Ecclesiastical records, state of New York, Volume VII, Index, Part 6

Author: New York (State). State Historian. cn; Hastings, Hugh, 1856-1916. cn; Corwin, Edward Tanjore, 1834-1914, ed. cn; Holden, James Austin, 1861-
Publication date: 1901
Publisher: Albany, J. B. Lyon, state printer
Number of Pages: 402


USA > New York > Ecclesiastical records, state of New York, Volume VII, Index > Part 6


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Amsterdam, Classis of, correspond- ence of (continued)


York, plan for the induction of an English-speaking minister, (May 6, 1763) 3859-61; Rev. William Jackson, (Apr. 11, 1763) 3868-69, 3879; Rev. R. Wildrick of Curaçoa, (May 2, 1763) 3870-71; the Consistory of New York, (May 6, 1763) 3873; the coetus [or American Classis], (Oct. 3, 1763) 3893- 95, 3960, 3963, 3991; the con- ferentie, (Oct. 3, 1763) 3895- 97, 3920, 3927, 3973; Rev. John Ritzema, (Oct. 3, 1763) 3897- 98; the opponents of Rev. Archi- bald Laidlie, (Oct. 3, 1763) 3898-99; the conferentie, (Apr. 2, 1764) 3920; Rev. Lambertus DeRonde, (June 4, 1764) 3923, 3967; the Consistory of New York, (June 4, 1764) 3923; the conferentie, (Feb. 4, 1765) 3972- 74, 4004; Rev. Archibald Laid- lie, (Feb. 4, 1765) 3974-75, 4030; Rev. L. DeRonde, (Feb. 4, 1765) 3975, 4004, 4062; the so- called coetus . [or American Classis], (June 3, 1765) 3991- 96, 4008, 4011, 4049; Rev. John Ritzema, (May 23, 1765) 4011; the conferentie, (Apr. 7, 1766) 4049-53; Rev. Archibald Laidlie, (Apr. 7, 1766) 4053-56; certain members of the Consistory of New York city, (Apr. 7, 1766) 4056-58, 4081, 4086; Rev. War- moldus Kuypers, (June 2, 1766) 4061; Rev. Isaac Rysdyck, (Oct. 6, 1766) 4070, 4080; the con- ferentie, (Apr. 6, 1767) 4086- 87, 4101, 4102; Rev. Warmoldus Kuypers, (Apr. 3, 1768) 4087; the Consistory of Curacoa, (Sept. 1707) 4100; the members of the Consistory of New York, (Nov. 28, 1767) 4108; Revs. Fryen- moet, Kok and Rysdyck, (Nov. 28, 1767) 4109; the Convention


52


THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK


Amsterdam, Classis of, correspond- ence of (continued)


of Kingston, (Nov. 28, 1767) 4109-10; the Chartered [Mis- sionary] Society for Surinam, (Mar. 25, 1768) 4112-13; Rev. John Michael Kern, (Apr. 11, 1768) 4117; the members who call themselves "The Confer- entie," (June 6, 1768) 4126, 4140; the coetus [or American Classis], (June 6, 1768) 4133, 4153; the Coetus of New York, (Oct. 3, 1768) 4133-35, 4153; the Conferentie of New York, (Oct. 3, 1768) 4135, 4140, 4154; the conferentie, (Apr. 3, 1769) 4147; the coetus [or American Classis], to the Conferentie, and to the Consistory of New York, (Sept. 4, 1769) 4169, (Jan. 9, 1770) 4175, 4195, 4196; Mr Cornelius Klopper, (Jan. 9, 1770) 4175, 4197; the Consistory of New York, (Jan. 8, 1771) 4194-95, 4205, 4227; the coetus [or American Classis] of New York, (Jan. 8, 1771) 4196-97, 4200, 4226; the conferentie, (Jan. 8, 1771) 4197-98, 4200, 4226; the Consistory of Kings- ton, (July 21, 1771) 4204, 4230; the general convention of New York, ratifying the Articles of Union, (Jan. 14, 1772) 4235-36, 4248, 4258; the Consistory of New York, (Jan. 14, 1772) 4237-38, 4240; the general con- vention of New York, (June 1, 1772) 4241, 4254; the assembly of Dutch Reformed churches in New York and New Jersey, (Jan. 12, 1773) 4258-59, (Apr. 11, 1774) 4274-75, (Dec. 18, 1773) 4281; the general meeting of Dutch Reformed churches in New York and New Jersey, (June 15, 1774) 4278-79, (Oct. 12, 1775) 4289; the ecclesiastical assembly of New York and New Jersey.


