Christopher Levett, of York; the Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Christopher Levett, of York; the Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 HQMSVOYYOLDB « eBook \\ Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 Filesize: 9.61 MB Reviews Excellent electronic book and helpful one. I could comprehended everything out of this published e book. I discovered this pdf from my i and dad suggested this book to discover. (Dr. Daphnee Homenick II) DISCLAIMER | DMCA SF5KTXGLPDB2 « eBook \ Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 CHRISTOPHER LEVETT, OF YORK; THE PIONEER COLONIST IN CASCO BAY VOLUME 5 To download Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 eBook, you should refer to the hyperlink under and save the file or gain access to other information which might be related to CHRISTOPHER LEVETT, OF YORK; THE PIONEER COLONIST IN CASCO BAY VOLUME 5 book. Theclassics.Us, United States, 2013. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 246 x 189 mm. Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1893 edition. Excerpt: . The Maine Historical Society published in 1847 a book of thirty-four pages, bearing the attractive title of A Voyage into New England, begun in 1623 and ended in 1624, Performed by Christopher Levett, His Majesty s Woodward of Somersetshire, and one of the Council of New England, printed at London by William fones and sold by Edward Brewster, at the sign of the Bible, in Paufs Churchyard, 1628. This reprint of a very rare book was of considerable interest to historical students, and their interest in the book naturally awakened an interest in its author; hence, the frequent enquiry, Who was Christopher Levett? The most that was known about him was that he was a Yorkshireman, and that when he wrote his book, he was living at Sherborne, in Dorsetshire. Certainly it was evident that he was a man of some importance, since he was the King s Woodward of Somersetshire, setshire, and a Councillor of New England, besides being a captain in the royal navy, and an author; but a year s search of the registers of Sherborne and neighboring parishes failed to reveal anything respecting him. In a visitation of the county, however, made in 1623, was found the name of his wife and several of his children, which was considered valuable information, since it gave some idea of Levett s social status. Of course the parishes in the city and neighborhood of York demanded attention; but a patient search of... Read Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 Online Download PDF Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 Download ePUB Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 YQWCDSBSBRCH » eBook ^ Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 See Also [PDF] Index to the Classified Subject Catalogue of the Bualo Library; The Whole System Being Adopted from the Classification and Subject Index of Mr. Melvil Dewey, with Some Modifications . Access the link listed below to download "Index to the Classified Subject Catalogue of the Bualo Library; The Whole System Being Adopted from the Classification and Subject Index of Mr. Melvil Dewey, with Some Modifications ." file. Read Book » [PDF] Kindergarten Culture in the Family and Kindergarten; A Complete Sketch of Froebel s System of Early Education, Adapted to American Institutions. for the Use of Mothers and Teachers Access the link listed below to download "Kindergarten Culture in the Family and Kindergarten; A Complete Sketch of Froebel s System of Early Education, Adapted to American Institutions. for the Use of Mothers and Teachers" file. Read Book » [PDF] A Kindergarten Manual for Jewish Religious Schools; Teacher s Text Book for Use in School and Home Access the link listed below to download "A Kindergarten Manual for Jewish Religious Schools; Teacher s Text Book for Use in School and Home" file. Read Book » [PDF] A Year Book for Primary Grades; Based on Froebel s Mother Plays Access the link listed below to download "A Year Book for Primary Grades; Based on Froebel s Mother Plays" file. Read Book » [PDF] Froebel s Occupations Access the link listed below to download "Froebel s Occupations" file. Read Book » [PDF] Southern Educational Review Volume 3 Access the link listed below to download "Southern Educational Review Volume 3" file. Read Book » MBQ9KV0BTW2E ^ Kindle ^ Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 [PDF] A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court Access the hyperlink below to download and read "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court" PDF file. Read PDF » [PDF] Bully, the Bullied, and the Not-So Innocent Bystander: From Preschool to High School and Beyond: Breaking the Cycle of Violence and Creating More Deeply Caring Communities Access the hyperlink below to download and read "Bully, the Bullied, and the Not-So Innocent Bystander: From Preschool to High School and Beyond: Breaking the Cycle of Violence and Creating More Deeply Caring Communities" PDF file. Read PDF » [PDF] Slavonic Rhapsody in A-Flat Major, B.86.3: Study Score Access the hyperlink below to download and read "Slavonic Rhapsody in A-Flat Major, B.86.3: Study Score" PDF file. Read PDF » [PDF] Yearbook Volume 15 Access the hyperlink below to download and read "Yearbook Volume 15" PDF file. Read PDF » [PDF] Odes Funebres, S.112: Study Score Access the hyperlink below to download and read "Odes Funebres, S.112: Study Score" PDF file. Read PDF » [PDF] Ohio Court Rules 2013, Practice Procedure Access the hyperlink below to download and read "Ohio Court Rules 2013, Practice Procedure" PDF file. Read PDF » .
