\ DISCOVERIES '_£o~7rom 1 492l o 1614 < r^ 'and the INDIAN NATIONS SCHOOL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES; FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT TIS3. BY BENSON J. LOSSING. ILLUSTRATED BY MAPS, AND OYER 200 OTHER ENGRAVINGS. NEW YORK: SHELDON & COMPANY, No. 8 MURRAY STREET. 1878. 7f Entered aceoiding to Act of Congress, in the year \>M'A, by MASON BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. LOSSING'S HISTORIES OF THE UNITED STATES. COMPLETE SERIES FOR ALL CLASSES. Lossing's Pictorial Primary History of the United States. For the youngest pupils. Elegantly Illustrated. 238 pages, 12mo. Lossing's History of the United States. Illustrated by 4 colored Maps, and over 200 other engravings. 378 pages, 12mo. For advanced scholars. Lossing's Outline History of the United States. Especially prepared for those who can give but a short time to this study. It will be the most elegantUj illustrated and attractive School History of the United States ever published. In press. By tr&naf si DEC 30 1915 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. This book has been prepared in obedience to the earnest calls of educators to sup- ply an acknowledged want in the Common Schools of the country, namely, a History of the United States, containing the record of every important event, arranged in a manner, and expressed in phraseology that might convey to the mind of the pupil a clear and comprehensive knowledge of the subject, in as few words as possible. The Author's Primary History of the United States, and Grammar School History of the United States, for beginners and young students, and Pictorial History of the United States for Schools and Families, for the use of more -advanced students, have met with a most gratifying reception from parents, teachers, and pupils, for many years. An intermediate History was wanted to make the series complete. To meet that want, this volume is offered. The general arrangement and peculiar features of the other books are preserved in this. Numerous pictorial illustrations of the subject ; maps showing the geographical positions of the most important events; numerous explanatory and illustrative foot- notes, and a convenient and useful Concordance interwoven with them, are notable features which commend themselves specially to teachers as important helpers in the task of instruction. Events during the last few years have impressed all thoughtful Americans with the importance of the possession, by every citizen, of a general knowledge of the letter and spirit of our National Constitution — the organic and supreme law of the land. That such knowledge may be taught in our Common Schools, and thereby be vividly and indelibly impressed upon the minds of the people, that Constitution, with numerous explanatory foot-notes, is made a part of this history. The Supplement contains the Declaration of Independence, with copious historical notes ; a biographical table of the Signers of the Declaration ; hrief sketches of the lives of the Presidents of the Republic, and a Chronological Table of events mentioned in this volume. General reviewing questions, in addition to those at the foot of each page, are intro- duced at the close of the History. These will be found useful as tests of the thorough- ness of the pupil's acquirements, and as helps for him in obtaining a comprehensive grasp of the subject. The historical narrative includes an outline sketch, with copious notes, of the most prominent events of the Great Civil War in our country. It is brought down to as late a period as possible before printing the book. At the end of the volume will be fouDd a carefully prepared Pronouncing Vocabulary of proper names. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. THE ABORIGINES. Section I. General Characteristics of the Indian Tribes, 5.— Their Manners, Customs, Habits, Religion, Government, Funeral Ceremonies, and Destiny, 6, 7, 8, 9. CHAPTER II. DISCOVERIES. Section I. Normaa and Spanish Discoveries, 10.— § II. English and French Discoveries, 15. CHAPTER III. SETTLEMENTS. Section I. Virginia, 24.— § II. New York, 32.— § III. Massachusetts, 34.— § IV. New Hampshire, 37.— § V. Maryland, 37— I VI. Connecticut, 39.— § VII. Rhode Island, 42. § VIII. Delaware, 43; New Jersey, 44 ; Pennsylvania, 45.— § IX. The Carolinas, 46.— § X. Georgia, 48. CHAPTER IV. THE COLONIES. Section I. Virginia, 50.— § II. Massachusetts, 56.— § III. New York, 69.— § IV. Maryland, 75.— § V. Connecticut, 77.— § VI. Rhode Island, 80.— § VII. New Jersey, 81.— § VIII. Pennsylvania, 83.— § IX. The Carolinas, 85.— § X. Georgia, 91. -§ XI. A Retrospect, 92. —I XIL The French and Indian War, 95. CHAPTER V. THE REVOLUTION. Section I. Preliminary Events, 115.— § II. First Year of the War for Independence, 128. — $ III. Second Year of the War for Independence, 138.— § IV. Third Year of the War for Independence, 149.— § V. Fourth Year of the War for Independence, 160.— § VI. Fifth Year of the War for Independence, 166.— § VII. Sixth Year of the War for Inde- pendence, 174.— § VIII. Seventh Year of the War for Independence, 181.— § IX. Closing Events of the War for Independence, 190. C n A P T E R VI. THE NATION. Section I. Washington's Administration, 195.— § II. John Adams's Administration, 201.— § III. Jefferson's Administration, 203.— I IV. Madison's Administration, 208.-1 V. The Second War for Independence, 214.— § VI. Second War for Independence— con- tinued, 222— § VII. Monroe's Administration, 231.— § VIII. John Quincy Adams's Administration, 234— § IX. Jackson's Administration, 236.— § X. Van Buren's Admm ; s- tration, 241.— § XI. Harrison and Tyler's Administrations, 243.— § XII. Polk's Adminis- tration, 246— § XIII. Taylor's Administration, 254.— § XIV. Pierce's Administration, 257.— § XV. Buchanan's Administration, 260.— § XVI. Lincoln's Administration, 262.- The Great Civil War, 265.— The Constitution and Growth of the Republic, 305. Questions for Review, 33G. SUPPLEMENT. The Declaration of Independence, 349.— The Signers of the Declaration of Independence, 35«. —Biographical Sketches of the Presidents of the Republic, 357. -Chronological Table, 361 —Pronouncing Vocabulary of Proper Names, 335. HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. CHAPTEE I. THE ABORIGINES. SECTION I, 1. When men from Europe first came over the Atlantic ocean and landed on the shores of America at different places, they found inhabitants of a copper color, who could give very little account of themselves, as a people. They could not tell whether their race came from Asia, Africa, or Europe ; or whether, as many of them believed, their first father and mother were created in the land which they inhabited. 1 2. These people, who were called Indians," spoke a great variety of dialects, 3 but there were among them only eight distinct languages. 4 They were divided into many families, or tribes ; but in color, size, moral character, religion, and government, they were very much alike. They were tall, straight, and well formed ; 1. There seem to be reasons for believing that the Aborigines, or first inhabitants of America, are of Asiatic origin. 2. When Columbus discovered the first land on the American coast (verse 6, page 12), he supposed that he had reached a point of Farther India, his theory being that, sailing westward, he would find that land. He and his people, therefore, called the native inhabif- ants Indians. 3. Dialect is the form of expression peculiar to the people of diftVrei t provinces or sections of a country where the same language is spoken. The people of London and Yorkshire have such different modes of expressing the English language, that it is difficult, sometimes, for them to understand each other. 4. These languages, which represented eight nations, who inhabited the country from the Atlantic ocean to the Mississippi river and beyond, occupying a region embraced within about twenty-four degrees of latitude, and almost forty degrees of longitude, and covering a greater port ; on of the breadth of the north temperate zone, were called^ respectively. Algonquin, Huron— Iroquois, Cherokee, Catawba, Uchee, Natchez, Mobilian, and Dacotah or Sioux. Questions. — 1. What kind of people did Europeans find in America? 2. What can you tell about their name, languages, and persons ? THE ABORIGINES. Dwellings, dress, money, and language of the Indians. their eyes were black ; their hair long, coarse, and straight. Sick- ness was very little known among them. 3. The men were employed in war, hunting, and fishing ; and the women did all the labor of every kind required by family wants. Huts made of poles covered with mats, skins of beasts, or bark of trees, were their dwelling-places, and were called wig- icams. Their few tools were made of stones, shells, and bones. Their food was the meat of animals found in the forests, with fish, a wigwam. an( j a f ew vegetables. Maize, commonly called Indian corn, was in common use. All the simple arts of their rude life were taught to their children. 4. In summer they were generally naked, excepting a light covering about the loins. In winter, they were clad in the skins of beasts. Their money was made of pieces of shells in the form of tubes, and was call- ed wampum ; it was made in strings and belts, and was used in traffic, and, between nations and tribes, as tokens of affection or alliance. "Wampum-belts were held by the sachems, or chief men, as records of public acts. WAMPrM - 5. The Indians had no written language, excepting rude pic- ture-writings, and these were I JK. i y<^^KX J V-^ > \/ confined to the records of war- t :;;dians in sc.mmer. = ^tf+^J> (~&%'&>- like achievements, treaties of alliance, and deeds of brave men. These were more fre- quently preserved in memory, and handed down from father to son, and from chief to chief. 1. This in pnrt of a record of a war expedition. The figures on the right nnd left — one with a gun, aid the other with the hatchet -denote pritoi.ers taken by a warrior. The one INDIAN nn ROGLTrniCS. Questions.— 3. What can you tell about the employments, dwellings, and food of the In- dians i 4. What of their clothing and money ? 5. What of iheir writing and records ? THE ABORIGINES. INDIAN WEAPONS. CALUMETS. Warfare, women, and funeral ceremonies of the Indiana. 6. War was the principal business of the men. They gener- ally went forth in parties of about forty. Sometimes only half-a-dozen would go out on the war-path, like the ancient knights, to seek renown in combat. Their weapons were bows and arrows, hatchets (tomahawks) of stone, and scalping-knives of bone. They made prisoners, and tortured them ; and the scalps of enemies were their trophies of war. 2 Peace was arranged by sachems in council;* and each, smoking the same pipe of peace, called calumet' thus made a pledge of fidelity to the contract. V. Women were the mere slaves of the men. They never en gaged in any of the games, but were allowed, with their children, to be spectators of them and the war-dances. Marriage >vas a contract that might be broken by the husbands, who had a right to take and dismiss wives at pleasure. 8. The funeral ceremonies and methods of burial were similai among all the Indian nations. The dead body was wrapped in skins, when it was laid upon sticks in the bottom of a shallow pit; or placed in a sitting posture in a grave; or laid upon a high scaffold, out of the reach of wild beasts. Trinkets, arms, tools, paints, and food were buried with it, for they supposed the soul would need them on its journey SCAFFOLD BURIAL-PLACE. without a head and holding a bow and arrow, denotes that one was killed; and the figurn with a shaded part below the cross indicates a female prisoner. Then he goes in a war canoe, with nine companions, denoted by the paddles, after which a council is held by the chiefs of the Bear and Turtle tribes, indicated by rude figures of these animals on each sid , of a fire. 1. a, bow and arrow ; h, war-club ; c, an iron tomahawk ■, rl, a stone one ; e, a scalping-knife. 2. They seized an enemy by the hair, and, by a skillful use of the knife, cut and toro from the top of the head a large portion of the skin. 3. Sachems were the civil heads of nations or tribes ; chiefs were military lenders. 4. Tobacco was in general use among the Indians for smoking, when the white men came The more filthy praclice of cheicins it was invented by the Europeans. The calumet wan made of pipe-clay, and often ornamented with feathers. Questions.— 6. What can you tell about the warfare and weapons, and method of peace- making of the Indians? 7. What can you tell about their won/ien and marriages? 8. What of their funeral ceremonies and burials? THE ABORIGINES. Religion of the Indians. to the abode of spirits. They raised mounds over the graves, plant- ed flowers upon them, and mourned there for many days. MEETING OF WHITE MEN AND INDIANS. 9. Their religion was simple in belief and ceremonies. They believed in a Great Good Spirit, and a Great Evil Spirit ; and considered the sun, moon, stars, meteors, fire, water, thunder, wind, and everything which they could not control themselves, as a sort of deity or god. They also adored what they called the Great Master of Life, in different forms, whom they called Manitou, and made a sort of special deity. They had vague Questions.— 9. What can you tell about the religious belief of the Indians? THE ABORIGINES. Government of the Indians. Their destiny. ideas of a great flood that covered the earth ; and they occasion- ally made sacrifices of animals as an atonement for sin. 10. The government of the Indians was a mixture of family rule and kingly use of authority and power. The Sachem was chief ruler, often chosen because of his merits. So with the Chief; he was frequently chosen to be the leader of warriors, because of his own deeds in battle. The Sachem decided all questions debated in council; and wherever the Chief led, the warriors followed. Their councils were models of good order. "While one was speaking, every other one listened with profound respect. 11. Such were the inhabitants of the territory of the present United States, when it was discovered by the Europeans. They were nearly all wanderers, and roamed over the solitary forests, free as the air they breathed, yet doing almost nothing toward cultivating the fertile soil beneath their feet. God did not design this continent to remain a wilderness. In his own good time he permitted the white man to find it. The white man came with the industry and arts of civilization, and changed the appearance of all things. "Where the Indians hunted and fished, are seen farms, villages, and cities; and that race is rapidly passing away. Very few can now be found eastward of the Mississippi river. 1 1. For a more detailed account of the Indians, see Lossing's Pictorial Ilistory of the United Stales, for Schools and Families. Questions —10. What can you tell ahout the government and leaders of the Indians? 11. What have you to say about them and their relation to the country ? What changes havo taken place ? CHAPTEE II. DISCOVERIES. SECTION I. NORMAN AND SPANISH DISCOVERIES. 1. Christopher Columbus, the son of a wool-carder of the city of Genoa, in Italy, is properly called the discoverer of America. There seems" to be proof, however, that Europeans landed on its shores five hundred years before his time. There were bold sailors in Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, who came to be called Sea-Kings. They sailed fearlessly over the northern seas in their little vessels, and at a very early period made settle- ments on Iceland and Greenland. There are rec- ords of voyages which they made from Iceland to a continent southwest from Greenland, as early as the year of our Lord 1002 ; and learned men believe that these Northmen 1 visited that portion of the United States known as New England, 2 and perhaps sailed as far southward as the Delaware river. NORMAN SHIP. WORTIIMAN. 1 The ancients called the territory which contains modern Norway, Sweden, Denmark Lapland, Iceland, Finland, and the country around the Baltic sea, by the general name of Scandinavia. The people were culled Scandinavians, hut in time came to be known as Northmen or Normen. _, „ „, , ., .. , ,, , A - — ,„ 2. The States of our Republic eastward of New York are collectively called New Eng- land. - QOT.STION8.-l. What can vou tell about the discoverers of America ,? What about an- cient sailors of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway ? What discoveries did they probably make 1 NORMAN AND SPANISH DISCOVERIES. 11 The Northmen. Eastern commerce. Columbus. TOWER AT XEWFORT, 2. There are proofs that the Northmen attempted to make settlements in the new land they had discovered ; but they left no trace of their presence, unless it be the myste- rious old Tower at Newport, Rhode Island, which many believe was built by them. If these voyages were ever known in Southern Europe, they had been long forgotten when Columbus proposed to sail westward in search of wealthy India by a new route. 3. At that time Italy was the mistress of the Mediterranean sea, and controlled the commerce of Europe with India, the great cape of Asia, for the route thither was through Egypt, Arabia, and Persia. The merchants of Western Europe wished to share with Italy in that traffic, but their ships were not allowed to sail unmo- lested in the Mediterranean, to Egypt. It was the common belief that under the equator was a region of impassable heat. This error was at length corrected by Portuguese navigators, who sailed around the southern extremity of Africa and went to the East thi'ough the Indian Ocean. 4. Lisbon, from Avhich these navigators sailed, now became an attractive place for adventurers. Columbus went there, and mar- ried the daughter of an eminent de- ceased navigator ; and from his father-in- law's papers he got much knowledge. He was convinced that the earth was round ; that an unknown continent was in the Atlantic ocean; and that Asia might be sooner reached by sailing west- ward than by making the long voyage around Africa. He was also impressed with a belief that he was commissioned to carry the gospel of Christ to un- known heathen. 5. In search of knowledge, Columbus made a voyage to Ice- Qtjestions.— 2. What can yon tell about the Northmen in Amer'ca ? 3. What did Italy- do? What did merchants of Western Europe desire to do? What error was corrected? 4. What can you tell about Lisbon, and Columbus there ? What were his beliefs ? *JTt COLCMBtTS. 12 DISCOVERIES. Columbus aided. His great discovery. land and the icy seas beyond, where he probably heard vague rumors of the early visits to a western continent. When he returned, he asked first his own countrymen, and then the kings of England and Portugal, to help him fit out an expedition for a voyage of discovery. None but King John of Portugal listened favorably, and he did nothing. Columbus waited long. At length his wife died, and, taking his little son by the hand, he started on foot, sad and discouraged, to lay his plans before Fer- dinand and Isabella, the rulers of Spain. 6. The queen became his friend, 1 and with others fitted out three small ves- sels for Columbus. With these lie sailed from Palos, in Andalusia, on the 3d of August, 1492, and, after a tedious and perilous voy- age, he first saw land on the llth of October fol- lowing. It was one of the Bahamas, now called Cat Island. On the next day he went ashore, richly dressed in scarlet, and, bearing the banner of the expedition, took pos- session of the country in the name of the king and queen. 2 The natives received him and his followers with awe. With pious feelings he named the island San Salvador, or Holy Savior. V. Columbus discovered several other islands, and named the group the West Indies. On his return he was received with great honors, but the monarchs attempted to keep his discoveries 1. Isabella was very religious, and the impression made on her mind by the zeal mani- fested by Columbus to become a missionary, had a powerful effect. His assurance that be should find the vast treasures hidden in that far-distant India, of which travelers had told, excited her di6ires for greater wealth and magnificence. 2. It was a common practice then, as now, for the discoverer of new lands to erect some monument and to proclaim the title of his sovereign to the territories so discovered. The banner of the expedition borne on shore by Columbus, was a white one, with a green cross. Over the initials, F. and Y. (Ferdinand and Ysabella), were golden mural crowns. EANNER OF THB EXPEDITION. Questions.— 5. What voyage did Columbus make? To whom did he apply for help? 6. What did Queen Isabella do? What can you tell about Columbus's voyage and dis- coveries? What took place when he reached land? SPANISH DISCOVERIES. 13 Columbus and his discoveries. A rival. a secret from the rest of the world for their own advantage, made several other voyages, and in 1498 discovered the coast of South America ; yet he died in the belief that he had only found a portion of Eastern Asia. One of his companions revealed the se- cret to Amerigo Vespucci, a Florentine navigator, who explored the eastern coast THE VESSELS OF COLUMBUS. COLUMBUS DISCOVERING LAND. Questions.— 7. What other voyages and discoveries did Columbus mako? What can you tell about another navigator, and the naming of our continent ? 14 DISCOVERIES. Name of the continent. Balboa. Florida. Mexico. AMERIGO VESrCCCI. of South America, and published a glowing account of the great continent which he claimed to have dis- covered. In his honor that continent was called America. 8. Spanish settlements were soon made in the West Indies, and expedi- tions were sent out from St. Domingo, Cuba, and Porto Rico, in search of gold- bearing regions which, it was believed, lay around them. In 1513, Balboa crossed the isthmus of Darien, and dis- covered the Pacific ocean, which he called the South sea. He waded into its waters in full costume, bearing the Spanish flag, and took pos- session of sea and land, in the name of his sovereign. 9. In 1512, John Ponce de Leon sailed from Porto Rico, and discovered the present great southern cape of the United States, which he named Florida. 3 Other adventurers followed him in the same direction, and made vain at- tempts to plant settlements on the coast of what is now Florida, Georgia, and South Caro- lina. In 1517, an expedition under Cordova discovered Mexico ; and so favorable was his report that Velasquez, the governor of Cuba, determined to take possession of the country. For this purpose he sent a fleet and small army, under the command of Fernando Cortez, who by falsehood and treachery obtained possession of the coun- try in 1521. 1. The picture gives a correct representation of tliose armed Spaniards who attempted conquests in the New World. BALBOA. 1 Conquests 01 mo -> cw n unu. 2. He had been governor of Forlo Rico, and had been made to believe that on the neigh- boring continent was a fountain whose waters, when partaken of, would restore youth to old age, and perpetuate it. He was in search of this fountain when, on the 27th of March, he touched the shore, and found it covered with (lowers. It was also PaaquH de Flores, or Easter Sunday, on which occasion the churches were decorated with flowers. So he called the land Florida. Questions.— S. What can yon tell about Spanish settlements and exped'tions? What of Balboal '■'. What can you tell about the discovery of Florida? What can you tell about the discovery and conquest of Mexico? ENGLISH AND FRENCH DISCOVERIES. 15 De Soto and the Mississippi. The Cabots. 10. In 1539, De Soto, a Spanish adventurer, who was then governor of Cuba, landed with six hundred men in Florida, and marching west- ward, in spite of hostile natives, discovered the Mississippi river, and explored the country be- yond it almost to the base of the Rocky Moun- tains. After a march of three thousand miles, during a period of about three years, De Soto died on the Mississippi, and the remnant of his followers, having suffered terribly, made their way to settlement in Mexico. The chief object of all these expeditions was gold. De Soto discovered the Mississippi, in 1541. a Spanish SECTION II. ENGLISH AND FRENCH DISCOVERIES. 1. While the Spaniards were searching for gold in the region of the Gulf of Mexico, English and French adventurers were on the more northerly shores of the continent, on the same errand, and for the discovery of a northwest passage to India through the Polar seas. Henry the Seventh, king of England, would not listen to Columbus; 1 but when he heard of his wonderful success, he was willing to give help in a similar undertaking. 2. John Cabot, a wealthy merchant of Bristol, England, hearing of this disposi- tion of the king, asked him to aid him- self and his son Sebastian in fitting out exploring vessels. The king did so. In May, 1498, Sebastian Cabot sailed toward Greenland with two small ships. When he encountered fields of ice in the polar waters, he turned toward the southwest, and first saw the American continent on Sebastian cabot. 1. Verse 5, page 11. Questions.— 10. Describe the adventures of De Soto, ar.d the end nf them. W' at was the object of all Spanish expeditions in America? — 1. What were English and French navi- gators doing? What can you toll about King Henry of England?' 2. What can you tell about John Cabot and his son ? Describe the voyage and discoveries of Sebastian Cabot. 16 DISCOVERIES. Sebastian Cabot's discoveries. Verrazzani. Cartier. the rugged shores of Labrador. He was the first discoverer of the North American continent, Columbus having seen only some of its neighboring islands. 1 3. Young Cabot sailed up the coast of Labrador to about the six, tieth degree of latitude, and being tben confronted by the ice-pack, he sailed southward, and passing in sight of Cape Charles, discovered Newfoundland. He also explored the Atlantic coast as far as the pre- sent harbor of Charleston. His discoveries gave him great fame. In 1517 he was sent again to the Polar seas ; and in 1526 while in the employment of the king of Spain, he explored the coast of Bra- zil, in South America, and discovered the great river de la Plata. 4. The king of Prance, in the mean time, had become interested in these Avonderful voyages, and in 1523 he employed John Verrazzani, a Florentine, to explore the coasts of the mys- terious New World. Verrazzani sailed in De- cember, and in March first touched the continent at the mouth of the Cajje Fear river. He then sailed northward, examined the coast all the way to Newfound- land, and called the entire country New France. 5. Ten years later, the French king was induced to attempt the planting of settlements in New France, and for that purpose he sent James Carrier, a native of St. Malo, with several ves- sels. Carrier reached New- foundland early in June, VERRAZZANI. CART1ERS SHIP. ARMS OF FRANCE. 1 Verse 7 page 12. •' II. ■ gave the name of Newfoundland (new found land) to this large Island. Ho per- ceived the immense numbers of codfish in ins vicinity; and within five or six years after tbis discovery, many fishermen from England, Brittany, and Normandy went thither for those treasures of tbe deep. Questions. —3. Describe other voyages and discoveries of Sebastian Cabot on the coast of North America. Describe bis discoveries in South America. 4. What did tbe king of France do? What can you tell about Verrazzini's discover es 1 What did he call the new country f 6 What else "did tbe Fronch do ? What can you tell about James Cartier's doings? ENGLISH AND FEENCH DISCOVERIES. 17 Events on the St. Lawrence. Protestants in France. 1534,and soon afterward discovered the mouth of the great river which he named St. Lawrence. 1 He set up a cross and the arms of France on the shore, and took possession of the country in the name of the French king. 6. Cartier commanded another expedition to the St. Lawrence, in 1535. Leaving his larger vessels in the mouth of the St. Charles, at the site of Quebec, he went in boats to the capital of the Indian king of the country, situated where Montreal 2 now stands. He was kindly received, and returning, wintered in his ships, in the St. Charles. In the spring he decoyed the Indian king on board of one of his vessels, and carried him off to France, where he died broken-hearted. This wicked act made the Indians hate the " pale-faces," as they called Europeans. Other efforts were made by the French to plant settlements in New France, but none were successful until seventy years afterward. 3 7. At this period, there was much religious excitement in France. The protests of Martin Luther and others against cer- tain doctrines and practices of the Roman Catholic Church, had made a great disturbance in Europe. Those who favored the ref- ormation then attempted were called Protestants. These had become numerous in France about the year 1560, and there they were named Huguenots. They had a powerful friend in Jas- per Coligny, high admiral of France. 1. This name was given because the discovery was made on the $\ festival day of St. Lawrence in the calendar of the Roman Catholic JpL*"A. 2. It was called Hochela%a. He ascended the great hill in the rear f^jt^ falfr of the village, and so inspired was lie with the view from its summit, 1$»~V {■ that he called it Mont Meal, or Royal Mountain, the name of the jtW&^WK present city at its foot. <^qjr fcsffiSMI 3. Cartier made another voyage to the St. Lawrence, as a suhor- %}* \m\$Wt dinate. Francis de la Roque, a wealthy nobleman of Picardy, in I KlI 'l|9»k. France, fitted out an expedition for discoveries ami settlement in New H^r^^W^ France, by permission of the French king. He chose Cartier for his X >M :: 'W) h lieutenant, who sailed before his superior was ready, in June, 1541. ^CiSSs''*/ Cartier again went up the St. Lawrence, and found the natives sullen [WrSr''^ o:i account of his perfidy. He built a fort at Quebec. Francis (who is \ll(¥ better known as Lord of Roberval) followed, but the attempt at settle- \?// ^ ment was a failure. Roberval passed up the St. Lawrence, built two IJifc je more forts near Quebec, endured a winter of great distress, and returned --' — ~2jO«J*tl§p to France in the spring of 1543. Six years afterward he again sailed "== -~i^^==**~ for the St. Lawrence, and was never heard of afterward. frexcii nobleman in 1540. Questions.— 6. What can you tell about Carter's second voyage? How did be treat the Indian king? 7. What can you tell about religious excitement in Europe? What were the reformers called? What can you say of the French Protestants? 18 DISCOVERIES. Huguenot Settlements. Disasters. English Navigators. 8. The rulers in church and state persecuted the Hugue- nots, and Coligny resolved to find a place of refuge for them in America. The king gave him authority to do so; and in Feb- ruary, 1562, several vessels filled with emigrants left France for the new-found world. They landed on the shore near Port Royal entrance, where the Broad river flows into the Atlantic ocean, and there built a fort, which they called Carolina, in honor of their monarch, Charles (Carlos) the Ninth. This name was afterward given to the adjacent portion of the continent, which it still bears. 9. The attempt to settle at Port Royal failed. Another was made on the bank of the St. John's river, in Florida, and met with a most tragical end. The Spanish monarch sent Pedro Melendez, a cruel soldier, to drive away or destroy the French. He landed with his followers on the coast of Florida, founded the city of St. Augustine, and proclaimed his king monarch of : 1 11 North America. This was in September, 15G5. He then fell upon the Huguenots and massacred about nine hundred men, women, and children. De Gourges, a French soldier, avenged the ileath of these people. 1 Thus ended this first attempt to plant settlements in America. 10. Fugitive Huguenots who were picked up at sea and car- ried to England, told of the beauty and fertility of the southern coasts of America, and the public attention was turned in that direction. Sir Humphrey Gilbert was the first to propose a sensi- ble plan for settlement. With the aid of his young and wealthy step-brother, Walter Raleigh, he fitted out some vessels, and sailed with a number of followers early in 1579. He was driven back by storms and Spanish war-vessels. Four years afterward [1583] he made another attempt. He reached and explored the 1. Dc Gourges, a fiery soldier of Oascony, fitted out an expedition to revenge this cruel act. He sailed for Florida in three ships bearing one hundred ami fifty men. He attacked and captured two Spanish forta on the St. John's, And made two hundred men prisoners. These he hung upon the trees. lie was too feeble to attack the force at Ot. / Ugustine, and the Spaniards held possession. This was the first permanent European settlement within the present domain of the United states. The first house built there was demolished by United States troops, during the Civil War that commenced in 1861. Questions.— 8. What did Coligny do? What can you tell about the Hueuenots in America' Where did they attempt a settlement? 9. What else did the Huguenots do? How and by whom was their new settlement broken up? Who avenged the act? 10. How came the English to make voyages to the more southern coasts ? What can you tell about Sir Humphrey Gilbert and his voyages to America < ENGLISH AND FRENCH DISCOVERIES. 19 Raleigh's Expeditions. Their results. New England coast, but his little squadron was destroyed by storms. Gilbert was lost, and only one of his vessels returned to England. 11. Raleigh now obtained a charter for himself, by which Queen Elizabeth made him proprietor of all lands that might be discovered be- tween the Delaware and Santee rivers. He sent two ships to explore. They entered Albemarle sound, on the coast of North Carolina ; and their comman- ders (Amidas and Barlow), returned with glowing accounts of the beauty and fertility of the country, which they had taken possession of in the name of Elizabeth. Raleigh Avas delighted ; and the queen, in consideration of her un- raleigh. married state, named the region Virginia, and knighted the gal- lant proprietor. 12. Raleigh sent five ships under Sir Richard Grenville the following year [1585], and one hundred emigrants, with Ralph Lane as their governor. They landed on Roanoke island, in Albemarle sound. Being gold-seekers instead of planters, and having offended the Indians, they suffered for want of food for nearly a year, when they embarked for England with Sir Francis Drake, who touched at Roanoke. 13. Raleigh learned wisdom by failure, ers he sent farmers and mechanics, with their families, in the spring of 1587, to found a colony in Virginia. They were accom- panied by John White, an English gentleman, as governor. They reached Roanoke in July, and a month afterward, Eleanor Dare, a daughter of the governor, gave birth to a girl, whom Questions.— 11. What can you tell about Walter Raleigh, and his first expedition sent to America? Tell how Virginia was so named. 12. Relate the adventures of Sir Richard (rrenville and his colony. 13. What can you tell about another expedition sent by Raleit-h in 1587 1 What occurred ? 6 ONE OF RALEIGH'S SHIPS. Instead of gold-seek- 20 DISCOVERIES. Gosnold's discoveries. Pring'e voyage. Weymouth's sin. they named Virginia. She was the first child of European parents born in America. This colony soon afterward disap- peared. Five times Raleigh sent good mariners to search for them, but in vain. They were prob- ably taken to the continent by the Indians. 14. Twelve years after the failure of Raleigh's colonization efforts, his friend Bartholomew Gos- nold sailed in a small vessel for the American coast. That was in March, 1602. After a voyage of seven weeks he discovered the continent near Nahant, eastward of the site of Boston [May 14], JT' and as he sailed southward he discovered and lkman, named Cape Cod. He also discovered the islands i58o. f Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard, and a group which he named the Elizabeth islands, in honor of his queen. On one of them he thought to make a settlement, but the fear of Indians and a lack of supplies caused him to abandon the design and return to England. 1 5. Gosnold's favorable account of the country caused Bristol merchants to send out two ships in the spring of 1603, com- manded by Martin Pring. He discovered the coast of Maine at Penobscot bay, in June. Sailing westward he explored the bays and rivers all the way to Martha's Vineyard,' where he traded with the natives, but soon sailed for England. 16. In 1605, Captain Weymouth, an English navigator, also visited Maine, and took possession of the country in the name of King James. He decoyed five natives on board of his vessel, and sailed with them for England, leaving behind him, by this wicked act, cause for the bitter hatred of the Indians for the white people. Pring made another voyage the following year [1606], and more thoroughly explored the New England coast.' 17. At about this time the French were again engaged in 1. Properly Martiris Vineyard, which was so ca'led in honor of Martin Pring, who first cultivated truffle with tin' Indians there. 2. Verse 1, page 10. Questions —14. What can yon tell about Bartholomew Gosnold's voyage and discoveries ? What did he attempt to do? 15. What can you tell about Martin Pring's voyage and dis- coveries? 16. What did Captain Weymouth do? What crime did he commit ? What more can you relate of Pring? ENGLISH AND FRENCH DISCOVERIES. 21 Settlements in Acadie. Discoveries by Champlain and Hudson. making explorations in the direction of the St. Lawrence. De Monts, a wealthy Huguenot, obtained a commission of viceroy over six degrees of latitude, extending from Cape May to the site of Quebec. He sailed with two vessels in the spring of 1604, and planted a settlement on the site of Annapolis, Nova Scotia. In the autumn he passed over to the St. Croix river, on the ex- treme eastern boundary of the United States, and built a fort. He returned in the spring, organized a colony, called the place Port Royal (now Annapolis), and named the whole region now included in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and the adjacent isl- ands, Acadie. 18. Having obtained a grant for a temporary monopoly of the fur trade on the St. Lawrence, De Monts sent Samuel Champlain up that river for traffic and explorations. Early in the summer of 1608 he founded a settlement, and named the place Quebec. A year later he ascended the Richelieu or Sorel river, and discov- ered the beautiful lake in Northeastern New York which bears his name, Champlain. 1 19. The idea of finding a northern passage to India still filled the minds of English merchants and mari- ners. All attempts to find it in a north- westerly direction had been foiled by ice. A company of London merchants now de- termined to have a search in a northeast- erly direction, and for that purpose they sent Henry Hudson, an eminent navigator, toward the Polar seas beyond the north- erly capes of Europe, in 1607. During that and the following years he made two voyages, but ice firmly barred the way. The disappointed merchants abandoned the project. 1. Champlain penetrated southward as far as Crown Point ; perhaps south of Ticonderoga. It was at about the same time that Hudson went up the river that bears his name, as far as Waterford ; so that these eminent navigators, exploring at different points, came very near meeting in the wilderness. Six years afterward, Champlain discovered Lake Huron, and there he .ioined some Huron Indians in an expedition against one of the Five Nations in Western New York. Questions.— 17. What did the French now do ? Give an account of De Monts and his efforts to make settlements. 18. What privilege was granted to De Monts, and what did he do? Describe the voyage and discoveries of Champlain. 19. What did Englishmen now do? Describe Hudson's voyages. HENRY HUDSON. 22 DISCOVERIES. Hudson's explorations and discoveries. 20. Hudson was not discouraged. He asked the Dutch East India Company ' to aid him in an attempt to find a northeast passage to India. The Amsterdam directors gave it, and on the 4th of April, 1609, he sailed from that city in a yacht of eighty tons, named the Half 3foo7i ) and steered for Spitzhergen. The ice was impassable. Turning westward, he sailed directly across the Atlantic ocean, touched the continent of America at Pe- nobscot hay, 2 and coasted southward to the capes of Virginia.' 21. It was now August, 1609. Hudson sailed northward, ex- ploring the coast and the mouths of the great rivers, and Chesa- peake and Delaware hays, until the beginning of September, when he entered what is now the harbor of New York, and anchored his vessel in the river that bears his name. Up that stream he sailed almost to the head of tide-water, and in a small boat went as high as the site of the city of Waterford. In No- vember he returned to Europe; and his report of the beautiful country he had discovered set in motion those commercial opera- tions which resulted in the formation of the Dutch West India Company, and the founding of a Dutch colony in America. 4 22. Now, early in the seventeenth century, commenced the period of settlements in the New World. The leading commer- cial nations of Western Europe, namely, England, France, Spain, and Holland, perceived that a way was opened not only for 1. ThiB company was organized in Amsterdam, It) 1595, for traffic with the East Indies. They became powerful ; made conquests ; founded Batavia as a Dutch colony, and opened intercourse with Japan. 2. Verse 15, page 20. S. The present capes Henry and Charles, at the entrance to Chesapeake hay. They wefe bo named by Captain Christopher Newport, in honor of the sons of the then reigning king of England. 4. While on a subsequent voyage in search of a northwest passage, Hud.-on discovered the great northern bay that bears his name. He was there frozen in the ice during the win- ter of 1610-11. While endeavoring to make his way homeward in the spring, his crew be- came mutinous. They finally seized Hudson, bound his arms, and placing him and his son, and seven sick companions, in an open boat, set them adrift upon the cold waters. They were never heard of afterward. Hudson left very interesting accounts of his voyages, end- ing with the discovery of the river that bears his name. Questions.— 20. What did Hudson do? What can you tell about his voyage when em- ployed by the Dutch East India Company I 21. What can you tell about Hudson's coast ex- plorations, and the discovery of a river ( What did he then do ? What followed 1 ENGLISH AND FKENCH DISCOVERIES. 23 Discoveries and discovcrcrc. profitable traffic, but for the found- ing of colonies and empires from which the parent states might re- ceive almost un- limited tribute to national wealth and national glo- ry; and they en- tered upon those vast enterprises which led to the founding of States and the creation of our Republic. When we contem- plate these voy- ages across the stormy Atlantic, and consider the limited geographi- cal knowledge of the navigators, the frailty of their ves- sels and equip- ments, the vast la- bor and constant privations endured by them, we are compelled to rank those sailors among the genuine hei oes of history. Questions.— 22. What have you to say about the discoveries and discoverers mentioneJ in this chapter? What did the nations of Western Europe expect and do * CHAPTER III. SETTLEMENTS. SECTION I. 1. The act of forming a settlement is not equivalent to the establishment of a colony or the founding of a state. It is the first and important step toward such an end, and may or may not show permanent results. When a settlement becomes permanent, and local laws for its government are framed and obeyed, it then assumes the character of a colony, the parent of a state. It seems proper, therefore, to consider the period of settlements, as distinct from that of colonial organization. The former period extends, in reference to the domain of the United States, from 1607 to 1733. The first permanent settlement within that domain, was made in Virginia. 2. The English claimed dominion over a belt of territory ex- tending from Cape Fear, in North Carolina, to Halifax, in Nova Scotia, and indefinitely westward. This was divided into two districts. One extended from the vicinity of New York city northward to the present southern boundary of Canada, including the whole of New England, and westward of it, and was called North Virginia. This territory was granted to an association in the west of England, called the Plymouth Company. The other district extended from the mouth of the Potomac south- ward to Cape Fear, and was called South Virginia. This was Questions.— 1. Define the difference between a settlement "and a colony. What was the period of settlements in America 1 Where was the first permanent settlement within the territory of the United States? 2. What was the extent of the claims of England to terri- tory in America ? How was it divided ? and what names were given to the owners ? VIRGINIA. 25 Changes in society. King James. Settlements attempted. granted to a company, chiefly residents of London, called the London Company. 1 The intermediate domain of almost twc hunched miles was a dividing line so broad that disputes about territory could not occur, as neither company was allowed to make settlements more than fifty miles beyond its own boundary. 3. At that time great changes in society were visible in Eu rope, and especially in England. The printing-press was diffus- ing knowledge widely, and the feudal system of government, which kept great masses of men in ignorance and slavery, was rapidly giving way to more generous laws and usages. 2 Had King James the First, then the reigning monarch, been a wise and good man, he might have been a blessing to his people and to mankind, by encouraging freedom of thought and action. 4. King James was not a wise and good man. The charters which he gave to the Virginian companies, allowed to the people who were to form colonies under them, no rights of self-govern- ment as a community. They were to be controlled by a council appointed by the king ; and they, in turn, were made responsible to a supreme council residing in England, also appointed by the king. Yet there were men enough who hoped to better their fortunes by a change, to allow the companies to attempt settle- ments at once. 5. The Plymouth Company made the first attempt at settle- ment, and failed. The London Company were more fortunate. In December, 1606, they sent three ships, under the command of Captain Christopher Newport, with one hundred and five emi- grants, to make a settlement on Roanoke island. 3 They did not 1. The chief members of the company were Thomas Hanham, Sir John and Raleigh Gil- bert (sons of Sir Humphrey Gilbert), William Parker, George Popham, Sir John Popham (Lord Chief Justice of England), aud Sir Fernando Gorges, Governor of Plymouth Fort. 2. The nature of feudal laws may be illustrated by this single example : William, the Norman conqueror of England, divided the land of that country into parts, called baronies, and gave them to certain of his favorites, who became masters of the conquered people on their respective estatip. For these gifts, and certain privileges, the barons, or masters, were to furnish the king with a stipulated amount of money, and a stated number of men for soldiers, when required. The people had no voice in this matter, nor in any public affairs, and were made essentially slaves to the barons. Out of this state of things originated the exclusive privileges yet enjoyed by the nobility of Europe. The people have been emanci- pated from this vassalage, and the ancient forms of feudal power have disappeared. 3. Verse 12, page 19. Questions. — 3. What can you say of society in Europe ? What were producing changes? What can you say of King James ? 4. What kind of government did he allow to the colo- nists? 5. What did the Plymouth Company do? What did the London Company do? Tell about the voyage of Newport and emigrants, and their landing-place. 26 SETTLEMENTS. English on the Janice River. Character of the Settlers. arrive on the American coast until April, 160V, when they were driven hy a storm into Chesapeake bay. They discovered and sailed up the Powhatan river, and on a beautiful peninsula, 1 fifty miles from its mouth, they landed and commenced building. They named the river James, and the capital of the new empire, James- town, in honor of the king. 6. Among the passengers was Bartholomew Gosnold, 2 the pro- jector of the expedition, and Captain John Smith, a great military adventurer and energetic man. The latter was one of the council appointed by the king to rule the colony. 3 They chose Ed- ward Maria Wingfield president, and com- menced the business of founding a state. Newport, Smith, and others then explored the river as far as the site of Richmond, visited Powhatan, 4 the powerful Indian emperor of that region, and returned much gratified. In June. Newport sailed for England for more settlers and provisions. V. A greater portion of these adventurers were poor materials for the construction of a state. There was no family among them, and only twelve laborers and mechanics. The others were "gentlemen," many of whom were idle, vicious, and dissolute, and unworthy associates of Gosnold and others who were anxious to found a permanent empire in the New World. They were consumers and not producers ; and it soon became evident that if they did not plant, famine might overtake them. 1. This may he called an island, for the marsh which connects it with the main land is oft in overflowed. The currents of the river have washed away large portions of the original island. 2. Verse 14, paste 20. 3. The Billy King placed the names of the council in a sealed box, with instructions not to open it until they arrived In Virginia, Disputes arose on the passage. There was no com- petent authority to decide. Smith, who was the ablest man among them, was accused by some who were jealous of him of a design to murder the council, whoever they might be, and proclaim himself king of Virginia, lie was put in irons, but when it was found that lib was une of the council, the absurd accusation was withdrawn. 4. His residence, at that time, was a few miles below the site of Richmond. His chief residence was on the York river, nearer Jamestown. Questions.— 6. Who were the chief men who sailed with Newport? Who was chosen president of the colony ? What did Smith and others do ? 7. What was the character of most of the adventurers I VIRGINIA. 27 Troubles in Virginia. Captain Smith and Pocahontas. 8. Famine did come soon. A larger portion of the provisions had been spoiled during the long voyage. 1 The Indians around them were unfriendly, and withheld food. Sickness attacked them ; and early in September, one half of the emigrants were dead. Gosnold had perished with them. President Wingneld Attempted to abandon the colony with the remainder of good supplies, and escape in a small vessel left by Newport. He was arrested and dismissed from office. Ratcliffe, his successor, was no better, and the suffering people chose Captain Smith to preside over them. He soon brought confusion into order, and made the Indians fear and like him so much that they brought corn to Jamestown. 9. Smith's energy was wonderful and useful. With the corn brought by the neighboring Indians, and the coming of wild fowl on the water, food was made plentiful in October. Then Smith, with a few men, started to explore the surrounding country. They ascended the Chickahominy river, where Smith was cap- tured by the Indians, and his companions were slain. He was carried to the emperor Powhatan, on the York river, who re- ceived him with cool dignity. 10. A solemn council decided that Smith must die, and he was led out to execution. His head was placed upon a stone, and the heavy clubs of the exe- cutioners were raised to crush it, when Pocahontas, a child of " ten or twelve years," the favorite daughter of Pow- hatan, rushed from her father's side, and casting herself upon the captive, be- sought the king to spare his life. Pow- hatan consented, and Smith was con- ducted in safety to Jamestown by a guard of twelve men, after an absence of seven weeks. He found 1. Verse 5, page 25. Questions.— 8. What happened in the colony? What did the Indians do? What did President Wingneld attempt to do? What wis done? What did Captain Smith do? 9. How was the colony relieved from famine ? What can you tell about Smith's explorations and his captivity ? 10. Relate how Smith was prepared for execution, and was saved by Pocahontas. What was the condition of the colony upon Smith's return ? pocahoxtas. 28 SETTLEMENTS. Gold Seekers. First European women in Virginia. everything in disorder on his return. Only forty men were liv- ing, and a greater portion of these were on the point of escaping to the West Indies.' 11. Newport returned to Virginia early in 1608, with pro- visions and immigrants. 1 These were no better than the first adventurers, and instead of planting, nearly all of them engaged in gold-hunting. They could think and talk of nothing else. Even Newport was employed in the business, and carried a ship- load of worthless yellow earth to England, under the impression that it contained a vast amount of the precious metal. 12. Smith vainly remonstrated against the idleness and folly around him. It increased rather than diminished. He turned in disgust from Jamestown, and with a few followers in an open boat, he traveled, during ninety days, in the summer of 1608, three thousand miles, exploring the country northward, on land and water, as far as the interior of Pennsylvania. He constructed a pretty accurate map of the region he traveled over. 13. It was now the autumn of 1608. On the 13th of Sep- tember, Newport arrived with seventy immigrants. Among them were two women, the first of European birth ever seen in Virginia. These immigrants were similar to the others; and after the most strenuous efforts of Captain Smith for two years to in- duce the settlers to become planters, only forty acres of land were under cultivation. They depended upon the Indians for most of their food. 14. In 1609 the London Company obtained a new charter, and Lord De la Warr (Delaware), an enlightened peer, was appointed governor of Virginia for life. Toward the middle of June, Newport was sent over with a squadron of nine ships and 1. Smith wrote an earnest letter to the supreme council, paying : "I entreat you rati er send but thirty carpenters, husbandmen, gardeners, blacksmiths, masons, and diggers of trees' roots, well provided, than a thousand such as we have." 2. The terms emigrant and immigrant may be applied to the same person, but under different circumstances. We use the word emigrant when a person leaves our country to settle in another. We use the word immigrant when a person comes to settle in our country. Questions.— 11. What can vou tell about Newport and the immigrants who came with him? 12. What did Smith do"? (Jive an account of his grand exploration of the country northward? 13. What can yon tell about another arrival of immigrants 1 What were their characters? What showed their improvidence ? 14. Whom did the London Company send us governor ? What can you tell about Newport and other immigrants ? Name the commis- sioners sent ? What happened? VIRGINIA. 29 Arrival of immigrants. Sufferings. Arrival of commissioners. five hundred emigrants, 1 accompanied by Lieutenant-Governor Sir Thomas Gates, and George Somers. 2 These two, with New- port, were appointed commissioners to rule the colony until De la Warr's arrival. A storm dispersed the squadron, and the vessel bearing the three commissioners was wrecked on one of the Bermuda islands. 15. Seven vessels reached Jamestown in safety, and from them were landed a more vicious company of immigrants than had yet been seen there. They regarded Virginia as a paradise for bad men. In the absence of the commissioners they acknowl- edged no ruler. But Smith boldly asserted and maintained his authority, until an accident compelled him to go to England for surgical aid. 16. Now was a season of carelessness and suffering. Pro- visions were soon exhausted. The Indians withheld supplies, and resolved to destroy the intruders. Famine was quicker than they. The winter and spring of 1610 was remembered as "the starving time." Within six months after Smith left, only sixty of the five hundred settlers were alive. These would have been destroyed but for the interposition of Pocahontas. The time for the massacre was fixed. The loving Indian maiden 3 hastened to Jamestown on a stormy night, revealed the plot, made the suffering people watchful, and saved their lives. 17. The commissioners 4 reached Jamestown in June, 1610, and found the remnant of settlers on the verge of starvation. Gates determined to abandon the place, sail to Newfoundland,* and distribute the sufferers among the English fishermen there. They all left in four small vessels called pinnaces, but on the very next day they met English ships, with Lord de la "Warr's pro- visions and immigrants, ascending the James river. That night 1. See note 2, page 28. 2. Domestic animals were now first taken to Virginia. They consisted of six mares, one horse, six hundred swine, a few sheep and goate. and five hundred domestic fowls. Two years later one hundred cows and some other cattle were brought over. 3. Verse 10, page 27. 4. Gates, Somers, and Newport. 5. Verse 3, page 16. Questions. — 15. What can you tell about the arrival of vessels and emigrants at James- town ? How did they behave ? What did Captain Smith do ? 16. Relate what occurred to the settlers after Smith left them. How was the colony saved from entire destruction? 17. Relate what happened on the arrival of the commissioners. How was the colony saved from dispersion ? What did the colonists do f 30 SETTLEMENTS. Change of policy. Marriage of PocahontaB. A want. hymns of joy and thanksgiving for a great deliverance were heard in Jamestown. 18. From this time prosperity attended the settlement. In September, 1611, Gates, who had returned to England, came with six ships and three hundred immigrants, most of whom were sober and industrious men. A radical change in the domestic policy was made. Hitherto the land had been worked in com- mon for the benefit of the whole community, and the industrious provided food for the lazy. Now a few acres of land were as- signed to each man for his exclusive use. The community system was abandoned, and industry, on private account, created an ample supply of food for all. 19. At the beginning of 1613, there were one thousand Eng- lishmen in Virginia. They had planted new settlements in the neighborhood of Jamestown, and but little seemed wanting to insure permanent success but the friendship of the Indians. The emperor, Powhatan, 1 was sullen and unfriendly; but his feelings were now changed by a remarkable event. Captain Argall, a sort of buccaneer, at the head of a foraging party, stole Poca- hontas and carried her on board of his vessel, under the pretense of extorting a treaty of peace and friendship from her father. There a mutual attachment grew up between her and John Rolfe, a young Englishman of good family. He instructed her in let- ters and religion ; and with the consent of Powhatan, she received the rite of Christian baptism, and became the wife of Rolfe, in 1613. The emperor was ever afterward the warm friend of the English. 20. Yet another element of success in founding a state was wanting. There were no families in Virginia, and few settlers expected to spend their lives there. This want was afterward supplied, and meanwhile the settlers prospered greatly. They cultivated the tobacco plant, as well as grain and vegetables for 1. VereelO.page 27. Qdfstions.— IS. What can you eav of the Virginia colony at this time ? What did Gates do? What change took place in Virginia? 19. How main Englishmen were in Virginia in 1613? What had they done i What was the disposition of Powhatan t What did Captain Argall do 1 What can you tell about Rolfe and Pocahontas ? 20. What was lacking for the founding of a state? What can you tell about the cultivation of tobacco? VIRGINIA. 31 A change in public affair?. food ; and so rapidly did the former gain in favor that it soon be- came, not only an article for export, but the currency of the country. 1 MARRIAGE OF POCAHONTAS. 21. A happy change took place in public affairs in Virginia in 1619, when George Yeardly became governor of the colony. He abolished martial law, released the planters from feudal ser- 1. This plant, yet very extensively cultivated in Virginia and adjoining States, was first discovered by Sir Trancis Drake, near Tabaco, in Yucatan : hence its name. Drake and Raleigh first, introduced it into England. King James conceived a great hatred of it, aim wrote a treatise against its use. He forbade its cultivation in England, but could not prevent its importation from Virginia. It became a very profitable article of commerce, and tne streets of Jamestown were planted with it. Other agricultural productions were negleetert, and at times, while cargoes of tobacco were preparing for England, the necessaries ot lite were wanting. The money valuation of tobacco was about sixty-six cents a pound. 32 SETTLEMENTS. Virginia commonwealth founded. Dutch adventurers. vice to the colony, 1 and established a representative government, by which the people had a voice in the public councils. On the 28th of June, 1619, the first representative assembly ever con- vened in America met at Jamestown, and then and there the foundations of the commonwealth were laid. Within two years afterward, one hundred and fifty reputable young women were sent over to become wives for the planters ; and homes, the most adhesive materials for the foundation of a state, were created. SECTION II. NEW YORK. 1. We have observed that Henry Hudson's discoveries set in motion important commercial enterprises by the Dutch.' So early as 1610, Amsterdam directors of the Dutch East India Company 3 sent a ship from the Texel, to traffic with the Indians on the Mauritius or Hudson river, in furs and peltries. During the same year the Half-Moon was also sent on a similar errand, and a trading station was soon established on Man- hattan island, on which the city of New York now stands. 2. Some of these adventurers cruised along the New England coast 4 and opened the way for trap- pers and traders as far east as Narragansett bay. Others went up the Hudson and traded with In- dians two hundred miles from the sea. They built Fort Nassau 5 1 Veree 3, page 25. 2. Ver.^e 21, page 22. .-', Verse 20, page 22, 4. Note 2, page 10. 5. Named in honor of the popular prince of Nassau. Questions.— 21. What change now occurred in the public affairs of Virginia ? What did Governor Yeardley do ! How were the foundations or the commonwealth of Virginia laid ? What happy event fur the colony occurred in Itil9?— 1. What did Hudson's discoveries do? What did Home of the directors of the Dutch Kast India Company do in 1610 ? What can you tell about the Half-Moon and Manhattan Island! 2. What did Dutch adventurers do eastward, and up the Hudson river i NEW YORK. 33 New Netherland. West India Company. Settlements. and a trading house, on a small island below the site of Albany, in 1614; and nine years later (1623) they founded the city of Albany, and built Fort Orange ' there. 3. In the autumn ot 1614, the States General 3 of Holland gave to a company of Amsterdam merchants a monopoly of the trade in America from Cape May to Nova Scotia, and the territory was named New Netherland. The trade was very profitable; andin 1621 these merchants and others were incorporated the Dutch West India Com- pany. Ample political powers were given to them. The territory was erected into a province of Holland, and the armorial distinction of a count was granted. 3 4. In 1623, the Dutch West India Company commenced operations vigorously. In April, of that year, they sent thirty families of French Protestants who had taken refuge in Holland, to make a settlement in New Netherland. Cornelius Jacobsen May was sent with them as governor. Most of the families settled on the site of Brooklyn, opposite New York, and a few made their home where Albany now stands. In that year (1623) the foundations of the commonwealth of New York were laid. SEAL OF NEW NETHER LAND. 1. Named in honor of the renowned William of Orange. 2. A legislative body, answering, in a degree, to our Congress. 3. Several hundred years ago there were large districts of country in England and on the Continent, governed by earls, who were subject to the crown, however. These districts were called counties, and the name is still retained, even in the United States, and indicates cer- tain judicial and other jurisdiction. New Netherland was constituted a county of Holland, having all the individual privileges appertaining to an earldom, or separate government. The armorial distinction of an earl, or count, was a kind of cap, called coronet, seen over the shield in the above engraved representation of the seal of New Netherland. The figure of a beaver, on the shield, is emblematic of the Hudson river regions, where that animal abounded, and of one of the grand objects of settlement here, the trade in furs. Questions. — 3. How was New Netherland formed? Tell of the establishment of the Dutch West India Company. What was done for New Netherland. 4. What can you tell about the settlement of New Netherland ? How were the foundations of the commonwealth of New York laid ? 2* 84 SETTLEMENTS. Captain Smith in New England. The Puritans. SECTION III. MASSACHUSETTS, 1. The Plymouth Company, we have observed, was at first unsuccessful. The country northward of the domain of the Lon- don Company was almost unknown, excejrting its sea-coasts, until 1614, when the intrepid Captain John Smith 1 went there, and with only eight men explored its bays and rivers, and much of the country far inland from the Penobscot to Cape Cod.' He constructed a map of the country, and called the region New England. 2. Smith was ordered to New England, to plant a settlement, in 1615. His vessel was captured by a French pirate, and Smith and his whole company were carried to France. He escaped to England in an open boat, and aroused the company to new exer- tions. Finally, in 1620, a new charter was granted, and forty of the wealthier and powerful men of the realm were incorporated The Council of Plymouth. The territory confided to their charge embraced more than a million of square miles, between the fortieth and forty-eighth degrees of latitude, and westward in- definitely. This vast monopoly, composed chiefly of speculators and mercenary adventurers, was not a good instrument for found- ing a state. 3. What rich and powerful men could not do, a few humble Christian men and women performed. In the same year when this new charter was granted [1620], a company of pious people in Holland, who had been driven to that noble asylum by perse- cution several years before, crossed the Atlantic and founded a permanent and powerful state. They and their friends in faith and practice in England were called Puritans, in derision, because they abstained from indulgence in the follies and vices of their 1. Verse 6, page 26. 2. Verse 14, page 20. MASSACHUSETTS. 35 The Puritans in Holland. Pilgrims on the ocean. time, and endeavored to lead lives marked by goodness and puri- ty. Because the Puritans dissented from the practices of the Church of England, 1 and refused to conform to them, they were also called Dissenters and Nonconformists. 4. Among the devout men who fled from England was the Reverend John Robinson, pas- tor of a flock gathered in the northern counties. Informed that there was " freedom of religion for all men in Holland," he fled thither, with his people [1608], and established a church at Ley- den. They were soon joined by others from their native country. Their purity of life and lofty in- dependence commanded the admiration of the Dutch ; and their loyalty to the country from which they had been driven was respected as a noble virtue. 5. The narratives of the Dutch traders to America made Robinson and his people, who felt they were only Pilgrims, determine to go to that land, where they might dwell in peace, and worship God in their own way. They obtained leave of the Plymouth company to settle in North Virginia. They formed a partnership with some London merchants, who furnished capital for the enterprise, 2 and, in the summer of 1620, many of them embarked for America, in two vessels, the Speedwell and the May- Flower. 6. The Speedwell did not proceed far before the courage of the A PURITAN. 1. The national church in England was Roman Catholic for a long time, until King Henry the Eighth quarreled with the head of that church. The vicious king asked Pope Julius HI. to divorce him from his queen, Catharine of Aragon, in order that he might marry the beautiful Anne Boleyn. The pope properly refused to give his sanction to the crime ; and the licentious monarch, who had been so much of a friend of the Roman pontiff as to receive the title of Defender of the Faith, quarreled with the pope, and professed Prot- estantism. An act of Parliament in 1534 declared the king of England to be the supreme head of the church in that realm, and Protestantism (verse 7, page 17) was made the estab- lished religion of England. 2. The services of each emigrant were valued as a capital of ten pounds, and belonged to the company. All profits were to be reserved till the end of seven years, when all the lands, houses, and every production of their joint industry were to be valued, and the amount divided among the shareholders, according to their respective interests. This was a com- munity of interest similar, in character, to those which have been proposed and attempted in our day, under the respective titles of Communism, Fouricrism, and Socialism. It failed tc accomplish its intended purpose, and was abandoned. Questions.— 4. What can you tell about John Robinson and his followers in Holland? b. What caused Robinson and his people to desire to go to America? What did they do? 36 SETTLEMENTS. The pilgrims in America. Their Bufferings. captain and company failed, and both ships returned to port. The May-Flower sailed again on the 6th of September, with forty men, most of them heads of families. The whole company numbered one hundred and one. After a boisterous passage of sixty-three days, she was anchored within Cape Cod. Her peo- ple had already entered into a written covenant, in the form of a constitu- tion of government, and elected John Carver to be their governor. That was a sublime act performed in the cabin of the May-Flower? 7. On the 22d of December, 1620, these Pilgrim Fathers, as they are lovingly called, landed on a bare rock, in the midst of snow, on the dreary coast of Massachusetts bay. They named the landing-place New Plymouth. There they suffered terribly. At one time there were only seven men able to take care of the sick. Governor Carver and his wife died, and so did nearly one-half of the immigrants, before the spring blossoms appeared. The survivors per- severed. They built houses and planted grain; they prospered, and others came; and there, in the year ^| ^;^5*!»i22§| 1620, the foundations of the commonwealth of GOV. carver's chair. Massachusetts were laid. 1. The following is a copy of the instrument : " In the name of God, Amen. We whose names are underwritten, the loyal subjects of our dread sovereign Lord, King James, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, ami Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, etc. Hav- ing undertaken, for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian faith, and honor of our king and country, a vovage to plant the first colony in the northern part of Virginia ; do, by these presents, solemnly and mutually, in the presence of God and of one another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil body politic, for our better ordering ard preservation, and furtherance of the ends aforesaid ; and by virtue hereof, to enact, consti- tute, and frame just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, and offices from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient tor the general good of the colony ; unto which we promise all due submission and obedience. In witness whereof we have hen to subscribed our names, at Cape Cod. the eleventh of November, in the year of the reium of our sovereign Lord, King James of England, France, and Ireland, the Eighteenth, and of Scotland the Fifty fourth. Anno Domini, 1620. 2. This was the throne apon which sat the first Christian monarch of New England. Governor Carver was at the head of a new state, ami, as chief magistrate, held the same relative position as King .lames of England, whose seat was richly ornamented and covered with a canopy of silk and gold. Questions —6. What can you tell about the people of the Speedwell 1 Tell of the voyago of the May-Flower. What great thing did the Pilgrims do on board of her? 7. Wh at can you tell about the landing of the Pilgrims? Tell of their sufferings, and deaths. What did the survivors do? MARYLAND. 37 Settlenfent of New Hampshire and Maine. King James. SECTION IV. NEW HAMPSHIRE. 1. A territory, which was named Zaconia, extending from the Merrimac river eastward to the Kennebec river, and inland to the St. Lawrence, was granted to Sir Ferdinand Gorges and John Mason, in 1622. Gorges was secretary to the council of Plymouth. Some settlements were immediately attempted, but it was seven years before a permanent one was established. This was effected in 1629, by the Rev. Mr. Wheelwright, who pur- chased from the Indians the wilderness between the Merrimac and Piscataqua rivers, and founded Exeter. 2. In the same year [1629], Mason became sole proprietor of Laconia, and the domain was named New Hampshire. He built a house on the site of Portsmouth. 1 Settlements were ex- tended eastward as far as Machias, and the western limits of Acadie, the French province, were fixed at Pemaquid Point, be- tween the Kennebec and Penobscot rivers. In 1641, the scattered settlements became dependents of the flourishing colony of Massa- chusetts Bay, and remained so till 1680, when New Hampshire became a royal province, and its foundations as a commonwealth were laid. SECTION V. MARYLAND. 1. The conceited bigot, King James, persecuted the Puritans for non-conformity to the usages of the established church, and the Roman Catholics were subjected to still harsher treatment. But he was fickle and inconsistent ; and men of both parties were found at times among his friends and counsellors. 1. Mason had been goven.or of Portsmouth, in Hampshire county, England, and these names were given in memory of his former residence. Questions.— 1. What can you tell about Laconia? Who was Gorges, and what did he do? What can you tell about a settlement in that region? 2. What did Mason do? What can you tell about settlements in New Hampshire and eastward? What did the settlements become?—!. What can yuu tell about King James? 38 SETTLEMENTS. The Maryland Charter. First Settlement In Maryland. 2. Among the most influential Roman Catholics was George Calvert, an active member of the London Company, and secre- tary of state. James created him Lord Baltimore (an Irish peer- age) in 1621, and granted him many personal favors. He visited Virginia in 1628, and resolved to establish a colony of Roman Catholics there. King Charles, successor of James, 1 readily granted a charter, but before it was completed [June, 1632] Lord Baltimore died. His son and successor, Cecil, received the char- ter, and the domain granted lay partly within the space between the lines of the London and Plymouth company's grants." In honor of Charles's Queen, Henrietta Marie, the young peer named the province Maryland. 3 3. The first settlers in Maryland, who were mostly Roman Catholics, sailed from England on the 2d of December, 1633, with Leonard Cal- vert, brother of Cecil, as their gov- ernor. 4 They arrived in March, 1634, and founded the town of St. Mary, which was made the capital of the colony. 4. The charter of Maryland was so liberal, that it invited settlers of every kind ; and Calvert treated the Indians so justly, that they were always friendly. Prosperity attended CECIL, SECOND LORD II ALTI.MOHE. 1. King James died Id 1025. 2. It was defined in the charter as extending along each side of the Chesapeake bay, from the 30th to the 4.">th degree of latitude, its western boundary being the line of the Potomac river. At this time the London Company vim dissolved, and the soil over which it held control was the property of the king. 3. She was a sister of Louis the Thirteenth, of Fiance. Mari'd is Mary in English. 4. Trading p ists were established a little earlier than this within the Maryland province. In 1631, William Clayborne obtained a license from the king to traffic wiili the Indian- ; and when Calvert and his company came, he had two settlements, one on Kent island, nearly opposite Annapolis, and another at the present Havre de Grace, at the month of the Susque- hannah. He refused to acknowledge the authority of Baltimore, and trouble ensued. He collected his people on the eastern shore of Maryland in 1035, with a determination to defend his claims by force of arms : and in May quite a severe skirmish ensued between his forces and those of the colonists. Clayborne's men were taken prisoners, and he fled to Virginia. He was declared guilty of treason, and sent to Kn.dind for trial. His estates were forfeited ; but, being acquitted Of the charge, be returned to Maryland and ten years afterward incited a rebellion there. Questions. — 2. What can you tell about George Calvert, and James's friendship for him? What did ( alvert do* What can you tell about the procuring of a charter for Maryland? Z. Who were the first settlers in Maryland ( What did they do? CONNECTICUT. 39 Discoveries and Settlements in Connecticut. the settlers from the beginning. A pure democracy was estab- lished as a form of government ; ' and on the 8th of March, 1635, the first legislative assembly met at St. Mary. Then was founded the commonwealth of Maryland. SECTION VI. \ CONNECTICUT. 1. Adrian Block, a Dutch navigator, 2 discovered the Connecticut river in 1614, and, not long afterward, Dutch traders were on its banks. They ill-treated and exasperated the Indians, 3 and were soon compelled to erect a small fort for their own protection from the savages. This fort was a little below the site of Hartford. 2. In 1630, the Council of Plymouth granted a large domain in the region of Connecticut to the earl of Warwick, who, the fol- lowing year, transferred all his rights thereto to several distin- guished English gentlemen. The boundary of the province was defined as from the "Narraganset river" in the east, to the Pacific ocean on the west. The Dutch were disturbed, and claiming ju- risdiction over the Connecticut valley by right of priority of occupation, determined to maintain their position by force, if necessary. 4 3. The first attempt at settlement by the English was made in the autumn of 1633, when a party, under Captain Holmes, ascended the river in a sloop with the frame of a house. The Dutch at the fort ordered him to stop, but he sailed by unmolested, and set up his house on the site of Windsor, a few miles above Hartford. 1. That is, every freeman was allowed to vote in the assembly. As the members in- creased, this was found to be inconvenient, and in 1639 a representative government was formed. 2. Verse 2, page 32. 3. An Indian chief was taken on board a Dutch vessel, and was rot released unt'l a ran- som of one hundred and forty fathoms of wampum (verse 4, page 6) had been paid. The outrage was never forgiven. 4. They had placed two cannon in their fort, and made it a formidable obstruction to the navigation for an enemy. Questions.— 4. What can you tell about the Maryland charter, and the founding of the commonwealth ?— 1. Who discovered the Connecticut river? What can you tell about the Dutch on its banks? 2. What did the council of Plymouth do in 1630? What were the boundaries of Connecticut? How did it affect the Dutch ? 3. Describe the first attempt at settlement in Connecticut. What did the Dutch and Captain Holmes do? 40 SETTLEMENTS. Connecticut Settlements, War with the Pequods. 4. Holmes's settlement flourished, and two years later a band of immigrants from Massachusetts Bay, sixty in number (men, women, and children), with cattle, made their way to the Con- necticut through the dreary wilderness. 1 They suffered much on the way, and more after their arrival. Relief came in the spring. They built a small house for public worship on the site of Hartford, and there, in April, 1636, the first court, or organized government, was held. At about the same time, a fort was built near the mouth of the Connecticut river, and the FIRST MEETING-HOTSE. settlement there was named bay brook. 5. In June, 1636, about one hundred emigrants from Boston, led by Reverend Thomas Hooker, made their way through the wilderness to the Connecticut river. They reached that stream on the 4th of July, and a greater portion of them settled around the little house of worship on the site of Hartford, while others founded Wethersfield, and Springfield far up the valley. 6. Great trouble soon appeared. Between the powerful tribes of the Narraganset and Mohegan Indians, was a warlike one called Pequods, who were enemies to both. Because the white people were friendly with both their foes, the Pequods were jealous. They kidnapped white children, and sometimes mur- dered settlers in the forests. At length they sought an alliance with the Narragansets, in an effort to exterminate the intruders. The design was prevented by Roger Williams, of Massachusetts Bay, who had won the respect of the Indians in what is now Rhode Island. 2 7. During the winter and spring of 1637, the Pequods made murderous raids into the Connecticut valley, in small numbers. At length the leaders of the settlers there declared war against the Pequods, whose chief, Sassacus, lived between the Thames 1. This was the first introduction of cattle Into Connecticut. ' 2. Verse 1, page 42. Questions.— 4. What can von tell about other settlers in tl e Connecticut valley? What did they do on the site of Hartford ) What was done at the mouth of the river? 5. What e-in you tell about settlere led by Hooker to Connecticut? 6. What trouble appeared? What can you tell about the Pequods! CONNECTICUT. 41 Destruction of the Pequods. Founding of New Haven. and Mystic rivers. Their brethren in Massachusetts Bay agreed to aid them. White people, and Mohegans under the great Uncas, went by water to Rhode Island. There other white people, and Narragansets under Miantonomoh, joined them, and the little allied army, full five hundred strong, under Captains Mason and Underbill, brave leaders, marched westward to attack the strongholds of the Pequods. 8. Before dawn on the 5th of June, 1637, the principal fort of the Pequods, on the Mystic river, was surprised ; and more than six hundred men, women, and children perished by weapons and fire. The blow was unexpected and appalling. Sassacus and his followers made no resistance ; they fled westward in terror, and were utterly dispersed. A nation had perished in a day. The New England Indians were filled with awe ; and for forty years the white people were unmolested by them. 9. While pursuing the Pequods along the region of Long Island sound, the sagacious Puritans discovered the beauty and fertility of the country, and in the autumn of 1637, a few adven- turers built a hut on the site of New Haven. In the spring of 1638, others, with the Rev. John Davenport, arrived. They purchased lands of the Indians, founded the city of New Haven, and made the Bible their guide in matters of civil government. 10. In January, 1639, most of the settlers in the Connecticut valley met in convention at Hartford, and adopted a written constitution for their government. It provided for a governor and legislature, to be elected annually by the people. These were required to take an oath of allegiance to the commonwealth, and not to the king. Then and there (1639) were laid the founda- tions of the Commonwealth of Connecticut. Questions.— 7. What did the Pequods do? Howwas wnr with the Pequods commenced? 8. What can you tell about an attack on the Pequods? What were its effects? 9. What did the white people, chasing the Indians, discover? What did the discovery lead to? What can you tell about the founding of New Haven ? 10. What did the Connecticut valby settlers do in 1639 ? 42 SETTLEMENTS. Written Constitution. SECTION VII. RHODE ISLAND. 1. Roger Williams, an eminent preacher, was banished from Massachusetts Bay toward the close of 1635. He sought refuge in the wilderness, in the cabin of Massasoit, 1 the chief of the Wampanoags, at Mount Hope, near Narraganset bay. There he was joined by friends in the spring of 1636. In a light canoe they went up the bay, and at its head, on a green slope by a spring, they prayed, and chose the spot for a settlement. With grateful piety they named the place Providence. 8 2. Persecuted men came there to find freedom of speech, which was denied them in a degree by zealots in the Massachusetts Bay colony. They established a pure democracy in politics and reli- gion. Canonicus, the powerful Narraganset sachem, became their fast friend ; and, as we have seen, he and his people were kept from joining the Pequods by the persuasions of Williams. 3. In 1638, several persons came from Boston, on Williams's invitation ; and Miantonomoh, another sachem, sold them the beautiful island of Aquiday 3 for a trifle, which they called the Isle of Rhodes. They founded Portsmouth on its northern extremity, adopted a written constitution for their government, 4 and chose William Coddington their governor. 5 Liberty of con- science was absolute there ; and on their seal was the expressive motto, "Amor vincit omnia" ("Love is all-powerful"). In 1639, 1. Massaso't bad become acquainted with tbe manner of building cabins adopted by the settlers at fishing stations on the coast, and had constructed one tor himself. They "were, much more comfortable than wigwams. Bee verse "., page •'. 2. That fountain still bears the name of Roger Williams' Spring. :s. This was the [ndian name of Rhode Island. It is a Narraganset word, signifying Peaceable Isle. It is sometimes spelled Aouitneok, ami Aquitnet, 4. It was similar to the otic used by Williams, and was as follows : "We, whose names an- underwritten, do swear solemnly, in the presence of Jehovah, to incorporate ourselves into a body politic, and, as He shall help us, will submit our persons, lives, and estates, unto our Lord .Tcsus Christ, the King of kinu's. and Lord of Hosts, and to all tnose most perfect and absolute laws of His. given US ill His holv Word of truth, to he guided and judged there- by." 5. He was not absolutely a governor. The'r executive was in imitation of the Jewish form ot government under" the judges. Coddington was chosen flrst judge or chief ruler, with three assistants. Questions.— !. What can you tell about Roger Williams I What can you tell about his making a settlement I 2, Who joined Roger Williams, and why' What canyon tell about Canonicus? 3. What can you tell about the settlement of Rhode Island? What can you tell about l heir government I What was their seal? DELAWARE. 43 Rhode Island Charter. Swedes on the Delaware. Newport was founded near the other extremity of the island. The settlements under Williams and Coddington were known respectively as the Providence and Rhode Island Plantations. 4. In 1643, Roger Williams went to England to obtain a charter for them jointly. After much delay, he succeeded ; and in March, 1644, he received a charter of incorporation, under which all the settlements were united, as one independent colony, with the general title of The Rhode Island and Providence Planta- tions. Then (1644) were laid the foundations of the Common- wealth of Rhode Island. SECTION VIII. DELAWARE, NEW JERSEY, AND PENNSYLVANIA. 1. The first permanent settlements in the provinces of Dela- ware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, bore such intimate relation- ship that they may be appropriately considered as parts of one grand event in the history of American colonization. DELAWARE. 2. The southern coast-limit of New Netherland 1 was Cape Henlopen. The Dutch attempted settlements in that direction, and failed. The Swedes were the first permanent occupants of the shores of the Delaware bay and river. Their attention had been called to the subject of colonizing that region by Usselincx, a dissatisfied member of the Putch West India Company, who laid plans before Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden. 3. The king heartily approved the project, and his represent- atives executed it with zeal. Toward the close of 1637, fifty emigrants sailed from Stockholm, with Peter Minuit as governor, 1. Verse 3, page 33. Questions.— 4. By what name were the settlements known?— 1. What have you to say of settlements in Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania? 2. What was the southern boundary of New Netherland? What did the Dutch attempt? What did the Swedes do? 44 SETTLEMENTS. The Dutch and Swedes. Settlements in New Jersey. and in April, 1638, they landed on the site of New Castle, Del- aware, and commenced a settlement. They built a church and fort on the site of Wilmington, named the territory New Sweden, and on an island just below the site of Philadelphia, founded the capital of the new empire. 1 They had purchased from the In- dians the territory extending from Cape Henlopen to the Falls of the Delaware, at Trenton. 4. The Dutch finally determined to expel the intruders. To- ward the close of 1655, Peter Stuyvesant, governor of New Ne- therland, 2 sent vessels with troops for the purpose. The Swedes were not driven away, but subjugated. For twenty-five years -they increased, and greatly prospered under the rule of the au- thorities of New Netherland, which, meanwhile, became New York. The year 1638 is the time when the first permanent set- tlement was made in Delaware. NEW JERSEY. 5. Like Delaware, the territory of New Jersey was included in the New Netherland charter. 3 The Dutch built Fort Nassau, on the Delaware, just below the site of Camden, in 1623 ; and in June, the same year, four couples who had been married on the voyage from Amsterdam, seated themselves on the site of Glou- cester, a little below the fort. 6. Traders' huts were seen in various parts of New Jersey previous to 1664, when New Netherland passed into the hands of the English. The duke of York, its proprietor, conveyed to Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret the same year all the territory between the North and South (Hudson and Delaware) rivers. During the same year several families from Long Island settled on the site of Elizabethtown. In 1665, a charter was 1. This was about forty years before William Penn became proprietor of Pennsylvania, mid twenty-wix before there was a settlement in New Jersey. 2. Verse 3, page 33. 8. Verse 3, page 33. Questions.— 3. What did the representatives of the Swedish kinz do? What ran you tell all. nit Swedish emigration to America) In what region did they settle f 4. What .lid the Dutch and Swedes do? f>. What can you say alum! New Jersey i What did the Dutch do there? What em you tell about settlements on the Delaware ? 'fi. What can you tell about settlements in New' Jersey ? What did the duke of York do? What can you tell of a per- manent settlement, and trie founding of the commonwealth ? PENNSYLVANIA. 45 The Quakers. Penn and his American Province. given them; Philip Carteret, the governor, came; and a repre- sentative government, composed of the governor and council, and delegates chosen hy the people, was established. Then [1665] were laid the foundations of the Commonwealth of New Jersey. PENNSYLVANIA. 7. Among the strictest of the Puritans of England Avere a sect who were called Quakers, in derision. 1 The founder of the sect was George Fox, and one of the most distinguished of his con- verts was William Penn, son of an eminent admiral of that name. 8. Fox visited America in 1673, and found his people everywhere despised. He yearned for an asylum there for the persecuted sect everywhere ; and through the powerful influence of Penn and his family, the Quakers became possessors, by purchase, of the western half of New Jersey. The first company of immigrants landed in the autumn of 1675, and named the place of debarkation Salem. There, in 1681, the first legislative assembly of Quakers convened. 9. In the mean time, Penn projected a colony beyond the Dela- ware. Charles the Second gave him a charter, on the 14th of March, 1681, and the domain granted was called Pennsylvania. Penn sent a deputy to organize a civil government. 2 He was accompanied by a large party of emigrants, who had purchased lands of the proprietor. 3 The following year, Penn obtained by grant and purchase the domain of the present State of Delaware. 1. Some say it was given because Fox and hie followers quaked or shook when they preached. Others affirm that it was derived from the fact, that Geortre Fox admonished a magistrate before whom he was brought, to " quake at the word of the Lord." 2. He sent a frame of government for the approval of all the settlers. It ordained a gen- eral assembly, or court, to consist of a governor, a council of seventy chosen bv the freemen of the colony, and a house of delegates, to consist of not less than two hundred members, nor more than five hundred. These were also to be chosen by the people. The proprietor, or his deputy (the governor), was to pres'de, and to have a threefold voice in the coui.cil ; that is, on all questions, he was to have three votes for every one of the councilors. 3. Lands in the new province were offered for about ten cents an acre. A large number of purchasers united, and called themselves The Company of Free Traders, with whom Questions.— 7. What can von toll about Quakers ? Who was William Penn ? 8. What did George Fox do and desire? What can you tell about Quakers in West Jersey? 9. What did William Penn do? How was he favored by the king? What can you tell about the set- tlement of Pennsylvania ? How did Penn extend his possessions ? WILLIAM PENN. 46 SETTLEMENTS. Founding of Pennsylvania. Settlement of North Carolina. 10. At the close of summer, in 1682, Penn sailed for America. He was joyfully received by the Swedes and the thousand new comers then on the soil. He visited his brethren in West Jersey, and the English authorities in New York. On his return, he met the general assembly of Pennsylvania, at THE ASSEMBLY HOUSE. 1 r s.-, , , -. . .. . Chester, when he made a more judicious and permanent organization of the government. Then [1682] the foundations of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania were laid. SECTION IX. THE C AROLI N AS. 1. We have noticed the unsuccessful attempts to make settle- ments on the coasts of the Carolinas in the sixteenth century. Others were made soon after the settlement of Jamestown, and failed. Finally, some emigrants from Virginia settled near the site of Edenton, on the Chowan river, and their habitations be- came permanent. William Drummond was appointed their governor in 1663, and an independent community, with the title of the Albemarle County Colony, was established. 2. In the same year [1663], King Charles granted to eight of his favorite friends an immense territory in that region, and gave it the general name of Carolina." In 1667, the Bahama islands were added to the grant. Already some Barbadoes planters, Penn entered iato an agreement concerning the occupation of the soil, laying out of a city, etc. 1. The p'cture is a correct representation of the building at Chester, in Pennsylvania, wherein the assembly met. It was yet standing in 1850. Not far from the spot, on the shore of tin' Delaware, at the mouth of Chester creek, was also a solitary pine tree, which marked the place where Penn landed. 2. It extended eoast-wise, from the present boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina, southward to St. Augustine, and westward to the Pacific ocean. Questions. — 10. How was Penn received in America ? What did he do after his arrival ?— 1. What can you say of attempts to settle in the Carolinas* What was accomplished? THE CAROLHSTAS. 47 Settlement of South Carolina. Founding of Charleston. under Sir John Yeamans, a bankrupt baronet, had made a settle- ment on the site of Wilmington, on the Cape Fear river. 1 An independent government was organized, under the title of the Clarendon County Colony, and Yeamans was appointed governor. In 1668 the first popular legislative assembly convened at Edenton ; and at that period the Commonwealth of North Carolina was founded. 3. In 1670 a colony, under William Sayle and Joseph West, attempted to settle on Beaufort island, where the Huguenots built Fort Carolina. 8 They soon abandoned the spot, and on the Ash- ley river, a few miles above the site of Charleston, they made a settlement. They were joined by Sir John Yeamans, who came from Barbadoes with fifty white families and about two hundred negro slaves. He was appointed their governor, and Carteret County Colony was established in 1672. 4. Eightyears later [1680] Charleston was founded, on the point formed by the Ashley and Cooper rivers. 3 Immigrants came from Europe and the northern colonies, and settlements spread into the interior. Representative government was established, and at about this period [1682] the foundations of the Common- wealth of South Carolina were laid. 1. In 1661 some New England Puritans settled on the same spot, but the poverty of the soil made them soon abandon it. The now settlers turned their attention chiefly to the man- ufacture of boards and other timber, and also turpentine, from the immense pine forests of the coast regions. Such continues to be the staple trade in the region between the Cape Fear and Roanoke, in the vicinity of the seaboard. 2. Verse 8, page 18. Sayle had previously explored the Carolina coast. Twenty years before he had attempted to plant an " Eleutheria," or place dedicated to the genius of Lib- erty (see Eleutheria, Anthon's Classical Dictionary), in the beautiful islands near the coast of Florida. 3. Charleston was laid out by John Culpepper, who had been surveyor-general for North Carolina. The two rivers were named in honor of Ashley Cooper, earl of Shaftesbury. The Indian name of the former was Ke-uwali ; of the latter E-ti-wan. Questions.— 2. What did King Charles do in 1663 and 1667? What can you tell about a settlement on the site of Wilmington? What can you tell about the establishment of a gov- ernment, and the founding of the Commonwealth of North Carolina? 3. What can you tell about settlers and settlements farther south ? What about the establishment of a colony there? 4. What can you teil about the founding of Charleston, and the Commonwealth of South Carolina? 48 SETTLEMENTS. Oglethorpe's plan. Settlement of Georgia. SECTION X. GEORGIA. 1. The right to occupy the wilderness between the Savannah and St. John rivers was so hotly disputed, for a time, by the Spaniards at St. Augustine and the South Carolinians, that war seemed inevitable. 1 At that time a great moral movement was in progress in England, at the head of which was General James Edward Oglethorpe, a brave soldier and member of Parliament. It was to afford relief to virtuous prisoners for debt, and other poor of the realm. 2. Oglethorpe proposed to open the prison doors to ail such debtors as should agree to go to America and settle there, on the southern coast. A royal charter was granted by George the Second in June, 1732, to a corporation "in trust for the poor," for twenty years ; and Parlia- ment and individuals furnished money to carry out the benevolent design. 2 3. Oglethorpe was a practical philan- thropist. He accompanied the first band of emigrants, as their governor. They sailed in November, 1732, for the Carolina coast; touched at Charleston ; many made a brief halt at Beaufort; and by the mid- dle of February, 1733, the whole company were seated on Yama- craw bluff, on the site of the city of Savannah, which Oglethorpe had chosen as the place for settlement. There they commenced building the capital of the future state. * xn ^ JAMES EDWARD OGLETHORPE. 1. The Savannah is the present boundary line between South Carolina and Georgia, ami the St. John is a river in Northern Florida. The Spaniards instigated the Indians to depre- date on the Carolina settlers, who went southward of the Savannah, 2. Individuals subscribed lars/e sums ; and within two years after the charter was issued, Parliament had appropriated $180,000 for the same purpose. Questions.— 1. What can you tell about disputes between the Spaniards and the South Carolinians I What movement took place in England, and for what purpose? 2. What did Oglethorpe propose ? What was done? 3. What did Oglethorpe do i What can you tell about the first settlers in Georgia? GEORGIA. 49 Oglethorpe and the Indians. Founding of the Georgia colony. 4. Oglethorpe built a fort, mounted cannon upon it, and in May, 1733, he met fifty chiefs in council, with To-mo-chi-chi, 1 the principal sachem of the Creek confederacy, at their head. Satis- factory bargains were made for territory ; and by a treaty con- cluded in June, the English obtained sovereignty over a vast do- main, 2 which was named Georgia, in honor of the king. Then were laid the foundations of the commonwealth of that name. 5. We have considered the events which led to the first per- manent settlements in the United States, and the formation of colonies. We will now consider the history of those colonies, until the period of the French and Indian war, when they were united in a sort of national league for common defence. 1. To-mo-chi-chi was then an aged man, and at his first interview with Oglethorpe, he presented him with a buffalo 6kin, ornamented with the picture of an eagle. " Here," said the chief, " is a little present ; I give you a buffalo's skin, adorned on the inside with the head and feathers of an eagle, which I desire you to accept, because the eagle is an emblem of speed, and the buffalo of strength. The. English are swift as the bird, and strong as the beast, since, like the former, they flew over vast seas to the uttermost parts of the earth ; and, like the latter, they are so strong that nothing can withstand them. The feathers of an eagle are soft, and signify love ; the buffalo's skin is warm, and signifies protection : there- fore I hope the English will love and protect our little families." Alas! the wishes of the venerable To-mo-chi-chi were never realized, for the white people more often plundered and destroyed, than loved and protected the Indians. See picture on page 8. 2. The domain granted by the charter extended along the coast from the Savannah to the Alatamaha, and westward to the Pacific ocean. The trustees appointed by the crown pos- sessed all legislative and executive power ; and therefore, while one side of the seal of the new province expressed the benevolent character of the scheme, by the device of a group of toiling silkworms, and the motto, Non si/ii, sed aliis ; the other side, bearing, between two urns, the genius of '• Georgia Augusta," with a cop of liberty on her head, a spear, and a horn of plenty, was a false emblem. There was no political liberty for the people. Q0BSTIONS.— 4. What did Oglethorpe do at Savannah? What can you tell about his in- terview with the Indians? What can you say of the founding of t'.ie Commonwealth of Georgia? 