History of New Hampshire, from its first discovery to the year 1830; with dissertations upon the rise of opinions and institutions, the growth of agriculture and manufactures, and the influence of leading families and distinguished men, to the year 1874;, Part 1

Author: Sanborn, Edwin David, 1808-1885; Cox, Channing Harris, 1879-
Publication date: 1875
Publisher: Manchester, N.H., J.B. Clarke
Number of Pages: 434


USA > New Hampshire > History of New Hampshire, from its first discovery to the year 1830; with dissertations upon the rise of opinions and institutions, the growth of agriculture and manufactures, and the influence of leading families and distinguished men, to the year 1874; > Part 1


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org.


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44



Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015


https://archive.org/details/historyofnewhamp00sanb_0


GEN


ATTENTION: BAR CODE IS LOCATED INSIDE OF BOOK


ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY


3 1833 01095 9317


Gc 974.2 Sa495 Sanborn, Edwin D. History of New Hampshire from its first discovery


HISTORY


OF


NEW HAMPSHIRE,


FROM ITS FIRST DISCOVERY TO


THE YEAR 1830 ;


WITH


DISSERTATIONS UPON THE RISE OF OPINIONS AND INSTITUTIONS, THE GROWTH OF AGRICULTURE AND MANUFACTURES, AND THE INFLUENCE OF LEADING FAMILIES AND DISTINGUISHED MEN,


TO THE YEAR 1874;


BY


EDWIN D. SANBORN, LL. D.,


PROFESSOR IN DARTMOUTH COLLEGE.


MANCHESTER, N. H. : JOHN B. CLARKE. 1875.


Allen County Public Library 900 Webster Street PO Box 2270 Fort Wayne, IN 46801-2270


Entered, according to act of Congress, in the year 1875, by JOHN B. CLARKE, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.


MIRROR OFFICE : JOHN B. CLARKE, MANCHESTER, N. H.


1233657


PREFACE.


The best historian is he who represents with the greatest fidelity the life and spirit of the age he describes. It is not sufficient that what he records should be true "for substance ;" it should be relatively as well as absolutely true. "History," says Cicero, "is the light of truth." As truth is immuta- ble, we should naturally infer that an impartial historian, like Thucydides, might write "for eternity;" but, while the facts of the past remain un- changed, the opinions of succeeding generations concerning them are modi- fied by the progress of knowledge. Hence all history needs frequent revis- ion. The oldest records receive the severest criticism. The study of the Sanscrit language has shed a flood of light on the affinities and migrations of early nations. The mythologies and traditions which connect the Orient with the Occident have fallen before the victorious march of comparative philology. The interpretation of the Rosetta stone, the Ninevite slabs and the Babylonian cylinders has restored the lost records of Egypt and Mesopo- tamia. The labors of Champollion, Lepsius, Layard, Rawlinson, Smith and Cesnola have made monumental records more valuable than existing history. Every generation receives a new version of old traditions respecting classic lands. Greece and Rome often appear in a new dress, and the public ap- proves of these antiquarian researches. Modern history is subjected to the same searching analysis. Readers of the present day are not satisfied with the estimate which historians have placed upon the English, French and American Revolutions. The motives of men are now deemed better indices of character than their actions. The progress of nations depends more upon opinions and institutions than upon sieges and battles. The camp and the court yield to the imperial sway of new ideas. The rise of Puritanism, in the age of Elizabeth, left a deeper impression upon English history than the dispersion of the Spanish Armada. The rise of Methodism better deserved the notice of the annalist than the battles of Marlborough. All writers of


iv


PREFACE.


history must, therefore, look for the origin of great events in the current opinions of the age when they occurred. Impressed with these convictions, the writer of the following pages has attempted to reproduce the history of New Hampshire and trace its institutions, social, political and religious, to their true origin. The influence of illustrious men, of distinguished families, of dominant parties, of prevailing creeds, has been carefully investigated and briefly portrayed. The progress of the state in arts, arms and learning has not been overlooked.


Public opinion seems to call for a new history of the state. I. Because all the histories previously written are out of print. 2. Because no ex- isting history covers the entire ground. 3. Because the progress of events has thrown new light upon the past. 4. Because the history of New Hamp- shire is rich in deeds of daring, suffering and heroism surpassing fable. 5. Because the men of every age require the records of the past to be re- vised for their use.


TABLE OF CONTENTS.