Amsterdam, Classis of, correspond- ence of (continued)


(July 21, 1783) 4311, 4321, 4325, 4330, 4338, (Jan. 10, 1786), 4337, 4341, 4342; the Rev. church assembly of New York and New Jersey, (Apr. 2, 1787) 4342, 4344, 4345, 4347 Amsterdam, English Presbyterian church of, (1643) 178; gives ex- cellent credentials to Domine Drisius, (1652) 305; its pastor, Rev. David Thompson, secured large sums in England for the benefit of the German churches in Pennsylvania, (1753) 3405, (1763) 3859, 4147, 4189


Amsterdam, Montgomery county, N. Y., 1245, 4383, 4389


Amsterdam in New Netherland, see New Amsterdam


Amwell (Amwyl), N. J., wants a pastor, (1761) 3808-9; Rev. C. P. Stapel ordained and sent, 3809, 3828, 3882-83, 3919-20, 4038; Dallicker settled at, (1769) 4167 Amy, Mr, 1837


Anabaptists (Mennonites), 300, 318, 552, 709, 880, 1893, 2015, 2114; a meetinghouse in New York (1715- 20) 2187, 2429, 2820, 2888, 3354, 3427, 3904, 4159


Ancram (Ancrum), Scotland, 331, 530


Anderissen, Dirk, 1526


Anderson, Alexander, 4276


Anderson, George, 2329, 2478


Anderson, Rev. James, first settled Presbyterian pastor in New York City, (1717) 1672, 2173-75, 4047 Anderson, James S. M., gives an ac- count of Indian missions in New York, (1701-9) 1443 Anderson, Rev. Jedediah, 878-79


Anderson, William, (1699) 1312,


1322, 1326, (1714) 2026


Andiatorocte lake (Lake George), 214 Andresen, Claes, 673


Andrews, Rev. Jedediah, 1671, 2519, 2684


53


ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS


Andrews, Rev. William, Anglican missionary to the Mohawks, (1712) 1968-69, 1972, 1993


Andrews, Rev. William, first Angli- can pastor at Schenectady, (1762- 73) 3813, 4174


Andrews. See also Andros Andrichomus, Christian, 155


Andries (Anderiesse), Barent, 3662, 3733


Andries, Gertruy, 501


Andries, Samuel, 497, 499


Andriesse, Luycas, 643


Andriessen, Andries, 2329 Andriessen, Cornelis, 128


Andriessen, Juriaen, 308 Andriessen, Lourens, 632


Andriestown, Canada, 4383, 4390 Andros (Andross, Andrews), Sir Ed- mund, governor of New York, (1674-83), commission and instruc- tions, 648; arrival, 720; his ad- ministration, 663-862, 1592; com- mittee to welcome him, 663; gives a pass to Rev. Arensius to go to Albany to officiate as Lutheran pastor, 663; confirms all previously existing rights, 663-64; certain parties petition him for 4000 acres at the Falls of the Delaware, (1674, not 1672 as printed) 627; Lutherans of New York petition him concerning noncontributors, 664; inhabitants of Hempstead petition him for a minister, 665; the Dutch burghers of New York object to the form of the oath, 669-72; the Lutherans of New Castle petition him to ratify their grant of land and confirm to them their ministers, Laers and Fabri- tius, (1675) 672-73; Rev. Fab- ritius cited before the governor for riotous conduct, other objections to him, is suspended, 674-77; must not be too severe on the Dutch burghers who objected to form of the oath, 677; Domine Van Nieu- wenhuysen summoned before the governor in reference to his oppo- sition to the claims of Rev. Nicho-


