USA > New York > Ecclesiastical records, state of New York, Volume VII, Index > Part 32
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Mohawks (Maquas, Mohogs) (cont'd) in numbers, (1701) 1439; Domine Lydius appointed to teach them, (1700) 1378, 1867; allusion to their loss of Domine Dellius, (1701) 1466; Robert Livingston urges Protestant missionaries for, 1532; six men needed, two found, Rev. [Syman?] Smith and Thor- oughgood Moore, the S. P. G. un- able to cope with the situation, appeal made to Queen Anne, 1549, 1554-56; grants of land by, 1684- 88; Palatines may settle on their river, (1709) 1812; a chapel built among (1712) 1967, 2192-93; Rev. William Andrews, missionary to, 1968-69, 1994; Governor Hun- ter has a conference with, (1714) 2070, 2099; Rev. Peter Van Dries- sen labors among, prays for com- pensation, (1722) 2191; conver- sions among, 2552-53; deed cer- tain lands to the king, (1733) 2634; the Mohawk Flats, excellent sites for churches, 2663, 2669-73; German settlers on these Flats, (1737) 2680; Rev. Henry Barclay has great success among, (1741) 2751; German churches on their river, (1751) 3162; complaints against Barclay touching a certain glebe land, 2933-34; allusions, 3107, 3399; French priests not allowed among, (1749) 3086; Rev. Gideon Hawley visits the Mohawk country, (1753) 3399- 3405; the Mohawks petition that rum may not be sold to them, 3483-84; importance of counter- acting French Jesuit influences, (1756) 3650; Rev. Ogilvie, mis- sionary among, 3650, (1763) 3910; Dr Wheelock labors among, 3813; book of common prayer translated into Mohawk, (1762) 3840; allu- sions, 4038; their school at Fort Hunter, (1769) 4173; are Chris- tianized, (1770) 4187-88
266
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Mohegans (Mohakanders), 57, 64, 993
Mol, Lambert Huyberts, 557
Molenaar, Abram, 3620
Molenar, Ary, 2274, 2329
Moleneri Praxis (Moral and Practi-
cal Discourses), book belonging to Jonas Bronck, 168
Moll, Joan (John), magistrate and elder at New Castle on the Dela- ware, 673-74, 734, 824
Mompesson, see Mumpesson
Monados, see Manhattan
Monckton, Robert, commissioner of trade and plantations, (1709-11) 1726, 1834, 1971
Monckton, Robert, governor of New York, (1763) 3826
Money bills, 1966-67, 2006
Moneys, 900 guilders raised by the Dutch churches to prosecute Gov- ernor Cornbury for his oppres- sions, sent to the Classis of Amster- dam for legal expenses in England, (1706) 1656. See also Liberties of the Dutch churches
Monmouth, [Charles Mordaunt, 3d earl of], 1002
Monmouth, [James Scott], duke of, 666, 918
" Monmouth Affair," 1248
Monmouth county, N. J., 3546, 4213 Monson, Mr, 2874
Montagne (Montanye, Mantanje), Abraham, elder, 4243, 4246
Montagne, Jean (Jan, Johannes) de la, councillor, 252, 254, 300, 523; appointed schoolmaster (hypodi- dasculum), (1652) 307-8
Montagne, Jan de la, sexton of the church in the fort (about 1689- 93), of Garden street church (1693-1730), 930-31, 1092, 2490 Montagne (Montagnie, Montague), Jan de la, jr, appointed sexton of Garden street church, (1730) 2490- 95, 2563, 2854, 3146, 3914, 3922, 3946, 3968, 4046
Montagne (Montanye), Jan de la, jr, (2d), appointed sexton of Garden
Montagne (Montanye), Jan de la, jr, (2d) -(continued)
street church, (1767) 4078-79, 4103, 4181; resigns, (1774) 4273 Montague, Captain James, (1775) 4187
Montague, Sir James, (1709), 1746, 1752, 1787
Montagu[e], Lord [Ralph, Earl of], member of the Privy Council, (1688), 961, 1002
Montaigne, Rev. John, French minis- ter at Fordham, (1696) 3454
Montanius (Bergen ?), Rev. Abra- ham, 708
Montanus's description of New