CHAPTER I. Characteristics and Symbols of Different Epochs of Civil- ization,


CHAPTER II. Causes of European Enterprise in the Fifteenth and Six- teenth Centuries, II


9


CHAPTER III. The Agents of Modern Enterprise, . · 13


CHAPTER IV. The Results of Modern Enterprise, . 14


CHAPTER V. Aborigines of America, 17


CHAPTER VI. Title to the Soil, 22


CHAPTER VII. English Chartered Companies, 24


CHAPTER VIII. Colonies Ancient and Modern, 25


CHAPTER IX. Early Explorers of the New England Coast, 27


CHAPTER X. Proprietors of New Hampshire, · 29


CHAPTER XI. First Settlers of New Hampshire, · 32


CHAPTER XII. Political and Pecuniary Condition of the Plantations from 1631 to 1641, 40


CHAPTER XIII. Social Condition of the Early Colonists,


47


CHAPTER XIV. Early Laws of Massachusetts, . 49


CHAPTER XV. Early Laws of New Hampshire, 51


CHAPTER XVI. Early Churches of New Hampshire,


53


CHAPTER XVII. Elements of Popular Liberty,


55


CHAPTER XVIII. Condition of New Hampshire after its Union with Massachusetts, 58


CHAPTER XIX. Moral Epidemics, .


60


CHAPTER XX. Philip's Indian War, 65


CHAPTER XXI. Revival of Mason's Claim,


· 74


CHAPTER XXII. Organization of the New Government,


76


CHAPTER XXIII. Administration of Justice in the Early History of New Hampshire, 81


CHAPTER XXIV. Administration of Cranfield,


83


CHAPTER XXV. Government under Dudley and Andros, S7


CHAPTER XXVI. King William's War, .


89


CHAPTER XXVII. Civil Policy of New Hampshire during King Wil- liam's War, . 94


CHAPTER XXVIII. Queen Anne's War, .


· 97


CHAPTER XXIX. Administration of Governor Shute,


. IOI


vi


CONTENTS.


CHAPTER XXX. Emigrants from Ireland, 103


CHAPTER XXXI. Origin of the Militia System, . III CHAPTER XXXII. Lieutenant-Governor Wentworth's Administration, . 118 CHAPTER XXXIII. New Hampshire an Independent Royal Province, 118 CHAPTER XXXIV. King George's War, 119


CHAPTER XXXV. Revival of Mason's Claim,


128


CHAPTER XXXVI. The Representatives of New Towns, 129


CHAPTER XXXVII. The Last French War, . . 130


CHAPTER XXXVIII. Close of the War and Return of Peace, · 14I


CHAPTER XXXIX. Controversy about the Western Boundary, · 143


CHAPTER XL. Origin of the Revolutionary War, . · 144


CHAPTER XLI. Officers and Ministers in New Hampshire in 1768, . 15I CHAPTER XLII. Origin of Dartmouth College, · 152


CHAPTER XLIII. Early Settlements in Cohos,


. 156


CHAPTER XLIV. The Wentworths in New Hampshire, . 160


CHAPTER XLV. Commencement of Hostilities with England, . 165


CHAPTER XLVI. The Battle of Bunker Hill,


167


CHAPTER XLVII. Formation of a New Government,


. 169


CHAPTER XLVIII. Movements of the Army under Washington, dur- ing the year 1776, · 172


CHAPTER XLIX. Secession in New Hampshire during the last Century, 174 CHAPTER L. Military Operations in 1777 : Battle of Bennington, . . 182


CHAPTER LI. Capture of Burgoyne, I86


CHAPTER LII. Employment of Savages by the English, . 188


CHAPTER LIII. Congregationalism in New Hampshire, . 191


CHAPTER LIV. Rise of Different Denominations, . . 196


CHAPTER LV. Insufficiency of the State and General Governments pre- vious to the Adoption of the New Constitutions, . 198


CHAPTER LVI. Treatment of Loyalists, . . 200


CHAPTER LVII. Heavy Burdens Imposed on the People by the War, and the Consequent Discontent, . 203


CHAPTER LVIII. Captain John Paul Jones, . 206


CHAPTER LIX. General John Sullivan, .


. 207


CHAPTER LX. The New Constitution and the Parties Formed at its Ratification, . 209 .