5. What have we considered in this chapter, and what shall we now consider? CHAPTER IY. THE COLONIES. SECTION I. 1. The colonial history of the United States is comprised within the period commencing when the several settlements along the Atlantic coasts became organized into political com- munities, and ending when representatives of these colonies met in general congress in 1774. There was an earlier union of in- terests and efforts. It was when the English colonies aided the mother country in a long war against the combined hostilities of the French and Indians. As the local histories of the several colonies after the commencement of that war have but little in- terest for the general reader, we shall trace the progress of each colony only to that period, and devote a section to the narrative of the French and Indian war. 2. "VVe have observed that a settlement acquires the character cf.a colony only when it has become permanent, and the people, acknowledging allegiance to a parent state, are governed by or- ganic laws.' According to these conditions, the earliest of the twelve colonics represented in the congress of 1774, 2 was Virginia. 3. It was a happy day for the six hundred settlers in Virginia, when the gold-seekers disappeared, 3 and the enlightened George 1. Verse 1, page 24. 2. Georgia was not officially represented in that Congress. 3. Verse 11, page 28. Question's.— 1. What is the period of the colonial history of the United States? What earlier union than 1774 took place? What shall we now do? 2. What is the di!l'er<'nee between a settlement and a colunyt Which was the earliest colony? VIRGINIA. 51 The family in Virginia. Slaves introduced. Constitution. Yeardley became governor, and established a representative assem- bly [June 28th, 1619] — the first in all America. 1 And yet a prime element of happiness and prosperity was wanting. There were no white women in the colony. This want was soon sup- plied. During the following year [1620] not less than twelve hundred emigrants went from England to Virginia, and among them were ninety young women, " pure and uncorrupt," who were sold to the planters for wives, at the cost of their passage. 2 The family relation was soon established ; the gentle influence of woman gave refinement to social life on the banks of the James liver, and a new incentive was given to industry and thrift. 3 During the same year [1620] a Dutch trading vessel entered the James river with negroes, and sold twenty of them to the planters at Jamestown. This was the beginning of Negro Slavery in the United States. 4. Emigrants now nocked to Virginia in great numbers, and settlements extended even so far as the site of Richmond. The government was remodeled. Sir Francis Wyatt, appointed gov- ernor in 1621, took with him to Virginia a written constitution, which gave the people the privilege of choosing a popular legis- lative assembly, 4 while the governor and council were appointed by the Company. Trial by jury was established, and courts like those of England were organized. 5. Serious trouble soon appeared. Emperor Powhatan, the friend of the English, 6 was dead, and their enemy sat in his seat. 1. Verse 21, page 31. 2. Tobaeco had already become a circulating medium, or currency, in Virginia. The price of a wife varied from one hundred and twenty to one hundred and fifty pounds of this product, equivalent, in money value, to about $90 and $112 each. The second " cargo" were sold at a still higher price. By the king's special order, one hundred dissolute vagabonds, called "jail-birds" by the colonists, were sent over the same year, and sold as bond-servants for a specified time. 3. Mo3t of the immigrants hitherto were possessed of the spirit of mere adventurers. They came to America to repair shattered fortunes, or to gain wealth, with the ultimate ob- ject of returning to England to enjoy it. Tha creation of families made the planters more attached to the soil of Virginia. 4. The different settlements were called boroughs. This assembly consisted of two bur- gesses or representatives from each borough, chosen by the people. This was the beginning of the Virginia House of Burgesses, which was so powerful on the side of freedom when the old war for independence broke out in 1775. 5. Verse 19, page 30. Qdestions.— 3. What was a happy incident in the history of Virginia? What were wanting in the colony ? How was that want supplied ? What did the family relation do? How was Negro Slavery in the United States begun ? 4. What can you say of the growth of Virginia ? What of a new form of government ? 52 COLONIES. Indian War. Usurpation. House of Burgesseg. The Indians plotted the extermination of the white people. At midday, on the first of April, 1622, they fell in fury on the more remote settlements. Within an hour, three hundred and fifty men, women, and children were slain. In the space of a few days, eighty plantations were reduced to eight* The people at James- town and vicinity were put on their guard by a Christian Indian, and were saved. 6. A vindictive war ensued, and a terrible blow of retaliation was given by the white people. The Indians upon the James and York rivers were slaughtered by scores, or were driven far back into the wilderness. Yet a blight was upon the colony. Sickness and famine followed close upon the massacre. Within three months, the colony of four thousand souls was reduced to twenty-five hundred; and at the beginning of 1624, of the nine thousand persons who had been sent to Virginia from England, only eighteen hundred remained. 7. By an act of high-handed usurpation, King James dissolved the London Company in 1623, and, seizing their possessions, made Virginia a royal province. Yeardley 2 was appointed gov- ernor, with twelve councilors ; but the king wisely abstained from interfering with the House of Burgesses, for the people regarded their constitutional privileges as their rights. 8. James was succeeded by his son Charles, in 1625. He Avas a weak and selfish man. He favored the Virginians, because he wished to share in the profits of projected commercial specu- lations in their tobacco. 3 The people accepted his favors, but went steadily on in the practice of self-government, with a deter- mination to be free. They boldly deposed an obnoxious governor, 1. Tho leader of this massacre was Opechancanough, a younger brother of Powh:itan, and his successor as emperor. He was wily and very treacherous. Only a few days before the massacre, he declared that " sooner the skies would fall than his friendship with the English should be dissolved." Even on the day of the massacre, the Indians entered the houses of the planters with usual tokens of friendship. 2. Verse 3, page 50. 3. In June, 1628, the king, in a letter to the governor and council, asked them to convene an assembly to consider his proposal to contract for the whole crop of tobacco. He thus tacitly acknowledged the legality of the republican assembly of Virginia, hitherto not sanc- tioned, but only permitted. Questions.— 5. What can you tell about troubles on the death of Powhatan ? What did the Indians dot What dreadful calamity lefcll the colony? 6. What can you tell about re- taliation? How did the colony suffer from sickness? 7. What did the king do to the Lon- don Company? How did it atfoot Virginia? 8. W T ho succeeded King James? W T hat did lie do! and for what purpose? How did the people show their independence? VIRGINIA. 53 Sir William Berkeley. Loyalty of the Virginiano. and elected a new one. Although the dismissed magistrate was reinstated, the royal governors ever afterward paid marked respect to the expressed will of the people. 9. Sir William Berkeley, an accomplished courtier, was ap- pointed governor in 1641. He ruled with vigor and discretion, and the colony prospered greatly. 1 He was a stanch royalist, and suppressed the growth of democracy as much as he dared, periling his seat. During the years 1644 and 1645, he con- ducted a war with the Indians, which they began, so well that the power of the savages for harm was completely broken, and he received large cessions of land from the subjugated chiefs. 10. During the civil war in England, when King Charles lost his head, the Virginians, adroitly led by Berkeley, remained loyal, and invited the monarch's exiled son and heir to come over and be their king. They defied the power of Cromwell and the republican Parliament; and until Charles was restored to the throne of his father in 1660, Virginia was virtually an independ- ent state. Becoming dissatisfied with Berkeley, they elected an- other governor in his place, and democracy became wide-spread and powerful throughout the colony, notwithstanding the royal- ist majority proclaimed Charles " king of England, Scotland, Ire- land, and Virginia.'''' s 11. The restoration of monarchy in England was the signal for an attempt to overthrow democracy in Virginia. Full power to do so was given to Berkeley and the royalist party. Those of the latter who were members of the House of Burgesses, elected for two years, claimed the right to hold office indefinitely. Thus the representative system, which was so prized by the people, was virtually overthrown. Unequal taxes were levied, and an 1. In 1643 the number of colonists was 20.000. " The cottages were filled with children, as the ports were with ships and immigrants." 2. When informed that Parliament was about to send a fleet to bring them to submission, the Virginians sent a message to Charles, then in Flanders, inviting him to come over and be king of Virginia. He had resolved to come, when matters took a turn in England favor- able to his restoration. In gratitude to the colonists, he caused the arms of Virginia to be quartered with those of England, Scotland, and Ireland, as an independent member of the emp ; re. From this circumstance Virginia received the name of The Old Dominion. Coins, with these quarterings, were made as late as 1773. Questions .—9. What can you tell of Governor Berkeley ? What can you tell about i war with the Indians? 10. What did the Virginians do during the civil war in England* What did the Virginians do after the restoration of Charles the Second ? 11. What was at- tempted in Virginia? What did Berkeley and the royalists do? 54 COLONIES. Virginia republicans. " Bacon's rebellion." idle aristocracy were recognized as a distinct and ruling class. The Church of England was made the state religion, and intoler- ance, the parent of persecution, began to grow. The profligate monarch gave away large tracts of the finest portions of Virginia to his special favorites, and an oppressive navigation act, passed by the Parliament ten years before, was revived. 1 2. The " common people " — the men of toil and substantial worth in the colony — formed a republican party, and rebellious murmurs were heard on every side. These soon grew into acts. Threats of an Indian raid was a pretext for the people to arm themselves. They chose Nathaniel Bacon for a leader, and he placed himself at the head of about five hundred men, without Berkeley's permission. The governor proclaimed him a traitor, and sent troops to arrest him. The whole colony was soon in- volved in civil Avar. 13. Bacon drove Berkeley to the eastern shore of the Chesa- peake. He dissolved the aristocratic assembly ; reinstated the House of Burgesses ;' confiscated the property of royalists ; held their wives as hostages ; and proclaimed the abdication of the governor. He was about to cast off all allegiance to the British crown, Avhen news came that troops from England had arrived to put down the rebellion. 14. Bacon was deceived. There were no imperial troops in Virginia. Under the impression that there were, and that armed royalists were marching upon Jamestown, he set that village on fire at dusk on the 30th of September [1676]. The next morn- ing nothing Avas left of the first town built by the English in America, but the broken emmet tower. toAVcr of the church, which now attracts the attention of the voyager on the James river. 5 Bacon then 1. Note 4, page 51. 2. The church, of which the brick tower alone remains, was built about 1620. It was probably the third church erected in Jamestown. The ruin is now (1864) a few rods from Questions.— 11. How were the people oppressed? 12. AV T ho formed a republican party in Virginia? What did they do? How came they to arm llieimelves? What can you tell about Nathaniel Bacon ? 13. What did Bacon do, and contemplate doing! A\ T hal rumors readied Bacon? 14. AVhat did Bacon do? What remains of Jamestown? What can you tell about the death of Bacon, and the end of his " rebellion " I AVhat did the governor do ? VIRGINIA. 55 End of " Bacon's rebellion." Salutary changes, pushed on with his troops to meet his enemy, but within a fort- night he perished, on the north bank of the York river [October 11, 1676], from fever — a foe more inexorable than man. With him died the rebellion. The exasperated governor caused more than twenty of Bacon's leading associates to be hanged, and many suffered from fines, confiscations, and imprisonments. 15. This effort to establish a free government is known in his- tory as Bacon's Rebellion. There was no printing press in Vir- ginia to put facts on record, 1 and for a hundred years loyalists called the leader a traitor. Such would have been Washington's title, had our Revolution failed. The colony felt the effects of this civil commotion many years, and suffered much from tyranny ; but democratic ideas had taken root, and the people were on the eve of another general rebellion. King Charles died, and his brother James succeeded him, in 1685. 16. The Virginians hoped for a change on the accession of James the Second. They were disappointed; and again they were on the verge of open rebellion, when the Revolution in Eng- land, in 1688, placed William of Orange and his wife Mary on the throne. Then a real change for the better took place in all the American colonies. The rights of the people were expressly defined, and the growth of free institutions in America was rapid and health- ful. From that time Virginia was a prosperous commonwealth. 2 the encroaching bank of the river, and is about thirty feet in height. The engraving is a cor- rect representation of its present appearance. In the grave-yard adjoining are fragments of several monuments. Besides the church and court-house, Jamestown contained sixteen or eighteen houses, built of brick, and quite commodious, and a large number of humble log cabins. 1. Berkeley was an enemy to popular enlightenment. He said to commissioners sent from England in 1671, " Thank God, there are no free schools nor printing-press ; and I hope we shall not have these hundred years ; for learning has brought disobedience, and heresy, and sects into the world, and printing has divulged these, and libels against the best govern- ment." Despots are always afraid of the printing-press, for it is the most formidable foe of tyrannv. 2. The population at that time (1688) was about 50.000, of whom one-halt were negro Blaves. The tobacco trade had become very important, the exports to England and Ireland being about 30,000 hogsheads that year. Almost one hundred vessels annually came from those countries to Virginia for tobacco. A powerful militia of almost 9,000 men was or- ganized, and they no longer feared their dusky neighbors. They became very expert in the use of fire-arms in the woods, and back to this period the Virginia rifleman may look for the foundation of his fame as a marksman. The province contained twenty-two counties, and forty-eight parishes, with a church and clergyman in each, and a great deal of glebo land. But there was no printing-press nor book-store in the colony. A press was first estab- lished in the colony in 1729. Questions.— 15. What was this effort of the people called in history? What thoughts arose on the subject ? How did the "rebellion" affect the colony? 16." What did the Vir- ginians hope for? What were they about to do? • How were the colonies benefited by the Revolution in England, in 1688? 56 COLONIES. Settlement of Plymouth in New England. SECTION II. MASSACHUSETTS. 1. For a hundred days after the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers at New Plymouth, 1 a few Indians hovered with fear around that band of sufferers. Then they boldly approached the settlement [March 26, 1621]; and Samoset, who had learned some English words of fishermen at Penobscot, 2 said, Welcome, Englishmen! These were blessed words for the settlers, who feared the savages. Soon afterward, Massasoit, the Wampanoag sachem, 3 came from Mount Hope in barbaric pomp, and formed a treaty of friendship with the white people, which remained unbroken for fifty years. 2. Three days after this interview [April 3, 1621], Governor Carver died, and was succeeded by "William Bradford, who was a chief manager of the affairs of the colony for more than thirty years. The settlers endured great hardships. In the autumn of 1621 they were barely saved from starvation by a scanty crop of Indian corn. 4 In November, other immigrants came, and offered more mouths to be filled with scanty supplies. The winter was spent in suffering from cold and hunger, and dread of Canonicus, the Narraganset sachem, who was unfriendly. 3. In the summer of 1622, a company of sixty-three immigrants arrived. They had been sent by Weston, a dissatisfied member of the Plymouth Company, to plant a new colony. Many of them were idle and vicious. They lived on the slender supplies of the Plymouth people a while, when they commenced a settle- ment on the site of Weymouth. They offended the Indians, and 1. Verse 7. page 36. 2. Verse 15, page 20. 3. Note 3, page 7. 4. While Captain Miles Standish and others were seeking a place to land (verse 7, page liti), they found some maize in one of the deserted huts of the savages. Afterward, Samnset and others taught them how to cultivate the grain (then unknown in Europe), and this supply serving for seed, provide ■ntiallv saved them from starvation. The grain now first received the name of Indian nun. Early in September [1621], an exploring party, under Standish, coasted northward to Shawmut. the site of Boston, where they found a few Indians. The place wa.s delightful, and, for a while, the Pilgrims thought of making their residence there. Questions.— 1. What can you tell about the Pilgrims nn<\ Indians at Plymouth I What can you relate of Masaasoit? 2. What can you tell about Governors Carver and Bradford? What can you tell about the sufferings of the settlers? 8. What can you tell about the arri- val and character of new immigrants ? What did they do ? What did Captain Standish do ? MASSACHUSETTS. 57 Founding of the Massachusetts Bay colony. were saved from destruction by them' by the timely assistance of Captain Miles Standish and eight followers, who attacked the savages and killed a chief and several warriors. 2 Most of the emigrants at Wissagusset, as the Indians called the place, soon afterward returned to England. 4. The partnership of the London merchants and the settlers 3 proved injurious to the interests of the latter, and at the end of the prescribed term of seven years, in 1627, it was dissolved. The colonists became sole proprietors of the soil ; the community system was abandoned ; and industry and thrift found new and power- ful incentives in individual enterprise. 4 Their government, which was a pure democracy in church and state, remained almost unchanged until 1634, when a representative system was established, and a pastor was chosen as spiritual guide. 5. Persecutions of Nonconformists had sent many and valu- able emigrants to New England. Some made a temporary settle- ment on Cape Anne, in 1624 ; others seated themselves, four years later, on the Merrimac river; and, in the summer of 1628, John Endicot and one hundred immigrants came over, and at Naumkeag, which they named Salem, they laid the foundations of the colony of Massachusetts Bay. The proprietors received a charter from the king the following year [March 14, 1629], and they were FIRST COLONY SEAL. 1. In gratitude for attentions and medicine during a severe illness, Massasoit revealed the plot formed by the Indians to murder these settlers, to Edward Winslow (afterward gov- ernor of the colony), a few days before the time appointed to strike the blow. 2. Standish carried the chiefs head in triumph to Plymouth. It was borne upon a pole, and was placed uron the palisades of the little fort which had just been erected. The good Robinson (verse 4, page 35), when he heard of it, wrote, " Oh, how happy a thing it would have been that yon hnd converted some before you killed any !" The injustice and violence practiced toward the Indians by the English produced much evil. 3. Verse 5, page 35. 4. Verse IS, page 30. The colonists unsuccessfully tried the cultivation of tobacco. They raised enough grain and vegetables for their own consumption, and relied upon traffic in furs with the Indians, for obtaining the means of paying for cloths, implements, etc., from Eng- land. In 1627, they made the first step toward tl e establishment of the cod fisherv. since become so important, by constructing a salt work, and curing some fish. In 1624, Edward Winslow imported three cows and a bull, and soon animals of that kind became numeious in the colony. Questions.— 4. What change in ownership of the territory occurred ? What effect did it have? What was the form "of government in 1634? 5. What drove English people to America? What can yoa tell about them, and about the founding of the colony of Massa- •husetts Bay? 3* 58 COLONIES. Founding of Boston and other towns. John Winthrop. incorporated by the name of The Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay, in New England. 1 6. The new colony increased rapidly, and in the autumn of 1629 the proprietors assigned the charter and government to them. Men of wealth and character prepared to emigrate to the independent republic; and in July, 1630, John Winthrop and about three hundred families arrived at Salem, Winthrop having been chosen governor. They commenced settlements at and around Dorchester, Roxbury, Watertown, and Cambridge. Win- throp and others built cottages on the peninsula of Shawmut, and there founded the city of Boston, the future capital of New England. 7. Sickness laid two hundred of the emigrants in the grave before winter. The survivors were not disheartened. They had come to estab- lish a free state, and persevered. In 1634 they changed their pure democracy to a representative government. 3 Prosperity prevailed. Indian leaders dined at Gov- ernor Winthrop's table, and made treaties of friendship with him. Friendly words passed between him and the Dutch John winthrop. authorities on Manhattan; 3 and inter- course was opened, by sea, with Virginia, as early as May, 1632/ 8. The Puritans 5 of Massachusetts, just escaped from persecu- tion, were jealous of every interference with their authority, their 1 The administration of affairs was intrusted to a trover:, or, deputy, and e'ghteen assist- ants who were to be elected annually by the stockholders of ihe corporation. A general (issem' ly of the freemen of the colony was to be held at leasl four turns a year. I,, legislate for the colonv The king claimed iio Jurisdiction, for he regarded the -whole matter as a trading operation, not ns the founding of an empire. The Instrument conferred on the col- onists all the. rights of English subjects, and afterward became the text for many powerful discourses against the usurpations of royalty. _ 2 It was agreed at n general asaemhly of the people in May, 1631, that all the officers of the government should thereafter be chosen by Ihe freemen of the colony. None were con- s'dered freemen unless rhey were members of some church within the colony r mm the beginning, the closest Intimacy existed between the ehnrch and state in Massachusetts, and that Intimacy gave rise toa great many disorders. This provision was repealed in lbto. 4] In May,' 1832, a "vessel from Virginia, laden with Indian corn, sailed into Boston Harbor. 5. Verse 8, page ".4. Questions —6 What can you tell about the new colonv? What of new settlements! How was the city of Boston founded? 7. How did the colony stiller? What can you tell about prosperity that ensued? MASSACHUSETTS. 59 Puritan strictness. Roger Williams and bis views. Troubles. peculiar views, and their peace. They regarded Churchmen ' and Roman Catholics as their deadly foes — to be kept at a distance. 3 They adopted rigid rules of action, and required those who came among them to conform to them. By the standard of our day they would be called intolerant bigots ; by the standard of their time, they appear like sagacious men, made cautious and suspi- cious by suffering, and inimical to every seeming disturber of their peace. 9. Roger Williams, 3 a Puritan minister, was the first to feel the power of that intolerance. He boldly denounced the prevalent exclusiveness in Massachusetts ; denied the right of magistrates to control the consciences of the people, or to withhold protection from any religious sect whatever ; and concluded that the king had no right to require an oath of allegiance from the colonists, who were free. 4 For these and other broad views of the civil and religious rights of the people, he was banished from the colony, went to the wilderness [January, 1636], and founded Rhode Island. 5 10. Violent theological discussions ensued, in which Anne Hutchinson, an eloquent woman, took part, in favor of the views of Williams. Young Henry Vane, who had been elected gov- ernor in 1636, and several ministers and magistrates, agreed with him ; but the exclusive party, led by Winthrop, were the most powerful. Mrs. Hutchinson's doctrines were condemned as hereti- 1. Note 1, page 35. 2. The following is an example of the jealous zeal of the colonists in keeping their old persecutor at bay : Lyford, who was sent out to the Pilgrims by the London partners, as their minister, was refused and expelled, because he was friendly to the Church of England. John and Samuel Browne, residents at Salem, and members of Endicot's council," were arrested by him, and sent to England as "factious and evil-conditioned persons," because they insisted upon the use of the liturgy, or printed forms of the English Church, in their worship. 3. Verse 1, page 42. 4. Williams was violent in his denunciations, and even went so far as to contend that obe- dience to magistrates ought not to be enforced ; in other words, all civil government should be abolished, so far as it controlled the wills of men. He also held some very narrow views of social obligations. He maintained that an oath should not be tendered to an unconverted person, and that no Christian could lawfully pray with such a one, though it were a wife er child ! In the intemperance of his zeal, Williams often exhibited intolerance himself, and at this day would be called a bigot. Yet his tolerant teachings in general had a most salu- tary effect upon Puritan exclusiveness. 5. Verse 1, page 42. Questions.— 8. 'What have you to say about the feelings and actions of the Puritans in Massachusetts? 9. What can you tell about Roger Williams's banishment, and the reasons for it? What were his views? * 10. What can you tell about theological discussions and per- sons connected with them, in Massachusetts? What was done to Anne Hutchinson? 60 COLONIES. Persecution and emigration. New England confederacy. Democracy. cal, and she and her family were banished from the colony in the summer of 1637. 11. The continual dread of the Indians was removed by the results of the Pequod war, in 163V, 1 and the Massachusetts colony flourished amazingly. Persecution in England sent hundreds of true men across the Atlantic in search of freedom. Yain efforts were made to stop the flight, as early as 1633. Believing that the colonists "aimed not at new discipline, but sovereignty," the king attempted to deprive them of their charter and reduce them to dependent vassals. He failed. The colonists prospered. They fostcred education,' 2 religion, and morals, and laid deeper and deeper the foundations of a free state. 12. The civil war in England left the colonies free to act. Those of New England, excepting Rhode Island, formed a con- federation for mutual benefit in 1643. 3 It lasted more than forty years, when mutual jealousies caused its dissolution. This was the first effort to establish a nation in America. The work was not accomplished until a century after this experiment was aban- doned. 4 13. In 1644, Massachusetts established a distinct House of Representatives. The people were thoroughly democratic, and sympathized with the opposers of royalty during the civil war in England. They prospered wonderfully. They opened trade with the West Indies 5 in defiance of a Navigation Act. 1 Verse 7, page 40. 2. In 1636 the general court at Boston appropriated two thousand dollars for the establish- ment of a college. In 163S, Rev. John Harvard bequeathed more than three thousand dollars to the institution which was then located at Cambridge, and it received the name of " Har- vard College," now one of the first seminaries of learning in the United States. In 1647 a law was passed, requiring every township which contained fifty householders, to have a school-house and employ a teacher ; and each town containing one thousand freeholders, to have a grammar school. 3. Rhode Island asked for admission Into tl.c union, but was refuged unless it would ac- knowledge the authority of Plymouth. 4. When James the Second came to the throre, the ;harters of all the colonies were taken away, or suspended. When local governments were- reestablished after the Revolution of 1688, there no longer existed a necessity for the union, and the confederacy dissolved. A nation, permanent and powerful, wits formed under the National Constitution of 1789, when our Great Republic was established 5. Verse 7, page 12. Qdrstions. — 11. What caused the prosperity of the Massachusetts colony? What can you tell of the efforts to stop emigration from England I What did tile colonists del 12. What can you tell shout a confederation of the New England colonies I 18. What can you tell ahout a change In the government of Massachusetts in 1644? What evidences of prosperity werf seen in Massachusetts? MASSACHUSETTS. 61 First colonial coinage. Persecution of Quakers. Despotism kept at bay. They coined money in 1652, 1 and performed other acts of sover- eignty, much to the disgust and alarm of the royalists in Eng- land. During: that year the iu- risdiction of Massachusetts was /£&W id progress. Desolation. war against the white people. This is known in American his- tory as king philip's war. 1G. Philip kept the covenant of his father with the white peo- ple for twelve years after the old sa- chem's death. But as spreading settle- ments were reducing his domains acre by acre, breaking up his hunting-grounds, diminishing his fisheries, and menacing his nation with servitude or annihila- tion, his patriotism was aroused, and he willingly listened to the hot young war- riors of his tribe, who counseled a war of extermination against the English. At Mount Hope, 1 the seat of the chief sachems of the Wampanoags, in the solitudes of the forests, he planned, with great skill, an alliance of all the New England tribes against the European intruders. 9 17. Philip struck the first blow at Swanzey, thirty-five miles soutlnvcst from Plymouth, on Sunday, the 4th of July, 1675. Many white people were slain or made captives, and others fled to the surrounding settlements and gave the alarm. The settlers flew to arms, and very soon Philip was a fugitive among the Nipmucs in the interior of Massachusetts. They espoused his cause; and with fifteen hundred warriors he fell upon the re- mote settlements high up the Connecticut valley. 18. The murders and burnings by the savages were wide- spread and terrible, and for months there was an apprehension kino rim.ip. 1. Mount Hope is a conical hill, throe hundred feet in height, and situated on the west side of Mount Hope hay, about two miles from Bristol, Rhode island. It was called Pokanoket by the Indians. 2. The tribes which became involved in this war numbered, prohablj, '25,000. Those along the coast of Massachusetts bay, who had suffered terribly by a pestilence just before the Pilgrims came (verse 7, page 80), had materially increased in numbers; and other tribes, besides the New England Indians proper, heonme parties to the conflict. The New England Indians inhabited the oountry eastward from the Connecticut river to the Baco, in Maine. Questions. -16, What can yon tell about King Philip? What caused him to eammenne B war) Wliat did he plant it. How and where did king Philip's war commence 5 What did the settlers do 1 What can you tell about the movoments of Philip? MASSACHUSETTS. 63 Punishment of the Indians. Death of Philip. Disposal of his son. that the white people of New England would be utterly extermi- nated. Philip was joined by the Springfield Indians in Septem- ber, 1 and on the 29th of October he fell furiously upon Hatfield, with almost a thousand warriors. He was so severely handled by its defenders that he fled, with a remnant of his followers, to- ward Rhode Island. 19. In violation of a recent treaty, the Narragansets gave Philip shelter. Fifteen hundred New Englanders proceeded to punish them for their bad faith. In a swamp, where they had collected their winter stores within palisades, the savages were surrounded at the close of December [1675], and within a few hours five hundred wigwams and a large amount of stores were in flames. Hundreds of men, women, and children perished in the fire, and a thousand warriors were slain or made captives. 20. Philip escaped, and found new allies during the winter; and in the spring of 1676 he commenced the work of desolation anew. It was terribly performed, and as terribly retaliated. During that year almost three thousand Indians were slain or brought into submission. Philip was chased from one hiding- place to another. His family were captured. His spirit Avas broken. A faithless Indian shot him, and Captain Church cut off his head. His body was quartered. His little son was sold as a bond-slave in Bermuda. 2 So perished the last prince of the Wam- panoags, and thus ended King Philip's War and the power of the New England Indians. 3 1. They had been friendly until now. They plotted the entire destruction of the Springfield settlement ; but the peop'e defended themselves bravely within their palisaded bouses. Many of the strong bouses of frontier settlements were thus fortified. Trunks of trees, eight or ten inches in diameter, were cut in uniform lengths, and stuck in the ground close together. The upper ends were sharpened, and the whole were fastened together with green withes or other contrivances. 2. The disposal of the boy was a subject of serious de liberation. Some of the elders proposed putting him to death ; others, professing more mere;/, suggested selling palisaded buildings. him as a slave. The most profitable measure appeared the most merciful, and the child was sold into bondage. The head of Philip was carried in triumnh to Plymouth, and placed U] 0:1 a pule. 3. The result of this war was vastly beneficial to the coloi.ists, for the fear of savages, Questions.— IS. What can you tell about the progress of the war ? Kelate how Philip became a fugitive? 19. What did the Narraganset Indians do? By whom and how were they punished? What terrible event occurred? 20. What did Philip do? What befell him and his family? How did the Avar end? 64 COLONIES. Revolution in England. Spirit of the Massachusetts people. 21. While the New England colonies were yet weak from the eftects of King Philip's war, the profligate Charles, who feared and hated the growing republics in America because their free life was making many discontented subjects at home, attempted to take their government into his own hands. He made the rejec- tion of Edward Randolph, a custom-house officer, by the author- ities of Massachusetts, the occasion for declaring the charter of that colony void. Before his object could be practically effected, he died [Eeb. 26, 1685], but his brother James gladly continued the wicked scheme. 22. James declared the Massachusetts charter void, and at the close of 1686 he sent over Sir Edmund Andros with authority to rule all New England as governor-general. Andros arrived at Boston on the 30th of December, and at once began playing the tyrant with a high hand. The oppressed people were about to practice the doctrine that "resistance to tyrants is obedience to God," 1 when intelligence reached Boston [April 14, 1689] that James was driven from the throne [1688], and was succeeded by William and Mary, of Orange. The inhabitants of Boston seized and imprisoned Andros and fifty of his political associates [April 28, 1689], sent them to England under a just charge of mal- administration of public affairs, and reestablished their constitu- tional government. Again republicanism was triumphant in Massachusetts. 23. The Revolution in England in 1688 2 was a cause of war between that country and France. King James fled to the court of the French monarch, who espoused his cause, and hostilities between the two nations commenced the same year. Their quar- rel extended to their respective colonies in America. The con- which ■prevented a rapid spread of settlements, was removed. From this period may be dated the real growth of New England. During the war, New England lost six hundred men ; a dozen towns were destroyed ; six hundred dwellings were burned ; every twentieth family was houseless ; and every twentieth man who had served as a soldier, had perished, The eost of t> e war equaled live hundred thousand dollars ; a very large sum at that time. l. Oliver Cromwell's motto. 2. Verse 16, page 56. Questions. —21. What was done to deprive the colonies of their liberties? Who was K}v% Charles's successor) 22. What did King .lames do? What did Andros attempt? What were the people about to do? What prevented revolution in Massachusetts? How did the people get rid of Andros? 23. What was an effect of the Revolution in England? What did the king of Fiance do? What important event occurred, and what was it called ? MASSACHUSETTS. 65 King William's War. Indian atrocities. Expeditions against the French. flict that ensued, and which continued more than seven years, is known in history as KING WILLIAM'S WAR. 24. In this war the English colonists suffered dreadfully. The French Jesuits, 2 who had acquired great influence over the eastern tribes of Indians, easily excited them to renew their fierce warfare against the English. They also made the savages their allies ; and all along the frontier settlements, murder and desolation were soon seen. Dover, a frontier town, was first attacked, on the 7th of July, 1689; and from that time the greatest alarm and confu- sion prevailed all along the frontiers, from the Penobscot to the Hudson. In February, 1690, the inhabitants of Schenectada, on the Mohawk river, were massacred by the French and Indians in the dead of night, and the village Avas burned ; and some settle- ments in the east suffered a like fate during the spring. 25. These atrocities aroused all the colonies to a sense of danger, and the New England people fitted out an expedition under Sir William Phipps, in May, 1690, which seized and plun- dered portions of the French domain of Acadie. 3 New York, also menaced, joined New England in an attempt to conquer Canada, by sending a land expedition by way of Lake Champlain 4 to Montreal, 5 and a naval expedition up the St. Lawrence against Quebec' The former was commanded by a son of Governor Winthrop, of Connecticut, and the latter by Sir William Phipps. Both were unsuccessful. Winthrop's troops, with warriors of the 1. Because it was during the re'gn of William and Mary. See verse 16, page 55. 2. This was a Roman Catholic religious order, founded by Ignatius Loyola, a Spaniard, in 1539. They have ever been remarkable for their great devotion to their cause, their self- denial, and masterly sagacity in the acquirement and maintenance of power. Their mission- aries preached Christianity in every part of the habitable globe. They came with the first French adventurers to America, and, under their influence, whole tribes of Indians, eastward of Massachusetts and in Canada, were made nominal Christians. This was one of the ties which made the savages such faithful allies to the French during the contests between them and the English, previous to 1763. 3. Verse 17, page 20. 4. Verse 18, page 21. 5. Verse 6, page 17. 6. Verse 18, page 21. Questions.— 24. What can you tell about the eltects of King WilVam's war in America? What did the Jesuits do? What terrible events occurred? 25. What did these atrocities effect ? What expedition was fitted out ? What did it do ? What can you tell about expedi- tions against Canada? G6 COLONIES. New charter for Massachusetts. Witchcraft Renewal of war. Five Ifations, 1 were repulsed at Frontenac, 2 and Phipps found Quebec too strongly fortified to promise a successful siege. 26. Another change of government now took place in Xew England. King William caused the colonies of Plymouth, Mas- sachusetts, and the settlements in Maine and New Brunswick, to he consolidated by a new charter, under the old name of Massa- chusetts Bay Colony, and made it a royal province. The new charter (which Avas taken to Boston from England in May, 1692, by Sir William Phipps, who had been appointed governor under it) was not acceptable to the people, for it abridged their privi- leges. Much discontent ensued, but no overt act of revolt occurred. 27. During the same year [1692] the people of a portion of Massachusetts were afflicted by a great delusion. A belief in witchcraft, or sorcery, generally prevailed, and to the practice of that " black art " some strange conduct of persons in Salem was attributed. Persons were suspected of being witches, or wizards, and were arrested and punished. The delusion spread fearfully ; and in the course of six months no less than twenty inhabitants, suspected of practicing witchcraft, suffered death, and scores of others were imprisoned. The delusion passed away as suddenly as it appeared. 28. King William's Avar continued until 1697. The English frontier settlements suffered terribly from the savages, incited, and often accompanied, by the French. A treaty of peace stopped the Avar, but the lull in the storm was very brief. King James died in the autumn of 1701, and the French monarch acknowl- edged his son to be the rightful sovereign of England. On that account the war was renewed in 1702, Avhen Anne was reigning monarch of England. The French and English colonies in 1. These were properly tribes of the Iroquois nation (free note 4, pace 5), named respec- tively Mohawks, Oneidas, Onnndagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. They formed a confederacy in the present State of Xew Vi>rk. 2. The site of Kingston, Upper Canada. Questions. — 20. What change In government took place In Xew England in lf>92? Ilow was it received by the people? 27. What can yon tell about a delusion In Massachusetts con- cerning witchcraft ? 28. How long did King William's war continue? Ilow was it stopped ? What can you tell about t lie renewal of war between England and France? MASSACHUSETTS. 67 Queen Anne's "War. Subjugation of Acadie. Expedition against Quebec. America were involved in the contest, and it is known in Amer- ican history as QUEEN ANNE's WAR. 29. Again the New England frontiers were desolated by the French and Indians. Blood flowed in almost every valley. Deerfield, on the Connecticut river, was laid in ashes, and many of the inhabitants were carried into captivity. Remote settle- ments were abandoned ; the people collected in palisaded houses ' for protection, and worked their fields with arms in their hands. Fortunately for the inhabitants of New York, the Five Nations a bad made a treaty of neutrality Avith the French in Canada [August, 1701], and they stood an impassable barrier against the savage hordes on the borders of the St. Lawrence. 30. Attempts were made, from time to time, by the New England people, to chastise their enemies on their eastern border. Little was accomplished until 1710, when an expedition from Boston, in conjunction with a fleet from England, captured Port Royal, 3 and named the place Annapolis, in honor of the queen. This led to the annexation of Acadie to the British realm, under the name of Nova Scotia, or New Scotland. 31. An English fleet and army, under Sir Hovenden Walker, designed for the conquest of Canada, arrived at Boston in July, 1711. They were joined by New Englanders; and on the 10th of August, almost seven thousand troops departed for Quebec. On the night of the 2d of September, eight of the ships and almost a thousand men peridhed on the rocks at the mouth of the St. Lawrence, and the expedition was abandoned. A land force, four thousand strong, on its way from Albany, on the Hudson, 4 hurried back. Hostilities were suspended ; a treaty of peace was con- cluded in April, 1713 ; and the Indians sued for pardon. 32. For thirty years after Queen Anne's Avar, the colonists 1. Note 1, page 63. 2. Note 1, page 66. 3. Verse 17, page 20. 4. A'erse 2, page 32. Questions.— 29. AVhat can you tell of the sufferings of the New England settlers? How were the inhabitants of New York protected? 30. What did the New England people at- tempt ? AVhat can you tell about an expedition against the French in Acadie? What was the result? 31. What can you tell about an expedition against Quebec? What great calam- ity occurred to the fleet? What followed? 68 COLONIES. King George's War. Capture of Louisburg. enjoyed comparative repose. It was a period of much political agitation in Massachusetts, and democratic principles grew vigor- ously. The royal governors and the people had some warm disputes, and sometimes they appeared almost warlike. These were arrested in the spring of 1744, when they heard that France had declared war against England. They immediately prepared to commence the contest known in American history as KING GEORGE WAR. 33. The principal event of this war, in America, was the cap- ture of Louisburg, on the island of Cape Breton. It was a strong fortress, erected by the French, and called The Gibraltar of America. Plans for its capture were perfected in Massachusetts, under the direction of the energetic Governor Shirley. The other New England colonies contributed their quota of troops. New York sent artillery, and Pennsylvania contributed provisions. Common danger from a common foe was thus knitting the Eng- lish colonies into a closer union of interest and sympathy. 34. Three thousand two hundred troops, under General William Pcpperell, sailed from Boston, for Louisburg, on the 4th of April, 1745. On the 9th of May they were joined by a British fleet under Admiral Warren combined forces, four sand strong, landed rear of the toAvn an The French were taken by surprise. A regular siege commenced on the 31st of May, and on the 28th of June CAPTURE OF LOUISDURG IX 1745. Questions. — 32. How long afterward did the colonies enjoy repose! What was the aspect of puiilic affairs in Massachusetts? What new war broke oat in 1744 t 3;v What was the Erincipal event In h~im; William? a tear I Give an account of the prep-nations to attack otiishurg? What was the effect of these efforts on the colonics? 34. What can you tell about the expedition to capture Louisburg ? How and when was it effected ? NEW YORK. 69 D'Anville's fleet dispersed. Founding of New York. the city and fortress of Louisburg and the island of Cape Breton were surrendered to the English. 1 35. This event deeply mortified the pride of the French, and, in 1746, the duke d'Anville was sent with a powerful armament to recover the lost fortress. Storms wrecked many of his vessels, and disease swept off hundreds of his men. Dismayed and dis- heartened, he abandoned the enterprise. Two years afterward, a treaty of peace restored quiet ; but it was not long before the colonists were called upon to engage in the final struggle for dominion in America between the French and English, known in American history as The French and Indian War. SECTION III. NEW YORK. 1. The colony of New York was founded in 1623, when the territory was called New Netherlands When Peter Minuit 3 arrived as governor, in May, 1626, he purchased of the Indians, for about twenty-four dollars, the whole of the island of Man- hattan, on which the city of New York now stands, 4 and began vigorously to perfect the founding of a state similar to those of Holland. He erected a strong fortification near the site of the present Battery, and called it Fort Amsterdam, Niew Amsterdam 1. Louisburg is on the east side of the island of Cape Breton, with a fine, deep harbor. The landing-place of the British, position of the camp, etc., will be seen by reference to the map. The royal battery was taken by four hundred men. When they approached, the French thought the whole English army was upon them. They immediately Bpiked their guns (that is, drove steel spikes into the touch-holes of the cannons, so as to make them use- less), and fled. In the upper part of the map is a profile of the fortifications at Louisburg. It is given here in order to illustrate certain terms which are used in military narratives : a, the glacis, is the extreme outside slope of the works ; b, the banquet, or step upon which the soldiers stand to fire over the parapet ; c, a covered way into the fort, under the banquet ; d, counterscarp, a bank or wall, outside the ditch, e ; f, the parapet, a protection for the men and guns from the balls from without ; g, the inner banquet; h, ramparts, the most solid embankment of the fortress ; ;', the last slope in the interior of the fort, called tulu s. The property obtained by the English, by this conquest, amounted, in value, to little less than $5,000,000. 2. Verse 3, page 33. 3. Verse 3, page 43. 4. Verse 1, page 32. Questions. — 35. What effect did the capture of Louisburg have on the French ? What was done to recover it ? What happened tothe French ? What restored quiet ?— 1. When was the colony of New York founded, and what was it first called ? What can you tell about the beginning of a state on Manhattan island ? How did Governor Minuit manage affairs 1 70 COLONIES. Emigration encouraged. Kieft the troubler. being the name given to the city. By kind measures he gained the confidence of the Indians; ' and he also opened a friendly cor- respondence' with the Puritans at Plymouth. The English recip- rocated the friendly expressions of the Dutch ; at the same time they requested the latter not to send their trappers quite so far eastAvard as Narraganset Bay, to catch otters and beavers. 3 2. To encourage emigration to New Netherland, the Dutch West India Company 3 offered [1629] large tracts of land and certain privileges to those persons who should lead or send a given number of emigrants to occupy and till the soil. Directors of the Company availed themselves of the privilege, and sent "Wouter Van Twiller to examine the country and select the lands. Im- migrants came ; and then were laid the foundations of the most noted of the manorial estates of New York. The proprietors Avcre called patroons, or patrons. 3. Van Twiller was appointed governor in 1633, and after a rather quiet administration, he was succeeded in 1638 by Sir Wil- liam Kieft, a haughty, rapacious, and unscrupulous man, who soon brought serious trouble ujion the colony. He sought to make his own will the supreme law ; and he treated the people with dis- dain. His turbulent spirit soon led him into strife with the Swedes on the Delaware, 4 the English on the Connecticut, 6 the Indians all around him, and the colonists at his door. 4. At length the murmurs against him Avere too loud not to be heeded by him. He had determined to make war upon the neighboring Indians, but thought it prudent to consult some of the leading men. He called a meeting of the heads of twelve families in New Amsterdam, in August, 1641, and these, on the 29th of that month, chose "twelve select men," with De Vries at 1. Verse 7, page 71. '_'. Trade in fore was the chief occupation of the Dutch of New Netherland at this time Tiny became expert trappers, and were seen as far east as Nantucket, and even Cape Cod. The trade Boon became profitable to the Company. The first year's rcmiitance of furs to Amsterdam was valued at $11,000. This trade greatly increased ; and before the troubles with Die Indians in lt'40, the value of furs sent to Holland annually, was more than $60,000. 3. Verse 3, page 33. 4. Verse 2, page 43. 5. Verse 3, page 39. Questions.— 2. What was done to encourage emigration to New Netherland ? How were the manorial estates of New York founded ? 3. What can you tell about Van Twiller and his successor? What was the character of Kieft I With whom was he at strife ? 4. What can ymi tell about Kiet't's respect for the people, through fear ? What did the representa- tives of the people do? What followed? NEW YOKK. 71 Kieft's troubles with the Indians. Peter Stuyvesant. His character. their head, to act for them. This was the germ of representative government in New Netherland. It grew vigorously. These "select men" were opposed to Kieft's war projects. They also talked freely about the grievances of the people ; and the gov- ernor, alarmed by this appearance of the democratic principle, dis- solved them in February, 1642. 5. Released from the restraint imposed by these representa- tives of the people, the governor made war upon the Indians. With cruel treachery he caused an attack to be made upon some at Hoboken, who had craved his protection from savage foes. The Hollanders and some Mohawk warriors fell upon them at midnight [February, 1643], and before the dawn almost one hun- dred men, women, and children had perished. This atrocity crea- ted an intense thirst for revenge among the savages. The fron- tier settlements were devastated, and for a while the very exist- ence of the Dutch colony was in peril. 6. The Indians were finally subdued, and the cruel Kieft, the author of all the serious trouble in the colony, Avas recalled, and succeeded by Peter Stuyvesant, a just, prudent, hon- est, and energetic man. He arrived at New Amsterdam in May, 1647, and en- tered upon his duties with vigor. As a military leader, he had been accustomed to arbitrary rule. He was stern and in- flexible, and could play the tyrant ad- mirably when disposed to do so. 7. Stuyvesant cultivated the friend- ship of the Indians, and treated his white neighbors with respect. 1 He regarded the Swedes with some dis- dain, and without their leave built a fort on the Delaware, within 1. Stuyvesant prudently avoided collisions with the English settlers eastward of him. He went to Hartford, and there made a treaty which fixed the eastern boundary of New Netherland nearly on the line of the present division between New York and Connecticut, and across Long island, at Oyster bay, thirty miles eastward of New York. The Dutch claims to lands on the Connecticut river were extinguished by this treaty. PETER STUYVESANT. i Questions.— 5. What can you tell about Kieft's war with the Indians? What effect did his atrocity at Hoboken produce ? 6. What can you tell about Kieft's recall and Stuyvesant's arrival ? . What was the character of Stuyvesant ? 7. What was Stuyvesant's deportment toward his neighbors ? How did he regard the Swedes ? How did he treat them? What can you tell of the subjugation of the Swedes ? 72 COLONIES. Discontents of the people. Capture of New Amsterdam by the English. their domain. 1 They seized it; and in August, 1655, Stuyvesant with six hundred men proceeded to chastise them for the act. By the middle of autumn they were completely in his power, and submitted to him as a conqueror. 2 Thus, after an existence of about seventeen years, New Sweden 3 disappeared by annexation to New Netherland. 8. A spark of Indian war that appeared during Stuyvesant's absence, was immediately extinguished on his return, and he saw no appearance of trouble coming from his neighbors. But the aspect of affairs in his own colony made him uneasy. He had perceived the rapid growth of democratic ideas planted in Kieft's time. These were fostered by Puritan settlers in New Netherland, whose continual pz-aises of English laws and govern- ment had created among the Hollanders a desire to exchange Stuyvesant's rigor for the milder English rule. 9. In December, 1663, deputies from each village in New Netherland, chosen by the people, had assembled at New Am- sterdam, without Stuyvesant's consent, to consult on public affairs. He opposed them with all his might. They grew bolder and bolder, and finally they resisted taxation, and openly expressed a Avillingness to bear English rule for the sake of enjoying English liberty. They were on the point of revolution, when the change in government which they professed to desire, was made without their help. 10. The change was made in thiswise: Charles the Second, king of England, gave to his brother James, Duke of York and Albany, the whole territory of New Netherland, in March, 1664. The duke sent a squadron under Colonel Richard Nicolls to secure the gift, and on the 3d of September following, the red 1. Verse 3, page 43. The fort was built on the site of New Castle, Delaware, and was named Cassimer. 2. He captured all the Swedish fortresses, and sent the governor (Rieingh') and several influential Swedes to Europe. Somcof the settlers withdrew to Maryland and Virginia, but the great body of them quietly submitted, and took an oath of allegiance to the States-General of Holland. Note 2, page 33. 3. Verse 3, page 43. " Questions.— 8. What did Stuwesant do on his return from the Delaware ? What trouble did he find in his own colony ? How were the Hollanders made discontented f 9. What can yon tell about a popular assembly at New Amsterdam ? W T hat did Stuyvesant do? What did the people attempt? 10. Can you relate how New Netherland passed into the hands of the English, aid was named New York ? NEW YORK. ?3 English despotism. A Charter of Liberties. Royal perfidy. CITY OF NEW YORK IN 1664. cross of St. George ' floated in triumph over the fort, and the name of New York was given to New Amsterdam. The whole prov- ince passed into the possession of the English. It was named New York, 2 and Colonel Nicolls was appointed governor. 11. English rule was not so mild as the Dutch expected. Nicolls was a petty ty- rant, and de- clared that the people should have " liberty for no thought but how to pay their taxes. ' But the people did think of something else, and were on the eve of open rebellion, when a Dutch squadron, in July, 1673, sailed into New York bay, and, by the aid of treachery, took the fort and city. 3 By a treaty of peace between England and Holland, then at war, the city and province were restored to the English, and remained in their possession until the Revolution of 1775. 12. In 1683, the duke of York granted to the people of New York a Charter of Liberties, 4 but when he ascended the throne on the death of his brother, in 1685, he withdrew these privileges and devised measures for enslaving the colonists. Again the people were driven to the verge of rebellion, when the Revolution in England, in 1688, caused them to pause. Jacob Leisler, an influential merchant and commander of the militia, then took pos- 1. The royal standard of England is sometimes so called because it bears a red cross, ■which is called the " cross of St. George," the patron saint of Great Britain. After the union with Scotland, the cross of St. Andrew (in the form of an X) was added, and is now seen on the British flag. In the centre are the royal arms. This union, as the figure is called, was borne upon the American flag, sometimes, until after the Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was upon the flag of thirteen stripes, alternately red and white, which Washington caused to be unfurled at Cambridge, on the first day of that year. 2. In honor of the duke of York, its proprietor. 3. The above picture is a correct view of the city of New York two hundred years ago. It is now the largest city on the American continent. On the left of the picture is seen Fort Amsterdam, with the church and governor's house within it, and a windmill. 4. Tliis was the foundation of representative government in New York. The assembly consisted of the governor and ten councilors, and seventeen deputies elected by the freehold- ers. They adopted a Declaration of Rights, and asserted the principle, so nobly fought for a hundred years later, that taxation and representation are inseparable — in other words, that taxes cannot be levied without the consent of the people, expressed by their representatives. At this time the colony was divided into twelve counties. Questions.— 11. How were the Dutch disappointed in English rule ? What did Governor Nicolls do? What prevented a revolution in New York ? Relate how New York changed masters? 12. What was granted to the people of New York ? What did King James at- tempt to do ? What occurred in New York after the Revolution in England \ What can you tell about Jacob Leisler? 4 74 COLONIES. Death of Leisler, and its effects. Indian war. Growth <>f democratic principles. session of the fort, and with the sanction of the people assumed the position of governor. He performed his duties well until the arrival of a new royal governor, when he relinquished power. His enemies caused him to be tried for high treason, and he was hanged on the 26th of May, 1691. i 13. Leisler's death created the most violent party spirit. The ruling class — the aristocracy — were his enemies; the great mass of the people — the democracy — were his friends. Fletcher, who became governor in 1691, was the tool of the aristocracy. He was cordially hated by the people ; and he Avas remembered with gratitude for only a i'ew acts. Among these was his wisdom in listening to the advice of Major Schuyler, concerning the French and Indians, who, under Frontenac, governor of Canada, were menacing all Northern New York. Schuyler, with some white soldiers and warriors of the Fvoe Nations, beat the foe back to the St. Lawrence, and so desolated his settlements, in 1692, that Fron- tenac was glad to remain quiet at Montreal. 14. The earl of Bellomont, who succeeded Fletcher in 1698, was a better man. He was laboring for the good of the people when he died, in the spring of 1701, and was succeeded by Ed- ward Hyde, a dissolute knave, who persecuted all Christians but Churchmen, and robbed the people by embezzling the public- money. He was recalled in 1708; and from that time until the arrival of William Cosby as governor, in 1732, the royal repre- sentatives, unable to resist the will of the people, as expressed by the assembly, allowed democratic principles to grow and bear fruit. 15. Rip Van Dam, a "man of the people, 1 ' was acting gover- nor when Cosby came. They soon quarreled^' Two violent parties were formed. The democratic supported Van Dam ; the aristocratic supported the governor. Each controlled a news- paper. When argument failed, the governor endeavored to suppress the democratic paper, by causing the arrest of its editor, Questions.— 13 What was tho effect of Leisler's death T What can you tell about Gov- ernor Fletcher? Whal can yon tell about the Indians on the frontier! 14. What can you tell about Governor Bellomont? Who w:is ins successor, and what was his character 1 What oan you tell about the growth ofdemocracy In the colony 1 1">. Whal can you tell about Rip Van Dam and Governor Cosby 1 What can you tell about the newspapers, and the defense of the liberty of the press ( MARYLAND. 75 Vindication of the liberty of the press. Government of Maryland. Rebellion. John Peter Zenger, on a charge of libel. He was tried and acquitted by a jury ; and the magistrates of the city of New York presented his counsel with a testimonial of their gratitude for his noble defense of the liberty of the press. 16. The trial of Zenger drew the lines of demarkation between the American republicans and royalists, very distinctly, and from that time until the French and Indian war, in 1754, their feuds compose much of the record of the public life of the province of New York. With every contest republicanism gained strength, and achieved complete triumph in the old war for independence, besrun in 1775. SECTION IV. MARYLAND. 1. Maryland, as we have observed, had its colonial birth when the first popular assembly convened at St. Mary for legislative purposes, on the 8th of March, 1635. 1 Its sturdy growth began when, in 1G39, the more convenient form of repre- sentative government was established. It was crude, but it pos- sessed the elements of republicanism. The freemen chose as many representatives as they pleased, and others were appointed by the proprietor. These, with the governor and secretary, composed the legislature. At this first session a Declaration of Rights was adopted ; the powers of the governor were defined ; and all the privileges enjoyed by English subjects were guaranteed to the colonists. 2. From 1642 until 1646, the colony was deeply agitated by an Indian war and an internal rebellion. The former was quelled in 1645. In the same year, Clayborne, already mentioned." re- turned from England, and fanned the embers of discontent in the 1. Verse 4, page 08. 2. Note 4, page 38. Questions. —16. What did the trial of Zenger do? What good did the disputes of tho republicans and loyalists effect 1 — 1. What can you say about the beginning and growth of the colony of Maryland? What can you toll about the government of Maryland? 76 COLONIES. Toleration in Maryland. Change of government. Civil war. province into a flame of open insurrection. Governor Calvert ' was compelled to flee to Virginia ; and for about a year and a half the rebels held the reins of government, and the horrors of civil war menaced the colony. The insurrection was suppressed in the summer of 1G46. 3. An important law, known as the Toleration Act, was made by the assembly in 1649; it was intended as an exponent of the charter, which guaranteed freedom of opinion and action to all in religious matters. This guarantee also sanctioned democratic ideas ; and these flourished vigorously in the new state, especially for ten years after royalty was abolished [1649] in England. 4. In the mean time the colonial government had been re- organized. The legislative body was divided [1650] into an upper and lower house. The former was composed of the governor and his council ; the latter, of representatives of the people. So great had been the influx of Protestants, on account of toleration, that their representatives outnumbered those of the Roman Catholics in the assembly in 1654. They then questioned the rights of the proprietor, and even went so far as to declare, by statute, that Roman Catholics were not entitled to the protec- tion of the laws. 5. Civil war ensued, 2 and for a long time anarchy prevailed. The colony was torn by internal dissensions ; and this state of things ended only by an act of the assembly [March 24, 1660], which asserted the supreme authority of the people, dissolved the upper house, and gave to the lower house the whole legislative power of the province. Josiah Fendall, a judicious man, who had been appointed governor by the proprietor in 1656, was com- missioned as governor of the people. 6. On the restoration of monarchy in England, in 1660, 3 the 1. Verse 3, page 38. 2. The Unman Catholics adhered to Lord Baltimore, and the Protestants opposed him. An armed force under Stone, a former governor, appointed by the proprietor, seized the public records. Stone assumed the office of governor. In a severe battle, not far from the site of Annapolis, his party was defeated. Stone was made prisoner, but his life was spared. Some of his adherents suffered death as traitors. 3. Verse 10, page 53. Questions.— 2. What can you tell about an Indian war, and a rebellion in Maryland? 3. What can you tell about the Toleration Act ? 4. What change was made in the colonial government? What did the Protestant majority do in 1654? 5. What can you tell about civil war in Maryland? CONNECTICUT. 77 Troubles in Maryland. Maryland a royal province. old order of things was reestablished in Maryland. Lord Balti- more's rights were restored; and, for about thirty years there- after, the province enjoyed repose. The government was mildly administered, and all was going on well until the Revolution in England in 1688, when a wicked and restless spirit named Coode excited the people against the governor, because the latter was slow to recognize William and Mary. 1 He spread a report that the authorities and Roman Catholics had conspired with the Indians for the destruction of the Protestants. 2 The latter, alarmed, called a convention, deposed Lord Baltimore as proprie- tor, and reasserted the majesty of the people. 7. In 1691, King William made Maryland a royal province.' The Church of England 4 was made the established religion of the colony ; and, in a province founded by Roman Catholics, 5 the members of that church were disfranchised by the consent of their sovereign. The proprietary government was reestablished in 1716, and lasted until the Revolution in 1775, which swept away feudalism and royalty. 6 SECTION V. CONNECTICUT. 1. We have observed that the Connecticut colony formed a political constitution in January, 1639. 7 This example was fol- lowed by the New Haven colony 8 in June following. The 1. Verse 16. page 55. 2. The coalition of the Indians and French Jesuits in the east, for the destruction of the New England colonists, gave a coloring of truth to this report, and the old religious feud burned again intensely. A treaty with the Indians had just been renewed, and the custom- ary presents distributed among them. Coode falsely adduced this as evidence of a coalition with the savages. 3. King William had an exulted idea of royal prerogatives, and was as much disposed as the Stuarts (the kings of England from James the First to James the Second) to suppress democracy ill the colonies. He repeatedly vetoed (refused his assent to) bills of rights en- acted by the colonial assemblies ; refused his assent to local laws of the deepest interest to the colonists ; and instructed his governors to prohibit printing in the colonies. 4. Note 1, page 35. 5. Verse 2, p:ige 38. 6. Note 2, page 25. 7. Verse 10, page 41. 8. Verse 9, page 41. Questions.— 6. What was done in Maryland on the restoration of royalty in England? What can you tell about another rebellion in Maryland? 7. When was Maryland made a royal province ? What other changes were effected in the colony ? 78 COLONIES. Government of Connecticut. Boundary disputes. Governor Andros. religious clement was supreme in the new organization, and the Bible was made the statute book of the colony ; and, in imitation of the constitution of the Plymouth and Massachusetts settlers, none but church members were allowed the privileges of freemen.' A committee of twelve men was appointed, who selected seven of their members to be " pillars " in the new state. These had power to admit as many others as they pleased to take part with them in legislation. Theophilus Eaton was chosen governor. 2. Many of the New Haven settlers were merchants, and they tried to found a commercial colony. Heavy losses at sea caused them to abandon the project and turn to tilling the soil. They worked in harmony with their brethren of the Connecticut valley. Both joined the New England confederacy in 1643. Ten years later, the Dutch, by mutual agreement, left the valley,' and a cause for irritation between the Puritans of New England and the Hollanders of New Netherland was removed. 3. After the restoration of Charles the Second, in 1660, 3 the Connecticut colony obtained a charter from the king, dated May 30, 1662. 4 It was more liberal than any yet issued by a royal hand. It included in its boundary the whole New Haven colony b and a part of Rhode Island/' The former consented to the union in 1G65 ; but Rhode Island refused, and disputed the boundary question for more than sixty years. 4. Sir Edmund Andros 7 was made governor of New York in 1674. He hated the sturdy republicans of New England, and did what he could to annoy them. He claimed jurisdiction to the 1. Note 2, pace 58. 2. Note 1, pace 71. 3. Verse 10, page 53. 4. This was obtained by the personal influence of John Winthrop. son of Governor Win throp of Massachusetts. At first Charles refused his applicat ; on, because of his known republicanism. Winthrop then presented to his majesty a ring which the king's father had given to Winthrop's father. The heart of the monarch was touched, and a liberal (barter was readily granted. W'nthrop was chosen governor of Connecticut in 1657, and held the office several years. Such was his station when he appeared in Emrland to ask a charter of the king. Hopkins (who was one of tho founders of the New Haven colony) was chosen the first governor of the Connecticut colony, and for several years he and Hay lies were alter- nately chosen chief magistrate. 5. Verse 9, page 41. 6. Verse 4, page 43. 7. Verse 22, page 64. Questions.— 1. What can you tell al out the New Haven colon; 1 What was their form of government ? 2. What kind of colony did the New Haven people attempt to establish? What prevented ? What did the Dutch'do, and what was the effect ? 3. What can you tel! about a new charter for the Connecticut colony, and the union with New Haven f CONNECTICUT. 79 Andros the usurper. Attempt to seize the Connecticut charter. mouth of the Connecticut river, and went to Saybrook in July, 1675, with a small naval force, to assert his authority. When he attempted to declare his power, he was silenced by the people, and he returned in great anger to New York. 5. Twelve years later [1687], Andros again appeared as the ANDROS AND THE CHARTER OF CONNECTICUT. disturber of the peace of Connecticut. As governor-general of New England, he demanded the surrender of all the colonial charters. Connecticut alone refused compliance. Andros went Questions.— 4. What can you tell about Governor Andros in Connecticut ? 5. What fur- ther can you tell about Governor Andros? 80 COLONIES. Salvation of the Connecticut charter. Defiance of a royal governor. THE CHARTER OAK. to Hartford with sixty armed men, in November, 1687, to seize the charter. The assembly was in ses- sion in the evening. The charter was brought out and laid on the table. When Andros was about to take it, the candles were put out, and the charter was car- ried away in the dark, and effectually hidden in a hollow tree, which bore the name of The Charter Oak until it was blown down, in August, 1856. Andros was soon afterward driven from New England; and in May, 1689, Connecticut resumed her position as an independent colony, under her preserved charter. 6. Governor Fletcher, of New York, also attempted to ex- ercise authority in Connecticut. He went to Hartford for the purpose, in November, 1693, and ordered the assembling of the militia. When he attempted to read his commission, Captain Wadsworth ordered the drums to be beaten. " Silence ! " shouted the governor. He was obeyed. "Sir," said Wadsworth, step- ping in front of the governor, " if they are again interrupted, I will make the sun shine through you in a moment ! " Fletcher believed him, and, with his unread commission, returned to New York in great but impotent anger. From this time, until the French and Indian war, when her people numbered one hundred thousand, Connecticut went hand in hand with her sister colonies in promoting the growth of an independent American nation- ality. SECTION VI. RHODE ISLAND 1. With the union of the Providence and Rhode Island plan- tations in 1644, 1 the independent Commonwealth of Rhode Island 1. Verse 4, page 43. Questions.— 5. Relate the circumstances concerning the savins of the Connecticut char- ter. 6. What can you tell about Governor Fletcher in Connecticut ? What did Connecticut afterward do? NEW JERSEY. 81 Rhode Island and its charter and constitution. commenced its career. 1 The royal charter was first confirmed by the Long Parliament in 1652, and then by Cromwell in 1655. By the recognition of the Parliament, the claims of jurisdiction made by Plymouth and Massachusetts were set aside. 2 Internal dissensions, growing out of theological discussions, sometimes dis- turbed the colony, but did not impede its prosperity. 2. On the restoration of Charles the Second, the people ap- plied for a new charter. One similar to that of Connecticut was granted in July, 1663. 3 It was yielded to Andros in 1687; but when that officer was expelled from New England in 1689, 4 the people resumed their independent government. Their seal bore the device of an anchor, and the motto was Hope. Under that royal charter Rhode Island was governed until 1842, a period of one hundred and fifty-seven years, when the people in convention adopted a constitution. 3. The history of Rhode Island, from King William's War, shows its active sympathies with its sister colonies down to the close of the Revolution in 1783, in which its sons took a distin- guished part. SECTION VII. NEW JERSEY. 1. We have considered the settlements in New Jersey, Penn- sylvania, and Delaware, in the same section, as forming a series of events having intimate relations. 5 The history of the colonial 1. A general assembly of deputies from the several towns met at Portsmouth on the 29th of May, 1647, and organized the new government by the election of a president and other officers. At that time a code of laws was adopted, which declared the government to be a democracy, and that "all men might walk as their conscience persuaded them." Verse 2, page 42. 2. Note 3, page 60 3. This charter guaranteed free toleration In religious matters, and the legislature of the colony reasserted the principle, so as to give it the popular force of law. The assertion, made by some, that Roman Catholics were excluded from voting, and that Quakers were outlawed, is erroneous. Very warm disputes occurred, but free discussion was allowed. 4. Verse 22, page 64. 5. Page 43. Questions. — 1. When did Rhode Island, as an independent province, commence its ca- reer ? What did Parliament and Cromwell do ? What was the effect ? 2. What can you tell about a new charter for Rhode Island? What can you tell about the duration of that charter? 3. What does the history of Rhode Island, from King William's War, show? 4* 82 COLONIES. Popular commotions in New Jersey. Its proprietors and partition. organization and progress of the first two is separate and dis- tinct. Delaware was never a separate commonwealth until after ".he declaration of independence in 1776. 2. The time when the colony was permanently founded, was when families from Long Island settled on the site of Elizabeth- lown in 1664, and Philip Carteret, brother of one of the proprie- tors, was appointed governor. 1 Settlers were allured thither by * liberal written agreement, on the part of the proprietors, called " concessions," which, among other privileges, exempted the peo- ple from the payment of quit-rents for their land for the space of live years. 2 3. At the first sitting of the assembly under the "conces- sions," that body perceived opposition to their authority on the part of settlers who had been there long, and had purchased lands of the Indians. And when slight quit-rents were exacted, at the end of the five years, there was a general resistance to the pay- ment of the tax. 3 A revolution ensued. The governor was driven from the province, and another chosen in his place by the people. Preparations were in progress to coerce the people into submission, when New York and New Jersey fell into the hands of the Dutch. 4 4. When the territory was restored to the English, 6 the dis- honest James, trampling upon the rights of the proprietors, made the infamous Andros governor of New Jersey as well as New York, in 1674. Berkeley " sold his interest to the Quakers. They were unwilling to maintain a political union with other parties, and in July, 1676, they bargained with Carteret 7 for a division of the province, they receiving the western part. From that time the divisions were known as East and West Jersey. 1. Verse 6, pane 44. 2. This was a sort of constitution, which provided for a government to 1 c composed of a governor and council appointed by the proprietors, and an assembly chosen by the freehold- ers of the province. The legislative power res'ded in 'the assembly; the executive In the governor. The council and the assembly were each restricted to twelve members. 3. The amount of qu t-rent was a half-penny for the use of each acre. 4. Verse 11, pace 73. 5. Verse 11, page 73. 6. Verse 6, page 41. 7. Verse 6, page 44. Question's.— 1. What have you to say about the settlement- in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware? 2. What can you tell about the founding of New Jersey? What was dono for the people ? 3. What can you tell about discontents in New Jersey 1 4. IIow did Kins; James treat the New Jersey people? What can you tell abmit a sale to Quakers ? What about the divs'.on of New Jersey? PENNSYLVANIA. 83 Quakers own New Jersey. It becomes a royal province. 5. Four hundred Quakers settled in West Jersey in 16 77, and a most liberal form of government was given to them. They mildly but firmly resisted the attempted usurpations of Andros. The matter was settled by law, in England, in favor of the Qua- kers, and in November, 1681, the first popular assembly in West Jersey met at Salem, and framed a code of laws for the colony. 6. William Penn and other Quakers bought East Jersey in 1682, and Robert Barclay, one of their most eminent preachers, was appointed governor. A large number of his sect from Great Britain, New England, and Long Island came and settled there. They prospered in quiet until that arch-troubler, Andros, again appeared, when his master had become king. 1 They lost their independence; and for twelve years after the petty tyrant was driven from America, in 1689, 2 there was no regular govern- ment in the Jerseys. 7. The proprietors of the Jerseys in 1702 gladly resigned the government to the crown. In July of that year East and West Jersey were united as a royal province, and placed under the rule of the infamous governor Hyde, of New York. 3 It remained a dependence of that province until 1738, when the connection was forever severed, and Lewis Morris was appoined the first royal governor. He managed public affairs with ability. From that time until the kindling of the war for independence in 1775, nc» event of great importance occurred in New Jersey. SECTION VIII. PENNSYLVANIA. 1. Soon after the arrival of William Penn in America in 1682,* the present State of Delaware (then called The Territories) was 1. Verse 15, page 55. 2. Verse 22, page 64. 3. Verse 14, page 74. 4. Verse 10, page 46. Questions.— 5. What can yon tell about the Quakers in West Jersey? When was the first popular assembly held in West Jersey? 6. What can you tell ahout the Quakers in East Jersey ? What can you tell about Andros in New Jersey, and the effects of his bad conduct ? 7. What did the proprietors of New Jersey do in 1702* What followed their ac- tion ? What can you tell of the separation of New Jersey from New York, and its effects? 84 COLONIES. Perm's treaty with the Indians. Philadelphia. Charter of Liberties. annexed to his province by consent of the agents of the duke of York. 1 Then commenced the colonial career of Pennsylvania. Penn laid the foundations of the new state upon the broad prin- ciples of Right. Under a spreading elm, he made a covenant of friendship with the Indians. He treated them with kindness and justice ; and the early history of Pennsylvania is not disfigured by records of oppression on one hand, and the horrors of savage vengeance on the other. 3 2. In November, 1682, Penn proceeded to lay out a capital for the province, between the DelaAvare and Schuylkill rivers, on __^^ lands purchased from the Swedes. He named it Philadelphia, which signifies brotherly love. Within a year a hundred houses were erected, and among them a modest one for the proprietor. In March, 1G83, he convened a second assembly at Philadelphia, and gave the people a Char- ter of Liberties so ample and just, that the PENN'S IIOCSE. 3 , ,, ,. government was really a representative democracy.* He surrendered to the people the right of choosing their own local officers ; and did everything in his power to pro- mote the happiness of the colonists. 1. Verse 10, page 7'2. 2. He paid them fairly for their lands. " We meet," he said, " on the broad pathway of good faith and good will ; no advantage shall be taken on either side, but all shall be open- ness and love.'' The Indians were delighted, and their hearts melted with good feeling. Such treatment was an anomaly in the history of the intercourse of their race with the white people. Even then the tires of a disastrous war were smoldering on the New England frontiers It was wonderful how the savage heart, so lately the dwelling of deepest hatred toward the white man, became the shrine of the holiest attribute of our nature. "We will live in love with William Penn and his children," they said, "as long as the moon and the sun shall endure." They were true to their promise — not a drop of Quaker blood was ever shed by an Indian. The Penn Soc : ety of Philadelphia erected a monument upon the spot where the venerable elm stood. The tree was blown down in 1810, and was found to be two hundred and eighty-three years old. The monument is near the intersection of Hanover and Beach streets, Kensington, Philadelphia. 3. This had been erected in 1682, by William Markham, Penn's agent, for the proprietor's •use, when he should arrive. Another and finer house was occupied by him in 1700. It yet remained on the corner of Second street and Norris's alley in 1864. 4. Free religious toleration was established. It was ordained that, to prevent lawsuits, three arbitrators, to be called peace-makers, should be appointed by the county courts, to hear and determine small differences between man and man , that children should be taught some useful rade : that factors wronging their employers should make satisfaction and one- third over ; that all causes for irreligion and vulgarity should be repressed, and that no man should be molested for his religious opinions. Questions. — 1. What occurred on the arrival of William Penn in America? What did Penn do for the people? What can you tell of his treaty with the Indians, and the effect of just dealings with them i 2. What can you tell about the laying out of Philadelphia? What important thing occurred in 16S3 for the benefit of the people? THE CAROLINES. 85 Penn's troubles. Secession of the Territories. A foolish scheme of government. 3. Penn returned to England in August, 1684, and became involved in the troubles of the Revolution in 1688. His loyalty to William and Mary was suspected, and his province was taken from his control, and placed in charge of the governor of New York, in 1692. In the mean time The Territories (Delaware) had withdrawn from the union, 1 but had been brought back by Gov- ernor Fletcher. Penn's rights were restored to him in 1694. and toward the close of 1699, he made a second visit to America. 4. Penn found the people clamorous for greater political privileges, and in November, 1701, he gave them a new frame of government. The Pennsylvanians accepted it, but the people of Delaware, who had again withdrawn their delegates from the assembly, declined it. They preferred an independent govern- ment, and Penn allowed them a distinct assembly. From that time until 1776, Pennsylvania and Delaware had separate legis- latures, but were under one governor. SECTION IX. THE CAROLINAS. 1. The proprietors of the Carolinas" indulged in expectations of seeing a magnificent empire of their own grow up in the New World. They desired a government for that empire, equal to its promised grandeur, and they employed the Earl of Shaftesbury, and John Locke, the philosopher, to frame one. They completed their task in March, 1669, and called the instrument the Funda- mental Constitutions. It was a huge aristocratic structure, to- tally unfitted for such aspirants for freedom as were now filling up the beautiful country of the Carolinas. 3 1. Verse 1, page 83. 2. Verse 2, page 46. 3. It consisted of one hundred and twenty articles, and is supposed to have been the pro- duction, chiefly, of the mind of Shaftesbury. There were to be two orders of nobility; the higher to consist of landgraves, or earls, the lower of caciques, or barons. The territory Questions.— 3. What can you tell about Penn on his return to England ? What occurred in his American province? What further can you tell about Penn? 4. What can you tell about Penn and his people, in 1701? How did the people of Delaware act? Relate how Delaware came to be independent of Pennsylvania. — 1. What can yon tell about the expec- tations and desires of the proprietors of the Carolinas ? What did they do ? What kind of government was formed? 36 COLONIES. Rebellion in the Carolinas. A legislative aescrubly. Charleston founded. 2. The first attempt to impose this government on the colonists led to open rebellion. The immediate cause of the outbreak was excessive taxation, and the enforcement of the Navigation Act ' in the Albemarle or Northern colony. 2 Refugee republicans from Virginia, after Bacon's rebellion, 3 fostered the opposition, and, under the lead of John Culpepper, a refugee from the Southern colony, the people seized the governor and the public funds, hi December, 1677, called a new assembly, and for two years main- tained an independent government. 3. Seth Sothel, one of the proprietors, arrived in the Carolina? as governor, in 1683. He was a shameless plunderer of the people and swindler of his associate grantees. 4 After enduring his miser- able rule six years, the people banished him for a year, and declared him forever disqualified to be their governor. He withdrew to the Carteret Colony a (South Carolina), Avhere we shall meet him again. His successors, Ludwell, Harvey, and Walker, were good men; but above them all in virtue and well-doing was the ami- able Quaker, John Archdale, who was sent over in 1695 to govern both Carolinas. The colonies had never known such prosperity and repose as they enjoyed during his administration. 4. The Carteret, or Southern colony, rapidly increased in wealth and numbers. Their first legislature met in 1674, but conflicting religious creeds and jarring interests prevented harmony. An- archy prevailed. Common danger, when the neighboring Indians threatened war upon them, united them for awhile; and, in 1680, was to be divided into counties, each containing 4S0,000 acres, with one landgrave and two caciques. There were also to be lords of manors, who, like the nobles, might hold courts and exercise .judicial functions. Persons ho'ding fifty acres were to be freeholders; the tenants held no political franchise, and could never attain to a higher rank. The four estates of proprietors, earls, barons, and commons, were to sit in one legislative chamber. The' proprietors were always to be eight in number, to possess the whole judicial power, and have the supreme control of all tribunals. The conimo is were to have four members in the legislature to every three of the nobility. Hut an aristocratic majority was always secured, and the real representatives of tbe people had no power. Every religion was professedly tolerated, but the Church of England only was declared to be orthodox. Such is an outline of the absurd scheme proposed for governing the free colonists of the Carolinas. 1. Verse 13, page 63. 2. Verse l, page 46. 3. Page 54. 4. Verse 2, page 46. 5. Verse 3, page 47. Questions. — 2. What can you tell about a revolution in North Carolina? 3. What can you tell about Seth Sothel and his successors in North Carolina? 4. What can you tell about the Carteret colony, or South Carolina? What united the people I What 0M1 you tell about Charleston? THE CAROLINAS, 67 Grand materials for a state. Another rebellion in South Carolina. CHARLESTON IN 1GS0. Charleston was founded on Oyster Point, 1 and the earlier settle- ment 2 was abandoned. There another popular legislature as- sembled in 1682, more harmo- nious than the first, and some useful laws were framed. 5. Immigrants poured into South Carolina in great num- bers. Hollanders came and planted settlements on the Santee and Edisto rivers. Har- dy men and their families came from Ireland and Scotland; 3 and in 1686 and 1687, a large number of Huguenots 4 arrived from France. English hatred of the French caused the latter to be looked upon with jealousy, and for more than ten years the Huguenots were denied the privi- leges of citizenship. 6. The colonists were discontented with the rule of the proprie- tors. They finally revolted, seized the public records, called a new assembly, and in 1690 the governor (James Colleton) was banished from the province. In the midst of these commotions, Sothel arrived from North Carolina, 5 and the people allowed him to assume the office of governor. For two years he plundered and oppressed the people, when the assembly impeached and ban- ished him. 1. Note 7, page 133. The above engraving; illustrates the manner of fortifying towns, as a defense against foes. It exhibits the walls of Charleston in 1680, and 'the location of churches in 1704. The points marked a a a, etc., are bastions for cannons. V, English church; Q, French church, R, Independent church; S, Anabaptist church ; and T, Qua- ker meeting-house. 2. Verse 3, page 47. 3. In 1684, Lord Cardon, and ten Scotch families, who had suffered persecution, came to South Carolina, and settled at Tort Royal. The Spaniards at St. Augustine claimed juris- diction over Port Royal, and during the absence of Cardon [1686], they attacked and dis- persed the settlers, and desolated their plantations. 4. They had escaped from severe troubles which had been revived in France by the revo cation of a friendly proclamation made by a former king, which is known as the Edict of Nantes. In that city Henry the Fourth issued an edict in 1598, in favor of the Huguenots, or Protestants, allowing them free toleration. The profligate Louis the Fourteenth, stung with remorse in his old age, sought to gain the favor of heaven by bringing his whole people into the bosom of the Roman Catholic Church. He revoked the famous edict in 1686. and instantly active opposition to the Huguenots was kindled throughout the empire. Many thousand of the Protestants left France and found refuge in other countries. 5. Verse 3, page 86. Questions.— 5. What immigrants came into South Carolina? What can you tell about Huguenots there? 6. What can you tell of a revolution in South Carolina? What more can you tell of Governor Sothel ? 88 COLONIES. Abtuird scheme of government abandoned. North Carolina. Indian war. 7. Philip Ludwell now came as the representative of the proprie- tors, but the people had resolved not to submit to the absurd Fun- damental Constitutions. 1 After a brief and turbulent administra- tion, Ludwell withdrew to Virginia, and in 1693, at the end of a contest with the people of more than twenty years, the scheme of Shaftesbury and Locke was abandoned by the proprietors. The good Quaker, Archdale, was sent in 1695, to administer a more simple and republican form of government for both the Carolinas. His administration was short, but very advantageous. From its close the progress of the two colonies should be considered as separate and distinct, although their political partition did not occur until 1729." NORTH CAROLINA. 8. Under the guidance of the good Archdale, the people of North Carolina turned their attention to the development of the interior of the country, where the soil was more productive and the beaver and otter abounded. Immigration flowed in Avith an ever- increasing stream ; Quakers 3 and Huguenots 4 came ; and in 1 709 a hundred German families, driven from their homes on the Rhine by persecution, came to North Carolina, and, led by Count Graf- fenried, made settlements on the head waters of the Neuse river and on the Roanoke river. 9. In 1711 an Indian Avar broke out. The Tusearoras were the leaders. They fell upon the German settlements with such fury, that during one night (October 2, 1711), one hundred and thirty of the immigrants perished. Along Pamlico and Albemarle sounds the savages swept, murdering the inhabitants and burning prop- erty. They ceased only Avhen disabled by fatigue and drunk- enness. 1 0. The North Carolinians called upon their brethren of the South- ern colony for help. Colonel Barnwell, with a party of white men 1. Verse 1, page 85. 2. Verse 17, page 91. 3. Verse 7, page 45. 4. Verse 7, page 17. Questions.— 7. Who succeeded Hot'iol I What can you tell about the form of rovers nient attempted to bo imposed upon the people ? What can you tell of Archdale and hi* ad ministration, and the separation of the two colonies? 8. What was done in North Carolina nnder Archuale's rule? What new immigrants came? 0. What great calamity did North Carolina sutler in 1711? Describe the Indian depredations? SOUTH CAROLINA. 89 End of the Indian War. Troubles with the Spaniards. and friendly savages from beyond the Savannah river, marched to their relief. The Indians were speedily subdued. A treaty with the Tuscaroras was made, but was soon violated by the white people, when the war was renewed by the savages. South Carolinians, with friendly Indians, again hastened (Decem- ber, 1712) to the aid of their brethren. Eight hundred of the Tuscaroras were captured, and the remainder were driven from the country. They joined their kindred (the Five Nations) in New York. 1 SOUTH CAROLINA. 11. The Spaniards in Florida 2 were troublesome neighbors, and in 1702 the authorities of South Carolina sent twelve hundred men (one-half Indians), by sea and land, to attack them at St. Augustine. 3 They took and plundered the town, but having no cannon, they could not make an impression on the fortress, into which the Spaniards fled for refuge. The commander of the little South Carolina squadron went to the West Indies for battery cannon, and barely escaped capture by Spanish vessels. The enterprise was abandoned ; and the colony was burdened with a debt of more than twenty-six thousand dollars. 4 1 2. Another expedition, the following year, was more successful. It was against the Apalachian Indians in Georgia, who were in league with the Spaniards. Their villages were desolated. Eight hundred of their warriors were taken prisoners, and their beauti- ful land was made tributary to the English. 13. Tranquillity had just been established after the war with the Indians, when domestic trouble appeared. Some of the proprie- tors, failing to learn wisdom from the defeat of their efforts to 1. Note 1, page 66. 2. Verse 1, patre 48. 3. Verse 9, page 18. 4. The province issued lulls of credit, for the first time, to the amount of $40,000, to de- fray the expenses of the war. North Carolina adopted a similar measure on a like occasion. Questions.— 10. What did the North Carolinians do? Who aided them, and how ? What caused another war? Tell how it was put down and ended. 11. What can you tell about the troubles of South Carolina with the Spaniards. Describe the war with them, and how it was ended. 12. What can you tell about an expedition against Indians in Georgia ? 90 COLONIES. Attempted invasion of South Carolina, Spirit of the Carolinians. A Revolution. impose a distasteful form of government upon the colonists, 1 de- termined to make the Church of England 2 the established religion in South Carolina. A pliant Assembly, with the governor (John- ston), disfranchised the Dissenters ; but this violation of chartered rights was disapproved by Parliament, and the act Avas repealed in November, 1706. The church had gained a foot-hold, and held its exalted position until the Revolution in 1775. 14. In May, 1706, a squadron of French and Spanish vessels appeared before Charleston, to avenge the insult offered to the Spaniards at St. Augustine. 3 Troops were landed, but were speed- ily repulsed by the people, with a loss of about three hundred men. This storm soon passed away, but a more formidable peril brooded over the colony a few years later, Avhen all the Indians, from the Ncuse region in North Carolina to Florida, seven thou- sand strong, confederated for the purpose cf exterminating the white people in the Carolinas. 15. Craven, governor of South Carolina, was a man of great energy. He declared martial law, took possession of the arms and ammunition in the province, and at the head of twelve hundred men, white and black, he marched against the approaching Indians. After several blocdy encounters, he drove them across the Savan- nah river in dismay, and they did not halt in their rapid flight until they found refuge under Spanish cannon at St. Augustine. 16. An important step was now taken in the direction of the independence of South Carolina. The people had become heartily wearied of the exactions of the proprietors, who afforded them no benefits of any kind in return. Late in 1719 they met in convention, cast off their allegiance to the proprietary govern- ment, and proclaimed Colonel Moore (December 21, 1719) gover- nor of the colony. The English Government sanctioned the ac- tion of the colonists, and South Carolina became a royal province. 1. Verse 2, page 86. 2. Note 1, page 35. 3. Verse 11, page 89. Questions. — 13. What new trouble appeared in South Carolina? What did the proprie- tor* attempt to do? What was the result ! 14. What can you tell about an attempted inva- sion of South Carolina by the Spaniards? What ran yon tell about an Indian confederacy? 15. What can you tell about a war with the Indians? 16. "What did the people of South Carolina do toward gaining their Independence! How did South Carolina become a royal province ? GEORGIA. 91 A change in North Carolina. Georgia colonists, 17. The people of North Carolina resolved upon a similar change at the same time. After a continual controversy for ten years (IV 19 to 1729), the proprietors sold all their interests in both provinces to the king. This was in 1729. North and South Caro- lina ] were then separated, and from that time until the Revolu- tion the general history of the Carolinas presents but few features of great interest, excepting the continual disputes between the people and the royal governors. These were important as demon- strating the growth of democratic principles. SECTION X. GEORGIA. 1. Oglethorpe's cbiony, on the Savannah river, 2 increased rapidly in numbers, but not in wealth. A large proportion of the settlers who arrived previous to 1740 were not accustomed to labor with their own hands, and as slavery was prohibited by the charter, tillage of the land was neglected. They were not allowed to own any land as private property, nor were they allowed to traffic with the Indians ; therefore, incentives to effort beyond the providing for daily wants were lacking. 2. The colonists were early called upon to perform military duty, for the Spaniards, who claimed jurisdiction over all Georgia and South Carolina to the latitude of Port Royal, 3 showed a disposi- tion to assert their claim by arms. The vigilant Oglethrope built fortifications as far as the present boundary of Florida and on St. Simon's island, 4 which irritated his Spanish neighbors, and 1. The Clarendon county settlers (verse 2, page 46) had nearly all emigrated to the Southern colony, and there being only two colonies remainii g, one was called North Caro- lina, and the other South Carolina. 2. Verse 3, page 48. 3. Verse 8, page 18. 4. He went to England and returned in 1736 with one hundred and fifty Highlanders, will trained as soldiers. He built a fort on the site of Augusta, as a defense against the Indians, and he erected fortifications at Darien on Cumberland ishmd, at Frederica on St. Simon's island, and on the north bank of the St. John river, the southern boundary of the English claim. Questions —17. What occurred in North Carolina? What can you toll about the separa- tion of the two colonies? What marked the course of the Carolinas afterward ?