York, 616
Montauk Indians, civilized, (1764) 3970
Montfoort, Abraham, 2780-81, 2858 -- 59, 2861, 2892, 2894-95
Montfoort, Cor[nelis], of Jamaica, L. I., (1759) 3726
Montfoort (Montford), Jacobus, 2745, 2843, 2887, 2890, 3099
Montfoort, John, 3031, 3925
Montfoort, Pieter, of Long Island, (1698) 1198
Montfoort, Pieter, of Long Island, (1740) 2745, 2887
Montfoort, Holland, 573
Montford, Jacob, see Montfoort,
Jacobus
Montford, Peter, of New Jersey, (1753) 3382
Montford. See also Mountfort
Montgomery, Classis of Ulster [Orange county], N. Y., 4383, (1800) 4388
Montgomery county, N. Y., 1245; classis of, (1800) 4383
Montgomery (Montgomerie), John, governor of New York, address of welcome to, by Consistory of Dutch Church, (1728) 2406, 2423; approved of collection to finish Middle Dutch Church, 2453-54, 2458; petitioned by the people of Fishkill to be allowed to build a church, 2534, 2550, 2552-53; his death, (1731) 2548, 2622
267
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS
Monthly fast days, (1664) 550
Monthly Journal of Amsterdam, (1767) 4109. See also Boekzaal Monton, Andrew, 3382
Montreal ( Mount Reall, Mount Troyall), allusions, 946, 993, 1069, 1094, 1122-23, 1173, 1223, 1225-26, 1241, 1374, 1410, 2172, 2234, 2921, 2934
Monvielle, Lieutenant Colonel, see Minvielle
Moonen (Mooner, Moons), Jacob, see Moene, Jacob
Moordrecht (Moort), near Gouda, Holland, 202, 339, 902
Moore, Colonel, 2821, 2927, 2997
Moore, Dr, of London, 1855
Moore, Alexander, 2026
Moore, Rev. Benjamin, assistant rec- tor in Trinity Church, (1784) 4325 Moore, Sir Henry, governor, (1765- 69) 4010; address of consistory to, and his reply, 4023-24, 4074, 4081, 4090-92, 4094, 4099, 4104, 4118, 4149-50, 4231
Moore (More), Rev. John, allusion, (1656) 342; parsonage at New- town given him, (1657) 369; preacher at Newtown, 397; death (1657), 410-11, 501
Moore, Lambert, 2930
Moore, Michael, 2329, 2353, 2403, 4211
Moore, Nathaniel, 4232 Moore, Samuel, 1846
Moore (Moor), Rev. Thoroughgood, is about to settle as a missionary to the Mohawks, (1704) 1554; is delayed by the winter and the fur traders, takes Rev. Talbot's charge at Burlington, N. J., refuses the sacrament to Lieutenant Governor Ingoldsby, imprisoned, escapes, sails for England, shipwrecked and lost, 1555-57; allusions, 1610, 1613, 1697, 1711, 1868, 1906-7
Moort, see Moordrecht, Holland
Moral philosophy, Rev. Dr Myles Cooper, professor of, in Kings Col- lege, 4186
Morasiere, Rev. [Johannes de la ?], 1720
Moravians (Herrnhuters), Classis of Amsterdam warns against, (1738) 2714, 2723, 2732, 2734, 2755; mis- sionaries to the Indians, (1740) 2746, 2847-48, 2851; summoned be- fore the governor, 2852-54; ordered to leave the province, 2861-62, 2874; alleged reasons for passing laws against them, (1746) 2906-8, 2917; Parliament acknowledges their episcopate, relieves them from bearing arms and from judicial oaths, 3084; resolve to build a church in New York, 3161, 3184; their excellent character, 3332-33; buy land of Collegiate Church, (1760) 3758;ª allusions, 3904, 3960, (1768) 4137
Mordaunt, [Charles, 2d], viscount, member of the Privy Council, 961
More, John, signs petition to found Jamaica (1660), 464
More. See also Moore
Morell, Samuel, 3173
Morgan, Joanes, see Jones, Morgan
Morgan, Rev. Joseph, Presbyterian, pastor in Westchester county, (1701) 1486, (1705) 1610; allu- sions, (1725) 2252, 2262, 2270, 2327, 2354, 2403-4, 2418, 2466; supplies the Presbyterian and Dutch churches of Monmouth coun- ty, N. J., 2507-8, 2511, 2513, 2557, 2583
Morgan, Charles (Sarles), 474 Morgat, Peter, 2237
Mormelton, see Marbletown