CHAPTER LXI. Condition of New Hampshire after the Adoption of the New Constitution, . 213


CHAPTER LXII. Lands Held by "Free and Common Soccage." . 217


CHAPTER LXIII. Internal Improvements, . 218


CHAPTER LXIV. Administration of President Bartlett, . 224


CHAPTER LXV. Corn-Mills and Saw-Mills, . 225


CHAPTER LXVI. Administration of John Taylor Gilman, . 228


CHAPTER LXVII. The Early Farm-House with its Furniture and Sur- roundings, 235


CHAPTER LXVIII. Development of Political Parties, 234 CHAPTER LXIX. Political Influence of the Clergy of New Hampshire, 238


vii


CONTENTS.


CHAPTER LXX. Puritan Influence in New Hampshire, . . . . 245 CHAPTER LXXI. Internal Condition of New Hampshire from 1805 to


1815, · 247


CHAPTER LXXII. Causes of the Second War with England, · 249


CHAPTER LXXIII. Record of New Hampshire during the War for Sailors' Rights, . · 252


CHAPTER LXXIV. The Hartford Convention, . 258


CHAPTER LXXV. Domestic Affairs in New Hampshire Preceding and During the War for "Sailors' Rights," . . 259


CHAPTER LXXVI. Restoration of Peace,


. 263


CHAPTER LXXVII. Dartmouth College Controversy, . 268


CHAPTER LXXVIII. The Caucus System, . 286


CHAPTER LXXIX. The Toleration Act, . 287


CHAPTER LXXX. Decline of "The Era of Good Feelings," · 289


CHAPTER LXXXI. Local Matters in New Hampshire during the Ad- ministration of Monroe and Adams, . 292


CHAPTER LXXXII. Character of Hon. Benjamin Pierce,


. 300


CHAPTER LXXXIII. Population of New Hampshire at Different Pe- riods, · 302


CHAPTER LXXXIV. Money Coined and Printed, .


· 303


CHAPTER LXXXV. Discovery and Settlement of the White Mountain Regions, · 307


CHAPTER LXXXVI. The Rivers of New Hampshire, . . 311


CHAPTER LXXXVII. Climate and Scenery of New Hampshire, . . 317


CHAPTER LXXXVIII. The Isles of Shoals, .


· 323


CHAPTER LXXXIX. Influence of Distinguished Families in New Hampshire, · 326


CHAPTER XC. The Livermore Family,


· 328


CHAPTER XCI. The Pickering Family,


· 329


CHAPTER XCII. The Weare Family,


· 331


CHAPTER XCIII. The Bartlett Family,.


· 334


CHAPTER XCIV. The Webster Family, .


· 335


CHAPTER XCV. The Bar of New Hampshire,


. 338


CHAPTER XCVI. Jeremiah Smith, .


· 339


CHAPTER XCVII. Ezekiel Webster,


· 340


CHAPTER XCVIII. Daniel Webster,


· 342


CHAPTER XCIX. Ichabod Bartlett,


. 343


CHAPTER C. Levi Woodbury, .


· 345


CHAPTER CI. Common School Instruction,


· 346


CHAPTER CII. Academies,


. 352


CHAPTER CIII. Agriculture, ·


. 357


CHAPTER CIV. Commerce of New Hampshire,


. 362


CHAPTER CV. The Press,


· 364


CHAPTER CVI. Banks,


. 366


CHAPTER CVII. Manufactures,


· 372


viii


CONTENTS.


CHAPTER CVIII. Railroads,


· 378


CHAPTER CIX. Geology of New Hampshire, · 399


CHAPTER CX. The Flora and Fauna of New Hampshire, · 404 CHAPTER CXI. Undecided Questions in New England History, . · 405


CHAPTER CXII. Proper Names in New Hampshire, · 410


CHAPTER I.


CHARACTERISTICS AND SYMBOLS OF DIFFERENT EPOCHS OF CIV- ILIZATION.


The temple and the palace are the true symbols of the earliest civilization known to history. The king and priest occupy the foreground of every old historic picture. The king holds the key of power ; the priest the key of knowledge; and the com- mon people are their slaves. The sculptured temples of Elora, the buried palaces of Nineveh and Babylon, the magnificent ruins of Karnac and the pyramids of Egypt are all monuments of royal and sacerdotal oppression. Fear and force then ruled the world. . The Greeks are the only people of all antiquity that made reason supreme in government and religion, and thus raised the masses of their population from bondage to free- dom. They worshiped beauty in the works of nature and in the creations of the imagination, and embodied their lofty ideals in sculpture, painting, architecture, poetry, oratory and philoso- phy. For a time their bema and theatre became the represen- tatives of human progress. Their culture was the inheritance of the race ; for they have been the teachers of all succeeding generations. The light of their civilization shone on Rome. Reason once more triumphed over brute force. Horace says : "When conquered Greece brought in her captive arts, She triumphed o'er her savage conquerors' hearts ; Taught our rough verse in numbers to refine, And our rude style with elegance to shine."