— 1. What can you tell of Oglethorpe's colony in Georgia? What hindered prosDerity ? 2. How were the colonists called from peaceful pursuits, and why ? What did the Spaniards claim ? Tell what Oglethorpe did, 92 COLONIES. War between Georgians and Spaniards. Change of labor system in Georgia. they threatened him with Avar. 1 He did not wait for them to begin it, but with two thousand men besieged St. Augustine in the summer of I740. a 3. Want of cannon and the approach of the sickly season caused Oglethorpe to withdraw and return to Savannah. In the summer of 1742 the Spaniards retaliated. They attacked Ogle- thorpe's strong places in Lower Georgia and on St. Simon's island ; but many disasters compelled them to abandon the enter- prise. They intended, in the event of their success against the fortifications, to subjugate or desolate all Georgia and the lower part of North Carolina. Oglethorpe's sagacity saved both colo- nies. 4. Oglethorpe left Georgia forever in 1743, when his mild mili- tary rule was succeeded by civil government, administered by a president and council. In 1752 it became a royal province, and remained such until the Revolution in 1775. 5. For the reasons already mentioned in verse 1, page 91, the Georgia colony did not flourish. With a change of government appeared new incentives to industry and thrift. The restraints concerning slavery were relaxed, 3 and Georgia became, through the instrumentality of a great w T rong, a flourishing planting state. SECTION XI. A RETROSPECT. 1. We have now considered the principal events which oc- curred within the domain of our Republic from the time of first discoveries (1492) to the commencement of the French and Indian 1. They sent commiss'o'iers to protest against these hostile preparations, and to demand the evacuation of the whole of Georgia and of South C irolina to the latitude of Port Royal. 2. Oglethorpe had again visited England, and in the autumn of 1737 brought over b'x hundred troops. Four hundred of them, volunteers, and a large body of friendly Creek Indians, composed the army that invaded Florida. 3. The law was evaded. Slaves were brought from the Carolinas and hired out to the Georgia planters for one hundred years. This was a practical sale and purchase ; and slave- ships were soon seen at Savannah, which had sailed directly from Africa with negroes. Questions.— 3. Why Hid Oglethorpe abandon his expedition against St. Augustine ? What did the Spaniards do? What did they intend to do? 4. What chance in government took place in Georgia i 5. What benefits did Georgia derive from the change ? A RETROSPECT. 93 Social materials of the colonies. Character of Virginians and New Englanders. war, 1 a period of about two hundred and sixty years. During that time, fifteen colonies were planted, 2 thirteen of which were commenced within the space of about sixty-six years [1G07 to 1673]. By the union of Plymouth and Massachusetts, 3 and Connec- ticut and New Haven, 4 the number of colonies was reduced to thirteen, and these were they which went into the Revolutionary contest in 1775. 2. Several European nations contributed men and women for the founding of these colonies.' They were distinguished by differ- ences in language, tastes, habits, and religious faith. England furnished the far greater number, and the settlements came to be known as Anglo-Amei-ican colonies, governed by English laws. Very soon, common interests produced a unity, and the people of several nations joined heartily in maintaining the integrity of the British realm when it was assailed. 6 They were still more united in opposing British aggressions upon their rights. 7 3. There were differences in the character of the people of the several colonies. The Virginians and their southern neighbors were mostly from a class of English society in which restraints were not very rigid ; and the warm climate produced a tendency toward indolence and ease. Hence slave labor, relieving the white man from toil, was regarded as a great blessing. 4. The New Englanders were chiefly from another class of English society, and included many religious enthusiasts, who sometimes possessed more zeal than wisdom. They were rigid disciplinarians in church and state ; and their early legislation ex- hibits some curious laws respecting the minute details of social and domestic life. Their sterile soil made industry a necessity, and the climate inclined them to activity. Their habits and their 1. Section XII., page 95. 2. Virginia, Plymouth, Massichusetts Bay, New Hampshire, Connecticut, New Haven, Tlhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, North and South Carolina, and Georgia. 3. Verse 26, page H6. 4. Verse 3, page 78. 5. England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, Holland, France, Denmark, Sweden, and the Baltic region. 6. Section XII. 7. Chapter V. Questions.— 1. What can you say about the establishment of colon'es in America? 2. What materials composed the colonists? What position did England hold? Did unity mark the colonists, and how ? 3. What can you say about the Virginians and their southern neighbors? 4. What can you say about the New England people, their laws and habits? 94 COLONIES. The Dutch, Swedes, and Quakers. Pursuits of the colonists. EARLY N. E. HOCSE. 1 dwellings were simple ; and their influence in the erection of out Republic was most salutary. 5. The industry, thrift, honesty, and aversion to change, peculiar to the Dutch, prevailed in New York and New Jersey, and portions of Pennsylva- nia, for almost a century after the first settlements were made. The Swedes were similar; while the Quakers were marked by a refined simplicity and equa- nimity which won the esteem of all. Their lives were governed by a religious sentiment without fanaticism, which formed a powerful safeguard against vice and immorality. The people of Maryland exhibited some of the traits of all. 6. Agriculture was the chief pursuit everywhere, yet com- merce and navigation were not wholly neglected, notwithstand- ing the restrictions of the navigation laws. They were compelled, by necessity, to be self-reliant, and what they could not buy from the workshops of England for their simple apparel and fur- niture, and implements of agriculture, they rudely manufactured, and were content. 2 7. Their commerce had a feeble infancy. Until their separa- tion from England, in 1776, their interchange of commodities with the rest of the world might not, with propriety, be dignified 1. Thin is a picture of one of the oldest houses in New England, ;ind is a favorable speci- men of the best class of frame dwellings, at that time. It is yet standing [1864], we believe, near Medfleld, in Massachusetts. •2. From the beginning of colonization, there were shoemakers, tailors, and blacksmiths in the several colonies; but, manufacturing, in its true sense, was discouraged by rigorous laws, because it was thought it would lie detrimental to Ei glish interests. It was enacted that all manufactories of iron and steel in tie colonies, should be considered a "common nuisance," to be abated within thirty days after notice being given, or the owi er should sutler a line of a thousand dollars. The exportation of hats even from one colony to another was prohibited, and no batter was allowed to have more than two apprentices at one time. The importation of sugar, rum, and mo!asscs was burdened with ex> rbitant duties ; and the Carolinians were forbidden to cut down the pine trees of their vast forests, and convert their wood into staves, and their juice into turpentine and tar, for commercial purposes. The first Navigation Act [1651] forbade all importations into England, except in English ships, or those belonging to English colonies. In 16fi0. this act was confirmed, and unjust additions were made to it. The colonics were forbidden to export their chief productions to any country except to England or its dependencies. Similar acts, all bearing heavily u\ on colonial commerce, were made law, from time to time. Questions.— 5. What were the peculiarities of the Dutch and Swedes? What marked the character of the Quakers 1 What can you say about the people of Maryland ? 6. What can you tell alo.it the pursuits of the colon'sts ? What made home manufactures a necessity ? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. Commerce and education. Wars between the English, and the French and Indians. with the name of commerce. English jealousy of the prosperity and independence of the colonies, caused many unwise restrictions upon their industry and enterprise to be imposed ; and these were the principal causes which finally led to the great revolt in 1775, and the separation of the colonies from the "mother coun- try," as England was called. 8. Education was early fostered among the people, particu- larly in New England, where the common school, the chief glory of our Republic, Avas early established and tenderly nurtured.' Provision was made for the education of all. The rigid laws which discouraged all frivolous amusements, were productive of a habit of reading. The books were devoted chiefly to history and religion, and large numbers were soldo A traveler asserts, as early as 1686, that several booksellers in Boston had "made fortunes by their business." But newspapers, the great educa- tors of the people in our day, were very few and of little worth before the era of the Revolution. 9. Such were the people, and such their political and social Condition, at the commencement of the great struggle between the French and English for supreme dominion in America, which we are now to consider. SECTION XII. THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 1. We have already noticed three wars between the English colonists in America and the French and Indians. 2 These origi- 1. Schoo's for the education of both white and Indian children were formed in Virginia as early as 1621 ; and in 1692, William and Mary College was established at Williamsburg. The Keloimed Dutch Church established a school in New Amsterdam, in 1633. Harvard College, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, was founded in 1637. Yale College, in Connecticut, was established at Saybrook in 1701, and removed to its present location, in New Haven, in 1717. It was named in honor of Elihu Yale, president of the East India Company, and one of its most liberal benefactors. The college of New Jersey, at Princeton, called Nassau JIall, was incorporated in 1738. 2. King William's War, page 65 ; Queen Anne's War, page 67 ; and Kins George's War, page 68. Questions.— 7. What can you tell about the commerce of the colonies? What folly did the English Government commit? 8. What can you say about education in the colonies? W r hat encouraged reading? What kind of books were read? What have you to say about books and newspapers? 96 COLONIES. The English and French in America. Beginning of disputes. nated in disputes in Europe. The fourth and last, which resulted in the establishment of England's supremacy in America, origi- nated here in disputes about boundaries and territorial possessions. 2. The English, at the time we are considering (1150), a mil- lion strong, occupied the sea-board from Maine to Florida, along a line of a thousand miles. The French, not more than one hun- dred thousand in number, were seated chiefly in the vicinity of the St. Lawrence, but had military, religious, and commer- cial stations on the borders of the great lakes, 1 the Mississippi, and the Gulf of Mexico. They were chiefly engaged in traffic with the Indians, and thereby, and with the influence of the Jes- uit priests, 2 they acquired great control over" the savages. 3. After the loss of Louisburg, 3 the French determined to check the growth of English power in America, by alliances with the savage tribes in the interior, the erection of fortifications, and the desolation of frontier settlements. The English colonies be- came uneasy, and resolved to meet the danger by pushing boldly into the interior. The king granted six hundred thousand acres of land on the southern side of the Ohio river to English and Vir- ginia speculators, called The Ohio Company, in 1749, and they immediately sent surveyors and traders in that direction. Some of these men were seized and imprisoned by the French in 1V53. 4 This act led to war. 4. Dinwiddie, acting governor of Virginia, sent a remon- strance to St. Pierre, the French commander, then at a fort in the present Erie county, Pennsylvania. 5 It was carried by George 1. Ontario, Erie, Huron, Michigan, and Superior, 2. Verse 24, page 65. 3. Verse 34, page 68. 4. While thi' English and French were disputing about the ownership of the territory, the claims of the real proprietors, by preemptive right, were overlooked. These were the Indians. When the agent of the Ohio Company went into the Indian country, on the bor- ders of the Ohio river, a messenger was pent by two Indian sachems to make the significant inquiry, " Where is the Indians' land ? The English," he said, " claim it all on one side of the river, the French on the other; where does the Indians' land lie?" 5. The French had already erected several forts in that direction. Twelve hundred men erected one on the south shore of Lake Erie, at I'resquo Isle, now Erie; soon a'terward, another was built at Lo Boeuf, on the Venango (French creek), row the village of Waterford ; and a third was erected at Venango, at the junction of French creek aid the Alleghany river, now the village of Franklin. Questions.— 1. What can you sav about wars between the English, French, nnd Indians? What about the last one? 2. 'What" was the number of English and French inhabitants in America, in 1750? Whal territory did they oecupy? What gave the French an advantage? S. What did the French determine to do after the lossof Louisburg? What did the English do? What can you tell about a land company? What outrage did the French commit? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 91 Difficulties between the English and French in the Ohio country. Washington, a young Virginian, twenty-one years of age, who now appeared in public life for the first time. 1 He performed his duty satisfactorily, and bore back to the governor a sealed answer to his remonstrance. Washington placed it in the hands of Din- widdie on the 16th of January, 1754, and was highly commended for his courage, prudence, and sagacity. 5. St. Pierre, acting, as he said, under orders from Du Quesne, governor of Canada, refused to withdraw his troops from the domain of the Ohio Company, as requested by Dinwiddie. The governor and the legislature of Virginia prepared to drive them away. The other colonies were appealed to for aid ; and at the close of March, 1754, a body of Virginians, and some North and South Carolina troops, were at Alexandria, on the Potomac, under Colonel Joshua Fry and Major George Washington, ready to march into the wilderness. On the 2d of April they marched toward the Ohio. 6. At this time some men were employed by the Ohio Com- pany in the construction of a fort on the site of Pittsburg, Pennsyl- vania. The French seized and finished it, and called it Fort du Quesne, in honor of the governor of Canada. Washington, with a part of the colonial troops, pushed forward to retake it. He heard of a strong force coming to meet him, and he built a fort, ivhich he named Necessity, in which to await the coming up of the remainder of the colonial troops. Some of his men surprised an advance party of the French (May 28, 1754), and slew their leader (Jumonville) and others. This was the first blood shed in the long and distressing war that ensued. 7. Colonel Fry died at the close of May (May 30), and the chief command devolved on Washington. The troops came up, and he pressed forward. Hearing of the approach of a large body of French and Indians, he fell back to Fort Necessity, where 1. He started with oily three attendants. He was joined by two others at the site of Cumberland in Maryland. Their journey was a perilous one over mountains, across streams, and through morasses, while the country was covered with snow. Questions.— 4. What did the governor of Virsinia do? Who bore a message to the French commander? What can you say about Washington and the performance of his duty? 5. What can you tell about the French commander's reply? What preparations were made for war? 6. What can you tell about Fort du Quesne? Relate what Wasb.ng- ton and his troops did. 7. How came Washington to be chief commander ? 98 COLONIES. Colonial union proposed. Indian depredations. he was besieged by fifteen hundred men on the 3d of July. On the morning of the 4th (1754) he was compelled to surrender, when he and all his troops Avere allowed to march back to Virginia. 8. During this military campaign, a civil movement 1 of great im- portance was in progress. The British ministry, perceiving war to be inevitable, advised the colonists to secure the continued friendship of the Six Nations? and to unite in measures for general defense. Delegates from seven colonies met at Albany, 3 in the province of New York, for that purpose, on the 19th of June, 1754. 4 They renewed the treaty with the Indians ; and on the 4th of July they adopted a plan of confederation, similar, in many respects, to our National Constitution, which had been drawn up by Dr. Benjamin Franklin. 5 When it was submitted to the American assemblies and the authorities of the home government, both rejected it. This was the germ of the union effected a few years later. 9. Soon after the close of this convention, the Indians com- menced murderous depredations along the New England fron- tiers, and French emissaries were busy among the tribes west of the Alleghanies, 8 arousing them to engage in a war of extermina- tion against the English. The imperiled colonists immediately pre- pared for war. 7 1. The word civil is used, in reference to a community and government and laws, as dis- tinguished from military doings or rule. 2. Note 1, page 66. 3. Verse 2, paee 32. 4. The colonies represented were New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Con- necticut, New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. There were twenty-five delegates in all. James Delancey, of New York, was chosen president. 5. Franklin was a delegate from Pennsylvania. This idea of union was not a new one. William Penn suggested the advantage of a union of all the English colonies, as early as 1700 ; and (Joxe, speaker of the New Jersey assembly, advocated it in 1722. Now it first found tangible expression under the sanction of authority. Franklin's plan proposed a general government, to be administered by one chief magistrate, to be appointed by the crown, and a council of forty-eight members, chosen by the several legislatures. This council, answer- ing to our Senate, was to have power to doclaro war, levy troops, raise money, regulate trade, conclude peace, and do many other things necessary for the general good. 6. A range of mountains which extend nearly the whole length of the United States, on a line r.luicist parallel with the sea-coast. 7. Governor Shirley, of Massachusetts, was very energetic. New York voted $25,000 for military service, and Maryland $30,000 for the same. The English Government sent over $50,000 for the use of the colonists, and with it a commission to Governor Sharpe, of Mary- land, appointing him commander-in-chief of all the colonial forces. Soon disputes about military rank and precedence ran high. Washington resigned his commission, and the year [1754] drew to a close without any efficient preparations for a conflict with the French. Questions. — 7. What did Washington do, and what happened to him and his troops? 8. What important event happened in 1754? What was done at Albany, ky a convention ! What did Dr. Franklin do? How was bis plan of government received? 9. What did the eastern Indians do? What were French emissaries about I FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 99 War between the English, and French and Indians. Plan of campaign. CAMPAIGN OF 1755. 10. War had not been declared by the two imperial govern- ments, but England extended its aid to the colonists. In Feb- ruary, 1755, Edward Braddock, a distinguished Irish officer, arrived with two regiments of his countrymen, as commander-in- chief of all the British forces in America. A campaign was im- mediately planned. General Braddock was to lead one column against Fort du Quesne ; ' Governor Shirley was to lead another against Forts Niagara and Frontenac ; 2 and General William Johnson was to lead a third against Crown Point, on Lake Chain- plain. . 11. Shirley had already planned an expedition against the French in the east. This was first put in motion. General Wins- low and three thousand men landed at the head of the bay of Fundy in May, when they were joined by three hundred regular troops under Colonel Monckton, who took chief command. They captured Forts Beausejour (June 16) and Gaspereau (June 17). The country was soon taken possession of and terribly desolated. The sufferings of the simple Acadians 3 (who took no part in the war), from the cruelty of the English, form a dismal chapter in history. 12. Braddock marched from Wills's creek (Cumberland), on the 10th of June, 1755, with two thousand men. Washington was his aid, with the commission of colonel. On the 9th of July, when within ten miles of Fort du Quesne, 4 marching in fancied security at noon-day, on the north side of the Monongahela river, the van- fort do qcesxe. guard of the little army was assailed by arrows and bullets from 1. Verse 6, page 97. 2. Furt Niagara was a strong work, built by the French at the mouth of the Niagara river ; and Fort Frontenac was on the site of the city of Kingston, in Canada, at the foot of Lake Ontario. 3. Verse 17, page 20. 4. Verse 6, page 97. Questions.— 10. W T aa war row declared ? What did the English Government do ? What officer came to America ? What was the plan of campaign for 1755? 11. What had Shirley planned? What can you tell about an expedition against the French in the east? What was done? 12. Relate what Braddock's expedition did. What happened ? ioo COLONIES. Defeat of Braddock. Expeditions of Shirley and Johnson. a concealed foe. Washington modestly asked Braddock to allow him to fight his men according to provincial cus- tom. The haughty commander refused, and a ter- rible defeat followed. Of all the mounted officers, Washington alone remained unhurt. 1 Braddock was mortally wounded,' and the command de- volved on the Virginia colonel. He gallantly conducted a retreat, and saved the remnant of his %& army. Thus ended this expedition, in failure. The conflict is known as the battle of the Mo- gexeril braddoce. nonsjahela. 13. Shirley's expedition against Niagara and Frontenac was also a failure. He went no farther than Oswego, on Lake Onta- rio, when storms, sickness, and desertions of Indians caused him to abandon the enterprise.' 14. Johnson's expedition was a partial fail- ure. In July (1755), six thousand troops were assembled on the Hudson, fifty miles above Albany, under Gen- eral Phineas Lyman. They built Fort Edward before the arrival of Johnson in August.' In the mean time. Baron Dieskau, with two bib William jo^on. thousand Canadians and In- dians, was making his way from Montreal to the head of Lake Champlain. KOHT EDWARD. 1 r»r Craik, who was with Washington at tlvs time, and also attcrded him in his last ill- ness. Bays that while in the Ohio country with him. fifteen yean afterward, an old Indian chief came, as he said. " a Ions way," to Bee the Virginia colonel at whom he Bred Ins ntle fifteen times daring the battle on the Monongahela, without hitting hmi. \> aenington was never wounded in battle. , . , . .... , 2 Braddock died near Port Necessity (vena 8, page 97), and was bnried on the i.>th of .Tuly, by torchlight Washington read at the crave the impressive funeral service of the Churc'i of Kiv.'h 1 d. . , S Bhirley had 2,600 men at Oswego, on the fir-t of September. When he gave opine expedition, he garrisoned two torts which he had commenced at Oswego. Oi e. on the east side ofthe harbor, was called Fort Ontario, and the one on the west side, Fori /'(>|, killed their principal chiefs, de- stroyed their town, and dispersed and completely humbled them. Questions.— IS. What preparations were made? What caused delays? What did the French do in the mean time ? Tell about the capture of Oswego. 19. What were the effects of the capture of Oswego? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 103 Loudon the Unready. , Siege and capture of Fort William Henry. CAMPAIGN OF 1757. 20. The inefficient Lord Loudon, who came to America in 1756, as governor of Virginia and commander-in-chief of the forces ) held a military council at Boston, in January, 1757. Wiser men than he, in that council, yielded their judgment to his, because he was commander-in-chief, and agreed to confine operations on the frontiers to defensive measures. The colonists were disap- pointed ; yet when Loudon called for troops to proceed against Louisburg, 1 then again in possession of the French by treaty, the response was cheerful, and he found himself at the head of six thousand provincials on the first of June. But his tardiness and inefficiency caused the failure of the expedition ; and when he re- turned to New York, at the close of August, he was met with intelligence of the success of the enemy on the northern frontier. 21. The French had built a fort above Crown Point, which they called Ticonderoga. There, in the summer of 1757, Montcalm assembled about nine thousand troops, two thousand of whom were Indians. With these, at the close of July, he besieged Fort William Henry, 2 then commanded by Colonel Monro, a gallant Eng- lish officer, who considered himself well sup- ported by four thousand troops at Fort Ed- ward, 3 under General Webb. 22. When Montcalm called for a surrender of the fort, Monro refused, and sent to Webb for succor. It was withheld, through cowardice or treachery, and Fort William Henry was surren- dered on the 9th of August. A terrible mas- cre by the Indians ensued when the troops marched out under promise of protection. Montcalm expressed deep sorrow, and de- LAKE GEOROE AND VICINITY. 1. Verse 33, page 2. Verse 16, page 101. 3. Verse 14, page 100. Questions. — 20. Who was Lord Loudon, and what did he do? What did a council agree to do? How did the colonists act? What caused the failure of an important expedition? 21. What had the French heen doiner? What did Montcalm do ? 22. What can you tell about the surrender of Fort William Henry, and a massacre? 104 COLONIES. Home interference with the colonists. Pitt's polio) FORT WILLIAM HENRY. clarcd that it was impossible for him to restrain the savages. Th, fort was destroyed, and was never rebuilt. Thus ended the cam- paign of 1757. 23. The arrogance of English military com- manders, and the haughty exactions of the royal governors, disgusted the Americans. They felt themselves fully competent to maintain their ter- ritorial rights, and regarded the method of the interference of the home government as detri- mental to their welfare. They fairly attributed the disasters and humiliations to which they had been subjected, during the first two years of the war, to that interference. A weak and corrupt ministry were sending their incompetent friends to America to fill the public offices, civil and military. 24. It was a cause for great rejoicing in the colonies, when William Pitt, by far the ablest statesman in England, was called to the control of public affairs in the summer of 1757. Energy and good judgment marked all his actions in reference to the war in America. He recalled Loudon, put Abercrombie in his place, and prepared to prosecute the war with vigor. 1 He made such liberal offers to the colonists, that an excess of troops soon ap- peared. 2 New England alone raised fifteen thousand men ; 3 and when Abercrombie took command of the American forces in May, 1758, he found fifty thousand men at his disposal. 1. lie caused a Firing naval armament to he prepared and plaeed under the command of Admiral Boscawen ; and 12,000 additional English troops were allotted to serve in America, He had organized such an admirable military system for home defense, that this large num- her of the soldiers of the standing army could be spared for foreign service. 2. Pitt addressed a circular to the several colonies, asking them to raise and clothe twenty thousand men. He promised in the name of Parliament, to furnish arms and provisions for them ; and also to reimburse the several colonies all the money they should expend In rais- ing and clothing the levies. 3. New York furnished almost twenty-seven hundred, Xew Jersey one thousand, Penn- sylvania almost three thousand, and Virginia over two thousand. .Some came from otlier colonies. Public and private advances during 1758, in Massachusetts alone, amounted to more than a million of dollars. The taxes on real estate, in order to raise money, were enor- mous ; in many cases equal to two-thirds of the income of the tax-payers. Yet it was levied by their mm representatives, and they did not murmur. A few years later, an almost noml n'al tax, in the form of duty upon an article of luxury, levied without their consent, excited the people of that colony to rebellion. Questions. — 2?>. What displeased the Americans? What can you sav about their self- reliancei How did the Americans regard the home government? 24. What can you tell about William Pitt ? What did he do J What did the colonies do? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 105 Siege and capture of Louisburg. Expedition against Ticonderoga. CAMPAIGN OF 1758, LORD AMHERST. 25. Boscawen arrived at Halifax, in May, 1758, with about forty armed vessels, bearing twelve thousand troops, under Gen- eral Amherst as chief, and General Wolfe as his lieutenant. On the 8th of June the troops landed, without much opposition, on the shore of Gabarus bay, near the city of Louisburg. 1 The French almost immediately deserted their outposts, and retired within the town and fortress. After a vigorous resistance for almost fifty days, and when all their shipping in the harbor was destroyed, the French surrendered [July 26, 1758] the town and fort, together with the island of Cape Breton and that of St. John (now Prince Edward), and their dependencies, by capitulation. The spoils of victory were more than five thou- sand prisoners, and a large quantity of munitions of war. By this victory, the English became masters of the coast almost to the mouth of the St. Lawrence. From that time the decline of French power in America Avas continual and rapid. 26. While Amherst and Wolfe were con- quering in the east, Abercrombie and the young Lord Howe were leading seven thou- sand regulars, nine thousand provincials, and a heavy train of artillery, against Ticonde- roga, occupied by Montcalm with about four thousand men. Abercrombie's army had ren- dezvoused at the head of Lake George, and at ticonderoga.^ the close of a calm Sabbath evening [July, 1758] they went down 1. Verse 34, pace 68. 2. This diagram shows the general form of the principal work*. The ground on which Ticondei.'iga stood is about one hundred feet above the level of the lake. Water is upon three sides, and a deep morass extends almost across the fourth, forming a nirrow neck, where the French had erected a strong line of breastworks with batteries. This line was about a mile north-west of the fortress, which occupied ttie point of the peninsula. The ruins of the fort are yet [1S64] quite picturesque. See page 114. Questions.— 25. What ran you tell about the opening of the campaign of 1758, and the capture of Louisburg? What did the English gain by that capture? 26. What were Aber- crombie and Lord Howe doing ? Tell of the movements of their army. 5* 106 COLONIES. Death of Lord Howe. Attack on Ticonderoga repulsed. Capture of Frontenac. that beautiful sheet of water in flat-boats, and at dawn [July 6] landed at its northern extremity. 27. From thence to Ticonderoga, the whole country was covered with a dense forest, in which were tangled morasses. The troops became bewildered, and in that condition were attacked [July 6, 1758], by a French scouting party. The enemy were repulsed, but Lord Howe, who was con- sidered the " soul of the expedition," was slain. 28. Abercrombie was now informed that reinforcements for Montcalm were approaching Ticonderoga, and he pressed forward to attack the fortress without waiting for his artillery to be brought forward. After a bloody conflict of four hours [July 8, 1758], he was re- pulsed. He hastened back to his old encampment at the head of Lake George, and immediately despatched Colonel Bradstreet, with three thousand men, to attack Fort Frontenac. 1 He cap- tured it without much opposition, on the 27th of August, with the garrison and shipping. 29. Bradstreet lost only three or four men in the fight, but a fearful camp-sickness laid five hundred of them in the grave. With the remainder he returned to Albahy by the Mohawk val- ley, stopping on the way to build Fort Stanwix on the site of the present village of Rome. Abercrombie, in the mean while, after garrisoning Fort George, returned with the remainder of his troops to Albany. 30. In July, General John Forbes was at "Wills's creek (Cum- berland) with about nine thousand men, ready to march to Fort da Qucsne. His perverse will and defective judgment caused almost fatal delays. Instead of following Braddock's road over 1. Verse 10, page 90. Qi'estions. — 27. What was the condition of the eonntryi What happened to the Eng- ,isli t 28. Wh.it diil Aberoromhle now dot What happened to him and his army, and what did they dot What can you tell of an expedition against Fort Frontenac! 29. How did Brad>treet lose a part of his army? What did he do w.th the remainder) What did Abercrombie do? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR, 107 Capture of Fort du Quesne. Pitt and the war in America. the Alleghanies, 1 he constructed a new one. In November he was yet fifty miles from Fort du Quesne. Already a part of the troops had been attacked [September 21] and defeated. 2 Winter was at hand, and his troops complained loudly. A council of war decided to abandon the enterprise, when three prisoners were brought in, and gave assurance that the garrison at Fort du Quesne was very weak. 31. Washington was now sent forward with his Virginians. They marched rapidly, and came in sight of the fort on the 24th of November. The garrison set it on fire, and fled down the river in boats, leaving everything behind them. The flames were extinguished, and the name of the fortress was changed to Fort Pitt, in honor of the great statesman. The campaign of 1758 Tesulted in great gains to the English. 3 CAMPAIGN OF 1759. 32. The final struggle was now at hand. Encouraged by the success of the campaigns just closed, Fitt conceived the magnifi- cent scheme of conquering all Canada, and destroying, at one blow, the French dominion in America. That dominion was really confined to the region of the St. Lawrence. Pitt had the rare fortune to possess the entire confidence and esteem of the Parliament and the colonists. The former was dazzled by his greatness ; the latter were deeply impressed by his justice. He had promptly reimbursed all the expenses incurred by the pro- vincial assemblies during the campaign, 4 amounting to almost a million of dollars, and they as promptly seconded his scheme of 1. Note 6, page 98. 2. Major Grant, with a scouting party of Boquet's advance corps, was attacked on the 21st of September, and defeated. The major was made a prisoner. 3. They had effectually humbled the French, by capturing three of their most important posts (Louisbure, Frontenae, and Du Quesne), and by weakening the attachment of their Indian allies. Many of the Indians had not only deserted the French, but at a great council held at Easton, on the Delaware, during the summer 11758], had, with the Six Nations, made treaties of friendship or neutrality with the English. 4. Note 2, page 104. Questions. — 30. What can you tell ahout an expedition against Fortdu Quesne? How was it delayed ? What caused a quicker movement ? 31. Relate how Washington pressed for- ward and took possession of Fort du Quesne. What name was given to it ? 32. What great scheme did Pitt conceive? Wherein lay his strength? How had ha treated the colonies? 108 COLONIES. Flan of Campaign. Operations on Lake Chaniplain. Capture of Fort Niagara. conquest, which had been communicated to them under an oath of secrecy. 33. General Amherst succeeded General Abercrombie in the spring of 1759, and entered upon the campaign with promises of great success. The plan was similar to that of Phipps and Win- throp in 1690. 1 Amherst was to drive the French from Northern New York, whilst Wolfe was to ascend the St. Lawrence and at- tack Quebec. General Prideaux, meanwhile, was to capture Fort Niagara, and hasten to join Amherst at Montreal or Quebec. 34. Amherst, with eleven thousand men, captured Ticonde- roga 2 on the 22d of July. The garrison had fled to Crown Point. 3 Amherst followed them, and they went in great haste down the lake. He again pursued, as soon as he could prepare a suffi- cient number of boats, but storms drove him back [October 11, 1759], and his army wintered at Crown Point. They employed the time in constructing that strong fortress whose ruins are now so picturesque. 4 35. General Prideaux, accompanied by Sir William Johnson * as his lieutenant, be- sieged Fort Niagara on the 1st of July [1759]. On the 15th he was killed by the bursting of a cohorn, 6 and the command de- volved on Johnson. The siege went on for three weeks, when about twelve hundred French and Indians came to the relief of the garrison. They were driven away, after a severe battle, and Fort Niagara was surren- CROWN POINT. FORT NIAGARA. dered to Johnson on the 25th of July. 1. Verse 25, page 65. 2. Verse 26, page 105. I 3. Verse 15, patre 101. 4. The above diagram shows the general form of the military works at Crown Point. There, like the ruins at Tieonderoga, are quite picturesque remains of the post. AAA show the position of the strong stone barracks, portions of which are yet standing. W shows the place of a very deep well, dug through the solid rock. 5. Verse 14, page 100. 6. A 24-poundcr brass mortar, weighing about one hundred and sixty-four pounds. Qcfstions.— 33. What chance of officers occurred ? What was the plan of the campaign of 1759? 34. What did Ambers) dol TeH how he drove the French from Lake Ohamplalc I What did he then do? 35. What did Prideaux do? What caused his death? Who took command ? Tell of the repulse of the French and Indians, and capture of Fort Niagara. FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 109 Expedition against Quebec. Battle of Montmorenci. 86. General Wolfe ascended the St. Lawrence with eight thou- sand troops, in a large fleet commanded by Admirals Holmes and Sanders. He landed on the island of Orleans, below Quebec, on the 27th of June. A few days afterward, a considerable force, under Generals Townshend and Murray, formed a camp on the main, below the Montmorenci river, while others took possession of Point Levi, opposite Quebec, on the 30th of July. From that point hot shot were thrown into the city, which destroyed most of the lower town. 1 37. At the close of July the English met with a sad disaster. General Monckton crossed the river from Point Levi, landed at the base of the high bank just above the Montmorenci, and pro- ceeded to attack the left of the French lines. They were driven back to the beach, just as a tremendous thunder shower burst upon them. The night, that came soon, was in- tensely dark, and the roar of the rapidly rising tide Avarned the English to escape to their boats. Before they could do so, five hundred of their number perished. This is known as the battle of Montmorenci. 38. For about two months, Wolfe lay before Quebec without obtaining any im- portant advantage. Anxiety, exposure, and fatigue produced a fever that prostrated him. He called a council of officers at his bedside, when it was determined to scale the heights of Abraham, 3 and attack the 1. Quebec, then, as now, cons : sted of an upper and lower town, the former within forti- fied walls, upon the top and declivities of a high peninsula ; the latter lying upon a narrow beach at the edge of the water. Upon the heights, three hundred feet above the water, was a level plateau called the Plains of Abraham. At the mouth of the St. Charles, which here enters the St. Lawrence, the French had moored several floating batteries. The town was strongly garrisoned by French regulars ; and along the north bank of the St. Lawrence, from the St.'Charles to the' Montmorenci river, was the main French army, under Montcalm, in a fortified camp extending eastward from Beaufort along the bank of the St. Lawrence. It was composed chiefly of Canadian militia and Ii.dans. 2. James Wolfe was son of a British general, and was born in Kent, England, in 1726. Be- fore he was twenty years of age, he was distinguished in battle. He was now only thirty- three vears old. 3. The declivity from Cape Diamond, on which the chief fortress at Quebec stands, along the St. Lawrence'to the cove below Sillery, was called by the general name of the Heights of Abraham, the plains of that name being oil the top. See the map on page 110. Qcesttons.— 36. What can you tell of General Wolfe's expedition up the St. Lawrence ? What disposition was made of troops near Quebec? What was done at Point Levi? 37. What sad disaster happened to the English ? How ? 38. What can you tell about delay ? What was determined on in council? GENERAL WOLFE. 110 COLONIES. Capture of Quebec Attempt to recover it. city in the rear. Preparations for the enterprise were made with vigor, and so secretly that the French had no suspicions of the designs of the English. 39, Wolfe arose from a sickbed to lead the expedition in per- son. On the night of the 12th [September, 1 759], the English went some distance up the river in their ships, and then, in boats with muffled oars, they returned to a cove and ravine in rear of the heights. In the face of a sharp fire from a guard above, they as- cended the acclivity, and, at sunrise on the 13th, stood in battle array on the Plains of Abraham.' 40. Montcalm, sur- prised and astonished, perceiving the peril of the city, marched his en- tire army to oppose the English. A fierce battle ensued. Wolfe, at the head of his column, fell, mortally wounded, but lived long enough to hear the shouts of his victorious army. Montcalm, too, was mortally wounded ; and in the city of Quebec stands a monument commemorative of the two gallant lead- ers. 2 On the 18th of September the city was sur- rendered to the English, and five thousand troops, under General Murray, immediately occupied it. CAMTUGN OF 17 6 0. 41. The French made an effort to recover Quebec in the spring of 1760. Six frigates and a strong land force, under M. Levi, Montcalm's successor, MONUMENT TO WOLFE AND MONTCALM. 1. Note 1, page 100. 2. This monument stands in the governor's garden. It is granite. Questions.— 38. What was done? 30. What did Wolfe do! Tell how the English gained (he rear of Quebec, on the Plains of Abraham. 40. Was Montcalm surprised? What did he do? What was the result of t lie battle 1 What can you tell of honors to Wolfe and Montcalm ? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. Ill Surrender of Montreal. Conquest of Canada. Treaty. went down the St. Lawrence for this purpose, in April. They were met by Murray, from Quebec, at Sillery, three miles above the city, on the 28th, where one of the bloodiest battles of the war was fought. The English were driven back to Quebec, and there besieged; but on the 9th of May, Levi, alarmed by the ap- pearance of what he supposed to be the advance of an English fleet, fled to Montreal. He lost most of his shipping. 42. Montreal, the last stronghold of the French, was doomed. Early in September, three English armies, eighteen thousand strong,' were before it. Vaudreuil, the governor, perceived the folly of resistance, and surrendered the city on the 8th. General Gage was appointed military governor. The prostration of French power in America was now complete, and the colonists were joyful. The people everywhere assembled to utter public thanksgivings to God. 3 43. The war between the English and French nations did not cease upon the ocean and among the West India islands until 1763, when a treaty of peace was concluded at Paris [Februrary 10], by which France ceded to Great Britain all her claimed possessions in America, eastward of the Mississippi, north of the latitude of 1. Ten thousand under Amherst, arid one thousand Indians under Johnson, arrived (it Montreal on the 6th of September. On the same day General Murray and four thousand troops arrived from Quebec, and on the following day Colonel Haviland joined them with three thousand troops from Crown Point. 2. The following is a list of the battles, with t':eir dates, of the French and Indian war : 1754. Great Meadows, May 28. 97 Fort Necessity, July 4. 97 1755. Fort Beausejour, June 16. 99 Fort Gasperau, June 17. 99 Monongahela, July 9. 99 Near Lake George, Sept. 8. 101 Head of Lake George, Sept. 8. 101 1756. Oswego, Aug. 14. 102 1757. Fort William Henry, July 9. 103 Name. 1758. Date. Page. Near Ticonderoga, July 6. Ticonderoga, July 8. Louisburg, July 26. Fort Frontenac, Aug. 27. Alleghany Mountains, Sept. 21. 1759. Fort Niagara, July 25. Montmorenci, July 31. Plains of Abraham, Sept. 13. 1760. Sillery, April 28. 106 106 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 Qukstions.— 41. What did the French attempt ? What can you tell about it, and a battle ? Who were victorious? Why did the French flee from Quebec? What did they lose? 42. Where was the last stronghold of the French? How was it threatened ? Till about its surrender to the English? What was the effect on the colonists? 43. What can you tell about the continuing of war between the English and French, and a treaty? What had England gained? 112 COLONIES. England's American dorniuions. Troubles with the southern Indians. Pontiac's war. Iberville river. 1 At the same time, Spain, Avith whom the English had been at war for a year previously, ceded [February 10, 1763] East and West Florida to the British crown. And now England held undisputed possession (except by the Indians) of the whole continent, from the shores of the Gulf of Mexico to the frozen north, and from ocean to ocean. 3 44. While there was war in the north, the frontier settlements of the Carolinas suffered terribly from the Indians, set on by French emissaries among them. An expedition under Colonel Grant severely punished them in 1761, and ever afterward they remained quiet. 45. In 1763, Pontiac, a sagacious Ottmca chief, and a former ally of the French, was seen upon the war-path. Pie had secretly effected a confederation of several of the no#th-western tribes of Indians, for the purpose of expelling the English from the coun- try west of the Alleghanies. 3 Within a fortnight, in the sum- mer of that year, he seized all the English posts west of Oswego, excepting Niagara, Fort Pitt and Detroit. The Indians were soon subdued, and "Pontiac's War" was brought to an end. He was murdered by an Illinois Indian on the Mississippi river. 46. Wc have now arrived at a point in the history of the Uni- ted States, of great interest and importance. We have traced the growth of the colonies through infancy and youth, their interests and destinies gradually commingling, until they really formed one people, 4 strong and lusty, like the mature man, pre- 1. France and England, Spain and Portugal were parties to the treaty. New Orleans, with the whole of Louisiana west of the Mississippi, was ceded by France to Spain at the same time, and she relinquished her entire possessions in North America. In 1800, Spain, by a secret treaty, retroceded Louisiana to France; and in 1S03, Napoleon sold it to the United States for $15,000,000. 2. The cost to England of this Seven Tears? War, as the conflict was called in Europe, was five hundred and sixty millions of dollars. 3. Note 6, page 98. 4. It must OOt be understood that there was yet a perfect unity of feeling among the vari- ous colonists. Sectional interests produced sectional jealousies, ami these worked much mischief, even while soldiers from almost every colony were lighting shoulder to shoulder in the Continental army. Burnaby, who traveled In America at this period, expressed the opinion, that sectional jealousy and dissimilarity would prevent a permanent union ; yet he avers that the people were imbued with ideas of independence, and that it was frequently remarked among them, that " the tide of dominion was running westward, and that America was destined to be the mistress of the world." Questions. — It. What can you tell about difficulties with the Indians in the SOilthi How were they chastised * 45. What can you tell about the conspiracy of Pontiac? What did be do? What followed! 46. What have we now accomplished ? What have we ob served ? How must we now regard the colonies ? FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 113 Map of the war. pared to vindicate natural rights, and to fashion political and social systems adapted to their position and wants. We view them now, 20 40 60 80 100 1 I I I I -I Scale of Miles. MAP OF THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 114 COLONIES. Toint arrived at in our studies. conscious of their physical and moral strength, possessing clear views of right and justice, and prepared to demand and defend both. This is the point, in the progress of the new and growing nation, to which our observation is now directed, when the great question was to he decided, whether independent self-control should he enjoyed, or continued vassalage to an ungenerous parent should be endured. Our next topic will be the events connected with the settlement of that question. *»INS OF TICOKDEUOGA. OHAPTEE V. THE REVOLUTION. SECTION I. 1. We have observed, in the course of our studies thus far, the slow but continual and solid growth of democratic ideas, from the time of the first planting of settlements in America which be- came colonies, 1 and with that growth a corresponding desire for independence of Great Britain, and the founding of a nation.' This desire was fostered by unjust and unwise legislation on the part of the mother country, by which the colonists were oppressed. That oppression finally became so severe that the people found it necessary first to complain, then to remonstrate, then to petition for redress, and finally to revolt, take up arms, and fight for their rights. 2. The colonists could not complain of the willful exercise of actual tyranny by the rulers of Great Britain. There was no motive for such conduct. They complained of an illiberal policy toward them, rigidly enforced, concerning manufactures and commerce ; 3 the exactions and haughtiness of the royal governors sent to rule them without their leave; and above all, the exercise, by the home government, of the asserted right to tax the colonists without their consent, and without allowing them representatives in the British 1. Verse 2, page 50. 2. Three forms of government had existed, namely charter, proprietary, and royal. The New England governments were based on royal charters ; New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Mary- land, and the Carolina* were owned and governed by individuals or companies ; and the remainder were immediately subject to the crown. Notwithstanding this diversity in the source of government, the anti-monarchical spirit pervaded the people, from the be- ginnine-, and gave birth to popular legislative assemblies. 3. Note 2, page 94. Questions.— 1. What have we observed? What desire was felt? What happened? 2. Of what did the colonists complain ? What did they declare ? What did they do? 116 THE REVOLUTION. Posture of the colonists. 'Wants of the British treasury. Writs of assistance. Parliament. The colonists declared that taxation without rep- resention is tyranny. In defense of that position, established on the firm foundation of the rights of man, they finally revolted, and fought seven years for their independence. A history of that Revolution we will now consider. PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 3. When the treaty of Paris [1763] closed tho French and In- dian war, 1 the colonists looked forward to long years of prosperity and repose. A young monarch, 2 virtuous and of upright inten- tions, was just seated [1761] upon the British throne. Having confidence in his integrity, and having recently felt the justice of the Government under the direction of Pitt, they were disposed to forget their grievances. But their hopes of happiness were soon destroyed. War had exhausted the British treasury, and the ministers were seeking various means for filling it. The late war had revealed to them the resources of the American col- onies, and they determined to get money from them by taxation, direct or indirect. They might have obtained it easily, by asking it as a favor, but they demanded it as a right, and the colonists were offended. 4. The first attempt to exercise this so-called right was the issuing of search-warrants to persons appointed by the king to collect the import duties authorized by the navigation laws. 3 These wan-ants, which were called Writs of Assistance, empowered the King's officers to enter, peaceably or forcibly, any man's store or dwelling, in search of goods on which the duty had not been paid. It was a common saying and feeling that "every English- 1. Verse 43, page 111. 2. George the Third, He was crowned in 1701, at the ace of twenty-one years. He reigned about sixty year.*, and died in 1820. During the latter years of his life* he was an imbecile, and his son (afterward George the Fourth) was appointed regent, or temporary ruler. 3. If a merchant receives from a foreign country goods valued in that country at f 1,000, and is required to pay to his Government $100 on the receipt of tlietn, he pays what is called a tariff or import duty, of ten per cent, on the original cost. He is thus taxed $100 for the support of hie Government. This is called, in commercial language, ad valorem duty. When he is required to pay a specified sum on every yard of cloth imported, whatever its cost abroad, it is called specific duly. Questions.— 3. "What hopes did the colonists indulge! Why? now were they disap- pointed ? What did the British Government do 1 4. What can you tell about a method of taxatiou? What about Writs of Assistance? PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 117 Resistance to taxation. James Otis. Stamp act proposed. man's house is his castle." These proceedings violated that sover- eignty; and in this form the taxation of the American colonists was first attempted, in the reign of George the Third. 5. The people resisted this violation of their rights. The mat- ter was brought before a general court held in Boston, and there James Otis, then advocate-general of the provinces, came out boldly on the side of the people. He denied the right of the British Government to tax them without their consent, and with his clear, trumpet- like voice, he exclaimed: "To my dying day I will oppose, with all the power and faculties God has given me, all such in- struments of slavery on one hand and villany on the other!" "Then and there," said John Adams, who was pres- ent, "the trumpet of the Revolution was sounded — the independence of the colonies was proclaimed." 6. Had the young king listened to the counsels of wise men like Pitt, 1 the Americans might have been loyal subjects during his long reign. He listened to the counsels of weak and corrupt men like Bute, whom he placed at the head of his cabinet. Under his counsels a meas- ure was adopted which no former British ministry dare attempt. It was the taxation of the American colonies by the means of a stamp duty. 2 The Stamp Act, as it was called, required the colonists to purchase, for specified sums, and place on all written JAMES OTIS. 1 Verse 24, page 104. 2. During Walpole's administration (1732], a stamp duty was proposed. He sa ! d, " I will leave the taxation of America to some of my successors, who have more courage than 1 have." Sir William Keith, governor of Pennsylvania, proposed such a tax in 1739. Frank- lin thought it just, when a delegate in the Colonial Congress at Albany, in 1754 (verse 8, p:ige 98). But when it was proposed to Pitt in 1759, he said, " I will never burn my Angers with an American Stamp Act." Questions.— 5. What did the people do? Who was their champion? What did Otis say? What did John Adams declare? 6. What should the king have done? What did he do ? What measure was adopted ? 118 THE EEVOLUTION. Passage of the stamp act. Opposition to it. documents, stamps furnished by the British Government. 1 It Avas a wrong, unwise, and most mischievous measure. 7. The passage of the Stamp Act [1765] created the most in- tense indignation in America. Otis, in Massachusetts, 2 and Patrick PATRICK nENRY ADDRESSING THE VIRGINIA ASSEMBLY. Henry, in Virginia, vehemently denounced it. 3 Their words found a ready response in the breasts of the people. Associations were 1. The stumps were upon blue paper, in the form seen in the ei graving on pace 117, and were to be attached to every piece or paper or parchment on which a legal instrument was written. For these Btamps, Government charged spec fie prices : for example, for a common property deed, one shilling and sixpence- for a diploma or a certificate of a college degree, two pounds, etc., etc. 2. Verse 5, page 117. 3. Henry was a member of the Virgln'a assembly. He introduced a seres of resolu- tions, highly tinctured with rebellions doctrine?. Reasserted the general r'ghts of all the colonies : then the exclusive right of the Virginia assembly to tax tie people of that province, ai'd boldly declared thai the people were not bound to obey any law relative to taxation which did not proceed from their representatives. The last resolution declared that whoever should dissent from the doctrines inculcated in the others, should be considered an "enemy of the colonii s." The Introduction of these resolutions produced great excitement cull alarm. Henry supported them with all the power of his wonderful eloquence. Some rose from their Beats, and others sat. in breathless silence. At length, when, alluding to tyrants, he exclaimed, " Caesar had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell, and George the Third —"there was aery of "Treason I treason!" He paused a moment, and said — "may profit by their example. If that be treason, make the most of it." A pari of his resolution's were adopted, and these formed the first gauntlet of defiance cast at the feet of the British monarch. Their power was felt throughout the laud. The head of the speaker in the abovo picture is a correct likeness of Patrick Henry. PRELIMINAEY EVENTS. 119 Opposition to the Stamp Act. England's tender 6pot. formed of those who were called Sons of Liberty, and pledges were made to resist the law. The stamps were seized and destroyed when they reached the seaboard towns ; and the agents, called "stamp distributors," appointed to sell them, were so much despised and insulted that they quickly relinquished the business. 8. The first day of November, 1765, was the appointed time for the Stamp Act to go into effect. Already a convention of del- egates from several colonies had assembled in New York city [October V], and in three well-written papers they ably set forth the grievances and rights of the colonies, and petitioned the king and Parliament for redress of the former and acknowledgment of the latter. This convention, or congress, was in session fourteen days, and was followed by firm action, in opposition to the law, on the part of the people. All business was suspended on the 1st of November. Bells tolled funeral knells, flags were hoisted at half- mast, the courts were closed, and there was deep silence in the land. Then followed an outburst of honest indignation and de- fiance. The Sons of Liberty put forth new efforts. Mobs assailed the houses of British officials in the cities, and burned loyalists in effigy ; ' and the people leagued against British commerce. They agreed to import nothing from Great Britain, to the dismay of her merchants and manufacturers. 2 9. England was touched in a tender point — her commerce ; and her merchants and manufacturers joined with the Americans in a demand for the repeal of the Stamp Act. 3 The Government was compelled to listen ; and on the 18th of March, 1766, the obnoxious 1. Public indignation is thus sometimes manifested. A figure of a man, intended to repre- sent the obnoxious individual, is paraded, and then hung upon a scaffold, or burned at a stake, as an intimation of the deserved fate of the person thus represented. It was a com- mon practice in England at the time in question, and has been often done in our own coun- try since. 2. The newspapers of the day contain many laudatory notices of the conformity of wealthy people to these agreements. On one occasion, forty or fifty young lades, who called them- selves "Daughters of Liberty," met at the house of Rev. Mr.Morehead, in Boston, with the : r spinning wheels, and spun two hundred and thirty-two skeins of yarn, durii g the day, and presented them to the pastor. It is said "there were upward of one hundred sp'nners in Mr. Morehead's Society." " Within eighteen months," wrote a gentleman at Newport, E. I., " four hundred and eighty-seven yards of cloth, and thirty six pairs of stocking*, have been spun and knit in the family of James Nixon, of this tow'n." That wool might not become Bcarce, the use of sheep-flesh for food was discontinued. 3. Half a million of dollars were due to them by the colonists, at that time, not a dollar of which could be collected under the existing state of things. Questions.— 7. What were the effects of the Stamp Act ? 8. What can you tell of a con- vention in New York? What followed ? 9. How was Eigland touched by the Stamp Act ? What was done? _ 120 THE REVOLUTION. The Declaratory Act. New oppressive measures. The colonies sensible of danger. act was repealed. Pitt was then in the Parliament, and, with Burke, Barre, and others, was chiefly instru- mental in accomplishing that result. The repeal gave joy in England and America. ,i 10. New trouble soon appeared. While Pitt applauded the Americans for resisting the stamp tax, he appended to the repeal bill a declaration that the British Parlia- ment had the right " to bind the colonies in any manner whatsoever." Without this william pitt. concession to British pride, it was said, the repeal bill could not have become law. But Pitt's expedient was hurtful ; for under the sanction of that Declaratory Act, as it was called, the British ministry planned and executed measures for taxing the Americans quite as odious in principle as the stamp tax. To overcome expected opposition, British troops were sent to America [June, 1766], and a Mutiny Act was passed, which provided for their partial subsistence by the colonists. 11. This palpable attempt to enslave the Americans filled them with burning indignation. The most determined opposition every- where appeared; yet the ministry persevered in their schemes. In June [1767] a tax was levied on several articles imported into the colonies. In July an act was passed establishing a board of trade and commissioners of customs in the colonies, who should be in- dependent of the colonial legislatures. A few days afterward [July, 1767], Parliament passed an act forbidding the assembly of New York performing any legislative act whatsoever, because that body had formally refused to comply with the requirements of the Mutiny Act. 12. The colonists were now thoroughly aroused to a sense of danger, and the bond of union between them grew stronger every day. A nation was rapidly germinating. The colonial assemblies first protested. New non-importation associations were formed.' 1. Verse 8, page 119. Questions.— 10. Wliat can you tell about the repeal of the Stamp Act ? What did the British ministry now do ? 11. What new measures did the ministry attempt? 12. What were the effects 1 PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 121 Non-importation leagues. Boldness of the Massachusetts assembly. A crisis. Pamphlets and newspapers boldly instigated the people to resist- ance by passionate appeals to their feelings and judgment, and defining their rights. The assembly of Massachusetts went a step farther. They issued a Circular Letter [February, 1768] to the other colonial assemblies, asking them to cooperate in eiforts to obtain a redress of grievances. The latter made a cordial response ; and early in 1768 almost every colonial assembly had boldly ex- pressed the conviction that Parliament had no right to tax the colonies without their consent. 13. The bold act of Massachusetts was resented by the minis- try. They ordered the assembly, in the name of the king, to rescind the Circular Letter. That body, by an almost unani- mous vote [June 30, 1768], voted not to rescind, and declared that order from the British ministry to be another evidence of the determination of the Government to enslave the colonists by restricting the freedom of speech and action of their repre- sentatives. 1 SAMUEL ADAMS - 14. The ministry and the colonists were now fairly at issue. The former, having resolved to use coercive measures, became more regardless than ever of even the forms of justice, and they began to treat the colonists as rebellious subjects. They warned the several colonial assemblies not to imitate the disobedience of Massachusetts ; 2 and the royal governors were instructed to use all the means at their command to enforce the submission of the people. 15. A crisis was soon reached. The new commissioners of customs 3 arrived at Boston in May, 1768. The people held them in detestation, and very soon gave a signal illustration of it. The 1. James Otis and Samuel Adams were the principal speakers on this occasion, "When Lord Hillsborough [colonial secretary] knows," said the former, " that we will not rescind. our acts, he should apply to Parliament to rescind theirs. Let Britons rescind their meas- ures, or the colonies are lost to them forever," 2. Verse 12, page 120. 3. Verse 11, page 120. Questions.— 12. What did the Massachusetts and other colonial assemblies do ? 13. What did the ministry require ? What did the Massachusetts assembly do? 14. What course did the ministry pursue? 122 THE REVOLUTION. Royal troops in Boston. Patriotism of the people. The Government an oppressor. commissioners seized a sloop [June, 1768] laden with wine, which belonged to John Hancock, one of the leaders of the popular sen- timent in Massachusetts, because that gentleman refused to pay the duty on the cargo on her arrival. The commissioners were personally assailed by a mob ; their houses were injured ; and they were compelled to seek safety in Castle William, a small fort on an island in the harbor. 16. The royal governor, Bernard, noAv called troops to Boston to overawe the people. General Gage 1 came with them late in September. They were seven hundred in number. They entered the city on the quiet Sabbath, with drums beating and colors flying, and with all the insolence of conquerors taking possession of a captured city. The inhabitants felt deeply outraged, but were compelled to see their beautiful Commons converted into a camp ground for mercenaries, without power to repel the indignity. But the assembly of Massachusetts refused to afford food or shel- ter for these royal troops, because they came as instruments of oppression. 2 1 7. The home government proceeded to punish Massachusetts for its obstinacy. An old law of Henry the Eighth was revived, by which the governor of the refractory colony should be required to arrest and send to England for trial, on a charge of treason, the ringleaders in the recent tumults in Boston. 3 The assembly boldly denied the right of the king to take an offender from the country for trial, and reasserted the chartered privileges of the people. A minority in the British House of Commons took the same position. Burke denounced the revival of the old statute, and said : " Can you not trust the juries of that country ? If you have not a party among two millions of people, you must cither changr? your plan of government or renounce the colonies forever." 18. It soon became apparent to the colonists that to preserve 1. Verse 42, page 111. 2. As the people refused to supply the troops with quarters, they were placed, some in the State House, some in Faneuil Hall, and others in tents on the Common. Cannon were planted at different points ; sentinels challenged the citizens as they passed ; and the whole city had the appearance of a camp. 8. Verse 15, page 121. Questions.— 15. What happened in Boston? What can you tell of a mob thfoj 16. What did the governor of Massachusetts do? What can you tell of royal troops In Bos- ton? 17. How was Boston punished ? What law was revived? What did Burke say f PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 123 Riot in Boston. " Boston Massacre." Good conduct of the Americans. their liberties they must oppose armed resistance to armed oppres- sion. 1 In Boston the indignation of the inhabitants was with diffi- culty restrained. The soldiers and the citizens had almost daily quarrels. At length [March 2, 1770] they came to blows, and citizens were badly beaten. The vengeance of the most excitable portion of the inhabitants was aroused, and a few evenings after- ward [March 5] several hundred of them assembled in the streets for the avowed purpose of attacking the troops and driving them from the city. A fight ensued, when three citizens were killed, and two were severely wounded. 2 The mob retreated. The city bells rang an alarum; and within an hour several thousands of the inhabitants were in the streets. The governor (Hutchinson) appeared and allayed the excitement by assuring the citizens that their wishes should be respected. 19. The people demanded the instant withdrawal of the troops and the trial of Captain Preston, the commander of the guard of eight men who fired on the mob, for murder. The governor com- plied. The troops were sent to Castle William 9 on the 12th [March, 1770], and the soldiers were arraigned. John Adams and Josiah Quincy, popular leaders of the people, defended them. The commander and six of his men were accpiitted. The other two were found guilty of manslaughter. The people acquiesced in the verdict, for they loved justice and reverenced the law." The victims of the riot were regarded as martyrs for the sake of liberty ; and for many years the memory of the "Boston Massa- cre," as it Avas called, was kept alive by anniversary orations in the city and vicinity. 20. The events in America and the clamors of British mer- 1. There were, at that time, full two hundred thousand men in the colonies capable of bearine arms. 2. The lender of the mob was a powerful mulatto, named Attucks. He and Samuel Gray and James Caldwell were killed instantly ; two others received mortal wounds. 3. Verse 15, page 121. 4. This trial and its results were highly favorable to the character of the Americans. It showed that they were alive to the importance of obedience to laws and the sanctity of jus- tice. The event was a most opportune and pertinent commentary on the folly and wicked- ness of the ministry in reviving the old statute of Henry the Eighth, by which Americans niight be taken to England for trial. It was so regarded in England, and gave the opposition in Parliament a powerful weapon for a defence of the Americans. Questions.— 18. What did the colonists perceive ? What can you tell of disturbances in Boston? 19. W T hat did the people demand? How were they answered ? What can you say about a trial of royal soldiers in Boston? 124 THE REVOLUTION. East India Company, and a duly on tea. Troubles in North Carolina. Regulators. chants who were injured by the non-importation associations,' caused the British ministry to recommend the repeal of all the obnoxious tax laws, and the imposition of a duty only on tea. This was retained for the twofold purpose of aiding the East India Company, 2 and the continued assertion of the right of Par- liament to tax the colonies. Lord North, the prime minister, mistaking the character of the Americans, believed that they would not complain of a very small tax on a single article of lux- ury. He could not comprehend the fact that they were contend- ing for a great principle which lay at the foundation of their liberties. They regarded the imposition of a duty on one article as much a violation of their rights as if ten were included. So they continued their non-importation league against the purchase and use of tea. 21. In 1771 there were popular outbreaks in the interior of North Carolina, caused by the exactions of government officers. Men banded in open rebellion, with the avowed purpose of redress- ing the grievances of the people. They called themselves Regu- lators. Local magistrates were powerless, and in May, Governor Tryon marched against them with troops. A bloody skirmish ensued near the banks of the Alamance creek [May 16, 1771]. The Regulators were subdued, and six of their number were hanged. But the spirit of the people was not subdued. The affair created intense hatred of British rule, which was soon man- ifested in patriotic deeds. 22. In June, the following year [1772], the British schooner Gaspe Avas cruising in Narraganset bay for the purpose of enforcing the revenue laws. While chasing a vessel that was trying to elude her, she ran aground; and that night [June 9, 1772] a party went 1. Verse 8, page 119. 2. The English East India Company was formed and chartered in 1600, for the purpose of Carrying on a trade by sea between England and the countries lying east of the Cape of Good Hope. It continued prosperous ; and about, the middle of the last century, the governor of its stations in India, under the pretense of obtaining security for their trade, subdued small territories, and thus planted the foundation of that ereat British empire in the East, which now comprises the whole of Hindostnn, from Cape Comorin to the Himalaya mountains, with a population of more than one hundred and twenty millions of people. Questions.— 20. What can you tell of feeling in England* What did Lord North do! What can you sav about the principle for which the Americans were contending? 21. What can you tell of disturbances in North Carolina I 22. What important event occurred in Nar- ean yon raganset Bay ? PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 125 The Gaspe. Tea sent to America. Destruction of tea in Boston harbor. LORD NORTH. down from Providence,'" and set her on fire. 2 This act exasperated the British ministry ; and so the breach between England and her colonies continually widened. 23. The East India Company 3 lost the best customer for their tea by the operation of the non-importation leagues/ and their warehouses were crowd- ed with the plant. They offered to pay an export duty, greater in amount than the tax imposed on the Americans by the im- port duty, 5 if the latter should be with- drawn. Lord North would not consent to thus relinquish even the appearance of the right to tax the colonists, but, still mistak- ing the character of the Americans, he con- sented to allow the company to send their tea over on terms which would make it cheaper in America than in England. Both the Government and the company believed that the Americans might be bribed into submission by cheap tea ; and very soon ships laden with the article were making their way across the Atlantic. 24. This concession to a commercial monopoly, while spurning the appeals of a great principle, only cre- ated contempt and indignation through- out the colonies, and not a cargo was allowed to be landed, excepting one or two, which were seized and not permitted to be sold. Governor Hutchinson, of Massachusetts, defied the popular will, and ordered the landing of two cargoes which arrived at Boston in December, 1. Verse 1, page 42. 2. One of the leaders was Abraham Whipple, a naval commander during the Revolut'o'. Several others were afterward distinguished for bravery during that struggle. Four years afterward, when Sir Jaines Wallace, a British commander, was in the vicinity of Newport, Whipple became known as the leader of the attack on the Gaspe. "Wallace sent him the fol- lowing letter: " You, Abraham Whipple, on the 9th of June, 1772, burned his ma ; esty's vessel, the G-ispe, and I will hang you at the yard-arm." To this Whipple renlied : " To Sir James Wallace. Sir : Always catch a man before you hang him. Abraham WHirPLF." 3. Note 2, page 124. 4. Verse 12, page 120. 5. Note 3, page 116. Questions.— 23. What can you tell about the East India Company and their tea? IIow were the Americana misunderstood ? 24. How did the Americans regard the acts of the Pritisli Government concerning a tax on tea? What did they do? 12G THE REVOLUTION. Retaliatory measures. Closing of the port of Boston. Sympathy for the Bostonians. 1773. The people held meetings in Faneuil Hall, and resolved that no tea should be landed ; and on a cold, moonlit night, a party of about sixty men, mostly disguised as Indians, went on board the two vessels, broke open the tea chests, and cast their contents into the waters of the harbor. 25. This event exasperated the British ministry, and they re- solved on retaliatory measures. On the 7th of March, 1774, Par- liament, by law, ordered the port of Boston to be closed against all commerce. Another act was passed, on the 28th, for depriv- ing the people of Massachusetts of some of their dearest rights given them by their charter. 1 This was followed by another on the 21st of April, which provided for the trial, in England, of any person who should commit murder in the colonies in support of the British Government : in other words, to encourage military insolence. A fourth act provided for the quartering of troops on the people of the colonies ; and a fifth made great concessions to the Roman Catholics in Canada. 2G. These measures created universal indignation throughout the colonies, which was heightened when General Gage* was ap- pointed governor of Massachusetts, and went to Boston, with troops, to enforce the obnoxious acts of Parliament. Under his direction the port of Boston was closed on the first of June [1774]. Business was prostrated and distress ensued. The in- habitants of the doomed town were considered martyrs ; and sympathizing friends throughout the colonies, and in Great Brit- ain, sent them all the relief in their power, 3 and counseled them to continue to resist. The American people saw that the time had 1. It empowered sheriffs, appointed by the crown, to select juries, instead of leaving: that power with Die selectmen of the towns, who were chosen by the people. It also prohibited all town meetings and other gatherings. It provided lor the appointment of the councils, judges, justices of the peace, etc., by the crown or its representative. 2. Verse 10, paL-c 122. S. The "Boston Port Bill'' not only ordered the 1 harbor to he closed atrainst the entrance and departure of vessels, but also directed the custom house, the courts of justice, and other public offices to he removed to Salem. The Salem people refused the offered advantage, and those of Marblehead Offered the merchants cf Boston the free use of their wharves. Food, clothing, and money were sent to Boston from different colonies, and sympathizers in London subscribed one hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the poor of Boslon. Questions.— 25. How were ministers affected, and what did they do? What new meal ares were adopted ? 26. Describe the State of public feeling in America. What occurred s>t Boston? What can you tell about sympathy for the Bostonians? What did the Arneri- chii people perceive? PRELIMINARY EVENTS. 127 Committees of correspondence. Meeting of the Continental Congress. come for them to decide which to choose, slavish submission or armed resistance. 27. Committees of correspondence had been formed in the several colonies the previous year. 1 These were now busy in creating a strong bond of union between the colonies, by a con- tinual interchange of opinions and intelligence. Party lines were distinctly drawn. The friends of British rule were called Tories, and the friends of the American people were called Whigs." 28. The inhabitants of Massachusetts defied their oppressors, while suffering greatly. Their representatives met at Salem, soon after the closing of the port of Boston, 3 and sent forth an invita- tion to all the colonies to send delegates to Philadelphia, early in September following, who should meet there in a continental congress, to consult on public affairs. This UNITE O K DIE I [NY ! invitation was cheerfully accepted. The idea of a national union took powerful hold on the public mind, and a snake de- vice, like the one seen annexed, was placed ,i l 1 /. 1 -r» SNAKE DEVICE. at the head ot several newspapers. Be- fore the close cf August [IV 74], twelve of the thirteen colonies had appointed delegates to the proposed general congress. 29. The First Continental Congress assembled in Car- penter's Hall, Philadelphia, on the 5th of September, 1774. All of the colonies were represented, excepting Georgia. Peyton Ran- dolph, of Virginia, was appointed president, and Charles Thom- son, of Pennsylvania, was chosen secretary. The regular business of the Congress was opened on the morning of the 7th, after a 1. At a consultation of leading members of the Virginia House of Assembly in March, 1773, held in the old Raleigh tavern at Williamsburg, at which Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, Richard Henry Lee, and others were present, it was agreed to submit a resolution in the house the following dav, appointine a committee of vigilance and correspondence, and recommending the same to the other colonies. The measure was carried, and these com- mittees formed one of the most powerful engines in carrying on the work of the Revolution. Similar committees hud alrendy been formed in several towns in Massachusetts. 2. The terms Whig and Tort had been long used in England as titles of political parties. The former denoted the opposers of royalty ; the latter indicated its supporters. These terms were introduced into America two or three years before the Revolution broke out, and became the distinctive titles of the patriots and loyalists. 3. Verse 20, page 126. Questions.— 27. What can you tell about committees of correspondence? What about party names? 28. How did the Massachusetts people act? What can you tell about prepa- rations for a Continental Congress? 29. What can you tell of the assembling of that Con- gress ? W'hat did they do ? 128 THE REVOLUTION". Doings of the Continental Congress. Preparations for war. Minute-men prayer from the Rev. Jacob Duche, of Philadelphia. They re- mained in session until the 26th of October, during which time they matured plans for future action, and prepared and put forth several state pa- pers which chal- lenged the admi- ration of the statesmen of Eu- rope, and received the approval of their countrymen. They expressed a firm loyalty to the king, and adjourned to meet on the 10th of May succeeding [1775], unless the grievances complained of should, in the mean time, be redressed, first ffreat bond of the American Union. CARPENTER S HALL. CHARLES THOMSON. Then was formed the SECTION II. FIRST TEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1775.] 1. While preparations were making for the Continental Con- gress, in the summer of 1774, the people were arming and drill- ing. In Massachusetts, in particular, the patriotic spirit was very zealous. The people enrolled themselves into companies, chose leaders, and prepared to take up arms at a minute's warn- ing. From this circumstance they were called Minute-men. During the session of the Congress in autumn, 1 and also through- out the ensuing winter, these warlike preparations continued, and public speakers everywhere, as well as the newspapers, boldly proclaimed the right of the people to resist oppression. General 1. Verse 29, page 127. Questions.— 1. What were the people doing in the summer and autumn of 1774? IIcw did their actions affect General Gage ? What did he do 1 FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 129 Spirit of the New Eng'and people. New measures of oppression. Gage 1 was alarmed, and commenced fortifying Boston Neck. 2 He seized all the ammunition that he could find in the vicinity of Boston, and, in many ways, so exasperated the people, that it was with difficulty that prudent counselors kept them from at- tacking the troops. 3 2. The spirit of New England was manifested early in Sep- tember. A rumor went abroad that British ships were cannon- ading Boston. Within two days, full thirty thousand armed Minute-men were on their way to that city. It was a false re- port, but the effect gave Gage a useful lesson. He lowered his haughty tone, and sought to soothe the people by calling an assembly of delegates to meet at Salem. Then, dreading their presence, he revoked the order. Ninety delegates met [October 5, 1774], appointed John Hancock their president, and proceeding to Cambridge, formed a Provincial Congress, almost within cannon-shot of Gage's headquarters. They made provis- ions for an army, and boldly declared General Gage to be an " inveterate enemy " of the people. 3. Such was the state of affairs in America at the beginning of 1775. It was an absorbing topic in Great Britain, for Dr. Franklin, the agent there for several of the colonies, had given wide circulation to the proceedings of the first Continental Con- gress. 4 The subject received the early attention of Parliament, and Pitt proposed [January 7, 1775] conciliatory measures. They were rejected, and in their stead Parliament struck another severe blow at the prosperity of NeAV England 5 [March], by prohibiting fishing on the banks of Newfoundland. 6 The colonists now lost 1. Verse 26, page 126. 2. The peninsula of Boston was originally connected with the main land by a narrow isthmus called the Neck. It has been greatly widened by filling in the marginal morasses ; and over it now passes the fine avenue which connects the city with Roxbury, on the main. 3. Many hundreds of armed men assembled at Cambridge. At Charlestown, the people took possession of the arsenal, after Gage had carried off the powder. At Portsmouth, N. H., tbey captured the fort, and carried oft' the ammunition. At Newport, R. I., the people seized the powder, and took possession of forty pieces of cannon at the entrance to the har- bor. In New York, Philadelphia, Annapolis, 'Williamsburg, Charleston, and Savannah, the people took active defensive measures, and the whole country was in a blaze of indignation. 4. Verse 29, page 127. 5. Verse 25, pace 126. 6. Verse 3, page 16. At that time there were employed by the Americans, in the British Newfoundland fisheries, about 400 ships, 2.C0J fish'ng shalkp--, and 20,000 men. O i account Questions.— 2. What can you tell about a war rumor, and its effects? What can vou tell about the Massachusetts assembly and a Provincial Congress? 3. What can you tell about the impression made by American affairs in England ? What did Parliament do? What did the colonists resolve to do ? 6* 130 THE REVOLUTION. British troops in Boston. Bloodshed at Lexington and Concord. The country aroused. all hopes of reconciliation, and, with reliance upon the justice of their cause and the aid of the Lord God Omnipotent, they resolved to defy the fleets and armies of Great Britain. 4. On the 1st of April, 17 75, there were three thousand British troops in Boston ; yet Gage was uneasy. He was told that the people were gathering ammunition and stores at Concord, six- teen miles from the city. He sent Lieutenant-Colonel Smith and Major Pitcairn, with some troops, at near midnight on the 18th, to destroy them. The movement was made secretly, but vigilant men, like Dr. Joseph Warren and Paul Revere, were watching unceas- ingly. The latter hastened toward Concord to arouse the inhab- itants and the Minute-men, and when, at dawn [April 19, 1775], Pitcairn approached Lexington, he found eighty armed men pre- pared to meet him. " Disperse, you rebels ! lay down your arms ! " he shouted. They stood firm. A severe skirmish ensued, in which eight citizens were killed and wounded. Then and there the first blood was shed in the great K evolution. 5. The British pushed on to Concord, and, after a skirmish with the Minute-men there, destroyed the stores, and then moved hastily toward Boston. They were terribly harassed by the militia concealed behind trees, stone fences, and buildings ; and nothing saved the eight hundred men from destruction or capture but the arrival of reinforcements under Lord Percy. The whole body fled to Charlestown, pursued by the Americans, who killed or wounded two hundred and seventy-three of them. The Ameri- cans lost one hundred and three. 6. The whole country was soon aroused to action by this in- vasion. Before the close of April, full twenty thousand Ameri- cans were engaged in building a line of fortifications fromRoxburv to the Mystic river, for the purpose of confining the foe to the narrow peninsula on which Boston stood. 1 The Provincial Coi - gross, with Joseph Warren at its head, was in perpetual session of tli is blow to tlie fishing trade, a great many Inhabitants of Nantucket and vicinity, oh'efly Quakers, went to North Carolina, and in Orange and Guilford counties became planters. Their descendants were yit numerous there when the civil war broke out in 18G1. 1. Verse 6, page 58. ( v 1(-estions.— 4. Wh:it riiu you tell of British troors in Boston? What did Gage do? What scenes ensued at Lexington f •">. Wlmt happened at Concord? What can you tell of the retreat of British troops toward Boston ? G. What were the effects of this armed invasion ? FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 131 Aggressive measures. Committee of Safety. The British reenforced. at Watertown, working clay and night for the public good. 1 The same zeal was manifested in other colonies, in which provincial congresses were formed, arms and ammunition seized, and royal governors defied. Before the close of summer, the power of every one of these magistrates, from Massachusetts to Georgia, was utterly destroyed. 7. The Americans did not confine themselves to the task of imprisoning the British in Boston. They struck an aggressive blow early in May, which opened the way to an invasion of Cana- da. Some Connecticut and Vermont militia, led by Colonels Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold, seized Ticonderoga 2 on the 10th of May ; and two days afterward a detachment, under Colo- nel Seth Warner, took possession of Crown Point. 3 The spoils of victory were one hundred and forty pieces of cannon and a large amount of ammunition and stores. 8. Meanwhile the Provincial Congress of Massachusetts had appointed a Committee of Safety, and clothed them with full power to regulate the operations of the army. They sat at Cam- bridge and worked faithfully. Artemas Ward was appointed commander-in-chief of the troops, and Richard Gridley chief en- gineer. Putnam, Stark, and other veterans of the French and Indian war 4 were appointed to important commands. 9. On the 25th of May large reenforcements for Gage arrived at Boston, under the command of the three experienced o-enerals Howe, Clinton, and Burgoyne, making the whole British force there about twelve thousand men. Admiral Graves was also there with several vessels of war. Thus strengthened, Gage pre- pared to break through the American lines that hemmed him in and penetrate the country. He issued a proclamation declaring all Americans in arms to be rebels and traitors, and offering a free pardon to all who should return to their allegiance, excepting 1. They appo'nted military officers ; organized a system of supplies ; issued bills of credit to the amount of $375,000, for the payment of which the province was pledged ; and declared General Gage to be an " inveterate enemy" of the people. 2. Verse 26, page 105. 3. Verse 34, page 108. 4. Page 95. Questions.— 7. What aggressive movements did the Americans make ? What can you tell about Ticonderoga and Crown Point? 8. What did the Provincial Congress of Massa- chusetts do? 9. What can you tell of the arrival of fresh British troops in Boston? What did Gage prepare to do ? What was done ? 132 THE REVOLUTION. Breed's Hill fortified. The British alarmed. The Americans attacked. John Hancock ' and Samuel Adams, 2 whom he intended to seize and send to England to be hanged. 10. The watchful patriots, aware of Gage's intentions, strength- ened their intrenchments on Boston Neck ; 3 and on the evening of the 16th of June, Colonel Prescottwas sent, with a detachment, to take possession of and fortify Bunker's Hill, which commanded Boston and the surrounding waters. They ascended Breed's Hill, nearer the city, by mistake, and before morning they had thrown up a strong redoubt, 4 which greatly astonished the British officers. 11. Gage and his associates perceived the necessity for driv- ing the Americans from this strong position before they should plant heavy cannon there, and, before sunrise on the morning of the 17th, they opened a cannonade upon the redoubt from Copp's Hill in Boston, and from the shipping in the harbor. The effect was small ; and hour after hour the patriots labored on. At noon they rested, for their work was done. They exchanged their im plements for guns and knapsacks, and prepared for battle. 12. General Howe, with General Pigot and three thousand men, crossed the Charles river to Morton's Point, at the foot of the eastern slopes of Breed's Hill, where he formed his troops into two columns, and marched slowly to attack the redoubt. Al- though the British commenced firing cannon soon after they had begun to ascend the hill, and the great guns of the ships, and the battery on Copp's Hill, poured out an incessant storm upon the redoubt, the Americans kept perfect silence until the enemy had approached within close musket-shot. Hardly an American could be seen by the invaders, yet behind those rude mounds of earth lay fifteen hundred determined men. 13. When the British column Mas within ten rods of the re- doubt, Prescott shouted Fire ! and instantly whole platoons of the assailants were prostrated by well-aimed bullets. The sur- 1. Verse 15, pace 121. 2. Pago 121. 3. Note 2, page 129. 4. A redoubt is a small fortification, generally composed of earth, ami having very few features of a regular fori , except its arrangement for the use of cannons and muskets. They are often temporary struct ares, east op in the progress of a si<' L rp, ,, r ;l protracted battle. The diagram A, on the map, page 133, shows the form of the redoubt ; a is the entrance. Questions.— 10. What can you tell about the movements of tie Americans? 11. How did the British regard and treat the redoubt on Breed's Hill? What did the Americans do.' 12. What can you tell of the attack of the British ou the Americans in their redoubt? FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 133 Battle of Bunker's Hill. Result of the battle. vivors fell back in great confusion, but were soon rallied for a second attack. They were again repulsed, with heavy loss, and while scattering in all directions, General Clinton arrived with a few followers, and joined Howe as a volunteer. The fugitives were rallied, and they rushed up to the redoubt in the face of a galling fire. For ten minutes the bat- tle raged fearfully, and, in the mean w h i 1 e, C h a r 1 es- town, at the foot of the emin- ence, hav- ing been set on fire by a car- cass 1 from one of the hills, 3 sent up a col- umn of dense smoke, which completely enveloped the combatants. 14. The firing in the redoubt soon grew weaker, for the am- munition of the Americans became exhausted. It ceased, and then the British scaled the banks and compelled the Americans to retreat, while they fought fiercely with clubbed muskets. They fled across Charlestown Neck, 3 gallantly covered by Putnam and a few brave men, and under that commander took position on Prospect Hill, aud fortified it. The British took possession of 1. A carcass is a hollow case, formed of ribs of iron, covered with cloth or metal, with holesin it. Being filled with combustibles, and set on tire, it is thrown from a mortar, like a bombshell, upon the roofs of buildings, and ignites them. A bombshell is a hollow ball with an orifice, tilled with powder, which is ignited by a slow match when fired, explodes, and its fragments produce terrible destruction. 2. Copp'e Hill. Versel2,page 132. 3. Charlestown, like Boston, is on a peninsula, almost surrounded by water and a marsh. The Neck was a narrow causeway connecting it wilh the main. Charlestown was a flourish- ing rival of Boston at the time of the battle. It was then completely destroyed. Six hun- dred buildings perished in the flames. Burgoyne, speaking of the buttle and conflagration, said it was the most awful and sublime sight he had ever witnessed. BUNKER S HILL BATTLE. MONTMEST. Questions.— 13. Relate the incidentBof the battle of " Bunker's Hi fina? result, 14. Tell about the I'd-i THE KE VOLUTION. The Revolution in the southern colonies. Second Continental Congress. Bunker's Hill ' and erected a fortification there. There was abso- lutely no victory in the case. The Americans had lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, about four hundred and fifty men. The loss of the British, from like causes, was almost eleven hundred.' This was the first real battle of the Revolution, and lasted almost two hours. 8 15. While these events were occurring in New England, the Revolution was making rapid progress elsewhere. Patrick Henry's eloquence had again aroused the Virginians, and his burning words in the assembly at Richmond, " Give me liberty, or give me death ! " * became the war-cry of the people. When Lord Dunmore, the governor of Virginia, sent on board a British Avar vessel powder belonging to the colony, that bold patriot de- manded and received full indemnity from him ; and, before the battle of Bunker's Hill, that detested magistrate was driven from the soil of Virginia to the shelter of a British man-of-war in the York river. In North Carolina a still bolder step had been taken. A convention of delegates, chosen by the people of Mecklenburg county, virtually declared [May, 1775], by a series of resolutions, the people absolved from all allegiance to the British crown. In South Carolina and Georgia arms and ammunition were seized by the people, and royal authority was spurned. 16. In the midst of these excitements, the Second Continen- 1 As the battle took place on Breed's, and not on Bunker's Hill, the former name should have been given to it. but the name of Bunker's Hill is too sacred in the records of patriotism to be changed. 2. The Provincial Congress estimated the loss at about 1,500; General Gage reported 1,054. Of the Americans, only 115 were killed ; the remainder were wounded or made pris- oners. 3. Among the Americans who were killed was r>r. Jo- seph Warren, who had just received the commission of ma- jor-general. He crossed Charlcstown Neck in the midst of flying balls from the British shipping, and reached the redoubt on Breed's Hill at the moment when the enemy had scaled its banks. He w;is killed by a musket ball, while retreating, and was buried near where he fell. The Bunker Hill monument commemorates his death as well as the patriotism of his countrymen. 4. In that assembly there was doubt, and hesitation, and a timid desire to postpone action. The fervent Henry ex- claimed, in the spirit of Joanna, " I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty, or give me death .'" JOSEPH WARREN. Questions— 15. What oan you tell of the Revolution elsewhere? Henry do? What occurred in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Get What did Patrick reia i FIRST YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 135 Washington commander-in-chief. He takes command of the army. The Canadians. tal Congress assembled [May 10, 1775] at Philadelphia. With commendable prudence and moderation, that body offered to Great Britain the hand of reconciliation, at the same time sayino-, with firmness, " We have counted the cost of this contest, and find nothing so dreadful as voluntary slavery." They voted to raise an army of twenty thousand men; and, on the 15th of June [1775], they chose George Washington, a delegate from Vir- ginia, commander-in-chief of all the forces raised, or to be raised for the defense of the colonies. They adopted the troops at Bos- ton as a Continental army, and appointed general officers to assist Washington in its organization and future operations. 1 1 7. Washington took command of the army, at Cambridge, on the 3d of July. It was fourteen thousand strong, and partially in- trenched. He gave the command of the right wing, at Roxbury to General Ward, 2 and the left wing, at Prospect Hill, two miles northwest of Breed's Hill, to General Lee. The centre, at Cam- bridge, he commanded himself. He then prepared to commence a regular siege of Boston, with as much vigor as his limited means would allow. 18. The Canadians, having refused to join the other colonies in their movement toward free government, were considered positive supporters of the royal cause. To prevent their giving aid to the enemy, whose armies for invasion and their supplies might ascend the St. Law- rence, it was resolved to take posses- sion of the country, and, for this pur- pose, a considerable force, composed of New England and New York troops, were sent down Lake Cham- plain, in the summer of 1775, under 4 GENERAL SCHUYLER. 1. Artemas Ward, Charles Lee, Philip Schuyler, and Israel Putnam, major-gpnerals ; Horatio Gates, adiutanlgeneral; and Seth Pomeroy, Richard Montgomery, David Wooster, William Heath, Joseph Spencer, John Thomas, John Sullivan, and Nathaniel Greene (.all but Montgomery New England men), brigadier-generals. 2. A soldier of the French and Indian war. Questions.— 16. What can you tell about the Second Continental Congress? Give an account of the appointment of commander-in-chief, and the creation of a Continental army. 17. Tell about Washington taking command. Describe the position of the army around Boston. 18. What can you tell about the attitude of the Canadians? What did the Ameri- cans do ? What can you tell about an invasion of Canada ? 136 THE REVOLUTION. Invasion of Canada. Capture of Montreal. Arnold's expedition. the command of General Schuyler. On account of illness, that officer was compelled to give the command to General Mont- gomery, who, toward the close of September, laid siege to St. John's, on the Sorel, the outlet of Lake Champlain. It Avas the first post within the Canadian border. After a siege of more than a month, it was surrendered on the 3d of November. 19. While Montgomery was before St. John's, Colonel Ethan Allen and eighty men crossed the St. Lawrence, to attack Mon- treal [September 25, 1775], but promised assistance having been withheld, they were captured, and the leader sent to England in irons. Another expedition, under Colonel Bedel, captured Chambly, at the rapids of the Sorel ; and Colonel Warner ' pre- vented Sir Guy Carleton, the governor of Canada, reenforcing the garrison at St. John's. These events hastened the surrender of that post. 20. Montgomery pushed on and captured Montreal" on the 13th of November, and then hastened down the river toward Quebec. Twenty miles above that city 3 he was joined by Colo- nel Arnold, 4 who had reached the St. Lawrence after one of the most wonderful marches on record. He left Cambridge in September, followed the Kennebec river deep into the wilderness, and, among lakes and morasses filled with ice and snow, made his way to the Canadian settlements in the valley of the Chaudiere. He suddenly appeared, with seven hundred and fifty followers, before Quebec [November 13], and demanded its surrender. It was refused, and biting, wintry winds, on the Plains of Abraham, 5 compelled him to withdraw to the place where he joined Mont- gomery. 