Morpo (Morpe, Moyro), Rev., French minister at Boston, 945, 948, 1172, 1188
Morray, [Alexander Stuart, 4th] earl of, member of the Privy Council, 925
a This lot on which their church was built, was the southeast corner of Fulton and Dutch streets.
268
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Morray, Lawyer, 2217
Morris, Frederick, 2652, 4275
Morris (Marus), Lewis, (son of
Colonel Lewis Morris) encroaches on Manor of Fordham, committee appointed to maintain the rights of the Collegiate Church, (1724) 2217, 2221; member of the Coun- cil, (1725) 2241, 2722; continues encroachments on Manor of Ford- ham, 3614, 3725, 3727; offers £6000 for 1200 acres of the manor, (1759) 3737-38, 3748, 3760-61; fails to meet his obligations, (1766) 4067- 68, (1772) 4249
Morris, Colonel Lewis,ª receives from Governor Fletcher the Manor of Morrisania, (1697) 3452; proposes the founding of a college in New York, and suggests that the Queen's Farm, of 32 acres, should be given toward its establishment, (1703) 1516; allusion, 1519; will give the S. P. G. an account of the min- istry of Rev. John Brooks in the Jerseys, (1705) 1611; allusion, 1615; tells how Cornbury demeaned himself by dressing in women's clothes, 1711; endeavors to start an Anglican church at Harlem, for Dutch people, with Rev. Henricus Beys, for rector, (1709) 1452, 1743, 3454; writes to S. P. G. (Jan. 1, 1712) 1899; to John Chamber- layn, giving an account of Angli- can affairs, (Feb. 20, 1712) 1906; to S. P. G., giving his view of the origin of the ministry act of 1693, all dissenters (non-Anglicans) in the Assembly which enacted that act, excepting one, loose wording
Morris, Colonel Lewis - (continued) of the bill, allusions to Rev. Poyer, (Feb. 20, 1712) 1909-12; allusions, 1615, 1683-84, 1751, 1951; chief justice of New York, his general character, 2622-24; removed from his chief justiceship, (1734) 2646; allusions, 2677, 2722, 2742 Morris, Roger, 4178
Morris, Colonel (Captain), William, 989, 999, 1134-35, 1139, 1148, 1177-
78, 1180-81, 1312, 1322, 1326, 1573 Morrisania Manor, 3452 Morrisen, Symon, 188
Morrison, Donald, 3804 Morten, Richard, 1788
Mosbach, Palatinate, 1602
Moscow, Russia, forms of calls and instructions of ministers going to, (1636) 92-95, 100-3, 128, 706-7 Moss, Dr, 1787
Mott, Rev., a Moravian minister in New England, 2852
Mott, Rev. Edmund, chaplain to the British forces (1696-1704), died,
(1704) 1668-69, 1508, 1583, 11726 Mott, John, 1326
Mouchin, Baron de, 1822
Mouckton, Mr, see Monckton, Robert, commissioner of Trade and Planta- tions
Moulinaars (Molinaar), Rev. Jean Joseph Brumold, last preacher in French, at New Paltz, (1726-41) 3209; allusions, 2236, 2240, 2294, 2296-97, 2300
Mount Johnson, 3401
Mountague, Mr, 1437
Mountain, Rt. Rev. [George], bishop of London, (1642) 170 Mountfort, Benjamin, 1174
a He was born 1671 at Morrisania, died at Kingsbury, N. J., 1746. His father settled on a farm of 3000 acres near Harlem. He became a judge of the New Jersey Superior Court in 1692, and a member of the Council, was subsequently an active member of the Assembly, drew up the charges against Cornbury, was for several years chief justice of New York and New Jersey, state councillor, 1710-38 ; acting governor, 1731; governor of New Jersey, 1738-46; brought about the sepa- ration of the governments of New York and New Jersey, 1738. Among his grand- sons were Staats, a general in the British army, and an M. P .; Richard, Judge in the New York Vice Admiralty Court; afterward chief justice; died 1810; Gouv- erneur : lived at Morrisania; in the Provincial Congress of 1775; in the conti- nental Congress.