Rome absorbed the blood and treasure of the nations and made herself, through war and law, the mistress of the world. For twelve hundred years, the camp and forum were the sym- bols of her civilization. In the days of her decline christi- anity became a ruling power in the earth ; and during the dark ages the monastery and castle embodied the power and wisdom of christendom. The history of the monk and the baron is the real history of Europe for a thousand years. In England, be- tween the conquest, A. D. 1066, and the reign of King John, during a period of one hundred and fifty years, five hundred and


IO


HISTORY OF


fifty-seven religious houses, of all kinds, were established. Hen- ry VIII. confiscated three thousand religious houses that yielded revenue ; and the castles in his reign were probably as numer- ous, for eleven hundred and fifteen were built in the brief reign of Stephen. The population of England was then about two and a half millions. The religious houses were all richly en- dowed. They owned large landed estates, commodious and im- posing buildings, with respectable libraries, when a manuscript was worth more than a small farm. A single monastery has been known to feed five hundred paupers daily for years. At that time there was no other provision for the poor. The cas- tles of the nobles were impregnable fortresses, surrounded by walls and moats, and defended by squadrons of mailed war- riors. The feudal system regulated the tenure of land. The king and his liege lords owned the entire territory of the king- dom ; hence, the large landed estates of the English nobility, which are often equal, in extent and population, to one of our counties. The conquering Normans ruled with an iron sway, in church and state; and the conquered Saxon served with abject humility, in war and peace. When the monastery and castle lost their imperial power cannot now be accurately de- termined. "It is remarkable," says Macaulay, "that the two greatest and most salutary social revolutions which have taken place in England, that revolution which, in the thirteenth century, put an end to the tyranny of nation over nation, and that revolu- tion which, a few generations later, put an end to the property of man in man, were silently and imperceptibly effected. They struck contemporary observers with no surprise and have received from historians a very scanty measure of attention. They were brought about neither by legislative regulation nor by physical force. Moral causes noiselessly effaced, first the distinction be- tween Norman and Saxon, and then the distinction between master and slave. None can venture to fix the precise moment at which either distinction ceased." The gentle influences of the gospel proved to be more potent agents of reform than mailed barons with their retainers, or Cromwell with his "ironsides."


. Soon after the union of the Norman and Saxon and the abolition of serfdom, the popular mind in Europe was stimulated to in- tense activity, by the invention of printing and the mariner's compass, by the revival of classical learning and the formation of the modern languages. From these causes arose the refor- mation which gave birth to the Puritans, who founded in the wilderness "a church without a bishop and a state without a king" and, from that hour, made the school-house and "meeting-house" the symbols of modern civilization. Before these modest rep- resentatives of American progress the temple and palace, the


II


NEW HAMPSHIRE.


camp and forum, the monastery and castle, all bow down, like the sheaves in Joseph's dream, and make obeisance.


CHAPTER II.


CAUSES OF EUROPEAN ENTERPRISE IN THE FIFTEENTH AND SIXTEENTH CENTURIES.


Europe owes her love of liberty to the Greeks, her obedience to law to the Romans. On the shores of the Ægean Oriental despotism first met, upon the battle-field, European indepen- dence. The right triumphed ; and Marathon is dear to us to- day, because there the cause of humanity was vindicated. Had the setting sun, on that memorable day, gilded the victorious banners of Persia, Grecian art, literature, oratory and liberty had never existed ; and, for the next two thousand years, Zoroaster and the Magi, instead of Socrates and the philosophers, might have been the educators of our race. The history of Marathon and Yorktown will never lose their interest, down