Recommended publications
  • Christopher Levett, of York; the Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5
    DSNFXAY0DLQ1 Kindle < Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5... Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 (Paperback) Filesize: 7.52 MB Reviews Absolutely essential read through ebook. Better then never, though i am quite late in start reading this one. Your life span will likely be change once you total reading this article pdf. (Jody Veum) DISCLAIMER | DMCA EJIPMB2X6RHZ « Book » Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5... CHRISTOPHER LEVETT, OF YORK; THE PIONEER COLONIST IN CASCO BAY VOLUME 5 (PAPERBACK) To download Christopher Levett, of York; The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay Volume 5 (Paperback) eBook, make sure you refer to the web link below and save the document or gain access to additional information which might be related to CHRISTOPHER LEVETT, OF YORK; THE PIONEER COLONIST IN CASCO BAY VOLUME 5 (PAPERBACK) book. Theclassics.Us, United States, 2013. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 246 x 189 mm. Language: English . Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1893 edition. Excerpt: . The Maine Historical Society published in 1847 a book of thirty-four pages, bearing the attractive title of A Voyage into New England, begun in 1623 and ended in 1624, Performed by Christopher Levett, His Majesty s Woodward of Somersetshire, and one of the Council of New England, printed at London by William fones and sold by Edward Brewster, at the sign of the Bible, in Paufs Churchyard, 1628.
    [Show full text]
  • Sir Ferdinando Gorges
    PEOPLE MENTIONED IN CAPE COD PEOPLE MENTIONED IN CAPE COD: SIR FERDINANDO GORGES “NARRATIVE HISTORY” AMOUNTS TO FABULATION, THE REAL STUFF BEING MERE CHRONOLOGY “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project The People of Cape Cod: Sir Fernando Gorges HDT WHAT? INDEX THE PEOPLE OF CAPE COD: SIR FERDINANDO GORGES PEOPLE MENTIONED IN CAPE COD CAPE COD: Even as late as 1633 we find Winthrop, the first Governor PEOPLE OF of the Massachusetts Colony, who was not the most likely to be CAPE COD misinformed, who, moreover, has the fame, at least, of having discovered Wachusett Mountain (discerned it forty miles inland), talking about the “Great Lake” and the “hideous swamps about it,” near which the Connecticut and the “Potomack” took their rise; and among the memorable events of the year 1642 he chronicles Darby Field, an Irishman’s expedition to the “White hill,” from whose top he saw eastward what he “judged to be the Gulf of Canada,” and westward what he “judged to be the great lake which Canada River comes out of,” and where he found much “Muscovy glass,” and “could rive out pieces of forty feet long and seven or eight broad.” While the very inhabitants of New England were thus fabling about the country a hundred miles inland, which was a terra incognita to them, —or rather many years before the earliest date referred to,— Champlain, the first Governor of CHAMPLAIN Canada, not to mention the inland discoveries of Cartier, CARTIER Roberval, and others, of the preceding century, and his own ROBERVAL earlier voyage, had already gone to war against the Iroquois in ALPHONSE their forest forts, and penetrated to the Great Lakes and wintered there, before a Pilgrim had heard of New England.