b He is one of the two nameless Episcopal ministers alluded to, (1696) 1172. The other is Symon Smith.
269
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS
Mountfort. See also Montfoort
Mourcourtius, Rev. Joannes, 110, 189,
190, 210, 455, 462, 468, 526
Mourin, P., 1322
Mouvlourt, Rev. John, 455 [A mis- print for Mourcourt]
Mowers, Henry, 4365
Moyon, G., 1322
Moyro, Rev., see Morpo, Rev.
Muirson, Rev. George, rector of a free Latin school in New York, (1704) 1552; goes to England for holy orders, 1552; minister at Rye and Bedford, (1705-8) 1611-13; cares for neighboring churches also, 1614; authorized to baptize in Con- necticut, (1706) 1635; letter to the Anglican Society about his parish, (1708) 1695-97; the An- glican ministers write to the bishop of London in behalf of his widow, (1709) 1809
Mulatto slaves, 1673, 1710
Mulford, Rev. Henry DuBois, 1761
Mulford, Samuel, 927
Muller, Cornelis, 3955, 3959
Muller Johannes, 3913
Muller, Philip, 3901 Mullerius, Rev. Nicholas, 371
Mumpsen (Mompsen, Mompesson), justice in Queens county, 1690, 1714, 1805, 1865, 1873, 1902, 1905, 1913
Munnik, Evert Willemsen, 574 Munro, Rev. Harry, 4118, 4173 Munster, treaty of, 1783, 1821 Mupa, Christian, 101
Murder, penalty of, 1710
Murfie, Aris, deacon of Flatbush, L. I., 3331
Murphy, Hon. Henry C., 22, 49, 827, 865, 868, 871, 876, 1006, 1041, 3456 Murray, Joseph, 2241, 2847, 2851-52, 2861, 3017, 3057, 3478, 3508, 3544, 3554
Muscovy, 184, 635, 1072. See also Moscow
Music, instrumental, (1703) 1519- 20
Musical type, 3921-22, 4010, 4031
Muskeeta's Kill, 1138
Mussart, Captain, 3739
Mussart, Toussaint, 310 Musy, Abraham, 2534
Muzelius (Mutzelius), Frederick,
holds favorable views of a coetus, (1737) 2687; changes his opinion, 2689; unites with others in writing to classis against a coetus, 2691- 94; allusions, 2710, 2712-13, 2716, 2727-29, 2753; with others, writes to classis, (Apr. 14/25, 1743) 2798-2800; response of classis, (Oct. 29, 1743) 2825, 2828; writes to classis, (Apr. 11/22, 1744) 2835; allusions, 2911, 2973, 2975; con- tinued opposition to the coetus, (1747) 2981; letter of classis to him, 2985-86, 2999; allusions, 3028, 3033, 3037, 3055; his church com- plains of his habits, (1749) 3057; classis writes to him, 3059, 3062- 64, 3067, 3071-72; allusions as to his habits and disciplinary meas- ures, 3087, 3092, 3099, 3101, 3119, 3126, 3133-34, 3140, 3158, 3177, 3236, 3246, 3288-89, 3329, 3336- 38, 3341, 3348-49, 3371, 3375, 3413- 17, 3466, 3472
Myer, Andrew, 3830 Myer. See also Meyer
Myles, Rev. Samuel, Anglican min- ister at Boston, 1174-75, 1335, (1709) 1809, 2096; gives an excel- lent certificate to Rev. William Ve- sey, when visiting England, (1714) 2053
Mynard, Samuel, 998
Mynders, Birgert, see Meynders, Bur- ger
Mynderse, Fredrick, 1608
Mynderse (misprinted Wynderse), [Jacobus], member of New York Assembly, (1770) 4176 Mynot, Abraham, 1197
Naam-Register, 4279 Naerden, Holland, 2346 Nagel, John, 3236, 3416
270