"To the last syllable of recorded time ;"


because a contrary result, in either case, would have changed the destinies of the world. They were decisive battles in the history of freedom. The same is true of the battle of Zama, where Roman civilization won the victory for the advancing ages, and made Rome the world's lawgiver. All ancient history ter- minates in the "eternal city ;" and from it all modern history takes its departure. Rome has conquered the world three times : by her army ; by her literature ; and by her jurisprudence. Her last victory was the chief of the three. Roman literature has developed modern mind ; Roman law has governed it. For nearly a thousand years after the irruption of the Northern bar- barians, Grecian literature was but little studied in Western Europe. Constantinople was its home. After the fall of that city in 1453, her scholars were exiled ; and learning followed the course of the sun. The seer of that day might have used, by prolepsis, the words of Berkeley :


"Westward the course of empire takes its way. "


The revival of learning awoke the European mind to intense ac- tivity. The noble ideas of Grecian liberty and Roman law took root in a virgin soil and brought forth abundant fruit. With this


12


HISTORY OF


new-born zeal for study came additional means of gratifying it. An obscure German, by the invention of movable types and the press, rendered the universal diffusion of knowledge possible. Next to the invention of letters stands that of printing. It has enlarged indefinitely the bounds of knowledge and given a new impulse to everything great and good in modern civilization. "If the invention of ships, " says Lord Bacon, "was thought so noble, which carrieth riches and commerce from place to place, how much more are letters to be magnified, which, as ships, pass through the vast seas of time and make ages so distant to par- ticipate of the wisdom, illuminations and inventions, the one of the other." Prior to the use of types, it required nearly a year's labor to copy a bible ; and the price of such a manuscript varied from two hundred to one thousand dollars of our money; and that, too, when its value was ten or twenty times as much as it now is. Some German mechanics and a wealthy goldsmith nam- ed John Faust, of the city of Mentz, in quest of gain, invented and executed this great work of human progress. The Bible was the first book printed. It was offered for sale, by Faust, in Paris. So astonished were the Parisians to find numerous copies of the bible, exactly alike, that they accused the seller of employing magic in their multiplication. He was supposed to be in league with the Devil ! Strange that the loyal subjects of the Prince of darkness should have so mistaken their master's character. Faust was imprisoned, as a magician, and was only released on confession of his valuable secret. This is supposed to be the origin of the popular legend, entitled: "The Devil and Dr. Faustus ;" or, as he is called by the illiterate, "Dr. Foster." It was a copy of this bible which kindled Luther's zeal for reform in the church. He first saw it, in the monastery of Erfurt, where he was in training for a monk. Dr. Staupitz, a man of rank in the church, happened to be there inspecting the convent and, ob- serving Luther's admiration of the discovered bible, gave him the copy for his private study. He read it twice in course of every year. He wrote thus of it: "It is a great and powerful tree, each word of which is a mighty branch; each of these branches have I shaken, so desirous was I to learn what fruit they every one of them bore, and what they would give me." This was one of Gutenberg's private copies of the Latin Vulgate. It could be read only by scholars. It was printed about 1450, with metal types, every one cut separately, with the imperfect tools then in use. It was a folio of six hundred and forty-one leaves. Schoeffer, the associate of Gutenberg, introduced cast types and thus perfected the art of printing. The study of the bible made Luther the champion of the reformation. He em- bodied his new opinions in ninety-five theses, which he nailed to


13


NEW HAMPSHIRE.


the door of the church of Wittenburg ; and some one has said, very justly, that the blows of his hammer shook all christendom. Thus, an Augustine monk, denouncing the corruptions of Ca- tholicism, introduced a schism in religion and changed the entire foundations of human government. Civil liberty was born of religious liberty.


Nearly contemporary with the publication of the bible was the practical use of the mariner's compass. That property of the magnet which gives polarity to the needle was known sev- eral centuries before the discovery of America. But navigators were slow to employ this unerring guide in traversing the seas. The French and Italians both claim the invention of the com- pass, which opened to man the dominion of the sea. "The common opinion," says Hallam, "which ascribes the discovery [of the polarity of the magnet] to a citizen of Amalfi, in the fourteenth century, is undoubtedly erroneous." It was, with- out dispute, in general use during the fifteenth century, by the Genoese, Spaniards and Portuguese. Soon after the discovery of America, Vasco de Gama sailed round the "Stormy Cape, " opened a new passage to India and changed the whole commerce of the world. The story of his perilous voyage, "married to immortal verse," still lives in the Epic of the Portuguese Cam- oens. These potent causes, the revival of classical learning, the invention of printing and the compass, and the reformation in the church, all contributed to awaken the common mind in Europe, to give new force and intensity to public opinion, and to impart increased energy to national enterprise.