21. With less than a thousand effective men," Montgom- ery and Arnold appeared upon the Plains of Abraham, before 1 Verse 7 page 131 2. Verse 6, page 17. 3. At Point an Trembles. 4. Verse 7, page 131. 5. Note 1, page 109. 6 Not much more than half of Arnold's seven hundred and fiftv men were fit for duty, they had been so much weakened by hardships They were half naked until woo'en cloth, s furnished by Montgomery covered them. They had not more than four hundred muskets, and no artillery. Qhrstions — 19. What can you tell about Colonels Ethan Allen, Bedell, and Warner ? £0 What can you tell about Montgomery's movements? What can you tell about Arnold's expedition f FIEST YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 137 Siege of Quebec. Disasters to the Americans. WALLS OF QUEBEC. Quebec, on the evening of the 5th of December, ing morning, Montgomery made a demand for its surrender. His flag was fired upon. 1 He had no heavy cannon, and for three weeks he besieged the city, in vain. Then he prepared to take it by assault. He divided his little army into four columns. He was to lead one down to Wolfe's cove* and along the St. Lawrence, while Arnold should lead another through the Lower Town, along the St. Charles, and join him in an attack upon Prescott gate, 3 for the purpose of forcing a passage into the city. At the same time two other columns, un- der Majors Livingston and Brown, were to make a feigned attack upon the Upper Town, from the Plains. 22. The assault ended in a disastrous failure, tempted just before dawn, on the 31st of December, snow-storm was raging. As Montgomery was moving along the St. Lawrence, at the foot of Cape Diamond, 4 a masked battery opened upon him. He was slain, and his troops were driven back. At about the same time, Arnold was wounded, and Captain Morgan took command. His troops were taken prisoners, and Arnold, with the rem- nant of the little army, abandoned the siege, and took a post a short distance up the river. In April, General Wooster came down from Montreal with some fresh troops, when another attempt was made to take Quebec. It It was at- A blinding GENERAL MONTGOMERY. .1 Messengers are sent from army to army with a white flag, indicating a desire for a peaceful interview. These flags, by common cor sent, are respected, and it is considered an outrage to fire on the bearer of one. The Americans were regarded as rebels, and unde- serving the usual courtesy. 2. Verse 39, page 110. 3. Prescott gate is on the St. Lawrence side of the town, and there bars Mountain street in its sinuous way from the water np into the walled city. The above diagram shows the plan of the city walls, and relative positions of the several gates mentioned. A is the St. Charles river, B the St. Lawrence, a Wolfe and Montcalm's monument (verse 40, page 110), b place where Montgomery fell, c place where Arnold was wounded. 4. A high, rocky promontory, on which the citadel stands. Questions.— 21. Relate the circumstances of the siege of Quebec. 22. What was the re- sult if What can you tell of the attempt to take the place by storm ? What was the final result? 138 THE REVOLUTION. Troubles in Lower Canada. The Union flag. failed ; and, by the middle of June, the American patriots were driven out of Canada. 23. While the Americans in the north were .suffering de- feats and misfortunes, their Virginia brethren were engaged zeal- ously in the good work of revolution. After his escape to the British man-of-war, 1 Governor Dunmore collected a force of Tories and negroes, and commenced depredations in Lower Virginia. He attacked Hampton [October 24, 1775], and was repulsed. He then declared open war. The Virginia mili- culpepper flag. ^ g ew to armgj « an( j } - m a severe battle, at the Great Bridge, near the Dismal Swamp, twelve miles from Nor- folk, he was defeated and driven to the British shipping in Norfolk harbor. In revenge, he burned that city on the 1st of January, 3 and committed other atrocities on the seaboard, when he was driven away, and returned to England. SECTION III. SECOND YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1776]. 1. On the 1st of January, 1776, the Union flag* composed of thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, was first raised at Wash- ington's headquarters at Cambridge, and was greeted with shouts by the army. That army was then less than ten thousand 1. Verse 15, page 134. 2. Among the various flags borne by the military companies, that of the men of Culpep- per enmity was the most notable. It bore the significant device of a rattlesnake, and the Injunction, DovHt tread on me ! It said to the opposer, Don't tread on me, I have dangerous fangs. It also bore the words of Patrick Henry (verse 15, pice 134), Liberty or Death I :■;. Noil'.. ik then co itaincd a population of about 0,000. The actual Iors by the conflagra- tion was estimated at more than $1,500,000, chiefly private property. Many slaves were carried off. 4. This was a flag composed of thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, symbolizing the thirteen revolted colonies. In one corner was the device on the British Union Jlas, namely, the ero-s of St. George, composed of a horizontal and perpendicular bar, and (lie cross of St. Andrew (representing Scotland), which is in the form of an X. This flag is represented in the sketch. On the 14th of .Tune, 1777, Congress ordered " thirteen stars, white, in a blue Held," to be put in the place of the British Union device. Such is the design of our flag at the present day. A star lias been added for every new State admitted into the Union. Questions.— 23. What can you say about the Virginians ? What can you tell about events in Lower Virginia I SECOND YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 139 Doings of Congress. Continental money. strong, in effective men, and these were poorly fed, clothed, and disciplined. But they were sufficient to hold the British, prisoners in Boston, 1 with a firm grasp, while the Continental Congress 2 prepared meas- ures for the great struggle at hand. They issued bills of credit, known as Continental money ; 3 agreed to articles of war; declared the causes for taking up arms; commenced a naval estab- lishment ; appointed a board of war and finance ; issued com- missions to privateers, and sent an agent to Europe. IN ION FLAG. Six 2)0££M18. nS« i y HIS BiU entitle *k« x i-_» SIX D OLLARS SIX SPANISH MIXLED DOLLARS, or t>\e Value th ere of inCoXD or SILVER- do.oTd.nc- to aflftoluticn of COM= GRESSpuilMat Fhi J lidelfMa Nov-2.- 1776 J I^LskY^Z'i^Sa XI Otk A BILL OF CREDIT. OR CONTINENTAL MONEY. 2. The British Parliament, in the mean time, convinced of the earnestness of the Americans, made extensive arrangements for crushing the revolt. In November, 1775, that body declared the revolted colonists to be rebels ; forbade all intercourse with them ; authorized the destruction of their property on the high seas, and 1. Verse 17, page 135. 2. Ver.reccdencc, etc. '2. Twe it'\ two miles from New York. 3. Wishing to ascertain the exact condition of the British array, Washington engaged Captain Nathan Hale, of Knowlton's regiment, to visit their camps mi Lung island. He war caught, taken to Howe's headquarters at New York, and executed as a spy by the brutal provost-marshal, Cunningham, lie was not allowed to have a Bible nor clergyman during his last hours, nor to send letters to friends. His fate and Andre's have been compared. Questions.— 10. now was the British commander affected ? What did he do? 17. What have you to say concerning Washington's army after the retreat from Long island ? What was done? 18. What can you tell of movements near Harlem ? Where wore the Americans sir.. ugly encamped? What did General Howe do? SECOND YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 147 Battle of White Plains. Capture of Fort Washington. Prison-ships. 19. When Washington was informed of Howe's movements, he placed a strong garrison in Fort Washington, under Colonel Ma- gaw, and with the remainder of his army hastened across the Harlem river to confront Howe. They met and fought severely at White Plains on the 28th of October. The Americans were driven to the hills of North Castle, five miles farther north, whither the British dared not follow, and from which, on the 4th of No- vember, Washington made a safe passage of the Hudson with a greater part of his army, and joined General Greene at Fort Lee, on the New Jersey shore. 20. This movement was made by Washington to prevent an invasion of New Jersey by the foe, and his march upon Philadel- phia, the seat of the infant national government. 1 It invited Howe back to York island. He sent General Knyp- hausen, just arrived with fresh Hessian troops, 2 to attack Fort Washington. He captured it after a loss of one thousand men. More than two thousand Americans were made prisoners ; and with their fellow captives taken on Long- island, 3 they suffered the horrors of the loath- some prisons and prison-ships. 4 21. Two days after the fall of Fort Washington [November 18, 1776], Cornwallis, 5 with six thousand British troops, crossed FORT WASHINGTON. 3. Verse 14, page 145. 1. Verse 9, page 142 2. Note 2, page 140. 4. Nothing could exceed the horrors of these crowded prisons, as described by an eye-witness. The sugar-houses of New York, being large, were used for the purpose, and therein scores suffered and died. But the most terrible scenes occurred on board several old hulks, which were anchored in the waters around New York, and used for prison- ers. Of these, the Jersey, was the most famous for the sufferings it contained, and the brutality of its officers. From these vessels, anchored near the present Navy Yard at Brooklyn, almost eleven thousand victims were carried ashore during the war, and buried in shallow graves in the sand. Their remains were gathered In 1808, and put in a vault situated near the termination of Front street, at Hudson avenue, Brooklyn. 5. Verse 9, page 131. THE JERSEY PRISON-SHIP. Questions.— 19. What movement did Washington make? What can you tell of a battle at White Plains? What ran von tell of Washington's retreat and passnge of the Hudson? 20. What was the object of Washington's movement ? Relate the circumstances of the cap- ture of Fort Washington. What can you tell about prisons and prison-ships? 148 THE REVOLUTION. Flight of the Americans. Delay of the British. Battle at Trenton. the Hudson at Dobb's Ferry, 1 and took possession of Fort Lcc, which the Americans abandoned on his approach, leaving behind them their baggage and stores. For three weeks afterward, Washington and his shattered army were flying before the victors across New Jersey, in the direction of Philadelphia ; and when, on the 8th of December, he reached the Delaware and crossed it, he had less than three thousand effective men, most of whom were ill fed and ill clothed. 22. Howe, in the mean time, was moving slowly and cautiously. He was alarmed at the impetuosity of Cornwallis; and when that officer asked permission to construct boats, cross the Delaware, annihilate the Continental army, and seize Philadelphia, his timid chief refused, and bade him wait until the river should be suffi- ciently frozen over for the passage of his army. Troops were posted at Trenton and other places on the Delaware, and Corn- wallis impatiently awaited at Princeton and New Brunswick the coming of the dilatory frost. 23. Washington profited by this delay. The arrival of fresh troops and the enlistment of recruits placed an army of almost five thousand men at his disposal on Christmas day. 3 He had planned an aggressive movement, and on Christmas night he performed it. In the darkness and a storm of sleet he crossed the river among floating ice, with twenty-four hundred men, accom- panied by Generals Greene and Sullivan. Early the next morning [December 26, 1776] he fell suddenly upon the foe at Trenton, capturing a thousand Hessians, 3 with arms and stores." Thinking it imprudent to remain on the New Jersey shore, Washington immediately recrossed the Delaware with his prisoners and spoils. 1. Note 2, page 146. 2. Recruits were obtained by the offer of liberal bounties, as well as appeal* to patriotism. Each soldier was to have a bounty of twenty dollars, besides an allotment of laud at the close of the war. A common soldier was to have one hundred acres, and a colonel live hui.dnd. These were given to those only who enlisted to serve " during the war." 3. Colonel Italic, the Hessian commander, was killed. 4. Five hundred British cavalry at Trenton barely escaped, and fled to Burlington. Questions.— 21. What can you tell about the British crossing the Fludson ? What can you tell of Washington's flight across New Jersey ? 22. What can you tell about Howe's caution ? What was the disposition of British troops in New Jersey? 23. How did Wash- ington profit by General Howe's delay ? What can you tell about the recruiting of his army ? What measure did he plan ? Can you give an account of the crossing of the Delaware and the capture of Trenton 1 ill THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 149 Effects of the battle of Trenton. Movements of the Americans. Position of the armies. 24. This victory elated the Americans and alarmed the British. Fourteen hundred soldiers, whose terms of enlistment would expire with the year, cheerfully agreed to remain six months longer. The gloom was lifted from the public heart, and hope filled every patriot's soul. The British were astonished. Their dream of the speedy end of the rebellion, was broken. 1 Their contempt for " rebels " was changed to respect and fear. The Congress, who had fled from Philadelphia to Baltimore [December 12] on the approach of the enemy, 2 perceiving the necessity of giving the commander- in-chief greater powers, wisely clothed [December 27] Washington with the strength and independence of a dictator, for six months. 25. Encouraged by his success at Trenton, Washington resolved to continue his aggressive movements. He ordered General Heath to march most of his troops at Peekskill 3 into New Jersey, and directed the new recruits to keep up an annoying warfare against the British outposts. In the mean time, Washington crossed the Delaware with his main army, and took post at Tren- ton, while the British and Hessians were gathering in large num- bers at Princeton, only ten miles distant, under Cornwallis. Such was the position and condition of the two main armies at the close of the second year of the war. SECTION IV. THIRD TEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1777]. 1. During a greater part of the year 1776, the British Govern- ment, failing, apparently, to comprehend the depths of the move- 1. When Washington fled across the Delaware, the British commanders believed the re- bellion was at an end, and Cornwallis returned to New York to embark for England. Wash- ington's sudden blow at Trenton caused Howe to order Cornwallis back with reinforcements, to regain what had been lost. 2. A committee to represent Congress was left in Philadelphia, who cooperated with Washington. Congress assembled at Baltimore on the 20th of December. 3. A village at the lower entrance to the Hudson Highlands. Questions.— 24. What were the effects of this victory ? What did the Continental Con- gress do? 25. What did Washington now do 1 What was the relative position of th« two armies at the close of 1776 ? 150 THE EEVOLUTION. Proceedings of Parliament. The American Congress. Foreign Diplomacy. ment in America, showed very little concern. Troops had been sent to crush the rebellion, and they were satisfied that the work would be done. When the Parliament assembled in October, the king congratulated them on the success of the royal arms; and when they had voted more troops and supplies, they adjourned to keep the Christmas holidays, satisfied that when they should reassemble in January, they would be informed of the complete submission of the American colonies. At that very time Wash- ington was planning his brilliant achievement on the Delaware. 1 2. The members of the American Congress, on the contrary, were hard workers, and fully conscious of the great interests at stake in the struggle. Their perpetual session was marked by perpetual labor. As early as March, 1776, they sent Silas Deane, of Connecticut, to France, as agent of the Congress, to solicit cooperation, well knowing that France, Spain, and Holland would gladly see the pride of haughty Britain humbled. Deane Avas successful. He obtained from France arms and money, and cordial sympa- thy from all. After the Declaration of Inde- pendence, a regular embassy to France was ap- pointed [September 22], and agents were sent to other courts. They took measures for the establishment of a National League, which, after more than two years' consideration, was adopted by the Congress as a form of government, under the title of Articles of Confederation* SILAS DEANE. 1. Verse 23, page 14S. 2. In July, 177;"), Dr. Franklin submitted a plan of union to Congress. On the 11th of June, 1776, a committee was appointed to draw up a plan. Their report was laid aside, and not called up until April, 1777. From that time until the 16th of November following, the sub- ject was debated two or three times a week, when thirteen Articles of Confederation were adopted. The substance was that the thirteen confederated States should be known as the Untied States of America ; that all engage in a reciprocal treaty of alliance and friendship, for mutual advantage, each to assist the other when help should be needed : that each State should have the right to regulate its own internal affairs; that no State should separately send or receive embassies, begin any negotiations, contract engagements or alliance-, or con- elude treaties with any foreign power, without the consent of the general Congress : that no public officer should be allowed to accept any presents, emoluments, office, or title from any foreign power ; and that neither Congress nor State Governments ebon Id possess the power to confer any title of nobility ; that none of the States should have the right to form .alliances among themselves, without the consent of Congress ; that they should not have the power to QUESTIONS.— 1. What can you say of the unconcern of the British Government ? What was Washington then doing i '-'. What can you tell oi the doings of the American Congress? What steps did they take tor the friendship of foreign Governments, and the establishment of a National League ? THIRD TEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 151 Armies at Trenton. Cornwallis deceived. Battle at Frincetoi. FRANKLIN. 3. We left Washington at Trenton, clothed with the powers of a dictator. 1 There, on the night of the first of January, 1777, he was joined by some troops under Generals Mifflin and Cadwallader; and yet his effective force did not exceed five thousand men. To- ward evening the next day, Cornwallis ap- proached from Princeton with a strong- force, and the two armies encamped on op- posite sides of a small stream, in Trenton, within pistol-shot of each other. 4. Cornwallis went to sleep feeling cer- tain of the capture of Washington and his army in the morning. At dawn [January 3, 1777], the British commander found the Ameri- can camp deserted ; and at sunrise he heard what seemed like the rumbling of thunder in the direction of Princeton. Washington, ful- ly aware of his perilous situation, had silently left his camp at midnight, and it was the thunder of his cannon, in an attack on the British reserves at Princeton, that Cornwallis heard. These were just moving forward toward Trenton when Washington fell upon them. 5. The fight at Princeton was severe. The British turned fiercely upon the Americans with a shout that frightened the militia and caused them to flee. The British pursued, ex- pecting a complete rout of Washington's army, when they were BATTLE AT P3INCET0N. levy duties contrary to the enactments of Congress ; that no State should keep up a standing army or ships of war, in time of peace, beyond the amount stipulated by Congress ; that when any of the States should raise troops for the common defense, all the officers of the rank of colonel and under, should be appointed by the legislature of the State, and the superior offi- cers by Congre.-s ; that all the expenses of the war should be paid out of the public treasury ; that Congress alone should have power to coin money, and that Canada might at any time be admitted to the confederacy when she felt disposed. The last clauses were explanatory of the power of certain governmental operations, and contained details of the same. Such was the form of government which existed as the basis of our Republic for almost twelve years. 1. Verse 24, page 149. Questions.— 3. Relate what occurred at Trenton at the beginning of 1777. 4. What were Cornwallis's expectations ? How did Washington disappoint him ? Give an account of Washington's withdiawal to Princeton » 152 THE REVOLUTION. End of the battle at Princeton. Washington in New Jersey. Small expeditions. met by a select corps of veterans, led by the commander-in-chief in person. The fugitives were soon rallied, the pursuers were as- sailed, and a decided victory was won by the Americans. General Hugh Mercer was slain while fighting at the head of his troops ; and other beloved officers fell. The battle had just ended, when Corn- wallis, who had hastened back from Trenton, 1 appeared. Washing- ton's soldiers had not slept, and had scarcely tasted food, for thirty- six hours. They were unable to fight again so soon; so the chief led them away, and took post among the hills of East Jersey. 2 6. Washington established his headquarters at Morristown, and placed cantonments 3 at different points from Princeton to the Hudson Highlands. He sent out detachments to harass the Brit- ish continually ; and so successful was this kind of guerilla war- fare, that by the 1st of March [1777], there was not an armed foe to be found in New Jersey, excepting at New Brunswick and Amboy. This result revived the drooping spirits of the Ameri- cans ; caused hundreds in New Jersey, who had been deceived by a proclamation by Howe, to openly espouse the Whig 4 cause ; and inspired the Congress with sufficient confidence in the future to cause them to resume their sittings in Philadelphia. 6 7. The summer campaign of 1777 was not fairly opened before June. Both parties set small detachments in motion in the mean time. One went up from the British camp at New York to de- stroy the American stores at Peekskill 6 in charge of General McDougall. That officer could not defend them, so he burned them [March 23, 1777], and fled to the hills. At the middle of April, Cornwallis went up the Raritan and fell upon General Lincoln, at Boundbrook, in New Jersey, but with little effect ; and toward the close of the month, Governor Tryon, at the head of two thou- sand British and Tories, went up Long Island sound to desolate the Connecticut coast. 1. Verse 3, pase 151. 2. Verse 4, page 82. 3. Permanent stations for small bodies of troops. 4. Note 2, page 127. 5. Verse 24, page 149. 6. Note 3, page 149. Qcfstions.— 5. What can you tell of the battle of Princeton? What did Washington then do, and why ? 6. How did Washington dispose of his army ? What did his troops do ? What effect did the successes of the Americana have? 7. What ran yon tell of the opening of the summer campaign ? What can you tell of operations on the Hudson, and in New Jersey ? THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 153 The British in Connecticut. Bold expeditions. Washington perplexed. 8. Tryon landed near Norwalk, and marched to Danbury and destroyed it. This outrage roused the neighboring militia, and the British retreated with great haste the next morning [April 27, 1777], by way of Ridgefield, when they were attacked by the yeomanry under Generals Wooster, Arnold, and Silliman. Wooster was killed, Arnold narrowly escaped capture, while Silliman har- assed the enemy all the way back to his shipping. During this marauding expedition, Tryon lost almost three hundred men, and killed or wounded about half that number of Americans. 9. The British were not always the aggressors. At two o'clock in the morning of the 23d of May [1777], one hundred and sev- enty men, under Colonel Meigs, who had crossed Long Island sound from Connecticut, attacked a British provision post at Sag Harbor, on the eastern extremity of Long island. They burned a dozen vessels, the store-houses and their contents, and returned with ninety prisoners, without losing a man. An equally bold exploit was performed on Rhode Island soon afterward. On the night of the 10th of July, Colonel William Barton, with some men in whale-boats, crossed Narraganset bay, went silently to the quarters of General Prescott, the British commander there, took him from his bed, and carried him away a prisoner. 10. Washington remained at Morristown until the close of May, preparing his army for the campaign. 1 Recruits had come in freely ; and he found himself in command of about ten thousand men. He refrained from moving, for some time, because he was perplexed by the operations of the enemy. He knew that Bur- goyne was preparing to invade the valley of the Hudson from Canada, but Avhether Howe intended to cooperate with him, or make another attempt to seize Philadelphia, he could not deter- mine. He disposed his army so as to be prepared to oppose either movement, by placing a strong force on the Hudson, and 1. He had caused a greater part of his army to be inoculated with the small-pox. The common practice of vaccination at the present day, was then unknown in the country. In- deed, the attention of Jenner, the father of the practice, had then just b.en turned to the subject. It was practiced here a year after the close of the war. Questions.— 8. What did troops under Tryon do in Connecticut ? Tell about the battle at Ridgerteld. What were Tryon's losses ? 9. What can you tell of Colonel Meigs's expedi- tion to Long island, and of Colonel Barton's capture of General Prescott ? 10. How long did Washington remain at Morristown, and for what purpose ? What was the Btrengtu of his army ? How was he perplexed ? What did he do ? 154 THE REVOLUTION. The armies in New Jersey. Washington in Philadelphia. Battle on the Brandy-wine. moving his main body to Middlebrook, within ten miles of the British at New Brunswick. 11. Howe's plans were developed toward the middle of June. He led his main army from New York to New Brunswick, and, by a feigned movement, on the 14th [June, 1777], he tried to draw Washington into battle, but failed. Then he suddenly re- treated, and Washington pursued. Howe as suddenly turned and became the aggressor. A sharp skirmish ensued on the 2Gth be- tween Cornwallis and Lord Stirling; and a few days afterward [June 30], the British all left New Jersey. 12. Washington's vigilance never slept. When, at the middle of July, information reached him that Bur* goyne was in possession of Crown Point and Ticonderoga, 1 he saw indications of an ascent of the Hudson by a land and naval force, t<> cooperate with him; but ten days afterward he ascertained that Howe, Avith a large force, had sailed with his brother's fleet 5 for the Delaware. Washington at once set his main army in motion toward the Delaware, and was soon in Philadelphia, where he was joined by the marquis de Lafayette, a wealthy French nobleman, less than twenty years of age, who had come to assist the Amer- icans struggling for freedom. 13. Howe did not go up the Delaware, but ascended Chesa- peake bay, debarked at its head, and pushed on toward Philadel- phia. Washington marched to meet him, and had advanced beyond the Brandywine creek, when Howe's superior forces compelled him to fall back to the east side of it. There, at Chad's Ford, he made a stand and fought a severe battle. Knyphausen and his Hessians attacked the American left wing, commanded by Washington in person, while Howe and Cornwallis crossed the 1. Burgoyne'a army consisted of about seven thousand R.itish and German troops, and a large i mly of Canadians and Indians. 2. Verse 11, page 1J3. QirBSTlnUS.— 11. What can you tell of Howe's movements? 12. What can you tell of Waal ington's vigilance and ohservat'on i What « I i • 1 he do 1 Who joined him at Philadelphia I 13, What can you tell of Howe's expedition against Philadelphia, and of Washington's movements to meet him t Give an account of the battle on the Brandywine, and retrial of the Americans. GENERAL LAFAYTTTE. THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 155 Defeat of the Americans. Capture of Philadelphia. stream several miles above, and fell upon the American right, commanded by Sullivan, near the Birmingham meeting-house. The battle continued until evening ; and that night the shattered and defeated American army retreated to Ches- ter, and the following day to Philadelphia. The patriots lost full twelve hundred men, killed, wounded, and made prisoners. 14. Washington re- mained in Philadelphia only long enough for his troops to rest, when he crossed the Schuyl- kill to meet Howe, who was advancing upon that city. They had a skirmish twenty miles west of Philadel phia, but a heavy rain prevented a general battle, and Washing ton fell back to Reading. General Wayne, in the mean time was hanging upon the enemy's rear, with fifteen hundred men He was surprised on the night of the 20th by a party under Gen eral Grey, and lost about three hundred men. 1 15. After various maneuvers, Howe crossed the Schuylkill, and took possession of Philadelphia on the 26th of September [1777]. He encamped his army at Germantown, and prepared to make the federal city 2 the winter quarters for his troops. The BATTLE AT THE BRANDYWINE. 1. The bodies of fifty-three Americans, found on the field the next morning, were interred in one broad grave; and forty years afterward, the "Republican Artillerists" of Chester county erected a neat marble monument over them. 2. While the States formed a simple league in carrying on the war and battling for their individual and aggregate independence, and during the period when the Articles of Confed- eration (note 2, page 150) were the organic law of the land, the term federal city, or capital of the confederated States, was a proper one. After the league was abandoned, and a Nation was formed under the new Constitution in 1789, the term was no lontrer correct. Then it be- came the seat of a National Government— the national city. Philadelphia, New Vork. and Washington have been, respectively, national cities, where the Congress of the United States have held their sessions. Questions.— 14. What did Washington do at Philadelphia ? What befell troops under General Wayne ? 15. Give an account of Howe's t?king Philadelphia. Where did he en- camp his army ? What did Congress do ? 156 THE REVOLUTION. Evente on the Delaware. Battle of Germantown. CHEVAtTX-DE- FK1SF.. Congress had fled, first to Lancaster, and then to York, where they assembled on the 30th, and continued their sittings until the following summer. 16. While Howe was making his way to Philadelphia, by land, the British fleet sailed round to the Delaware and appeared before the obstructions in and on the banks of that river, a few miles below Philadelphia. Fort Mercer was on the New Jersey shore, Fort Mifflin on the Pennsylvania shore, and heavy che- vaux-de-frise l were in the channel of the river. Howe sent land troops to cooperate with the fleet in an at- tack. The obstructions were overcome at the middle of November, and the ships sailed [November 18 1171] up to Philadelphia. 17. Washington did not allow Howe to rest long at German* town and Philadelphia. On the evening of the 3d of October he moved secretly against the British camp, and fell upon its outposts near Chestnut Hill, 8 at daylight. The battle soon be- came general, and after a struggle of several hours, partly in the gloom of a thick fog, the Americans were repulsed with a loss in killed, wounded, and pris- oners, of about twelve hundred. 3 The British lost about half that number. Washington retired to his camp on Skip- pack creek, and soon prepared to go into winter quarters at White Marsh, fourteen miles from Philadelphia. Howe took his 1. Chevaux-de-frise are obstructions placed in river channels to prevent the passage of vessels. They are generally made of a series of heavy timbers, pointed with iron, and secured at an angle in a strong frame filled with stones, as seen in the engraving. The up- per figure shows the position under water— the lower one shows how the timbers are arranged, and the stones placed in them. 2. About three miles beyond Germantown, on the road from Philadelphia. 3. Washington felt certain of victory at the beginning of the battle. Just as it com- menced, a dense fog overspread the country ; and through the inexperience of some of his troops, great confusion in their movements was produced. A false rumor caused a panic among the Americai s, just as the British were about to fall back, and a general retreat and loss of victory were the result. In Germantown, a strong stone house is yet [1864] standing, which belonged to Judge Chew. This a part of the enemy occupied, and from the windows tired with deadly effect upon the Americans. Questions.— 16. What can you tell of the movements of the British fleet ? Can you give an Recount of the obstructions in the Delaware, and the capture of Forts Mifflin and Mercer* 17. What can you tell of a battle at Germantown, and its results ? BATTLE AT GERMANTOWN. THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 157 Burgoyne's invasion. The Americans driven to the Mohawk. army into that city, and there he remained until the following spring. 18. While the Americans were suffering disasters near the Delaware, important events were occurring on the Hudson river and Lake Champlain. With more than ten thousand men under his command, Burgoyne ' drove General St. Clair from Ticon- deroga [July 5, 1777], over Mount Independence opposite, and through the hill-country in the direction of Fort Edward, 2 the headquarters of General Schuyler, 3 the commander of the North- ern Department. The British pursued by land and water. At Hubbardton, in Vermont, the rear division of St. Clair's army was defeated with considerable loss, and on the same day a British flotilla destroyed boat-loads of ammunition and stores, which St. Clair had sent up the lake ; and soldiers went ashore and set fire to other supplies at Skenesborough. 4 19. The fragments of St. Clair's army reached Fort Edward on the 12th of July. Within a week the Americans had lost almost two hundred pieces of artillery and a large amount of provisions and stores. Even with St. Clair's reinforcements, Schuyler could not muster more than four thousand effective men. He could not hope, with these, to confront the victorious Burgoyne success- fully ; so, after felling trees in the invader's path, and destroying all the bridges, he slowly retreated down the Hudson valley . to the mouth of the Mohawk river, and there established a fortified camp. 5 There kosctoszko. he was joined by a large body of New England militia, under 1. Verse 12, page 154. 2. Verso 14, pace 100. 3 Verse 18, page 135. 4. Now Whitehall. It was named after Philip Skene, who settled there in 1764. The irirrow part of Lake Champlain, from Ticonderosra tn Whitehall, was formerly called Wood Creek (the rame of the stream that enters the lake at Whitehall), and also South River. 5. Thaddeus Koscniszko, a Polish refugee, who came with Lafayette (verse 12, page 154), was now ajtached to Schuyler's army, as engineer. Under his direction, the intrenchments fit the mouth of the Mohawk river were constructed ; also those at Stillwater aid Saratoga. The camp at the mouth of the Mohawk was upon islands just helow the Great, or Cohoes Falls. Questions. — 18. What can yon tell ahout movements on the Hudson river and Lake Champlain? What can you tell of Burgoyne's invasion ? 19. Where did the remains of St. Clair's army retreat to? What had the Americans lost ? What was the condition of the army ? What can you tell of its retreat, and Burgoyne's pursuit ? Give an account of afJiirs at the mouth of the Mohawk. 58 THE KEVOLUTION. 3urgoyne and his disasters. Invasion of the Mohawk valley. Battle at Oriskany. reneral Lincoln, and other recruits ; and when General Gates rrived to take command of the department, he found an army f thirteen thousand men ready to move. 20. Burgoyne reached Fort Edward on the 30th of July 1777], with a wearied army and a light supply of provisions, [e sent a foraging expedition eastward, with special instructions ) seize American stores at Bennington, in Vermont. Colonel ohn Stark and New Hampshire militia met them [August 16, 777] five miles from Bennington, and drove them back after a larp fight ; and on the same day Colonel Seth Warner, 1 and >me Continental troops, defeated another invading party. That ight Burgoyne had about one thousand less men to feed. 5 This efeat was fatal to his future operations, for it dispirited his ■oops and caused great delay. 21. While Burgoyne was sweeping down from the north, >me Canadians, Tories, 3 and Indians, under Colonel St. Leger, assisted by Brant, John Johnson, 4 and John Butler, threatened the Mohawk valley. They invested Fort Schuyler (now Rome) on the 3d of August. Gen- eral Herkimer hastened to its relief with some militia, and at Oriskany, on his way, fell into an Indian ambuscade. He was mortally wounded, and his troops de- feated. A part of the garrison, under Colonel Willett, fought their way through the assailants, and the timely arrival of Arnold, with troops, saved the post, and spersed [August 22] the besiegers. 1. Verse 7, page 131. 2. The American losa was ahont two hundred. For his gallantry on that occasion, Stark, to had be n a captain in the French and Indian war, was made a brigadier-general. 3. Note 2. ]KiL/e 127. 4. Son or Sir William Johnson (verse 14, page 100), then dead. Johnsr.n's family were the irst enemies of the Americans during the war, in that region. His son, John, raised a ;iment of Tories, called the Johnson Greens (those who joined St. Leger); and John But- , a cruel leader, was at the head of another hand, called Butler's Rangers. Tlie*e ro- Brated with Brant, the ureal Mohawk sachem, and for years they made the Mohawk val- and vicinity a scene of terror. These men were the allies of St. Leger on the occasion in cstion. Questions.— 20. What can you tell of the British at Fort Edward, and a foraging ezpedi- n ? Can you eive an account of the defeat of the British near Bennington I What were Bur- j-ne's losses ? 21. What can you tell of an attack on Fort Schuyler i How was it relieved ? JOSEPH BRANT. THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 159 Battle at Bemis's Heights and Saratoga. Surrender of Burgoyne. Its effects. 22. The expulsion of St. Leger increased Burgoyne's perplexi- nor remain inactive, in GENERAL BUKGOYNE. ties. He could not advance, retreat, safety. He formed a fortified camp on the hills at Saratoga, while Gates did the same thing on Bemis's Heights, near Stillwater, to which he had ad- vanced. Burgoyne came forward and gave battle on the 19th of September. He was repulsed, and fell back to semis's heights. Saratoga. 1 Gates soon advanced, and they had another severe conflict at Saratoga on the 7th of October. Ten days afterward [October 17, 1777] Burgoyne and his whole army were compelled to surrender themselves prisoners of war. 2 23. This victory produced great joy in America. The highest hopes of the British ministry rested on this campaign of Bur- goyne, and their disappointment was intense. The opposition in Parliament were furnished with keen weapons. Pitt eloquently denounced [December 1777] the employment of German hirelings and brutal savages. " If I were an American, as I am an Eng- lishman," he exclaimed, " while a foreign troop was landed in my country, I never would lay down my arms — never, never, never ! " In the Lower House, Burke, Fox, and Barre were equally severe 1. It was an indecisive battle. Both parties claimed a victory. Burgoyne had been ex- pecting a triumphant passage up the Hudson, by Sir Henry Clinton, in aid of his invasion, and now resolved to wait. But the disaffection of his Indians and Canadians, scarcitv of provisions, and the rapidly increasing army of Gates, taught him that he must speedily fight or flee. The Indians had been disappointed in their expectations of blood and plunder ; and now was their hunting season, when provisions must be secured for winter use. The Canadians saw nothing but defeat in the future, and left the army in whole companies. 2. The whole number surrendered was 5,791, of whom 2,412 were Germans or Hessians (note 2, page 140), under the chief command of the Baron Reidesel, whose wife accompanied him, and afterward wrote a very interesting account of her experience in America. Bur- goyne bad boasted that he would eat his Christmas dinner in Albany. He ate dinner there before Christmas, not as conqueror, but as prisoner. He was a guest at the table of Gene- ral Schuyler. His troops were marched to Cambridge, with the view of sending them to Europe, but Congress thought it proper to retain them, and they were marched to tie inte- rior of Virginia. Questions.— 22. How were Burgoyne's perplexities increased? Give an account of the battles at Bemis's Heights and Saratoga, 23. What were the effects at home and abroad ? 160 THE REVOLUTION. Capture of the Highland forts. British depredations. upon the Government. The victory also weighed heavily in favor of the Americans at the French court ; and in less than three months after the surrender of Burgoyne, France formed an al- liance with the United States [February 0, 1778], and publicly avowed it. 24. We have referred to Burgoyne's expectation of aid from General Clinton. 1 That commander tried to give it. He ascended the Hudson with a strong force, captured the Highland forts [October G, 177G], and sent a marauding expedition above these mountain barriers, to devastate the country [October 13], and endeavor to draw off some of the jiatriot troops from Saratoga. They burned Kingston, and penetrated as far as Livingston's manor, in Columbia county. Informed of the surrender of Bur- goyne, they hastily retreated, and Clinton and his army returned to New York. Some of Gates's troops now joined Washington at Whitemarsh. Howe made several attempts to entice the chief from his encampment, but without success. Finally Washington moved from that position [December 11], and went into winter quarters at the Valley Forge, where he might more easily afford protection to Congress at York, 2 and his stores at Reading. The events of that encampment at Valley Forge afford some of the gloomiest, as Avell as some of the most brilliant scenes in the records of American patriotism. SECTION V. FOURTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1778.] 1. The Valley Forge s was in the bosom of a rugged gorge on the banks of the Schuylkill, twenty miles north-west from Phila- delphia. There the American army encamped during the severe 1. Note 1, page 159. 2. Verse 15. page 155. 3. There was a.for?r on a little stream that came down through a mountain gonre and emptied i:ito the* Schuylkill river. It was qu'te celebrated, and was called the Valley Forge, The village there bears that name. Questions.— 24. What can you tell of Clinto i'a efforts to aid Rnrgoyno ? What outrages did the Brit ; sh commit? What can you tell of the armies of Washington and Ilowe, nut far from Philadelphia ? What can you say about the army at the Valley Forge ? FOURTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 161 The Americans at Valley Forge. Bright side of the picture. winter of 1777 and 1778. The soldiers suffered from insufficient food, clothing, and shelter, yet, like their hopeful commander-in- chief, they never despaired of success in the good cause, nor mur- mured because of their hardships. 1 The intrigues of ambitious men did not disturb the serenity of Washington's mind, 2 nor did suffering and temptation cause a soldier's departure from duty. Both relied upon the Lord of Hosts. 3 2. It was not all gloom at the Valley Forge. Early in the spring, news came of the alliance with France, 4 and the camp was a scene of great joy. Mrs. Washington and the wives of a few other officers spent most of the winter at Valley Forge, and gave pleasure by their presence ; and finally the troops were cheered by news that the British ministry had appointed commissioners to come to America and offer terms of reconciliation. The hopes inspired by the latter measure were soon dispelled, for when the conciliatory bills of Parliament reached the Congress, it was perceived that the commissioners had no authority to treat for the inde- pendence of the colonies. The overture and the war was therefore rejected, went on. 3. Immediately after States, 5 the French Government sent a fleet, under the count ENCAMPMENT AT VALLEY FORGE. making the treaty with the United 1. They were bo ill-shod, that in their march from Whitemarsh to the Valley Forge, many of them left bloody foot-prints in the snow. At this time the British army were in- dulging in every comfort in Philadelphia. Yet that indulgence srreatly weakened them. Profligacy begat disease, crime, and insubordination. The evil effects produced upon the army led Dr. Franklin to say, "Howe did not take Philadelphia — Philadelphia took Howe." 2. During this season a scheme was formed among a few officers of the army, and mem- bers of Congress, for depriving Washington of his command, and giving it to Gates or Lee. One of the chief actors in the plot was General Conway, an Irishman, who belonged to the Continental army. The plot was discovered and defeated, and Conway was led to make a most humble apology to Washington for his conduct. 3. On one occasion, Isaac Potts, whose house was Washington's headquarters at the Valley Forge, discovered the chief in a retired place, pouring out his soul in prayer to his God. Potts went to his wife and said, " If there is any one on this earth to whom the Lord will listen, it is George Washington." 4. Verse 23, page 159. 5 . Verse 23, page 159. Questions.— 1. Whore is Valley Forge? What events occurred therein the winter of 1777-78 ? 2. What enlivened the camp ? What can you tell of a proposed reconciliation ? 162 THE REVOLUTION. British ministry alarmed. The British flee from Philadelphia. Battle at Monmouth. D'Estaing, to aid the patriots. 1 This was officially made known to the British ministry on the 17th of March [1778]. It created alarm ; and a dispatch vessel was sent with orders for the British army and navy to leave Philadelphia and the Delaware, and return to New York. Lord Howe had just obeyed the order, when D'Estaing appeared [July 8, 1778] in Delaware bay. The British fleet found safety in Amboy bay, into which the heavier French vessels could not enter. 4. Sir Henry Clinton succeeded Howe in chief command, in the spring of 1778, and on the 18th of June he crossed the Dela- ware with his whole army, and moved through New Jersey for New York. Wash- ington left the Valley Forge at the same time, and pursued him vigorously with about twelve thousand men. 2 He overtook him near Monmouth Court House, and there, on a sultry Sabbath morning [June 28, 1778], a severe battle Avas fought. It was begun by the treacherous Charles Lee, 3 Avho had lately rejoined the army ; and it was almost lost by his bad conduct. He and his troops were flying in a panic from the field, without reason, when Washington, advancing witli the main army, checked them, and led them back to battle and honor. 5. The contest now became general, and raged during all of that long, hot summer's day. It ceased at night, and both parties lay upon their arms. After midnight, when the moon had set, Clinton and GENERAL CLINTON. KATTL.E OF MONMOl'TII. 1. It consisted of twelve ships of the lire and four large frigates. •J. General Arnold, who was wounded In the legal Bemis's Heights (verse 22, page 169), was, ai his own solicitation, left in command at Philadelphia, as military governor, y. Verse 5, page 141. There arc proofs of his treason, QCESTtOHS.— 3. What did the French Government do? Plow d d their act affect the Brit- ish? What can you tell about the escape of the British fleet from capture by that of the French? 4. What change was made in British commanders? What movement did Clin- ton make ' What can yon tell of Washington's movements? Can you give an account of the battle of Monmouth ? FOURTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 163 Events in Rhode Island. Bad conduct of the French. Battle of Quaker Hill. his army stole away in silence, escaped to the British fleet, and found rest and safety in New York. Washington marched his troops slowly to the Hudson river, crossed it, and lay in camp at White Plains ' until late in autumn, when he passed into New Jersey, and went into winter quarters at Middlebrook, ou the Raritan river. 6. When D'Estaing found it impossible to reach the British fleet, 2 he sailed eastward, at the request of Washington, to coope- rate with General Sullivan in an attempt to drive the British from Rhode Island. On the 9th of August [1778], Sullivan, accom- panied by Lafayette, 3 and by John Hancock 4 with Massachusetts militia, crossed the channel at Tiverton, and landed on the north end of Rhode Island. On the same day, Howe's fleet, which had been reinforced, appeared otf the island, and D'Estaing went out to fight him. Both vessels were disabled by a terrible storm [August 12], and sought port for repairs. 5 7. D'Estaing returned to Newport on the 20th, when Sullivan was very near the town. He had promised the American general four thousand troops from his fleet. These were not only withheld at this critical mo- ment, but D'Estaing sailed away for Boston, lor repairs to his vessels. 6 Sullivan was compelled to retreat. He was pursued ; and on Quaker Hill, near the northern end of the island, a severe engagement took place on the 29th. The British were repulsed, and that night the Americans withdrew to the main, near Bristol. The movement was C0lNT d'estaing. 1 Verse 19, pa^e 147. 2. Verse 3, page 161. 3. Verse 12, pa>c 154. 4. Ver.-e 10, page 143. 5. This was remembered as the " great storm," and was spoken of as such by very old people who experienced it, when I visited Rhode Island in 1848. C. This conduct was warmly censured by the American commandt rs. 1 ecauBe it had ro valid excuse. It deprived them of a victory just within their grasp. Congress, however, unwilling to offend the French, uttered not a word of blame. The matter was passed over, but not forgotten. Once again [at Savannah, in 1779] the same admiral abandoned the Americans. Questions.— 5. Give a further account of the battle of Monmouth ? TIow did the British escape? What did Washington then do? 6. What have you to say about .in attack on Rhode island ? What did the French fleet do ? What happened to it? 7. How did the French admiral behave ? How did his conduct affect the Americans ? What can you teli pf a battle on Rhode Island, and retreat of the Americans? 164 THE REVOLUTION. Indian and Tory r".ids. Devastation of the Wyoming valley. Brant. timely, for the British had just received a reenforcement of four thousand men under General Clinton. 8. During the summer of 1778, Indians and Tories combined in making murderous raids among settlements in the Mohawk, Schoharie, and Cherry valleys, in New York, and the Wyoming 'valley, in Pennsylvania. At the beginning of July, eleven hun- dred of these white and dusky savages, under Colonel John Butler, entered the beautiful valley of Wyoming [July 2], when the strong men Avere away. Only a very few trained soldiers, aged men, youths, and resolute women were left to defend the homes. Four hundred of these, under Colonel Zebulon Butler, resolved to meet the invaders, but were utterly routed [July 4, 1778]. Many fled for safety into a fort near Wilkesbarre, and on the following day were compelled to surrender. 1 9. A terrible tragedy now ensued. The Indians, thirsting for blood and plunder, could not be restrained. They swept over the valley, and spread death and desolation everywhere. The blaze of more than twenty dwellings lighted the scene on that eventful night ; and when the moon arose, the terrified people fled to the mountains and morasses eastward, where many women and chil- dren perished.' That dreary mountain region has ever since been called TJie Shades of Death. 10. Brant, in the mean time, was sending out or leading war- parties of savages over the country south of the Mohawk river, 8 1. All onr histories contain horrihle statements of the fiend-Ike character of John Butler, and his unmitigated wickedness on this occasion. They also spc ak of the " monster Brant," ns the leader of the Indians, and the instigator of the crimes of which they were guilty. Both of these men were bad enough ; but recent investigations clearly demonstrate that Brant was not there at all ; and the treaty tor surrender, which is still in existence, granted mo BAKON STEUBEN. experience in military tactics, the aid ot good foreign officers, 3 a treaty with France, 4 and the sympathies of other powerful nations. But their finances were in a wretched condition. One hundred millions of dollars of Continental money, rapidly depreciating in value, were afloat, and the public credit 1. Verse 21, page 158. 2. Verse 3, page 48. 3. Among the foreign officer* -who came to America in 1777, was the Baron Steuben, who joined the Continental army at Valley Forge (verse 1, page 160). He was a veteran from the armies of Frederic the Great of Prussia, and a skillful disciplinarian. He was made inspec- tor-general of the army ; and the vast advantages of his military instruction were seen on the field of Monmouth'(verse 4, page 162), and in other subsequent conflicts. 4. Verse 23, page 159. Questions.— 10. What did Brant and the Johnsons do? 11. Where was the seat of ac- tual war transferred to late in 1778 i Where was the French fleet? Why did the British go to the south ? How did they gain possession of Savannah ? 12. What have you to say of the position of the contending armies at the close of the fourth year of the war? What can you say of the strength and "finances of the Americans? 1G6 THE REVOLUTION. A defensive policy adopted. Lincoln on the Savannah. was daily sinking. 1 Only small loans had been obtained in Eu- rope ; and the Congress were powerless in attempts to procure money from general taxation in the different States. The French had not fairly Infilled the stipulations of the treaty, for no French army was in America, and their navy had sailed away to the West Indies." SECTION VI. FIFTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1779]. 1. At the beginning of 1779, the Congress and Washington carefully considered plans for the year's campaign. It was resolved to act on the defensive, excepting in the chastisement of the In- dians and Tories in the interior. The chief effort was to be for the confinement of the British to the sea-board, 3 and preventing their obtaining any advantages. A wild scheme for the conquest of Can- ada and the eastern British provinces, matured by Congress and the Board of War, was abandoned, and thoughtful men applauded the resolution to adopt the safe and less expensive mode of warfare. 2. The campaign was opened, as we have seen, by Campbell, at Savannah. 4 Soon after the fall of that place, General Prevost marched from Florida, captured the American fort at Sunbury, in Georgia [January 9, 1779], and assumed the chief command of the British forces in the South. In the mean time, General Lincoln had been sent to take command of the American armies in the 1. Robert Munis, cif Philadelphia, who was the chief financial aixentofihe Government during the Revolution, wan a wealthy merchant, with almost unlimited credit. At the period in question, when Congress could not borrow a dollar on its own credit, Robert Morris found no difficulty in raisin.; millions upon Ins. For a longtime he alone furnished the "hard iiionev" which Government used. •J. Verse 11, page 165, 3. At tills time tin ir chief forces were hemmed in on York or Manhattan island, and Rhode Island. 4. Verse 11, page 165. Questions.— 12. Had the French kept their promises?— 1. What can you tell about plans for the campaign of 1779 ? What was lo i>e tbo chief effort) What have you to say of a scheme to conquer Canada? 2. How and where was the campaign opened 1 What can you tell of Gene" ^Lincoln in the south? FIFTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 167 Operations in Georgia. B.ittle at Brier creek. Defeat of Ashe. south [September, 1778], and on the 6th of January [1779] made his headquarters at Perrysburg, twenty-five miles above Savan- nah. There, with the broken forces of General Howe, 1 he com- menced the formation of an army. 3. While Lincoln was making these preparations on the Carolina bank of the Savannah, Campbell marched up the Georgia side to Augusta, to encourage the Tories and open a com- munication with the Creek Indians. At the same time a band of Tories, under Colonel Boyd, was desolating the Carolina frontiers, but these were utterly broken up by Colonel Pickens, in a battle on Kettle creek, on the 14th of February. 2 This dis- . 1 /-< t 11 1 .lI GENERAL LINCOLN. aster alarmed Campbell, and on the ap- proach of General Ashe and about two thousand men, sent to- ward Augusta by Lincoln, Campbell fled toward the sea [Feb- ruary 13, 1779]. 4. Ashe pursued Campbell forty miles, when he halted and formed a camp at Brier creek. There he Avas surprised and de- feated [March 3, 1779] by General Prevost, and lost nearly his whole army by death, capture, or dispersion. This disaster de prived Lincoln of one fourth of his military strength, and so em- boldened Prevost that he crossed the Savannah river with about two thousand regulars, and a large body of Tories and Indians, and marched directly for Charleston. 3 Lincoln was then just ready, with about five thousand men, to attempt the recovery of Georgia, but, perceiving the danger to Charleston, he pursued Prevost. When that general appeared before Charleston on the 1. Verse 11, page 165. 2. They were on their march to join the royal troops. Boyd and seventy of his men were killed, and seveiity-tive were made prisoners. Pickens lost thirty-eight. Seventy of the Tories were found guilty of treason, and condemned to be hung, but only Ave were executed. 3. The destruction of Ashe's army caused a temporary reostablishment of royal nuthoi- ity in Georgia, which had been extinguished at the beginning of 1776 by the bold Whigs (Note 2, page 127), who had made Governor Sir James Wright a prisoner in his own house ; and the provincial assembly, assuming governmental nowers, made provisions for military defense, issued bills of credit, etc. [February, 1776]. Wright escaped and went to England. He returned in July, 1779, and resumed his office as governor of the " colony." Questions.— 3. "What account can you give of events on the Georgia side of the Savan- nah river ? 4. "What can you tell of a battle at Brier creek, and its effect ? Give an account of the movements of the British and Americans toward Charleston. 168 THE KEVOLUTION. The British before Charleston. Battle at Stono Ferry. British pltmderers. 11th of May, he found the inhabitants well prepared to defend their city. 5. Prevost demanded the immediate surrender of Charleston. He was promptly refused. Then he prepared to take it by assault. At evening he heard of the near approach of the pursu-' ing Lincoln ; and at midnight he commenced a retreat toward Savannah, along the famous Sea islands between the two cities, to avoid his dreaded foe. For more than a month a detachment of his army lingered on John's island, near Charleston ; and on the 20th of June Lincoln sent a force to drive them off. A severe battle occurred at Stono Ferry, when the Americans were repulsed with a loss of over three hundred men. The British suffered se- verely. The hot season now produced a suspension of hostilities in the south. 6. Unable to make any extension of military movements at the north, Sir Henry Clinton contented himself with sending out marauding expeditions, to plunder and harass the people on the sea-coast. Tryon ' was sent on a plundering expedition toward Connecticut, with fifteen hundred British regulars and Hessians. 3 He attacked and dispersed some troops at Greenwich, under General Putnam. That officer escaped with difficulty, but soon rallying his troops, he pursued the British toward New York, re- captured some plunder, and took thirty prisoners. T. In May [1779], Sir George Col- lier, with a small squadron, took Gen- eral Mathews and some land troops to Hampton Roads. They ravaged the country on both sides of the water, all the way to Norfolk. Returning to New York, Collier went up the Hudson and assisted General Clinton in the capture of Stony Point [May 31], and Ver- planck's Point, opposite [June 1], after small resistance. A month later [July 4], Collier conveyed STONY rOlNT. 1. Verse 7, page 152. 2. Note 2, page 140. Questions.— 5. What did the British do before Charleston? Give an account of their retreat, and a battle at .Stono Ferry. «. What did Sir Henry Clinton at New York do I Give an account of Trvon's expedition toward Connecticut." 7. What did Collier and Mathews do in t lie vicinity of Hampton and Norfolk? What can you tell of an expedition \ip the Hudson river? Of a marauding expedition to the Connecticut coast ? FIFTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 169 Capture of Stony Point and Paulus' Hook. Daniel Boone. Tryon, with twenty-five hundred troops, to Connecticut, where the marauder plundered New Haven [July 5] and laid East Haven [July 6], Fairfield [July 8], and Norwalk [July 12] in ashes, and then boasted of his clemency in leaving a single house standing on the New England coast. 8. The bold and dashing General Wayne struck the British a severe blow in retaliation. He led a small force secretly to the vicinity of Stony Point [July 15, 1779], and at midnight attacked the fortress there, in two columns. The garrison were surprised and con- founded ; and at two o'clock in the morn- ing [July 16], Wayne wrote to Washing- ton : " The fort and garrison, with Colonel Johnson, are ours." This was a brilliant achievement. The British lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, about six hundred general way*e. men. 1 Five weeks afterward [Aug 19], Major Henry Lee sur- prised a British post at Paulus' Hook (now Jersey City), oppo- site New York, killed thirty-six of the garrison, and captured one hundred and sixty. These, and similar successes, greatly inspir- ited the Americans; but a reverse in Maine, a month later, saddened them. Forty vessels, with troops, were sent from Mas* sachusetts to capture a British post at Castine, on the east side of Penobscot bay. A British fleet entered the bay, destroyed the flotilla, captured many soldiers and sailors, and dispersed the remainder in the wilderness. 9. The vast solitudes west of the Alleghany mountains, in which Boone 5 and other pioneers had battled with the savages for several years, now resounded with the din of arms. The British and Indians came from beyond the Ohio to ravage the settlements 1. The Americans los* fifteen killed and eighty-three wounded. The spoils Were a large amount of military stores. _. _, it . . 2. Boone was one of the boldest pioneers of the great West, He went oyer the mountains as early as 1769, and took his family there in 1773. He built a fort on the site of the present Boonesbc.rough, in 1775, and his wife and daughters were the first white women ever seen on the banks of the Kainluckee. QCESTION8.-8. Give an account of Wayne's capture of Stony Point on the Hudson. What can you teil of Major Henry Lee's exploits? What misfortune occurred in Maine? 8 170 THE KEVOLTJTIOK The war in the wilderness. Sullivan chastist'S the Indians. DANIEL BOONE. Wyoming valley. 3 in what is now Kentucky. At length, Major Clarke ' led an ex- pedition which captured several British posts north of the Ohio. One of them (Vincennes) was recaptured [January, 1779], hut Clarke, after a fatiguing and perilous march, again wrested it from the British in February. 2 10. In the summer of 1779, General Sul- livan was sent to chastise the savages who were engaged in the devastation of the He led about three thousand troops. At Ti- oga Point 4 he was joined [August 22, 1779] by sixteen hundred men, under Gen- eral James Clinton, from the Mohawk val- ley ; and in the course of three weeks, the combined forces destroyed forty Indian vil- li lages and a vast amount of food. 5 They penetrated the heart of the country of the Six Nations, to the Genesee valley. The retribution was terrible, and was long re- membered by the Indians. 11. D'Estaing came from the West Indies with a powerful fleet to the coast of Georgia early in September [1779], pre- pared to cooperate with General Lincoln in an attack upon Sa- vannah. He landed troops and battery guns ; and the combined OENERAL SULLIVAN. 1. George Rogers Clarke was a native of Virginia, and was born in 1752. lie was the most accomplished and useful, in a military point of view, of all the western pioneers dur- ing the Revolution. He was then a young man. lie died near Louisville, Kentuckv, in 1818. 2. With a few men, Clarke traversed the dreadful wilderness of a hundred miles from tie Ohio. Over what was known as the "drowned lands'' of Illinois, through ice and snow. they traveled for a whole week; and just before reaching Vincennes, they waded through the cold flood that covered the country, more than the miles, the water sometimes so deep as to leave only their breasts and heads above it. They planted the American Sag on the fort on the 20th of February. 3. Verse 8, page 161. 4. At the junction of the Susquehanna and Tioga rivers, near the border between Penn- sylvania and New York. 5. The Seneca Indians were beginning to cultivate rich openings In the forests, known as the "Genesee Flats," quite extensively. They raised large quantities of corn, and culti- vate! gardens ami orchards. The dwellings were of the rudest character, and their villages consisted of a small collection of these miserable huts, of no value except for winter shelter. Qtestions.— 9. What can you tell of milltarv movements westward of the Alleghany mountains? 10. Can you eive an account of Sullivan's campaign against the Indians in Western New York? 11. What canyon tell of an attack by the Americans and French on H ivannah in 1775* / How came the siege to be abandoned? FIFTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 171 Siege of Savannah. Pulaski Siege abandoned. They armies commenced a siege of the British works on the 23d. finally attempted to carry the works by storm [October 9]. After five hours' hard fighting, there was a truce to bury the dead, when D'Estaing pro- posed to abandon the siege. 1 Lincoln was compelled to agree to it ; and ten days afterward he was in full retreat for Charleston, and the French fleet was at sea. This was a second time that D'Estaing had deprived the Americans of victory. Thus closed the campaign in the south. 12. Immense difficulties beset Great Britain during the year 1779. Spain declared war against her, in June, and a powerful French and Spanish armament attempted an invasion of England, in August. Lafayette had persuaded the French Government to send another fleet and several thousand soldiers to America ; and American and French cruisers were destroying British merchant vessels in their own waters. 2 In September, John Paul Jones, 6IEGE OF SAVANNAH. 1779. 1. Already nearly one thousand of the assailants had been killed and wounded. Anions the mortally wounded was Count Pulaski, a brave Pole who was met in the battle on the Brandy wi i e (verse 13, page 154). He died on board a vessel bound for Charleston, a few days after the siege. Ser- jeant .Tasper, wl ose bravery at Fort Moultrie we have noticed (note 1, pagel42),was also killed, while nobly holding aloft, upon a bastion of the British works which he had mounted, oneo&the beautiful colors which had been presented to Moul- trie's regiment by ladies of Charleston. Savanuah ho; ors both these heroes, by having parks bearing their names. 2. The naval operations during the war for independence do not occupy a conspicuous place in history, yet they were by no means insignificant. The Continental Congress took action on the subject of an armed marine in the autumn of 1775. Already Washington had fitted out some armed ves- sels at Boston, and constructed some gun-boats for use in the waters around that city. These were propelled by oars, and covered. In November, the Government of Massachusetts established a Board of Admiralty A committee on naval affairs, of which S las Deane (verse 2, page 150) was chairman, was nppointed by the Continental Congress in October, 1775. Before the close of the year, the construction of almost twenty vessels had been ordered by Congress ; and the Marine Committee was so reorganized as to have in it a representative from each colony. In November, 1776, a Continental Navy Board to assist the Marine Com- mitiee was appointed ; and in October, 1779, a Board of Admiralty was installed. Its secretary (Secretary of the Navy) was John Brown, until 1771, when he was succeeded by General McBougal (verse 7, page 152). Robert Morris also acted as authorized Agent of Marine ; and many privateers COUNT PULASKI. A GUN-BOAT AT BOSTOK. Questions.— 12. What difficulties beset Great Britain at thij time ? What service for the Americans did Lafayette perform ? 17_ THE REVOLUTION. Great Britain's difficulties, Naval affairs. John Paul Jones. the intrepid cruiser, conquered two of her ships of war in sight of her coast, while her armies in America had achieved no marked success. On the Continent, and among her own people, there was wide- spread sympathy for the struggling Amer- icans ; and she found opposition on every hand. Yet in the midst of all these diffi- culties, the Government put forth mighty energies. Parliament voted an ample JOHN PAUL JONES. amount of men and money for the general service. were titled out by him on his own account. In November, 1776, Congress determined the relative rank of the naval commanders, such as admiral equal to a major-general on land ; a commodore equal to a brigadier-general, etc. The first com- mander-in-chief of the navy, or high admiral, was Esek Hop- kins, of Khode Island, whom Congress commissioned as such in December, 1775. He first went against Dunmore (verse 23, page 138) on the coast of Virginia. He also went to the Ba- hamas and captured the town of New Providence, and it* governor. Sailing for home, he captured some British ves- sels oft' the east end of Long island, and with these prizes he went into Nurraganset bay. In the mean while, Paul Junes and Captain Barry were doing good service, and New Eng- land cruisers were greatly am oying English shipping on our coast. In 1777, Dr. Franklin, under the authority of Con- ^ v ; gross, issued commissions to naval officers in Europe. Ex- peditions "were fitted ont in French sea-ports, and these p:o- duced great alarm on the British coasts. While these things were occurring in European waters, Captains Biddle, Manly, McNeil, Hinman, Barry, and others, were making many prizes on tl e American coasts. Finally, in the spring of 1779, an expedition was fitted out at E'Orient, under the auspices of the French and American Govern- ments. It consisted of five vessels, under the command of ADMIRAL HOPKINS. John Taul Jones. They sailed fir^t in June, for the British waters, took a few prizes, and returned. They sailed again in August, and on the 23d oi September, while oft the coast ot Scotland, not far above the mouth of the Humher, Joins, w th his flag-ship (Hie Uotiliummc Richard) and two others, fell in with and encountered a small British fleet, which was convoy- ing a number of merchant vessels to the Baltic sea. An engagement took placi alter night had fallen upon the scene, and for three hours one of the not desperate sc alights on record raced off Flamborough Head. Jones managed to lash the Richard to the British ship Sera- pis", and with muzzle to muzzle they poured broadsides into each other. Three times both ships were on fire. The Serapis finally yielded, and ten minuti s afterward, the Countess ot Scarborough, a other large English vessel, surrendered. Jones's ship was so much injured that, sixteen hours after the battle, she went to the bottom of the ocean. Congress gave Jones a gold medal for his bravery. Manv other brave acts were performed by American seamen during the remainder of the war. For a condensed account of the whole naval ope- rations of the Revolution, and of the "whale-boat warfare" on the toast, see supplement to Eossing's yield Book of the Revolution. Quk.stioks.~12. What can you tell of the American navy, and John Paul Jor.es's ex- ploits 1 FIFTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 173 174 THE REVOLUTION. Movements in the Southern States. Charleston threatened and prepared. SECTION VII. SIXTH YEAR OP TriE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [l780], 1. When the British ministry were informed of Lafayette's success at the French court, 1 they sent orders for the immediate abandonment of Rhode Island, and the concentration of troops at New York. When this was accomplished, Clinton sailed south- ward [December 25] with about five thousand troops, leaving General Knyphausen " in command at New York. In Admiral Arbuthnot's fleet, that bore him, there were two thousand marines, making an aggregate of seven thousand fighting men. 2. As early in the spring of 1780 as possible, Washington sent the baron De Kalb, and other good officers, with troops, to assist the patriots of the South; and this weakening of his army caused the Tories to be more active than ever. The chief seat of war was, however, transferred to the South, and the people of the North had some rest from anxiety and alarm. 3. Clinton landed his troops on the isl- lands below Charleston [February 10, 1780], and prepared to besiege the city. General Lincoln was there with a feeble force, but so well did the militia answer the call of John Rutledgc, their governor, that when the invaders appeared before the American works on Charleston Neck, the patriots felt strong enough to resist them. The intrenchments had been strengthened; batteries had been planted at various points around the harbor, and there was a small flotilla of little armed vessels near the town. BARON DE KALB. 1. Verae 12, page 171. 2. Ver^e 20, page 147. Questions.— 1. What orders did the British Government give, and why? What can you tell of British forces going southward? 2. What movements in that direction were m'ade hy the Americans? 3. What can yon tell of the British movements against Charleston? What was the position of affairs at that city? SIXTH YEAK OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 175 Siege of Charleston. Incidents of the siege. Surrender of Charleston, 4. Arbuthnot, with his fleet, passed up the harbor on the morn- ing of the 9th of April. Clinton had already erected batteries in front of the American works on Charleston Neck,' and the two commanders now demanded a surrender of the town. Lincoln refused, and for a month a siege went on. In the mean time, Corn \ wallis arrived with fresh troops from New York, and the city was completely surrounded by the foe. s 5. On the night of the 9th of May, two hundred cannon opened upon the town, and bombshells, like meteors, filled the air. At one time the city was on fire in five places. The fleet moved toward the town to join in the bom- bardment. The terrible assault continued about forty-eight hours, when, at two o'clock in the morning of the 12th [May, 1780], Lincoln offered to surrender. The firing ceased, and the army and many citizens, about six thousand in number, became prisoners of war. 3 The spoils were four hundred pieces of cannon, ammuni- tion, and stores. 6. This was a terrible blow for the Americans. It was followed by expeditions into the interior; 4 and very soon the quiet of peace SIEGE OF CHARLESTON, 1780. 1. Verse 4, page 47. 2. Detachments had been sent out between the Cooper and Santee rivers, to keep open a communication between the city and country. These were defeated. On the 14th of April, Tarleton defeated Colonel Huger at Monk's Corner, on the head waters of the Cooner river, and killed twenty-five Americans. On the 6th of May, a party under Colonel White, of New Jersey, were routed at a ferry on the Santee, with a loss of about thirty in killed, wounded, and prisoners. These British detachments overran the whole country below the Cooper and Santee, in the course of a few days, and the city was cut off from the country. 3. The citizens and a large number of the soldiers were paroled. 4. One, under Cornwallis, marched up the Santee, toward Camden ; another, under Lieu- tenant-Colonel Cruger, was ordered to penetrate the country to Ninety-six, and a third, un- der Lieutenant-Colonel Brown, marched to Augusta, in Georgia. Among the American de- tachments which had hastened toward Charleston to assist Lincoln, and retreated when they heard of his fall, was that of Colonel Bnford, consisting of four hundred Continental infantry, and a small troop of cavalry, with two field-pieces. He retreated from Camden on Cornwallis's approach, and near the Waxhaw creek, some sixty miles further north, he was overtaken and surprised by Tarleton and his cavalry. They gave no quarter, but massacred or maimed the larger portion of Buford's command. His loss in killed, wounded, and pris- oners was three hundred and thirteen. He also lost his artillery, ammunition, and baggage. The cruelty of Tarleton was condemned by British writers themselves. Questions.— 4. What did the commanders of the British land and naval forces do? 5. Give an account of the siege and capture of Charleston by the British. 176 THE REVOLUTION. Invasion of South Carolina. Partisans aroused. Their movements. GENERAL GATES. prevailed in South Carolina. Mistaking this lull in the storm for permanent tranquillity, Clinton, with a large number of troops, sailed in the fleet for New York [June 5, 1780], leaving Corn- wallis ' and a small force to hold the subjugated State. 7. The lull was of short duration. We have observed that De Kalb had been sent to the assistance of Lincoln. 2 He did not arrive till long after the fall of Charleston. General Gates was also sent to the same field, and, on forming a junction with De Kalb, took chief com- mand of all the forces, and pushed forward. The South Carolinians were aroused into action by intelligence of the approach of the " conqueror of Burgoyne," 3 and parti- sans like Marion, Sumter, Pickens, and Clarke, were soon in the field with follow- ers, striking British and Tory detachments here and there, and staying the tide of invasion. 8. Sumter first appeared in power on the Catawba. Repulsed at Rocky Mount [July 30, 1780], on that river, he crossed it, and at Hanging Rock, a few miles eastward, he fell upon and dispersed [August 6] a large body of British and Tories; yet, through the folly of his men, he did not secure a vic- tory. 4 Marion, at the same time, was smiting the enemy among the swamps of the lower country, on the borders of the Pedee. Pickens was annoying Cruger 5 in the neighborhood of the Saluda, and Clarke was calling for the patriots along the Sa- vannah, Ogcechee, and Altamaha, to drive Brown 6 from Au gusta. 1. Verse 4, page 175. 2. Verse 2, page 174. 3. Verse 22, pace 159. 4. Having secured a portion of the British camp, Sumter's men commenced plundering, and drinking the Minora found there. They became intoxicated, and were unable to com- plete the victory, yet the British dared not follow Sumter la his slow retreat. 5. Note 4, page 175. 6. Note 4, page 175. Questions.— 6. What was the effect of the capture of Charleston ? What did the British then do? 7. What c:m vou tell of the movements of Gates and De Kalb? Ilow did Gates's approach ailed the South Carolinians? 8. Give au account of the doings of partisan leaders In South Carolina. GENERAL SUMTER. SIXTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 177 Battle near Camden. Defeat of Gate?. Sumter's defeat. 9. Gates entered South Carolina near the upper waters of the Santee. Lord Rawdon was in command in that region, and was joined at Camden by Lord Cornwallis. Gates came down through Lancaster district to attack them, and Cornwallis advanced from Camden to meet him. They unexpectedly met, at a little past midnight [August 16, 1780], near Sanders's creek, a few miles north of Camden, and early in the morning engaged in a general battle. The British had an overwhelming force ; and after a des- perate struggle, the Americans were compelled to yield. 1 They lost, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, about a thousand men, be- sides all their artillery, and nearly everything else. The British lost three hundred and twenty-five. Gates's army was dispersed, and, with a few followers, he escaped to Charlotte, in North Car- olina, about eighty miles distant. 10. A few days after Gates's defeat, Sum- ter's forces were almost annihilated by Col- onel Tarleton, on Fishing creek, near the Catawba river [August 18, 1780]; and at the close of summer there were no republi- cans in arms in South Carolina, excepting Marion and his men. Within three months, two American armies had been annihilated, and one of the most active of their partisan corps scattered to the winds. South Carolina swarmed with Tories, K and Cornwallis now treated the people as subjugated vassals. His tyranny produced a reaction, and the patriots prepared to strike powerfully for home COLONEL TARLETON. and freedom. I. Among the sla'n was the baron Do Kalb, whose remains lie under a neat monument at dmden. Questions. — 9. Can you give an account of the march of G;ites and Cornwallis, and their battle near Camden ? What was the result ? 10. What disaster befell Sumter ? What had the Americans lost in the South ? What can you Bay of Tories in South Carolina, and the effects of British tyranny? 8* 178 THE REVOLUTION. Battle at King's mountain. Cornwallis perplexed. Movements at New York. 11. Cornwallia invaded "Western North Carolina early in Sep- tember, and sent out detachments to awe the republicans and encourage the Tories. Among other commanders, he sent Major Ferguson to embody the Tory militia west of Broad river, among the hills. With fifteen hundred of them, Ferguson en- camped on King's mountain, in Yorkville district, early in October. There he was attacked and defeated, on the 7th, by Whig ! militia, under the respective commands of Colonels Campbell, Shelby, Cleveland, Sevier, Winston, McDow- ell, and Williams. 2 This defeat Avas to Cornwallis what the affair near Bennington was to Burgoyne. 3 12. The partisans already mentioned, 4 again appeared in the field, with daily increasing forces. 5 These movements alarmed Cornwallis, and he returned to South Carolina [October 14], and made his headquarters at Winnsborough, between the Broad and Catawba rivers, in Fairfield district, where we will leave him for the present. 13. While the events we have just related were occurring iu the South, others of importance marked the progress of the war in the North, where extensive military operations were almost sus- pended during the year 1780. Clinton, as we observed, left Knyp- hausen in command at New York. That officer sent General 1. Note 2, pace 127. 2. The Americana lost only twenty men. They killed and wounded three hundred of the enemy, and took eight hundred of them prisoners, with fifteen hundred stnnd of arms. Major Ferguson was among the slain. On the snot where he fell, he was buried, and a plain ,*toiie with an Inscription commemorates that officer and some Americans killed at the same time. 3. Verse 20, pace 158. 4. Verse 7, page 17">. 5. Sumter collected a small force in the vicinity of Charlotte, and returned to South Carolina. For some weeks lie annoyed the British and Tories very much, and Lord Corn- wallis, who called him The Carolina Garni Cock, used great endeavors to crush him. On the night of the 12th of November, Major Wemyss, at the head of a British detachment, fell : i|ion nim at the Fish Dam Fort on the Broad river, hut was repulsed. V. ghl clays afterward he had a very severe engagement with Tarleton, at Rlackstock's plantation on the Tycer river, in Union district. lie had now been joined by some Georgians under Uoloi elR Clarke and Twiggs. The British were repulsed, with a lo>s, in billed and wounded, of about three hundred. The Americans lost only three killed anil five wounded. Sumter was among the latter, and lie was detained from the field for several months by his wounds. 6. Verse 1, page 174. Qpestions. — 11. What did Cornwallis do in September ? What can you tell of the battle of Kind's mountain, in October, 1780? 12. Tell how Cornwallis was alarmed and called hack from North Carolina. SIXTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. If 9 Invasion of New Jersey. Arrival of French forces. Arnold plotting treason. Mathews 1 to invade New Jersey with five thousand men, from Staten island. Washington, then encamped at Morristown, 2 sent detachments which drove them back to the coast, where they remained until joined by Clinton [June 22] on his return from the south, 3 when he reenforced Mathews, and endeavored to draw Washington into battle, or capture his stores. He failed in both. In a severe skirmish at Springfield [June 23], the Americans, under General Greene, defeated the British, and they fled back to Staten island. 14. A few days after this invasion, a French fleet, under Admiral Ternay, arrived at Newport, Rhode Island, with six thousand French troops, commanded by the count De Rochambeau. They came to give substantial aid to the Americans. Their coming gave joy to the patriots, and alarm to the British and Tories. They did not enter upon the campaign that season, but prepared to pass the winter in New England. At the same time, General Benedict Arnold was bargaining with Sir Henry Clinton for the transfer of West Point and its dependencies on the Hudson, with the liberties of his country, into the hands of the British. 15. Arnold was a brave soldier, but a bad man. He had be- come deeply involved in debt, in Philadelphia, 4 where he married the beautiful young daughter of a leading Tory. 5 He was officially disgraced for bad conduct ; ° and the combined motives of revenge and lust for money and power made him a traitor. He was to receive fifty thousand dollars and a brigadier's commission for his perfidy. By false professions he obtained command of West Point, and while Washington was in New England for the pur- pose of conferring with the French officers, he sought to accom- plish his wicked work and receive his reward. 16. The negotiations with Arnold were made through Major 1. Verse 7, page 168. 2. In East Jersey. 3. Verse 6, page 175. 4. Note 2, page 162. 5. Mr. Shippen. 6. He was charged, before the Continental Congress, with fraudulent transactions while acting as military governor in Philadelphia, and was found guilty. He was sentenced to a reprimand by Washington. This was given as tenderly as possible, but the bad nature of Arnold would not allow him to forget or forgive even so slight a punishment. Questions.— 13. Can you give an account of military movements from New York into New Jersey ? What were the incidents and results of a Britsh invasion of New Jersey i 14. What can you tell of the arrival of a French fleet and army at Newport ? What was General Arnold doing ? 15. Givj an account of Arnold's preparations to betray West Toiin 180 THE REVOLUTION. Arnold's treason. Capture ar_d death of Andre. Energy of the British. BENEDICT ARNOLD, Andre, Clinton's adjutant-general. 1 It was done by letters until the 22d of September [1780], when they met, for the first time, near Haverstraw, on the west side of the Hudson. The bargain was then closed. The Vulture, sloop-of-war, in which Andre was conveyed up the river, had been driven from ; her anchorage during the long conference, and the adjutant was compelled to cross the Hud- son, and make his way back by land. At Tarrytown he was seized and searched by three young militia-men, who, finding papers in his boots, took him to the nearest military station. 17. Arnold was informed of the capture, 2 and immediately fled to the Vulture, in his barge, and joined the British army. Major Andre was hung as a spy; 3 and the Congress voted a silver medal and a pension of two hundred dollars a year during their lives to his captors. 4 18. The sixth year of the war was now drawing to a close, and yet the patriots were not subdued. Yet Eng- land seemed not to suffer discourage- ment. Unmindful of the powerful French army and navy on our shores, and the necessity which compelled her to declare war against Holland [December 20, 1780]," she put forth as mighty energies as ever, and made large preparations to meet the rebellion in 1781. CAPTORS .MEDAL. 1. Arnold's handwriting was disguised, and he s'gnod his letters Gustavtu, Andrews let- ters were signed John Anderson. A correspondence was carried on between them for more than a year. 2. The oommandaitof the station, too stupid, apparently, to comprehend the character of his prisoner, allowed him to write a letter to Arnold, informing him of his capture, and thus giving him warning, that he might escape. 3. At Tappan, on the west side of the Hudson, nearly opposite Tarrytown. 4. On one side is the word " Fidelity," 0:1 the oiher^ " Vincit amor patri.e," " The love of country conquers." 6. War was declared when the British ministry learned that this maritime rival of Eng- land was secretly negotiating a treaty with the United States for assistance in their struggle. Questions.— 16. How did Arnold bargain with the British? What can you tell of the meeting of Arnold and Andre? Relate the Circumstances Of Andre's capture. 17. What did Arnold do when informed of Andre's arrest ? What was done with Andre? 18, What have you to say concerning the subjugation of the patriots, and the giant efforts of England ( OLD WAR FOR w fP E NO*" SEVENTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 181 Mutiny. Noble conduct of mutineers. Action of Congress. SECTIOIT VIII. SEVENTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [1781]. 1. Owing to the tardiness of Congress in providing pay and cloth- ing for the troops, discontent assumed the shape of open mutiny at the beginning of 1 781. On the 1st of January, thirteen hundred of the Pennsylvania line left the camp at Morristown, 1 with the avowed purpose of demanding, in person, full justice at the hands of Congress. Two kinds of embassies met them at Princeton. 3 One was composed of British emissaries, who tried to seduce them, by bribes, into the royal service ; the other was a com- mittee from Congress. They handed the former over to the American general, for punishment as spies ; 3 and confiding in the promises of the latter, that they should receive their dues speedily, they returned to camp. 2. On the 18th of the same month [January, 1781], a portion of the New Jersey line, at Pompton, left camp in the same way. This was promptly quelled by military force [January 27], and nothing of the kind appeared afterward. Congress and peo- ple, warned by these events, put forth greater exertions ; and Robert Morris, of Philadelphia, was chosen agent for the management of the finances of the Government. To his energy and per- ROBERT MOIUUS. 1. The headquarters of Washington were now at New Windsor, just above the Hudson Highlands. The Pennsylvania troops were cantoned at Morristown, New Jersey ; and the New Jersey troops were at Pompton. in the same State. 2. Washington had sent Wayne to bring the insurgents back to dntv. When he placed himself before them, with loaded pistols, they put their bayonets to his breast, and said, u We love and respect you, but if you fire you are a dead man. We are not going to the enemy ; on the contrary, if they were now to come out, you should see us fight u:.der your orders with as much alacrity as ever." 3. They were indignant because of the implied doubt of their patriotism which the ap- proaches of the British enrssaries created, and they cheerfully handed them over to Wayne. When offered a reward for delivering them up, they refused it, saying, " Our necessities compelled us to demand justice from our Government ; we ask no reward for doing our duty to our country against its enemies." Questions.— 1. What can you tell of mutinies in the American army at the beginning of 1781 ? Flow was American patriotism illustrated ? 2. Give an account of a mutiny by New Jersey troop3. What were the effects of these mutinies? What can you tell of Robert Morris ? 182 THE REVOLUTION. Arnold's invasion of Virginia, Greene in South Carolina. Battle of the Cowpene. sonal credit the country was indebted for the means to commence offensive operations in the spring of 1781. 3. Arnold, the traitor, 1 commenced the work of his royal pur- chaser, with a few armed vessels and sixteen hundred Tories, at the beginning of 1781. He went up the James river, and destroyed [January 5,1781] much property at Richmond. Re- turning, he made his headquarters at Portsmouth [January 20], opposite Norfolk. A portion of the French fleet was sent to keep him there, but was driven back [March 16] by the British fleet. Lafayette was sent, with twelve hundred men, to oppose his fur- ther invasion of Virginia, but Arnold was soon joined [March 26] by more than two thousand men, under General Phillips, when they went up the James on another marauding expedition. Wo shall meet Arnold, presently, in New England. 4. The Southern States became the chief theatre of the cam- paign of 1781. General Greene 2 suc- ceeded Gates in the command at the South, 3 at the close of 1780. He took post, with the main body of his little army, at Cheraw, on the Pedee, and sent the remainder, about a thousand strong, under Morgan, to occupy a posi- tion near the Broad river. This dispo- sition of his forces disconcerted the general greene. plans of Cornwallis, who was about to invade North Carolina again. 4 It would not do to leave Morgan on his flank or rear. So he sent Tarleton 6 to capture or disperse his command. They fought a severe battle [January 17, 1781] at a place called The Cowpens, in Spartanburg district, and the Americans won a brilliant victory. 6 The Congress gave Morgan ] Verse 15 page 179. 2. Verse 13, page 178. 3. Verse 9, page 177. 4. Verse 11, page 178. 6. Verse 10. page 177 6. The British lost almost three hundred men killed and wounded, and live hundred made prisoners. Questions. 3. When and how did Arnold, the traitor, commence serving his Rr'tish master? Give an aceonnt of efforts to take him. By whom was he joined, in Virginia? 4 Where was the chief theatre of w-ir in 1781? What did (ieneral Greene do? What dis- position did he make of h ; s army ? llow did it affeot the enemy '. What can you tell of a battle at the Cowpens? SEVENTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 183 Greene's retreat before Cornwallis. His return in force. GENERAL MORGAN. COLONEL WASHINGTON. a gold medal, and to Colonels Howard ' and Washington 2 each a silver medal, for their services on that occasion. 5, At the close of the battle, Morgan hurried toward Virgi- nia with his five hundred prisoners. Cornwallis tried, in vain, to intercept him. Greene joined him ; and then commenced a remark- able retreat by the Americans, from the Yadkin to the Dan, ^ closely pursued by the ,^| L .K--\ British. The main body from Cheraw joined Greene [Febru- ary V] at Guilford Court House. After many narrow escapes they all crossed the Dan [February 13], and at its bank Cornwallis gave up the chase. Mortified and dispirit- ed, he moved sullen- / ly back [February 14] and established his headquarters at Hills- borough, in North Ca- rolina. 6. Greene remained in Virginia only long enough to refresh his colonel henry lee. troops and receive re- battle of glilford. cruits, when he recrossed the Dan to confront his foe. Colonel Henry Lee was sent forward with cavalry, to foil Tarleton's at- 1. John Eager Howard, of the Maryland line. Willinm Washington was a blood relation of the general-in-chief, and commanded a corps of Virginia cavalry. Boih were active pa- tr'.ors. Howard afterward became governor of Maryland and United States eei ator. 2. In a personal combat with Tarleton, at the battle of the Cowpens, Washington wounded his antagon : st in his hand. Some months afterward, Tarleton said sneeringly to Mrs. Willie Jones, a witty American lady. " That Colonel Washington, I am told, is illiterate, and can- not write his own name." "Ah! Colonel," said Mrs. Jones, " you ought to know better, for you bear evidence that he can make his mark." At another time he expressed a desire to see Colonel Washington. Mrs. Jones's sister instantly replied, " Had you looked behind you at the Cowpens, you nrght have had that pleasure." Questions.— 5. What did Morgan do after the battle of the Cowpei-.s i account of a remarkable retreat a :.d pursuit ? Can you give an 18-1 THE REVOLUTION. Battle at Guilford Court HouBe. Battle at Hobkirk's Hill. Flight of Iiawdon. tcnipt to recruit among the Tories, and was successful. Greene, meanwhile, moved cautiously, and was continually increased in strength. On the 1st of March [1781] he had almost five thousand men. He desired a battle with Cornwallis, and was gratified on the 15th. They met and fought a very severe combat at Guilford Court House. Greene was driven from the field, but Comwallis's army was so much shattered by the shock, that he fled with the remnant toward the sea-board, followed some distance by Greene. 7. At the beginning of April, Greene marched against the British under Lord Rawdon, at Camden. He encamped [April 1 9] on Hobkirk's Hill, two miles from that vil- lage, where he was attacked and defeated [April 25, 1781], after a desperate straggle, with a loss of two hundred and sixty-six killed, wounded, and missing. The British loss was about the same. Greene carried away, in his retreat, all of his artillery and baggage, and fifty prisoner?. 8. Recruits flocked to Greene's camp. This alarmed Raw don. He set fire to Camden [May 10], fled to Nelson's Ferry on the Santee, and called toward him the garrisons of more remote outposts. Greene moved at once with vigor, and in the space of a week he captured four im- portant British posts,' and was well on his way toward Ninety- Six. 2 At the beginning of June [1781], the British held only three places in South Carolina, namely, Charleston, Nelson's Ferry, and Ninety-Six. hobkirk's hill. 1. Bee ami Marion were the principal leaders against these po;ts. Orangeburg, on the North Kdisto, sixty live miles below Columbia, was taken on the 11th of May ; Fort Motte on the 12th : the post at Nelson's Ferry on the 14th, 8P-d Fort G/ranby, on the Congarec, two miles from Columbia, on the 16th. Fort Watson, situated on the Santee, a few miles above Nelson's Ferry, was taken on the 16th of April. Fort Motte was near the junction of the Watercc and Congaree, forty miles south from Camden, Nelson's Ferry is at the mouth of Eutaw creek, on the Sat tee, about fifty miles from Charleston. This was abandoned od the approach of Rawdon, and was held by him to the close of May. 2. So called because it was ninety six miles from the frontier fort, Pr'nce George, on the Keowee river. Its site is occupied by the pleasant village of Cambridge, in Abbeville dis- trict, one hundred and forty seven miles northwest from Charleston. Questions.— fi. What did Green" then do? What have you to say of Major L"c ? Can you give an account of a battle at Guilford Court House? 7. Give an account of the move- ments of Greene toward Camden. What can yon tell about a battle at Hobkirk's Hill ? 8. What alarmed Rawdon ! What did he dd I What can vou tell of Greene's operations I What ports did the British hold? SEVENTH YEAK OF THE WAR TOR INDEPENDENCE. 185 Siege of Ninety-Six. Capture of Augusta. Summer camp. FORT NINETY-SIX. 3 9. Greene commenced the siege of Ninety-Six oh the 22d of May, with less than a thousand regulars and a few raw militia. For almost a month his efforts were unavail- ing. Then hearing of the approach of Raw- don, with a strong force, for the relief of Cruger, 1 the Americans made an unsuccessful effort [June 18] to take the place by storm. They raised the siege the following evening [June 19], and retreated beyond the Saluda. Rawdon pursued them a short distance, when he wheeled and marched to Orangeburg. 10. Lee, Pickens, and Clarke were busy, in the mean time, on the Savannah. They captured Augusta on the 5th of June [1781], after a siege of twelve days, and took over three hundred prisoners, losing, in killed and wounded, fifty-one — the same as the enemy. They then hastened to join Greene, who pursued Rawdon to Orange- burg. Finding the British strongly in- trenched there, Greene crossed the Con- garee, and, leading his army to the high hills of Santee, in Santee district, en- camped there for several weeks during the hot and sickly season. Rawdon left his troops in command of Colonel Stewart and do- parted for England. 3 11. Greene was joined by North Carolina troops in August, 1. Note 4, page 175. 2. The principal work was a star redoubt (note 4, page 1S2). There was a picketed in- closure (note 1, page 63) around the little village ; and on the west side of a stream running from a spring (a) was a stockade (note 1, page 63) fort. The besiegers encamped at four different points around the works. Ko^ciuszko (verse 19, page 157) was the enginecr-in-chief. 3. A short time before he sailed, Rawdon was> a party to a cruel transaction which crea- ted a great deal of excitement throughout the South. Among those who took British pro- tection after the fall of Charleston, in 1780 (verse 5, page 175), was Colonel Isaac Hayne, a .highly respectable Carolinian. When General Greene, the following year, confined the British to Charleston alone, and these protections had no force, Hayne considered himself released from the obligations of his parole, took up arms for his country, aid was made a prisoner. Colonel Balfour was then in chief command at Charleston, and from the begin- ning seemed determined on the death of Hayne. Rawdon exerted his influenc to save the prisoner, but Bnally he consented to his execution, as a traitor. Greet e was inclined to re- taliate, but, fortunately, hostilities soon afterward ceased, and the flow of blood was stopped. GENERAL PICKENS. Questions.— 9. Can you give an account of the s : ege of Ninety-Six? 10. What can you tell of Lee, Pickens, and Clarke, and the capture of Augusta? What did Greene do with his anuy I 186 THE REVOLUTION. Battle of Eutaw Springs. British posts. Invasion of Virginia. and at the close of the month marched against Orangehurg. Cruger ' had joined Stewart there, and the whole British force retreated to Eutaw Springs, near the Santee. Greene pursued, and on the morning of the 8th of September [1781] fell upon the enemy at Eutaw, and drove him from the field. Stewart rallied and renewed the fight with so much vigor, that after a struggle of four hours, the Americans were driven from the position. On that night the British fled toward Charleston, and the Americans reoccupied the battle-field. 