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Nagel (Nget), Philip, 2804-5, 2894, 2899, 3023-24, 3027, 3074, 3080,
3101-2, 3176, 3178, 3187-90, 3250, 3331, 3420, 3437, 3444, 3473
Nagel, William, 4243, 4246 Names, latinized in Holland, 1289
Namur, Belgium, 36
Nancy, France, 921, 924, 928
Nanfan, Captain, 1441-42, (1701) 1592; lieutenant Governor of New York, 3452
Nantz, revocation of edict of, 2239
Napanoch (Wawarsing), N. Y., 3562, 3709
Narisch (Naris, Norris), Pa., 2984, 2990
Narragansett, 1795, 3735
Nash, Stephen P., prepares history of the title of the Trinity Church property, 1518
Nassau, John Maurice, count of, governor of Dutch Brazil, 41; writes for eight Reformed minis- ters, 42, 109
Nassau-Dillenburg, 3687
Nassau island, Long island so called in honor of William III, 1066, 1118, 1121, 1132, 1227, 1245, 1315, 1333, 1573, 1579, 1608, 1713-14, 1721- 22, 1799, 1800, 1846, 2738, 2744, 2803
National Synod, (1619) 4221. See also General synod
Natural ministers (unregenerate), 2354, 2842, 2883-84, 2891
Natural people, 2354
Naturalizing foreign Protestants, in England, (Feb., Mar. 1709) 1724- 32, 1752, 1821, 1823, 1832; repeal of the bill, 1833-34; in Holland, (1709) 1776, 1830; in New York, (1711) 1878, (1712) 1964, (1715) 2094, (1769) 4149-50 Natural religion, 4323
Naudain, André, 1864
Nauty (Neuty, Menty), see Menz Navarre, 1784
Navesink, N. J., 2462, 2466, 2506, 2509, 2513, 2536, 2554, 2557, 2570, 2574, 2578, 2583, 3547
Navigation act, 532
Navy, 103 105, 281
Nawenzinks, see Neversink
Nayack (Nyack), L. I., near Fort Hamilton, 303
Nazareth, Pa., 2746
Neau, Elias, an elder in the French church, and catechist among the negroes and Indians, (1703) 1528, 1559; conforms to the Church of England, (Oct. 1704) 1452, 1559, 1609, 1613; appointed catechist in Trinity Church, (Aug. 4, 1704), 1949-50; his successful labors, (1704-23) 1452; died, (1723) 2231; allusions, 1695, 1699, 1906, 2357
Neauline, E., 3120
Neder-Veluwe, province of Gelder- land, Holland, classis of, 3159-60, 3165, 3180, 3182-84, 3195, 3204-6, 3237-38, 3240-41, 3245, 3256, 3258- 62, 3264-65, 3270, 3277, 3291, 3306, 3374
Neering, Henry, organ maker, (1703) 1520
Nees, Frederick, 1813
Nefius, see Nevius
Negro conspiracy to burn New York, (1741) 2757-58, 2763-64, 2906 Negro-English, 2953, 3109, 3110 Negro, given to the Collegiate Church in payment of a debt, (1770) 4184 Negroes, give better hopes of con- version than Indians, (1641) 142, 150; a teacher found for the ne- groes in Brazil, (1645) 191, 243; 40 negroes at Stuyvesant's Bou- werie, instructed by Domine Selyns, (1660) 488-89; are to be baptized only on a proper confession of their faith, the children of heathen not to be baptized, (1661) 508; Selyns, slow to baptize the children of the negroes, (1664) 548; allu- sions, 554, 954, 1034; about 1500 negroes in New York City, taught by Elias Neau, not a few baptized by Rev. Mr Vesey in Trinity Church, (1705) 1609, 1613; an act
271
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS
Negroes (continued)