CHAPTER III.


THE AGENTS OF MODERN ENTERPRISE.


Men of action and men of thought have existed in all ages. In the oriental world, the men of action became warriors ; the men of thought, priests. The sculptured slabs that lined the walls of the temples and palaces of buried Nineveh and Baby- lon show us nothing of Asiatic life but sieges and battles, pomps and sacrifices. The blood of men flows upon the field, the blood of beasts upon the altar ; enslaved people come before their rul- ers laden with tribute and offerings. In Greece, the cradle of liberty, and in Rome, the birth-place of law, men of affairs and


14


HISTORY OF


men of reflection appeared as statesmen and philosophers, con- suls and jurisconsults. In the dark ages, the baron and inonk controlled the people in "body, mind and estate." After the decline of feudalism, the abolition of serfdom and the rise of free cities, political power was centralized ; and hereditary mon- archs became its representatives. With the emancipation of mind, by the revival of learning and religion, came improved agri- culture, enlarged commerce and multiplied manufactures. Then, monarchs, merchants and mechanics became the originators of great enterprises and the heralds of material progress. Mon- archs lent their names, merchants their funds and mechanics their hands to the discovery and settlement of a new world. Mechanics built and manned the ships, merchants furnished supplies and wages, and monarchs gave charters and patents to the explorers and colonists. These royal parchments were about as useful to the navigators and pilgrims as were the gilded figure- heads that adorned the prows of their ships. Yet, as society was then constituted, they were as necessary to successful enter- prise as "the cunning hand and cultured brain" of the artisan, or the gathered treasures of merchant princes. Kings furnished neither men nor means, yet they claimed the lion's share of the profits. Isabella is a noble exception to the parsimonious and mercenary character of European rulers. Her wise and gen- erous patronage of Columbus shines out, amid that night of ignorance, like a solitary star through the rent clouds of a mid- night storm.


CHAPTER IV.


THE RESULTS OF MODERN ENTERPRISE.


In the infancy of science, as in that of the church, "not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, were called." The inventors, discoverers and explorers of the world have been found oftener among artisans and sailors than among scientists and philosophers. Such were Watt and Arkwright, Fulton and Stevenson, Franklin and Morse. Columbus, poor and friendless, leading his little boy through the streets of Mad- rid, beseeching one monarch after another to become god- father to the progeny of his teeming brain, and finally receiv- ing, from the generous queen, a suit of clothes to render his


15


NEW HAMPSHIRE.


presentation at court possible, shows, very plainly, that the kingdom of science, like the kingdom of Heaven, "cometh not with observation." "Genius finds or makes a way." The eloquence of the veteran sailor won the ear of royalty, and a woman became the sole patroness of the most memorable mari- time enterprise in the history of the world. A continent was discovered. But the main land was not first reached by Col- umbus. The American continent was discovered by English merchants. The parsimonious Henry VII. gave a patent to John Cabot, a Venetian merchant living at Bristol, empower- ing him and his three sons to sail into the Eastern, Western or Northern sea, with five ships, at their own expense, to search for new lands and undiscovered treasures. The avaricious king, who contributed nothing but his sign manual to their commis- sion, required these private adventurers to pay into his exchequer one fifth of all their profits. Such kings deserve to be remem- bered as examples of unmitigated selfishness. The Cabots reached the continent nearly fourteen months before Columbus on his third voyage touched upon the main land. A new patent was issued, in 1498, to John Cabot, less favorable to the explorer than the former ; and "the frugal king was himself a partner in the enterprise." Sebastian Cabot, one of the bravest, noblest and purest of England's sons, explored the whole northern coast of America from Albemarle Sound to Hudson's Bay, in latitude 67º30 north. The ocean was his home. He followed the seas for half a century, and in extreme old age was so fond of his profession that his last wandering thoughts and words revealed his ruling passion. The fame of these first explorers of the New World kindled a love of adventure in all the states of Western Europe. The great monarchs of that age suspended, for a time, their thoughts of war and indulged in dreams of avarice. They were eager to occupy the lands, to work the mines and appropri- ate the fruits of a continent which private enterprise had revealed. They issued patents, commissioned captains and furnished ships for new discoveries. Italians, Portuguese, Spaniards, French and English swarmed in all the waters that wash the eastern coast of North America. Like insects in the summer's sun,




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.