Andros (Andross, Andrews, Sir Ed- mund (continued)


las Van Rensselaer, (1675) 678- 82, 684-86; inhabitants of Esopus petition the governor for a min- ister, would like Tesschenmacher, (1676) 683-84; inhabitants of Huntington, L. I. petition the governor to prevent Quakers from disturbing them in their worship, and to regulate church rates, 691- 92, 708; petition of the three villages of Kingston, Hurley and Marbletown to be permitted to call a minister, granted, 697-99; allusions, 700-1; proposals from the East and North Ridings of Long Island for the general sup- port of ministers and schoolmas- ters, 705; report on religion in the colonies, (1678) 708-9; the gov- ernor visits England, and returns with Chaplain Wolley, 720; is in- formed of a Quaker meeting at Hempstead, 723; the governor re- quests and authorizes any three of the ministers of the province to examine and ordain Tesschenma- cher as minister at New Castle, 724-26, 730-32, 734, 737; orders the overseers at Brooklyn to assist in building a parsonage at Flatbush, 737; the church of Esopus informs the governor that they intend to call a minister from Europe, 748, 784; he approves their call, 750, 784; recalled, 779, returns as governor of New Eng- land, New York and New Jersey, commission and instructions, (1688) 954-55, 999; is informed of the Revolution in New York by Van Cortlandt, Bayard and others, (1689) 967-68, 981, 995-97; his own account of his administration and deposition by the people of Boston, 999-1000; allusions, 846, 935, 944, 956, 958, 962, 969, 970, 972, 974, 976-79, 982-84, 985-89, 989-90, 1069, 1248, 1283, 1290, 1421, 1572, 3209


54


THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK


Andross, Lauwerens, 664


Anglican chapel in the fort, the Dutch abandon their old church- building in the fort to the sole use of the Anglican chaplain [Rev. John Miller, 1692-95], committee appointed to report on rebuilding, (1693) 1074; the old Dutch church in the fort, destroyed; Governor Fletcher asks for an appropriation to build an Anglican chapel in its place, (Dec. 1693) 1090-91; the king also orders the erection of such & chapel, appropriation again asked for it, (Oct. 1694) 1091; Assembly evades the matter, the contractor petitions for his money, (Mar. 1695) 1113; Assembly is again asked for an appropriation, refused, (1696) 1135; allusion to, (1699) 1311; referred to, as if an organized church, by Selyns, (1696) 1172, (1708) 1705; such view opposed by Vesey, (1712) 1914, 1918, 2016-19; burning of the fort and chapel, (1741) 2751, 2757-59, 2763-64 [chapel not re- built ]


Anglican chaplains« in New York, names unknown, (1664-78) 2016; allusion to such chaplains, (Apr. 1678) 709, 1311; Rev. Charles Wolley, (Aug. 1678-80) 711, 720, 743, 744; no chaplain, (1681) 779; Rev. John Gordon, (1683-84) 867, 877; [Governor Dongan's Catholic chaplains, 877]; · Rev. Josias Clarke, (1684-86) 877, 880, 893; Rev. Alexander Innes, (1686) 877, 915, 1508; Rev. John Miller, (1692-95) 1037, 1097, 1132b; Rev. Symon Smith, (1696-1700) 1175, 1334, 1393-94, 1440; Rev. Ed- mund Mott, (1696-1704) 1444, 1668-69; Rev. John Peter Brisac, (1701) 1444, 1669; Rev. John


Anglican chaplains in New York (continued)


Sharpe, (1704-17) 1444, 1583, 1669, 1807, 1809, 1895, 1921; Rev. Robert Jenney, (1717-22) 2215; Rev. James Orem, (1724) 2215 Anglican chaplains outside of New York, Rev. James Honeyman, (1704) 1557-58; Rev. Robert Jenney, in Royal Navy, (1710-14), in Philadelphia, (1714-15), in New York, (1717-22) 2215