to encourage the baptism of negro, Indian and mulatto slaves, (1706) 1673; their deplorable condition, (1710) 1609; Colonel Heathcote's negroes at Rye, (1710), 1695; their conspiracies, (1712) 1609, 1949, 2336-37; slaves in the city, (1726) 2357; conversion of, 2993, 3045 Nelson, Mr, 1069, 1739, 1741 Nelson, William, 2244
Nertunius, Rev., (Lutheran), 395 Nesaquake, L. I., 578
Nesbitt, Rev. James, 4047
Neshaminy (Shaminy, Schemmeny), Pa. 2701, 2735, 2904, 3628, 3653
Neshanic (Nechanic, New Shannock, Shannick), N. J., 3719, 3827, 4211, 4243, 4246, (1784) 4318, (1800), 4390
Nesser, Mr, 1963 Netherlands, The, 558
Netherlands confession of faith, 465, 467 Neubert, J., 1662
Neuburg, in the Palatinate, see New- burgh
Neversink (Naversinks), 636, 967, 2686, 2703-4, 2708, 2916, 3603 Neville, Dr John, 1864 Neville, Richard, 1724, 1752, 1832 Nevius, David, elder at Six Mile Run, (1735) 2668, 3382 Nevius genealogy, 573 Nevius, Joannes, 418, 557, 565, 573 Nevius, Rev. John, 573 Nevius, Rev. Mathias, 573 Nevius, Mathias, jr, 573
Nevius (Nevijus), Peter, 1713, 1723, 1797-98, 1806
Nevius, Peter, elder, 2708
Nevius (Nefius, Neefius, Nevyus), Roelof, elder on the Raritan, 2204, 2256, 2595, 2639-40
New Albany, see Albany
New Amersfoort (Amersfort, Ames- foort), (1703) 1522, 1539, 1544, 1579, 1622, 1634, 1644, 1662, 1765, 1929, 1935, 1973-90, 1994, 2012, 2084
New Amstel (South River), Dela- ware, colony of, 458, 529, 530, 533, (1680) 753, 782, 976. See also
South River New Amstel, a ship, 458
New Amsterdam, church of, see Col- legiate Church
New Amsterdam, city of, (Manhat- tan), its first settlement, 37; its directors and directors general, see names of May, Verhulst, Minuit, Krol, Van Twiller, Kieft, Stuyves- ant; remonstrance of the people against its form of government, (1649) 254-60, 285-86; prayer at the opening of the court, (1653) 314-15; plan and sketch of, (1660) 492, 495; fears for its safety, (Aug. 4, 1664) 551-53; remonstrance of the people against resistance, 555- 57; articles of capitulation, 557- 59; English policy in its capture, 559-60; the oath of allegiance to Great Britain, 563-64; action in Holland, 565-67; the fidelity of Stuyvesant, 573-74; displeasure of the West India Company, 574; Stuyvesant's report on the surren- der, 575-77; answer of the com- pany, 584-86, 876. See also New York
New Barbadoes, 2330-31, 2359, 4086. See also Hacensack
New Bohemia, Md., 871, 876, 958, 1053, 1232
New Born, The, 2429
New Brunswick, N. J., allusions to, 2740, 3003, 3382-84, 3547, 3598, 3705, 3762, 4269-70, 4274, 4320, 4322, 4327; Archives of the General Synod R. C. A., at, 22, 73, 2639- 40, 2656; Dutch church of, see Frelinghuysen, Rev. T. J., first pas- tor; Rev. Leydt called to, 3027, 3035, 3043, 3132, 3176, 4243, 4246, (1784) 4318, (1800) 4390; Par- ticular Assembly, (or Classis) of, (1771) 4213, 4253, (1784), 4318; assumes the name of classis, (1784) 4322, 4327, 4362, (1800) 4384
272
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
New Brunswick, N. J., Presbytery of, (1738) 2717, 2746