12. Greene sent detachments in pursuit of the enemy, and soon afterward returned, with his main army, to the High Hills of San- tee, leaving those active partisans, Marion, Sumter, Lee, and others, to confine the enemy to the sea-board. They were successful ; and at the close of 1781 the British did not hold a single post southward of New York, excepting Charleston and Savannah. Greene moved his army to the vicinity of the former city, in November: while Wayne, early in 1782, was closely watching the British at Savannah. 13, While these events were occurring in South Carolina, Corn- wallis was trying to subjugate Virginia. He reached Petersburg, from Wilmington, 5 on the 20th of May, where he found Lafayette, with a feeble force, to oppose him, and he pressed on beyond Richmond, destroying an immense amount of property. 3 For several weeks the State was at his mercy, when the appearance of Lafayette, Wayne, and Steuben, with combined forces, caused him to retire suddenly toward the sea, closely followed by these opponents. He crossed the James river at Old Jamestown [July 9], and made his way to Portsmouth, opposite Norfolk. 4 1. Verse 9, page 185. 2. After the battle at Guilford Court House in March, Cornwall's marched to Wilming ton, to tost aOd recruit hi a shattered army. He moved northward from that point on t he 25th of April, and reached Petersburg on the 20th of May, where he took command of the' troops of Phillips (verse 3, page 1*2), who had died there. 3. The principal object of Cornwall is in marching beyond Richmond, was to prevent a Junction of troops, under Wayne, then approaching through Maryland, with Lafayette. But the marquis was too expert, out-marched the earl, and met Wayne on the 10th of June. 4. Verse 23, page 138. Questions.— 11. What can you tell of Greene's pursuit of the British, and the battle at Eutaw Springs? 12. Where did Greene take Irs arm}' ? What can you tell of the dongs of partisan leaders? Where were Greene and Wayne at the beginning of 1782? 13. What was Cornwallia now trying to do? What can you tell of his invas'on of Virginia, and his depar- ture from it ? SEVENTH YEAR OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 187 The allied armies. Arnold, the traitor, in Virginia. 14. Cornwallis soon moved from Portsmouth to Yorktowa, on the York river [August, 1781], and cast up fortifications there. In the mean time, a formidable foe was approaching him from the north. Rochambeau and his army joined Washing- ton, on the Hudson, early in July, with the intention of driving Clinton from New York. This scheme was abandoned when it was as- certained that the British had been reenforced, and that the count de Grasse, with a powerful French fleet; was about to sail from the West Indies to the Chesapeake, with many land troops. Washington resolved to march for Virginia and drive the enemy from that State. conNT DE rochambeau. 15. Washington so concealed his movements, that his army was beyond successful pursuit Avhen Clinton was assured that his adversary was hastening forward. Hoping to recall him by maraudings on the New England coast, he sent Arnold to do that work. He burned New London [September 6, 1*781], and committed dreadful atrocities at Fort Griswold, opposite, 1 but Washington did not turn back. Clinton also sent reinforce- ments to Cornwallis, in the fleet of Admiral Graves, but De Grasse was at the entrance to the Chesapeake [September 5], to dispute their entrance. Graves was driven oif after a partial engagement, and the French fleet anchored within the capes. 16. The allied armies appeared before Yorktown on the 28th of September. They numbered about twelve thousand effective men. 2 COUNT DE GRASSE. 1. Arno'd landed at the mouth of the Thames, and pro-eeded to attack Fovt Trumbull, near New London. The garrison evacuated it, and the village was hurned. Another div's- ion of the expedition went up on the east side of the Thames, attacked Fort Giiswold at Oroton, and after Colonel Ledyaid had surrendered it, he and almost every man in the fort were cruelly murdered, or badly wounded. There is a monument to their memory at G-rotnn. 2. The whole of the American and French forces, employed in the siesre, amounted to a little over sixteen thousand men. Of the Americans, ahout seven thousand were regular troops, and four thousand militia. The French troops numbered about five thousand, in- eluding those brought by De Grasse from the West Indies. Questions.— 14. Where did Cornwallis make a fortified camn? What can you tell of the French army ? What scheme was planned and abandoned ? What did Washington resolve to do? 15. How did Washington deceive Clinton? What did Clinton do? What can you jell of a naval skirmish ? 188 THE EEVOLUTIOlSr. Siege of Yorktown. Surrender of Cornwallis. Clinton's movement*--. A regular siege was soon commenced; and on the evening of the 9th of Oc- tober, a heavy cannonade was opened upon the town and the British works, and several vessels were set on fire by red-hot balls. Per- ceiving his peril, and despair- ing of aid frt>m Clinton, Cornwallis attempted to es- cape on the night of the 16th, but was foiled by a tremendous storm. 1 Three days afterward [October 19, 1781], he surrendered his soldiers and posts, his seamen and ship- ping, into the hands of Washington and De Grasse.* 17. A few days after the surrender of Cornwallis, Clinton ap- peared off the entrance to Chesapeake bay, with seven thousand men. He was too late. The withering blow to British power in America had been struck, and he returned to New York, amazed and disheartened. All over the land were heard voices of thanks- giving for the great victory which gave assurances of peace. The Tories were silenced and awed ; and the war party in Great Britain, utterly confounded, began to talk of the expediency of peace. 3 The administration of Lord North, which had misled the SIFGE OF YORKTOWN. 1. Tie made preparations to cross the York rivrr to Gloucester, break through the line of French troops stationed there, and, by force. I marches through Maryland, escape to New York. A fearful storm of wind and rain can-.e on suddenly, and compelled him to abandon the design. 2. The British lost one hundred and fifty-six killed, three hundred and twenty-six wounded, and seventy missing. The combined armies list, in kilh d and wounded, about three hundred. Among the spo : ls were seventy five brass, and one hundred and sixty iion cannon ; seven thousand seven hundred and ninety-four muskets; twenty-eight regimental standards ; a large quantity of musket and cannon' balls, and nearly eleven thousand dollars in specie in the military chest. The annv was surrendered to Washington, and the shipping ••"id seamen to Pe Grasse. The latter s ion afterward left the Chesa] eake and went to tl e West Ind'es. 3. Lord George Germaine said that Lord North received the intelligence as he would have done a cannon-ball in hi* breast. He paced the room, and throwing his arms wildly about, kept exclaiming, " Go 1 I il is all over, it is all over I" Questions. — 16. Can you give an account of the siege and capture of Yorktown ? 17. What can you tell of Clinton's" movements? What were the effects of the capture of Cornwallis snd his army ? Seventh ^ear of the war for independence. 189 190 THE REVOLUTION. Peace approaching. Proceedings of the British House of Commons. nation for twelve years, gave way to the control of more liberal men [March, 1782 J; and early in May, Sir Guy -Carlton 1 arrived in New York, with propositions for a reconciliation. SECTION IX. CLOSING EVENTS OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [l 782-1 789] 1. The news of the surrender of Cornwallis was hailed in Greene's army 8 [October 30, 1781], in South Carolina, as an omen of peace, and Governor Rutledge 3 called a legislative assembly to reestab- lish civil authority. Pardon was offered to offending Tories, and hundreds came from the British lines to accept the favor. The British at Wilmington fled to the vicinity of Charleston for safety; Wayne watched the enemy at Savannah; and Washing- ton kept Clinton and his army close prisoners in New York. 2. On the 4th of March, 1782, the British House of Commons* resolved to end the war. Orders for a cessation of hostilities speedily went forth to the British commanders in America. On tho 11th of July [1782] the British evacuated Savannah, and on the 14th of December following, they also departed from Charles- ton. 5 They remained in New York almost a year longer [No- vember 25, 1783], under the command of Sir Guy Carleton,* wdio succeeded Sir Henry Clinton, because the final negotiations 1 VerBO 10, pnge 130. 2. Verse 12, paire 186. & Verse :'., page 174. i. The popular branch of the British Parliament. 5! During the preceding summer, General Leslie, the British commander nt Charleston, made several attempts to penetrate the country for the purpose of sc-izini; provisions for his army. Late in August, he attempted to ascend the Com bah ee for that purpose, when he was opposed hjr the Americans under General Cist, of the Maryland line. Colonel John Laurens volunteered in the service ; und in a skirmish at daybreak, on the 25th of August, he was killed. The last blood of the Revolution was shed at Stono Ferry (verse 5, page 168) in Icptember following, when Captaiu Wilinot was killed in a skirmish with a British foraging party. 6. Verse 19, page 136. QUESTIONS.— 1. TTow did Greene's army receive the news of the defeat of Cornwall's f What did the authorities of South Carolina do? How and where were the British watched? 2. What peace measures were taken by Parliament I What can you tell of the British leav- ing our shores? CLOSING EVENTS OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 191 Negotiations for peace. Treaty of peace agreed to. for peace were not completed, by ratification, until near that time.' 3. Five commissioners 2 were appointed by the United States to conclude a treaty of peace with Great Britain. They met two English commissioners, for that purpose, at Paris, and there, on the 30th of November, 1782, they signed a preliminary treaty. French and English commissioners also signed a treaty of ]Deace on the 20th of January following. Congress ratified the action of its commissioners in April, 1783, yet negotiations were in progress until September following, when a definitive treaty was signed 3 [September 3, 1783] at Paris. At the same time, defini- 1. The following is a list of the principal battles of the Revolution, with the dates of their occurrence : Name. 1775. Date. 130 133 136 137 142 145 147 147 148 151 153 157 158 158 155 159 155 156 160 159 156 156 162 164 163 165 166 167 167 168 li y li,9 169 170 170 177 177 178 Lexington, April 19. Bunker Hill, June 17. Siege of St. John's, Nov. Quebec, Dec. 31. 1776. Fort Moultrie, June 28. Long Island, Aug. 27. White Plains, Oct. 23. Fort Washington, Nov. 16. Trenton, Dec. 26. 1777. Princeton, Jar. 3. Eidgefield, April 27. Hubbardton Inly 7. Oriskany, Aug. 6. Bennington, Aug. 16. Brandywine, Sept. 11. Bemis's Heights, Sept. 19. Paoli, Sept. 20. Germantown, Oct. 4. Forts Clinton and Montgomery,. Oct. 6. Saratoga, Oct. 7. Fort Mercer, Oct. 22. Fort Mifflin, Nov. 16. 1778. Monmouth, June 28. Wyoming, July 3. Quaker Hill or Rhode Island,. Aug. 29. Savannah, Dec. 29. 1779. 'Sunbury, Jan. 9. 2. This number was appointed in order that different sections of the Union might be represented. The commissioners were John Adams, John Jay, Dr. Franklin, Thomas Jef- ferson, and Henrv Laurens. Jefferson did not serve. 3. England acknowledged the independence of the United States : allowed ample bound- aries, exfending northward to the great lakes, and westward to the Mississippi, and an un- limited right of fishing on the banks of Newfoundland. The two Floridas were restored tc Spain. Name. Date. 1 Kettle Creek, Feb. 14. Brier Creek, March 3. Stono Ferry, June 20. Stony Point, July 15. Fer.obseot, Ausr. 13. Paulus' Hook, Aug. 19. Indian Country in New York,. Aug, Flamboio' Head, Sept. 23. 17 Savamah, Oct. 9. 171 1780. Monk's Corner, April 14. 175, n. Santee Ferry Mav 6. 175, n. Charleston, May'l2. 175 Waxhaw, May 29. 175, n. Sprii gtield, June" 23. 178 Rocky Mount July CO. 176 Hanging Rock Aug. 6. Sanders's Creek, AugT 16. Fishing Creek, Aug. 18. King's Mountain, Oct. 7. Fish Dam Ford, Nov. 12. 1 Blackstocks, Nov. 20. 178', n 1781. 182 is:; 184 185 Cowpens Jan. 17. Guilford Court House March 15. Hobkirk's Hill, April 25. Ninetv-Six, June 18. Fort Griswold, Sept. 6. 187. n. Eutaw Springs, Sept. 8. 186 Yorktown, Oct. 19. 188 1782. Combahce, Aug. 25. 190, n. Stono Ferry, Sept. — . 190, n. Questions.— 3. What can you tell of treaties at the close of the war. 192 THE REVOLUTION. Public dangers. The arm)' disbanded. Washington resigns his commission. tive treaties between England, France, Spain, and Holland, were signed by their respective commissioners, and the United States became an acknowledged Power among the nations of the earth. 4. With the joy that gladdened the Americans on the return of peace, were mingled gloomy apprehensions of coming evil, foreshadowed in the murmurings of the unpaid soldiers, 1 the con- dition of the finances, and the jealousies of the States. For a long time the soldiers had been unpaid, for the Treasury was empty. Crafty men increased their discontent by charging Con- gress with neglect; and finally, when, in the spring of 1783, the time drew near for the disbanding of the army, an address was circulated through the American camp at Newburg, on the Hud- son, which advised the army to take matters into their own hands, make a demonstration that should arouse the fears of the people and of Congress, and thus obtain justice for themselves. Washington's sagacity and prudence nipped a mischievous scheme in the bud. 5. On the eighth anniversary of the skirmish at Lexington [April 19, 1783], a cessation of hostilities was proclaimed in the army, and on the 3d of November following, that glorious Continental army was disbanded, and its members returned quietly to their homes. a Washington met his officers in New York [December 4, 1783], and affectionately parted with them. Then he hastened to Annapolis, in Maryland, where the Con- gress was sitting, with General Mifflin at their head, and resigned into their hands [December 23] the com- mission which he received [June 16, 1775] from them more than eight years before. It was a spectacle of great moral sublimity. CENESAL MIFFLIN. 1. Verse 1, page 181. 2. Of the 230,000 Continental soldiers, and the 50 0C0 militia, whoborc arms during the war, not one remains among us. The last survivor died at Mount Vernon, Ohio, in the year 1866. Great Britain sent to America, during the war, one hundred and twelve thousand five hundred and eighty-lour troops tor the land service, and more than twenty-two thousand seamen. Of all tuis host, not one la known to be living. Question's.— 4. What produced uneasiness on the return of peace ? What can you tell about seditious movements in the army at Newburg I 6, What can you tell about the proc- lamation of peace in the army! what about the disbandment of the army? What did Washington do? Give an account of his giving up his commission. CLOSING EVENTS OF THE WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 193 Departure of the British. Weakness of the General Government. Like Cincinnatus, the patriotic Roman, 1 Washington laid down the cares of state, and returned to his farm on the banks of the Potomac. Already the last hostile foot had departed [November 25, 1783], and his country was free. G. When the war was ended, and the common danger past, the Americans found themselves without a sufficient bond of union, in the form of organic law, to entitle them to the charac- ter of a nation. TJie Articles of Confederation " allowed the ex- ercise of so much independent power by the several States, and so little by the Congress or national legislature, that no system of taxation, for the payment of the heavy public debt, 3 or for carrying on the Government, could be put in practice ; and the States, all im- poverished by the war, found it difficult to collect taxes for their individual uses. 4 Congress could only recommend certain meas- ures to the several States ; they could not demand any action for the public good. 7. Thoughtful men saw the dangers to which the young Re- public was exposed by this loose system of government — this 1. A little while before the final disbanding of the arm}-, many of the officers, then at Newburg, on the Hudson,~met [June 19, 1783], and formed an association, which they named the Societ? of me Cincin- nati. The chief objects of the society were to promote cordial friend- (hip and indissoluble union among themselves ; to commemorate, by frequent reunions, the great struggle they had just passed through ; to use their best endeavors for the promotion of human liberty ; to cherish good feeling between the respective States ; and to extend be- nevolent aid to those of the society whose circumstances might require it. The order of the society consists of a gold eagle, suspended upon a ribbon, on the breast of which is a medallion with a device represent- ing Cincinnatus receiving the Roman senators. 2. Verse 2, page 150. 3. According to an estimate made by the register of the Treasury in 1790, the entire cost of the war for independence was at least one hundred and thirty millions of dollars, exclusive of vast sums lost by in- dividuals and the several States. The Treasury payments amounted to almost ninety-three millions, chiefly in Continental bills. The foreign debt amounted to eight millions of dollars ; and the domestic debt, due ehiefly to the officers and soldiers of the Revolution, was more than thirty millions of dollars. 4. This effort produced great excitement in mnnv of the States ; and in Massachusetts, in 1786, the people openly rebelled. The insurrection became so formidable, that an armed force of several thousand men was required to suppress it. The insurgents were led by Daniel Shay, and it is known in history as Shay's Rebellion. In the convention which framed the National Constitution, no subject created more earnest debate than a proposition for the General order Government to assume the debts of the States contracted in providing means for carrying on the war. The debts of the several States were unequal. Those of Massachusetts and South Carolina amounted to more than ten millions and a half of dollars, while the debts of all the other States did not extend, in the aggregate, to fifteen millions, lhis assumption was finally made, to the amount of $21,500,000. Questions.— 6. What great want did the Americans feel ? What have vou to say of the weakness of the leagues of States ? 194 THE REVOLUTION". Important conventions. A National Constitution. Birth of the Nation. mere league of States — and earnestly sought a remedy. A better system of commercial regulations was demanded; and in Septem- ber, 1786, delegates from six States met in convention at Annapo- lis, in Maryland, to consider the matter. They did more. They suggested the propriety of holding another convention, for the purpose of amending the Articles of Confederation, 1 so as to give greater powers to the General Government. Accordingly, in May, 1787, representatives from all the States but Rhode Island, met in convention in the State House in Philadelphia, 2 with Wash- ington as president. 8. It was soon perceived that the Articles of Confederation were too faulty for amendment. They were cast aside, and the convention set about making a new instrument. All agreed that a greater centralization of power was essential to the existence of the Republic, and that what was called independent State sover- eignty, as displayed under the Articles of Confederation, was so dangerous to national life, that it must be made subordinate to the sovereignty of the General Government, With this central idea they proceeded, and formed the National Constitution [September, 1787] under which we live. 3 9. This Constitution was submitted for consideration to con- ventions of the people in the several States, in which it was dis- cussed with warmth and ability. It was finally ratified by these cpnventions in nine States (the requisite number) ; and, on the 4th of March, 1789, the Continental Congress expired, and the Na- tional Constitution became the organic law of the Republic. Thus was consummated the last and most important act in the war for independence. Then the Nation was born. 1 Then the Republic of The United States commenced its glorious career. 1 Vcrae 2 pace 150 2 Verse 9, pase 142. :;. The Constitution was submittal to Oongf*ess [September 28, 1787). thenin session, and that body sent copies of it to the several State Legislatures, in order that it might be con- sidercd in conventions of the people. , , .■ .. „ 4. Hitherto th- Government of Great Britain had refused to acknowledge the rew I.e public as a sovereignty, because its action was controlled by the legislatures ot thirteen in- dependent States; now the people had invested the General Government with supremacy in national atfairs, and for the tirst time Great Britain sent an embassador to represent its sovereignty at the sent of the Government of the Republic. QOEST10XS.-7. What did thoughtful men do? What can you tell of two conventions to form a more perfect government? 8. What did the last convention perceive and consider < What did that convention do? 9. What was done with the National Constitution then adopted ? What did the people do ? What was the glorious result f CHAPTER YI. THE NATION". , SECTION I. • Washington's administration [1 789-1797]. 1. When the National Constitution ' had received the appro- bation of the people, and was made the supreme law of the land, General Washington was chosen, by the unanimous vote of the electors, 2 the first President or chief magistrate of the Republic, and John Adams was made Vice-President. On the 30th of April, 1789, Washington stood upon the street gallery of the old City Hall, New York, and there, in the presence of a vast concourse of people, took the oath of office, which was administered by Chan- cellor Livingston. 3 1. This instrument, in language and general arrange- ment, is the work of G tuverneur Morris, into whose hands the coiventio:r of 17S7 placed the crude mate- rials which h:id been adopted at various times during the session. Gonverneur Morris was born near New York, in 1752. Ho was a lawyer, and active in public life. In 1792 he was appointed minister to France, and after his return he was a legislator for many years. He died in 1816. ' . 2. These are men elected by the people in the vari- ous States, to meet and choxc a President and Vice- President of the United States. Their number is equal to the whole number of senators and representatives to which the several States are entitled. So the people do not vote directly for the chief magistrate. Former- ly, the man who received the highest number of votes ■vVas declared to be President, and he who received the next highest number was proclaimed V'ce-Pres ; dent. Now these are voted for as distinct candidates for sep- arate oflices. i 3. One of the committee (verse 10, paee 143) to draft the Declaration of Independence. He was born in New York in 1747, became a lawyer, and was always an ac- tive public man. " H • was minister to France in 1S01, when he purchased Louisiana for the United States. He died in 1813. GOUVERNEUR MORRIS. Questions.— 1. What can you tell about the choice of the first President of the United States ? When and where did he take the oath of office ? 196 THE NATION. The new Government in motion. Its machinery. Washington's tour. 2. The first session of Congress was chiefly devoted to the organiza- tion of the new Government, and the arrangement of measures for the fu- ture prosperity of the Republic. The public finances and a system of reve- nues first engaged their attention. Three Executive Departments were created ; namely, Treasury, War, and Foreign Affairs, the heads of which were to be styled Secretaries, instead of Ministers, as in Europe. These the President might appoint or dismiss with the concurrence of the Senate of the United States. They were to con- stitute a cabinet council, always ready for consultation with the President on public affairs, and bound to give him their opinions in writing, when requir ed. A national judiciary was estab- lished, consisting of a Supreme Court, having a Chief Justice and five as- sociates ; ' also, circuit and district courts, which had jurisdiction over certain specified cases. 3. The Congress adjourned on the 29th of September [1789], and Washington, having appointed his cabinet council, 2 made a brief tour in New England, to make himself better acquainted with the people and their resources. The second session of Con- gress began early in January, 1790, when Mr. Hamilton, the Secretary of the Treasury, made able reports on the monetary affairs WASHINGTON, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. John Jay was nppo'nted Chief Justice ; John Rutledge (verse 3, page 174), of South Carolina ; James Wilson, of Pennsylvania ; William Cashing, of Massachusetts ; Robert H. Harrison, of Maryland ; and John Blair, of Virginia, were annotated Associate Justices. 2. Alexander Hamilton was appointed Secretary of the Treasury; Henry. Knox, Secre- tary of War; and Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of Foreign Affairs. Ji tfersou was ihen United States minister at the couit of France, and did not enter upon his duties until March, 1790. The office of Secretary of the Navy was not created untd the presidency of Mr. Adams. Naval affairs were under the control of the Secretary of War. Questions.— 2. What chiefly engaged the attention of Congress at the'r first session' What can JtOU tell about the Executive Departments? What about a national judiciary? 3. What can you tell about the adjournment of Congress, the President's tour, and the second session ? Washington's administration. 197 Financial measures. Growth of the Republic. National bank and mint. of the nation. On his recommendation the National Government assumed the public debt incurred during the Revolution, 1 and also the debts of the several States, contracted during that period. 2 A wise revenue system, proposed by Hamilton,was adopted ; and an act was passed, making a territory, ten miles square, on the Potomac river, which was named the District of Columbia, the perma- nent sc it of the National Government, after the lapse of ten years from that date. 4. Since the organization of the Govern- ment, the people of North Carolina and Rhode Island, in conventions assembled, had adopted the Constitution ; 3 and, during the third session of the first Congress, which ° ' ALEXANDER HAMILTON. commenced in December, 1790, Vermont was admitted [March 4, 1791] to the Union as a State. 4 During that session the foundations of public credit and national pros- perity were formally laid. Settlements were rapidly spreading beyond the Alleghany mountains, 5 where two immense Territories had been established," and the subject of further territorial organi- zation was pressed upon the attention of Congress. That body, in accordance with the recommendation of Hamilton, authorized the creation of a national bank, 7 and the establishment of a mint, 8 for national coinage. 1. Note 3, page 193. 2. The Government assumed the payment of State debts to the amount of $21,000,000. 3. Verse 9, page 194. 4. Vermont was originally called the 'New Hampshire Grants, and was claimed by both New York and New Hampshire. In 1777, the people met in convention, nnd proclaimed the Territory an independent State. After purchasing the claims of New York for $30,000, it was admitted into the Union. 5. The first census, or enumeration of the inhabitants of the United States, was completed in 1791. The number of all sexes and color was 3,929,000. The number of slaves was 695,000. 6. One, embracing the present States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, ar.d Wiscon- sin, was established in July, 1787, by the name of the North-trestern Territory, and the do- main of Tennessee was constituted the Territory South-west of the Ohio, in March, 1790. 7. At that time the whole banking capital In the United States was only $2,000,000, in- vested in the Bank of North. America at Philadelphia, established by Robert Morris (verse 2, page 181) in 1781, the Bunk, of New York, in New York city, and the Bank of Massachu- setts, in Boston. The Bank of the United States began its operations in corporate form, in February, 1794, with a capital of $10,000,000. 8. The first mint went into operation in 1792, in Philadelphia, and remained the sole is- suer of coWi. in the Umted States, unt 1 1835, when a branch was established in each of the States of Georgia, North Carolina, and Louisiana. Questions.— 3. What financial measures were adopted ? What provision was made for a permanent seat of government? 4. What States joined the Union ? What have you to say about the public credit and new settlements ? What about a national bank and mint ? 198 THE NATION. War with the Indians. Formation of political parties. 5. Trouble with the Indians north-west of the Ohio now ap- peared. They were excited to hostilities by British agents and traders. 1 Their acts became so hostile that, in the summer of 1790, General Harmer was sent into their country to awe them by chastisement. Near the present village of Fort Wayne, in In- diana, he was defeated by the savages in two battles [October 17 and 22, 1790]. A year later, General St. Clair, then governor of the North-western Territory, marched into the Indian country with two thousand men. He was surprised and driven back [No- vember 4, 1791], with a loss of about six hundred men. 6. General Wayne succeeded St. Clair. He swept victoriously through the Indian country, to the Maumee river, and, near the present Maumee City, Ohio, he struck the savages such a severe blow [August 20, 1794] that they begged for peace. A year after- ward [August, 1795], a treaty was made with the principal In- dian leaders, at Greenville, by which the United States acquired a large domain, and secured peace for more than fifteen years. 7. Before the second presidential election occurred, in the autumn of 1792, two distinct political parties had been formed, the leaders of which were members of Washington's cabinet. One party, headed by Jefferson, was called Republican or Demo- cratic, and the other, headed by Hamilton, was called Federalist.' 1 The lines were clearly drawn ; and their hostility became bitter as the time for the election drew nigh. Washington and Adams were reelected by large majorities, yet the opposition or Republican party was rapidly increasing in strength. They sympathized with the French revolutionists, who had lately abolished royalty, 1. For several years after the peace of 1783 (Verse 3, page 191), the Brilish, in violation of the treaty then made, held possession of military posts in the West, belonging to the linked States. Until the creation of a nation by the adoption of the Constitution In 178S, the British authorities treated the 'United States with contempt. They held these forts, believing, no doubt, that the States would again become British provinces. The forts were not given u;> until 1796. 2. The Federalists advocated the National Constitution, which concentrated power in the General Government. The Republicans advocated the supremacy of the States, In mose of establishing an independ- ent empire in Northern Mexico, now Texas. Men of character and substance were in- duced to join him, but he was soon sus- pected of a design to dismember the Union and form a separate confederacy west of the Alleghanies. He was arrested on a AARON BCRR. 1. A consul of this kind is a commercial agent of a Government in a foreign port. The word consul was applied, in the case of Napokon, in the Roman sense, as the title of a chief magistrate during the republic. 2. Note 5, page 203. 3. Verse 4, page 202. Questions.— 3. What can you tell of the Tripolitan ruler? Can you give fin account of an overland expedition against Tripoli ? What was the result ? 4. What have you to say about settlements in the West? What did Aaron Burr do? Relate the circumstances of bis career at this time. 206 THE NATION. Navigation by ("team. Napoleon, emperor. Bad conduct of France and England. charge of treason, but on trial the crime was not proven, and lie was acquitted. He was ever afterward an outcast. 5. In the same year [1807], Robert Fulton's experiments in steam navigation were crowned with per- fect success, by a voyage from New York to Albany, in August, and regular voy- ages by his steam- boat thereafter. This is a most important fact in the history of the FULTON S STEAMBOAT. United States and of the world ; ROBERT FULTON. but its beneficent promises were then discerned by only a few; Events of vast importance were occupying the attention of the nation. Napoleon ' was seated on the throne of France, as emperor, and all Europe was trembling in his presence. The United States, maintaining a strict neutrality, neither courted his favor nor feared his power; but the Americans soon found them- selves interested spectators of European events, and were made sufferers by them. 6. England and France were engaged in a fierce war, and in their efforts to damage each other, they violated the most sacred rights of the United States, as a neutral nation. By an order in council* [May, 1806], Great Britain declared a greater portion of the coast of Europe to be in a state of blockade. Napoleon retal- iated, by issuing a decree at Berlin [November, 1806], declaring the blockade of all the ports of the British Islands. Similar orders and decrees were afterward issued; and thus the desperate game- sters played vith the world's peace and prosperity. American vessels were seized by both English and French cruisers, and 1. Verse 2, pat*e 202. , 2 The British privy council consists of an Indefinite number of eentlenicn, chosen by the sovereign, and having 1 o direct connection with the nrnistere. The sovereign may, under the advice of this council, issueorders of proclamation which, If not contrary to existing law*) arc binding upon the subjects. These arc for temporary purposes, and are called orden <" council. Questions.— 5. What can you tell about Fulton and steam navigation.! What have yo.i to say about Napoleon and Europe, and the United states? 6. C-.m yon five an account of the way by which England and France injured the United States 1 Why were the Ameri- cans powerless? jeffersok's administration. 207 American commerce injured. Search and imprisonment. Chesapeake and Leopard, American commerce was reduced to a domestic coast trade. The Americans liad no competent navy to protect their commerce, and the swarm of gun-boats ' ordered by Congress were not sufficient for even a coast-guard. 7. The American merchants, and all in their interest, so deeply injured by the " or- ders " and " decrees " of the warring mon- archs, demanded redress of grievances. Great excitement prevailed throughout the country, and the most bitter feeling was beginning to be felt against Great Britain. This was in- creased by her haughty assertion and often- A fellcca guk doat sive practice of the doctrine that she had the right to search American vessels for suspected deserters from the British navy,' 2 and to cany away the suspected without hinderance. This right was strenuously denied, and its policy vehemently condemned, because American seamen might be thus forced into the British service, under the pretense that they were deserters. Indeed, this had already happened. 8. A crisis approached. Four seamen on board the United States frigate Chesapeake, were claimed as deserters from the British armed ship Melampus. They were demanded, but Com- modore Barron, of the Chesapeake, refused to give them up. The Chesapeake left the coast of Virginia on a cruise on the 22d of June, 1807, and on the same day she was chased and attacked by the British frigate Leopard. Unsuspicious of danger and unpre- pared for an attack, Barron surrendered his vessel, after losing three men killed and eighteen wounded. The four men were then taken on board the Leopard, and the Chesapeake returned to Hampton roads. Investigation proved that three of the seamen 1. These were small sailing vessels, having a cannon at the how and stern, and manned by full-armed men for the purpose of boarding other vessels. 2^ England maintains the doctrine that a British subject can never hecome an alien. At the time in question, she held that she had a right to take her native-born subjects wherever found, and place them in the army or navy, even though, by legal process, they had become citizens of another nation. Our laws give equal protection to native and adopted citizens, and would not allow Great Britain lo exercise her asserted privilege toward one of her sub- jects who had become a citizen of the United States. Questions. — 7. What did American merchants do? What offensive acts did Great Britain perform ? What was said of them ? 8. Can you give an account of the affair be- tween the Chesapeake and Leopard? 208 THE NATION. Retaliation. Embargo. President Madison. (colored men) were native Americans, and that the fourth had been impressed into the British service, and had deserted. 9. This outrage aroused the nation and provoked retaliatory measures. The President issued a proclamation in July [1807], ordering all British armed vessels to leave the waters of the United States immediately, and forbidding any to enter, until full satisfaction for the recent insult, and security against future aggressions, should be made. In the mean time, France and Eng- land continued to play their desperate commercial game, unmind- ful of the interests of other nations, or the obligations of interna- tional law. When the National Congress met [December 22], they decreed an embargo, which detained all vessels, American and foreign, then in our ports, and ordered American vessels abroad to return ^ome. Thus the chief commerce of the world was brought to a full stop. The embargo failed to accomplish its object, namely, the obtaining of justice from England and France, and it was removed in the spring of 1809, when all inter- course with those countries was forbidden. 10. While the nation was in this feverish state, Mr. Jefferson retired from office [March 4, 1809], and was succeeded by James Madison, as President, and George Clinton, as Vice-President. SECTION IV. madison's administration [1809-1817]. 1. Mr. Madison entered upon the duties of his exalted station at a time of great commotion. He had been Mr. Jefferson's first cabinet officer for eight years, 1 and was perfectly familiar with public affairs. He chose a cabinet of able men; 3 and of the eleventh Congress, 3 a majority were his political friends. On 1. Note 3, page 203. „ . _ _ _.. 2 Robert Smith, Secretary of State ; Albert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury ; Wil- l-am Euetls, Secretary of War; Paul Hamilton, Secretary of the Navy; Caesar Rodney, Attoi-i ey-General. 3, The duration of each Congress is two years. Ocestions.— 9. What followed the attack of the Leopard on the CheMpoakc ? What did England and Franco do I What did the American Congress do I What can you tell of an embargo ? 10. What ollicial change occurred 1—1. What have you to say about Mr. Madison, his cabinet, and the political character of Congress? MADISON S ADMINISTRATION. 20 the hands of Hull. He was completely deceived by it. 2. At this lime the British navy numbered 1,060 vessels, white thai of the I'm ted Slates, exclusive of gun-boats (note 1, pace 207), numbered only twenty. Two of these were tin- seaworthy, and one was mi Lake Ontario. Nine of the American vessels were of a class less than frigates. Questions. —ft. What new plan for the invasion of C inada was arranged ? What prepa- ration^ had the British made to meet It 1 What can you tell of movements at Queenstown. and of the first battle there? 10. Can you give an account of other battles on that day, and the results? What can you say about a later attempt at invasion ? A SLOOr-OF-WAR. madison's administration. 213 Naval operations. Doings of American armed vessels. Madison reelected. The first action of importance was between the American frigate Essex, Captain Porter, and the British sloop-of-war Alert [August 13], in which the former was victorious. On the 19th of August [1812], the United States frigate Constitution, Captain Hull, cap- tured and destroyed the British frigate Guerriere. On the 18th of October following, the United States sloop- of-war Wasp, Captain Jones, captured the British brig Frolic, after a desperate encoun- ter. In the afternoon of the same day, the British ship Poictiers captured both the vic- tor and her prize. A week later [October 25], the frigate United States, Captain De- catur, captured the Macedonian; and on the 29th of December, the Constitution, then com- manded by Bainbridge, fought the Java almost three hours otf the coast of Brazil, and captured her. 12. The Americans were greatly elated by these victories. At the same time numerous American privateers ' were seizing British prizes in every direction. During the first six months of the war [July to January], about fifty British armed vessels and two hun- dred and fifty merchantmen, with three thousand prisoners and a vast amount of booty, were captured by the Americans. At the close of the year, naval armaments were in preparation, on Lakes Erie and Ontario, to assist in the invasion of Canada. 13. The Federalists, 2 as a party, had violently opposed the war, and tried to make it unpopular. They did not succeed, as the reelection of Madison in the autumn of 1812, with Elbridge Gerry as Vice-President, fully attested. That election was ac- cepted as a test of the war spirit of the people. 1. Private armed vessels, commissioned by Government to seize or destroy the property of the enemy. 2. Verse 7, page 198. Questions.— 11. What can you tell about naval operations in the year 1812 ? 12. How were the Americans affected ? What can you tell about the doings of American privateers 1 What preparations for the command of the lakes were made? 13. What had the Federal- ists done ? "What can you tell about an election of President in 1812? How was it regarded t 214 THE NATION". The American armies. Enthusiasm in the West. Tragedy at Frenchtown. SECTION V. THE SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE [ 1 8 1 3 ] . 1. Three armies were prepared for the campaign of 1813, and all were looking toward Canada as an objective point. The Army of the West, under General Harrison, of Tippecanoe fame, was de- signed to recover what Hull had lost, and invade Canada ; the Army of the Center, under General Dearborn, was to hold a posi- tion on the Niagara river ; and the Army of the North, under General Hampton, was placed on the borders of Lake Champlain, to operate in the region of the St. Lawrence. Sii George Prevost was the successor of Sir Isaac Brock, in command of the British army in Canada. 2. Th3 people of the West were determined to drive the British i.ito Canada, and recover all that had been lost in Michigan. 1 At the call of Harrison, thousands of the young men of Kentucky and Ohio flew to arms," and he made the vicinity of the western end of Lake Erie his chief mustering-ground. There a terrible tragedy occurred early in 1813. On the 10th of January, General Win- chester, with a fine body of Kentuckians, reached the Maumee Rapids, and sent forward a portion of them to drive the British from Frenchtown, on the river Raisin. 3 They did so [January 18], and two days afterward Winchester arrived there with reen- foreements. 3. The British general Proctor was at Maiden, and proceeded immediately, with fifteen hundred white men and Indians, to attack the Americans at Frenchtown. He fell upon them at dawn 1. During the autumn of 1812, the whole Western country, incensed by Hull's surrender, seemed filled with the zeal of the old Crusaders. The leaders found Volunteers everywhere, anxious to fl d employment against the foe. Tbey were engaged for many weeks In driving the Indians from post to post, in the vicinity of the extreme western settlements, and indeed, lating their villages and plantations, after the manner of Sullivan (verse 10. page 170) in 1779. Pierce indignation was thus excited among the tribes, and led to terrible retaliations under (he stimulus of their white allies. '_>. Bo numerous were the volunteers, that Harrison was compelled to issue an order Against furtber enlistments. :s. Now Monroe, Michigan. The R;iis ; n was so called by the French, because of the grea,t quantity of grapes found growing on its banks. Questions.— 1. What preparations were made for the campaign of 1S13? 2. What had the people of the West resolved to do? What did they do at the call of Harrison? What fan yon tell about doings at Frenchtown, on the river Raisin 1 SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 215 Fort Meigs twice besieged. Defense of Fort Stephenson. on the 22d of January, and, after a severe battle, Winchester sur- rendered, on the condition that the prisoners should be protected from the savages. Proctor, fearing the approach of Harrison, fled, leaving the sick and wounded Americans to be slaughtered by the Indians the next day. After that, the war-cry of the Ken- tuckians was, " Remember the river Raisin 1 " 4. General Harrison was at the Maumee Rapids ' when he heard of the affair at Frenchtown. There he established a fortified camp [February, 1813], and called it Fort Meigs. There he was besieged by two thousand men, British and Indians, under Proctor and Tecum- tha, 2 at the beginning of May. He was relieved by the arrival of General Green Clay with reinforce- ments 3 [May 5], and four days afterward [May 9], Proctor, deserted by his Indian allies, abandoned the siege, and returned to Maiden. 5. About four thousand British and Indians, un- der Proctor and Tecumtha, again appeared before Fort Meigs on the 21st of July. General Clay was in command, and resisted the invaders so vigorously that they turned eastward and attacked Fort Stephen- son, at Lower Sandusky, on the 2d of August. It was garrisoned by one hun- dred and fifty men, under Major Croghan, a brave sol- dier, only twenty-one years of age. It was bravely defended, and the assailants, ter- ribly injured by grape-shot from the only cannon in the fort, fled in confusion. 4 FORT 5IEICS. FORT STEPHENSON. MAJOR CROGHAN. 1. Verse 6, page 198. 2. Tecumtha had borne the commission of a brigadier-general in the British army, since the surrender of Hull at Detroit. 3. A portion of Clay's Kentuckians, under Colonel Dudley, landed on the opposite side of the Maumee, to attack some British batteries there. They were successful, but, when madly pursuing the retreating enemy, they fell into an Indian ambush, and were lost, being either killed or made prisoners, excepting one hundred and seventy. 4. Proctor had demanded the instant surrender of the fort, and threatened to allow the Questions.— 3. What did General Proctor do ? What can you tell of a tragedy at French- town ? 4. What did General Harrison do ? What can you tell about Fort Meigs and a siege ? 5. What can you tell about a second siege of Fort Meigs ? What other place did the British attack? Give an account of the affair at Fort Stephenson. 216 THE NATION. Perry's victory on Lake Erie. Another invasion of Canada. COMMODORE PERRY. 6. While these events were occurring on the land, a squadron of nine vessels was constructed at Erie, in Pennsyl- vania, under the charge of Commodore Perry, 1 to cooperate with the Army of the West. The British had also prepared a squadron of six vessels, commanded by Commodore Barclay, The hostile fleets met near the western extremity of Lake Erie, on the morning of the 10th of September, 1813, and a very severe battle ensued. The brave Perry managed with the skill of an old admiral and the courage of the proudest soldier. At four o'clock in the afternoon, every British vessel had sur* rendered to him; and before sunset, he had sent a messenger to General Harrison with the famous dispatch, " We have met the enemy, and they are ours." This vic- tory was hailed with unbounded demon- For a moment, party rancor was almost for- gotten ; and bonfires and illuminations light- ed up the whole country. 7. The command of Lake Erie now being secured, and four thousand Kentuckians, under the command of the veteran Gover- nor Shelby, having reached Harrison's camp [September 17], the army moved across the lake in a portion of Perry's vessels [Septem- ber 27]. They found Maiden deserted. Har- rison pressed on in pursuit of the flying Proc- tor and Tecumtha, and at the Moravian Town, on the Thames, Indians to masBacre the garrison, in the event of their refusal. In reply, Croahan said, in substance, that when the "fort should be taken, there would be none left to massacre, as it would not be given up while there was a man left to fi) early in November, damaged them a good deal, and captured and carried into Saekett's Harbor a schooner belonging to the enemy. He then captured another schooner, which had $12,000 in specie on board, and the baggage of the deceased General Brock. strations of j°y- GENERAL SHELBY. Question's.— 6. What can you tell about naval preparations on Lake Erie ? What can you tell of a Bght, and victory for the Americans, on Lake Erie? 7. What caused Harrison's army to move across Lake Erie ? Can you relate how the war in the North-west was ended 1 SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 21 7 Capture of York or Toronto. Capture of Fori George. Battle at Stony Creek. deep in Upper Canada, he overtook, fought, and conquered them. Proctor's force was completely broken up. All that Hull had lost ivas regained, 1 and more, and the war in the North-west was ended. 5 8. Toward the close of April, General Dearborn was at Sack- ett's Harbor, but with troops too few to assist the exposed places between that post and Ogdensburg on the St. Lawrence, 3 against which the British had been operating. For the purpose of drawing the foe away from the St. Law- rence, and to seize Toronto (then called York), the capital of Upper Canada and chief place for the supplies of the western British garrisons, he crossed the lake in Chauncey's fleet [April 25], with seventeen hundred men, under General Pike, and two days afterward became master of the place. The British, under Sheaffe, blew up their magazine by a train of wet powder when they fled, and Pike was mortally wounded by stones hurled by the explosion. 9. A month later [May 27], Dearborn and Chauncey attacked the British at Fort George, at the mouth of the Niagara river. The enemy were driven westward, toward the head of Lake Ontario, closely pursued by the victors for many miles. On the night of the 6th of June they turned, and fell upon the American camp at Stony Creek, in Canada. They were repulsed ; but in the darkness and confusion, Generals Chandler and Winder, the American commanders, were made prisoners. 1. Verse 8, page 211. Here the Americans recaptured six brass field-pieces, which had been surrendered by Hull, on two of which were engraved the words, " Surrendered by Burgoyne at Saratoga." See verse 22, page 159. 2. Almost the whole of Proctor's command were killed or made prisoners, Tecumtha was slain, and Proctor himself narrowly escaped capture by some cavalry that pursued him. Harrison's prisoners amounted to about six hundred, 3. In February a detachment of British soldiers crossed the St. Lawrence on the ice from Prescott to Ogdensburg, and, under pretense of seeking for deserters, committed robberies. Major Forsvth, then in" command of riflemen there, retaliated. This was resented, in turn, by a large British force, which crossed on the 21st of February, and, after a conflict of an hour, drove out the few military defenders of Ogdensburg, plundered and destroyed a large amount of property, and then returned to Canada. Questions.— 8. What can you tell about affairs at Sackett's Harbor? What can you tell about the attack on and capture of York, or Toronto? 9. Can you give an account of opera- tions at the mouth of the Niagara river? What cao you tell about a night battle at Stoney Creek, and capture of American generals ? 10 218 THE NATION. Battle at Sackctt'g Harbor. Operations on the St. Lawrence. Niagara frontier desolated. 10. On the day [May 27] when the Americans attacked Fort George, a British squadron appeared before Sackett's Harbor ; and two days afterward [May 29] Sir George Prevost 1 and a thousand soldiers landed in the face of a severe fire from some regulars 2 stationed there. General Brown, the commander, rallied the militia, and their rapid gathering near the landing- place so alarmed Prevost, lest they should cut off his retreat, that he hastily reembarked, leaving almost the whole of his wounded behind. Soon after this, Dearborn retired from active service, and was succeeded in command by General Wilkinson, in August. The Government had arranged a plan for another invasion of Canada, and Wilkinson, at the head of a large force assembled at French Creek [November 5, 1813], went down the St. Lawrence in boats. 11. Near Williamsburg, on the Canada shore below Ogdens- burg, Wilkinson landed troops under General Brown, to disperse the gathering enemy. A severe battle ensued [November 11], in which both parties suffered much without a decisive result. The enemy were crippled, and Wilkinson went on, expecting to find General Hampton 3 with a cooperating force at St. Regis. 4 He was disappointed ; and the attempt to capture Montreal, which was the first object of the expedition, was abandoned. The army went into winter quarters at French Mills, and there suffered much. 12. At this time, General McClure with a few troops was hold- ing Fort George. The British pressed him so hard that, on the 10th of December, he burned the village of Newark, near the fort, and on the 12th fled to Fort Niagara, 6 on the opposite side of the 1 Verse 1, page 214. 2. Soldiers of the permanent army. 3. Verse 6, pace 210. 4. An Indian town and early French settlement, about twenty-five miles south-east from Williamsburg. There was enmity between Wilkinson and Hampton, and General Arm- strong, then Secretary of War, resolved to command the expedit : on himself, to prevent trouble on account of precedence. He joined the army at Sackett's Harbor, but Mion re- turned to Washington, for he and Wilkinson could not agree. To the jealousies and bicker- ings of these old officers, must the disasters of the land troops be, in a great dogree, at- tributed General Hampton did move forward toward Canada, but finally returned to Plattsburg, and, leaving the command with General Izard, went to his Southern home. 5. On the St. Lawrence, mouth of the St. Regis river. Questions —10 Can you give an accountof an attack on Sackett's narbor by the British, and their repulse? What change of officers took place? What have yonto Bay about another invasion of Canada? 11. Can you give an account of a battle near Vv illlamsbnrg, in Canada? What did Wilkinson do, and how was he disappointed ? \\ hat course did bo pursue? 12. Can you give an account of events at Fort George and its vicinity ? How did the British retaliate on the Americans? SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 219 War with the Crock Indians. Their power and spirit broken. FORT NIAGARA, 1S13. river. That fortress was surprised and captured by the British and Indians on the night of the 19th, when they proceeded to lay waste by fire the American shores of the river, all the way to Buffalo. 1 This retaliation was the closing scene of the campaign of 1813 in the north. 13. There was serious trouble in the extreme south. Tecuin- tha had stirred up the powerful Creek Indians to make war on the white people. On the 30th of August [1813] they surprised and destroyed Fort Mimms, on the Ala- bama river, and massacred the inmates, in- cluding many women and children. This act created the most intense indignation. General Andrew Jackson, with over two thousand men, marched into the Creek country, and in a series of conflicts with the savages, between the beginning of No- vember, 1813, and thecloseof March, 1814, 2 the Greeks were thoroughly subdued, and their power and spirit as a nation so broken that they humbly begged for peace. 3 14. The ocean was a theater of sharp conflicts in 1813. On the 24th of February, the United States sloop-of-war Hornet cap- tured the British brig Peacock, after a severe fight of fifteen minutes. The latter suddenly sunk, carrying down with her CAPTAIN LAWRENCE. 1. YounurutL' tiic war there were 250 private armed vessels commissioned, and they cap- tured or destroyed about 1,600 British vessels. Qckstions.— 14. What have you to say about the continuance of the war upon the ocean, and its operations ? SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 229 Land battles. Naval battles. commissioners had been negotiating at Ghent, in Belgium. 1 It ended in a treaty signed on the 24th of December, 1814, which both Governments speedily ratified. The voice of faction 2 almost 1. The United States commissioners were John Quincy Adams, James A. Bayard, Henry Clay, Jonathan Russet, and Allien Gallatin. Those of Great Britain were Admiral Lord Gam bier, Henry Goul bourn, and William Adams. These commissioners are all dead. Mr. Clay, who died in 1S52, was the last survivor. 2. There was a faction of the Federal party, who were unconditional "peace men," and they cast every possible obstacle in the way of the Administration in its prosecution of the war. As the war advanced, the opposition of the Federal party grew more intense. It reached its culmination when delegates, appointed by several New England legislatures, met (December 16, 18141 in convention at Hartford, for the purpose of considering the griev- ances of the people, caused by a state of w;ir, and to devise speedy measures for its termi- nation. This convention, whose sessions were secret, was denounced as treasonable, but patriotism appears to have prevailed In its councils, whatever may have been the des ; gns of some. Its plans for disunion or secession, if any were formed, were rendered abortive 60on after its adjournment, by the proclamation of peace. Note.— The following is a list of the principal land and naval battles fought during the second war for independence : LAND BATTLES. Name. Date. 1812. Van Home's, Aug. 5 Miller"s, Aug. 9. Detroit, An b^ 15. Queenstown, Oct. 13. 1S13. Frenchtown, Jan. 22. York, April 27. Fort Meigs, May 5. Stoney Creek, June 6. Crancy Island, Tune 22. Snckett's Harbor, May 29. Fort Stephenson, Aug. 2. Thames, Oct. 5. Creek War, November. Chrysler's Field, Nov. 11. 1814. Oswego, May 6. Chippewa, July 5. Niagara, July 25. Stohington Aug. 9, 12. Fort Erie, Aug. 15. Bladensburg, Aug. 24. Plat tsburg, Sept. 11. North Point, Sept. 12. Fort McHenry, Sept, 13. Fort Bowyer, Sept. 15. Fort Erie (sortie), Sept. 17. Below New Orleans, Dec. 23. 1815. New Oilcan*, Jan. 211 211 212 212 214 217 215 217 221 218 215 216 219 218 222 223 223 224 223 226 224 226 226 227 223 227 NAVAL BATTLES. Date. 1812. Essex,* ) . 10 Alert, ( Au S- 13 - asssssf-j **» United States, ( n „ . ,,. Macedonian, \ uct.fi*. Constitution, <> - „q Java, \ uec - af - .Feb. 24. 1813. Hornet, ) Peacock, \ Chesapeake, ) , , Shannon, \ ,June l ' Ar ^ U8 ' I \ns> 14 Pelican, \ Aug l4 " Enterprise, ) c „ „, - Boxer! \ Se P l " 5 ' Lake Brie, Sept. 10. 1814. rZl'J M - Ch28 - .April 29. .June 28. .Jan. 15. .Feb. 20. 213 213 213 213 213 219 220 221 221 216 222 228 228 228 224 227, n Peacock, '( Epervier, S Wasp, > Reindeer, $ Y™V>1 Sept.l. Avon, V » Lake Champlain, Sept. 11. Lake Borgne, ... .Dec. 14. 1815. President, ) British squadron, \"' Constitution, ? Cyane and Levant, $ ' ' ' Hornet, I March 23. Peneuin, S * The American vessels are first named, each time. 228 228 228 Questions.— 15. What was the euect of the victory at New Orleans? What can you tell about negotiations for peace? 230 THE .NATION. War with Algiers, Decatur on the Mediterranean sea. ceased, and the Nation, truly independent, started on a glorious career. 1G. The contest with England had but just ended when the United States were compelled to engage in a brief WAR WITH ALGIERS. 17. Believing that the United States navy had been almost annihilated by the British, the insolent Algerines renewed their depredations on American commerce. 1 Decatur 2 was sent, in May, 1815, with a squadron, to humble the pirates. He was successful. On the 17th of June he captured the frigate of the Algerine ad- miral, and, with another vessel, and several hundred prisoners, he 1. Verse 2, page 204. 2. Verse 2, page 204, and verse 14, page 228. Questions.— lf>. Wh:it followed the war with England 1 17. Can you give an account of t'le way in which the Algerinee were bumbled by Decatur * MONROES ADMINISTRATION. 231 Decatur humbles the pirates. Monroe and h.s Administration. sailed into the bay of Algiers. He demanded [June 28] the in- stant release of all American prisoners, full indemnification for all property destroyed, and absolute relinquishment of all claims to tribute from the United States in future. The terrified dey signed a treaty to that effect two days afterward. 18. Decatur obtained similar concessions from the rulers of Tunis and Tripoli ; and accomplished, in that single cruise in the Mediterranean sea in the summer of 1815, what the combined Powers of Europe had not dared to attempt, namely, the acquire- ment of full security to commerce in those waters. 19. The eventful Administration of Mr. Madison now drew to a close. James Monroe, of Virginia, was elected his successor, with Daniel D. Tompkins, of New York, as Vice-President. In December [1816] Indiana was admitted into the Union as a State. Louisiana had already been admitted in 1812. On the 4th of March, 1817, Mr. Madison retired to private life. SECTION VII. Monroe's administration [1817-1825], 1. Mr. Monroe took the oath of office on the 4th of March, 1817. He selected an able cabinet, 1 composed of his Republican friends ; and he entered with vigor upon the duties of his high position at the critical period of our country's history when the na- tion Avas beginning to recover from the excitements and disturb- ances of war. His Administration was not distinguished by such 1. John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State ; William H. Crawford, Secretary of the Treasury ; John C. Calhoun, Secretary of War ; Benjamin Crowninshicld, Secretary of the Navy ; and William Wirt, Attorney-General. He ottered the War Department to the ven- erable Governor Shelby, of Kentucky (verse 7, pag-e 216), who declined it. Calhoun was ap- pointed in December, 1817. Crownirshield, who was in Madison's cabinet, continued in office until the close of November, 1818, when Smith Thompson, of New York, was appointed in his x>lace. Questions.-18. What else did Decatur do? 19. What have you to sny about the close of ^..dison's Administration, the election of his successor, and the admission of new States? — I. What can you say about Monroe and his Administration? 232 THE NATION. Filibusters dispersed. Troubles in tbc South. Jackson again in Florida. ft#* stirring events as marked that of his predecessors, but it has the glory of embracing a period in which five new States were added to the Union, namely, Mississippi, Il- linois, Alabama, Missouri, and Maine. 2. On Amelia island, off the coast of Florida, and at Galveston, Texas, piratical and slave-dealing establish- ments existed. The men engaged in the business pretended to have au- thority from the South American re- publics to attempt the liberation of Florida from Spanish rule. These es- tablishments were broken up by the power of the "United States at the close of 1817. 3. At about the same time the frontier settlements of Georgia were 'i greatly disturbed by the murderous raids of Seminole and Creek Indians, whom British subjects, under the pro- tection of the Spanish authorities in Florida, had excited to hostilities. j'L Troops were sent to suppress them ; and in April, 1818, General Jackson, with Tennessceans, captured the post of St. Mark's in Florida, sent the authorities to Pensacola, and hanged two English subjects who were known to have excited the Indians to war. Jackson then took possession of Pensacola, and its fort, Barrancas, and sent the Spanish civil authorities and troops to Havana. These measures soon led to a treaty, 1 by which Spain ceded to the United MONROE, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. Made by John Quincy Adams for the United States, and Don Onis, the Spanish em- bassador at Washington. Hitherto, the United States had claimed a large portion of Texas, as a part of Louisiana. By this treaty, Texas was retained by the Spaniards. The cession was made as an equivalent for all claims against Spain for injury done to American com- iiicne.lo an amount not exceeding $5,00O,0OO. This treaty was nut finally ratified until Feb- ruary, 1821. General Jackson was appointed the first governor of the Territory of Florida Questions.— '2. What can you tell about breaking up piratical and slave-dealing est: - lisiimentsl 3. What can you tell about disturbances on the frontiers of Georgia? What o.'d Jackson again do in Florida? What was the result? monkoe's administration. 233 A struggle for political power. The Missouri Compromise. States all of the Floridas; and in February, 1821, that country was erected into a Territory. 4. While the Florida question was under consideration, the first serious struggle between the slaveholders and non-slaveholders for supremacy in the Republic commenced in Congress. A por- tion of the great domain of Louisiana l was erected into a Terri- tory in 1812, called Missouri. At the session of 181 8-' 19, appli- cation was made for the admission of Missouri as a State, when a bill was offered which forbade the introduction of slavery into the new State, when admitted. Long and violent debates ensued, and the decision was postponed. Finally, on the 28th of February, 1821, a compromise was agreed to, by Avhich slavery should be allowed in Missouri, and in all territory south of its southern boundary (36° 30' north latitude), and prohibited in all the terri- tory northerly and westerly of these limits. This is known as The Missouri Compromise. Under this compromise, Missouri was admitted on the 21st of August, 1821. 5. Monroe and Tompkins were reelected by an almost unani- mous vote in 1820. The Federalist party, 2 as a political organiza- tion, was almost extinct. The Administration was very popular ; and several events made it memorable. Among the most important was the recognition, by the United States, of the independence of the South American republics, when the President proclaimed that, as a principle, the American continents " are henceforth not to be considered as subject for future colonization by any European Power." This is known as the " Monroe Doctrine." 6. The passage of a law for the relief of soldiers of the Revo- lution ; an agreement with Great Britain for a share in the New- foundland fisheries by American citizens, and the visit of Lafayette as the guest of the nation, 3 are memorable events. Mr. Monroe's 1. Verse 1, page 203. 2. Verse 7, page 198. 3. Lafayette (verse 12, page 154) arrived at New York from France in August, 1824, and during about eleven months he made a tour of over five thousand miles in the United States. lie was received everywhere with great enthusiasm. When he was prepared to return, an American frigate, named Brandywine in compliment to him, was sent by the United States Government to convey him home. It was on the banks of the Brandywine that La- fayette first drew his sword in aid of the Americans. Questions.— 4. What struggle now commenced in Congress? What can you tell ahout the " Missouri Compromise " ? 5. What can you say about another Pres : dential election, and Monroe's Administration ? Can you give an account of the origin of the " Monroe Doctrine ? " 2M THE NATION. John Quincy Adams and his Administration. quiet and prosperous Administration closed on the 4th of March, 1825, when John Quincy Adams, of Massachusetts, one of four candidates for the Presidency, became his successor, with John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina, as Vice-President. SECTION VIII. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS'S ADMINISTRA- TION [1825-1829]. 1. On the 4th of March, 1825, John Quincy Adams took the seat at the national capital which his father had left twenty-five years before. The Senate of the United States was in session, and all but one of his cabinet nominations were confirmed by unan- imous vote. 1 2. Mr. Adams's Administration is remarkable in our history for the prev- alence of quiet at home and friendly relations with foreign Governments. There was a little trouble at the be- ginning, caused by the assumption of State supremacy by the Governor of Georgia, in the matter of the removal The cloud soon passed away." J. Q. ADAMS, AND niS RESIDENCE of Indians from that State. 1. Honrv Clay, Secretary of State; Richard Rush, Secretary of the Treasury, JameB Barbour, Secretary of War; .Samuel L. Southard (continued in office), Secretary of th • Navy, and William Wirt (continued), Attorney-General. There was considerable oppo- sition in the Senate to the confirmation of Henry Clay's nomination. He had been charged with defeating the election of General Jackson, by giving his influence to Mr. Adams, on oondi'ion thai he should be appointed his Secretary of State This, however, seems to have been only a bubble on tiic surface of political strife, and had no truthful substance. In I he Smaic, there were twenty-seven votes in favor, and fourteen against confirming the Domina- tion of Mr. Clay. 2. When Georgia relinquished her claims to portions of the Mississippi Territory the National Government agreed to purchase, for that State, the Indian lands within its borders, Questions. — 6. What memorable events occurred during Monroe's Admimstration ? What can you say about its close, and Monroe's successor?— 1. What can you tell about Adams's inauguration, and his cabinet appointments? 2. For what was his Administration remarkable i What trouble at first appeared? JOHN QUINCY ADAMs's ADMINISTRATION. 235 An impressive coincidence, The American System. Its opponents 3. A remarkable coincidence, that made a profound impres- sion on the public mind throughout the country, occurred on the fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, 1 or the 4th of July, 1826. On that day, and almost at the same hour, Thomas Jefferson 2 died at Monticello, in Virginia, and John Adams, 3 at Quincy, Massachusetts. Their States had been chief leaders in the Revolution. 4 They had each assisted, as members of the same committee, in preparing the great Declaration; 6 had each signed it ; had each been a minister at a foreign court, and had each been Vice-President and President 6 of the United States. 4. It was during the Administration of Mr. Adams that the policy of protecting home manufactures, by imposing a heavy duty upon foreign articles of the same kind, assumed the shape of a settled national policy, and the foundations of the American Sys- tem? as that policy is called, were then laid. It Avas very popular with the man- ufacturers of the North ; but the peo- ple of the cotton-growing States, who found a ready market for the raw ma- terial in England, opposed it. A tariff law passed in 1828 [May 15] was J0IIN c - "«*»»■ made to appear very obnoxious to the Southern planters by " whenever it could be peaceably done upon reasonable terms." The Creeks, who, with their neighbors, the Cherakees, were beginning to practice the arts of civilized life, refused to sell their lands. The Governor of Georgia demanded the immediate fulfillment of the contract. He caused a survey of the lands lo be made, and prepared to distribute them by lottery to the citizens of that State. The National Government interfered in behalf of the Indians, and a civil war was menaced. The difficulties were finally settled, and the Indians were removed gradually to the rich wilderness beyond the Mississippi. 1. Verse 10, page 143. 2. Verse 10, page 143. 3. Verse 19, page 123. 4. Verse 28, page 127, and verse 15, page 134; 5. Vtrse 19, page 123. 6. Verse 1, page 201, and verse 1, page 203. 7. The illiberal commercial policy of Great Britain caused tariff laws to be enacted by Congress as early as 1816, as retaliatory measures. In 1824, imposts were laid on foreign fabrics, with a view to encourage American manufactures. In July, 1827, a national conven- tion was held at Harrisburg, in Pennsylvania, to discuss the subject of protective tar ffs. Only four of the Slave. States sent delegates. The result of the convention was a memor al to Congress, asking an augmentation of dut'es on several articles then manufactured in the United States. The Secretary of the Treasury called attent'on to the subject in his report in December, 1827. Congress took up the matter, and a Tariff Bill became a law in May fol- lowing. Questions.— 3. What remarkable and impressive coincidence occurred in 1826 ? What have you to say of Adams and Jefferson ? 4. Can you give an account of the origin of the American System ? How did it affect the people of the North and South? What did the politicians do '< What teachings were begun ? 236 THE NATION. Disloyal teachings. President Jackson's collision with the Supreme Court. the politicians, especially by John C. Calhoun, who appears to have made use of this measure as an instrument for creating ill feeling in his section against the National Government. Then was commenced that systematic teaching of the doctrine of State supremacy, which created a slight rebellion in South Carolina in 1832, and the great civil war kindled in 18G1. 5. Mr. Adams left the chair of state in the spring of 1829, when his country was at peace with all the world, and the na- tional debt almost extinguished. General Andrew Jackson, of Tennessee, had been elected his successor, after a contest in which almost unexampled malignity of party feeling had been exhibited. John C. Calhoun was reelected Vice-President. SECTION IX. jackson's administration [1829-1837]. 1. Several surviving officers and soldiers of the Revolution surrounded General Jackson, when, on the 4th of March, 1829, he took the oath of office as seventh President of the United States. He constructed a cabinet wholly of his political friends, 1 and with inflexible honesty, a strong will, incorruptible integ- rity, and audacity which amazed his friends and alarmed his op- ponents, he began the administration of public affairs with great vigor. 2. In 1832, the President and the Supreme Court of the United States came into collision. The authorities of Georgia claimed for that State the lands of the Cherokee Indians within its borders. 2 The President favored the claim. The Georgians proceeded 1. Martin Van Buren, Secretary of State ; Samuel D. Ingham, Secretary of the Treasury ; John II. Eato I, Secretary of War ; John Branch, Secretary of the Navy ; and John McPhereon Berrien, Attorney-General. It having been determined to make the Fostnias- ter-Ge era! a cabinet oftirer, William T. Barry was appointed to that station. 2. Note 4, page 5. Qtrstions.— 5. What can you say of Mr. Adams leaving the chair of state? Who WAS elected his successor?— 1. What can you te'l about Jackson's inauguration? How did he construct his cabinet, and begin his administration of public affairs? Jackson's administration. 23? Re-charter of the U. S. Bank. Removal of the public money. to expel them, when the Supreme Court decided against the claims of that State. The authorities of Georgia, favored by Jackson, re- sisted the decision, and great trouble f / was anticipated. The difficulty was settled, and in the course of a few years the Cherokees peacefully mi- grated to lands west of the Missis- \ sippi river.' 3. Another cause of public agita- tion soon appeared. The charter of the United States Bank, 2 in which the public money was deposited, would expire in 183G. In his first annual message [December, 1829] the Presi- dent took ground against a renewal of the charter ; 3 and in 1832, he recom- mended the withdrawal of the public funds ($10,000,000) from its custody, because it was an unsafe depository. Congress refused to authorize the measure, when the President took the responsibility of ordering the Secre- tary of the Treasury to remove them. It was done in October, 1833, and pixxluced a terrible financial and business convulsion. The act was doubtless beneficial to the country. 1. The Cherokees were involved in the difficulties of their Creek neighbors. They were defended against the encroachments of the Georgians during Adams's Administration, but in December, 1829, they were crushed, as a nation, by an act of Congress. The Cherokees were more advanced in the arts of civilized life than the Creeks. They had churches, schools, and a printing-press, and were becoming successful agriculturists. It appeared cruel in the extreme to remove them from their fertile lands and the graves of their lathers, to the wil- derness ; yet it was, doubtless, a proper measure for insuring the prosperity of hoth races. But now, again, the tide of civilization is beating again.-t their borders. Will they not be borne upon its powerful wave, further into the wilderness ? 2. Note 7, page 197. It was rechartered in 1816. 3. Jackson regarded the bank as unauthorized by the National Constitution, and an in- strument of political corruption. JACKSON, AND DIS RESIDENCE. Questions. — 1. What can you say about a collision between the President and the Su- preme Court, in reference to the action of the authorities of Georgia? 3. What other cause of public agitation appeared ? What can you tell about the President and the United States Bank? 238 THE NATION. Black Hawk war. Rebellion in South Carolina. A compromise. BLACK nAWK. 4. At the same period, still more important events agitated the public mind. In the spring of 1832, a portion of the Western Indian tribes, led by Black Hawk, a fiery Sac chief, commenced a warfare upon the frontier set- tlements of Illinois. They were utterly subdued in August, when Black Hawk was made a prisoner.' Then came menaces of civil war from South Caro- lina. The imposition of additional duties upon foreign goods,* by act of Congress, in the spring of 1832, led to a State convention in November, which declared the law unconstitutional, and therefore null and void. 5. The State authorities of South Carolina, assuming the right to annul any act of the National Government, prepared to resist by force of arms the collection of duties in the port of Charleston. Jackson met the crisis promptly by a proclamation [December 10, 1832] 3 in which he warned the fomenters of rebellion that the laws of the United States would be enforced by military power. The Nullifiers, as the re- bellious leaders were called, 4 quailed, and gladly accepted a compromise adroitly pre pared by Henry Clay, for the sake of peace. A bill prepared by him, providing for the gradual reduction of the obnoxious duties, became a law on the 3d of March [1833], and quiet was restored. 5 6. The intense excitement caused, by the removal of the public HENRY CLAY. 1. This brief strife appeared very alarming, at one time. Black Hawk was taken to Washington, New York, and other cities, that he might be impressed with the number and power of the white people, 2. Verse 4, page 235. 3. Jackson had just been reelected Pres : dent, with Martin Van Buren as Viee-rres'dcnt. 4. The principal leaders were John C. Calbonn, -who had recently resieued the office ol Vice President, and was now a member of the United Stales Senate, and Robert 1 . Ilayiic who was also in the Senate. Calhoun asserted the doctrine of State Supremacy, which he ndro'tly called State Rights, with ereat boldness, on the floor of Congress, and so d d Hayno. 5. The conspirators" against the Union were o ly checked in their wiekednes. and at once set about the corruption of the people. Jackson predicted that their next pMext lor rebelbon would not be a tariff, but slavery. That prediction was fulfilled at the beginning of 1801. Questions.— 4. What enn you tell aliont an Indian war? What important event occurred in South Carolina? 5. What can you tell of the rebellious position of the State author ties of South Carolina? What did the President do J How did the Nullified avoid great trouble for themselves 1 Jackson's administration. 239 War with the Seminoles. Osceola and his treachery. funds from the United States Bank had just subsided, when [December, 1835] war with the Seminole Indians in Florida com- menced. A majority of the tribe were dissatisfied with a treaty which a few chiefs had made for their emigration west of the Mis- sissippi river ; and when General Thompson was sent by the National Go rernment to remove them by force, Osceola, a very able chief, was so defiant and dangerous in his opposition, that he was seized and imprisoned. He feigned penitence, and, on promising to fulfill the agreements of the treaty, he was released. 7. Osceola was treacherous. In violation of his promise, and for the healing of his wounded pride, he led a war party in murderous at- tacks on the frontier settlers, and killed General Thompson and five of his friends [December 28, 1835] near Fort King. Almost at the same hour, a hundred men under Major Dade, who had been sent to the relief of Gene- ral Clinch at Fort Drane, in the in- terior of Florida, were attacked by the savages, and all but four were osccola. killed. Two days later, General Clinch and his troops had a bat- tle with the Seminoles on the Withlacoochee ; and on the 29th of February [1836], General Gaines had a battle with the savages near the same place. 8. In May following, the Creeks aided the Seminoles by attack- ing settlers in Western Georgia and Eastern Alabama, and thou- sands of white people fled in terror from their homes. By the judicious management of General Scott, then in command in the South, they were soon subdued, and sent beyond the Mississippi. The Seminoles still held out; and in October, 1836, Governor Call, of Georgia, marched into their country with two thousand men, a part of whom had a severe battle with the Indians at Questions.— 6. What excitement had subsided, and what new sensation was produced? What can you tell about the dissatisfaction of the Seminole Indians '' 7. What have you to say about Osceola? What crime did he commit ? What military movements took place in Florida? 8. What did the Creek Indians do? What did General Scott etf'ect ? What can you tell about an expedition under Governor Call ? 240 THE KATION. Osceola's capture and death. End of the war. Growth of the RepuUlc. Wahoo swamp [November 21, 183G], near the scene of Dade's Orance L. SBiock House SEAT OF SEMINOLE WAR. 9. All winter the war went on ; and in March, 183*7, a number of chiefs came to General Jesup, then in chief command, at Fort Dade, and made a treaty of peace. The treacherous Os- ceola broke it, and in October following he was seized by stratagem, and impris- oned in Fort Moultrie, at Charleston, where he died. Soon after this [De- cember 25, 1837], Colonel Taylor, who had succeeded Jesup in command, gave the Indians a severe chastisement on the borders of Lake Macaco; yet for four years longer the Seminoles, in their swamp fastnesses, called The Everglades, resisted almost nine thousand United States troops. The war was not really closed before 1842. 10. General Jackson's official career ended in the spring of 1837. His Administration of eight years had been marked by great vigor and important events. 1 Two new States had been added to the Union, 2 making the number twenty-six. The origi- nal thirteen States had been doubled. In the autumn of 1836, Martin Van Buren was elected his successor. The people having failed to elect a Vice-president, Richard M. Johnson, of Kentucky, was chosen such by the United States Senate. 1. At the close of Jackson's first term, our foreign relations were very satisfactory, ex- cept with France. That Government had agreed to pay about $5,000,000, by installments, as indemnification for French spoliations on American commerce, under the operations of the several decrees of Napoleon, from 1806 to 1811. The French Government did not promptly comply with the agreement, and the President assumed a hostile tone, which caused France to perform her duty. Similar claims against Portugal 'Were made, and payment obtained. A treaty of reciprocity was made with Russia and Belgium, ard everywhere the American flag commanded the highest respect. The last official act of President Jackson produced much excitement and bitter feelings toward him. A circular was issued from the Treasury Department on the 11th of July, 1836, requiring all collectors of the public revenue to receivo nothing but gold and silver in payment. This was intended to check speculations in the public lands, but it also bore heavily upon every kind of business. The "specie circular" was denounced ; and so loud was the clamor, that toward the close of the session in 1837, both Houses of Congress adopted a partial repeal of it. Jackson refused to sign the bill, and by keeping it in his possession until after the adjournment of Congress, prevented it be- coming a law. This act was denounced as usurpation. 2. Arkansas in June, 1836, and Michigan in January, 1837. Questions.— 9. What further can you tell about the war with the Indians? What can you tell about Osceola's treachery, and his seizure and death ? What more can you relate about the war, and its close ? 10. What have you to say about Jackson's Administration I Who was elected his successor ? van buren's administration. 241 Bad condition of the country. A poor remedy for an evil. Causes of trouble. SECTION X. van buren's administration [1837-1841], 1. Mr. Van Buren 1 commenced his official career with an able cabinet, at a time when the business of the coun- try was on the verge of a terrible convulsion and utter prostration. The distressing effects of the removal of the public funds [October, 1833] from the United States Bank, 2 and the opera- tions of the " specie circular," 3 had disappeared, in a measure ; but as the remedy for the evil was superficial, the cure was only apparent. 2. The chief remedy was in the form of loans of the public money to individuals, by the State banks with whom it had been deposited. The medicine produced a disease worse than the one it was intended to cure. A sudden expansion of paper currency was the result, and excessive impor- tations, inordinate stimulus to all in- dustrial pursuits, and a wild spirit of speculation ensued. Overtrading and Speculation, relying for support upon continued bank loans, were suddenly checked by bank contractions early in 1837; and during March and April of that year, there were mercantile failures in the city of New York alone to the amount of more than a hun- 1. He appointed John Forsyth Secretary of State ; Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the Treasury; Joel R. Poinsett, Secretary of War - , Mahlon Dickinson, Secretary of the Navy ; Amos Kendall, Postmaster-General ; and Benjamin F. Butler, Attorney-General. All of them, except Mr. Poinsett, held their respective offices under President Jackson. 2. Verse 3, page 237. 3. Note 1, page 240. Questions.— 1. What have you to say about the commencement of Van Buren's Adminis- tration ? What evils existed ? 2. What was the chief remedy for the evil? How did it work f 11 VAN BCREN. AND HIS RESIDENCE. 242 THE NATION. Insurrection in Canada. The North-eastern boundary. Harrison elected. drecl millions of dollars. The effects of these failures were felt to the remotest borders of the Union, and credit and confidence were destroyed. 3. The Seminole war, as we have observed, 1 continued during Van Buren's Administration ; and the peaceful relations between the United States and Great Britain were somewhat disturbed by- revolutionary movements in Canada, that commenced in 1837.* The movement, being professedly to secure the independence of Canada, enlisted the warm sympathies of the American people, and banded companies and individuals crossed the border to aid the " patriots." 3 It was this practical sympathy that offended Great Britain. It was suppressed by the prompt action of the Govern- ment of the United States. 4 4. At this time a long-pending dispute concerning the boundary between Maine and New Brunswick had ripened into preparations for a settlement by war. This threatened danger to the friend- ship between the United States and Great Britain was soon re moved by General Scott, who was sent to that frontier by the President, clothed with power to make peace or war. His concil- iatory course produced perfect quiet, and the matter was perma- nently adjusted by treaty, in August, 1842. 5 5. Mr. Van Buren was nominated for reelection in 1840. He was opposed by General William Henry Harrison. 6 The contest was very exciting, and was characterized by demoralizing pro 1. Verse 6, page 238, to verse 9, page 240. 2. Both Upper and Lower Canada exhibited revolutionary movements. The principal leader of the revolt in Upper Canada was William Lyon Mackenzie : t lie prime mover in the Lower Province was Louis Joseph Papineau. The movements of the revolutionary party were well planned, but local jealousies prevented unity of action, and the scheme failed. 3. A party of Americans took possession of Navy island, situated in the Niagara river, about two miles above the falls, and belonging to Canada. They numbered seven hundroel strong, well provisioned, and provided with twenty pieces of canno i. They had a small steamboat named Caroline, to ply between Schlosser, on the American side, and Navy isl- and. O.i a dark night in December, 1837, a party of royalists from the Canada shore crossed over, cut the \ Caroline loose, set heron lire, and she went over the great cataract while in full blaze. 4. In 1838, General Scott was sent to the frontier to preserve order, and was assisted by proclamations by the President, and also by the Governor of New York. Yet secret revolution nry associations, called " Hunters' Lodges," continuedfor two or three years. Against these. President Tyler's proclamation, here referred to, was specially directed. 5. This was negotiated at Washington city by Daniel Webster for the United States, and Lord Ashbuiton (special minister) for Great Britain. Besides settling the boundary ques. tion, this agreement, known as the Ashburton Treaty, provided for the final suppression of the slave trade, and for the giving up of criminal fugitives from justice, in certain cases. 6. Verse 1, page 214. Questions.— 3. What have you to say about the Seminole war, and disturbances in Can. ada? 4. What can you tell about a dispute and its settlement concerning the boundary be- tween the Uri'ted States and a British province? Iiaeeison's and tyler's administrations. 243 Population of the Republic. Dtath of President Harrison. ceedings hitherto unknown in the United States. It resulted in the election of General Harrison, with John Tyler, of Virginia, a? Vice-President. And now, at the close of the first fifty years of the existence of the Republic, the population had increased from three and a half millions, of all colors, to seventeen millions. SECTION XI. Harrison's and tyler's administra- tions [1841-1845]. 1. President Harrison took the oath of office on the 4th of March, 1841 ; and when his cabinet was announced, 1 the peojde felt a conviction that a brighter day was about to dawn upon the country by a change of policy and measures. But he was suddenly re- moved by death [April 4, 1841], pre- cisely one month after Chief-Justice Taney administered the oath to him. 2 2. In accordance with the provis- ions of the Constitution, the Vice- President became the official successor of the deceased President, and on the 6th of April, 1841, the oath of office was administered to HARIUSOX, AND HIS RESIDENCE. JOHN TYLER. 3. The cabinet officers appointed by Harrison remained in place 1. Daniel Webster, Secretary of State ; Thomas Ewing, Secretary of tlie Treasury : .Tolul Bell, Secretary of War ; George E. Badger. Secretary of the Navy ; Francis Granger, Post- master-General ; and J. J. Crittenden, Attorney-General. 2. The only offiVal act of general importance performed by President Harrison during his href Administration, was the issuing of a proclamation on the 17th of Mar^h, calling an extraordinary eess'on of Congress, to commence at the close of the following May, to legis- late upon the subject of finance and revenue. Questions.— 5. What was the result of the Presidential (lection in 1840 ? What have you to say about an increase in the population ?— 1. What can you tdl about the inauguration of Harrison? What did the people anticipate, and how were they disappointed? 2. What CXac^e occurred in consequence of the death of Harrison ? Who succeeded him t 244 THE nation. The successor of HarriBon. His relations to his party. Cabinet changes. until the following September, when all but Mr. Webster, the Secretary of State, resigned. 1 Great public interests would have suffered by Mr. Webster's withdrawal at that time, and he patriotically remained at his post, while his associate minis- ters, dissatisfied with the President, retired. 4. The extraordinary session of Congress called by Harrison, com- menced on the 31st of May, and continued until the 13th of September. The chief object sought to be obtained was the recharter of the United States Bank. 2 The actions of the President in this matter (who vetoed two separate bills passed for the pur- pose) were regarded as violations of pledges to his party and the friends of that institution throughout the country, and, for that reason, his ministers and party deserted him. 5. Mr. Tyler's Administration was distinguished by the return of a South Sea exploring expedition ; s the settlement of the north-eastern boundary question ; 4 and for domestic difficulties in Rhode Island, TYLER, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. TTe then appoint Walter Forward, Secretary of the Treasury : John C. Spencer, Secre- tary of War 5 Abel P. Upshur, Secretary of the Navy; Charles A. Wlckliffe, Poatmaater- General ; and Hugh S. Legare, Attorney-General. 2. Verse 3, p\L'e 237. 3. This expedition, commanded by Lieutenant (now— 1870— rear-admiral) Wilkes, of the United States navy, had been sent several years before, to explore the gnat southern ocean. It coai-tcd along what is supposed to be the Antarctic continent, for seventeen hundred miles in the vicinity of latitude sixty-six degrees south, and between longitude ninety-six and one hundred and fifty-four degrees east. The expedition brought home a great many curiosities Of island human life, and a large number of fine specimens of natural history, all of which are now [1870] in the Smithsonian Institute, In Washington eity. The expedition made a voyage of about ninety thousand miles, equal to almost four times the circumference of the. globe. 4. Verse 4, page 242. Questions.— 3. What can you tell about cabinet officers? What about the patriotism of Mr. Webster? 4. What can you tell about an extra session of Congress ? How did Tyler offend his party, and cause a dissolution of his cabinet? tyler's administration. 245 Difficulties in Rhode Island. Admission of Texas. so serious as to demand the interposition of the National Gov- ernment. The Rhode Island difficulty- grew out of an effort to exchange the charter granted hy Charles the Second, 1 under which the commonwealth had been ruled for one hundred and eighty years, for a new State constitution. Two parties were formed ; a bitter quarrel ensued ; each armed in defense of its po- ition,and the State was on the verge of civil war. The President sent United States troops to prevent bloodshed, 1 x DANIEL WEBSTER. and the excitement was quelled. A Constitution was adopted in 1842, and went into operation in the spring of 1843. 6. The admission of the Republic of Texas, 2 as a State of the Union, was made a subject for warm discussion toward the close of Tyler's Administration. It was opposed, on one hand, because it would increase the political power of slavery ; and was advo- cated, on the other hand, for precisely the same reason. A treaty for annexation, signed on the 12th of April, 1844, was rejected by the Senate, and the subject had an important bearing on the Presi- dential election held in the ensuing autumn. James K. Polk, who was favorable to the annexation, was elected, with George M. Dallas, of Pennsylvania, as Vice-President. 1. In 1S63. See verse 4, page 43. 2. Texas was apart o! the domain of that ancient Mexico conquered by Cortez (verse 9, page 14). In 1824, Mexico became a republic under Generals Victoria and Santa Anna, and wag divided into States united by a Federal Constitution. One of these was Texas, a terri- tory which was originallv claimed by the United States as a part of Louisiana, purchased (verse 1, page 203) from France in 1803, but ceded to Spain in 1820. In 1821-22, a colony from the United States, under Stephen F. Austin, made a settlement on >oth sides of the Colo- rado river ; and the Spanish Government favoring immigration thither, caused a rapid in- crease in the population. There were ten thousand Americans in that province in 1833. Santa Anna became military dictator, and these settlers in Texas, having resolved to seize the province, rebelled. A war ensued ; and on the 2d of March, 1836, a convention de- clared Texas independent. Much bloodshed occurred afterward; but a final battle at San Jacinto, in which the Texans were led by the late General Samuel Houston, afterward a member of the United States Senate from Texas, sustained the position the people had taken, and terminated the strife. Texas remained an independent republic until its admis- sion into our National Un on in 1845. Questions.— 5. What events distinguished Tyler's Administration ? What can you tell about troubles in Rhode Island ? 6. What was done concerning the admission of Texas into the Union? What have you to say concerning the election of James Jv, Polk ? 7, What was the last important official act performed by Tyler f 246 THE NATION. President Polk. The Texas question. Action of Texas. 7. The last important official act of President Tyler was the signing, on the 3d of March, 1845, of a bill for the admission of Florida and Iowa into the Union of States. SECTION XII. folk's administration [1845-1849]. 1. An immense concourse of citi- zens were present when James K. Polk took the oath of office on the 4th of March, 1845. On the folio w- \ ing day he nominated his cabinet offi- cers, 1 and entered with vigor upon the duties of his exalted station. 2. The annexation of Texas and a claim of Great Britain to a large por- tion of the Territory of Oregon, on the Pacific coast, occupied the earliest and most serious attention of the new Administration. The Texas question was held to be first in importance ; Tyler had sent a messenger to the #j^ Government of that republic, with a copy of the bill (or jomt resolutions) for annexation. On the 4th of July [1845] the Texan Government ap- proved the measure, and that republic became a State in December. 3. Mexico, from which Texas h.ul been wrested, 2 had never acknowl- POLK. AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. James Buchanan, Secretary of State , Robert •!. Walker, Secretary of the Treasury - William L. Many, Secretary ol "War , George Bancroft, Secretary of the Navy ; Cave John- ton, Postmaster General ; and John V. Mason, Attorney-General. '1. Note 2, page 245. Questions. - 1. What can you tell about Polk's inauguration, and his cabinet appoint- ment--* 2. What subjects occupied the earl est attcnt.on of the new Administration \ What can you tell about the Texas matter 1 polk's administration. 247 War with Mexico probable. General Taylor in Texas. Two heavy battles, edged the independence of her stolen territory ; and, as had been predicted, its annexation to the United States produced a rupture between that Government and Mexico. 1 Expecting this, Presi- dent Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor a to march into Texas with about fifteen hundred troops, and take post near the Mexican frontier as an " army of occupation." At the same time, a squad : ron, under Commodore Conner, was sent to the Gulf of Mexico for the protection of American interests in that quarter. 4. Taylor first formed a camp at Corpus Christi, near the mouth of the Neuces river, where he remained until the following March [1846], when he advanced to the mouth of the Rio Grande, opposite the Mexican city of Matamoras, and there established a fortified camp. The Mexicans were gathering in force at Mata- moras ; and toward the middle of April their leader sent a per- emptory demand for Taylor to withdraw instantly. Scouting parties were out on both sides ; and on the 26th of April, on the Texas bank of the Rio Grande, the first blood was shed 3 in THE WAR WITH MEXICO. 5. Leaving a small force under Major Brown to hold the posi- tion opposite Matamoras, General Taylor inarched to Point Isabel, where his stores were menaced by a large body of Mexicans. He was recalled by an attack upon Brown, and while making his way back with a little more than two thousand men, he met the Mexican army [May 8, 1846], six thousand strong, under General Arista, at a prairie called Palo Alto. A hot battle of five hours ensued, and Taylor won a victory. On the following day [May 1. There was already a serious misunderstanding between the United States and Mexico, concerning claims of American citizens on the latter Government, for losses of property occasioned by the acts of its public officials. Comnrssioners appointed by the two Govern- ments, to adjust these claims, met in 1840. The Mexican commissioners acknowledged two millions of dollars, and no more. In 1843 the whole amount was acknowledged by Mexico, and the payment was to be made in twenty installments, of $300,000 each. Only three of these installments had been paid in 1845, and the Mexican Government refused to decide whether the remainder should be settled or not. 2. Verse 9, page 240. 3. General Taylor had been informed that a body of Mexican troops were crossing the Rio Grande above his encampment, and he sent Captain Thornton, with sixty dragoons, to reconnoitre. They were surprised and captured. Sixteen Americans were killed, and Cap- tain Thornton escaped by an extraordinary leap of his horse. Questions. — 3. What have you to say concerning the effect of the annexation of Texas? What did President Polk do? 4. Can you give an account of the movements of General Taylor ? What did the Mexicans do ? How was the first blood shed ? 5. What did General Taylor do? Can you give an account of two battles with the Mexicans? 248 THE NATION. Declaration of war. Magnificent campaign planned. Invasion of Mexico. 9], at Resaca de la Palma, a shorter but more terrible conflict ensued, when the Mexicans were again defeated, and their army broken up, with a loss of one thousand men. Taylor lost only one hundred. His loss the day before was fifty-three. 6. When Congress was informed of the shedding of blood, they formally declared [May 11, 1846] that war existed by the act of Mexico. They authorized the President to raise fifty thousand volunteers, and appropriated ten millions of dollars for carrying on the contest. The Secretary of War and General Scott 1 planned a campaign greater in the territorial extent of its pro- posed operations than any recorded in history. A fleet was to sweep around Cape Horn and attack the Pacific coast of Mexico ; an " Army of the West " was to gather at Fort Leavenworth, invade New Mexico, and cooperate with the Pacific fleet ; and an " Army of the Center" was to rendezvous in the heart of Texas, general scott. to mva a e Old Mexico from the north. V. General Taylor crossed the Rio Grande and took possession of Matamoras on the 18th of May. Late in August, the army, led by General Worth, was put in motion for the interior ; and late in September, General Taylor was before Monterey, with six thousand men. It was defended by General Ampudia with nine thousand men. After a siege and assault which lasted about four days, Ampudia surrendered [September 24, 1846] the fort and garrison. This accomplished, Taylor waited for further orders from his Government. 