    [Show full text]
  • A Note on the Publication Dates of Christopher Levett's “A Voyage Into
    Maine History Volume 28 Number 4 Portland, 1838 Article 4 4-1-1989 A Note on the Publication Dates of Christopher Levett’s “A Voyage into New England Roger Howell Jr. Bowdoin College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Howell, Roger. "A Note on the Publication Dates of Christopher Levett’s “A Voyage into New England." Maine History 28, 4 (1989): 223-225. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal/ vol28/iss4/4 This Research Note is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine History by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A NOTE ON THE PUBLICATION DATES OF CHRIS TOPIIE.R LE VE TT ’S A VOYAGE INTO NEW ENGLAND Christopher Levett’s/4 Voyage into New England is a well known narrative and promotional argument for colonization, and it has frequently been cited by modern scholars.1 Its com­ position and publishing history have, however, been treated in misleading fashion. The most substantial study of Levett is the indispensable account of James Phinney Baxter which indi­ cates that the tract was written and published in 1628.2 There was indeed an edition in 1628, and the circumstances surround­ ing its publication are clear enough. Levett was the beneficiary of an extraordinary proclamation issued by Charles I in Febru­ ary 1628 calling on the ecclesiastical authorities to take up a collection for the maintenance of the plantation in New Eng­ land; the monies were to be paid to Levett who was, by the same proclamation, appointed governor.3 The publication of Levett’s account at this juncture was clearly designed to stimu­ late support for the collection which was being undertaken at a most inauspicious moment.
    [Show full text]
  • An Investigation Into Weston's Colony at Wessagussett Weymouth, MA Craig S
    Plymouth Archaeological Rediscovery Project (PARP) An Investigation into Weston's Colony at Wessagussett Weymouth, MA Craig S. Chartier MA www.plymoutharch.com March 2011 The story of the 1622 plantation at Wessagusset begins with Master Thomas Weston. Weston was a wealthy London merchant and ironmonger and one of the original backers of the Plymouth colonists’ plantation in the New World. Weston personally traveled to Leiden, Holland to convince the Plymouth colonists not to negotiate with the Dutch or the Virginia Company for the right to settle in their New World lands (Davis 1908:63). Weston informed them that he and a number of other merchants would be the Adventurers who would personally finance their colony. He also informed them that Sir Ferdinando Gorges had obtained a patent for land in the northern part of Virginia that they had named “New England,” and that they could be establishing a colony at any time (Davis 1908:66). Unfortunately, after the conditions were drawn up, agreed upon in Holland and sent back to England, the Adventurers, with Weston being specifically named, changed some of the particulars, and the colonists, having already sold everything to finance the venture, had to agree to the altered terms (Davis 1908: 66). Weston became the chief agent and organizer of the venture which led some of the settlers, such as John Robinson, Samuel Fuller, William Bradford, Isaac Allerton, and Edward Winslow to fear laying their fate in the hands of one man alone (Davis 1908:66, 71). The London merchant Adventurers agreed to finance the voyage in order to see personal gain through the shipping of lumber, sassafras, and fur back to them from the Plymouth Colony.
    [Show full text]
  • (C. 1590 – C. 1653) the First Native American to Contact the Pilgrims
    Samoset (c. 1590 – c. 1653) The First Native American to Contact the Pilgrims Compiled by Jerry Reif All Scouts learn the story of the Pilgrims’ arrival on the Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor in November 1620 in American History classes. A major part of that story is the role played by Tisquantum or Squanto, the Patuxet Indian. Squanto was captured and enslaved by an English sea captain named Thomas Hunt in 1614 and sent first to Spain and then England before returning to his tribal land in 1619. During his captivity, Squanto learned English. By teaching the colonists how to catch herring to fertilize maize, squash and beans, how to catch eels and other seafood, and how to trap and hunt wildlife, he helped the Pilgrims recover from that extremely hard first winter. What is not so well known in the Pilgrim story is the key role played by Samoset, our Council’s namesake. So let’s take a brief look at the role in he played. After fleeing religious persecution in England, and first settling in Leiden, The Netherlands, where they discovered that they did not care for the Dutch culture, the Pilgrims set sail for America in the hope that they could freely practice their Puritan beliefs. As you all know, they landed at Plymouth in the Patuxet region on the eastern shore of present-day Massachusetts. Patuxet was the homeland of the Wampanoag Confederacy. Wampanoag means “ People of the First Light.” which makes sense since they would be the first to see the sun rise over the Atlantic Ocean.