New Brunswick, N. J., Anglican church of, Rev. Cutting, rector of, (1764-66) 3997, 4211, 4256, 4265- 66, (1776) 4295, 4300, (1780) 4306, 4312-14; Episcopal Confer- ence at, (1784) 4325
New Castle, Delaware, 778, 823-24, 830-33, 849, 853, 854, 867-68, 876, 882, 959, 969, 1042, 1045, 1053, 1061, 1093, 1134, 1991, (1776) 4290. See also South River
New Castle, John, duke of, 1787 Newcastle, [Thomas Pelham Holles,
4th] duke of, 2673, 2680, 2757-59, 2763-64, 2934
New Castle, Presbytery of, 2746
New church, suggested for New York City, (1726) a
Newdigall, Sergeant, 509
New Dorp, or New Village, at the Esopus, 597. See also Hurley, Mar- bletown
New England, each town at once builds a fine church, (1642) 164; desires to receive the exiles and the poor children and orphans from the persecuted churches of Ireland and England, (1643) 169, 170; its people tax themselves for the sup- port of ministers and teachers, (1650) 285; appoint their own magistrates, (1653) 318; the Dutch ministers desire English-speaking ministers for the English villages on Long Island, but especially for those who are free from independ- ent and other New England no- tions, (1660) 470; proposed condi- tions under which New Englanders may settle in New Netherland, (1662) 518-20, 523-24; secret in- structions to Colonel Nicolls, as to religion, in his mission to New Eng- land, (1664) 544; New England
New England (continued)
willing to help Colonel Nicolls in his expedition against New Nether- land, (1664) 565-67; allusions, 882, 894, 908, 922, 954-55, 973, 985-87, 993, 1008, 1043, 1096, 1125, 1170, 1172, 1188, 1382; suggested as a home for the Palatines, (1709) 1789, 1828; allusions, 1430, 1670, 1910, 2015, 2564; name used, as if including New York, 2765, 3059, 3104; fanaticism of, 3909- 10
New Flushing, see Flushing New Forest, The, England, 1437
New Hackensack, N .. Y., 3949-50, 3972; calls Rysdyck, (1765) 3983- 84, 3989, 4069-70, 4284, (1784) 4318, 4383, (1800) 4388
New Haerlem (Harlem), see Harlem, N. Y.
New Hampshire, 1222, 1744, 3736; grants of land in, (1767) 4090-91 New Hanover, Pa., 3882
New Harlem (Fonda's Bush), N. Y., (1800) 4389
New Haven, certain parties from, seek conditions of settlement in New Netherland, (1662) 518, 520, 2564, 2572, 2580, 2602, 2605, 2610-11, 2800, 2966; Anglican church at, 3502-4 (1754)
New Hempstead (Kakiat, Clarks- town), N. Y., 3133, 4243, 4246, (1784) 4318, 4383, (1800) 4391 New Hurley, N. Y., 4243, 4247, (1784) 4318, 4383, (1800) 4388 New Jamaica, see Jamaica
New Jersey, (New Yarsey), sold to Berkeley and Carteret, (1664) 542; their "Concessions and Agree- ments " with settlers, (1665) 569- 70; general freedom of conscience allowed by the restored Dutch gov- ernment, (1673) 631-32; English government restored, (1674) 648;
a" New Church," a name for a long time applied to the Middle Church on Nassau street ; only occasionally to the North Church on Fulton street; also yet occasionally to the Middle Church, after the North Church had been built, 4180-81, see Middle Dutch Church.