Anglican church, in general, see Anglican chaplains, allusion to, 30, conditions under which an Angli- can minister may officiate in a Dutch church, (1675) 680-81, 685; no Anglican church yet in New England, New York or New Jersey, (1678) 709c; an Angli- can chaplain may reside in Penn- sylvania if twenty inhabitants 80 desire, (1681) 759; attempt to establish the Anglican church in four counties of New York, by a ministry bill, (1693), see Minis- terial maintenance bill; Trinity Church, efforts to extend, (1683) 849; only a chaplain for the troops in New York, (1684) 879, see Hepburne; royal instructions as to religion, (1686) 915; commis- sioners appointed to prepare such instructions, (1686) 926; instruc- tions to Sloughter, (1689) 991; Anglican services in Boston, 999, 2882; in Philadelphia, 2882; in- structions to Fletcher, (1692) 1033-34; Selyns's allusion to Anglican services in New York, (1696) 1172, see Vesey, Rev. Wil- liam; instructions to Bellomont, (1697) 1213; review, 1311-13; in New Jersey, 1321, 1438; allusions, 754, 779, 783, 986-87, 981, 1054, 1170, 1222, 1225, 1346, 1441-42;


a These chaplains sometimes itinerated to distant places -"Boston and Philadelphia.


b For warrant to pay a chaplain in New York for two foot companies, (1690) 992.


e The one church of England alluded to in this report, refers'only to the Anglican chapla Rev. Charles Wolley.


:


55


ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS


Anglican church (continued)


founding in London, of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, (1701) 1468; pe- tition from Eastchester, N. Y. for an Anglican church, (1701) 1486; Anglican churches established at Jamaica, L. I., Burlington and Elizabethtown, N. J .; convention of Anglican ministers, their names, (1702) 1507-9; attempt to estab- lish an Anglican church in Kings- ton, N. Y., (1704) 1478, see Hep- burne; the Anglican church on Long Island, (1704) 1557, (1705) 1585- 90; Neau's attempt to form a ministerial society in New York of the Anglican, Dutch and French ministers, (1704) 1559-60; general account of the Anglican and other churches in New York, by counties, (1704) 1551-55; Colonel Heath- cote suggests four quarterly


meetings for the Anglicans, (1704) 1560; opposition to the Anglican church in Westchester county and on Long Island, (1705) 1587-89; Cornbury's general review of ec- clesiastical affairs, (1705) 1591- 93; Colonel Heathcote's general re- view of Anglican affairs, (1705)


1609-15; an Anglican church at Stratford, Ct., (1706) 1635; oppo- sition to, in Pennsylvania, (1707)


1683; in Westchester county and on Long Island, (1707) 1690; ob- servations of the Bishop of London regarding a Suffragan for America, (1707) 1690-91; an Anglican church at Rye, N. Y., continued op- position in Westchester county, (1708) 1695-97; Trinity church loans money to build a church at Stratford, Ct., (1708) 1698; the state of the church, (1708) 1704; attempt to found an Anglican


church among the Dutch at Har- lem, (1709) 1743, see Beys; the French church at New Rochelle conforms, (1709) 1750-51; rebuilds


Anglican church (continued)


1864; receives a charter, (1711) 1891; Trinity Church informs the Archbishop of Canterbury that only three counties will receive an Anglican minister, (1709) 1768; Anglican ministers write to the bishop of London in behalf of two ministerial widows, (1709) 1809; an Anglican minister to be sought to accompany the Palatines to America, (1709) 1811, 1871; John Frederick Haegar ordained in Eng- land for this purpose, (1709) 1816-17; Rector Barclay's account of the Anglican church in America, (1710) 1866-68; induction of Rev. Thomas Bridge at Rye, (1710) 1870; memorial of the clergy to the Bishop of London relating to af- fairs at Jamaica, L. I., (Nov. 1711) 1892-96; correspondence of Colonels Heathcote and Morris with the Society for Propagating the Faith, concerning the condi- tion and necessities of the Angli- can church in New York and New Jersey, (1712) 1899-1915; the pre- carious foundation of the Angli- can church on the ministry bill of 1693, (1712) 1920; representations of Rev. Jacob Henderson as to the Anglican church, called to account therefor, (1712) 1951, (1713) 1991-92; only four Anglican ministers in New Jersey, (1712) 1950; right of appeal of an Angli- can church allowed, to a higher court or to the Crown, although the amount be small, (1712-13) 1963-64, 1971, 1991; state of the church described by the friends of Governor Hunter, (1714) 2014-19; not greatly advanced in America, (1721) 2186; the Anglican church succeeds to the glebe lands of the Lutherans, at Newburgh, (1751)


3171-73, 3218-20; William ·Liv- ingston appeals to the Anglican church as well as the other