    [Show full text]
  • PLATT FAMILY RECORDS CENTER NOTES Volume 3.1 Compiled by Lyman D
    PLATT FAMILY RECORDS CENTER NOTES Volume 3.1 compiled by Lyman D. Platt, Ph.D. Platt Family Records Center The Redwoods, New Harmony, Utah 2008 2 The Platt Family Records Center Copyright © 2008 The Lyman D. Platt Family Protection Trust All Rights Reserved Manufactured in the U.S.A. 3 INTRODUCTION Over many years the collections that comprise the Platt Family Records Center (PFRC) have been gathered from a diversity of sources and locations. These have been cataloged as they have been received, or in the order that they were initially organized. It was not felt in preparing this final version that a re-cataloging was necessary due to the versatility of the indexing systems used. There are twelve divisions to the PFRC: 1) Documents; 2) Letters; 3) Notes; 4) Family Histories; 5) Journals & Diaries; 6) Manuscripts; 7) Photographs; 8) Maps; 9) Books; 10) Genealogies; 11) Bibliography; and 12) Indexes. The collection that follows - Notes - is divided into several volumes, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, etc. These notes do not contain all of the material that I have collected, but they are a compilation of much of it. Some information went directly into histories, family group records, pedigree charts and short biographies. Copies of these volumes have been given to: 1) Special Collections, Marriott Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah; 2) The Church Historical Library, Salt Lake City, Utah; 3) Special Collections, Southern Utah University, Cedar City, Utah; and 4) The Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Museum, Salt Lake City, Utah. Additional copies have been given to each of my siblings and to some of our children.
    [Show full text]
  • Christopher Levett, of YORK
    Christopher Levett, OF YORK, The Pioneer Colonist 1n Casco Bay. BY JAMES PHINNEY B,AXTER, A.M., AUTHOR OF GEORGE CLEEVE OF CASCO BAY, THE BRITISH INVASION FROM THE NoRTH, Sm FERDINANDO GoRGES AND HIS PROVINCE OF MAINE, &c., &c. PRINTED FOR THE GORGES SOCIETY, PoRTLAND, MAINE. 1893· CHRISTOPHER LEVETT OF YORK. TABLE OF CONTENTS. PREFACE, Vll MEMOIR OF CHRISTOPHER LEVETT, I A VovAGE INTO NEw ENGLAND, ·APPENDIX, INDEX, LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. THE CITY oF YORK, ENGLAND, IN LEVETT's TIME, THE CHURCH OF ST. MICHAEL LE BELFRY, 7 TITLE PAGE oF VoYAGE INTO NEw ENGLAND, - 79 MAP OF OLD· YoRK, 105 LEVETT GENEALOGY, 140 PREP AGE. The Maine Historical Society published m I 847 a book of thirty-four pages, bearing the attractive title of "A Voyage z"nto New E1zgland, begt~:n z"n 1623 and mded £n 1624, Performed by Christopher Levett, H£s Majesty's T/f/oodward of Somersetshz"re, and one of the Coundl of New England, pr£nted at Loml01z by W£ll£am Jones and sold by Edward Brewster, at the sz"g1z of the Bz"ble, z"n Pauts Churchyard, 1628." This reprint of a very rare book was of considerable interest to historical students, and their interest in the book naturally awakened an interest in its author; hence, the frequent enquiry, "Who was Christopher Levett? " The most that was known about him was that he was a Y orkshireman, and that when he wrote his book, he was living at Sherborne, il) Dorsetshire. Certainly it was evident that he was a man of _some_ irp-: portance, since he was the King's Woodward bf Sorher- setshire, Vlll PREFACE.