273
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS
New Jersey (continued)
allusions, 876, 954, 971, 977, 987, 996, 1009, 1024, 1037, 1099, 1125, 1171, 1222, 1262; Anglican church in, (1699) 1321, 1330; state of re- ligion in, 1427, 1430, 1438; sur- render of the Proprietors to the Crown, (1702) 1593; Assembly of, said to be opposed to the queen's government, (1707) 1683; reasons alleged by Cornbury, of emigration to, from Long Island, (1708) 1707- 9; allusions, 1527, 1670; half of the Assembly, Quakers, (1709) 1767; allusions, 1950-51, 1992, 2506; census of, (1726) 2336-37; synodical report on, (1763) 3883- 86, 3943-44, (1768) 4128-30, 4168, 4213-14, (1772) 4250, 4252, 4264; church charters in, (1775) 4287, (1776) 4294 (1779) 4304, (1785) 4330-31, (1787) 4343-44
New Kirk, Benjamin, 4040
New Kirk. See also Nieuwkerk
New Lights, 3072, 4058 New London, Ct., 3614, 3642
New Millstone, see Millstone, N. J.
New Netherland, a ship, 37 New Netherland, discovery of, (1609)
255; by what ecclesiastical bodies to be governed, (1624) 38, 39; di- rectors May and Verhulst, (1624- 26) 37; directors general Minuit [and Krol],« (1626-31) 43-83; the first minister, Michaëlius, (1628- 31) 48-68; patroonships, (1629) 75; arrival of Van Twiller and Bo- gardus, (1633) 84; the States- General urge the more rapid colon- ization of, (1638) 115; proposed articles for, (1638) 120-21, but not adopted; arrival of Kieft, (1638) 114; its religious condition neglected by the West India Com- pany, 115; conditions for English settlers, (1641) 137-38; Patroon Van Rensselaer sends a minister [Megapolensis] with colonists for
New Netherland (continued)
Rensselaerwyck, (1642) 153-58; Kieft builds the church, at Man- hattan, in the fort, (1642) 163- 66; Jesuit missionaries in central New York, (1642-43) 166-69; re- view of New Netherland's history, (1614-39) 187-88; the Indian war, (1643) 213-14, 256-58, 285; thanksgiving for peace, (1645) 192; further review of the history, (1641-46) 212-15; resolutions of the company concerning, 193-94, 196; events connected with the coming of Stuyvesant, (1647) 216- 18, 224-25; condition of, 575; res- ignation of Domine Bogardus, death of Bogardus and Kieft by shipwreck, 228-29; Flushing peti- tions Stuyesant for a minister, 226; Domine Megapolensis re- moves to Manhattan, (1649) 244, 253-54, 262, 268-71, 278; cause of the decline of, 256-59, 266-70, 275- 76, 284-86; its religious condition, (1650) 270; Dutch settlements on Long Island, Flatbush and New- town, (1652) 314, 330-33; religious condition, (1656), 341; surrender to the English, (1664) 555-60, 564-67, 574, 584-86, 1591; its re- conquest by the Dutch, (1673) 628; petition to the States-General as to the means of prosperity, 635- 36; consists of three cities and thirty villages, (1673) 630, 635, 640, 649-50, 659; to be restored to England, (1674) 644-45, 1591; petition against the division into New York and New Jersey, (1692) 1041; review of the history, (1702) 1591-93
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