8. General Wool, in the mean time, had been preparing the volunteers, and before the middle of July, twelve thousand of them were mustered into the service. Nine thousand of these were sent to reenforce Taylor, and with the remaining three thou- sand Wool prepared, at Bexar, in Texas, for an invasion of Mex- 1. Then general in-chief of the armies of the United States. Questions.— 6. What did Congress do on hearing of bloodshed? What can you tell about a plan of campaign if 7. C;in you give an account of Taylor's invasion of Mexico, and the capture of Monterey? POLKS ADMINISTRATION. 249 General Wool in Mexico. Taylor's forces weakened. Viotory at Buena Vista. ico. This was accomplished in October, and he won the friendship of the people by his justice and kindness. Taylor, in the mean time, had gone farther into Mexico, without much opposition ; and late in December the divisions of Wool and Worth were united, On the 29th, Taylor, with his combined forces, took and occupied Victoria, the capital of Tamaulipas, with the intention of attacking Tampico, on the coast. 1 9. Just as Taylor was about to commence a vigorous winter campaign, General Scott, who REGION OF TAYLOR S OPERATIONS. had started for Mexico, ordered him, by a messenger, to send a large portion of his best officers and troops to assist in the siege of Vera Cruz. 2 By this order, which he promptly obeyed, Taylor was left with only about five thousand men, to act on the defensive against twenty thousand Mexicans, then gathering at San Luis Potosi, under General Santa Anna. These advanced upon the Americans early in February [1847], and at Buena Vista, 3 eleven miles from Saltillo, a heavy battle was fought on the 23d. Taylor, ably assisted by Wool, repulsed the enemy, and drove them in confusion from the field. They fled during the night, leaving their dead and wounded behind them. 4 10. The Americans were now in possession of all the northern provinces of Mexico. 5 General Taylor was left in a position of 1. Commodore Conner, who commanded the "Home Squadron" in the Gulf, captured Tampico. Tobasco and Tnspan were captured by Commodore Perry, in October following. 2. The recesBity for this order was as painful to General Scott as it was mortifying to General Taylor. Before leaving Washington, Scott wrote a long private letter to General Taylor, apprising him of this necessity, expressing his sincere regrets, and speaking in high- est praise of the victories already achieved in Mexico. 3. Pleasant View. This was the name of a plantation at Aneostura. 4. The Americans lost two hundred and sixty-seven killed, four hundred and fifty-six wounded, and twenty-three missing. The Mexicans lost almost two thousand. They left five hundred of their comrades dead o'i the field. Among the Americans slain was Lieuten- ant-Colonel Clay, son of t lie distinguished Henry Clay, of Kentucky. Verse 5. page 238. 5. On the day of the battle at Buena Vista, General Minon, with eight hundred cavalry, was driven from Saltillo by Captain Webster and a small party of Americans. On the 26t"h of February, Colonels Morgan and Irvin defeated a party at Agua Frio ; and on the 7th of March, Major Giddings was victorious at Ceralvo. Questions. — 8. What was General Wool doing with the vo'nnteers? What can you tell of his invasion of Mexico, and junction with Taylor? What did Taylor then do ? 9. What can you tell of General Scott's order to GeneralTaylor ? How did it affect Taylor ? WTiat ean you tell of the Mexican force, and the battle at Buena Vista ? 11* 250 THE WATION. The conquest of California. Exploits of Doniphan in Mexico. inactivity, and in September following he assigned the command of his army to Wool, and returned to the United States. In the mean time, the " Army of the "West " had been ac- tive, under General Kearny. He took formal possession of New Mexico, at Santa Fe, its capital, on the 18th of Au- gust, 1846, and then pushed on toward California. He was soon met by intel- ligence that the conquest of that coun- try had been accomplished by Colonel Fremont. 1 He sent back the main body of his troops to Santa Fe, and with one hundred men went for- ward, and shared with Stockton and Fremont the honor of the complete conquest and pacification of California. On the 18th of February, 1847, he proclaimed its annexation to the United States. 11. General Kearny sent Colonel Doniphan, with one thousand Missouri volunteers, to chastise the Navajo Indians. He forced them to make a treaty of peace on the 22d of November, 1846, and then proceeded to join General Wool. 3 At Sacramento, near Chihuahua, the capital of the State of that name, he fought and COLONEL VRE.MONT. 1. Lieutenant-Colonel Fremont was sent with a party of about sixty men, to explore por- tions of New Mexico and California. When lie arrived in the vicinity of Monterey, on the Pacific coast, he was opposed by a Mexican force under Genera] Castro. Fremont aroused all the American settlers in the vicinity of San Francisco bay, captured a Mexican post and garrison, and nine cannon and two hundred and fifty muskets, at Sonoma Pass r June 15, 1846], and then advanced to Sonoma, and defeated Castro and his troops. The Mexican authorities were effectually driven out of that, region of the country ; an.! on the 5th of July, the American Californians declared themselves independent, and placed Fremont at the head of their affairs. Two days afterward, Commodore Bloat, then in command of the squadron in tin' Pacific, bombarded and captured Monterey; ai.d on the 9th, Commodore Montgomery took possession of San Francisco. Commodore Stockton arrived on the 15th, and, w>th Colonel Fremont, took possession of the city of l.os Angelas on the 17lh of Au- gust. When California became a State, Fremont was elected [1851] its first United States senator, and in 1856. he was the candidate of the " Republican " party for the office of Presi- dent of the United States. He served as major-general of volunteers in the earlier part of the Great Civil War. See page 265. 2. At Braceto, In the valley of the Rio del Norte, he met a large Mexican force on t 1 e 22d of December, under General Ponce de Leon, who sent a black flag to Doniphan, with the message : " We will neither ask nor give quarter." The Mexicans then advanced and tired three rounds. The Missourians fell upon tin ir faces, and t' e enemy, supposing them to he all s'ain, rushed forward for plunder. The Americans suddenly arose, and delivering a deadly fire from their rifles', killed two hundred Mexicans, and dispersed the remainder in k'reat confusion. Questions.— 10. What did the Americans now possess ? What was Taylor's position, and what did he do? What can you tell about the " Army of the West" ? Can you give an ac- count of the conquest of New Mexico and California J folk's aumlnistkation. 251 Capture of Vera Cruz, Battle at the Oerro Gordo. March into the interior. defeated four thousand Mexicans [February 28, 1847], and placed the American flag on the citadel of the capital [March 2], in the midst of forty thousand inhabitants. After a perilous march of almost five thousand miles, he joined General Wool at Saltillo [March 22]. The conquest of Northern Mexico and California was now complete, and General Scott was marching on the Mexi- can capital. Let us now consider GENERAL SCOTT'S INVASION OF MEXICO. INTRENCHMEXTS AT VERA CROZ. 12. In the autumn of 1846, the Mexican Government having refused terms of peace proposed by the United States, it was resolved to take possession of that country. An army under Gene- ral Scott and a squadron under Commodore Conner appeared be- fore Vera Cruz on the 9th of March, and after a siege of eight- een days the city and the neigh- boring castle of San Juan de Ulloa were surrendered, with five thousand men and five hun- dred cannon. Scott lost in the encounters eighty men, and the Mexicans more than two thousand. 13. Scott immediately marched toward the city of Mexico, with little more than eight thousand men. At the Cerro Gordo, a difficult mountain pass at the foot of the Eastern Cordilleras, he found Santa Anna, with twelve thousand men, strongly intrenched. Scott boldly attacked him ; killed or wounded more than a thou- sand Mexicans ; took three thousand prisoners ; dispersed the re- mainder, and made Santa Anna flee on a mule. Scott's loss was a little more than four hundred. 14. Onward the Americans marched. On the 22d of April [1847] they had possession of Perote, the strongest fortress in Questions.— 11. What can you tell about an expedition under Co'onel Doniphan against the Indians? What can you tell of his doings in Mexico? 12. What arrangements were made for a new invasion of Mexico? What can you tell about an attack upon and capture of Vera Cruz? 13. What can you tell about Scott's advance into Mexico ? What was done at Sierra Gordo ? 252 THE NATION. Scott's array in Mexico. Approach to the capital. Severe battles. Mexico. It was on the summit of the Eastern Cordilleras. On the loth of May they entered the city of Puebla, in the presence of its eighty thousand inhabitants ; and there they rested until August, after a series of unparalleled victories. Within two months, an army averaging only about ten thousand men had taken some of the strongest fortresses on the continent, made ten thousand prisoners, and captured seven hundred pieces of artil- lery, ten thousand stand of arms, and thirty thousand shells and cannon-balls. Yet greater conquests awaited them. 15. At Puebla, Scott was reenforced, and with ten thousand men resumed his march toward the capital, through a magnificent region of country, and on ROUTE OF U. S. ARMY FROM VERA CRUZ TO MEXICO. the 10th of August they looked down from the lofty Cordilleras upon the extensive valley of Mex- ico. On the following day General Twiggs led the advance of the Americans cautiously toward the ancient capital, between which and the invaders Averevery strong fortifications, to be defended by at least thirty thousand men, under the gen- eral command of Santa Anna. 16. An attack upon the defenses of Mexico was commenced on the morning of the 20th of August, 1847. The Mexi- can fortress of San Antonio and the camp of Contreras were first taken, with many prisoners and cannon. Churu- busco was then assailed. Santa Anna then advanced, and the Avhole region became a battle-field. The Americans Avere victo- rious, and Santa Anna and his shattered army fled to the capital. Such was the Avork of one day. Full four thousand %•/--■<* ■ ••FICLDS vt OPERATIONS NEAR MEXICO. Questions.— 14. Give an account of Hie triumphant march of the Americans. 15. What can you toll of the Americans at Puebla, and their march toward the capital? 16. Give an account of the attack upon the defenses of Mexico, and the result. POLK 8 ADMINISTRATION. 253 Mexico an easy prey. Santa Anna's treachery. Entrance Into the capital. SANTA ANNA. Mexicans were killed or wounded, and three thousand were made prisoners. A part of the trophies were thirty-seven cannon. 17. Scott might now have entered the city in triumph. He preferred to again offer the Mexicans peace. Santa Anna asked an armistice until terms could be arranged. It was granted; and, while the American commissioner was detain- ed in the city by negotiations, that treach- erous leader was strengthening its defenses. Disgusted by his bad conduct, Scott declared the armistice at an end on the 7th of Septem- ber, and on the following morning he pro- ceeded to take the city by storm. The strong position of Molinos del Rey [September 8] and the lofty fortified hill of Chapultepec [September 13] were compelled to yield to the Americans, and, on the 14th of Septem- ber, Scott entered the Mexican capital as conqueror. 1 18. Order was soon restored in the capital. Santa Anna and his army and the officers of Government had fled, and the treacherous chief was soon stripped of power, and became a fugi- tive. 2 A treaty of peace was concluded between the two Govern- ments at Guadalupe Hidalgo, on the 2d of February, 1848, 3 and 1. A deputation of citizens came out and begged Scott to spare the town and treat for peace. He would not listen, but ordered Generals Quitman and Worth to go forward and place the American flag upon the national palace. Scott rode on, followed by the army, and at ten o'clock formal possession was taken of the Mexican capital. 2. He appeared before Puebla on the 22d of September, where Colonel Childs had be»n besiesred since the 13th. The approach of General Lane frightened him away ; and in a bat- tle with the troops of that leader at Huamantla, Santa Anna was defeated. On the 18th of October he was again defeated at Atlixco, and there his troops deserted him, and he be- came a fugitive, seeking safety by flight to the shores of the Gulf. 3. It stipulated the evacuation of Mexico by the American army, within three months ; the payment of $3,000,000 in hand, and $12,000,000 in four annual installments by the United States to Mexico, for the territory acquired by conquest ; and, in addition, to assume debts due to certain citizens of the United States to the amount of $3,500,000. It also fixed bound- aries, etc. During the same month when that treaty was signed, a man employed by Cap- tain Slitter, who owned a mill twenty-five mles up the American fork of the Sacramento river, discovered gold. It was very soon found in other localities, and during the summer rumors of the fact reached the Un'ted States. These rumors assumed tangible form in the President's message in December, 1S48 ; and at the beginning of 1849, thousands were on their way to the land of gold. Around Cape Horn, across the isthmus of Panama, and over the great central plains of the continent, men went by hundreds ; and far and wide in Cali- fornia the precious metal was found. From Europe and South America hundreds flocked thither ; and the Chinese came also by scores from Asia, to dig gold. The dreams of the early Spanish voyagers, and those of the English who sought gold ou the coasts of Labrador Questions.— 17. What m : ght Scott have done, and what did he do? What can you tell about the treachery of Santa Anna? What did Scott do? What can you tell of the events that led to the final conquest of Mexico? 18. What can you tell about affairs in the Mexican capital ? What can you tell about Santa Anna? 254 THE NATION. Peace. General Taylor elected President of the United 8tates. New Mexico and California became Territories of the United States. President Polk proclaimed peace on the 4th of July fol- lowing.' 19. During the last year of Polk's Administration, Wisconsin was admitted [May 29, 1848] as a State of the Union. At about the same time, General Taylor, whose deeds in Mexico made him very popular, was nominated for the office of President of the United States ; and in the autumn he was elected by a large majority over his opponent, General Cass, with Millard Fillmore, of New York, as Vice-President. SECTION XIII. taylor's administration [1849-1850], 1. The 4th of March, 1849, fell on the Sabbath, and President Taylor did not take the oath of office until the 5th. He nomi- nated his cabinet 2 on the following day, and, with pure and honest purposes, he entered upon the duties of his high station. and up the rivers of the middle of the continent, have been more than realized, and hun- dreds continue to lto thither, and to other territories, in which the gold seems inexhaustible. New gold regions are discovered every year. 1. The following are the names and dates of the principal battles in the war with Mex- ico ■ Name. Date. Page 1846. Palo Alio May 8. 247 Resacadela Palmn, May 9. 248 Monterey Sept." 24. 248 Bracito, Dec. 25. 250, n. 1847. Buena Vista Feb. 23. 249 Name. Date. Page. Sacramento Feb. 28. 250 Vera Cruz, March 27. 251 Cerro (jordo, April 18. 251 sssa*j *<*»■ 252 Molinosdel Key, Sept. 8. 253 Chapnltepec, Sept. 13. 253 Iluamantla, Oct. y. 253, n. 2. lie appointed John M.Clayton Secretary of State; Wi'liam M. Meredith, Secretary of the Treasury ; Georere W. Crawford, Secretary of War; William B. Preston, Secretary of the Navy; Thomas E wing, Secretary of the Intcrior(a new office recently established, in which some of the dnties before performed by the State and Treasury Departments are Attended to), Jacob Collamer, Postmaster-General; and Reverdy Johnson, Attorney- General. QUESTIONS.— 18. What can you tell about the treaty of peace ? 19. What State was now admitted to the Union? What can you say about Polk's successor ?— 1. What can you tell shout Taylor's inauguration, and his cabinet i TAYLOK S ADMINISTKATlOtf . 255 Slavery agitation. Admission of California. Compromise Act. 2. The agitation of the slavery- question was now revived by the ac- tion of the inhabitants of California, who, in convention at San Francisco, had formed a State Constitution, by which slavery should be excluded from / the territory forever. When, in Feb- ruary, 1850, her representatives ' asked Congress to admit her as a State of the Union, the friends of the Slave Power in that body violently opposed her ad- mission as a Free State, and openly de- clared that such an act would be a sufficient reason for the Slave States to P withdraw from the Union. 3. The threats of the Slave Power so intimidated the real friends of the Union that they became ready to yield. Henry Clay offered a plan of compromise 2 [January 25, 1850] in the United States Senate. A com- mittee of thirteen (of which Mr. Clay was chairman) was appointed to con- sider the various propositions, and, on the 8th of May, Clay introduced a compromise bill. The subject was discussed about four months, when, on the 9th of September, the famous Compromise Act of 1850 became law. 3 During the TAYLOR, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. Under the new Constitution, John C. Fremont and William M. 6 win were elected senators, and Edward Gilbert and G. H. Wright were elected members of the House of Representatives. The senators carried the new Constitution with them to Washington. 2. It was Mr. Clay who proposed the Missouri Compromise, and the compromise with Calhoun and his fellow conspirators in 1833. See note 4, page 238. 3. Because several measures, distinct in their objects, were embodied in the act, it is sometimes known as the " Omnibus Bill." The most important stipulations of the act were, 1st. That California should be admitted into the Dn on as a State, with its anti-slavery Con- stitution, and its territorial extent from Oregon to the Mexican possessions ; 2d. That tin- vast country east of California, containing the Mormon settlements near the Great Salt Lake, should be erected into a Territory, called Utah, without mention of slavery ; 3d. That New Mexico should be erected into a Territory, within satisfactory boundaries, and without any stipulatio' s respecting slavery, and that ten millions of dollars should be paid to Texas from the National treasury in purchase of her claims ; 4th. That the slave-trade in the Dis- Questions.— 2. How was slavery agitation revived? What occurred in Conerress in rela- tion to California? 3. What were the effects of the threats of the Slave Tower? What can you tell of another compromise ? What sad event occurred ? 256 THE NATION. Death of President Taylor. Fillmore his successor. His Administration. discussions of tins matter, President Taylor sickened and died [July 9, 1850], and Mr. Fillmore became, by the operation of the Constitution, 1 President of the United States. fillmoee's administration [185 0-1 85 3]. 4. Mr. Fillmore took the oath of office on the 10th of July, 1850. President Taylor's cabinet ministers remained in place until the 15th, when new heads of departments 3 were appointed. 3 The most impor- tant measures of his Administration Avere the Compromise Act ; 4 the set- tlement of disputes with Great Brit- ain concerning the fisheries on the coast of British America, 5 and the sending of an expedition to open di- plomatic and commercial relations with Japan. 5. The country was agitated, at times, from the spring of 1850 until near the close of President Buchan- an's Administration in 1861, by the fitting out of expeditions in the Uni- ted States with the professed object FILLMORE, AND HIS RESIDENCE. trict of Columbia should bo abolished ; 5th. A law providing for tho arrest, in the Northern in- Free States, and return to their masters, of all slaves who Btaould escape from bondage. The last measure of the Compromise Act produced much dissatisfaction at the North ; and the execution, evasion, and violation of the law, ill several instances, led to sirious disturb- ances and much bitter sectional feeling. 1. Verse 2. page 243. 2. Verse 2, pace 196. :;. Daniel Webster, Secretary of State; Thomas Corwin, Secretary of the Treasury; ( Jhnrles M. Conrad, Secretary of War , Alexander II. II. Stuart, Secretary of the Interior ; William A. Graham, Secretary of the Navy; John J. Crittenden, Attorney-General ; Na- than k. Hall, Postmaster-General. 4. Verse ">, page 255. ft. This stipulation was so corstrued as to allow American fishermen to catch cod within the la rite bays, where they could easily carry on their avocation at a greater d'stance than three miles from any land. Snch had been the common practice, without interference, until the assumption of exclusive light to these bays was promulgated by the British. QUESTIOSS.— 4. Who was Taylor's successor? What did Fillmore do? What were the most important measures of his Administration I pierce's administration. 25^ Filibustering. Repose and prosperity looked for. A delusion. of liberating Cuba from the rule of Old Spain,' establishing more liberal governments in Central America, et cetera. These filibustering movements, as they were termed, formed a practical part of the scheme, then fast ripening, for the destruction of our Union and the establishment of a confederacy of Slave States. At one time they threatened to involve our country in serious difficulties. 8 6. During the Administrations of Taylor and Fillmore, one State (California) was added to the Union, and four new Territories were organized, namely, Minnesota, New Mexico, Utah, 3 and Washing- ton. There was a delusive belief that the " slavery agitation " had been laid at rest forever by the Compromise Act of 1850 ; 4 and a pe- riod of uncommon prosperity and repose for the nation was looked for. The election of President of the United States in the autumn of 1852 was a quiet one, and resulted in the choice of Franklin Pierce, of New Hampshire, with William R. King, of Alabama, as Vice-President, SECTION XIV. pierce's administration [1853-1857]. 1. The 4th of March, 1853, when Franklin Pierce took the oath of office, was a cheerless, stormy day. The oath was admin- 1. The leader of the earlier expedition was General Lopez, a Cuban, who sailed from New Orleans in April, 1S50. He landed at Cardenas, Cuba, with the expectation of being joined by native Cubans. He was disappointed, and returned to the United States. In Auguot, 1851, he again sailed from New Orleans, with about four hundred and eighty fol- lowers, and landed on the northern coast of Cuba. The leader and many of his followers were captured and executed. 2. The idea became prevalent in Cuba and in Europe that it had become the policy of the United States Government to ultimately acquire absolute possession of that island, and thus control the commerce of the gulf of Mexico (the door to California) and the trade of the West India islands. To prevent this, the cabinets of France and England asked the Govern- ment of the United States to enter with them into a treaty which should secure Cuba to Spain. France and England were plainly told by Mr. Everett, the Secretary of State, that the subject was not within the scope of their interference. This put an end to the matter. 3. The greater portion of the inhabitants of Utah are of the religious sect called Mor- mons, who, after suffering much in Missouri and Illinois from their opposers, penetrated the deep wilderness [1848] in the interior of our continent, and near the Great Salt Lsike, in the midst of the savage Utah tribes, they have built a large city, made extensive plantations, and founded an empire almost as large, in territorial extent, as that of Alexander the Great. 4. Verse 3, page 255. Questions.— 5. What have you to say about " fillibustering" operations? What were they a part of? 6. What additions were made to the Union ? What did the people believe and look for ? What can you say about the Presidential election in 1852 ? 258 THE NATION. President Pierce. Explorations by land and sea. Slavery agitation aroused. istered by Chief- Justice Taney, and the cabinet appointments were confirmed by the Senate three clays afterward. 1 2. Pierce's Administration is dis- tinguished for the revival of the "slavery agitation" in all its inten- sity ; and by explorations on land and sea, carried on by the National Gov- ernment, and having reference to the future commerce of the Republic with Asia and the islands of the Pacific ocean. The future tracks of steamships across the ocean from our "Western ports were thoroughly trav- ersed. The land explorations were for the purpose of deciding upon the best route for the railway about to be constructed between the valley of the Mississippi and the Pacific ocean. 3. Good feeling marked the open- ing of Congress in December, 1853, but just as preparations were completed for carrying out measures for the na- tional welfare, a bill was introduced in the Senate for the organization of a vast region in the interior of the con- tinent into two Territories, to be called, respectively, Nebraska and Kansas. The bill contained a provision concerning slavery, which would annul the Missouri Compromise ; * and the measure was regarded as a blow aimed by the Slave Power against univer- sal freedom. It was vehemently opposed as such. The measure PIERCE, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. William L. Marcy, Secretary of State : .T.imos Guthrie, Secretary of the Treasury ; Pobert McClelland, Secretary of the Interior; Jefferson Davis, Secretary of War; James « !. Dobbin, Secretary of the Navy ; .lames Campbell, rostmaster-General , Caleb duelling, Attorney-General. Mr. Marcy ami Mr. Dobbin left office at the close of Pierce's Administra- tion, :mci both died tin- ensuing summer. 2. Verse 4, page 233. Questions.-!. What can you toll about Pierce's inauguration and cabinet appointments? 2. For what is his Administration distinguished? What imnortant work waa done? 8. What have you to say about the opening of Congress in 1853? What measure disturbed their har- mony, and revived slavery agitation ? pierce's administration. 259 OCEAN STEAMSnil'. Civil war in Kansas. Osteud Manifesto. Atlantic cable. was carried through, and the Missouri Compromise was virtually repealed. 4. Two years later, when the Territory of Kansas was organ- ized, the friends of freedom and slavery there, contended for the mastery. Civil war ensued, bnt when the Presidential election came on in 1856, it quieted the storm for the time. Meanwhile, the " fillibustering " movements led to a conference of American ministers in Europe, at Ostend, who issued a paper known as the Ostend Manifesto, which was highly discreditable to the American character, for it was a plea for the abominable doctrine that " might makes right." l 5. Little else that is remarkable distinguished the Administra- tion of Pierce, excepting the effort to connect America and Europe by telegraphic wires, beneath the waters of the Atlantic ocean, made under the auspices of the Governments of the United States and Great Britain. The effort was successful, when the bond was immediately broken. 2 That was in 1858, when James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania, was President, having been elected in the autumn of 1856, over two rival candidates. 3 John C. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, was elected Vice-President. 1. The ministers were Messrs. Buchanan, in England, Mason, in France, and Soule in S;ain. Ostend is in Belgium. Their conference was professedly to consider the serious misunderstanding between the United States and Spain, on account of the attempts of ad- venturers to seize Cuba. In that " manifesto" they said : " If Spain, actuated by stubborn pride and a false sense of honor, should refuse to sell Cuba to the United States, then, by every law, human and divine, we [United States] shall be justified in wresting it from Spain, if ire possess the power .' " 2. The insulated cable, composed of many wires, was stretched from Trinity bay, New- foundland, to Valentia bay in Ireland, a distance of 1,000 miles. It was successfully laid be- tween these places on the 5th of August, 185S, and on the lfilh a message was set t from the Queen of England to the President of the United States, and a reply returned by him. Only one more message passed perfectly, when the cable was severed. 3. .Tames Buchanan was nominated by the " Democratic " party, John C. Fremont by the " Republican" party, and Millard Fillmore by the "Know Nothing" or "American" part)-. Questions. — 4. What occurred in Kansas? What have you to say about Civil War and the presidential election? W T hat about the "Ostend Manifesto"? 5. What else distin- guished the Administration of Pierce ? What have you to say about the " Atlantic Cable " ? 260 THE NATION. The Dred Scott decision. lavery agitation aroused. SECTION XV. Buchanan's administration [1857-1861]. 1. James Buchanan took the oath of office on the 4th of March, 1857, and two days afterward the Senate confirmed his nominations for cabi- net officers. 1 The "slavery agitation" was aroused at the beginning of his Administration by the decision of the Chief-Justice of the United States [March 6, 1857], that a freed negro slave, or the descendant of a slave, could not become a citizen of the Re- public — a decision which affected al- most every man of African descent in the United States. 2 2. This decision provoked much feeling and wide discussion. The President and the " Democratic " party agreed with the Chief-Justice (Taney); but in 1862, the National Government, in accordance with the decision of the Attorney-General made a practical reversal of this judgment, by granting a passport to a negro to travel abroad, in which he was called " a citize?iof the United States." The agitation caused by Judge Taney's decision 1. Lewis Cass, Secretary of State; Unwell Cobb, Secretary of tlie Treasury; John B. Floyd, Secretary of War ; Isaac Toucey, Secretary of tiro Navy ; Jacob Thompson, Secre- tary nt' the Interior ; Aaron V. Brown, Postmaster-General ; and Jeremiah S. Black, Attor ney-General. 2. This decision was in the case of Dred Scott, who had been a slave in Missouri, but claimed to be a freeman on account of an involuntary residence in a Free State. (The Chief- Justice asserted that the fathers did not include the negro in the Declaration of Ii depend- ence, and that they were regarded " as so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect." BUCHANAN, AND HIS RESIDENCE. Questions. — 1. What can you tell about Buchanan's inauguration and cabinet appoint- ments? What aroused the Blavery agitation ? 2. What followed the decision of the Chief- Justice ? How was that decision reversed ? Buchanan's administeation. 261 Great public uneasiness. John Brown's raid, and its results. continued, in a violent form, throughout Buchanan's Administra- tion. 3. Civil war again became imminent in Kansas. The Presi- dent sided with the Slave Power, but the opponents of that Power, aided by Congress, succeeded in bringing Kansas into the Union as a Free State [January 29, 1861], and the controversy ceased. 1 Not so the " slavery agitation." That increased in intensity. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 s was offensive to a large majority of the people of the Free States ; and as it was evident that measures were perfecting to nationalize the system of slavery, it was op- posed by legislative enactments, called " Personal Liberty Bills," 3 and otherwise, most vehemently. 4. The excitement became intense in both sections of the Union ; and the Slave Power was naturally maddened, in the autumn of 1859, by a foolish attempt of an enthusiast, named John Brown, to liberate the slaves of Virginia. He and a few followers seized the arsenal at Harper's Ferry, in the autumn of 1859 [Oc- tober 16], but were overpowered by National and State troops. Brown was tried [October 29] and hung [December 2] by the authorities of Virginia. The politicians of the Slave States de- clared it to be the act of the people of the Free States, 4 and the alarm and exasperation in the former became intense. It con- tinued to increase in volume until the next year [1860], when, in the autumn, Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, an opponent of the system of slavery, was elected President of the United States, with Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, as Vice-President. Buchanan retired to private life on the 4th of March, 1861. B 1. Two other States were admitted to the Union during Buchanan's Administration, namely Minnesota, in 385S, and Oregon, in 1859. The admission of Kansas was followed by the organization of the Territories of Nevada, Colorado, and Dakotah. 2. Note 3, page 255. 3. None of these assumed a position of a violation of the Fugitive Slave Act, which all were bound to obey so long as it was law ; hut they were intended as guardians of the nat- ural rights of the fuaritive, an 1 to nrevent the kid lapping of free ne2roe3. 4. A committee of the United States Senate, with Mr. Mason (a secessionist in 1S60) at its head, was appointed to investigate the matter, when it was proven that John Brown had no eon federates or confidants in the Free States, other than those who were his immediate followers, and these did not exceed twenty in number. 5. During the year 1S60, the crown prince of Great Britain, and embassadors from the empire of Japan, visited the United States. Such events never occurred before. Questions.— 3. What have you to say about Kansas? What about slavery agitation? 4. What can you tell about excitements on the subject of slavery ? What about John Brown's attempt to release the Virginia slaves, and its result ? What can you tell about the Presidential election in 1860? 262 THE NATION. President Lincoln. Rebellious movements in Slave Slates. SECTION XVI. Lincoln's administration [1861-1865]. 1. The oath of office was admin* istered to Mr. Lincoln by Chief! Justice Taney on the 4th of March, 1861. He had been elected over three rival candidates ' by a consti- tutional majority, in the regular way. The political leaders of the great proprietors or small ruling class in the Slave States, professing to regard Mr. Lincoln as the repre- sentative of the Abolitionists, who, y for years, they alleged, had been trying to deprive them of their rights and property, and by whom these "fanatics," as they called them, now expected to accomplish the destruction of slavery, would not accept him. Making his elec- tion and its alleged menaces a pre- text," they at once adopted measures for seizing or destroying the Gov- ernment, pleading the "right of revolution," and the law of self- preservation, in justification of their acts. 2. South Carolinians (as in 1832) 'took the lead in < pen action. The politicians of that State, in convention at Charleston, declared LINCOLN, AND HIS RESIDENCE. 1. The wedge of slavery split the "• Democratic" party at their convent' on in Charleston, In April, 1800. One wing of the party nominated John C. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, and the other wing chose Stephen A. Douglas, of Illinois. A new organization, calling them- selves the Constitutional Union Party a nated John Bell, of Tennessee. 2. President Jackson, as we have seen (note 6, page 288), predicted that the politicians of the cotton-producing States would make the BUbject of slavery their next pretext tor en. deavoring to destroy the Union. 3. Verse 5, page -2u8. Questions— 1. What have yon to say about Lincoln's election? How did the ruling class in the Slave Stales act? Lincoln's administration. 263 8o-called " secession of States" from the Union. A confederacy of politicians. JEFFERSON DAVIS. [December 20, 1S60] that commonwealth to be withdrawn from the Union forever. Similar action immediately followed in six other of the more southern Slave States ; ' and, on the 4th of February, 1861, a " Southern Confederacy " was formed at Montgomery, Alabama, by delegates from six States, with the title of Confederate States of America. 2 Five days afterward, the Montgomery " Congress " chose Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi, President of the "Con- federation." 3 It was wholly the act of politicians^ for no ordinance of secession, nor the question of a Confederacy, was ever submitted to the judgment or decision of the people." 4 The secessionists seized 1. Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. 2. This name does not express the truth. No States, as Slides, had withdrawn from tli3 Union, for the people, who compose a State in our Republic, had never been asked to sanction, such change. Only certain persons in certain States were in open opposition to the national authority. They usurped the power and suspended the Constitutions or several of the States ; but the confederation formed at Montgomeiy was only a band of confederate i nlili; i.ms, not of States. With thisqualification,^he name of Confederate may properly be given to the insurgents, and in the sense of that qualification it is used in the text. Seces- sion ordinance were passed in conventions in eleven Slave States in the following order : S»ith Carolina, December 20, 1860 ; Mississippi, January 9, 1861 ; Florida, January 10 ; Ala- bama, January 11; Georgia, January 19 : Louisiana, January 26; Texas, February 1 ; Vir- ginia, April 17; Arkansas, May 6 ; North Carolina, May 20 ; Tennessee, June 8. 3. The " Congress" at Montgomery adopted a provisional constitution. This was super- seded a month later hy a "permanent" one, and, by the votes of electors chosen in eleven States, Davis was elected President for six years, from the 22d of February, 1862. 4. The case of Arkansas is an example of the method of secession. The secessionists, by means of a secret organization known as Knights of iht Golden Circle, procured tbe election of a disloyal legislature and governor, who called a convention to vote on secession. That con- vention voted for Union by a majority of over two-thirds. The foiled secessionists, by false promises, gained the consent of the Unionists to an adjournment subject to the call of the president, who pretended to be a loyal man, but was really not so. It was agreed to refer the question back to the people ; also that the convention should not reassemble before the vote should be taken, in August. The president, in violation of that pledge, called the con- vention in May, soon after Fort Sumter was taken. The hal! in which the members met was filled by an excited crowd. When the roll had been called, a member offered an ordi- nance of secession, and moved that the " yeas" and " nays" on the question should be taken without debate. The president untruly declared the motion carried ; and when the vote on the ordinance was taken, and it was found that there was a majority against it, he arose, and in the midst of cheers and threats of the mob, ureed the Unionists to change their votes tc "aye" immediately. It was evident that the mob were prepared to execute their threats, and the terrified Unionists complied. There was one exception. His name was Murphy. lie was rompclled to fly for his life. He was the Union governor of the State in 1864. Thus, by fraud and violence, Arkansas was placed in the position of a rebellious State. The scees- s onists at once commenced a system of terrorism. Unionists were n indued, impris- oned, and exiled. Confederate troops from Texas and Louisiana were brought into the State, ai d Arkansas troops, raised chiefly by fraud and violence, were sent out of tbe State. The voice of opposition was silenced ; and the usurpers, with their feet on the necks of the people, proclaimed the unanimity of I he inliabiUints of Arkansas in favor of disunion ' Questions.— 2. What did South Carolinians do p What was done in other States? What can you tell about a Confederacy ? 264 THE NATION. Acts of the secessionists. Attack on Fort Sumter. Its abandonment. forts, arsenals, mints, ships, custom-houses, and other Government property ; and armies were raised in support of this usurpation, and for the overthrow of the Republic. The President of the United States (Buchanan), restrained by fear, or by excessive caution, made no serious effort to suppress what was really a con- spiracy against American nationality. 1 3. In the midst of these excitements, Mr. Lincoln entered upon the duties of his office, and declared his intention to maintain the supreme authority of the National Government. The Senate, re- lieved of most of the secessionists confirmed his cabinet appoint- ments. 5 He found the offices swarming with disloyal men, and proceeded to purge them. Meanwhile, thousands of armed insur- gents had assembled, under P. G. T. Beauregard, at Charleston. They had already fired [January 9, 1861] on a Government ves- sel (Star of the West), when making her way, with reenforce- FORT SUMTER. ments and food, to Fort Sumter ; and they demanded the surrender of that fort. Its commander (Major Robert Anderson) refused, and on the 12th of April [1861] it was furiously bombarded. Its 1. On the 4th of February, 1861, there was an assemblage at Washington city of delegates from several States, which was called the Ptare Convention, It was called on the recom- mendation of the Legislature of Virginia, for the professed object of settling all difficulties and preserving the Union. John Tyler, of Virginia, one of the secessionists, was chosen president After a session of three' weeks, it closed. Their action was not approved by Congn n->. 2. William II. Seward, Secretin' of State ; Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury ; Simon Cameron, Secretary of War , Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy , Caleb Smith, Secretary of the Interior • Montgomery B'air. I'osttnas'er-Oeneral ; Edward Bate*. Attor ney-Oeneral. Edwin M. Stanton succeeded Mr. Cameron in January, 1S(!2. John P. I'-lur succeeded Mr. Smith (deceased) the same year; and at the beginning of July, 18M. Mr. Ohase, having resigned his office, was succeeded by William Pitt Fessenden, a member of the Senate of the United States. Questions.— 2. What did secessionists do ? What did President Buchanan fa ; l to do? 3. What have you to say about Lincoln's entrance upon the duties of his office ? What did he find P What had armed insurgents done ? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 265 Troops called to quell the insurrection. Response of the people. The National forces. interior was set in flames, and Anderson was compelled to evacu- ate it. It was never surrendered. 1 4. The Confederates had intended to follow up this first blow by seizing the National capital. It was saved by the loyal peo- ple. The President called [April 15] for seventy-five thousand men, from the militia of the country, to serve for three months in putting down the insurrection.* The response in men and money was wonderful. Within thirty days, almost two hun- dred thousand citizens were ready to fight under the old flag for the life of the Republic. Then commenced a conflict which, in numbers engaged, territorial extent of operations, and destruc- tive engines used, has no parallel in history. We will now con- sider some of the prominent events in THE GREAT CIVIL WAR [ 1 8 6 1 ] . 5. The National army, at the beginning of the war, consisted of only about sixteen thousand men ; and the navy was com* posed of only ninety vessels of all classes, carrying about twenty* four hundred guns, and seven thousand men. The land troops were mostly on the extreme Western frontier, professedly to check the Indians; 3 and most of the naval force was in distant seas. Only one steamship (Brooklyn),* of twenty-five guns, and a relief ship, of two guns, were immediately available for the defense of the Atlantic coast of the Republic. The late Secretary of War 5 had 1. Anderson had only three days' provisions left, and would have been compelled to sur- render, if he had not been attacked. This the insurgents knew ; but, as they said, they hoped to "fire the Southern heart" against the Government, and so they made haste to begin war. Fort Monroe and Fort Pickens were the only military works of great importance, ex- cepting the one on the Dry Tortugas. at the southern extremity of Florida, that now remained in possession of the United States southward of the National capital. Fort Pickens had been saved by the prudence and valor of its commander, Lieutenant Slemmer. 2. The governors of several of the border Slave States refused to respond favorably to the call, and the Free States alone contributed the means for saving the Republic from instant assassination. There were thousands of men in the Slave States, anxious to support the old flag, but they were generally restrained by their rulers. 3. In February, 1861, General Twiggs, commanding the Department of Texas, and having under Mm nearly one-half of the military force of the United States, surrendered them to the " authorities of Texas," one of the States professedly withdrawn from the Union, with public property valued at $1,250,000. 4. Her draught was too great, excepting at very high tides, to enter the harbor of Charles- ton, where it had been arranged for the war to begin. 5. John B. Floyd. Questions.— 4. What had the Confederates intended todo ? What did the President do ? What can you tell of the action of the people, and the beginning of war ? 5. What can you tell about the National army and navy ? What had late cabinet officers done to we*ken the power of the Government ? 12 266 THE NATIOtf. Magnitude of the insurrection. Measures to suppress it. Meeting of Congress. transferred most of the arms from the forts and arsenals in the Free States to those of the Slave States ; ' and the late Secretary of the Treasury 2 had, months before, deliberately attempted to injure the public credit and bankrupt the Treasury. Thus, it will be seen, the secessionists had put far away from the immediate control of the Government every implement that might be used for its defense and protection. 6. The magnitude of the insurrection was soon perceived. The National capital was in great danger. It was surrounded by re- sident enemies. Troops, on their way for its defense, had been assailed and murdered. 8 The navy yard at Norfolk and the arm- ory at Harper's Ferry were in the hands of the insurgents, 4 and armed men from the Gulf States were pouring into Virginia, for the purpose of seizing Washington city. In view of great and impending danger, the President, on the 3rd of May [1861], called for over sixty-four thousand more troops, to serve "during the war," and eighteen thousand men for the navy. Forts Mon- roe and Pickens were reinforced, and the blockade of the Southern ports was proclaimed. 7. The President had summoned [April 15] the Congress to meet on the 4th of July. When they assembled, there were two hundred and thirty thousand troops in the field under the old flag, independent of the three-months' men. The Congress authorized 1. The defensive fortifications within tho " seceded States" were about thirty in number, mounting over 3,000 guns, and having cost at least $20,000,000. These had nearly all been seized before the close of Buchanan's Administration, excepting Forts Monroe, Sumter, Pickens (gallantly held by Lieutenant flleraraer), and those on Key West and the Tortngas oft' the Florida coast. It is estimated that the value of National property seized by the ' secessionists " previous to the 4th of March, 1861, was at least f 30,000,000. 2. Howell Cobb, afterward a general in the Confederate army. 3. While the 6th Massachusetts volunteer regiment, Colonel Jones, were passing through Baltimore, on the 19th of April, 1861, they were attacked by a mob. Two men were killed, and eight were wounded. One of the latter afterward died. Nine of the mob were killed, and three wounded. 4. On the 17th of April, Governor Letcher, of Virginia, ordered the entrance to Norfolk harbor to be obstructed by the sinking of vessels, and on that day issued a proclamation recognizing the independence of the " Confederacy," and ordering Virginia troops to hold themselves in readiness to act in its defense. On that day a minority of the Virginia con- vention voted for the secession of that State, and the usurpers proclaimed the ordinance adopted. On the ISth of April, Lieutenant Jones, hearing of the approach of Virginia troops to Harper's Ferry, destroyed the armory, and greatly injured its contents, by fire, to prevent its falling into the hands of the insurgents. Tho Virginians took possession that night. Qpestions.— 6. What have you to say about the magnitude of the insurrection, and the perls of the National capital I What had occurred? What did the President do? 7. What can you tell about the meeting of Congress, and troops in the field ? What did Congress do ? What had the people done ? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 26 1 Doings of Congress. Movements in Virginia and Missouri. [July 10] the raising of five hundred thousand men, and appropri- ated five hundred millions of dollars to defray the expenses of the kindling war. In the mean time, towns, villages, cities, and States had made contributions of money for the public service, to the amount of almost fifty millions of dollars. Party spirit disap- peared for the moment, and the people in the Free States were united in efforts to save the life of the Republic. 8. The veteran Scott, 1 general-in-chief of the armies of the Republic, gathered a greater portion of the troops eastward of the Alleghany mountains, at or near Washington city, for the defense of the capital ; while the Confederate troops, estimated at more than one hundred thousand in number, occupied an irregular line from Harper's Ferry, by way of Richmond, to Norfolk. Their heaviest force was at Manassas Junction, within about thirty miles of Washington city, and there, very soon, the first heavy shock of war was felt. Montgomery Avas soon abandoned as the headquarters of the secessionists, and Richmond was established as such on the 20th of July, 1861. 9. The first iuvr.sion of a State in which insurrection existed, occurred on the 24th of May [18G1], when National troops crossed the Potomac and seized Alexandria, and Arlington Heights op- posite Washington city. 2 Already [May 10], Captain (after- ward brigadier-general) Lyon had captured a " Confederate" camp near St. Louis, and, taking possession of the arsenal there, saved Missouri from actual secession. The theatre of the opening war rapidly widened, and by the first of June the whole country was in commotion from Maine to Texas. 10. On the 10th of June a severe battle occurred at Big Bethel, in South-eastern Virginia, in which the National troops were re- pulsed. This misfortune was atoned for the next day [June 11], when Colonel (afterward major-general) Lewis Wallace, with a few 1. Verse 6, page 248. 2. On the previous day, a Confederate flag displayed at Alexandria attracted attention. William Me Spedon, of New York city, and Samuel Smith, of (Jueens county, N". Y., went over from Washington and captured it. This was the first flag taken from the insurgents. Questions.— 8. What did General Scott do? What can you tell aV>out the Confederate forces? What about the headquarters of the conspirators? 9. What can you tell about the first invasion of a State in which insurrection was seen? What important event occurred at St. Louis ? What was the effect ? What was the state of the oountry ? 268 THE NATTOffi Battle at Bull Run. The Nationals defeated. Effects of the battle. Indiana troops, dispersed five hundred Confederates at Romney, in Virginia. Twenty-one days later [July 2], General Patterson, with a considerable force, crossed the Potomac and entered the Shenandoah valley, in Virginia. At the same time, National troops were advancing in Western Virginia, under General George B. McClellan ; and on the 11th of July a severe engagement oc- curred at Rich mountain, in which the Nationals were successful. 11. On the 18th of July, the National army, under General Irvin McDowell, marched from Fairfax Court House, in Virginia, to attack the Confederates at Manassas. 1 A severe fight occurred near Centreville. From that point the army moved forward on the 21st, and at Bull Run a very heavy battle was fought. The Confederates were commanded by Beauregard,' assisted by able generals. At a moment when they were about to give way, they receiv- ed reinforcements from the Shenan- doah valley. The National troops were utterly defeated and routed, with a loss of about three thousand men. The army fled back toward Washington city in the wildest con- fusion. On the following day, Gene- ral McClellan was called to the com- mand of the Army of the Potomac, GENERAL MCCLELLAN. , „ -, -t T t -i • . as the forces around AY ashington were named. 12. The disaster at Bull Run stimulated the loyal people to greater exertions, and volunteers flocked to the army in large numbers. There was an anxious desire for the capture of Rich- mond, the Confederate capital, distant from Washington about one hundred and thirty miles ; but the Army of the Potomac did not move in that direction again until the next spring. The au- 1. Verse 8, page 267. 2. Verse 3, page 264. OcF.smoN9 —10. "What ran vou tell of the battles at Big Bethel and Romney? What did General Pattereon do! What occurred in Western Virginia ? 11. What can yon tell of events near Centreville, and tho battle at Bull Run? What were the results ? \\ ho was called to the command of the Army of the Potomac ? 12. How did the disaster at Bull Run affect the loyal people ? What was their desire ? What can you Bay about the Array of the Potomac ? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 269 Doings in Missouri. Operations at Hattcras. Movements In Virginia and Missouri. tumn of 1861, and the following winter, were spent in preparations for an advance. 1 13. In the mean time, the war was progressing elsewhere. There was a fierce struggle in Missouri for the control of that State. On the 5th of July a severe engagement took place near Carthage, between the Nationals, under Colonel (afterward major- general) Sigel, and Confederates, under Jackson, the disloyal Governor of Missouri. On the 2d of August, General Lyon fought the Confederates, under General Ben McCullough, at Dug Spring, near the Arkansas border ; and he lost his life while gallantly fighting a still more severe battle at Wilson's creek, on the 10th. 14. A considerable navy was created by the close of summer, composed chiefly of purchased vessels, which were changed into ships of war. A military and naval expedition, under General B. F. Butler and Commodore Stringham, captured the fortifica- tions at Hatteras inlet, off the coast of North Carolina, on the 29th of August. It was an important victory, and led to others more important. 15. Early in September, General W. S. Rosecrans defeated the Confederate General Floyd 2 at Carnifex Ferry (Gauley river), in Western Virginia; and, ten days afterward [September 20], Lex- ington, Missouri, was surrendered, with a body of National troops, to General Price, of the Confederate army. It was retaken [Octo- ber 16] by Major White, at the head of National cavalry. 16. On the 21st of October, General Stone's troops were badly beaten at Ball's Bluff, on the Upper Potomac, by Confed- erates under General Evans; and, a little later [November 7], the insurgents gained a victory over troops under General Ulysses S. Grant, at Belmont, Missouri, on the west bank of the Missis- sippi river. On the same day [November 7], the forts at Port 1. On the 31st of October, General Scott resigned his post at the head of the armies of the Republic, on account of physical infirmities. On his recommendation, General McClellan was appointed general-in-chief of the armies of the United States. 2. Secretary of War under -President Buchanan. See verse 5, page 265. He died at Abingdon, Virginia, in August, 1S63. Questions.— 13. What can you tell of the war elsewhere ? What occurred in Missour, and what have you to say of Sigel and Lyon ? 14. What can you tell about the navy ? Give an account of a military and naval exped ; tion. 15. What did Rosecrans do in Western Virginia? What can you tell about events at Lexington, Missouri ? 16. What can you tell about a battle at Call's Bluff and Bjlmout? What can you tel! about an expedition to Port Royal? ■ - ,70 THE NATION. Capture of Port Royal and Sea islands. Extent of the war. Foreign relations. Royal entrance, on the Atlantic, hundreds of miles east of the Mississippi, were captured by the National navy, under Admiral Du Pont. This victory led to the permanent occupation, by Gov- ernment troops, of the Sea islands along the South Carolina coast, so famous for the production of fine cotton. 17. We have mentioned only the most important warlike movements in 1861. There were a thousand others in a thousand places, for the line along which were disputes and conflicts was full two thousand miles in length, from the Susquehanna to the Rio Grande, There Avcre struggles everywhere — in Mary- land, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, on the rivers, and along three thousand miles of sea-coast, where block- ading squadrons were rapidly closing up ports useful to the Con- federates. 18. Our foreign relations were unpleasant. England declared her neutrality at the beginning, 1 and called the armed confederates a " belligerent nation." Her ruling class, and that of most other European countries, sympathized with the Confederates ; and the Jatter rightfully cherished such strong hopes of speedy recognition and aid from France and England, at least, that they were en- couraged to persevere. At the close of 1861 their hopes were blasted, for the circumstance known as "the Trent affair" had led to action between tho United States and Great Britain which promised peaceful relations. 2 From that time forward, the Gov- ernments of Europe seemed less and less inclined to interfere in the hot quarrel. 1. By proclamation of the Qneen, dated 13th of Slay. 1861. 2. On the 8th of November, 1861, Captain Wilkes, U. S. N., in command of the steam sloop-of-war San Jacinto, overhauled the English mail steamer Trent, in the Bahama chan- nel and took from her James M. Mason and John Slidcll, who were proceeding to Europe as commissioners of the " Confederates." Thev had been arch secessionists in the United States Senate. Wilkes brought them to the United States, and they were placed in Fort Warren at Boston. The act was contrary to the American doctrine of the sanctity of a neutral vessel, and our Government promptly disavowed the act, and Ma«on and Slidel'. were sent on board an English vessel (liinuliln) bound for Europe, on the 2d of January, 1862. Not expecting such an exhibition of national honor, the British Government had demanded the surrender of the commissioners and prepared for war. It was a shameful exhibition, which the English people speedily rebuked. The people ever afterward curbed the desires of the Government and the ruling classes to aid the insurgents. QtTE«TtONs.— 17. What have von to sav about war movements, and their extent! 18. What can you say about our foreign relations I What did England do I What can you say about foreign sympathy for the insurgents? Ep«i vi ere theft hopes of aid blasted y THE GKEAT CIVIL WAR. 271 Rap ture of Roanoke island. Capture of Fort Doneho n^ Battle of Pea Rid^eT THE GREAT CIVIL WAR, CONTINUED [1862]. 19. On the 19th of January [1862], the National troops, under General George H. Thomas, won an important victory over the enemy, under General Crittenden, in Somerset, Kentucky The conflict is sometimes called the battle of Mill Spring ' A few days before [January 11, 1862], a heavy land and naval expedi- tion under General A. E. Burnside and Commodore Goldstar- ough left Fortress Monroe. They passed through Hatteras inlet on the 26th, and on the 8th of February, after a severe fight captured Roanoke island, and over twenty-five hundred Confederates, with thirty-five hundred small arms. This victory gave the Nationals control over that region, and imperiled Nor- folk. 20. A still more important victory was won by the Nationals Dn the 16th of February [1862], in the capture of Fort Donelson, near Dover, on the Cumberland river, in Tennessee, with over thirteen thousand prisoners, three thousand horses, sixty-two cannon, and twenty thousand small arms. The Nationals were commanded by General Grant, and the Confederates by Gen- eral Buckner, at the time of the surrender. 3 This victory, in the accomplishment of which a flotilla of gun-boats, under Commo- dore A. H. Foote, bore a conspicuous part, opened the way to Nashville and the conquest of Western Tennessee, and caused the insurgents to abandon Kentucky. 21. Early in March, the National forces, under General S. R, Curtis, fought and conquered the Confederates, under General Van Dora, at Pea Ridge, a portion of the Ozark mountains, in Arkansas. 4 The victory was won on the 8th, after a struggle of 2. Verse 14, page 269 4. Van born was assisted b y Price and McCulIough . The latter was killed 272 THE NATION. Raid of the Merrimac. Success of the Monitor. Battlo of Shiloh. three days, and the Confederates were dispersed. On the same day T ^_--y== ^ ^ [March 8, 1862], the iron- clad " ram " Merrimac, 1 went down from Norfolk, sunk the frigates Cumberland and Con- gress in the mouth of the James river, and threatened the monitor. the destruction of the Na- tional fleet in Hampton Roads. That night a newly invented floating battery, named the Monitor? commanded by Lieutenant John H. Worden, arrived, attacked the Merrimac the next morn- ing [March 9], drove her back to Norfolk disabled, and held com- mand of Hampton Roads. 22. The President ordered [January 2*7] a general movement of the land and naval forces on the 22d of February. 3 When the Army of the Potomac advanced, the Confederates at Manassas fled [March 10] toward Richmond, and General McClellan pre- pared to approach that city by way of the Peninsula. On the 23d, National troops, under General Shields, gained a victory over the Confederates near Winchester, in Virginia. Already New- bern, in North Carolina, had been captured by Burnside [March 14] ; and Grant's victorious army was preparing to ascend the Tennessee toward the heart of the confederacy. Early in April it was at Pittsburg landing, and on the 6th, while encamped near Shiloh Church, it was attacked by a large force of Confederates, under Beauregard and A. S. Johnston. Victory was with the assailants that night, but, after a desperate struggle the next day [April 7], it was won by the Nationals, and the Confederates fled 1. The Merrimac was a common steam frigate. The Confederates plated her with iron, and affixed to her how an extension of iron with which she might push terribly. It was sharp, and could scarcely fail to destroy an ordinary vessel. 2. Invented by Captain J. Ericsson, a native of Sweden. This vessel was afterward foundered at sea, in a storm, while on her way to the Southern coast. Many vessels of her class, but improved, were afterward built for the Government. 3. At that time there were four distinct armies, namely, one at Fortress Monroe, the Army of the Potomac, the Army of Western Virginia, and the army near Mumfordsville, Kentucky. There was also an army and flotilla at Cairo, and a naval force in the gulf of Mexico. Questions.— 21. What can you tell about the battle of Pea Ridire, in Arkansas? What can you tell about the Merrimac and her doings? What about the Monitor ? 22. What order did the President issue? What cin you tell about the movements of the Army of the Po- tomac? What was done in North Carolina? What ran you tell of Grant's army ? What did it do at Shiloh ? What can you tell about Island No. 10 ? COMMODORE FOOTE. THE GKEAT CIVIL WAR. 273 Capture of Fort Pulaski and Huntsville. Capture of New Orleans. toward Corinth, in Mississippi.' On the same day, the important post of Island No. 10, m the Mississippi river, was surrendered to the National troops." A fleet of gun-boats, under Com- modore Foote, was chiefly instrumental in achieving this victory. 23. On the 11th of April, Fort Pulaski, at the mouth of the Savannah river, was surrendered to Captain (afterward major- general) Q. A Gillmore; and, on the same day, General O. M. Mitchell, after an ex- traordinary forced march from Kentucky through Tennessee, captured Huntsville, in Northern Alabama. Seven days afterward [April 18], General Augur drove the Confed- erates out of Fredericksburg, in Virginia, and took possession. 24. On the 25th of April, New Orleans was taken possession of by the National forces. Commodores D. G. Farragut and D. D. Porter, with a gun-boat and mortar fleet, 3 had bombarded Forts Jackson and St. Philip, below the city, for six days, when they ran by them [April 25] and passed up the river. 4 When they approached New Orleans, the Confederates set shipping and cotton on fire at the levees, and destroyed property to the amount of full three million dollars. The Confederate troops, under Gen- eral Lovell, twenty thousand strong, fled, and General Butler, with troops from Ship island, took possession of the city. 1. The Nationals lost during; the two days over 13,000 men in killed, wounded, and pris- oners. The Confederates left 3,000 dead or.'the field. This is known as the battle of Shiloh. 2. This was a very important victory. The attack and bombardment had continued daily for twenty-three days, by Commodore Footc. The works, consisting of nine batteries, were very strong. The total number of guns captured was sever ty. The total loss to the Con- federates was about $378,000. The operations on the land, at the same time, were carried on by General Pope. Commodore Foote was wounded in the ank'e at Fort D >• elson (verse 20, p-ige 271), but remained in service until the conclusion of the affair at Island No. 10, when he was compelled to leave on account of the painfulness of his unhealed wound. The command of the fleet devolved upon Captain Davis. In June, 1S63, while preparing to take command of the South Atlantic squadron, Foote died at the Astor House, in New York. 3. The combined Union fleet comprised two flag-ships, seven steam sloops-of-war, fourteen cnnboatB, one sailing schooner, twenty-one mortar-schooners, and six tow-boats and steamers; In all fifty-one. with two hundred and eighty six guns. 4. When they rushed by the forts, Confedrrate rams, gun-boats, floating butteries, fire- ships, and rafts attacked them. A most destructive naval engngoment ensued, in which the Nationals lost thirteen gun-boats and three transports. Questions.— 23. What can you tell about Fort ruhiski ? What about Mitchell's expedi- tion ? What did General Augur do? 24. What can you tell about the capture of New Orbans ? 12* 274 THE NATION. ADMIRAL FARRAGCT. Movements toward Richmond. Battle at Fair Oaks. The seven days' battle. This loss was a terrible blow to the Confederates, from which they never recovered. 25. On the 4th of April, General McClellan commenced his march up the Virginia peninsula, from Fortress Monroe. On the 3d of May Yorktown was abandoned by the Confederates, and they fled toward Richmond. A pursuit commenced tAvo days after- ward [May 5], and resulted in a ter- rible battle at Williamsburg, on the same day, in which the Nationals were victorious. Five days afterward [May 10], General Wool captured Norfolk, when the Confederates destroyed the Merrimaef and the National gun-boats were enabled to go up the James river to coope- rate with the army advan- cing toward Richmond. 26. Cautiously that army moved forward. A portion of it crossed the Chicka- hominy river on the 22d of May, and on the 31st and the following day [June 1], a very severe battle was fought at a place called Fair Oaks, in which the Nationals lost five thousand men, and the Confederates eight thousand, without any advantage to either party. For about three weeks succeed- ing, preparations were in progress for an advance, and then there was a change. Hitherto supplies had been received by the York river. Now [June 24] McClellan prepared to change his base to the James river. This brought on attacks from the enemy, which resulted in a memorable series of brilliant and destructive battles. THE " RAM" MERRIMAC. 1. Verse 21, page 271. Questions.— 25. Oive an account of the movements of the Army of the Potomac toward Richmond, the capture of Norfolk, and destruction of the Merrimac. 26. What more can you tell about the Army of the Potomac on the Peninsula? What did McClellan do? What did the President do? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 275 Disasters to the Nationals In Virginia, Invasion of Maryland. during seven days, at the close of June. On the 1st of July the President, at the request of the governors of eighteen States, called for three hundred thousand more men for the army. 27. In the mean time, the forces under N. P. Banks, J. C. Fre- mont, and McDowell, 1 were consolidated [June 25], and, with the name of the Army of Virginia, were placed in the charge of General John Pope. Elated by their successes before Richmond, the Confederates soon pushed northward, for the purpose of at- tempting the capture of Washington. The danger was immi- nent. McClellan was ordered [August 3] to withdraw from the Peninsula, and hasten to the aid of Pope. He commenced mov- ing on the 14th, and on the 22d reached Alexandria. 28. On the 9th of August, Banks had a severe but indecisive battle with " Stonewall Jackson," 2 at Cedar mountain, in Cul- pepper county, Virginia. He held the enemy at bay, when the Confederates, by a quick movement, flanked Pope's army ; and, from the 23d of August until the close of the month, the struggle between the contestants was fierce. The Army of Virginia was driven toward the fortifications around Washington, and, on the 1st of September, General McClellan was placed in command of all the troops for the defense of that city. 3 29. The Confederates, under Robert E. Lee, their general-in- chief, now pushed across the Potomac, into Maryland. McClellan followed [September V] on their right flank. On the 14th [Sep- tember, 1862], a severe battle, favorable to the Nationals, was fought at South mountain, in Maryland. On the same day, Harper's Ferry 4 was attacked; and on the 15th it was surrendered to the 1. Verse 11, page 268. 2. This name was given General T. J. Jackson after the battle of Bull Run, in July, 1861. The Confederate General Bee, speaking of Jackson's conduct on that occasion, said that he " stood like a stone wall against the assaults of the enemy." He was ever afterward called " Stonewall Jackson," and his troops the " Stonewall Brigade." 3. The armies of Virginia and of the Polnmac were thea consolidated, and thereafter known as the Armu of lite Potomac. General McClellan had been superseded as eeneral-in- chief by General H. W. Halleck, who, by an order dated Ju'y 11, 1862, was called to that post from the command of the armies in the West. 4. Verse 6, page 266. Questions.— 27. Can you tell how the Army of Virginia was firmed ? What did the Con- federates do ? What was McClellan ordered *to do? What did he do ? 28. What can you tell of a battle at Cedar mountain ? What followed ? 29. G've an account of an invasion of Maryland, and a battle there. What occurred at Harper's Ferry ? 2*76 THE NATION. Battles in Maryland. A Confederate raid. Repulse at Fredericksburg. Confederates, with eleven thousand men and all its vast munitions of war. 30. On the 17th of September a great battle was fought near the Antietam creek (which name it bears), in Maryland, between the forces of McClellan and Lee. Tho latter was defeated, with a loss of twenty thou- sand men, and then fell back to the Potomac, which they slowly crossed, and retired toward Richmond, without being pursued. Three weeks after- ward, a Confederate cavalry force made a sweeping raid around the entire Na- tional army, carrying away one thou* sand horses, and destroying property to the amount of sixty thousand dollars. 31. A portion of the Army of the Potomac, under Burnside, 1 crossed into Virginia on the 27th of October, and moved south- ward along the eastern base of the Blue Ridge. McClellan and the remainder crossed the Potomac on the 31st ; and on the 5th of November he was relieved of the command and succeeded by Burnside. The latter led the army slowly forward, and appeared on the Rappahannock, opposite Fredericksburg, on the 17th. He attempted the capture of that city and the Confederate works be- yond, on the 13th of December, but was repulsed with a loss of nearly eight thousand men. He withdrew across the river, and there the army remained until near the close of the following April. 32. While the events just related wero occurring eastward of the Alleghany mountains, very important events were transpiring westward of them. We have already considered some of these." The last one mentioned was that of Shiloh, on the 6th and 7th of April, 1862. All summer long the Confederates tried to regain 1. Verse 19, pace 271. 2. The capture of Fort Donelson, February 1<1 ; battle of Pea Ridge, March 8 ; battle of Shiloh, April 7-8 ; the surrender of Island No. 10, April 7 , surrender of Fort Pulaski, April 11 ; capture of Huntsville, April 18, and the capture of New Orleans, April 28. Questions.— 30. What can yon tell about the battle at Antietam creek ? What followed I What can you tell about a raid ? 31. What have you to say about the movements of tho Potomac army into Virginia 1 What chanse in commanders occurred? What did Bum- side do? What occurred at Fredericksburg ? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 27* Invasion of Kentucky. Operations on the Mississippi. National successes, what they had lost in Kentucky and Tennessee. They unsuc- cessfully attacked Fort Donelson [August 25], and then invaded Eastern Kentucky in considerable force. They defeated the Na- tional troops, under General Nelson, near Richmond, Kentucky [August 29-30], and then pushed rapidly toward the Ohio, to seize, plunder, and destroy Cincinnati. Their design w r as frus- trated by General Wallace, 1 and they fled southward. General Bragg (Confederate) invaded the more western portion of Ken- tucky, at about the same time, and penetrated almost to Louis- ville, at the close of September, watched and foiled by General D. C. Buell, w T ith National troops. Soon after a severe fight near Perryville, with Rousseau and others, Bragg was compelled to retreat southward. 83. General Halleck 2 besieged Corinth, and drove out the Confederates on the 29th of May. Little else of importance oc- curred in that region until September. The naval vessels, under Farragut, Davis, and others, on the Mississippi, were not idle meanwhile. Farragut captured Natchez on the 12th of May ; and on the 6th of June, Memphis was surrendered to Flag-officer Davis, after a severe naval engagement. Other movements, tend- ing to the final opening of the Mississippi, took place. Finally, General Rosecrans, with a National force, fought and dispersed [September 19] the Confederates, under Price, at Iuka, in Missis- sippi. Early in October, there were severe battles in the vicinity of Corinth, which resulted in favor of the Nationals, and the partial rescue of all West Tennessee from the insurgents. 34. During the season, there had been National successes in Texas. Pensacola, on the gulf of Mexico, had been taken pos- session of; and over many places on the Lower Mississippi river, the flag of the Republic w r as floating. The last days of the year were signalized by some severe struggles. On the 27th of Decem- ber, General W. T. Sherman attempted to capture Vicksburg, on 1. Verse 10, page 267. 2. Note 3, rage 275. Questions.— 32. What have you to say of affairs westward of the Alleghany mountains ? What did the rebels do? Give an account of the invasions of Kentucky. 33. What did General Halleck do? What was done on the Mi-sissippi river ? What did General Rose- crans do? 34. What can you tell about National successes? What did General Sherman attempt to do? W r hat can you tell about a battle near Murfruesboro' ? 2*8 THE NATION. Battle of Murfreesboro'. Abolition of slavery threatened, The two armies. the Mississippi, but was repulsed, after severe fighting. At Mur- freesboro', in Tennessee, General Rosecrans had a terrible conflict with the Confederates, beginning on the 29th of December [1862], and ending on the 4th of January, 1863. Rosecrans was victo- rious, but at the cost of almost twelve thousand men. 35. While military and naval contests were waging during 1862, the National Government was devising and executing meas- ures for the suppression of the great insurrection. Congress made ample provisions for money and men, the latter by draft, if not otherwise obtained. Believing that a heavy blow at slavery had become a military necessity, they authorized the President to proclaim the emancipation of the slaves. 1 He did not do so imme- diately; but, by proclamation [September 22, 1862], he assured the Confederates that unless they should lay down their arms within a hundred days, he should issue an edict which would pro- claim the freedom of all bondmen in territory wherein armed oppo- sition existed. 36. The year [1862] closed gloomily for the National cause. The insurrection was as rampant as ever, and the area of its opera- tions had been very little diminished. Party spirit was diverting the public attention from the great business in hand, namely, the suppression of the insurrection ; and menaces of foreign interference were loud and somewhat alarming. The National army, at that time, numbered about seven hundred thousand men, while that of the Confederates was probably larger than at any time before or afterward. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR CONTINUED [1863], 37. The Confederates scorned the warning of the President [September 22, 1862], and on the first of January, 1863, he pro- claimed forever free all the slaves in Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, 1. Early in April, slavery was abolished in the District of Columbia, by an act of Con- press. It was signed by the President and became law on the Kith of th:it month. Con- green also passed a bill in June, forever prohibiting slavery in the Territories of the repub- lic. Il was Mailed by the President on the 20th of June. Questions. -35. What did the National Government do? What can you tell about measures for the emancipation of slaves ? 36. What was the situation of affairs at the close Of 1862 ? What can yon say of the two armies? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 279 Proclamation of freedom to the glaves. B:ittle of Cbancellorsville. Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, excepting West Virginia and portions of those States that were occupied by the National troops at that time. The friends of the Administration regarded the Procla- mation of Emancipation as just, necessary, and efficacious ; the opponents of the Administration regarded it as wrong, unneces- sary, and futile. It doubtless increased the number and strength- ened the faith of the friends of the Republic in Europe. 38. The military movements during 1863 were vast in num- ber and the area of operations. 1 We may take only a general view of them. The different armies and their duties were then so well defined, that we may consider the doings of each sepa- rately. That of the Potomac was commanded by Burnside. 3 lie was relieved on the 25th of January [1863], and Avas succeeded by General Joseph Hooker. That commander led his army across the Rappahannock toward the end of April, and on the 2d and 3d of May they had a severe contest with Lee in the " Wilderness,' which is known as the battle of Chancellorsville. It was inde- cisive. The National army fell back to the left bank 3 of the Rap- pahannock on the 5 th. 39. Early in June, Lee advanced in full force to the Potomac, and invaded Maryland at the middle of the month. 4 Hooker fol- lowed on his right flank to cover Washington and Baltimore; and on the 28th of June he was relieved, and succeeded in com- 1. The Congress, during its session that ended on the 3d of March, 1863, placed the Sword and Purse of the Republic in the hands of the President The financial resources and the military power of the country were placed at the disposal of the Government. A Conscrip- tion Act was passed, and became law on the 3d of March, by which the able-bodied men of the nation might be called to the field, at the discretion of the President. On the 8th of May following he proclaimed his intention to enforce the Conscription Act, and preparations were made throughout the country for a draft. There was much opposition to the measure manifested, and the public mind became much excited. On the day when the draft was to commence in the city of New York [July 13, 18631, a fearful riot broke out there, which con- tinued about three days. The rioters were chiefly of foreign birth, and their violence w:is mainly directed against the negro population, and persons supposed to be their friends. A colored orphan asylum was burned, and several colored people were murdered. Many lives were lost during the riot, and a vast amount of property was destroyed. 2. Verse 31, page 276. 3. The " right" or " left " bank of a stream is that to the right or left of the observer who, on its surface, is looking toward its mouth. 4. On the 15th of June the President issued a proclamation which announced the in- vasion, and called for 100,000 militia to oppose it, to serve sis months, as follows : from Mary- laud, 10,000 ; Pennsylvania, 50,000 ; West Virginia, 10,000 ; Ohio, 30,000. Questions.— 37. What did the Confederates do? What did the President do? How was his act regarded? 38. What have you to say about the military movements during 1863? What can you say about the doings of the Army of the Potomac ? 280 THE NATION. Another invasion of Maryland. Battle of Gettysburg. War in North Carolina. mand by General G. G. Meade. Lee pushed on into Pennsylva- nia, and at Gettysburg he and Meade struggled desperately for victory from the 1st to the 3d of July. Meade won it on the afternoon of the 3d, and Lee fled toward Virginia. By the middle of August, the Confederates were beyond the Rappahan- nock, The battle of Gettysburg [July 1, 2, and 3, 1863] was one of the most severe and important of the war. 1 40. For a long time the two armies confronted each other. In September, Lee sent General Longstreet with reinforcements to the army of Bragg, on the Tennessee and Georgia border ; and on the 8th of October he boldly advanced and compelled Mcadc to fall back to the line of Bull Run, and, after destroying the railway from Manassas 2 to the Rapid Anna, 3 took post behind that stream, near Orange Court House. During these maneuvers there was heavy skirmishing [October 8 to 23], and on the 7th of November, Generals John Sedgwick and W. H. French captured two thousand Confederates at Kelly's ford. The Army of the Potomac then crossed the Rappahannock, and advanced upon the Confederate camp. They skirmished heavily, and then fighting was suspended for a long time. 41. At the close of 1862, the National forces in North Carolina, under General J. G. Foster, were very active in the vicinity of the Neuse, Tar, and Roanoke rivers. In March and April following [1863], they struggled with Confederates under Hill and Pettigrew for the mastery of that region, and succeeded. At the same time, Longstreet, one of the best of Lee's generals, was trying to drive the Nationals from the vicinity of Norfolk. 4 1. The loss of the National forces during this invasion by the Confederates was a little more than 23,000 men. That of t lie insurgents is not known. It is believed to have been full 30,000 men. Almost 14,000 prisoners, with 3 cannon, 41 standards, and over 28,000 small arms, fell into the hands of the Nationals. 2. Verse 8, page 267. 3. The name of this stream has been generally written, during the war, Rapidan, and oc- casionally Rapid Ann. Its correct name is Rapid Anna. There are three streams in that portioi of Virginia named Anna, namely, North Anna, South Anna, and Kapid Anna. 4. Verse 25, page 274. Questions.— 39. What can you tell of another invasion of Maryland by the Confederates I What did Hooker do 1 Who succeeded him in command? What can you tell about the battle Of Gettysburg! 40. What have you to say about the two armies? What did Lee do? What did a portion of the Army of the Potomac do! What movement was made bv the whole army ? 41. What can you tell about movements in North Carolina and Lower Virginia? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 281 Operations near Charleston. Operations in Louisiana and Texas. Capture of Port Hudson. He failed ; and at the close of the year the latter held a firm grasp upon Eastern North Carolina and Virginia from the Neuse north' ward to the Potomac. 42. In the Department of the South, the principal operations were near Charleston. Admiral Du Pont attacked Fort Sumter ' on the 7th of April [1863], with his iron-clad fleet, but was re- pulsed. It was found necessary to have a cooperating land force. General Gillmore was ordered there for the purpose. He landed, with a competent force, on Morris island, and at once commenced a siege of the works defending Charleston harbor. On the 23d of August, after a terrible bombardment for seven days, Fort Sumter was reduced, it was reported, to a "shapeless and harmless mass of ruins." 3 Shells were afterward thrown into Charleston; and Gillmore, with a waiting fleet of iron-clads, continued the siege the remainder of the year, and longer. 43. In the Department of the Gulf, General N. P. Banks was in command at the close of 1862, with headquarters at New Orleans. He at once commenced operations in Louisiana, west of the Mississippi river ; and between January and May he swept victoriously across the wealthy country from New Orleans to Alexandria, on the Red river. He captured two thousand pris- oners, twenty-two cannon, several steamboats, and a large amount of public property. Banks returned; went up the Mississippi, and invested Port Hudson, above Baton Ronge. He captured that post on the 8th of July, with over five thousand prisoners, thirty- one cannon, two steamboats, and a large quantity of small arms, ammunition, and stores. He soon afterward sent an expedition by water to Texas; and at the close of the year [1863] the Na- tional troops occupied the line of the Rio Grande, from its mouth to Brownsville, 3 opposite Matamoras. 44. General Grant was in command of the Department of Ten- 1. Verse 3, page 264. 2. Not precisely so. It was made "shapeless," but not altogether "harmless." It maintained a garrison during the war, and its guns gave tho National forces some hard blows. 3. This place was named in honor of Major Brown, who built a fort there and lost his life in its defense, at the beginning of the war with Mexico. See verse 5, page 247. Questions. — 42. What was done in the Department of the South? Tell what took place near Charleston. 43. What have you to say about the Department of the Gulf J What did General Banks do ? What was effected ? 282 THE NATION. Sl.erman's doings in Arkansas. Attempts to take Vicksburg. nessee at the close of 1 802, and his chief business was the opening of the Mississippi river. Vicksburg, the strongest Confederate post on that river, was considered impregnable by them. Grant com- menced movements for its capture, by the destruction of its railway communications. Sherman, as Ave have seen, 1 unsuccessfully at- tacked its outworks at the close of December, 1862, when he crossed the Mississippi, went up the Arkansas river, and, with Ad- miral Porter, captured [January, 1863] Arkansas Post, with five thousand prisoners, seventeen cannon, and a large quantity of small arms and ammunition. This was a severe blow for the insurgents. 45. Grant now took the immediate command of the Army of the Mississippi, in cooperation with the fleet of Admiral Porter. He first attempted to cut a new and straight channel for the Missis- sippi, across a neck, which might leave Vicksburg inland. He failed. Other attempts to pass around the city also failed. He then moved his army down the west side of the Mississippi, while Porter boldly ran by Vicksburg with his fleet, and met Farragut, who had passed Port Hudson, coming up. On the 30th of April, the army recrossed the Mississippi, defeated the Confede' rates in two battles, not far from Port Gibson, and pushed on rapidly to the rear of Vicksburg. 46. After a series of brilliant and successful battles, 2 Grant, late in May [1863], invested Vicksburg, where General Pember- /DVIEAL PORTER. 1. Verse 54, page 277. 2. Battle of Raymond, May 12 ; of Jackson, May 14 ; of Champion Hill, May lfi ; and of Biff Black river bridge, May 17. In order to facilitate Grant's movements and keep rein- forcements and supplies from Johnston in his rear, a considerable force of cavalry under Colonel (now general) Gricrson was sent to cut the railway communications in Mississippi. This was effectually done. Gricrson left La Grange, in South-western Tennessee, and after making a wide circuit with destructive effect, he reached Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on the 2d of May. Questions.— 44. What have you to say about General Grant and the Mississippi ? What did ho attempt ? What can you tell about Sherman in Arkansas? 45. Q\\i an account of Grant's attempt to take Vicksburg. i THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 283 Capture of Vicksburg. Effects of it. The Army of the Cumberland. ton was in chief command. A severe struggle ensued, for Gene- ral Johnston was in his rear with a strong Confederate force. Vicksburg at length yielded to starvation and the force of arms. On the 4th of July it was surrendered, with over thirty thousand prisoners, 1 and arms and munitions of war for an anny of sixty thousand men ; also steamboats, cotton, and other property of immense value. Besides the prisoners, the Confederates lost ten thousand killed and wounded. 2 The fall of Port Hudson followed 3 [July 8], and the Mississippi was speedily opened to commerce. These victories, coincident with that at Gettysburg, 4 produced the liveliest joy among the loyal people of the Republic. The in- surrection had received a most disastrous blow. 47. The capture of Vicksburg, and other successes in the vicinity, enabled Grant to send troops to the aid of General Steele, in Arkansas, and General Banks, in Louisiana. General J. B. McPherson was placed in command at Vicksburg ; and, on the 19th of October [1863], Grant was called to the command of the Army of the Cumberland, in place of Rosecrans, who had steadily pursued the Confederates southward, after the severe battle of Murfreesboro', at the close of 1862. 5 48. After their defeat at Murfreesboro', the Confederates were very active in efforts to destroy Rosecrans's communications with the North, and he was compelled to be very cautious. He remained quiet, but not inactive, until the following summer, when he moved forward [June 25, 1863] vigorously, drove the Confederates, under General Bragg, from their strong position on the Duck river, and, by a series of heavy blows, compelled them to abandon Middle Tennessee, cross the Cumberland mountains, and take position at Chattanooga, which they strongly fortified. 1. These were paroled : but. in violation of the principles and the usages of war, it is raid, most of them were soon placed in their armies again, without having been exchanged. After that, the Nationals refused to parole any prisoners whom they could hold. They were sent to appointed stations in the Free States, for confinement until exchanged. 2. Grant's loss in the several battles from Port G-ibson to the capture of Vicksburg, in killed, wounded, and missing, did not exceed 10,(100 men. 3. Verse 43, page 2S1. 4. Verse £9, page 279. 5. Verse 34, page 277. Questions. — 46. Give an account of the investment and capture of Vieksbure. What was the result ? 47 What was Grant enabled to do? Who took command at Vicksburg? Where was Grant called to ? 4S. What have you to siy about the Confederates after their defeat at Murfreesboro' ? What did Rosecrans do i What important movements took place ? 284 THE NATION. Operations near Chattanooga. Battles of Chickamauga and Chattanooga, 49. Rosecrans followed Bragg over the Cumberland moun- tains at the middle of August, and, by a flank movement, com- pelled him to march on in the direction of Georgia. Some of the National troops took possession of Chattanooga, while the remain- der pressed forward through the passes of the great Lookout and Missionary mountains, to flank the Confederates. Longstreet and his corps, from Lee's army, 1 now reenforced Bragg, who turned suddenly and furiously upon his pursuer [September 19]. They fought until night. The Confederates renewed the battle fiercely in the morning. The conflict was terrible, and disastrous to both parties." The National troops were compelled to fall back to Chattanooga, and seek safety behind the fortifications there. This is known as the Battle of Chickamauga. 50. Rosecrans was in a perilous position. Grant hastened to his relief with reinforcements, and, at the close of October, the Confederates were driven from Lookout mountain and valley, and communication with Chattanooga was restored. Supplies were now moved rapidly to that point. Late in November, General W. T. Shorman, in command of the Department of Tennessee, joined Grant, who attacked the Confederates on the 23d. Then commenced that remarkable and fierce conflict, known as the Battle of Chattanooga. It continued until the 25th, when the Confederates were completely routed and driven into Georgia. Both parties lost heavily. 3 51. The victory at Chattanooga gave immense advantages to the National cause. The key to the military resources of Ala- bama and Georgia was thus placed in the hands of the patriots. At the same time, Burnside was struggling for the possession of East Tennessee, and the railway communications with Richmond 1. Verse 40, page 280. 2 The loss of the Nationa's in the battles of September 19th and 20th, was 16."51 men, 36 cannon, over 8,000 small arms, and a large amount of munitions of war. The Confederates lo.tf, in billed, wounded, and missing, according to their own stnteme ts, :ibout 20,000. Of these, 2000 were prisoners in the hands of Rosecrans. This confl < t occurred on the Chick- amauga creek, and is known as the Battle of Chickamauga. 3. The National loss, in killed, wounded, and missing, was about 4,ooo men. The Cot federate loss, is not known. Over 6,ooo prisoners, besides the wounded, 42 cannon, abont 6,000 small arms, and a large supply-train fell Into the bai ds of the Nationals. Questions. — 49. What d ; d Rosecrans do? What occurred at and near Chattanooga! 60. What have you to say about Rosecrans' s position ? How was be relieved ? What victory and advantages were gained? What can you lay about the great battle at Chattanooga? 61. What were the effects of tile battle of Chattanooga ? What was Burnside doing? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 285 Operations at Knoxville. Doings in Missouri. Morgan's raid. in that direction. He was atacked at Knoxville [November 18] by Longstreet, who went up from Bragg's broken army, for the purpose of driving him out of that region. Grant sent troops, under Sherman, to relieve him. Longstreet fled eastward, and, finally, made his way back to Lee's army in Virginia. 52. There was much activity in the Department of Missouri during 1863. No considerable battle occurred, but there were many skirmishes, in which the Nationals were generally success- ful. The Confederates were repulsed at Springfield, Missouri, early in January ; and were also driven away in confusion when they attacked the National forces [July 4, 1863], under General Prentiss, at Helena, Arkansas. On the 1st of September, General Blunt took Fort Smith from them; and on the 10th of the same month, General Steele attacked and captured Little Rock, the capital of Arkansas. The power of the insurgents was now com- pletely broken in that State. 53. At the time of Lee's invasion of Maryland and Pennsyl- vania [June, 1863], a large guerrilla 1 band, under General Morgan, a famous leader, composed of about three thousand cavalry, with six cannon, crossed the Ohio river into Indiana, and moved rap- idly eastward, plundering as they went. Their intention, doubt- less, was to cross into Western Virginia, and join Lee in Pennsyl- vania. They were foiled by the valor of home troops, who killed or captured almost the entire band of invaders. Morgan, with a remnant of eight hundred, surrendered to General Shackleford in Morgan county, Ohio, on the 26th of July. 54. The National army had made large progress at the close of 1863. Missouri, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, a large por- tion of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Florida, the Rio Grande fron- tier of Texas, and the control of the Mississippi river, had been wrested from the Confederates. Some of these districts were great food-producing regions, which made their loss to the insur- 1. Guerrilla is the Spanish word signifying "little war." It is a term applied to an irreg- ular mode of carrying on war by the constant attacks of independent bands. Questions. — 51. What can you tell about the siege of Knoxville? 52. What have you to say about affairs in Missouri? What can you tell of battles at Sprinefield and Helena? What did Generals Blunt and Steele do? 53. Can you give an account of Morgan's raid into Indiana and Ohio? What was it* probable object? Whit was the result? 54. What can you tell about the progress of the National army during 1863? 286 THE NATION. National successes. Doings of the Navy. Proceedings of Congress. gents very serious. The friends of the Government had cause for joy and firm hope. 1 55. The National navy, divided into six squadrons, 2 and em- ployed in the blockading service and in cooperation with armies, was very active and successful during the year, on the coasts and on the rivers inland. Those in the coast service were chiefly em- ployed in blockading Confederate ports, and in cooperation with land forces in attacking harbor defenses. We have already al- luded to the unsuccessful attack on Sumter. On the lVth of June, the WeehawJcen captured the Confederate "ram" Atlanta, on the Georgia coast ; and in July, several of the iron-clad steam- ers joined Gillmore's land forces in an attack on the defenses of Charleston, and lay there, for that purpose, a whole year or more. In the mean time, the squadrons under Farragut and Porter were doing noble service on the Mississippi and its tributaries. 3 56. The thirty-seventh Congress closed its last session on the 4th of March, 1863. It had placed the entire resources of the country in the hands of the President, and adopted measures for the increase and efficiency of the army. All distinctions between regular and volunteer troops were removed. * Arrangements were made for the organization of colored troops ; 4 and on the 3d of 1. The 8 cretary of War, in his report in December, 1863, paid: "The success of our armies during the last year, has enabled the Department to make a reduction of over $200,000,000 in the war estimates for the ensuing fi-eal year." 2. The whole number of vessels owned by the Government, at the close of 1863, was 688, carrying about 4,500 tjuns, and about 26,000 seamen. Of these vessels, 3S4 were in actual ser- vice, of which number, 75 were iron-clad steamers. Of these steamers, 46 were engaged in the coast service, and 29 on the rivers in the interior. The squadrons were geographically designated as follows : Potomac Flot 11a, North Atlantic Squadron, South Atlantic Squad- ron, Eastern Gulf Squadron, Western Gulf Squadron, Mississippi Flotilla, West India Squad- ron, Kast India Squadron, Mediti rranean Squadron, Pacific Squadron ; bes des half a dozen vessels on special service, and about as many engaged in miscellaneous duties. There were only six vessels on foreign stations ; the remainder were engaged in home service. 3. The Mississippi flotilla, at the close of the year, number* d over a hundred vessels, car- rying 462 cannon, and about 5,500 men. The blockading service was performed with great vigilance, generally. The number of vessels captured from the beginning of the war until November, 1863, was 1,045. These were chiefly fitted out in England or her colonies, for the purpose of running the blockade. The four principal coast squadrons captured over three hundred prizes during 1863, about one third of which were steamers. 4. At the close of the year 1863, there were about 60,000 colored troops recnlarly mustered into the armies of the Republic. The Emancipation Proclamation (verse 37, page 278) had caused immense numbers of slaves to flock into the lines of the National army, ard meas- ures were taken to give them employment as soldiers or laborers. Measures were also taken for their instruction aid moral discipline. The results were very wonderful. There wen large communities of these freedmen and their families in diflere t parts of the Southern Slates held by the National arms, where were soon promises of the most radical improve- Questions.— 55. What have you to say about the National navy? What were its duties? What can you tell atumt tie capture of a " ram," and the sieu'c of Charleston! 56. What did the National Congress do? What can you tell about colored troops < THE GEE AT CIVIL WAR. 287 The Draft. Riots in New York. The Army, the Ti .jatary, and the People. March [1863] a Conscription Act became law. 1 The President at once summoned [March 10] all enlisted or drafted troops to their places in the field or camp ; and, early in May, he called for a draft of three hundred thousand men. Violent opposition was excited against the measure ; and, on the day when the draft was to commence in New York city, a great riot broke out there, and lasted three days. Many lives and much property were sacrificed. 2 The Government, sustained by a majority of the citizens, went steadily on in its duty. The draft was enforced in twelve States. Fifty thousand men were added to the army by it, and ten and a half millions of dollars to the Treasury, 3 by the first of Decem- ber, 1863. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR CONTINUED [1864]. 57. The National armies were strong, cheerful, and well-ap- pointed, at the opening of the year, and the money affairs of the nation were in a healthful condition. 4 The patriotic war-spirit of the people was increasing ; and there were many indications to inspire confidence that the great insurrection would be subdued before the close of the year. On the 1st of February, the Presi- dent ordered preparations for a draft for three hundred thousand men; and, on the 15th of March, he called for two hundred thou- ments in the condition and character of their race. Thev also ma'le excellent soldiers. It was estimated that at the close of the war, there were almost 200,000 colored troops undor arms in the United States service. 