    [Show full text]
  • North Hampton Events
    NORTH HAMPTON EVENTS NEW HAMPSHIRE, (in-progress) NATIONAL (does not include all births/deaths,..) & WORLD EVENTS (selected/in-progress) Natives move seasonally around New 7000BC 5000: Egyptians invent the Hampshire to live, hunt, gather and fish. 31 to balance scale 86 2001BC 4600: Chinese invent buttons 86 3500: Sumerian & Egyptians invent soldering process 86 3500: Egyptians & Chinese invent plywood. Sumerians develop semi-standard code of symbols for sounds—writing is invented 86 3000: Chinese develop silk making. Egyptians invent cement, blending gypsum, lime and sand 86 2500: Egyptians melt sand and lime, making first glass. Mesopotamian bronze workers make first chains—Egyptians use on prisoners 86 2000 BC America’s Stonehenge is a 2000BC 2000: Egyptians invent candles. megalithic site located on Mystery Hill in to Minoans on Crete invent modern Salem 31 1001BC sewage sanitations and flush toilets 86 1500: First Egyptian “lighthouses” are fires tended by priest along Nile 86 1400: Palestinians develop brass, alloy of 2/3 copper and 1/3 zinc 86 Natives establish villages and develop 1000BC 800: Egyptians make the first true trade and make ceramics and bows and to sundial 86 arrows. 31 0 AD 650: King Ashurbanipal of Assyria (Iraq) builds first library Before recorded history, natives extract 86 sap from maples for sugar and syrup. 68 640: King Gages of Lydia makes first coin 86 600: Sushruta of India performs first plastic surgery (rhinoplasty). Greeks invent mathematics 86 500: Persians (Iranians) build first highway. Chinese invent abacus 86 330-260: Euclid invents geometry 86 312: Romans construct aqueducts 86 300: Chinese invent crossbow.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Trails and Waterways of Maine William Otis Sawtelle
    Bangor Public Library Bangor Community: Digital Commons@bpl Books and Publications Special Collections 1932 Historic Trails and Waterways of Maine William Otis Sawtelle Maine Development Commission Follow this and additional works at: https://digicom.bpl.lib.me.us/books_pubs Recommended Citation Sawtelle, William Otis and Maine Development Commission, "Historic Trails and Waterways of Maine" (1932). Books and Publications. 175. https://digicom.bpl.lib.me.us/books_pubs/175 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Collections at Bangor Community: Digital Commons@bpl. It has been accepted for inclusion in Books and Publications by an authorized administrator of Bangor Community: Digital Commons@bpl. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NE~S Historic '&ails HISTORIC TRAILS AND WATERWAYS OF MAINE By WILLIAM OTIS SAWTELLE Founder of the Islesford Collection, Incorporated MAINE DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION AUGUST A, MAINE Copyright 1932 by THE MAINE DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION EASTERN PORTION OF THE SIMANCAS MAP 1610 CONTENTS 1. PROLOGUE .................. "· ........................ 2. THE DAWN OF A NEW ERA.......................... 5 3. RIVER OF NORUMBEGA-THE PENOBSCOT. 8 4. THE RIVER ST. CROIX. 12 5. A KENNEBEC KIDNAPPING AND WHAT CAME OF IT. 16 6.. MAINE NATIVES INTEREST ENGLAND'S LORD CHIEF JUSTICE......................................... 21 7. THE JESUIT FATHER PIERRE BIARD VISITS THE PENOBSCOT AND MATINICUS.................. 28 8. CAPTAIN ARGALL'S VOYAGES TO SAGADAHOC...... 31 9. NOVA SCOTIA AN OUTCOME OF ARGALL'S CONQUEST 38 10. CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH AT MONHEGAN .............. 4c 11. PROCEEDS FROM MAINE FURS CANCEL MAYFLOWER OBLIGATIONS. H 12. FRENCH AND PILGRIMS CLASH AT CASTINE AND MACHIAS. 48 lJ. MURDER AT CUSHNOC AND ITS CONSEQUENCES..