56


THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK


Anglican church (continued)


churches, against a sectarian col- lege, (1753) 3366-67; Livings- ton's arguments that the church of England was never established in New York, (1753) 3427-32; op- position to the Anglican church in connection with the founding of Kings College, (1754, 1755) 3457, 3481, 3612; church of Jamaica pe- titions for a charter, (1761) 3805- 6; building a parsonage at New Rochelle, 3810; church at Schenec- tady, 3813; Rev. Dr Samuel John- son describes condition of Anglican church, (1762) 3816-17; reply of Archbishop Secker, 3833-34; John- son to Secker, (Jan. 1763) 3841; Rev. Samuel Seabury to S. P. G., (Mar. 1763) 3863; Seçker to John- son, 3864-65; Johnson to Secker, (Aug. 1763) 3887-88; Secker to Johnson, (Sept. 1763) 3889-90; Sir William Johnson to the Lords of Trade, (Nov. 1763) 3901-2; Rev. Johnson to Secker, necessity of bishops, (Dec. 1763) 3909-10, see "St Paul's Church "; Sir William Johnson to the Lords of Trade; need of American bishops, (Jan. 1764) 3912; Rev. Samuel Seabury to S. P. G., (Mar. 1764) 3917, see "Kings College "; Sea- bury to S. P. G., (Oct. 1764) 3952; again, (June 1765) 3997; church of Schenectady desires a charter, (Dec. 1765) 4026; Sea- bury to S. P. G., (Apr. 1766) 4058; review of efforts for an episcopate in America, 4083-84; complaints of the S. P. G., rights of the Anglican church, (1767) 4090-92; Sir William Johnson to the Earl of Shelburne, Bishops in America, (Dec. 1767) 4110; Hon. William Livingston on bishops in America, (Mar. 1768) 4113-14; reply to Livingston by Rev. Samuel Cooper, (Apr. 1768) 4115- 16; church of Albany petitions for


Anglican church (continued) a charter, (May 1768) 4118; church of Newburgh petitions for a charter, (Nov. 1769) 4172, 4183; efforts to repeal the ministry act, or to secure other unsectarian legislation, (1770) 4176-79, 4193, 4199; inefficiency of the ministry act, lawsuits, (1770) 4180-81; Rev. Myles Cooper, 4186-88; Sir William Johnson and the Indians, (1770) 4187-88; lawsuits, (1771) 4231-34; condition of the Angli- can church in New York at the opening of the Revolution, (1776) 4289-90; during the Revolution, (1776-83) 4290-4300; Protestant Episcopal churches after the Revo- lution, conventions, election of bishops, (1784) 4325-27; allusions, 3813, 3908, 3911-12, 3969-70, 4077- 78, 4095, 4098-99, 4137-38, 4160, 4173-74, 4185-87; article 85, 4226 Anglican churches, 3936, (1776) 4289-90


Anglican controversy, (1762) 3833- 34; 3841


Anglican liturgy, not to be allowed in the Dutch churches, (1665) 575; fears concerning, 596; translated into Dutch, German and French, see Common prayer


Anglican ministers loyal to England, (1776) 4292


Anglican services, permitted in the Dutch church in the fort, being conducted by the Anglican chap- lains, (1664-93) 829; description of an Anglican service in the fort by the Labadist travelers, (1679) 711; services permitted in the Dutch church in Garden street during the completion of Trinity Church, (1696-97) 1172


Angola, Africa, 162, 182, 229


Ann street, New York, Christ Church, the second Episcopal church in the city, founded, 490