1. A compulsory enrollment ot individuals for military or naval service. From these a certain number are chosen by lot for service in the field. This is performed by placing the name of each man enrolled on a card, and, putting these into a revolving cylinder, the required number of names are drawn out by a person with his eyes bandaged. This is com- monly called a draft, and cannot but be impartial. 2. About 100 lives, and property valued at $2,000,000, were destroyed. 3. There was a provision in the Conscription Act, that any drafted person might be ex- empted from duty, by paying three hundred dollars. A large number of the drafted men availed themselves of this privilege. 4. The National debt at the close of 1863, amounted to about 1,400 millions of dollars. This was due chiefly to the citizens of the United States who held Government bonds or circulating Treasury notes, familial ly known as "greenback?,"' because on the backs of the bills there were figures and devices printed in green ink. Congress had levied taxes and impost duties sufficient to form a safe promise of redemption, and the people had the fullest confidence in the ability of the Government to meet all demands that might be made upo i it. On the 1st of September, 1864, the exact amount of the public debt was $1,878,565,233, of which 1519,111,267 bore po interest. The actual amount of the interest, a year, of the debt at the above date, was $77,795,000. The amount of fractional currency in circulation was $24,490,000. Questions.— 56. What about a draft for the army, and a r'ot in New York city ? What was the result of the draft? 57. What can you say about the National armies at the begin- ning of 1864 ? What about money affairs, the war-spirit of the people, and promises of suc- ceso? What did the President do in February and March ? What did General Averill do? 288 THE NATION. Preparations for a campaign. Sherman's Invasion of Mississippi. Red river expedition. sand volunteers, to serve in the army and navy. At about the same time, the National troops, everywhere, were ready to begin the campaign. Preparatory to the movement of the Army of the Potomac, General W. W. Averill, with cavalry, had struck [Jan- uary 16, 1864] the Virginia and Tennessee railway, at Salem, west- ward of Lynchburg, and destroyed fifteen miles of the track between Lee and Longstreet. 1 58. On the 3d of February, General Sherman 2 left Vicksburg, with a heavy column, and made a most destructive invasion of the country eastward, almost to the borders of Alabama. In the space of twenty-four days he marched four hundred miles, and destroyed an immense amount of property of every kind, useful to the Confederates, and liberated about ten thousand slaves. 9 On the 5th of February [1864], General T. Seymour left Port Royal, South Carolina, at the head of an expedition to invade Florida. At Jacksonville he fought and defeated the Confed- erates, toward the middle of the month, and then pushed on, with about five thousand men, to Olustee, on the Florida Central rail' way, where he was met by a heavy force of insurgents [February 20] and thoroughly defeated. He retreated in good order to Jacksonville, and abandoned the enterprise. 59. On the 10th of March, General A. J. Smith left Vicksburg, with a considerable body of troops, and, with the fleet of Admiral Porter, went up the Red river. On the 13th, he captured Fort de Russey from the Confederates under General Taylor. This opened the way to Alexandria, and the invaders pushed forward to that place [March 15, 1864]. There they were joined by Gen- eral Banks, with a heavy columo from New Orleans, and the fleet and a portion of Smith's army advanced toward Shreveport. 4 The Nationals were met at Cane river on the 26th, where they fought and defeated the Confederates who opposed them. 60. Onward the National troops moved, and on the 8th of 1. Verso 51, pace 284. 2. Verse 50, page 284. S. About 6,000 of these accompan'ed the army hack to Vicksburg. 4. Shreveport is on the Red river, in Louisiana, near the borders of Texas. Qiestioxs.— 58. Give an account of Sherman'* invasion of Mississippi and Alabama, What can you tell about Seymour's expedition to Florida? 59. Can you give an account of an expedition up the Red river? What was accomplished ? What did Banks do? What occurred I THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 289 Operations on the Red river. Salvation of the National fleet. Army of the Potomac. April, they fought the Confederates at Sabine Cross Roads and at Pleasant Grove. The Nationals were defeated in the first battle, but won the second. The next day they gained a more substantial victory in a severe battle at Pleasant Hill. The patriots now fell back to Alexandria, and Banks ordered Por- ter, who had gone on toward Shreveport, to return, as he could afford him no support. The task was difficult. The Confed- erates swarmed on the banks of the narrow stream. Th.3 water was rapidly falling; and when Porter approached Alexandria, it was too shallow to allow his vessels to pass the rapids near there. Under the direction of Lieutenant-Colonel Bailey, of Wisconsin, the river was dammed up, and, by a process well known to lum- bermen, the fleet was passed in safety on the 11th of May. The army and navy then hastened to the Mississippi. 61. There were misfortunes elsewhere. General Steele, in Arkansas, 1 had attempted to cooperate with the Red river expedi- tion. When he heard of its retreat, he fell back toward Little Rock,' continually annoyed by attacking Confederates on the way, who captured two thousand of his men, and a train of two hundred wagons. In March, the Confederate General Forrest, with several thousand men, made a raid into Tennessee and Ken- tucky. He captured Union City, Tennessee, on the 24th, and, on the following day, five thousand of his troops nearly de- stroyed Paducah, on the Ohio river. On the 12th of April, they captured Fort Pillow, on the Mississippi, and there war appeared in its most savage form. 62. The grand Army of the Potomac, in the mean time, had fully prepared for the campaign, under the immediate command of General Meade ; 3 and three Western armies, concentrated under General Sherman, 4 were equally ready. In March, Grant was made a lieutenant-general, 5 and he became the general-in-chief of 1. Verse 52, page 285. . 2. Verse 52. page 285. 3. Verse 39, page 279. 4. Verse 68, page 288. 5. This rank in the army, which had been conferred only on General Scott (verse 6, QUESTtoNa.— 60. What can you tell about the movements of the National troops on Red river? Tell how Porter was ordered back, and what took place. 61. What can you tell about the movements of General Steele, and his misfortunes ? What can you tell about a raid into Tennessee and Kentucky by Forrest ? 62. What can you say about the Army of the Potomac under Meade, and those of the West under Sherman ? What can you tell about General Giant ? 13 290 THE NATION. Movements of the Great Armies. Severe battles in Virginia. LIEUTEHANT-GEXERAL GRANT. the armies of the Republic. He en- tered upon the duties of his office with vigor, and, on the morning of the 3d of May, he issued an order ' for the Potomac and the Western armies, sev- eral hundred miles distant from each other, to move forward. 63. The Army of the Potomac im- mediately crossed the Rapid Anna, 2 and moved toward Richmond on the right flank of General Lee, who was behind strong intrenchments in Orange county, Virginia. This movement compelled Lee to leave his works ; and, in the Wilderness, 3 not far from the Chancellorsville battle- ground, 4 the two great armies, numbering together not less, prob- ably, than two hundred and fifty thousand men, fought a severe bat- tle on the 5th. Longstreet's corps b had reached and strengthened Lee. For three days the combatants fiercely contended for the mastery, when the Confederates withdrew [May 7, 1864] in the direction of Richmond. Near Spottsylvania Court House heavy battles were fought ; and, at the end of six days of conflict, the Nationals had gained decided advantages. 6 64. By attacks and flank movements, Grant compelled Lee to page 24$), had been extinguished by that officer's retirement from the service. It was now revived, with special reference to General Grant, whose services had been of the greatest im- portance. 1. These orders were sent by the magnetic telegraph, which was a most wonderful instrumentality in the conduct of this war. During the year 1863, over 1,700 miles of land and submarine telegraph were constructed under the direction of the military authorities , and at least 3,000 despatches eacii day were sent and received over the military lii.es, during the year. These messages varied in length from 10 to 1,000 words and upward. 2. Note 3, page 280. 3. Verse 38, page 279. This is a broken, sterile tract of country in Spottsylvania county, Virginia, about fifteen miles in extent, commencing not far from the south bank of t lie Rapid Anna. It is intersected by gullies, and dotted with swamps. It is covered by a thick growth of stunted pines, dwarf oiks and underbrush, dense and almost impenetrable. Only rough paths go through it, and it is almost impassable after a rain. 4. Verse 38, page 279. This was the site of a tavern on the eastern edge of the Wilder- ness. 5. Verse 51, page 284. 6. At that time, Grant sent the following despatch to the Secretary of War- " We have now ended the sixth day of very heavy fighting. The result, to this time, is very much in our favor. Our losses have been heavy as well as those of the enemy. I think the loss of the enemy must be greater. We have taken over 5.000 prisoners in battle, while he lias taken from us few except stragglers. I propose to fight it out oa this line, if it takes all summer." Questions. — 63. Can you give an account of the movements and doings of the Army of the Potomac from the Rapid Anna to Spottsylvania Court House ? What battles occurred? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 29l Operations near Richmond. Petersburg besieged. Sherman's successes. leave one strong position after another, and fall back to the de- fences of Richmond, at the beginning of June. In the mean time, a large force, under General Butler, had gone up from Fortress Monroe and seized and fortified a strong position ' near the mouth of the Appomattox river, on the south side of the James, by which he held in check reinforcements under Beauregard, 2 then hasten- ing from the Carolinas to the army under Lee. This was to aid a movement already planned for placing the Army of the Potomac on the south side of the James river. This plan was successfully executed at the middle of June, and placed Grant in an advan- tageous position before Petersburg, a strongly intrenched town on the Appomattox river, twenty miles south of Richmond, and commanding, in a degree, the railway communication with North Carolina by way of Weldon. G5. Lee crossed the James river with the bulk of his army, and took a position to defend Petersburg, that being essential to the security of Richmond. Grant at once commenced a siege. He sent out cavalry expeditions in various directions to cut the railway communications with Lee's army and the Confederate capital. Early in July, these were placed in great peril. 3 66. While the Army of the Potomac was achieving these suc- cesses, that in Northern Georgia, under Sherman, was equally victorious. 4 Sherman advanced from Chattanooga 5 at the begin- ning of May. The Confederates, under J. E. Johnston, were then at Dalton, in Georgia. Steadily Sherman pressed forward, day after day, over a rugged mountain region, fought battle after battle, captured or passed round one stronghold after another 1. Bermuda Hundred. 2. Verse 11, page 268. 3. A force under General David Hunter captured Staunton, and thpn proceeded to cut the Virginia and Tennessee railway eastward of Lynchburg Another force, under General J. H. Wilson, destroyed many miles of the Richmond and Danville railway ; and another, under General Philip H. Sheridan, destroyed a port ; on of the railway between Gordonsville and Richmond. The Weldon road was also severed (but not seriously), as well as the road leading from Petersburg to Richmond. The James river was now in complete control of the Nationals, from its mouth to above the Appomattox river. 4. Sherman's force was composed of three armies, namely, that of the Tennessee, under General McPher-on ; of the Ohio, under General Thomas, and of the Cumberland, under General Sehofield. 5. Verse 50, page 284. Question's.— 64. What did Gr:.nt do ? What did Butler do ? Whnt was the object of his movement ? Whnt great achievement was effected ? 65. What did Lee do ? What expedi- tions were sent out by Grant, and what did they effect? 66. What have you to say r><>out movements elsewhere ? Can you give an account of Sherman's progress in Georgia ? What can you tell of events near Atlanta? 292 THE NATION. Atlanta besieged. The Confederate Navy. Lettcrs-of marque. (the Confederates as steadily falling back), until the middle of July, when he had crossed the Chattahoochee river with his whole army, and advanced upon Atlanta, one of the most important military positions in the South. Near that strong post three heavy battles were fought [July 20, 22, and 28], in which the Confederates were defeated with immense losses, when the National army close- ly invested the place. 1 Cavalry expedi- tions, in the mean while, had destroyed all the railway communications with At- lanta. 2 67. While the hearts of loyal men were joyful because of the success of the general shebma.n. National arms, news came of the destruc- tion, in the British cliannel, of the steam ship Alabama, which had, for almost two years, been the terror of American commerce. Two days after the President called for seventy-five thousand men to put down the insurrection, 3 the chief of the Confederates offered [April 17, 1861] letters-of-marque 4 to anybody who might choose to fit out a vessel to make war on the commerce of the Republic on the high seas. The Confederates organized a navy department, and gave places to the officers who had deserted the National flag; 6 but their means for the creation of a marine force were in- significant. 6 So they looked to Europe for aid, and, in the greed 1. In the battle of the 22d, Oerer.il McPhereon was killed. Two day? before [July 20), Johnston had been relieved of the command of the Confederate army in Georgia, and wa» succeeded by General Hood. 2. General Housseau, a Kentuckian, with a cavalry force, swept down from Decatur, in Northern Alabama, almost to Montgomery, and then alone; t he line of the rail way between that city and Atlanta, destroying; thirty-one miles of the track, many bridges, consuming station- houses and a vast amount of public property, capturing and paroling a large number of Con- federate soldiers, and freeing many negroes. He arrived at Marietta, after a march of four hundred miles in the course of thirteen days. Already the railway between Atlanta ami Au- gusta had been made useless to the Confederate army in Georgia ■ and at the beginning of August, a force under General Stoneman destroyed many miles of the railway between At- lanta and Macon. 3. Verse 4, page 265. 4. Such is the European title of the commissions given to the commanders of private armed vessels, to capture or destroy the property of an enemy. See no'.e 5, page 228. 5. A luge number of the officers of the National navy, who were natives or resdents of the Slave States, deserted their flag when the war broke out. and 8 imeresi raed before. They all joine 1 the Confederates, but found Utile to do in the wav of their legitimate profession. 6. K. S. Mallory, formerly a member of the National Senate, from Florida, was made Questions.— fi7. What news made loyal men rejoice? W r hat can yon tell about a Confed- erate navy and letters-of-marque ? Where did the Confederates look for aid and find it » THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 293 Confederates aided by England. English pirate vessels. Destruction of the Alabama. of England for the " supremacy of the seas," they found a stead- fast friend and helper. 68. The first formidable " privateer" pat afloat was the Sumter, (Captain Semmes,) whose destructive career was ended at the close of 1861. l Meanwhile, arrangements were made by the Confederates with Laird, a member of the British Parliament and a ship-builder, at Liverpool, to construct several powerful steam- ships for their use. The Oreto (afterward Florida) was soon at sea, and, in September, 1862, she ran the blockade at Mobile under English colors. She went to sea again in December, and made havoc among American merchantmen. She was never again in a Confederate port, but always found a welcome in British colonial harbors. 69. Semmes was soon in command of a powerful vessel, built by Laird, called the Alabama. She was essentially a British war- ship, with a Confederate commander and flag ; " and she fulfilled the expectations of the British shipping interest, by frightening American commerce into British vessels, and giving them a mo- nopoly of the carrying trade. 3 She always avoided our national ves- sels sent after her. She was finally blockaded in the French port of Cherbourg, by the Kearsarge, Captain Winslow. The French Gov- ernment ordered the vessel to leave their waters. She went out on the 19th of June [1864], met the ITearsarge, and, after a short con- flict, was sent to the bottom of the sea. Her commander and others were picked up by an English vessel in attendance, which carried them to England to save them from their conqueror. 4 Confederate Secretary of the Navy. They built a few iron clad trim-boats, for the defense of the ; r rivers, and " rams,'' for the protection of their harbors. Moot of them perished. 1. She was blockaded at Gibraltar, and was finally sold. 2. She was built, armed, and furnished in England, and almost wholly manned by Brit- ish subjects, several of them from the Royal navy. She sailed out of England under a Brit- ish flag, and was always welcomed into British ports. And before she went into battle with the Kearsarge, her commander, in a little speech to her officers and crew, repeated the words of Lord Nelson, "England expects every man to do his duty I" She was not allowed to carry her pr'zes into British ports, and so her commander generally plundered and burnt them at sea. The Alabama captured and destroyed 64 American vessel*. 3. The estimated value of property destroyed by the Alabama was $10,000,000. It was also estimated that nearly two tliirds of the carrying trade enjoyed by citizens of the United States was transferred to British vessels. During 1863, about 1,000 American ships were sold to foreign merchants, chiefly British. 4. One of the English aristocracy, named Lancaster, was near the scene of action, in his Questions.— 68. What can you tell about the Sumter? What have you to say about British ship builders, and their aid of the Confederates ? What about the Oreto or Florida ? 69. What can you tell about the Alabama 1 Give an account of her destruction What did her English friends do? 294 THE NATION. Invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania. Destruction of Ohambersburg. 70. The joy produced by the sinking of the Alabama was succeeded by alarm, caused by a sudden invasion of Maryland, early in July, by way of the Shenandoah valley, by about fifteen thousand Confederate soldiers, 1 under General Early, whose chief object seems to have been the seizure of supplies for the use of the army at Richmond. They were held in check on the Mono- eacy river, near Frederick, by General Wallace 2 and a few hastily assembled troops (about one third the number of the invaders), who fought them gallantly [July 9] for seven or eight hours, and saved Baltimore and Washington from capture or destruction. Overwhelming numbers caused Wallace to fall back. After threatening the two cities and securing a considerable amount of plunder, 3 including many horses, the Confederates fled across the Potomac, pursued by National troops, who struck them a severe blow [July 20] at Winchester. 4 71. Gathering force, the Confederates pushed the National troops back to the Potomac, and, at the close of July, some of them crossed the river, swept through Northern Maryland into Pennsylvania, and burned [July 30, 1864] the village of Cham- bersburg. 6 They soon fled back to Virginia, closely pursued, but yacht, tlic Deerhound , evidently by previous arrangement with the confederate commander, to afford him any assistance in his power. He took Semmes and other ofti cers. who were the legal prisoners to Wirs'.ow, on board his yacht, and carried them to Ei gland out of harm's way. A public dinner was offered Scmm'cs at Southampton ; and a British admiral (Anson) luaded a list of subscribers to a fund to purchase an elegant sword, to be presenied to him ! 1. It was estimated that the whole number detached from Lee's army for the great for- age raid, was about 20,000, a fourth of whom remained in Virginia, at different points from the Potomac to Lynchburg. 2. Verse 10, page 207. 'i. The spirit of the war, in Maryland, where the people were divided, may be illustrated by a single event. A Marylander, named Gilmor, with a body of horsemen, swept through the country, spreading destruction, alarm, ami confusion among the people. An old man. seventy- three years of age, named lslnnael Hay, said to some of them who came to his house, over which waved the national Hag: "Gentlemen, you may bum my barn, and rob my bouse, but I will shoot the first man who touches that Hag.*' Two of Gilmor' s raiders attempted to tear it down. The old man mortally wounded one of them with the contents of a duck-gun. when the other fled. Day escaped to the woods. A body of (iilnior's horsemen came up. turned the Old man's family out of doors, and burned his house and barn. •I. The National troops were commanded by General Averill. He killed or wounded three hundred of the Confederates, made two hundred prisoners, captured four cannon, and a large quantity of their plunder. 5. The 'village was destroyed by General McCausland Wfth 10 I rvm. He demanded as a ran som, J5 10,000. It was not given. 'and property of the value of $2,000,000 was destroyed. So the Confederates retaliated like destruction of property by the Nationals. It was but a sad illustra tion o!' the horrid character of War. another name for Destruction, which, unmindful of light and justice, tramples upon the innocent. Questions.- 70. Give an account of a Confederate invasion of Maryland. How \\cn< Balti- more and Washington saved? What then occurred? 71. What can you tell about the return of the Confederates to .Maryland and Pennsylvania, and the destruction of Chambersburg ? THE GEE AT CIVIL WAR. 295 Sheridan in the Shenandoah valley. Seizure of the Weldon railway. were strong enough to halt and gather food in the Shenandoah valley, which they sent off to Richmond. In the meantime, heavy reenforcements were sent by Grant to the opposers of the raiders, and all were placed under the command of General Sheridan, 1 who kept near the Potomac until the army before Petersburg had achieved an important success, when he moved forward [Septem- ber] to press the Confederates up the Shenandoah valley back in their track toward Richmond. 72. While these movements were going on near the Potomac, General Grant was making important ones on the borders of the James and Appomattox rivers ; 2 and during the months of July and August he gained substantial advantages, but not without heavy losses. He formed a mine under one of the strongest forts in the Confederate lines of defenses in front of Petersburg, and at dawn on the 30th of July it was exploded with fearful effect. 3 The fort, with about two hundred men, was destroyed. The ex- plosion was followed by a vigorous assault. The assailants were repulsed, and the well-devised plan for breaking the Confederate line and seizing Petersburg was foiled. 73. Three weeks later Grant secured a very important advan- tage by seizing the Weldon railway below Petersburg. That road was of vital importance to Lee's army, as the chief avenue through which he could receive supplies of men, munitions, and food, from the Southern portions of the Confederacy, or hold mil- itary communication with it. As early as the middle of August Grant was aware that Lee had sent reenforcements to Early in the Shenandoah valley, and he at once commenced strategic move- ments which were eminently successful. The Weldon road was seized [August 18], and every attempt (and they were desperate) 1. Note 3, page 291. 2. Verses 64 and 65, page 291. 3. The construction of this mine was suggested by Lieutenant-Cnlonel Pleasants, of the 48th Pennsylvania Regiment, and was performed by his men, who were mostly coal-miners. He excavated a nearly horizontal shaft about 500 feet in length, at the end of which, 10 feet below the surfare of the earth, and directly under the fort to be destroyed, a large chamber was excavated. In this were four connected magazines, containing, in the aggregate, between five and six tons of powder. These were ignited by means of a fuse. The explosion produced an immense crater. Questions.— 71. What did the Confederates then do ? What can you tell about reenforce- ments and Sheridan's operations? 72. What was Grant doing? Can you give an account of the destruction of a Confederate fort? What was the result? 73. Give an account of the seizure of the Weldon Railway. What was its importance to the Confederates, and what did they attempt to do ? What was the result ? 296 THE NATION. Sherman's movements and the capture of Atlanta. Victories in Mobile Bay. made to retake it [August 19, 20, 21, and 25] was defeated. The road was destroyed a distance of twelve miles, and the National troops, strongly intrenched, held a firm grasp upon it. 74. During the whole of August [1864] Sherman closely be- sieged Atlanta, 1 making his hold upon the Confederate forces there firmer and closer every day, and continually diminishing their ability to escape or endure a long siege, while his ample guards kept his own communications free from any serious dam- age by the guerilla parties and Confederate cavalry. At length, by a skillful flank movement, he severed the Confederate army that opposed him, seized their only remaining railway communi- cation between Atlanta and the surrounding country, and com- pelled Hood 2 to go from that city [September 2], in despair, to- ward the heart of Georgia. " So Atlanta is ours, and fairly won," Sherman modestly wrote in his despatch to his government. He announced one of the most important victories of the war, for, in connection with recent events near Mobile, it promised to the National arms the speedy control of the entire region of the Gulf States from the Atlantic to the Mississippi, 3 as well as of Georgia and South Corolina. 75. While the two great National armies of Meade * and Sher- man were struggling in close conflict with the two great Confed- erate armies of Lee and Hood, 6 the "Western Gulf squadron,' under Admiral Farragut, 7 was performing brilliant exploits near Mobile, assisted by a land force under General Gordon Granger. Early in the morning of the 5th of August [1864], the squadron sailed into Mobile bay past Forts Morgan and Gaines, at its en- trance. The vessels went in in pairs, lashed together, 8 and all 1, Verse 66, page 291. 2. Xote 1, paerc 292. 3. The States bordering on the Gulf of Mexico, namely, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida By this victory, the armed Confederal es in the Southern States were driven into the narrow compass of the seaboard portion of Georgia and South Carolina, the principal cities of which are Savannah and Charleston. 4. It must be remembered that Meade remained the commander of the Arm;/ of the Po- tomac, but under the immediate direction of Lieutenant-General Grant, whose headquarters were with that army. 5. Note 1, page 292. 6. Note 2, page 286. 7. Verse 24, page 273. 8. The Brooklyn, with the Octarora, led the way, followed by the Hartford (Ihe Admiral's flag-ship), and trie Metacomet as her consort. The Admiral was lashed to the maintop of the Questions.— 74. What was Sherman doing at Atlanta? Give an account of his victory there. What were its promised effects? 75. Can you give an account of how a National naval victory was won near Mobile ? THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 297 Capture of Forts Gaines and Morgan. passed the forts m safety excepting the "monitor" Tectimseh, which was sixik by a torpedo. A brief and furious engagement with the Confederate naval force then quickly ensued, and resulted in the capture of the formidable Confederate " ram " Tennessee, with the commanding admiral (Buchanan), and the seizure or dis- persion of the rest of the fleet. 76. General Granger landed with troops on Dauphin island, in the rear of Fort Gaines; and on the 8th [August, 1864] that post, with its garrison, guns, and provisions for a year, was sur- rendered to Farragut. Fort Morgan, on Mobile Point, was next attacked. Farragut's vessels took petition on both sides of the Point, and poured a terrific storm of shot and shell upon the doomed fortress, 1 while the land troops assailed it in the rear. It was surrendered unconditionally, with its garrison, on the 23d of August," when the preliminary work for the speedy capture of Mobile was accomplished. 3 77. The victories at Mobile and Atlanta, minor successes else- where, and the ample response given to the call of the President for more men to reinforce the two great armies in the field, 4 and the equally efficient navy, 6 gave assurance at the beginning of September that the end of the Civil War, and the return o*f peace were nigh. Because of these triumphs and this hopeful aspect of Hartford, that he nvght overlook his whole fleet and not be thrown down by the shocks of battle; and by means of a speaking-tube from his perch to the deck, he gave his orders. 1. About 3,000 shells were thrown into the fort. 2. It was officially reported that after the white flag had been raised in token of surren der, the Confederates spiked most of the cannon, and wantonly injured the carriages, stria 1 arms, ammunition, and provisions , and that the officers, with General Page at their head, destroyed the r swords that they might not be surrendered. Subsequent investigation proved this report to have been entirely unfounded. 3. T ie captn-ed forts at the entrance to the bay are about 30 mile* below MoYlo, 4. On the 18th of .Tuly, the President issued an order for a draft for 500,000 men at the end of 50 days, should the number asked for not be enrolled by volunteer ng before that time. About 200,000 were credited in consequence of enlistments in the navy and other causes, according to an act of Congress, and the number actually called for w:is reduced to 300.000. A large proportion of this number had volunteered, or Leen supplied in the form of substitutes, at the end of the 50 days. 5. The operations of the navy, during the war, were of the highest importance. Its ser- vices have not been as well appreciated as they deserve, because of its having acted much of the time as merely an auxiliary of the army. Its achievements were wonderful, and should receive equal credit with those of the army. 6. On the 5th of September, the joyful news reached New York that the confederate ship Georgia, which had done much damage to American commerce, had been captured oft t he port of Lisbon, Portugal, by the National steamship Niagara, and was on her way to the Questions.— 76. Can you give an account of the captures of Forts Gaines and Morgan at the entrance to Mobile Bay ? 77. What caused the President to recommend public thanks- givings ? 13* 298 THE NATION, Thanksgiving. Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley. Movements in Georgia. affairs, the President issued a proclamation [September 3, 1SG4], in which he requested the people to make a special recognition of Divine Goodness, by offering thanksgivings in their respective places of worship, on the following Sunday, the 11th of September. 1 78. Whilst Sherman was resting his weaned troops at At- lanta," and Grant was holding Lee fast near Richmond,' General Sheridan was giving the Confederates heavy blows in the Shen andoah Valley.* On the 19th of September he gained a great victory over Early, not far from Winchester. After that he held the Valley under complete control. 79. Late in September, Hood, 1 with his Confederate Army, moved toward Tennessee for the purpose of destroying Sherman's communication with Chattanooga and invading that State. The watchful Sherman was soon on his track, and gave him such heavy blows that he was compelled to flee toward Northern Alabama, where he prepared to invade Tennessee and push on toward the Ohio river. 80. Leaving General Thomas in Tennessee to oppose Hood, Sherman, early in November, com- menced a grand march with his army through the heart of Georgia, for the Atlantic coast. Atlanta was abandoned on the 14th. Threatening Macon and Augusta, 8 he moved forward, captured Milledgeville [November 23], the capi- tal of the State, and finally, on the 21st of December, he entered Savannah in triumph. The Confederates there un- GRNERAL THOMAS. United States in charsrc of a prize crew. The Florida and Ttilliiliassee were the only coufed- erate slaps afloat at the beginning of September. The latter was captured soon after. 1 On the game day the President issued orders for salutes of a hundred gurs to be fired on ti,e 5th and the 7th, at Washington, New York Boston, Philadelphia, KtUhnrg, Bal«- more Newport (Ky ), and St. Louis ; and at New Orleans, Mobile, 1'ensacola, II Ho i Head, an 1 Newbern, the day after the rece pt of tie order. 2. Verse 6.5, page 201. 3. \ er-e 6.,. p lge2»l. 4 Verse 71 page 294 5 Note 1, pago 282. d. These towns were important as depositories of munitions of war, but of little account In a military point of view. OnrsTios's — 7« What can you tell about Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley » 79. What _dllood Sol What di' ' What can you tell about at can vou ieii ;uvui ouciiu.iu in iuv guvuttuuuwi * «»i»^j ■ ."■ »■ •■■■- ddYlooddof What did Sherman do I What .ltd Hood prepare to attempt to do? 8a t Sherman's march through Geoiv • » Y^hat vras the result I THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 299 Invasion of Tennessee, Capture of Wilmington. Sherman's march through the Carolinas. der Hardee crossed the Savannah river and marched toward Charleston. 81. Hood, in the mean time, invaded Tennessee with an army of about forty thousand men. Thomas slowly fell back toward Nashville. A heavy battle was fought by Schofield and Hootl, at Franklin [November 30], and then the latter besieged Nash- ville. On the 15th of December, Thomas marched out, attacked the besiegers, and drove them southward with great loss of men and materials of war. Hood, greatly crippled, crossed the Ten- nessee into Alabama. 1 82. At the middle of December a military and naval expedi- tion was sent against Wilmington, the only seaport of importance then in possession of the Confederates." An unsuccessful attack "was made on the forts at the mouth of the Cape Fear river, on Christmas Day; but on the 15th of January [1805], they were captured by land troops under General Terry, assisted by the navy under Admiral Porter. Wilmington was captured by the National forces on the 21st of February. 83. General Foster co6j>erated Avith Sherman from Beaufort, South Carolina; and at the middle of January the latter moved his army into that State. They made their way through the swamps to the borders of the Upper Country. On the 17th of February they entered Columbia, and much of the city lay in ashes that night. Thus flanked, the Confederates fled from Charleston, and on the following day [February 18] colored troops marched in and took possession of that city. Sherman pushed on toward North Carolina without much opposition, whilst Schofield from Newbern and Terry from Wilmington were cooperating with him. After some fighting, the three armies 1. During this invasion, Rood lost one third of his army, and nearly all of his cannon. 2. From the beginning of this war, the Confederates received a vast amount of supplies through Wilmington, by blockade runners, and sent out cotton in return. Questions.— 81. What can yon tell about Hood's invasion of Tennessee? What battle was fought, and where? What occurred at Nashville? What became of Hood? 82. What can you tell about expeditions against Wilmington? 83. Who cooperated with Bherman in South Carolina? What can you tell about Sherman's march through South Carolina, and the result? How came Charleston to be abandoned f What can you tell of the junction of armies in North Carolina! '600 THE NATION. Sheridan's destructive operations. Defeat of Lee. met at Goklsboro' ' [March 22], while General J. E. Johnston, with the Confederate troops, was kept at bay near Raleigh.' 84. In the mean time Sheridan marched, with a heavy caval- ry force, up the Shenandoah Valley, and in the neighborhood of Charlottesville he almost annihi- lated Early's army 3 at the beginning of March. He then swept over the country toward Lynchburg, destroy- ing the railway and canal communi- cations with Richmond. Moving swiftly around to the north of that city, he broke up the railway com- munications with Fredericksburg, general bhbbidan. and without much opposition joined the Army of the James under General Ord toward the middle of March. 85. During the nine months that Grant and Lee faced each other on the James and Appomattox rivers, 4 hostile movements were frequent, and sometimes resulted in battles, which were almost always favorable to the Nationals. Finding his sup- plies cut oiF by Sheridan's operations, Lee prepared to aban- don Richmond, march into North Carolina, and join John- ston. 5 The watchful Grant would not allow it. Sheridan had joined him, and at the close of March [1865] the whole Army of the Potomac, with a part of that of the James, was in motion. After three days of hard fighting, during which time he lost more than 20,000 men, Lee was compelled to abandon his works at 1. Schofield's troops rnd a battle with the Confederates under Bragg, at Kinston. and were victorious. Two of Sherman's columns had conflicts with Johnston's troops after the former left . Fayetteville. The cavalry of Kilpatric.k and Wade Hampton also had some combats, in which the former were successful. 2. The capital of North Carolina. 3. Verse 70, page 294. 4. Versct 64 and G5, page 291 6 Beauregard superseded Hood in the command of the remnant of the Army of the Ten- nessee, after its disastrous expulsion by Thomas, and he in turn was superseded by John- ston, who was restored to the command of what was left of his old army. Questions —84. Give an account of Sheridan's attack o:i Early and his destructive raid around Richmond. 85. What can you tell about the armies of Grant and Lee ? What did Lee attempt, and why! How was he nre\ented from jo'ning Johnston t What can you tell of his flight and surrender ) THE GKEAT CIVIL WAR. 301 Surrender of Lee's Army. President Lincoln in Richmond. Assassination of the President. Petersburg and Richmond, and move westward, for the National troops were across his path to North Carolina. On the 9th of April he surrendered the remainder of his army to Grant at Appomattox Court House. 86. On the morning of the 3d of April, General Godfrey Weitzel, at the head of his colored troops, marched mto Richmond. 1 The mayor surrendered the city, and the people received them with joy. The Confederate " President," Cabinet, and Congress had fled, and with that flight the active power of the insurrection pnssed away forever. On the following day [April 4, 1865], President Lincoln, who had been at Grant's headquarters at City Point for several days, went up to Richmond, and, in the parlor of Jefferson Davis's house, held a public reception of army officers and citizens. 3 87. During the last operations of Lee's army, the war, in the Gulf region, had been rapidly drawing to a close. A land force under Gen- eral Canby, assisted by a squadron under Rear Admiral Thatcher completed what Farragut and Granger had begun,' by the capture of Mobile [April 12]. At the same time a cavalry force under General Wilson swept victoriously through Alabama, into Georgia ; and the re-occupation of that region by the Nationals was effected by the mid- dle of April. 88. The surrender of Lee's army gave assurance that the war was at an end ; and there was great joy everywhere. This joy was sud- denly turned into mourning when intelligence went over the land that the President had been assassinated [April 14] in a public place in 1. His corps (the Twenty-fifth), attached to the Army of the James, was composed wholly of colored troops. A portion of those were the first national troops that marched into Rich- mond. 2. Just one month before [March 4], Mr. Lincoln had been Inaugurated President of the United States for the second time, having been re-elected by an overwhelming vote of the people, with Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee, as Vice-President. His opponent, nominated by the Democratic party, was George B. McOlellan [see page 268], who received the electoral votes of three of the thirty-five States, namely, New Jersey, Delaware and Kentucky. 3. Verse 76, page 297. Qcbstions. — 86. Give an account of Weitzel's entrance into Richmond and the President's visit there. 87. What did Generals Canby and Wilson do ? 88. What did the surrender of Lee's army promise ? What can you teU about the assassination of President Lincoln ? What other murders were attempted ? Tell how Mr. Lincoln was succeeded in office. 302 THE NATION. Assault on the Secretary of State. Failure of the plan of the Assassins. Washington City, : and that the Secretary of State (Mr, Seward) had been terribly wounded, at his house, at the same time.' It was suspected that assassins had been hired by the " Confederate Gov- ernment," or its agents, to murder the President, the Vice-President, the Cabinet Ministers, General Grant, and other distinguished men,' with the hope that in some way, in the midst of the confusion that might ensue, their cause would gain an advantage. But no evi- dence ever appeared that justified such suspicion. 3 Only the President was killed. In less than six hours after his death, 4 the Vice-President was inaugurated President of the United States, and the Government went steadily on in its course. t. On the 14th of April it was announced that the President and General Grant^ by invi- tation, would visit Ford's theatre in the evening. General Grant did not remain in Wash- ington that evening. The President, unwilling to disappoint the public, went to the theatre with Mrs. Lincoln, and while sitting in a private box, J. Wilkes Booth, formerly an actor in that theatre, approached from behind, shot him throush the head, leaped upon the stage brandishing a knife and exclaiming, in the motto of Virginhu Sic semper tyrannia— So al- ways with tyrants— and escaped at the back of the bnildiug. He was afterward found in a barn, which was fired, and the culprit was shot [April 26] when he appeared, by a sergeant named Boston Corbett. Some of Booth's associates in crime were discovered, arrested, and received punishment. 2. Mr. Seward was then almost helpless, In bed, from the effects of a fall when thrown from his carriage a few days before. '■',. The Government offered a reward for the apprehension of several distinguished Confeder- ates, then in Canada, who were supposed to be leaders in the plot to assassinate the President. Policy, if ii" higher feeling had interfered, would have restrained the Confederate leaders from the commission of such a blunder. They well knew that it could not affect the life of the Government, but would make its friends stronger and more united. 4. The President died at twenty minutes past seven o'clock, on the morning of the 15th of April. Johnson's administration. 303 Surrender of the Confederate Armies. Close of the Civil War. CHAPTER XVII. Johnson's administration [1865-1869.] 1. In accordance with law, Vioe- President Andrew Johnson took the oath of office as President of the United States on the 15th of April, 1865. He retained the Cabinet Min- isters appointed by the late Presi- dent. 1 The war was almost ended. 2. The only remaining large army of the Confederates, under General Joseph E. Johnston, 3 surrendered to General Sherman in North Carolina, on the 26th of April. Other armies and guerilla bands 3 speedily followed this example. In the meantime, Jeff- erson Davis, 4 the leader of the se- cessionists, was fleeing toward the sea- coast to escape from the country. Ho was captured in Georgia on the 10th of May, whilst flying to the swamps from his surprised camp.' 3. By the middle of May [1865] The war had disturbed the relations of several of the States to the General Government, and also their social and industrial systems. Reorganization was necessary. It was the duty of the National Government to do it. The President formed a ANDREW JOHNSON. armed insurrection had ceased. 1. William H. Seward, Secretary of State ;Hugh McCullough, Secretary of the Treasury; Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War ; Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy ; John P. Usher, Secretary of the Interior ; James Speed, Attorney-General ; William Dennison, Postmaster- General. 2. Verse 66, page 291. 8. Note 1. page 285. 4 Verf e 2, page 262. 5. The Government had offered 8100,000 for his arrest He was captnred by a portion ol the Fourth Michigan Cavalry, under CoL B. D. Pritchard, near Irwinsvills, capital of Irwin county, Georgia. Questions. —1. What can yon tell about Mr. Lincoln's successor ? 2. What about the sui* render of Johnston's and other armies, and the flight and capture of Jefferson Davis T 304 JOHNSON'S ADMINISTRATION. Dienerecments between the President and Congress. Amendment* of the Constitution. plan and acted upon it. It was disapproved by Congress because il seemed to be unjust toward the emancipated slaves and calculated to restore political power to the vanquished enemies of the Government. 4. In December, 1865, Congress appointed a committee to devise a plan for the reorganization of the disturbed State governments. It was opposed by the President ; and from that time until the close of Mr. Johnson's administration, he was in open opposition to the repre- sentatives of the people. Finally he was tried before the National Senate, sitting as a high court of impeachment, charged with u high crimes and misdemeanors." The trial, which began at the close of March, 1868, ended in May following, when the President was acquit- ted by one vote, a vote of two-thirds of the Senate present, being necessary fir conviction. 5. Congress, meanwhile, had gone on steadily in the work of reor- ganization. All civil rights of a citizen were extended to the emancipated slaves; and an amendment of the National Constitution was adopted [January 31,1865] which prohibits slavery within the bounds of the Republic. 1 It forms the Thirteenth Amendment. Another amend- ment was afterwards adopted [June 13, 1SG6] which guaranteed civil rights to the emancipated slaves, disfranchised a class of leaders in the late insurrection, enforced the payment of the national debt, and dis- allowed the payment of the debt of the so-called Confederate States. 2 6. In May, 1868, Ulysses S. Grant, the eminent military com- mander,' was nominated by the Republicans for President of the United States, and Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana, for Vice-President. In July following, the Democrats nominated Horatio Seymour of New York, and Francis P. Blair, Junior, of Missouri, for the respective offices. Grant and Colfax were chosen for the high positions by a large majority of the people. 1. See Article XIII of Amendments of the Constitution. Its ratification by the re- quisite number of States was proclaimed on the 18th of December, 1S66. 2. See Article XIV of Amendments of the Constitution. Its ratification was proclaimed on the 20th of July, 1808. 3. Page 290. Questions.— 3. What can you tell about the reorganization of State governments, and th« President's plan ? 4. What can you tell about the action of Congress, and impeachment of the President ? Questions. — 6. What Important work did Congress da ? WTiat amendments of the con- eritution were adopted " «. Who were nominated for President and Vice-President of tin United States, and who were elected ? THE NATION. 305 Increase of States. Measures for securing Liberty and Justice. 7. During President Johnson's ad- ministration, one new State (Neb- raska) was added to the Union, making the whole number thirty-seven. At its close there were eight organ- , ized Territories, 1 growing so rapidly in population that they would soon be ready for admission as States. Meas- ures were taken for the complete res- toration of the union of States, and especially for thoroughly sustaining vthe public credit, 5 and the guaranteeing of civil and political rights to all citi zens. At near the close of the session of the Fortieth Congress in March, 1869, a Fifteenth Amendment of tho Constitution was adopted, declaring that the right of every citizen of the Republic to vote shall not be denied " on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." 3 The amend- ment was ratified by the required num- ber of States during 1870. 8. During the eight years of President Grant's administration, which, began on the 4th of March, 1869 4 (and continued by re-election, in 1872, until the 4th of March, 1877), important events occurred in our country. IKESIIENT GItANT BIRTUPLACE. AND IIIS 1. Arizona, Dacotah, Idaho, Montana, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Washington. 2. By a majority of two-thirds in each House, Congress enacted [February 28, 1869] that " the faith of the United States is solemnly pledged to the payment, in coin or its equivalent, of all the obligations of the United States," unless otherwise agreed upon at the time of the creation of the debt. 3. The following is a copy of the Fifteenth Amendment, which was immediately Bent to the Legislatures of all the States : "Article XV. The right of the citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous con- dition of servitude. 1 ' "Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article, by appropriate legislation." 4. The following gentlemen composed his Cabinet: Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State; George S. Boutwell, Secretary of the Treasury; John A. Rawlins, Secretary of War; Adolph E. Borie, Secretary of the Navy ; Jacob D. Cox, Secretary of the Interior ; John A. J. Cress- well, Postmaster-General ; E. R. Hoar, Attorney-General. Question.— What can you say about President Johnson's administration ? What can you tell about an amendment to tlie Constitution V 306 CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION. Grant's Administration. Election of President Hayes. Early in 1869, a railway from oceau to ocean, across the continent, was completed ; and surveys for a ship canal across the Isthmus of Darien were made. 9. Armed vessels, built and fitted out in Great Britain during our Civil "War, to aid the Confederates, destroyed the property of loyal Americans on the ocean. The Government of the United States claimed damages from Great Britain ; and in 1871 a treaty was made between the two governments to settle the matter. A court of arbitration held at Geneva, Switzerland, decided that Great Britain should pay to the United States $15,500,000 in gold, and it was done in September, 1872. 10. In May, 1872, the Union was finally reorganized, and every seat in Congress was filled. During Grant's administration, a large amount of the public debt was paid, the taxes were reduced, and the public credit was strengthened. Our relations w r ere satis- factory with all the world, excepting some trouble with the Indian tribes within our borders. A more humane and wise policy toward that race has been inaugurated, and promises success. 11. In 187G, the first century of the Republic was completed, and a commemorative Exhibition of the Industries of nations was held at Philadelphia for six months, beginning in May. Thirty- three foreign nations participated in it. Almost ten million per- sons visited it, and about $1,000,000 were received as entrance- fees. On the 4th of July that year, Colorado was admitted as a State ; and in the autumn, Rutherford B. Hayes, of Ohio, was chosen President of the United States, with William A. Wheeler, of New York, as Vice-President. They were inaugurated on the 1th of March, 1877. 1 1. The following gentlemen composed the Cabinet of President Hayes: William M. Evarts, Secretary of State ; John Sherman, Secretary of the Treasury; George W. McCrary, Secretary of War; R. W. Thompson, Secretary of the Navy; Carl Sehurz, Secretary of the Interior; D. M. Key, Postmaster-General; and General Devens, Attorney-General. Questions.— 8,9, andlO. What important events occurred daring Grant's administration? 11. What can you tell about an international Centennial Exhibition, and the admission of a new State ? What about the election of a President and Vice-President r THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 307 SECTION XVII. THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION AND GROWTH OF THE REPUBLIC [1 789-1864]. We have considered the causes which led to the construction of the National Constitution, in 1787; its adoption by the people of the United States as the organic law of the land, and the estab- lishment of a National Government in accordance with its plan. 1 Let us now take it up and study it carefully, for it is the Great Charter of our Liberties. We will begin with the introductory remarks, or PREAMBLE. We the People of the United States, 2 in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, 3 do ordain and establish this Con- stitution for the United States of America. ARTICLE I. SECTION I. All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a 1. See pages 193 and 194. Previous to the Revolution, there were three forms of gov- ernment in the colonies, namely, Charier, Proprietary, and Provincial. The charter gov- ernments were Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. They had power to make laws not inconsistent with those of England. The proprietary governments were Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Their governors were appointed by their proprietors, and these ami the. proprietors usually made the laws. The provincial were New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. In these the governor and his council were appointed by the crown, and these, with chosen represent- atives of the people, made the laws. 2. The Union is older than the Constitution. It was formed in the first Continental Con- gress (page 127), by the representatives of thirteen separate but not independent nor sov- ereign provinces, for they had ever been subject to the British crown. Then the inhabitants of those colonies were solemnly leagued as one people, and two years later (verse 9, page 142) they declared themselves collectively independent of Great Britaiv, and recognized the supremacy of the Continental Congress as a central government. See Curtis's History of the Constitution, i. 39, 40. The plan of Independent State governments then adopted having failed (ver.-:e 6, page 193), a national one was formed, and the framers of the Constitution, to srive emphasis to the fact, said in the preamble of the instrument, "We the people of the United States," instead of "We the people of Massachusetts, New York," et cetera. So argued the Supreme Court. See Wheatoris S.C. Reports, i. 304. 3. Six objects, it is seen, were to be obtained, each having a national breadth of purpose. Questions.— What have we considered? What are the remarks introductory to the Na- tional Constitution called ? Recite the Preamble to the Constitution. Who ordained an4 established the Constitution ? For what purposes ! 308 THE NATION. Congress of the United States, which shall con Legislative powers. . . « -. , r sist of a senate and house of representatives. SECTION II. 1st Clause. — The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every second year by the House of Repre- . _ .. . _ " , , , . sentatives people ot the several States, and the electors in each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the State legislature. 8 2d Clause, — No person shall be a representative who shall not have attained to the age of twenty-five years, Qualification of -, , „ ,, TT ., , _ and been seven years a citizen of the United Representatives. * btates, and who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen. 8 3d Clause. — Representatives and direct taxes shall be appor- tioned among the several States which may be Apportionment of . . , -. .Jx. .,. TT . ,. /, . _ x . included within this Union, according to their Representatives. . . ' _=» , respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths of all other persons. 5 The actual enumeration shall be made within three years after the first meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent term 1. The members of the House of Representatives are elected to scats therein for two years, and they hold two regular sessiors or sittings during that time. E:ich full term is Called a Congress. Senators are elected by the State legislatures, to serve for six years. 2. There is a Senate and House of Representatives, or Assembly, in each State. Any verson qualified to vote for a member of his State Assembly, may vote for a member of the National House of Representatives. 3. A person born in a foreign country, may be elected a repre. dilative after ho has been for eeven years a citizen of the United States. 4. It has been decided that this docs not restrict the power of imposing direct taxes, to States only. The Congress of the United States has powerto doso, but only for the purpose of paying" the national debts and providing for the national welfare. See Kent's Common- lories on the < 'onstitution, abridged edition, page ":!n. ]>ireet taxes bad been laid three times by the National Congress, previous to the Great Civil War that broke out in 1SG1, namely, in 179 s . 1813, and 1815. 5. The "other per- oris" here mentioned were slave.. In making the apportionment, every live slaves arc accounted three persons. Questions. — Art. I. Legislative Department. Sec. I. R?cite Bect;o:i I. In what body are all legislative powers vested f Of what does < lonjrrrss i (insist 1 Sec. II. Recite the let CUvuss. How is the House of Representatives composed ? now often and by whom are the Representatives chosen? What are the qualifications for an elector or voter ? Recite the 2d Clause. What Is said about the age of a Representative? How long must lie have been a e'tizeii of the United States? What is required in regard to his residence! What three qualifications must a Representative possess! Recite the Sci Clause. How are Representatives and direct taxes apportioned among the several States? How are the respective numbers of the representative population to be determined? When was the first enumeration or census to be made, a::d how often thereafter ? THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 309 of ten years, in such manner as they shall by law direct. The number of representatives shall not exceed one for every thirty thousand, but each State shall have at least one representative ; and until such enumeration shall be made, the State of New Hampshire shall be entitled to choose three, Massachusetts eight, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations one, Connecticut five, New York six, New Jersey four, Pennsylvania eight, Delaware one, Maryland six, Virginia ten, North Carolina five, South Caro- lina five, and Georgia three. 1 4th Clause. — When vacancies happen in the representation from any State, the executive authority thereof vacancies how shall issue writs of election to fill such va- filled, cancies. 5th Clause. — The House of Representatives shall choose their speaker and other officers;* and shall have the speaker, how ap- sole power of impeachment. 3 pointed. s E CTJ ON III. 1st Clause. — The Senate of the United States shall be com- posed of two senators from each State, chosen Number of Senators by the legislature thereof, for six years ; 4 and from each state, each senator shall have one vote. 2d Clause. — Immediately after they shall be assembled in con- sequence of the first election, they shall be di- classification of vided as equally as may be into three classes. Senators. • The seats of the senators of the first class shall be vacated at the 1. The apportionment is made as soon as practicable after each enumeration of the in- habitants is completed. The ratio based on the census of 1790, was one Representative lor every 33,000 persons. The ratio according to the census ofl860,isone forevery 127,316 persons. 2. The presiding officer is called the speaker. The other officers of the House, alluded to. are clerk, sergeant-at-arms, d>or-keeper, and postmaster. 3. That is to say, to declare unfit for duty, any civil officer of the United States. 1 his clause gives the Representatives of the people the right to inspect, inquire into, and supervise the several departments of the Government, from the President down. 4. This gives perfect equality to the States, in one portion of the legislative branch ot the Government. The small States of Rhode Island and Delaware have as much power in the National Senate as the large ones of New York and Ohio. Questions —Sec II. 3d Clous". How mmv inhabitants, at least, are requ'red for one representative? What shall ench State have? What number of representatives respectively were the States then in the Union entitled to? Of how many member?, consequently, did the first House of Representatives consist? Recite the 4th Chnixe. H«>w are vacancies in the representation of a State to be filled? Recite the Hh Clause. Who shall choose the officers of the House of Representatives? Sec. III. Recite the \si Clause. Of whom shall the Senate be composed? By whom are the Senators chosen, and for what space of time? How many votes is each Senator enti- tled to? 810 THE NATlOtf. expiration of the second year, of the second class at the expira- tion of the fourth year, and of the third class at the expiration of the sixth year, so that one-third may be chosen every second year ; ' and if vacancies happen by resignation, or otherwise, during the recess of the legislature of any State, the executive thereof may make temporary appointments until the next meeting of the legis- lature, which shall then fill such vacancies. Zd Clause. — No person shall be a senator who shall not have attained to the a2,e of thirty years, and been Qualification of nine g a dtizen of the Un ited States, 2 and Still l-tOl'S who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen. 4th Clause. — The Vice-President of the United States shall be Presiding- officer of president of the Senate, but shall have no vote, the Senate. unless they be equally divided. 3 5th Clause. — The Senate shall choose their other officers, 4 and also a president pro tempore, in the absence of the Vice- President, or when he shall exercise the office of President of the United States. 6th Clause. — The Senate shall have the sole power to try all Senate, a conrt for impeachments : 5 When sitting for that pur- triai of impeach- pose, they shall be on oath or affirmation. ments. When the President of the United States is tried, the chief-justice 5 shall preside: and no person shall be 1. This in a wise provision. It leaves representatives of the people in that branch, at all times, familiar with the legislation thereof, ami therefore more efficient than if an entirely new delegation should be chosen at the end of six years. 2. This was to allow a foreign-born citizen to make himself familiar with our Institutions, before ho should be eligible to a seat in that highest legislative hall. 3. He is not a representative of any State. By this arrangement, the equality of the States is preserved. 4. Secretary, clerk, sergeant-at-arms, door-keeper, and postmaster. 5. Verse 4, page 301. The House of Representatives, it will be observed, itnpeacll the allege. 1 offender, that Is to say, are his accusers, and the (Senate constitutes the court where- in he is tried. 6. Verse 2, page 196. Questions.— Sec. III. 2d Clause Recite the 2<1 Clawe. Into how many classes were the Senators at first divided? In what order were their seats vacated ? What proportion of Senators are chosen every second year? Under what conditions may the Executive or Governor of a State fill a vacancy in the Senate? How long may a Senator so appointed fill the office? How shall the vacancy then be filled 1 Recite the. Jot fXauw. At what age Is a n rson el 'gible to be a Senator! How long must be have been a citizen of the United States? What is required concerning his residence? What are the three requisites of a Senator? Recite the At/i Clawt Who shall be the President of the Senate! When may he vote? Recite the Ulh Clause. What officers shall the S nate choose? What officers mav they choose pro ti'in pore, or for the time being, and under what conditions? Recite the flth <'/ urr ence of the Senate and House of Repre- powers of the sentatives may be necessary (except on a ques- President. ^ on f adjournment) shall be presented to the President of the United States ; and before the same shall take effect, shall be approved by him, or being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by two-thirds of the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives, according to the rules and limitations prescribed in the case of a bill. 8 SECTION VIII. 1st Clause.— The Congress shall have power to lay and collect Powers vested in taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the Congress. debts and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States; but all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States ; 3 1. Note 3, page 304. 2. This requirement is made that Congress may not pass, with the name of order, resolu- tion, or vote, what, as a bill, the President has already vetoed, as his method of returning a bill, with his objections, is called. 3. The power of Congress to lay and collect duties, etc., for national purposes, extends to the District of Columbia, and to the Territories of the United States, as well as to the States ; but Congress is not bound to extend a direct tax to the ] >i ~t rii- 1 and Territories. The stipulation that the taxes, efts., shall be uniform throughout the United States, is to prevent favors being shown to one State or section of the Republic, and l.ot to another. Questions.— Sec. VII. Id Clause. When shall the bill be sent to the other House 4 W'>at shall accompany the bill i What shall the other House do? It" the bill shall be approved by two-thirds of both Houses, what then i How shall the votes of the Houses be determined, in such c.isrs!' What shall be entered in the journals 1 Under what other conditions may a bill become a law ? What is the exception ? Recite the 3'/ Clause. What mui-t be done with every order, resolution, and vote, requiring the concurrence of both Houses, he'Vuv they shall take effect ? What is the exception I How may such orders, resolutions, and votes be made effecfrve, notwithstanding the President's veto? Sec. VIII. Recite the 1st Clause. What powers are given to the Congress concer ing laves, duties, imposts, excises, debts and the common defense of the Tinted States? What is said about the uniformity of duties, imposts, and excises' THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 3i5 2d Clause. — To borrow money on the credit of the United States ; ' 3d Clause. — To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes ; 2 4th Clause. — To establish an uniform rule of naturalization, 3 and uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States ; ' 5th Clause. — To coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coin, and fix the standard of weights and measures ; 6 6th Clause. — To provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the securities and current coin of the United States ; 1th Clause. — To establish post-offices and post-roads ; 8^ Clause. — To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times, to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries ; 6 9th Clause. — To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court ; r 10£A Clause. — To define and punish piracies and felonies com- mitted on the high seas, and offenses against the law of nations ; 8 1. This was to enable the Government to provide for its expenses at a time of domestic insurrection or a foreign war, When the sources of revenue by taxation and impost, might be obstructed. 2. This power was lacking, under the Articles of Confederation (verse 2, page 150). It is one of the most important powers delegated by the people to their representatives, for it in- volves national development and prosperity. 3. The power of naturalization was possessed by each State under the Confederat'on. There was such want of uniformity of laws on the subject, that confuson was already manifested, when the people, by the Constitution, vested the power exclusively in Congress. Thus a State is prohibited from d : scouraging emigration, or casting hinderances in the way of ob- taining citizenship. By a recent decision of the attorney-gei eral of the Republic, every per- son born within its borders is entitled to the rights of citizenship. It is a birth-right. 4. Since the adoption of the Constitution of the United Slates, a State has authority to pass a bankrupt law, provided such law does not impair the obligations of contracts within the meaning of the Constitution (art. i., sec. 10), and provided there be i o act of Congress in force to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy conflicting with such law. 5. This was to insure Uniformity in the metallic currency of the Republic, and of weights and measures for the benefit of the people in commercial operations. 6. The first copy-right law was enacted in 1793, o i the petition of David Ramsay, the his- torian, and others. A copy-right, or patent-right to an invention, is given for a specified time. A copy-right is granted for 28 years, and a renewal for 14 years. Patents are granted for 17 years, without the right of extension. 7. Verse 2, page 196. 8. Congress has power to provide for the punishment of offenses committed by persons on board of an American ship, wherever that sbip may be. Questions.— Sec. VIII. What power is given to Congress by the 2d Clause? What rower is given to Congress by the 3«/ Clause t Wh't power ; s given to Co gress by the ith Clause t What power >s given to Congress by the bt'i Clause ? What power is given to Congn ss by the 6th Clause ? What power is given to Congress by the 1'h Clause ? What power is given to Con- gress by the 8th Clause t What rower is given to Congress by the 9th Clause t What power is given to Congress by the 10th Clause t 316 THE NATION. llth Clause. — To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water ; 12th Clause. — To raise and support armies, but no appropria- tion of money to that use shall be for a longer term than two years ; 13th Clause. — To provide and maintain a navy ; 14th Clause. — To make rules for the government and regula- tion of the land and naval forces ; 15th Clause. — To provide for calling forth the militia to exe- cute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrections and repel inva- sions ; lQth Clause. — To provide for organizing, arming, and dis- ciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the appointment of the officers, and the au- thority of training the militia according to the discipline pre- scribed by Congress ; ' 17th Clause. — To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such district (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Con- gress, become the scat of the government of the United States,* and to exercise like authority over all places purchased by the con- sent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings ; — And 18th Clause. — To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof. 1. Clauses 11 to 16 inclusive, define the war pow.-rs of the Government, such :ie grant- mtr licenses to privateers (note 5, page 228), rais'ng and supporting armed forces on land and sea, calling out the militia, etc. See Article II. of the Amendments to this Constitution. These powers, used l>y the hand of an efficient and judicious Executive, are quite sufficient. The President cannot exercise any of them, until the power is given him by Congress, when he. is hound by his oath to take care that all the laws shall be executed. 2. Congress has authority to impose a direct tax on the District of Columbia (i-.ote 3, page 306), in proportion to the census directed by the Constitution to be taken. Questions. — Sec. VIII. What power is given to Congress by the Wh Clans?! Wliat power is given to Congress by the 12th Clause t What power is given to Congress by the 13th Clause i What power is given to Congress by the 14th Clause t What power is given to Congress by the loth Clause ? What power is given to Congress by the lMt ' 'lause t What is reserved to the States respectively ? What power is given to Congress by the llth Clause? What power is given to Congress by the 18th Clause t THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 317 SECTION IX. 1st Clause. — The migration or importation of such persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Imni a5mitted h ° W Congress prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a tax or duty may be imposed on such importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person. 1 2c? Clause. — The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of re- , „. . . ,, ■,,. r , Habeas Corpus, bellion or invasion the public safety may re- quire it. a 3d Clause. — No bill of attainder 3 or ex post ... . ., Attainder, facto law shall be passed. 4th Clause. — No capitation, or other direct, tax shall be laid, unless in proportion to the census or enumera- tion hereinbefore directed to be taken. 6 5th Clause. — No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any State. 6th Clause. — No preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or revenue to the ports of one State over those of another: nor shall vessels bound Re ^ ulations **- to, or from, one State, be obliged to enter, u clear, or pay duties in another. 1. The object of this clause was to end the slave-trade, or the importation of regroesfrom Africa, to become slaves in the United States, after the first of January, 1808. The Articles of Confederation allowed any State to continue the traffic indefinitely, for the States were independent of each other, and the organic law was silent on the subject. The importation of slaves after the beginning of 1808, was prohibited under severe penalties by the Act of March 2, 1807. Act.} o.i the subject have since been passed by Co gress from time to time. That of 1820 declared the foreign slave-trade to be piracy, "in July, 18fi2, Congress made provisions for carryiug into effect a treaty with Great Brittain for the suppression of the slave-trade. A domestic .slave-trade was kept up until the beginning of the Civil War in 1861. It was Virginia's largest source of revenue. 2. This is a writ for delivering a person from false imprisonment, or for removing a per- son from one court to another. The act of suspending the privilege of the writ must bo done by the Executive, in the cases specified, under the authority of an Act of Consress. 3. A deprivation of power to inherit or transmit property, a loss of civil rights, etc. 4. Declaring an act criminal or penal, which was innocent when committed. 5. This was to secure uniformity in taxes laid on persons or on lands. 6. To secure free trade between the States, that one might not have an advantage over another, was the object of these two clauses. Questions.— Sec. IX. Recite the 1st Clause. "What restrictiors were imposed upon Con- gress concerning the migration or importation of certain persons meaning slaves, from Africa or elsewhere ? What was the limit of that restriction ? What tax or duty might be laid ? Recite the 2d Clause. What is said concerning the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus? What does the 3d Clause prohibit? What is said in the 4th Clause about taxation ? What does the 5th Clause prohibit concerning exportation from any State ? Wnat does the 6th Clause provide concerning the commerce between the States? 318 THE NATION. 1th Clause. — No money shall be draw from the treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law : Money, how drawn. -, , , . ". , . and a regular statement and account of the receipts and expenditures of all public money shall be published from time to time. 1 Bth Clause, — No title of nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no person holding any office of Titles of nobility £ . -, , , „ • , pront or trust under them, shall, without the prohibited. r . ' ' consent of the Congress, accept of any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from any king, prince, or foreign state. 2 SE cti on x. 1st Clause. — No State shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation; grant letters of marque and re- Powers of States de- • i • -,. vmi x» i-j. i prisal ; coin money ; emit bills of credit ; make fined. anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or grant any title of nobility. 2d Clause. — No State shall,Avithout the consent of the Congress, lay any impost or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws ; and the net produce of all duties and imposts, laid by any State on imports or exports, shall be for the use of the treasury of the United States ; and all such laws shall be subject to the revision and con- trol of the Congress. 3d Clause. — No State shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops, or ships-of-war in time of peace, enter into any agreement or compact with another State, 1. This drives to Congress the control of the money belonging to the Republic, and places (t beyond the reach of the Executive. 2. This was to secure equality of rights and privileges among the citizens, and to cl.eck the bad effects of foreign influences m the form of aristocratic distinctions. Questions.— Sec IX. What is provided |h the 7th Clause in relation to the drawing of monev from the Treasury, and a statement and account of receipts and expenditures! Recite [bf Ht?i Cltiune. What is paid concerning tit!es ofnob'lityf What restrictions con- ccrnlng favors from foreigners are laid upon National officers i Sec. X. What restrictions are laid upon each Btate by the let Clause? What restrictions are laid upon eacli St ite by the 2d Clause f What restrictions are laid upon each State by the 3d Clause f THE .NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 319 or with a foreign power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay. 1 ARTICLE II. SECTION I. 1st Clause. — The executive power shall be vested in a Presi- dent of the United States of America. 2 He shall hold his office during the term of four xec1 - 1 L ° 7er ' __. in whom vested, years, and, together with the Vice-President, chosen for the same term, be elected, as follows : 2d Clause. — Each State shall appoint, in such manner as the legislature thereof may direct, a number of elect- , ,, , , , j, t Presidential elect- ors, equal to the whole number ol senators and ' *■ ors. representatives to which the State may be en- titled in the Congress : but no senator or representative, or person holding an office of trust or profit under the United States, shall be appointed an elector. 3 1. By this section the people of the several States who, In conventions, ratified the Na- tional Constitution invested the General Government with the supreme attributes of sover- eignty exclusively, while reserving to themselves, or their respective commonwealths, the powers peculiar to the municipal authority of a State, which are essential to the regulation of its internal affairs, and the preservation of its domestic institutions from interference byanother State, or by the National Government In a time of domestic tranquillity. The National Government is hereby empowered to act for the people of the whole Republic as a nation. Having no superior, it is sovereign. See Story's Commentaries on the Constitu- tion, chapter xxxv. 2. The Executive is a coordinate but not coequal branch of the Government with the legis- lative, for he is the agent provided in the Constitution for executing the laws of a superior, the Co' gress or legislature. 3. This clause was followed by another, defin ; ng the method of choosing a President and Vi-ce-President of the United States. It was afterward annulled, and Article XII. of the Amendments to this Constitution was substituted for it. Originally the electors voted by ballot, for two persons, one of whom, at least, should not be an inhabitant of the same State with themselves. The one who received the highest number of votes was declared to be President, and the one receiving the next highest number was declared to be Vice-President. For an example, see verse 4, page 202, and explanatory foot-note number 1. Questions.— Art. II. Executive Department. Sec. I. Recite the 1st Clause. In whom is the executive power of the Republic vested? What is the term of office of the President and Vice-President? Recite the 2d Clause. What shall each State do ? What shall be the number of electors ? Who may not be an elector ? Now turn to the Twelfth Amendment of the Constitution, on page 324. Where shall the electors meet ? How shall they vote ? What restriction is made ? How shall their ballots be made out? What lists shall they make ? What shall they do with them ? What shall the President of the Senate do? Who shall be declared the'President under certain condi- tions? What are those conditions ? When no choice shall be made by the electors, by whom is the President chosen ? From how many and what candidates must the House of Repre- sentatives choose a President ? How shall the votes be taken ? What shall constitute a quo- rum? What is necessary to a choice? In the event of the House not choosing a President before the 4th of March following, who shall act as President ? How shall the Vice-President be chosen ? In the event of no choice by the electors, how shall he be chosen ? Under what •onditions may the Senate make the choice ? What is said about the eligibility of a person for Vice-President ? 320 THE NATION. i 3d Clause. — The Congress may determine the time of choosing the electors, and the day on which they shall °° Sme £* ve their votes ; which day shall be the same throughout the United States. 1 4th Clause. — No person except a natural born citizen, or a citi- zen of the United States, at the time of the .. _ .. t adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible tile President. x ' ° to the office of President; neither shall any person be eligible to that office who shall not have attained to the age of thirty-five years, and been fourteen years resident within the United States. 5th Clause. — In case of the removal of the President from of- fice, or of his death, resignation, or inability to Resort in case of ,. , ,, ° , . ' „ ... .i „ •-. .. ..... discharge the powers and duties ot the said of- his disability. ° x fice, the same shall devolve on the Vice-Presi- dent, 2 and the Congress may by law provide for the case of re- moval, death, resignation, or inability, both of the President and Vice-President, declaring what officer shall then act as Presi- dent, and such officer shall act accordingly, until the disability be removed, or a President shall be elected. 3 6th Clause. — The President shall, at stated times, receive for his services, a compensation, which shall neither Salary of the Pres- -, -, -,. . • , -, -, . ,, . , , , be increased nor diminished during the period ident. ° 1 for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that period any other emolument from the United States, or any of them. 1 1. See Amendments 1o the Constitution, Article XII. By an Act passed in 1845 (January 23), the electors must be chosen, in each State, on the Tuesday next alter the tlr>t Monday in the month of November of the year in which they are to be cleoted. In the preceding por- tion of this history, when the election of a President is spoken of, it is meant that electors favorable to such candidates were chosen at that time. 2. For examples, see verse 2. page 243, and verse 8, page 255. 3. Provision has been made for the President of the Senate, for the time being, or if there shall be no such officer, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, shall perform the execut've functions. 4. The salary of the President was fixed by the first Congress at $25,000 a year, and that of the Vice President at $8,000, and 6uch they are at present. The salary for each entire term was so fixed, that the executive might be independent of the legislative department for it. Questions.— Recite the M Clause of Section I., Article II. Wind may Congress deter- mine concerning electors? What is said about the day on which electors shall vote? Recite the 4tk Clause. What is said about the birth place of a person being eligible for the office of President? What shall be liis .age, at least, and the time of lis residence in the United States? Recite the hth Clause On whom s>'all the office of Presdellt devolve, in tbe even! of the death or disability of that officer? What power is given to Congress for filling tbe places of President ami Vice-President! Recite the 6th Clause. What 's s«iid concerning the President's compensation ? What restrictions are laid upon him! What does the 1th Clause declare that the President shall doi THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 321 7th Clause. — Before he enter on the execution of his office, he shall take the following oath or affirmation: — "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States." SECTION II. 1st Clause. — The President shall be commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several States, when called Duties of the Pres " into the actual service of the United States; 1 he may require the opinion, in writing, of the principal officer in each of the executive departments, upon any subject relating to the duties of their respective offices, 2 and he shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment. 3 2c? Clause. — He shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, pro- •j j j. j.u' j r ii Sis power to make vided two-thirds oi the senators present concur; treaties, appoint and he shall nominate, and by and with the ambassadors, advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint -> ud&es ' etc - ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law : 4 but the Congress may by law vest 1. This was to insure unity and efficiency in action, when foreign war or domestic insur- rection should call for the services of the army and navy. His large powers as Executive are directed by constitutional provisions. He is the arm of the nat:oii to execute its bidding. 2. Verse 2, page 196. 3. It is presumed that the Executive is above the personal, local, or sectional influences that might, be brought to hear, in these cases, on the courts or on leg slative bodies. The Ex- ecutive, according to a decision of the Supreme Court, has power to grant a pardon before trial or conviction. See Brightley's Analytical Digest qf the Laws of the United States, page 7, note (e). 4. The President is presumed to be more fully informed concerning the foreign relations of the Republic, and the fitness of men for the highest offices. Tl e Senate represents the leg'slative department of the Government in treaty-making and the appointment of high officers, and is a check on the Executive against any eucroachme:.ts on the rights of Con- gress in the matter. Questions.— Sec. II. Recite the \st Clause Of what, and under what circumstances, shall the President be a commander in-chief ? What may he require of the officers of the executive departments' What powers are g'ven him concerning reprieves and pardons? What is the exceptio > ? What power is given to the President by the 2d Clause? What proviso is made? What officers of the government shall he nominate, :md, by and with the advice of the Senate, appoint? What may the Congress do concerning appoint- ments ? 14* 322 THE NATION. the appointment of such inferior officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments. 3c? Clause. — The President shall have power to fill up all vacancies that may happen during the recess May fill vacancies. of ^ Senate> by grant j ng commissions which shall expire at the end of their next session. 1 SECTION III. He shall from time to time give to the Congress information of the state of the Union, and recommend to Power to convene ^^ consideration such measures as he shall Congress • judge necessary and expedient; 2 he may, on extraordinary occasions, convene both houses, or either of them, 3 and in case of disagreement between them, with respect to the time of adjournment, he may adjourn them to such time as he shall think proper ; he shall receive ambassadors and other pub- lic ministers ; 4 he shall take care that the laws be faithfully exe- cuted, and shall commission all the officers of the United States. SECTION IV. The President, Vice-President and all civil officers of the How officers may United States, shall be removed from office be removed. on impeachment for, and conviction of, trea- son, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors. 6 1 This limitation to executive appointments is to prevent the President from neutral- izing the action of the Senate as a coordinate power. 2. It is the practice of the President to submit to Congress, at the opening of each Ma- rio i, a statement of national affairs. This is called lis Annual Message. Washington and John Adams read their messages in person to the assembled Congress. Jefferson first s-.'iit he message to them, by bis private secretary. That practice is still kept up. 3. The President, with his better information concerning national affairs, can best judire when an extraordinary session of Congress may be necessary. 4. He may also refuse to receive them, and thereby annul or prevent diplomatic relations between the' United States and any country. 5. See note 5, page 302. Questions.— Sec. II. Recite the 3d Clause. What power is g'ven to the President for filling vacancies i What is the duration of such commissions < Sue. Ill What information is the President required to give to the Congress? What recommendations shall he make? What may lie do on ext aordinary o •( asions ? When may the President adjourn the Congress I What is his duty respecting ambassadors! What is his duty concerning the execution of the laws, and the comm'ssioning of government offi- cers? Sec. IV. For what crimes may all civil officers of the Government be removed, and by what method ? THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. >23 V ARTICLE III. ' SECTION I. The judicial power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme court, 1 and in such inferior ., .-, f» Judicial power, how courts as the Congress may irom time to J , vested, time ordain and establish. The judges, both of the supreme and inferior courts, shall hold their offices during good behavior, and shall, at stated times, receive for their ser- vices, a compensation, which shall not be diminished during their continuance in office. SECTION II. 1st Clause.— The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority ; — to all cases affecting anibas- , ,i-ii. • • . t i To what cases it ex- sadors, other public ministers, and consuls ; — to all cases of admiralty and maritime juris- diction ; — to controversies to which the United States shall be a party j — to controversies between two or more States ; — between a State and citizens of another State ; — between citizens of differ- ent States ; 2 — between citizens of the same State claiming lands under grants of different States, and between a State, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects. 2d Clause. — In all cases affecting ambassadors, other public 1. Verse 2, page 196. This section provides that the Supreme Court shall be a coordinate branch of the National Government, yet independent of and distinct from both the legisla- tive and executive departments. The powers of the National Government, it will be seen, are threefold, namely, legislative, judicial, and executive. The first enacts laws ; the second interprets them, and the third enforces them. The Supreme Court consists of one chief- justice and several associate justices, who hold an annual session at the national capital, commencing on the day when' Congress meets— first Wednesday in December. 2. A citizen of the District of Columbia (verse 3, page 196) is not a citizen of a State, with- in the meaning of this Constitution. The District is under the immediate control of Con- gress, and has neither a legislature or governor. Questions. Art. III. Judicial Department. Sec. I. In what body or bodies is the judi- cial powerof the Republic vested ? By what tenure do the judges hold their offices ? What is said about compensation for their services? Sec. II. Recite the lei Clause. How many subjects are named, in which the United States courts have jurisdiction ? Name the 1st ? Name the 2d ? Name the 3d ? Name tho 4ih? Name the 5th « Name the 6th? Name the 7th ? Name the 8th ? Name the 9th' 324 THE NATION. ministers and consuls, and those in which a State shall be party, the supreme court shall have original jurisdic- Jurisdiction of the ,. T n ,1 ,1 i ^ .. , Supreme Court. tlon ' ^ n all the other eases beiore mentioned, the supreme court shall have appellate jurisdic- tion, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make. 3d Clause. — The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeach- ment, 1 shall be by jury ; and such trial shall be Rules respecting h^ m t h e g tate w h ere t j ie B ^ crimes shall have been committed ; but when not commit- ted within any State, the trial shall be at such place or places as the Congress may by law have directed. 2 SECTION in. 1st Clause. — Treason against the United States, shall consist Treason defined. onl ^ in ley y in S war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. 3 2c? Clause. — No person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court. 3d Clause. — The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason, but no attainder of ow pums e . treason sliall work corruption of blood, or for- feiture except during the life of the person attainted. 4 1. Note 5, page 302. 2. See Amendments to the Constitution, Articles V.. VI., VII., VIII. 3. At the trial of Aaron Burr (verse 4, page 205), Chief-Justice Marshall paid "Any combination to subvert by force the Government of the United Sta'es ; violently to dismem- ber the Union ; to compel a change in the administration, to coerce the repeal or adoption of a general law, is a conspiracy to levy war. And if conspiracy be carried into effect by the actual employment of force", by the embodying and assembling of men for the purpose of executing the treasonable design which was previously conceived, it amounts to levying war." 4. See note 3, page 309. The limit as to forfeiture applies only to the real estate of the criminal, which, at his death, must be restored to his heirs or assigns. The dower right of his wife also remains untouched. Bee Kent's Commentaries on American Law, ii. 464. This is more humane than the English law of treason. It dues not punish the innocent wife and children of a criminal on account of his crimes. Questions.— Skc. II Recite the 2d Clause. In what cases shall the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction J What is its jur'.S lirtion, both as to law and fact, in all the other cases mentioned? What may be exceptio ns ? Recitfl the 2d Clause. By whom shall all crimes lie tried? What is the exception? Where shall such trials be held" t What may the Con- gress direct | Sec. III. Recite the \d Clause. In what does treason consist ? Recite the 2rf Clause. What is required to convict a person of treason % Recite the 'Ml <'/f the States in the Senate ? Article VI. Recite the 1st Clause, What is said of the validity of former public debts? 62$ THE NATION. 2d Clause. — This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance there- SUP land defined! the of ? and a11 treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land ; and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding. 1 3d Clause. — The senators and representatives before men- n ^ _ . tioned, and the members of the several State Oath, of whom re- _ ' quired, and for legislatures, and all executive and judicial offi- what - cers, both of the United States and of the sev- eral States, shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution ; 2 but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.' ARTICLE VII. The ratification of the conventions of nine States, shall be sufficient for the establishment of this Consti- txfication. tution between the States so ratifying the same. 4 Done in convention by the unanimous consent of the States present the seventeenth day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-seven and of the independence of the United States of America the 1. A c'ear and positive declaration of the supremacy of the National Government, resist- ance to which is trenao >. 2 State officers are bound to rapport the Constitution because they may be required to perform some service in giving effect to that "supreme law of the lai d," in other words, of the Republic. :{. This is to prevent a political union of church and state, which is always prejudicial to the best interests of both. I. S le verse <», pat:,- 194. The conventions of the reoplc in the several States ratified the ( Constitution in the following order : Delaware, December 7. 1787 ; Pennsylvania, December 12,1787; New Jersey, December 18, 1787 ; Georgia, January 2, 1788; Connecticut, January 9, 1788; Massachusetts " 23, 1788 ; North Cc 1 , ii™ jfisri/, jjereniner jo, ii"i ; veurgia, .lanuarv z, J.YHS ; f Connecticut, .January : Massachusetts, February 6, 1788;' Maryland, April 78, 1788; South Carolina, May i ; New Hampshire, .Tune 21, 1788 , Virginia, June 26, 1788 ; Ni ir York, July 26, 1788 ; Carolina, November 21, 1789 ; Rhode Island, May 29, 1790. Questions. — Article VI. Recite the 2d Clause. "What is declared to be the supreme law of the- land? By what are the judges in every Stat" hound I Recite the Sd tlause. Who shall bo bound by oath or affirmation to support the Xat'onal Constitution 1 What is said concert ing re ligio ns tests? ARTICLE VII. What dO"s th ; s article declare ? Where, and by whose consent, and when was the National Constitution formed? Who were the witnesses to it I THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 329 twelfth. names. 2 In witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our AMENDMENTS. 3 At the first session of the First Congress, begun and held in the city of New York, on Wednesday, the 4th of March, 1789, many amendments to the National Constitution were offered for consideration. The Congress proposed ten of them to the legis- latures of the several States. These were ratified by the constitu- tional number of State legislatures 4 in the middle of December, 1791. Another was proposed on the 5th of March, 1794, 5 and still another on the 12th of December, 1803. 6 These were duly ratified, and became, with the other ten, a part of the National Constitution. A thirteenth amendment was proposed by Con- gress on the 1st of May, 1810, but has never been ratified.' The following arc the amendments : 1. Verse 10, page 143. 2. The following are the names of the deputies representing the several States, and the order in which they signed their names : NEW HAMPSHIRE. John Langdon, Nicholas Oilman. MASSACHUSETTS. Nathaniel Gorham, Rufcs King. CONNECTICUT. William Sam'l Johnson. Roger Sherman. NEW YORK. Alexander Hamilton. NEW JERSEY. William Livingston, David Brkarlet, William Paterson, Jonathan Dayton. Attest : George Washington, President, and Deputy from Virginia. PENNS Y L V A N I A. Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Mifflin, Robert Morris, Thomas Cltmer, Thomas Fitz Simons, Jared Ingersoll, James Wilson, Gouverneur Morris. DELAWARE. George Reed, Gunning Bedford, Jb John Dickinson, Richard Bassett, Jacob Broom. MARYLAND. James McIIenrv, Daniel of St. Thos. Jenifer Danif.l Carroll. VIRGINIA. John Blair, James Madison, Jr. NORTn CAROLINA. William Blount, RicnARD Dobbs Spaight, Hugh Williamson. SOUTH CAROLINA. Jonv Rutledge, Charles C. Pincknet, CnARLES PlNCKNEY, Pierce Butler. GEORGIA. William Few, Abraham Baldwin. William Jackson, Secretary. 3. The Amendments to the Constitution, excepting the Twelfth, are authoritative declar- ations securing to the people aid the seven I States, certain rights, against any possible en- croachments of the Congress. They form a Bill of Rights. 4. Article VII., page 320. 5. Ratified in 1798. fi Ratified in 1S04. 7. It was to prohibit citizens of the United States accepting, claiming, receiving, or re- Qpf.stions.— Amendments. When and where were amendments to the Constitution offered to the Congress? What did the Congress do? How manv amendments were rati- fied ? What others were proposed, and when were they ratified ? What can you tell about a thirteenth amendment ? 330 THE NATION. ARTICLE I. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of Freedom in religion religion, or prohibiting the free exercise there- and speech, and of; or abridging the freedom of speech or ol of the press. .1, A , . , „ , * the picss ; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for redress of griev- ances.' ARTICLE II. A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a Militia. free state > the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed. ARTICLE III. No soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, g . without the consent of the owner, nor in time of Avar, but in a manner to be prescribed by law. 3 ARTICLE IV. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable search- Search warrants. , . i ii . -. • , , ■, -, es and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. 3 taining any title nf nobilitv or honor, or any present, pension, office, or emolument of any kind whatever, from any "person, King, Prince, or foreign Power," without the consent of Congress, under the penalty of disfranchisement, or ceasing to be a citizen of the United Slates. 1. This article gives an additional assurance of religious freedom. See clause 3d, Article VI., of the Constitution It also secures the invaluable right of the freedom of speech at d of the r>>-ess ; and the privilege for the people of making their grievances ki own to the Na- tional Government. 2. This is to protect citizens, in time of peace, from the oppressions of military power, anil to secure uniformity in the rules for quartering poldiers upon citizens In time of war. 3 The security of the private citizen from an infringement of his rights by public officers, herein guaranteed, is in accordance with the English maxim that " Every man's house is his castle." See verse 4, page 116. Questions.