    [Show full text]
  • 125 Wabanaki Women Extraordinaire
    125 WABANAKI WOMEN EXTRAORDINAIRE: A SAMPLER FROM FACT AND FANCY Alvin Hamblen Morrison SUNY Fredonia Introduction Archaeology, ethnohistory, history, folklore, and ethnography each occasionally presents limited evidence of a Wabanaki woman who some­ how stood out from the crowd. Six such cases are examined herein, ranging in time from ca. 1600 to ca. 1870. Never is the picture clear enough for a meaningful biography, but this only enhances our fascina­ tion with both the individual personality and her sociocultural position. Indeed, many more questions are raised than answered by the evidence at hand. While this paper attempts no major theoretical speculations, it suggests that aboriginal social organization in the Dawnland is still open for further study. The classic model of the Hunting Society in general is decidedly male-oriented, and that usually assumed for the Wabanaki Algonquians of northern New England and sub-St. Lawrence Canada conforms to this norm. This theory seems to mesh well with the fact that, in the southwesterly end of Wabanakia in the pre-contact era, the importance of supplemental maize horticulture (with its enhancement of women's status) was greater than in the rest of the Dawnland, but never so great as to challenge hunting. With such a conceptual orientation in mind, the following ethnohis- torical vignette would be relatively acceptable at face value. It is from an account of a 1624 English settlement attempt in what is now Port­ land Harbor, Maine, written first-hand in 1628 by Christopher Levett (1893:117-118). Their wiues are their slaves, and doe all their worke the men doe nothing but kill Beasts, Fish, «fcc.
    [Show full text]
  • An Historical Sketch, Guide Book, and Prospectus of Cushing's Island: Casco Bay, Coast of Maine William M
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Maine Bicentennial Special Collections 1836 An Historical Sketch, Guide Book, and Prospectus of Cushing's Island: Casco Bay, Coast of Maine William M. Sargent Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainebicentennial Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Sargent, William M., "An Historical Sketch, Guide Book, and Prospectus of Cushing's Island: Casco Bay, Coast of Maine" (1836). Maine Bicentennial. 84. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainebicentennial/84 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine Bicentennial by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Pamp 1108 Vickery An Historical Sketch Guide Book, a n d Prospectus of Cushing's Island Casco Bay, Coast of Maine by Wm . M . Sargent,A.M. A N OSEGAY OF CULLED FLOWERS I BRING, w ith n othing of my own except the string T HAT BlNDS THEM —Montaigne. J ohn Calvin Stevens New Y ork : American Photo-Engraving Co., 13 & 15 v andewater Street. LIBRARIES UNIVERSITY OF MAINE A T ORONO State of Maine Collection R aymond H. Fogler Library gift of Mr. James B. Vickery WHITE HEAD. From a Painting by H. B. Brown. “ The heavens are all blue, and the billow’s bright verge Is frothily laved by a whispering surge, That heaves incessant, a tranquil dirge, To lull the pale forms that sleep below; Forms that rock as the waters flow.” —J ohn N e al .
    [Show full text]
  • William Bradford
    PEOPLE MENTIONED IN CAPE COD: 1 GOVERNOR WILLIAM “MASTER BUBBLE” BRADFORD “NARRATIVE HISTORY” AMOUNTS TO FABULATION, THE REAL STUFF BEING MERE CHRONOLOGY 1. This “Master Bubble” monicker is courtesy of Thomas Morton. HDT WHAT? INDEX THE PEOPLE OF CAPE COD:GOVERNOR WILLIAM BRADFORD 1590 March: William Bradford was born. NOBODY COULD GUESS WHAT WOULD HAPPEN NEXT The People of Cape Cod: “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project HDT WHAT? INDEX THE PEOPLE OF CAPE COD:GOVERNOR WILLIAM BRADFORD Lemay, Joseph A. Leo, “NEW ENGLAND’S ANNOYANCES”: AMERICA’S FIRST FOLK SONG (Newark NJ: U of Delaware P, 1985), pages 43-44, 54, 60 passim: If barley be wanting to make into malt, We must be contented, and think it no fault; For we can make liquor to sweeten our lips, Of pumpkins and parsnips and walnut tree chips. ... Hey down, down, hey down derry down.... And of our green corn-stalks we make our best beer, We put it in barrels to drink all the year: Yet I am as healthy, I verily think, Who make the spring-water my commonest drink. ... Hey down, down, hey down derry down.... Stanzas 11 and 12 concern New England’s drinks — liquor, beer, and water. Since English and European water was often polluted, people did not commonly drink it. The usual English drink was small beer. Water was considered, in general, an unhealthy drink. But American water was different [Dean Albertson, “Puritan Liquor in the Planting of New England,” New England Quarterly 23 (1950):477-90]. The quantity and quality of New England water became an important topic for almost all New England writers.
    [Show full text]