/ nnastogus, 1069


Anne, daughter of James II, 1013


57


ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS


Anne, Queen, proclaimed in New York, (1702) 1492; prohibits the giving of presents to governors or other civil officials, (1703) 1521; allows £20 for passage, to all mis- sionaries going to the plantations, (1704) 1556; gives the "Queen's Farm and Garden ", in Manhattan, to Trinity Church, (Nov. 20, 1705) 1517-18; the deed, 1507-98; allu- sions, 1780, 1785; her coronation day celebrated, (1706) 1618; sends the Palatines to New York, (1709) 2168-69; her great charity to the Palatines, 1796, 1814, 1821, 1825, 1832-41, 2168-69, 3171; defrays the expense of chaplains in the In- dian country (1711) 1891; orders the law suits, pending against Trinity Church, to stop, (1714) 2041-42, 3429; allusion, 1947 Anneke Jans (Annetje Jans, Mrs Everardus Bogardus), marries Rev. Everardus Bogardus, (1637 ?) 84, 216; her extensive possessions, 216-18, 1517; her children, 217, 218, 237-38; death of her second husband, (1647) 216, 217, 228, 229, 231, 232, 237, 243, 246, 247, 260, 1517; her removal to Albany, (1648 ?) 237, 1517; her poverty, 237, 238, 243, 246, 579; her death, (1663) 217; confirmation of her property to her heirs, (1667) 218; its sale to Governor Lovelace, (1670) 218, 1517; confiscated to the Duke of York, (1674) 668, 669, 1180, 1517; becomes the property of the Crown, (1685) 1517; is leased to various parties, (1685-97) 1496; is leased by Gov- ernor Fletcher to Trinity Church for seven years, (1697) 1516-18, 1704; lease annulled, (1699) 1496; lease renewed, (1702) 1496; the property given to Trinity Church by Queen Anne, (1705) 218, 1517- 18; first


lawsuit, concerning,


(1738) 2713-14


Annesbury (Annsburg), Dutchess


county, N. Y., 1896, 2062-63, 2093 Anseuvain, Zachary, 1864


Anslaer (Anselaar), Rev. Gulielmus, 975, 977


Antego, see Antigua, W. I.


Antes, Rev. Frederick, 2437, 2482, 2487


Anthology of New Netherland, 827, 865, 1006, 1041


Anthonides, Rev., a minister in Holland, (1644) 183


Anthonides. See also Antonides


Anthony (Antoni), Allard, 355, 361, 557, 563-64, 586, 621, 640


Anthony, Rev. Bernhardus, 660


("Anthony " is evidently a mistake for Arensius, which see)


Anthony, John, 4074


Anthony, Nicholas, 4262


Anti-Catholicism, letter of Megapo- lensis to Father LeMoyne,ª (1658) 427; the test act, (1691) 1012-13; act against Romish priests, (1700) 1368-70; allusions, (1701-1800) 1449-52, see Leisler


Anti-Leislerians, (1689-91) 963-68, 971-73, 977, 982-84, 995-98, 1041- 44, 1048-53, 1441 Antigua (Antego), W. I., 1703 Antill, Edward, 801 Antinomians, 3904-5


Anti-Roman legislation, (1700)


1013


Anti-Sabbatarians, 880


Antonides (Anthonides), Rev. Vin- centius, called to the churches of Kings county, L. I., (1704) 1577- 78, 1580; receives instructions from classis, 1588; departure for field of labor, 1594; his passage money, 1620, 1999; arrival; for- bidden by Cornbury to preach without a civil license, (Jan. 1, 1706) 1642, 1646; petitions Corn- bury to be allowed, 1621; finds Freeman occupying his field, 1622; consistory of Antonides makes written offers of peace to the Free-


a An edition of a hundred copies of this elaborate letter, in Latin and English, was published by the Collegiate Church in 1907. It makes an octavo pamphlet of twenty-two pages.


58


THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK


·


Antonides (Anthonides), Rev. Vin- centius (continued)


man party, (Jan. 28, 1706) 1622, 1647-50; his three congregations protest against an illegal election of a new consistory at New Utrecht by Freeman's party, (Feb. 15, 1706) 1625-30; An- tonides and DuBois suggest the propriety of a fraternal meeting of all the ministers once a year, 1655; finally allowed by the gov- ernor to officiate, (June 1706) 1667; is ordered by Cornbury to give up the church books to Free- man, (Jan. 3, 1706) 1608, [this passage misplaced in printed volume]; legal opinion as to the illegality of Cornbury's order, 1679; complains to classis of Freeman's conduct, (1707) 1681; informs classis that matters are improving slightly, (1707) 1697; allusions, 1607, 1615-16, 1618, 1625, 1630, 1636, 1638, 1657, 1662, 1699; his elders petition Governor Lovelace for protection from the intrusions of Freeman into their churches, and ask for a committee of investigation, (Jan. 21, 1709) 1713; committee appointed, 1714; classis rebukes Freeman, and ex- horts him to cease troubling An- tonides, (Feb. 4, 1709) 1715-16; classis urges DuBois to effect a re- conciliation between Artonides and Freeman, 1716-17; classis writes to Antonides, justifying him in his position, complains of Corn- bury's acts against the liberties of the Dutch church, requests An- tonides and his adherents to be conciliatory, refers to the remote- ness of an American Classis, 1718- 20; Freeman's party proposes terms of peace, wants all his claims to be acknowledged, and a new consistory from elements of each party elected, 1721; the friends of Antonides demand regularity in


Antonides (Anthonides), Rev. Vin- centius (continued)


all ecclesiastical proceedings, that civil licenses be condemned, that all parties subscribe to the regular church order, 1722-23; certain letters tampered with, 1723; An- tonides and DuBois write to classis, reviewing all the circumstances, the peaceable disposition of Antonides, the committee of investigation, the propositions of the two sides for peace, (June 21, 1709) 1755-60; Freeman also writes to classis, giv- ing his version of affairs, (June 28, 1709) 1762-67; allusions in classis to this correspondence, 1794- 95, 1797. The elders of Antonides petition Governor Ingoldsby to direct the committee of investi- gation formerly appointed, (1713- 14) to report, (Sept, 8, 1709) 1797-98; so ordered, 1798; the elders of Freeman petition for an order restraining An- tonides from appointing elders and deacons at Jamaica, (Sept. 19, 1709) 1798; the commit- tee of investigation present a ma- jority report, declaring that An- tonides is the regularly appointed minister in Kings county, (Sept. 15, 1709) 1799; complaint of Free- man's elders that Antonides had installed elders and deacons at Jamaica, contrary to the governor's orders, (Oct. 6, 1709) 1800-1; minority report of the committee of investigation, charging irregu- larities in the call of Antonides, and asserting that Freeman was the regular minister by a civil license, (Oct. 6, 1709) 1802-3; the ma- jority report accepted and the minority report rejected, (Oct. 20, 1709) 1805; the elders of Antonides petition that Antonides be de- clared. the only legal minister in Kings county, (Oct. 22, 1709) 1806; the elders of Freeman peti-


A


59


ECCLESIASTICAL RECORDS


Antonides (Anthonides), Rev. Vin- centius (continued)


tion that the governor finally de- clare officially his decision in the matter, (Oct. 27, 1709) 1806; the governor orders that Freeman and Antonides shall alternate in preach- ing in all the churches of Kings county, and shall share equally in the salary, and upon refusal to comply with his order shall be dis- missed, (Oct. 27, 1709) 1807; An- tonides, the regularly installed ecclesiastical minister, refused to comply with this arbitrary order of the governor, (Nov. 11, 1709) 1808-9; further allusions to the difficulties, 1842, 1846-47, 1854, 1857, 1866, 1873-75; Antonids's consistory petitions for a charter, (1711) 1885-86; caveat against, 1887; petition granted, [but char- ter not secured], 1887; further ref- erences to the difficulties between Antonides and Freeman, 1889-90, 1903, 1928, 1929, 1935-49, 1955- 60; Antonides's consistories write a letter to the classis reviewing all the circumstances, (Jan. 28, 1713) 1973-90; abstract of, 1994-97; ap- parent peace with Freeman, (1713) 1999-2012; classis writes to these consistories, urging peace, (Mar. 14, 1714) 2029-34, 2035-37; An- tonides is called to Kingston, de- clines the call, 2056; allusions, 2036, 2038, 2040-41; Antonides informs classis (July 23, 1714) that peace was established on New Year's Day, 2064-67; also writes to Rev. John Vander Hagen to same effect, 2067-68; Antonides and Freeman write a joint letter to classis of their reconciliation, (Feb. 11, 1715) 2083-86; allusions, 2312, 2319-20, 2327, 2335, 2353, 2362; letter to, from classis, (1726) 2356, 2402, 2416, 2426, 2438-39, 2461, 2479, 2483, 2485-87, 2506, 2559, 2589, 2606-7, 2655, 2692-94,




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