— Article I. Rec'tefhe first amendment to the Constitution? What sub- jects are the Conpress prohibited from making laws unon ? Article II. Recite this article? What is declared concerning the militia, at.d rights of the people I Article III. Recite this Article. Article IV. Recite this article I What right are the people to be secure in? What is declared concerning warrants ? THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 331 ARTICLE V. No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or in- ,. . . j, i • , • • Capital crimes, dictment of a grand jury, except in cases aris- ing in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war and public danger ; ' nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb ; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor to be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation. 2 ARTICLE VI. In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the btate and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation ; to be confronted with the witnesses against him ; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. ARTICLE VII. In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury Suits at^common shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of common law. 1 In such cases offenses are within the jurisdiction of the military and naval courts martial. 2. These prohibitions do not relate to State governments, but to the National Govern- ment, according to a decision of the Supreme Court. The several States make their own laws on these subjects. Questions.— Article V. What is declared co"cerning the ho'ding of persons to answer for alleged offenses? What is said about a second trial for the same offense? In what case shnll a person not be compelled to testify in court » What guarantee of protection is prom- ised ? When only can private property be taken for the public use ? Article VI. What right snail a person accused of crime enjoy i What richt as to the witnesses that may appear against him ? What method is secured to him for obtaining wit- nesses in his favor, and the obtaining of counsel? Article VII. In what civil cases shall the right of trial bv jury be preserved ? I 11 what way shall the reexamination of facte tried by a jury, be made j 332 THE NATION. ARTICLE V I I I . Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, Bail. nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted. 1 ARTICLE IX. The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall Certain rights de- not De construed to deny or disparage others fined. retained by the people. 2 ARTICLE X . The powers not delegated to the United States by the Consti- tution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the Rig-hts reserved people. 3 ARTICLE XI The judicial power of the United States shall not be con- strued to extend to any suit in law or equity, Judicial power com menced or prosecuted against one of the limited. l s United States by citizens of another State, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state. 4 ARTICLE XII. The electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by Amendment re- ballot for President and Vice-President, one of specting the elec- w hom, at least, shall not be an inhabitant of tion of President . 0i . , ,. , , . ,, and Vice-Presi- the same State with themselves ; they shall dent. name in their ballots the person voted for as 1. These several amendments concerning the operations of law through the instrumen- tality of the courts, are all intended to secure the citizen against the arbitrary exercise of rower on the part of the judiciary. 2. That is to say, because certain rights ami powers of the people arc not enumerated in the Constitution, it is not to be inferred that tliev are denied. 3. This is simply an enunciation of the broad democratic principle, that the people are the true sources of all political power. 4. This is to limit tic judicial power of the National courts. Previous to the adoption of this amendment, the Supremo Court had decided that the power of the National judiciary extended to suits brought by or against a State of the Republic. Now, no person has a right to commence a persoi al suit agamst a Sate, i" the Supreme Court of the United States, for the recovery of property seized and sold bj a State. Questions.— Article VIII. What does this article declare? Article IX. What docs this article declare? Article X. What docs this article declare < Article XI. What does this article declare? THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 333 President, and in distinct ballots the person voted for as Vice- President, and they shall make distinct lists of all persons voted for as President, and of all persons voted for as Vice-President, and of the number of votes for each, which lists they shall sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the seat of the Government of the United States, directed to the President of the Senate ; — the President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates, and the votes shall then be counted ; — the person having the greatest number of votes for President, shall be the President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed ; and if no person have such majority, then from the persons having the high- est numbers not exceeding three on the list of those voted for as President, the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by States, the representation from each State having one vote ; a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the States, and a majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice. And if the House of Representatives shall not choose a President whenever the right of choice shall devolve upon them, before the fourth day of March next following, then the Vice-President shall act as Presi- dent, as in the case of the death or other constitutional disability of the President. The person having the greatest number of votes as Vice-President, shall be the Vice-President, if such num- ber be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed, and if no person have a majority, then, from the two highest numbers on the list, the Senate shall choose the Vice-President ; a quorum for the purpose shall consist of two-thirds of the whole number of senators, and a majorty of the whole number shall be necessary to a choice. But no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States. 1 1. This amendment is a substitute for the 3d clause, Section II., of Article I. of the Con- stitution. See note 3, page 311. Questions.— Article XII. What does this article declare? In what coi nection have we considered the Twelfth Article of the Constitution, which relates to the election of Pree ident and Vice-President of the United States? 334 THE NATION. ARTICLE XIII. SECTION I. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall ex- ist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdic- tion. SECTION II. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. ARTICLE XIV. SECTION I. All persons born or naturalized in tbe United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States ; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. SECTION II. Representatives shall be appointed among the several States ac cording to their respective Lumbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Iudians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice-President of the United States, representatives in Congress, the executive or judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such S I ate, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole num- ber of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State. THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION. 335 SECTION III. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or mil- itary, under the United States, or under any State, who, having pre- viously taken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State Legislature, or as an ex- ecutive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such dis- ability. SECTION IV. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be ques- tioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave ; but all such debts, obligations, and claims shall be held il- legal and void. SECTION V. Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article. ARTICLE XV. SECTION I. The right of the citizens of the United States to vote, shall not be denied or abridged by the United States, or by any State, on accouut of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. SECTION II. The Congress shall have power to enforce this Article by appra priate legislation. 1 1. ThlR amendment was adopted by Congress on the 28th of February, 18G9, and was ratified early In 1870. Question's.— Article XIII. WTiat does this article declare? Abttolb XIV. What does tills article declare ? Abtiole XV. What docs this article declare ? 336 THE NATION. THE NEW STATES. 1. When the National Government was established, in 1789, under the Constitution that we have just been considering,' the num- ber of the States in the Union was thirteen ; namely, New Hamp- shire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, and Georgia. These were the colonies whose people were united in the Revolutionary struggle, and who, for a national purpose, collectively declared themselves independent of Great Britain. 2 In each of these colonies State Governments were formed in 1776 and 1777, on the recommendation of the Continental Congress, and these formed the Old Confederation, or League of States, 3 Avhich ended on the 4th of March, 1789, when the Nation commenced its career under the new Constitution. 2. Stability being given to the Government, private enterprise began its work. A stream of emigrants flowed into the rich wilderness west of the Alleghany mountains, 4 and materials for new States were speedily organized. From that time the Repub- lic has grown rapidly, and the number of States has increased from thirteen to thirty-five, while no less than nine organized and immense Territories — each large enough to make several States — are preparing to ask for admission into the Union. 3. Lying east of Lake Champlain was a territory called the New Hampshire Grants. It was claimed by New York and New Hampshire. It was finally organized into an independent State, with the name of Vermont, and was admitted into the Union on the 4th of March, 1791. At the same time, a vast region west of the Alleghany mountains, forming a part of Virginia, was becom- ing populous, and a portion of it was admitted as a State on the 1st of June, 1792, with the name of Kentucky. Four years later, a large territory south of Kentucky was ceded to the United States by North Carolina, and on the 1st of June, 1796, it was admitted into the Union as a State, with the name of Tennessee. 1. Page 299. 2. Verse 10, page 143. .",. Verse 2, page 150. 4. Note 6. page 98. Questions.— 1. What was the number of thn States when the National Constitution was formed? Name them. What were they I What bad they done 1 2, What waa the conse- quence of Government stability 1 What have you to say about emigration 1 What about the growth of the Republic) 3. What can you till about Vermont 1 What can you tell about Kentucky? What can you tell about Tennessee 1 THE NEW STATES. 337 4. In the year 1802, Ohio was admitted as a State. It was formed from a part of the North-western Territory, 1 which Vir- ginia and Connecticut had ceded to the United States. Ohio was organized as a separate government in May, 1800, and admitted as a State on the 29th of November, 1802. Ten years elapsed before another State took its place in the cluster of the great commonwealths that form our Republic. That State was Lou- isiana, formed of a portion of the magnificent domain purchased from France in April, 1803. 2 It was admitted as a State on the 8th of April, 1812. 5. Indiana was formed out of a portion of the North-western Territory. A Territorial government was first organized in May, 1 800, simultaneously with that of Ohio, when it included Illinois. It was divided in 1809, and the western portion became the Terri- tory of Illinois. It was admitted as a State on the 11th of De- cember, 1816. One year later, Mississippi was added to the Union. It was formed from territory ceded to the United States by South Carolina and Georgia, and was admitted as a State on the 10th of December, 1817. 6. The Territory of Illinois, separated from Indiana in 1809, steadily increased in population, and on the 3d of December, 1818, was admitted as a State. Alabama followed, a year later. It had been a part of the Territory of Mississippi. It was organ- ized as a separate government in the spring of 1817, and was admitted as a State on the 14th of December, 1819. Up to that time, Maine had been a District of Massachusetts, and under the jurisdiction of that State, when, with the concurrence of that commonwealth, its people asked for its admission as a State. The request was granted by Congress on the 15th of March, 1820. 7. Missouri was a part of the domain of Louisiana, and was under the jurisdiction of the governor and judges of the Indiana Territory. It was formed into a separate Territory in 1812. In 1819 it was divided, and the southern part was organized into the Territory of Arkansas. Missouri was admitted to the Union as a 1. Note 6, page 197. 2. Verse 1, page 203. Questions. — i. What can yon tell about Ohio? What can you tell about Louisiana? 5. What can you tell about Indiana? What can you tell about Mississippi? 6. What can you tell about niino's? What can you tell about Alabama? What can you tell about Maine ( 7. What can you tell about Missouri ? 338 THE NATIOX. State on the 10th of August, 1821. 1 And now, for the space of fifteen years, no new State was added to the Union. Then, on the 15th of June, 1836, Arkansas was admitted, and the growth again commenced. Michigan, formerly a part of the Territory of Indiana, 2 was given a separate government in 1805, and on the 26th of January, 1837, it was admitted into the Union as a State. 8. The Spanish Territory of the Floridas was ceded to the United States in 1819. 3 They were called East and West Florida. They were made one Territory in 1823 ; and on the 3d of March, 1845, it was admitted as a State, with the name of Florida. On the 27th of December, 1845, Texas, which for nine years had been a sovereign state and independent republic, 4 was admitted into the Union as a State, by the joint action of the legislature of each National Government. In the resolution of annexation, it was provided that four new States might be formed of the terri- tory of the State of Texas, and admitted into the Union. 9. In 1836, a Territory named Wisconsin was formed of a part of the Michigan Territory, 5 and in 1838 a portion of that domain, lying west of the Mississippi, was formed into a separate Terri- tory. It was admitted into the Union as a State, with the name of Iowa, on the 28th of December, 1846. Wisconsin was ad- mitted as a State on the 29th of May, 1848 ; and, three years and a half later, a part of the territory on the Pacific ocean, acquired by conquest and purchase from Mexico, was organized as a State. and admitted into the Union as such on the 9th of September, 1850, with the name of California. 9 10. Eight years now passed by before another State was added, when, on the 11th of May, 1858, a part of the ancient domain of Louisiana, lying on the Mississippi river, was admitted as a State, with the beautiful Indian name of Minnesota. A feAv months later, another portion of that magnificent domain of Louisiana, lying on the Pacific ocean, which had been organized into a Territory in 1848, was admitted [February 14, 1859] a- a 1. Verso 4, pape 233. 2. Verse 5, page 327. 3. Verse 3, paeo 232. 4. Note 2, page 245. 5. Verse 7, pau;e 327. 6. Verses 2 aid 3, page 255. Questions.— 7. What can von toll abont Arkansas and Michigan? 8. What can you toll, about Florida ? What cm vmi toll about Texas? 9. What can you toll about Iowa I W hat cm you toll about Wisconsin ! What oan you toll about California? 10. What can you tell about Minnesota ? THE NEW STATES. 339 State, with the title of Oregon. Still another portion of ancient Louisiana was erected into a Territory in 1854, with the name of Kansas, and was admitted as a State on the 29th of January, 1861. 11. West Virginia was formed of a portion of the old State of Virginia. The people of that part of the State which lies chiefly be- tween the Alleghany mountains and the Ohio River, and contained, in 1860, a population of about three hundred and thirty-five thousand souls, were generally loyal to the National Government when the re- bellion broke out in 1861. They met in convention at Wheeling, in June of that year, and organized a State government. A constitution was adopted in convention, in November following, aud was ratified by the people in May, 1862. West Virginia was admitted into the Union as a State on the 20th of June, 1863, by the authority of an act of Congress, passed on the 31st of December, 1862. On the 31st of October, 1864, Nevada, west of the Rocky Mountains, between Cal- ifornia and Utah, was admitted as a State. It was followed on the 15th of January, 1867, by Nebraska, which is west of the Missouri River, between Kansas and Dakota. The act for the admission of the latter was passed over the veto of President Johnson. Colorado was admitted into the Union as a State on the 4th of July, 18*76. 12. There are now (1877) thirty-eight States and eight organized Territories. The latter consist of Arizona, New Mexico, Idaho, 1 Montana, Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, and Washington. There is also an Indian Territory, west of Arkansas ; and the District of Columbia, on the Potomac River. 2 The latter is the seat of the National Govern- ment, and is under the immediate control of Cono-ress. 3 — * ■ — ^^* — i 1. Pvonnunced I-daho, 2. Verse 3, p. 196. 3. Note 2, p. 315. The District originally comprised territory on each side of the Poto- mac, ten miles square, which was ceded to the United States by the States of Maryland and Virginia. The portion oh the Maryland side, on which the city of Washington was situated, was a county named Washington, and that on the Virginia side was a county named Alexan- dria. On the 9th of July, 1S46, Alexandria county was retroceded to Virginia, and the area of the District was diminished by so much. Questions.— 10. What can yon tell about Oregon and Kansas ? 11. What can you tell about West Virginia, Nevada, Nebraska, and Colorado ? 12. What can you tell about Terri- tories and tho District of Columbia f REVIEW QUESTIONS. THE ABORIGINES. 1. What can you tell about the people found in America by *he Europeans ? . . . . . .5 2. What can you tell about their language and physical character ? 5 3. What were their dwellings, implements, food, dress, money, and records ? . . . . . . . .6 4. What were their pursuits, weapons, and dealings with prisoners ? and what was the method of peace-making, and the con- dition of the women ? . . . . . .7 5. What can you tell about their funerals and burials ? .7 6. What was their religion ? . . . . .8 7. What was their government, and what appears to be their destiny ? . . . . . . . .9 DISCOVERIES. 1. What can you tell about alleged discoveries by Northmen ? . 10 2. What circumstances kept Western Europe from the commerce of the East? . . . . . . .11 3. What can you tell about the movements of Columbus ? .11 4. Who aided Columbus '? and how ? . . . . .12 5. Give an account of his first exploring voyage. . . .12 6. How came this continent to be called America ? . . .13 7. What settlements and what other discoveries were made by the Spaniards ? . . . . . . .14 8. What occurred in Florida and Mexico ? . . .14 9. What can you tell about De Soto's expedition ? . . .15 10. What can you tell about the king of England, and the expedition of the Cabots ? . . . . . . . 15 11. Give an account of other voyages and discoveries by Sebastian Cabot .16 12. What can you tell of a voyage and discoveries by Verazzani ? . 16 13. Give an account of the first voyage and the discoveries of Cartier. 16 14. Give an account of the second voyage and the discoveries of Cartier. . . . . . . . .17 15. What important religious movement took place in France ? . 17 16. What emigration from France occurred ? . . . .18 17. What can you tell about the attempts at settlement by the Hu- guenots, and their misfortunes ? . . . .18 38. What now occurred in England ? . . . . .18 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 341 PAG* 19. What can you tell about Raleigh's efforts and expeditions ? .19 20. What did Gosnold do ? . . . . .20 21. What can you tell about Captains Pring and Weymouth ? . 20 22. What can you tell of De Mont's expeditions, and the discovery of Lake Champ] ain ? . . . . . .21 23. What did English merchants and mariners do ? . . .21 24. What can you tell about the voyages and discoveries of Henry Hudson? . . . . . . .22 i5. What great movements now took place? . . . .22 SETTLEMENTS. 1. What is a settlement, and what a colony ? . . . .24 2. What territory was embraced in North and South Virginia ? . 24 3. What can you tell about social changes, and the charters given by King James ? ...... 25 4. What did the London Company do in 1606 ? . . . 25 5. What can you tell of Newport's voyage ? . . . .26 6. What eminent men were with Newport ? . . . .26 7. What occurred in Virginia ? . . . . .26 8. Give an account of distress in Virginia, and how it was relieved. 27 9. Tell the story of Captain Smith and Pocahontas . . .27 10. What kind of immigrants afterward came to Virginia, and what was the aspect of the colony ? . . . . .28 11. What became of a new governor and commissioners ? . .29 12. What sad events occurred in Virginia ? . . . .29 13. What can you tell about a change in affairs in Virginia ? and the marriage of Pocahontas ? . . . .30 14. What political change occurred ? . . . . .31 15. What occurred on the Hudson river and the New England coasts ? 32 16. What can you tell about the founding of the province of New Netherland by the Dutch ? . ... 33 17. What can you tell about Captain Smith, New England, and the Council of Plymouth ? . . . . . .34 18. What was the origin of the Puritans ? . . . .34 19. Give an account of the Pilgrims in Holland, and their emigration to America. . . . . . . .35 20. What can you tell about the voyage of the Mayflower, and the Pilgrims in Massachusetts ? . . . . .36 21. When and how was New Hampshire settled ? . . .37 22. Under what circumstances was Maryland settled, and by whom ? 38 23. Give an account of the first settlement, and the character of the charter. . . . . . . . .38 24. Give an account of the discovery of the Connecticut river, and the beginning of settlements in the valley. . . .39 25. Give an account of emigrations to the Connecticut valley. . 40 26. How and by whom were the settlers troubled ? . . .40 27. What can you tell about a war between the New Englanders and the Indians ? . . . . . . .41 28. How came the New Haven settlement to be formed, and in what manner ? „.,».,. 4J 342 REVIEW QUESTIONS. PAGB 29. Can you give an account of the settlement of Rhode Island ? . 42 30. What can you tell about a charter for Rhode Island ? . .43 31. What can you relate concerning settlements on the Delaware river ? . . . • • • .43 32. What happened to the settlers ? . . . . .44 33. What did the Dutch do in New Jersey ? . . . .44 34. Give an account of the settlement of New Jersey. . . 44 35. What can you tell about the Quakers, and the movements of their founder ? . . . • • • .45 36. What did William Penn do ? . . . . .45 37. Give an account of the founding of Pennsylvania, and Penn's visit to the colony. . . . . . .45 38. Can you give an account of the first settlements in North Caro- lina ? . 46 39. Relate the circumstances of the settlement of South Carolina. . 47 40. What can you tell about the efforts of Oglethorpe, and the settle- ment of Georgia ? . . ... 48 41. Give an account of what occurred on the site of Savannah. . 49 COLONIES. 1. What have you to say about the colonial history of the United States? ........ 50 2. Which colony was first founded ? . . . .50 3. What have you to say about government and society in Virginia ? 51 4. Give an account of emigration to Virginia, and troubles with the Indians. . . . . . . . .51 5. What change in government took place ? . . . .52 6. What can you tell about the growth of democracy in Virginia ? . 53 7. Give an account of " Bacon's Rebellion " in Virginia. . 53, 54, 55 8. What can you tell about the Plymouth settlement in Massachu- setts ? . . . . . . . .56 9. How did the colony suffer ? . . . . . .56 ^0. Give an account of other settlements, and a change in ownership. 56 11. Give an account of the settlement of a colony under John Endicot. 57 12. Relate the circumstances of the settlement in which John Win- throp was engaged. . . . . . .58 13. What have you to say about the Puritans in New England ? . 58 14. What caused the banishment of Roger Williams? • . . 59 15. What can you tell about emigration from England, and attempts to stop* it ? . . . . . . .60 16. What confederacy was formed ? . . . . .60 17. What have you to say about Massachusetts ? . . .60 18. Give an account of Quakers in Massachusetts. . . .61 19. What occurred in Massachusetts on the restoration of monarchy in England ? . . . . . . .61 20. Give an account of the origin of King Philip's War. . . 62 21. Relate the principal occurrences of that war. . . 62, 63 22. Tell how the king of England attempted to control the people of Massachusetts. . . . . . .64 23. What can you tell about Governor Andros in Massachusetts ? . 64 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 313 24. Relate the principal occurrences of King William's War. . . 65 25. What change of government took place in New England ? . 66 26. What can you tell about a delusion in Massachusetts ? .66 27. Give an account of Queen Anne's War. . . . .67 28. What was the condition of affairs in Massachusetts for thirty years after Queen Anne's War ? . . . .67 29. Give an account of King George's War, and the capture of Louisburg ? . . . . . . .68 30. What happened to a French fleet ? . . . . .69 31. What did Peter Minuit do in New Netherland ? . . .69 32. What was the origin of the manorial estates in New York ? . 70 33. What can you tell about Governor Kieft ? . . . .70 34. How was the germ of representative government in New Nether- laud produced ? . . . . . . .70 35. Give an account of war between the Dutch and Indians. . .71 36. What can you tell about Peter Stuyvesant ? . . .71 37. How did the people of New Netherland trouble him with their democratic notions ? . . . . . .72 38. What can you tell about the change from Dutch to English rule in New Netherland ? . . . . . .73 39. What further changes took place there ? . . . .73 40. Give an account of affairs in New York under Leisler, Bellemont, and Hyde ? . . . . . . .74 41. How was the liberty of the press vindicated in New York, and by whom ? . . . . . . .74 42. What can you tell about the establishment of government in Maryland ? . . . . . . .75 43. What of Indian wars and insurrection there ? . . .75 44. What have you to say about toleration, and a change of govern- ment in Maryland ? . . . . . .76 45. Give an account of civil war in Maryland. , . . .76 46. What other troubles ensued ? . . . . .77 47. When was Maryland made a royal province ? . . .77 48. What can you tell about the establishment of government in Connecticut ? . . . . . . .78 49. Give an account of the New Haven colony, and the consolidation of that and the Connecticut colony. . . . .78 50. What can you tell about the preservation of the Connecticut charter? . . . . . . . .79 51. Give an account of Governor Fletcher's visit to Hartford. . 80 52. What can you tell about Rhode Island and its charter ? . .81 53. When did New Jersey become a colony ? . . . .82 54. Give an account of its settlement, and the organization of gov- ernment in New Jersey. . . . . .82 55. What can you tell about the Quakers there ? . .82, 83 56. When were East and West Jersey united, and made a royal prov- ince? . . . . . . . .83 57. When did Pennsylvania become a colony ? . . .84 58. Give an account of Penn in America, the founding of Philadel- phia, and a representative government. . . .84 59. Give an account of Penn's difficulties in England and America. . 85, 344 REVIEW QUESTIONS. PAGE 60. What can you tell about a government framed for the Carolinas ? 85 61. What did the people do ? . . . . . .86 62. What have you to say about Sothel, and other governors ? .86 63. What can you tell about the Southern Carolina colony, and Charleston ? . . . . , .86 64. When was Charleston founded ? . . , .87 65. What immigrants came to South Carolina ? . . .87 66. What can you tell of a revolution in South Carolina, a change in North Carolina, and one governor for both of the colonies ? 87, 88 67. What can you tell about immigrants who settled in North Carolina ( . . . . , . .88 68. Give an account of an Indian war in that colony. . . .88 69. Give an account of hostilities between the South Carolinians and the Sjmniards. . . . . . , 89. 90 70. Give an account of another revolution in South Carolina. . 90 71. Wnen did South Carolina become a royal province ? and when were the two provinces united I . . . 90, 91 72. Give an account of the colonists in Georgia. . . .91 73. What did Oglethorpe do ? . . . . .91 74. What military events occurred ? . . . . .92 75. How many English colonies were planted in America ? .93 76. Give an account of the character of the several people who formed the colonies. . . . . . . .93 77. What have you to say about agriculture and commerce ? . .94 78. What about education ? . . . . .95 FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 1. What was the comparative strength of the English and French in America in 1750 ? . . . . . .96 2. What movements caused hostile feelings between them ? . .96 3. Give an account of young Washington's mission to the French military commander. . . . . . .96 4. What can you tell about the origin and progress of a military expedition against the French, and its results 1 . .97 5. What can you tell about Colonel Fry, Washington, and Fort Necessity? . . . . . .97 6. Describe an important civil event at Albany in 1754. . . 98 7. What was the plan of campaign for 1755, and who were to be chief actors in it ? . . . . . .99 8. Give an account of Braddoek's movements, and his defeat. . 99 9. What can you tell about Johnston's expedition ? . . . 100 10. What occurred near and at Lake George ? . . . . 101 11. When and by whom was war declared ? . . . . 101 12. What can you tell about the capture of Oswego by Montcalm ? . 102 13. What have you to say about Lord Loudon ? . . .103 14. Give an account of the siege and capture of Fort William Henry. 103 15. What have you to say about the American colonists, in their rela- tions to military commanders, and William Pitt ? . . 104 16. Give an account of the capture of Louisburg in 1758. . . 105 17. Give an account of Abercrombie's expedition against Ticonderoga. 105, 106 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 345 PAGE 18. What did Colonel Bradstreet do ? . . . . .106 19. Can you give an account of an expedition against Fort du Quesne, and its results ? . . . . . • • 107 20. What magnificent scheme of conquest did Pitt conceive ? . 107 21. What was the plan of campaign for 1759 ? ... 108 22. Give an account of expeditions against Ticonderoga, Crown Point, and Niagara ? . . . . . .108 23. Give an account of Wolfe's expedition, and the capture of Quebec 109, 110 24. What did the French attempt to do ? . . . .110 25. When, where, and how was the death-blow to French dominion in America given ? . . . ■ • .111 26. What can you tell about the Treaty of 1763 ? . . .111 27. Can you name the battles, and their dates, of the French and Indian War? . . . . . • .111 28. What can you tell about Indian hostilities, and Pontiac's doings ? 113 THE REVOLU TION. 115 115 116 1. What have we observed in the course of our studies ? 2. What have you to say about the American colonists ? 3. What principle were the colonists ready to contend for ? 4. What can you tell about the cause of the emptiness of the British treasury, and the necessity for taxation ? 5. Give an account of Writs of Assistance, and the commotion they gave rise to. ...... 6. What can you tell about a Stamp Act ? 7. What movements did the Stamp Act cause ? . .118 8. How did some of these movements affect British merchants ? 9. Give an account of the repeal of the Stamp Act. . 10. What measures of the British Parliament offended the Americans ? 11. What did the Assembly of Massachusetts do ? 12. What occurred in Boston ? . 13. What can you tell about troops in Boston ? 14. How did the home Government attempt to punish Massachusetts 15. What can you tell about a mob and a massacre at Boston ? 16. What can you tell about the administration of law and justice in Massachusetts ? . 17. What can you tell about the levying of a tax on tea ? 18. What can you tell about the Regulators in North Carolina ? 19. What did Lord North and the East India Company do about tea ? 20. Give an account of the destruction of tea in Boston harbor. 21. Give an account of the Boston Port Bill, and other measures ob noxious to the Americans. 22. What were their effects in America ? 23. How did the people of Massachusetts behave ? 24. What can you tell about a Continental Congress ? 25. What preparations were made for war ? 26. Give an account of the formation of a Provincial Congress in Massachusetts. . . . . , . .129 15* 116 116 117 119 119 120 120 121 121 122 122 123 123 124 124 125 125 126 126 127 127 128 346 KEVIEW QUESTIONS. PAQE 27. Give aa account of the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord, and retreat of the British. . . . . .130 28. What did the Americans do ? . . . . .130 29. Give an account of the capture of forts on Lake Champlain. . 131 30. What can you tell about American and British troops at Boston ? 131 31. What can you tell about fortifications cast up by the Americans ? 132 32. Give an account of the battle of Bunker Hill. . . 132, 133 33. What can you tell about the progress of revolution in Virginia ? 134 34. What can you tell about the doings of the Second Continental Congress? . . . . . . .135 35. When and where did Washington take command of the Conti- nental army ? . . . . . . .135 36. What can you tell about an expedition to invade Canada ? . 135 37. Give an account of Ethan Allen, and the capture of St. Johns and Montreal. . . . . . . .136 38. Give an account of Arnold's expedition through the Wilderness. 136 39. Give an account of the siege of Quebec, and the results. . .137 40. What can you tell about operations in Lower Virginia ? . .138 41. What have you to say about the hoisting of the Union flag, and the doings of Congress ? . . . . .139 42. What did the British Parliament do ? . . . .139 43. Give an account of the siege and capture of Boston by the Americans. ....... 140 44. What can you tell about the movements of the Americans at New York? . . . . . . . .140 45. Give an account of events at Charleston. .... 141 46. What was done in Congress concerning a declaration of the inde- pendence of the colonies ?..... 142 47. What can you tell about the Declaration of Independence ? . 143- 48. Give an account of the British at New York, and a battle on Long island. ..... 143, 144, 145 49. What can you tell about Washington in New York, and the retreat of the Americans from Brooklyn ? 50. What movement did the American arm; next make ? 51. What did the British do ? . . 52. Give an account of the battle at White Plains, and capture of Fort Washington. . . . . . 53. Give an account of Washington's retreat across New Jersey, and defeat of the enemy at Trenton. 54. What did Congress and Washington now do ? . 55. What have you to say about the British Parliament and American Congress ?...... 56. What did Silas Deane do ? . 57. Give an account of Washington's escape from Trenton, and the battle of Princeton. ..... 58. What did the American army do in New Jersev in the spring of 1777? ....... 59. Give an account of Tryon's movements. 60. What bold acts did the Americans perform ? 61. Give an account of the movements of the armies of Wasliington and Howe, in the summer of 1777. .... 154 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 347 PAGE 62. What can you tell of a battle on the Brandywine ? . . 154 63. What can you tell about the battle at Germautown, and the Brit- ish in Philadelphia ? . . . . 155, 150 64. Give an account of events on Lake Champlain and its vicinity, and the movements of the Americans under St. Clair and Schuyler. . . . . . . .157 65. What occurred near Bennington, and at Fort Schuyler, in August, 1777? 158 66. Give an account of the battles at Bemis's Height and Saratoga, and the surrender of Burgoyne. .... 159 67. What were the effects of the victory by the Americans ? . . 159 68. What did the British do in the Hudson Highlands, and above ? . 160 69. Give an account of the American army at Valley Forge, and events there. ....... 161 70. What caused the British to leave Philadelphia ? . . .162 71. Give an account of Washington's pursuit, and the battle of Mon- mouth. . . . . . . . .162 72. What have you to say about the American army and French fleet at Rhode Island ? . . . . . .163 73. What terrible event occurred in the Wyoming valley in the sum- mer of 1778 ? 164 74. What can you tell of the British and French forces, and events at Savannah ? . . . . . . . 165 75. What was the American plan of campaign for 1779 ? . . 166 76. Give an account of events in Georgia, near the Savannah river, in the winter of 1779. .... .167 77. What can you tell of an attempt to take Charleston in 1779 ? . 168 78. Give an account of the capture of Stouey Pont by the British. . 168 .79. Give an account of the capture of Stoney Point by the Americans. 169 80. What can you tell about Daniel Boone ? . . , 169 81. Give an account of Sullivan's chastisement of the Indians, . 170 82. Give an account of the siege of Savannah. . . .171 83. What did John Paul Jones do ? . . . . .172 84. What can you tell about the siege of Charleston, in 1780 ? 174, 175 85. What partisans appeared in the South ? . . . .176 86. What can you tell about their exploits in South Carolina and Georgia? . . . . . . .176 87. What can you tell about a battle near Camden, and defeat of the Americans, in August, 1780 ? . . . . 177 88. What can you tell about Cornwallis, and the battle at King's Mountain? ....... 178 89. What aid for the Americans came from abroad ? . . . 179 90. What have you to say about General Arnold and his treason ? 179, 180 91. Give an account of mutinies, and the patriotism of some of the mutineers. ....... 181 92. How did Arnold do service for the British ? . . . 182 93. What have you to say about Greene in South Carolina, and the battle of the Cowpens ? . . . . . 182 94. Give an account of Greene's retreat. .... 183 95. Give an account of the battle of Guilford. , . . 184 348 REVIEW QUESTIONS. PAGB 96. What have you to say about Greene, and a battle near Camden ? 184 97. Give an account of the siege of Ninety-Six, and the capture of Augusta. ....... 185 98. Give an account of the battle of Eutaw Springs. . . . 186 99. Give an account of Cornwallis in Virginia. . . . 186 100. What can you tell about the American and French armies on the Hudson, and their march southward ? . . . . 187 101. Give an account of the siege of Yorktown, and surrender of Cornwallis. ....... 189 102. Can you give an account of the closing events of the Revolution ? 190 103. What can you tell about the treaty of peace ? . . . 191 104. Give the names and dates of the principal battles of the Revo- lution. . . . . . . . .191 105. Give an account of movements at Newburg, and Washington's surrender of his commission. . . . . .192 106. What can you tell about the Articles of Confederation, and the formation and adoption of a National Constitution ? . 193, 194 THE NATION. 1. What can you tell about the first President of the United States ? 195 2. Give an account of the organization of the National Government. 196 3. What have you to say about the public debt, the seat of the Na- tional Government, the public credit, a bank and mint ? .197 4. Give an account of troubles with the Indians. . . .198 5. How and when were two distinct political parties formed ? .198 6. What can you tell about Genet, the representative of French de- mocracy ? ....... 199 7. What insurrection occurred in Pennsylvania, and how was it put down ? . . . . . . . . 199 8. What have you to say about Jay's treaty, the Algerine pirates, and Washington's Administration ? . . . 200 9. Give an account of troubles with the French. . . 201, 202 10. What additions were made to the Republic during Jefferson's Administration ? ...... 203 11. Give an account of war with the piratical powers on the Medi- terranean Sea. ....... 204 12. What can you tell about the movements of Aaron Burr in the region of the Mississippi ?..... 205 13. When and by whom was navigation by steam introduced ? . 206 14. Relate how the hostilities between Napoleon and Great Britain injured the world's commerce. ..... 206 15. Tell what caused ill feeling in the United States against Great Britain. ........ 207 16. Give an account of the affair of the Chesapeake and Leopard. . 207 17. What caused an embargo ? . . . . . . 208 18. What can you tell about the relations between the United States and Great Britain at the beginning of Madison's Adminis- tration ? ....... 209 19. Tell the story of the President and Little Belt. . . .209 20. What circumstances brought on the battle of Tippecanoe ? . 210 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 349 PAGE 21. When was war against Great Britain proclaimed ? . . 210 22. What preparations for war were made ? . . . .211 23. Give an account of Hull's campaign, and the surrender of Detroit. 211 24. What stirring events occurred at Queenstown ? . . 212 25. Give an account of naval operations in 1812. . . . 213 26. What was the plan of campaign for 1813 ? 214 27. What was done by the people of the West ? 214 28. Give an account of the attacks on Forts Meigs and Stephenson. 215 29. Relate the story of Perry's victory. .... 216 30. Give an account of Harrison's invasion of Canada. . . 216 31. What occurred at York or Toronto, and Fort George, in April and May, 1813 ? . . . . . . .217 32. Give an account of events at Sackett's Harbor, and at Williams- burg, in Canada. . . . . . .218 33. What occurred on the Niagara frontier ? . . . . 218 34. Give an account of war with the Creek Indians. . . . 219 35. What have you to say about Lawrence and the Chesapeake ? . 220 36. What naval operations took place in 1813 ? 221 37. Give an account of British marauders on Chesapeake bay. . 221 38. What took place in the spring of 1814 ? . . . . 222 39. Give an account of the battles at Chippewa, Niagara Falls, and Fort Erie. . . . . . . .223 40. Give an account of land and naval movements near Plattsburg, and the battles there. ...... 224 41. What were the circumstances of the capture and destruction of Washington city, and the repulse of the British at Baltimore ? 226 42. Relate the story of the defense of New Orleans, and the defeat of the British there. ...... 227 43. Give an account of naval operations in 1814. . . . 228 44. Recite the names and dates of the principal battles diiriuo- the Second War for Independence. ..... 229 45. What can you tell about war with Algiers, and Decatur's suc- cesses ? ....... 230, 231 46. What can you tell about the breaking up of piratical establish- ments ? . . -2 32 47. What did Jackson do in Florida, and what was the result ? . 232 48. Give an account of slavery agitation, and the Missouri Compro- mise 233 49. For what was John Quincy Adams's Administration remarkable ? 234 50. What remarkable coincidence was observed in 1826 ? . . 235 51. Give an account of the American System, and the discontent of cotton growers. . . . . • . . 235 52. Give an account of Jackson's opposition to the United States Bank, and the result. ...... 237 53. Give an account of rebellious movements in South Carolina, and the result. ....... 238 54. Relate the story of the war with the Seminole Indians. . 239, 240 55. What marked the beginning of Van Buren's Administration ? . 241 56. What can you tell about disputes on the borders ? . . 242 57. What have you to say about President Harrison, his death, and his successor ? . . . . . . . 243 350 REVIEW QUESTIONS. PAGE 58. What was done at the extraordinary session of Congress in 1841 ? 244 59. What difficulties occurred in Rhode Island ? 245 60. What important questions occupied the early attention of Presi- dent Polk ? . . . . . .246 61. What hostile movements toward Mexico were made ? . . 247 62. Give an account of the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma? . . . . . . 247, 248 63. Describe the plan of campaign made by the Secretary of War and General Scott. ...... 248 64. Give an account of Taylor's invasion of Mexico. . . . 248 65. Give an account of the battle of Buena Vista. . . 249 66. Relate how California was wrested from Mexico. . . . 250 67. Give an account of Doniphan's movements. . . . 250 68. Relate how Vera Cruz was taken, and the Mexicans defeated at the Sierra Gordo. ...... 251 69. Give an account of Scott's triumphant march toward the Mexican capital. ........ 252 70. What can you tell about battles near the city of Mexico, and the final capture of the capital ? . . . 252, 253 71. What can you tell about a treaty ? . . . . . 253 72. Name the principal battles in the war with Mexico, and the dates of their occurrence. ...... 254 73. Give an account of the admission of California as a State, and the Compromise of 1850. ..... 255 74. What have you to say about fillibustering movements ? . . 257 75. For what was Pierce's Administration distinguished ? . . 258 76. How was the Missouri Compromise virtually repealed ? . . 258 77. What have you to say about Kansas, also about the Atlantic Tele- graph cable ? . . . . . • • 259 78. How was slavery agitation aroused at the beginning of Mr. Bu- chanan's Administration ? . « . . . 260 79. What did Chief Justice Taney declare ? . . . .260 80. Give an account of John Brown's raid, and its results. . ^ . 261 81. What have you to say about Mr. Lincoln, and his opponents in the Slave States ? 262 82. Give an account of the formation of a confederacy in the Slave States. . . . . . . . .263 83. Who formed it, and what did they do ? . . . 263 84. What occurred at Charleston in the spring of 1801 ? . .264 85. What did the Confederates intend to do, and how were they foiled? . . . . . . .265 86. Give an account of the National Army and Navy, and the doings of the conspirators. ..... 265, 266 THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 1. Give an account of the beginning of the great Civil War. . 266 2. What did Congress do ? . . . . . . 266 3. What were the positions of the two principal armies in July, 1861 ? 267 REVIEW QUESTIONS. 351 4. Where was the first invasion by national troops ? and where the first battle ? . . . . .267 5. Give an account of the first battle of Bull Run. . . . 268 6. What have you to say about the war in Missouri ? . . 269 7. Give an account of the capture of Hatteras, and fighting in West- ern Virginia, on the Upper Potomac, in Missouri, and at Port Royal entrance. ....... 269 8. What was the extent of the war ? . . . . .270 9. What have you to say about our foreign relations ? . . 270 10. Give an account of the capture of Roanoke island. . . 271 11. Give an account of the capture of Fort Donelson, and the battle of Pea Ridge 271 12. What can you tell about the Merrimac and Monitor ? . . 272 13. What can you tell about the battle of Shiloh, and capture of Island No. 10 ? 272 14. Give an account of the capture of Fort Pulaski, and of New Orleans. . . . . . . . .273 15. Give an account of the capture of Norfolk, and the movements of the Army of the Potomac on the Peninsula. . . . 274 16. How was the Army of Virginia formed ? . . . 275 17. What did it do and suffer? . . . . . .275 18. Give an account of an invasion of Maryland, and the surrender of Harper's Ferry. ...... 275 19. What can you tell about battles in Maryland, and the doings of Confederate cavalry ? . . . . . 276 20. What did the Army of the Potomac afterward do in Virginia ? . 276 21. What can you tell about operations in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Upper Mississippi ?...... 277 22. What great battle did Rosecrans fight ? . . .277 23. What can you tell of an attempt to capture Vicksburg ? . . 277 24. What did Congress do ? . . . .278 25. What have you to say about the President's Emancipation Proc- lamation ? . . . . . . .279 26. Give an account of the doings of the Army of the Potomac. . 279 27. Give an account of another invasion of Maryland and Pennsyl- vania, and the battle at Gettysburg. .... 280 28. What further have you to say of the two armies in Virginia ? . 280 29. What occurred in North Carolina ? . . . . . 280 30. What occurred at Charleston in the summer of 1863? . . 281 81. Give an account of operations in Louisiana under General Banks. 281 32. Give an accouut of the doings of Sherman and Porter in Arkansas. 282 33. Relate the story of the siege and capture of Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and the result. ...... 283 34. What did Rosecrans do in South-eastern Tennessee ? . . 283 35. Give an account of operations near Chattanooga. . . . 284 36. Give an account of the great battle of Chattanooga, and its ad- vantages. ....... 284 37. What was done in Arkansas by Steele and Blunt ? . . 285 38. What had the National armies accomplished at the close of 1863 ? 285 39. What have vou to say about the National navy ? . . . 286 40. What did the National Congress do ? . . .286 352 REVIEW QUESTIONS. PAGF. 41. What occurred in New York citv ? . . . . . 287 42. What was the aspect of affairs at the beginning of 1864? . . 287 43. Tel] about invasions of Mississippi and Florida. . . . 288 44. Give an account of an expedition up the Red River. . . 288 45. What can you say about it^ doings and the result ? . . . 289 46. Wliat have you to say about General Steele's misfortunes, and Con- federate doings at Paducah and Fort Pillow ? . . . 289 47. To what office was Grant promoted? .... 289 48. What order did he issue ? . . . • . • 290 49. Give an account of the movements of the Army of the Potomac. . 290 50. What did Butler do? and for what purpose? . . . 291 51. What did Grant accomplish by July, 1864? . . .291 52. Give an accouut of Sherman's movements in Georgia. . . 291 53. What had he accomplished at tie close of July, 1804? . . 292 54. Give an account of the destruction of the Alabama. . . 292 55. What can you til about English-Confederate pirate ships ? 2! 2, 293 56. What can you tell about an invasion ot Maryland in July, 1864, and doings of the Confederates in Pennsylvania ai:d the Shenan- doah valley ? . . . . .294 57. Give an account of operations near Petersburg. . . . 295 58. Tell about events in the Oarolinas, Georgia and Tennessee. 296, 298, 299 59. What can you tell about events near Mobile ? . . . 296 60. (live an account of events connected with the final breaking up cf the Confederate armies, the death of the President, and the close of the war. ..... 300, 301, 302 61. What can you tell about the reorganization of State Governments, and the impeachment of the President ? . . . . 304 62. What can you tell about amendments of the National Constitution and the election of a new President in 1868 and 1872? . . 30* 63. What can you tell about events of Grant's administration, a settle- ment of claims, and election of a new President '! . 305, £06 THE CONSTITUTION. 1. Of what powers of the Government does Article I. treat? 2. State the contents of the several sections. 3. Of what powers does Article II. treat? 4. State the contents of the several sections. 5. Of what powers does Article III. treat? 6. State the contents of the several sections. 7. Of what powers does Article IV. treat? 8. State the contents of the several sections. 9. Of what does Article V. treat? 10. Of what does Article VI. treat? 11. Of what does Article VII. treat? 12. How many amendments have been made to the Constitution? 13. Of what do the several amendments treat? SUPPLEMENT. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 1. The following preamble and specifications, 1 known as the Declara- tion of Independence, 2 accompanied the resolution of Richard Henry Lee, 3 which was adopted by Congress on the 2d day of July, 1776. This declaration was agreed to on the 4th, and the transaction is thus recorded in the Journal for that day : 2. " Agreeably to the order of the day, the Congress resolved itself into a Committee of the Whole, to take into their further consideration the Declaration ; and, after some time, the President resumed the chair, and Mr. Harrison reported that the committee have agreed to a declara- tion, which they desired him to report. The Declaration, being read, was agreed to as follows : " A DECLARATION OF THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES, IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED. When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume, among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station, to which the laws of nature, and of nature's God, entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. 3. We hold these truths to be self-evident— that all men are created equal ; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights ; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, de- riving their just powers from the consent of the governed ; that, when- ever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new govern- ment, laying its foundations on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long estab- lished should not be changed for light and transient causes ; and, accord- ingly, all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suf- 1. Ttmnstbe remembered that these specific charges marie against the kins; of Great Britain, include, 4, the Assembly of New York took measures to conciliate the Six Nations, and other Indian tribe-. The m itives of the assembly were misconstrued, representations hav- ing been made to the king that the colonies wished to mike allies of the Indians, so as to increase their physical power and proportionate independence of the British crown. The monarch sent instructions to all his governors to desist from such alliances, or to suspend their operatio s until his assent should be given. He then " utterly neglected to attend to them." The Massachusetts Assembly pass ■(! a law in 1770 for taxing officers of the Drit isli Government in that colony. The governor was ordered to withhold his assent to such tax- bill. This was in violation of the colonial charter, ami the people justly complained. The Assembly was prorogued from time to time, and laws of great importance were "utterly neg- lected." 3. A law was passed by Parliament in the spring of 1774, by which the popular repre- sentative system in the provinre of (Quebec (Canada) was annulled, and officers appointed by the crown had all power as legislators, except that of levying taxes. The Canadians being Roman Catholics, were easily pacified under the new order of things, by having their religious System declared the established religion of the province. Rut "large districts of Eeopte" bordering on Nova Scotia felt this deprivation to be a great grievance. Their hum- Ic petitions concerning commercial regulations were unheeded, because they remonstrated against the new order of things, and ( Jove r nor Carl et on (verse 19. p. 136) plainly told them tliattheymusteea.se their clamor about representatives, before they should have anv new commercial laws. A bill for "better regulating the government in the province of Massa- chusetts Hay," passed that year, provided for the abridgment of the privileges of popular elections, to take the government out of the hands of the people, and to vest the nomina- tion of judges, magistrates, and even sheriffs, in the crown. When thus deprived of " free representation in the Legislature," and the governor refused to issue warrants for the elec t'on of members of tile Assembly, they called a convention of the freemen, and asked for the passage of " laws for the accommodation of large districts of people." These requests were disregarded, and they were told that no laws should be passed until they should quietly " relinquish the right of representation in the Legislature— a light inestimable to them, and formidable to tyrants only." DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 355 fortable, and distant from the repository of their public records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures. 1 8. He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly, for opposing, with manly firmness, his invasions on the rights of the people. 2 9. He has refused, for a long time after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected, whereby the legislative powers, incapable of anni- hilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise ; the State remaining, in the mean time, exposed to all the dangers of invasions from without, and convulsions within. 3 10. He has endeavored to prevent the population of these States ; for that purpose obstructing the laws for the naturalization of foreigners ; refusing to pass others to encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new appropriations of lands. 4 11. He has obstructed the administration of justice, by refusing his assent to laws for establishing judiciary powers. 5 1. In conseqner.ee of the destruction of tea in Boston harbor (verse 24, p. 125) in 1773, the inhabitants of that town became the special objects of royal displeasure. The Boston Port Bill (verse 25, p. 126) was passed as a punishment. The custom house, courts, and other public operations were removed to Salem, while the public records were kept in Boston, and so well guarded by two regiments of soldiers, that the patriotic members of the colonial as- sembly could i ot have referred to them. Although compelled to meet at a place (note 3, p. 126) " distant from the repository of the public records," and in a place extremely " uncom- fortable," they were nut fatigued into compliance, but, in spite of the efforts of the governor, they elected delegates to a general congress (verse 28, p. 127), and adopted other measures for the public good. 2. When the British Government became ii formed of the fact that the Assembly of Mas- sachusetts, in 1768, had issued a circular (verse 12, page 120) to other assemblies, inviting their cooperation in asserting the prii ciple that Great Britain had no r'ght to tax the colo- nists without their consent, Lord Hillsborough, the secretary for Foreign Affairs, was directed to order the governor of Massachusetts to require the Assembly of that provir.ee to rescind its obnoxious resolutions expressed in the circular. In case of their refusal to do so, the governor was ordered to dissolve them immediately. Other assemblies were warned not to imitate that of Massachusetts, and when they refused to accede to the wishes of the king, as expressed by the several royal governors, they were repeatedly dissolved. The assemblies of Virginia and North Carolina were d : ssolved for denying the right of the king to tax the colo ies, or to remove offenders' out of the country, for trial. In 1774, when the several as- semblies entertained the propos'tion to elect delegates to a general congress (verse 28, page 127), pearly all of them were dissolved. 3. When the Assembly of New York, in 1766, refused to comply with the provisions of the Mutiny Act (verse 10, page 120), its legislative functions were suspended by royal authority (verse 11, page 120), and for several mc ths the State rcmai- ed " exposed to ail the dangers of invasion from w thout. and convulsions within." The Assembly of Massachusetts, after its dissolution in July, 1768, was not permitted to meet again until the last Wednesday of May, 1769, and then they found the place of meeting surroui ded by a military guard, with canrons po'nted d'rectly at their place of meeting. They refused to act under such tyran- nical restraint, and their legislative powers " returned to the people." 4. Secret agents were sent to America soon after the accession of George the Third to the throne of England (verse 3, page 116), to spy out the cond'tion of the colonists. A larae influx of liberty-loving German cmigrai ts was observed, and the king was advised to d : s- courage these immigrations. Obstacles in the way of procuring lands, and otherwise, were put in the way of all emigrants, except from England, and the tendency of French Roman Catholics to settle in Maryland, was also discouraged. The British G overnment was jealous of the increasing power of the colonies, and the danger of having that power controlled by democratic ideas, caused the employment of restrictive measures." The easy conditions upon which actual settlers might obtain lands on the Western frontier, after tie peace of 1763 (verse 43, page 111), were so changed, that toward the dawning of the Revolut on, the vast Bolitudes west of the AUeghanies were seldom penetrated by any but the hunter from the seaboard provinces. "When the War for Independence broke out, immigration had almost ceased. The king conjectured wisely, for almost the entire German population in the colo- nies were on the side of the patriots. 5. By an act of Parbament in 1774, the judiciary was taken from the people of Massachu- setts. The judges were appointed by the king, we're dependent on him for their salaries, and were subject to his will Their salaries were paid from moneys drawn from the people by the commissioners of customs (verse 11, page 120), in the form of duties. The same act de- prived them, m most cases, of the benefit of trial by jury, and the " administration of jus- tice" was effectually obstructed. The rights for which Englishmen so manfully contended 356 SUPPLEMENT. 12. He has made judges dependent on his will alone for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries. 1 13. He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their substance. 8 14. He has kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies, with- out the consent of our Legislatures. 3 15. He has affected to render the military independent of, and suj^erior to, the civil power. 4 16. He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction for- eign to our constitutions, and unacknowledged by our laws ; giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation : 8 17. For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us ; 8 in 168S (verse 16, page 55), were trampled under foot. Similar grievai ces concerting the courts of law existed in other colonies, and throughout the Angle-American domain there was but a semblance of ju.-tice left. The people met in convi ntii ns, when assemblies were dissolved, and endeavored to establish "judiciary powers," but in vain, ai d were finally driven to rebellion. 1. As we have observed in note 5, page 355, judges were made independent of the peo- ple. Royal gover. ors were placed in the same position. Instead of cheeking their tei dei cy to petty tyranny, 1 y having them depend upon the colonial assemblii s for their salaries, these were paid out of the naiioi al treasury. Independent of the people, they had no sym- pathies with the people, ai.d thus became fit instruments of oppression, ai d ready at all firms to do the bidding of the king and his ministers. The colonial assemblies protested against the measure, and out of the excitement which it produced, grew tl at power of the Revolution, the committees of correspondence (verse 27, pa^e 127). When, in 1774, Chief- Justice Oliver, of Massachusetts, declared it to be h : s intention to receive his salary from the crown, the assembly proceed) d to impeach him, and petitioned the governor for Ins removal. The governor refused compliance, and great irritation enuscd. 2. After the passage of the Stamp Act, stamp distributors w ere appointed in every consid- erable town. In 1766 and 1767, acts for the collection of duties created " swarms of « Hirers," all of whom received high salaries ; and when, in 176S, admiralty ai d viec-admira'ty courts wire established on a new basis, an increase in tl e number of officers was made. Tl e high salaries and extensive perquisites of all of these were paid with the people's money, and thus " swarms of officers " "eat out tl e'r substance." 3. After the treaty of peace with France, in 1763 (verse 43, page 111), Great Britain left ejuito a large number of troops in America, and required the colonists to contribute to their support. There was no use for this standing army, except lo repress ll e growing f pirit of democracy among the colonists, and to enforce compliai.ee -with taxation laws. The pres- ence of troops was always a cause of complaint, at d wl en, finally, the colonists boldly op- posed the unjust measure's of the British Government, armies were Eel t hither, to awe the. peeple into sulmrs-io <. It was one of those "standing armies" ke] t here " without the consent of the Legislature," against which II, e patriots at Lexington at d Concord (verses 4 and 5, page 130, and Bunker Hill (Terse 13, page 132). so manfully battled in 1775. 4. General Gage, commander-in-chief of the British forces in America, was appointed governor of Massachusetts, in T774, and to put tie measures of the Boston Tort Bill (verse 26, page 126) into execution, be encamped several regiments of solders upon Boston Com- mon. The military there, ami also ill New York, was made independei t of, and superior to, the civil power, and this, too, in a time' of peace, before the minute men (verse 1, page 128) w ere organized. 5. The establishment of a I oard of trade, to art independ( nt of colonial b gislation through its creatures (resident commissioners of customs) in the enforcement of revenue- laws, was altogi tber foreign to tl e constitution of any of the co'on'es, ami produced great indlgi ation. The establishment of this power, ami the remodeling of the admiralty courts, so as to ex- elude trial by jury therein, in most cases, rendered the Government fully obnoxious to the charge in the t «-xi . The' people felt the' r degradation under Buch petty tyranny, and re Solved to spurn it. It was effectually done in Boston, as we- have sre-n (verse 15. page' 121), ami the' Government, after all its blUBter, was Obliged to rece-eh'. In 1774, ihe members of the council of Massachusetts (answer'ng tei our Senate), were, by a parliamentary enactment, chosen fcythe king, to hold the office during h's pleasure. Almost unlimited rower ■\y»s also given to the' governor, ami the- people were indeed subjected to " a jurisdiction 1'oreivn to their constitution," by these creatures of royalty. 6. In 1774 seven hundred troops were landed m Boston, under cover of ihe cam one of Brit sh armed ships in the harbor ; anil early the' following Ve ar, I'arl'amei t voteel ten tl ou- sanel me'ii for the- American service, (or it saw the wave of rebellion rising high nneler the gale of indignation which unrighteous ae-ts had spreael over the land. The tragedies at Lexington and Concord soon followed, and at Bunker Hill the War for Independence was opened in earnest. DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 357 18. For protecting them, by a mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they should commit on the inhabitants of these States ; l 19. For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world ; 2 20. For imposing taxes on us without our consent ; 3 21. For depriving us, in many cases, of the benefits of trial by jury ; * 22. For transporting us beyond seas, to be tried for pretended offenses ; 5 23. For abolishing the free system of English laws in a neighboring province, establishing therein an arbitrary government, and enlarging its boundaries, so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these colonies ; 6 24. For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws, and altering, fundamentally, the forms of our governments ; 7 1. In 1768, two citizens of Annanolis, in Maryland, were murdered by some marines be- longing to a British armed ship. The trial was a mockery of jusiice, and, in the face of clear evidence against them, they were acquitted. In the d fficulties with the Regulators (verse 21, page 124) in North Carolina, in 1771, some of the soldiers who had shot down citizens when standing up in defense of their rights, were tried for murder and acquitted, wh le Governor Tryon mercilessly hung six pr so.iers, who were certainly entitled to the bei.cfits of the laws of war, if his own soldiers were. 2. The navigation laws were always oppressive in character ; and in 17C4, the Biit'sh naval commanders, having been clothed w.th the authority of custom-house officers, com- pletely broke up a profitable trade which the coloni.-ts had long ei joyed with tne Spanish and French West Indies, notwithstanding it. was in violation of the old navigation act of 1660, which had been almost ineffectual. Finally, Lord North concluded to punish the re- fractory colonists of New E igland, by crippling their commerce with Great Britain, Ireland, and the West Indies. Fishing on the banks of Newfoundland was also prohibited, and thus, as far as parliamentary enactments could accomplish it, their " trade w.th all parts of the world " was cut off. 3. In addition to the revenue taxes imposed from time to time, and attempted to be col- lected by means of writs of assistance (verse 4, page 116) the Stamp Act (verse 6, page 117) was passed, and duties upon paper, painters' colors, glass, tea, &c, were levied. This was the great bone of contention between the colonists a~,d the Imperial Government. It was contention, on the one hand, for the great polit cal truth that taxation and representation are inseparable, and a lu-t for power, and the means for replenishing an exhausted treasury, on the other. The climax of the contention was the Kevo'ut o >. 4. This was especially the case, when commisioners of customs were concerned in the suit. After these functionaries were driven from Boston in 1768 (verse 15. page 121), an act was passed which placed violations of the revenue laws under the jurisd ction of the admi- ralty courts, where the offenders were tried by a creature of the crown, aid were deprived " of the benefits of trial by jury." 5. A law of 1774 provided that any person in the province of Massachusetts, who should be accused of riot, resistance of magistrates or the officers of customs, murder, "or any other capital offense," might, at the opt on of the goverror, be taken for trial to another colony, or transported to Great Britain for the purpose. The minister pretended that im- partial justice could not be administered in Massachusetts, but the facts of Captain Pres- ton's case (vers? 19, page 123) refuted his arguments in that direction. The bill was vio- lently opposed in Parliament, yet it became a law. It was decreed that Americans might be " transported beyond the seas, to be tried for pretended offerees," or real crimes. 6. This charge is emboded in an earlier one (verse 6, page 351) considered in note 3, page 354. The Brit'sh ministry thought it prudent to take early steps to secure a footing in Amerira, so near the scene of inevitable rebellion, as to allow them to breast, successfully, the gathering storm. The investing of a legislative council in Canada, with all the powers except levying of taxes, was a great stride toward that absolute military rule which bore sway there within eighteen months afterward. Giving up their political f'ghts for doubtful religious privileges, made them willing slaves, and Canada remained a part of the British empire, when its sister colonies rejoiced in freedom. 7. This is a reiteration of the charge considered in note 5, page 355, and refers to the alteration of the Massachusetts charter, so as to make judges and other officers independent of the people, and subservient to the crown. The governor was empowered to remove and appoint all inferior judges, the attorney-general, provosts, marshals, and just ces of the peace, and to appoint sheriffs independent of the council. As the sheriffs chose jurors, tria. by jury might easily be made a mere mockery. The people had hitherto been allowed, by their charter, to select jurors ; now the whole matter was placed in the hands of the crea- tures of Government. 358 SI IM'LEMENT. 25. For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves in- vested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever ; ' 26. lie has abdicated government here, by declaring us out of his pro- tection, and waging war against us. 8 27. He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burned our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. 3 28. He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries, to complete the works of death, desolation, and tyranny already begun, with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the head of a civilized nation.* 29. He has constrained our fellow citizens, taken captive on the high seas, to bear arms against their country, to become the executioners of their friends and brethren, or to fall themselves by their hands. 6 30. He has excited domestic insurrection among us, and has endeav- ored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes, and conditions. 6 31. In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms ; our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people. 1 1. This, too, is another phase of the charge just considered. "Wc have noticed the sup- pri Bsion of the Legislature of New York (verse 11, page 120), and in tevcral eases the gov- ernors, after dissolving colonial assemblies, assumed the ri<;ht to make proclamations stand in the place of statute law. Lord Dunmore assumed tins right in 1775, and s i did Sir James "Wright, of Georgia, and Lord William Campbell, of South Carolina. Tluy wire driven from the country in consequence. 2. In his message to Pari anient early in 1775, the king declared the colonists to ho In a Btato of open rebellion, and by sending armies hither to make war upon them, ho really ,; abdicated government," by thus declaring them "out of his protection." lie sai ctloncd the acts of governors in employing the Indiai s aeait st his subjects, ai d himself bargained for tho employment of Gorman hinli gs. And when, yielding to the pressure ofpopul.tr will, lis representatives (the royal governors) fled before the indignant people, l.e certainly '• abdi cat ed government." 8, When naval commanders were clothed w'th the powers of custom-house officers, tiny seized many American vessels ; and after the a (la r at Lexington and 1! inker Hill, British ships of war "plundered our seas 1 ' whenever an American vessel could be found. They aiso "ravaged our coasts and burnt our towns" Uharlestown (verse 13, page 102), Fal- ..louth (now Portland, in Maine), and Norfolk were burnt, and Dunmore and others (verse 23, page 138) " ravaged our coast-," and " destroyed the lives of our people." Al d at the very time when tb s Declaration was Lei i tr read to the assembled coi gi^s, the shattered fleet of Sir Peter Parker was sailing northward (verse 8, page 142), after an attack upon Charleston, South Carolina. 4. This charge refers to the ii famous employment of German troop-, known here as Hessians. See note 2, page 140. 5. An act of Parliament passed toward the close of December, 1775, authorized the capture of all American vessels, and also directed the treatment of the crews of armed vessels to be as slaves, and not as prisoi era of war. They were to be enrolled for ''the service of h ; s majesty,' 1 and were ihue compelled to light for the crown, even Rgainst their own friends and countrymen. T ; is act was loudly condemned on the floor of Parlia- ment, as unworthy of a Christian people, and "a refinement of cruelty unknown among savaire nations." (',. XI Is was done in several instances. Governor! Dunmore was charged with a de- -i.oi to employ the Indians atraii st the Vlrtri' ians, as early as 1774 ; ard while ravaging the Virginia coast in 1775 and 177ti.be endeavored to excite the slaves against their masters. He was also concerned with Governor Gage and others, nrder instructions from the British ministry, in exciting the Shatenoeae, and other Bavages of the Ohio country, against the white people, Eni'ssar'es were also sent among the Cherokees and Crekes for the same purpose, and all of the tribes of the Six Notions, except the Oneidos, were found in arms with the British when war began. Thus excited, dreadful massacres occurred on the bor- ders of the several colonies. 7. For ten long years the colonies petitioned for redress of grievances, " in the most hum- DECLAKATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 359 32. Nor have we been wanting in our attentions to our British breth- ren. 1 We have warned them, from time to time, of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them, by the ties of our common kindred, to disavow these usurpations, which would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence, They, too, have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity which denounces our separation, and hold them as we hold the rest of mankind — enemies in war — in peace, friends. 33. We, therefore, the representatives of the United States of America, in general Congress assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, solemnly publish and de- clare that these united colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States ; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved ; and that, as free and independent States, they have full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all other acts and things which independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor. Such was the form and substance of the Declaration of Independence made by the representatives of the thirteen Anglo-American colonies, in 1776. They did more than declare that people independent of the Brit- ish crown. They proclaimed, in justification of their act, the great birth-right to natural equality belonging to every human creature, and the inalienable rights of man as a free agent, responsible only to his Maker, from whom he received them. The doctrine put forth in that Declara- tion was not applied to any particular nation, people, or race, but to all mankind. They also declared the sovereignty of the people, by claiming for them the right of revolt against government whenever it becomes destructive of those natural and inalienable rights ; and then proceeded to show, by accusations against the head of their own Government, as its representative, the lawfulness of their own revolt. How truthful were their accusations, and how perfectly they were justified, let the preceding pages of this little volume testify. ble terms," and loyal manner. It was done by the Colonial Congress of 1765 (verse 8, page 119), and also bv the Continental Congresses of 1774 (verse 29, page 127) and 1775 (verse 10, page 134). But : 1. From British brethr__ pie of Great Britain ;" and the Congress of 1775 sent an affectionate appeal "To the People of Ireland." Iso by the Continental Congresses ot Hit (.verse zy, page izt) ana mo (.verse 10, But their peti'ions were almost always " answered oi ly by repeated injuries." the beginning, the colonists appealed, in the most affectionate terms, to "their thven"" The first address, put forth by the Congress of 1774, was "To the Peo- SIGNERS OF THE DECLARATION* OF INDEPENDENCE. The following is a list of the members of the Continental Congress, who signed the Declaration of Independence, with the places and dates of their birth, and the time of their respective deaths. XAMES OF THE SIGNERS. Adams, John Adams, Snmnel . Bartlett, Josiah . Braxton, Carter . Carroll Cha's of Oai "toil Chase, Siinnu-1 . Clark, Abraham . Clymer, George . Briery, William . Floyd, William . Franklin, Benjamin . Gerry, Elbridge . Gwinnet, Billion . Hall, I. jman Hancock, John . Harrison, Benjamin . H lit. John . Heyward, Thomas, jr. llewes, Joseph . Hooper, William Hopkins, Stephen (lopkinson, Francis Huntington, Bamael Jefferson, Thomas Lee, Francis Light foot I,ce, Richard Henrj Lewis, Francis Livingston, Philip Lynch, Thomas, jr. M'Kean, Thomas Middleton, Arthur Morris, Lewis Morris, Robert Morton, -John Nelson, Thomas, jr. . Paca, William Paine, Robert Treat . Penn, John . Read, Oeorge Rodney, (Var . Boss, George Rush, Benjamin, M.D, F.utleilge, Kilward Sherman, Roger . Smith, James Stockton, Richard Stone, Thomas Taylor, ('•< orge . Thornton, Matthew Walton, George . Whipple, William Williams, William Wilson, James Wiiherspoon, John Wolcott. Oliver . Wythe, Ucorgo . Braintree, Mass., 19:h Oct. Boston, " 22d Sept. Amesbury, " in Nov. Newington, Va., lOih Sept. Annapolis, lid., 201 b Sept. Someiset co., Mil., 1 , t h April Klizabeihi'n, N.J. 15lh Feb. Philadelphia, Penn., in Newport, R. I., 22d Dec. Suffolk CO., N. ST., i;ih Dec. Boston, Mass., 1, ih Jan. Marblehcad, Mass.. 1, ih Jul. England, in Connecticut, in Braintree, Mass., in Berkely, Virginia, Hopewell, N. J., St. Luke's. SC, Kingston, N. J., Boston, Mass., Sciluate, " Philadelphia, Penn., Windham. Conn., 3d July Shadwell, Va., Stratford, " Stratford, " LandalT, Wales, Albany, N. Y., St. George's, S. ('., r>ih Aug. Chester CO.. Pa., l'.Hh Mar. Middleton Place, S. C, in Morrisania, N. Y., in Lancashire, England, Jan. Ridley, Penn., ia York, Virginia, 26:h Dec. Wye-Hill, Md., 31st Oct. Boston, Mass.. in Caroline CO., Va., 171b May Cecil co.. Md., in Dover, Delaware, in New Castle, Del., in Hyberry, Penn., 24tb Dec. Charleston S. C, In Nov. Newton, Mass., 19th Apiil Ireland, Princeton, N. J., Charles e,,., Md., Inland. I eland, Fre leiick co., Va Kittery, Maine, Lebanon, Conn., Scotland, faster, Scotland, 5:h Feb. Windsor, Conn., 26lb N,>\ . Elizabe h citj e,>., Va., about 17ih June 7\b Mar. 13th Apiil llib Oct. 20th Jan. in March 15th Jan. 1st Oct, 8ih April about 1735 1722 l , 29 1736 1,37 1,11 1726 i;:-.9 1727 1734 1706 1,41 1732 1731 1,37 1715 1746 1,30 1742 1707 1,37 1732 1743 1. .it 1732 1713 1716 1749 1734 1743 1726 1733 1724 1738 1710 1731 1741 1734 1730 1730 I, 15 1749 1721 1730 1742 1716 1714 1740 1730 1731 1742 1722 1726 1726 DELEGATE FROM Massachusetts, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Virginia, Maryland, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, R. I. A Piov. PI., New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Georgia, Geoigia, Massachusetts, Virginia, New Jersey, South Carolina, North Carolina, North Carolina, R. I. & Piov. PL. New Jersey. Connecticut, Virginia, Virginia, Virginia, New Y'ork, New Y'oik, South Carolina, Delaware, South Carolina, New York, Pennsj Ivania, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Delaware, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Georgia, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, i lonnecticut, Virginia, 4th July, 2d Oct:, 19th May, Mil i.. ll;h Nov., l'.Hh June, June, 24lh Jan., lSlb Feb., 4th Aug., 17th Apiil. 23d Nov., 27ih May, Feb., 8th Oct., Apiil, Mar.,' 10th Nov., Oct., 19 h July, II. h May, 5lh Jan., 4th July, April, 19, h June, 30th Dec, 12th June, lost at sea, 24th June, 1st Jan., 221 Jan., 8th May, Apiil, 41 h Jan., 11th May,' Sept., July, 19. h Apiil. 23d Jan., 23d July, llih July, 28th Feb., 5ih Ocl , 23d Feb., 24i h June, 2d Feb., 28th Nov., 2d Aug., 2Mb Aug., 15th Nov., 1st Dee.. Pita June, 1826 1803 r,9o 1797 1832 1811 r,94 1813 1820 1821 1790 1814 1777 17 90 1793 1791 1780 1809 1779 1790 1785 17 90 1790 1820 1797 1794 1803 1778 1779 1M7 1787 1798 1806 1777 1789 1799 1814 1788 1798 1783 1779 1813 1800 1793 ink; 1781 1787 1781 1803 1804 17 85 1M1 1798 1794 1 , 97 1806 A lining the signers of the Declaration of independence, were men engaged in almost every vocation. There were twenty-four latoyers ; fourteen farmers { or men devoted chiefly to agriculturo; nine merchants; four physicians; one gospel minister, and three who were oducated fur that profession, but ohose. other avocations; and one manufacturer. A largo portion of them lived to the age ofthree score and ten years. Three of them were overDQ yeareofage when they died; ten over 80; eleven over TO; fourteen over UO; eleven over 50; . over -1 I. Mr, I,\ ach (lost al sea) was only 30, The aggregate years of life oftho tifty-six patriots, were 3^8"? years, THE PRESIDENTS OF THE REPUBLIC. The presidents of the Continental Congress during the Revolutionary period, and under the Articles of Confederation, held the same political relations to the Government and the people (though with far less power) as Washington and his successors did under the National Constitution. They may therefore properly be termed Presidents of the Republic, and, as such, they are introduced here in the company of those known as the Presidents of the United States. PEYTON RANDOLPH. When the First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia, in 1774, 1 they chose Peyton Randolph, of Virginia, to preside over them. He was descended from one of the oldest families of that commonwealth. The law was his profession, and, in 1750, he was attorney-general of that colony. He was chosen president of the Second Continental Congress in May, 1775, 2 but was compelled to leave his chair and go home, on account of illness. He returned, and took his seat as a delegate, and died of apoplexy at Philadelphia, on the 22d of October, 1775. Ill health had compelled him to leave the First Congress before the close of its session, when his place was temporarily filled by HENRY MIDDLETON, An elderly gentleman, and delegate from South Carolina. He was a son of the first royal governor of South Carolina, and father of Arthur Mid- dleton, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. He was a man of great wealth, but did not engage much in public affairs. He remained a member of Congress until 1776, when he retired to private life. JOHN HANCOCK. Succeeded Peyton Randolph as president of Congress, iu May, 1775. He was the son of a Massachusetts clergyman, and was born in that province in 1737. He was educated at Harvard College, trained to mercantile business, and became a leading merchant of Boston. 3 He was chosen to the seat of a representative in the Assembly of Massachusetts, in 1766, and became one of the popular leaders at the beginning of the Revolu- tion. He was a delegate in the First Continental Congress, and remained f . Verse 29, page 127. 2. Verse 16, page 134. 3. Verse 15, page 121. 16 362 SUPPLEMENT. a member of that body until November, 1777, when ill health compelled him to leave it. He was president of Congress from May, 1775, until that time, and, as such, was the first to sign the Declaration of Indepen- dence. 1 He was the first governor of Massachusetts, when it became a State. Mr. Hancock died on the 8th of October, 1793. HENRY LAURENS. When Hancock left the Congress, in November, 1777, he was suc- ceeded, as president, by Henry Laurens, a delegate from South Carolina. He was an active patriot, and* had been prominent in public affairs in his province and State for some time. He occupied the presidential chair for little more than a year. In 1780, he was sent to negotiate a treaty with Holland. He was captured on the sea, taken to England, and imprisoned until the close of 1781. He was one of the signers of the preliminaries of peace, in 1782. 2 Mr. Laurens died at Charleston, S. C, on the 8th of December, 1793, at the age of sixty-nine years. JOHN JAY. Mr. Jay, the successor of Mr. Laurens, was a native of New York. His family were Huguenot refugees. 8 He was born in December, 1745, educated at King's (now Columbia) College, and at an early age became distinguished as a lawyer. He was a member of the First Continental Congress, and was author of one of the able state papers put forth by that body. In succeeding Congresses, his pen was ever busy. He suc- ceeded Mr. Laurens as president on the 10th of December, 1778. At that time he was chief-justice of the State of New York. He was sent as minister to Spain in 1779, and was one of the commissioners for negotia- ting peace with Great Britain. In 1784 he was appointed Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs ; and, three years later, assisted in the formation of the National Constitution. Washington appointed him chief-justice of the United States. 4 He became governor of" New York, after returning from an embassy to England in 1795. He withdrew from public life in 1801, and died in May, 1829, at the age of eighty-four years. SAMUEL HUNTINGTON. Mr. Jay's successor was Mr. Huntington, of Connecticut, who was born in that colony in 1732. He was a lawyer by profession, represented his district in the colonial legislature in 1764, and became the king's attorney the following year. He was chosen a delegate to the Second Continental Congress in 1775, and he remained a member of that body until 1781. He succeeded Mr. Jay as president on the 28th of Septem- ber, 1779. In 1784, he was appointed chief-justice of Connecticut, and, two years later, was elected governor of that State. He continued in that office until his death, in January, 1796, when he was sixty-three years of age. ,-. 1. Verse 10, pace 143. 2. Verse 3, page 191. y 3. Verse 7, page 17. 4. Verse 2, page 196. THE PRESIDENTS OF THE REPUBLIC. 363 THOMAS McKEAN. The little State of Delaware was represented in the First Continental Congress by Mr. McKean, who became president of its successor on the Vetirement of Mr. Huntington. He was born in March, 1734, and was educated for the practice of the law. He represented the New Castle dis- trict in the Legislature of Delaware, in 1762 ; and in 1765 he was a dele- gate in the Stamp Act Congress in New York. 1 He entered the Conti- nental Congress, as delegate, in 1774, and served in that capacity until 1783, holding, much of that time, the office of chief-justice of Delaware. He was elected governor of Delaware in 1799, and held that office until 1808, when he retired from public life. Mr. McKean died in June, 1817, in the eighty-third year of his age. JOHN HANSON. This gentleman does not appear conspicuously in public records, until his election to the Continental Congress, in 1781, as a representative of Maryland. He entered that body in the summer, became an active and able member, and, on the retirement of Mr. McKean, was chosen his suc- cessor as president, on the 5th of November, 1781. He held that office precisely one year, when he left Congress. Mr. Hanson died in Prince George's county, Md., in November, 1783. ELIAS BOUDINOT. Another descendant of the Huguenots, Elias Boudinot, was called to preside over the Congress. He was a native of New Jersey, and a lawyer by profession. He took an active part as a patriot in the Revolution. In 1777, the Congress appointed him commissary-general of prisoners, and he was elected to a seat in that body the same year, where he remained until 1783. He succeeded Mr. Hanson as president ou the 4th of Novem- ber, 1782, and in that capacity he signed the definitive treaty of peace. He was for six years [1789-1795] a representative of New Jersey in the Congress of the United States, and was appointed chief director of the Mint in 1796. He was one of the founders of the American Bible Soci- ety, in 1816, and was ever usefully employed. Mr. Boudinot died in October, 1821, aged eighty-one years THOMAS MIFFLIN. Two soldiers of the Revolution occupied the presidential chair under the Confederation. These were Generals Mifflin and St. Clair. General Mifflin succeeded Mr. Boudinot on the 3d of November, 1783. He was a native of Pennsylvania, where he was born, of Quaker parents, in 1744. He was an active patriot, and entered the Continental army at the close of the First Congress, of which he was a member. He arose to the rank of general, and served his country well during the war. As the president of Congress, he received Washington's commission, when he resigned it 1. Verse 8, page 119, 364 SUPPLEMENT. in December, 1783. 1 General Mifflin assisted in the construction of the National Constitution. In 1790 he was chosen governor of Pennsylvania, and held the office nine years. He died in January, 1800, at the age of fifty-six years. RICHARD HENRY LEE. Few patriots were more active, during the Revolutionary struggle, than Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia. He was born a month earlier than Washington, in 1732. He first appeared conspicuously in public life during the Stamp Act excitement. 8 In the First Continental Congress he was an active member ; and, in 1776, he submitted the immortal resolu- tion which declared the colonies to be " free and independent States." * He withdrew from Congress in 1778, but was reelected in 1784. On the 30th of November of that year, he was chosen president of that body as successor to General Mifflin. He was the first representative of Virginia in the Senate of the United States under the National Constitution. He died in June, 1794, at the age of sixty-two years. NATHANIEL GORHAM. Mr. Gorham succeeded Mr. Lee on the 6th of June, 1786. He was born in Massachusetts in 1738, and was often a member of the legislature of that commonwealth. During the Revolution he was an active but not very prominent patriot. He was elected to Congress in 1784 ; and, after he left that body, he became a judge, and was a delegate in the conven- tion that framed the National Constitution. He died in June, 1796, at the age of fifty-eight years. ARTHUR ST. CLAIR. This soldier of the Revolution, who was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1734, came to America with Admiral Boscawen, in 1755. He served under Wolfe, in Canada, 4 and, after the peace of 1763, was appointed to the command of a fort in Pennsylvania. He entered the Continental army as colonel, in 1776, and in August of that year he was appointed a brigadier-general. He was a faithful officer, with the rank of major- general, throughout the war. He was elected to represent a district of Pennsylvania, in Congress, in 1786, and on the 2d of February, 1787, he was chosen to preside over that body. In 1788 he was appointed gov- ernor of the North-western Territory, 5 and held that office until 1802. He died in August, 1818, at the age of eighty-four years. CYRUS GRIFFIN. The last of the presidents of Congress was Cyrus Griffin, a native of England, but, for many years previous to the Revolution, a resident of Virginia. He was a firm patriot during that struggle. In 1778 he was "1. Verse 5, page 192. 2. Verse 8, page 119. 3. Verse 9, page 142. i 4. Verse 36, page 109. 6. Note 6, page 197. THE PRESIDENTS OF THE REPUBLIC. 365 elected a delegate to the Continental Congress ; and nine years afterward he was again honored with a seat in that body. On the 22d of January, 1788, he was chosen president ; and, under the provisions of the National Constitution, he was appointed a judge of the United States district court in Virginia. 1 Mr. Griffin died at Yorktown, Va., in December, 1810, at the age of sixty-two years. The Continental Congress ceased to exist in the spring of 1789, when the National Government, under the new Constitution, commenced its career. 2 The first President of the Republic, under the new order of things, and the first chief magistrate elected by the people, was GEORGE WASHINGTON. The great leader of the armies of the Revolution was born in Febru- ary, 1732, in the colony of Virginia, and was educated chiefly by his mother, who was left a widow when George was little more than ten years of age. He became a surveyor, and was early inured to hardships, and filled with a knowledge of the forests, and of the Indian character, which became of much service to him. He was employed in the military service of Virginia during the French and Indian War, 3 and was for some time a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses. 4 He espoused the cause of the patriots, and was a, delegate in the first Continental Congress. In June, the following year, he was chosen commander-in-chief of the armies of the Revolution, 5 and with signal ability he led them to the achieve- ment of the independence of the colonies. He assisted in the construc- tion of the National Constitution, was president of the Convention, and was chosen the first chief magistrate of the Republic under its provisions. He held that office eight years [1789-1797], when he retired to private life. He died in December, 1799, when almost sixty-eight years of age. JOHN ADAMS. The first successor of Washington was John Adams, who was inaugu- rated in March, 1797, and held the office four years. He was a native of Massachusetts, and was born in October, 1735. He was a prominent law- yer before the Revolution, and was one of the most active of the patriots of that struggle, from its inception to its close. He was a member of the First Continental Congress ; and, in the Second, he proposed the ap- pointment of Washington to the position of commander-in chief of the armies. Mr. Adams was a faithful worker in Congress, until sent on a diplomatic mission to Europe. He served his country in that capacity for many years, and at one time was intrusted with no less than six missions. He assisted in negotiating the treaty of peace ; and was the first United States minister sent to England after the Revolution. He was chosen Vice-President under Washington, and, after serving as his successor, he retired from public life in 1801. He died in the summer of 1826, in the ninety-second year of his age. 7 1. Verse 2, page 196. 2. Verse 9, page 194. 3. Page 95. 4. Note 4, page 51. 5. Verse 16, page 134. 6. Verse 19, page 123, 7. Verse 3, page 235. 666 SUPPLEMENT. THOMAS JEFFERSON, The writer of the Declaration of Independence, was the third President of the United States. He was born in Virginia, in April, 1743. He was educated at William and Mary College, became a lawyer, and took an active part in the public affairs of the colony immediately after the Stamp Act excitement. He was elected to a seat in Congress in 1775, and was active in the work of securing the independence of the colonies. He drew up the Declaration of Independence after its substance was agreed upon in committee ; and, not long after its adoption, he left Congress, and engaged in the civil affairs of his State. He was elected governor in 1779. He was sent as minister to France in 1784, and remained there until 1789, when he returned, and became secretary of state. He was chosen Vice-President in 1796, and became President in 1801. After serv- ing eight years, he retired to private life, and died in the summer of 1826, at the age of eighty-three years. JAMES MADISON, The fourth President of the United States, was also born in Virginia. That event occurred in March, 1751. He was educated at Princeton, N. J. He studied law, and took an active part in the opening scenes of the Revolution. He was a member of the convention of Virginia that formed its first State constitution, in 1776, and was elected to the legisla- ture. He was chosen to represent his State in Congress in 1779, and he served three years in that body. He was active in the business of pro- curing a convention to reform the General Government, and was one of the ablest of the framers and defenders of the National Constitution. He was one of the first representatives of Virginia in the National Congress, and was highly esteemed by Washington as an able and trusty friend. He was chosen to be secretary of state in 1801, and in 1808 he was elected President of the United States. He retired from that office to private life in the spring of 1817. He died in June, 1836, at the age of eighty- five years. JAMES MONROE, The fifth President of the United States, was also a native of Virginia. He was born in April, 1758. He was educated at William and Mary Col- lege, and at the age of nearly eighteen he entered the Continental army as a soldier, under the immediate eye of Washington. He left the army not long after the battle of Monmouth, 1 and was active in public affairs in Virginia. He became a member of the Virginia legislature in 1782, and, at the age of twenty-five years, was promoted to a seat in Congress. He was one of the originators of the convention that framed the National Constitution, but was one of the most zealous opposers of the ratification of that instrument. He was a member of the first Senate of the United States; and in 1794 he went to France as minister. He was chosen governor of Virginia in 1796, but soon afterward went to France as min- ister. He was again governor in 1811 ; and, in 1813, President Madison 1. Verse 4, page 163. THE PRESIDENTS OF THE REPUBLIC. 367 called him to his cabinet as secretary of state. He was elected President in 1816, and retired from that office in the spring of 1825. He died in the city of New York, in July, 1831, in the seventy-second year of his age. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, The accomplished son of John Adams, became President of the United States in March, 1825. He was born in Massachusetts, in 1767. He went abroad with his father, at the age of eleven years, and from that time until his death he was more or less connected with public life. He was the private secretary to Mr. Dana, American ambassador to the Russian court, at the age of fourteen years. His education was completed at Har- vard University, in 1787, when he studied law. In 1794 he was appoint- ed resident minister in the Netherlands. He served as minister at other courts, as well as lawmaker in the Senate of the United States. He assisted in negotiating the treaty of peace in 1814, 1 and then became min- ister at the British court. He was secretary of state during Monroe's Administration, and was elected President in 1824. After he left that office, in 1828, he was called to a seat in Congress, and was a member thenceforward until the day of his death. That event occurred in the room of the sjDeaker of the House of Representatives, on the 22d of Feb- ruary, 1848. ANDREW JACKSON. The seventh President of the United States was Andrew Jackson, who was born in North Carolina, in March, 1767. His mother educated him for the Christian ministry. He became a young soldier in the Revolution, and was a prisoner to the British at Charleston, in 1781. He commenced the practice of law in 1788, and soon afterward he began a career in that profession, in the wild regions of Tennessee, that was full of romantic incident. In 1790 he made his residence at Nashville. He was then active in public matters, and in 1797 took his seat as a member of the United States Senate. He was afterward appointed judge of the supreme court of Tennessee, and in 1806 he became somewhat involved, innocently, in the scheme of Aaron Burr, which led to that man's trial for treason. 3 During the war of 1812, and afterward, Jackson was an active military leader in the region of the gulf of Mexico, and acquired glory by his vic- tory over the British at New Orleans, in 1815. He was made governor of Florida in 1821, 3 and was elected United States senator the next year. He was elected President in 1828, and held the office eight years. He retired from public life in 1837, and in June, 1845, he died, near Nash- ville, at the age of seventy-eight years. MARTIN VAN BUREN, The eighth President of the United States, was born in the State of New York, in December, 1782. His origin was very humble, and his early school education was extremely limited. He became a lawyer in 1803, 1. Veree 15, page 228. 2. Verse 4, page 205. 3. Verse 3, page 232. GG8 SUPPLEMENT. and in 1815 was appointed attorney-general of his State. He was elected governor in 1828. He had already served a full term in the Senate of the United States, and had been reelected. He became secretary of state under Jackson, in 1829, by whom he was sent as minister to E.igland in 1831. He was elected Vice-President in 1832, and President in 1836. He retired to private life in 1841. Mr. Van Buren died at the place of his birth (Kinderhook, N. Y.), in July, 1862, at the age of eighty years. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, The ninth President of the United States, was born in Virginia, in Febru- ary, 1773. He commenced the study of medicine, but entered the army as an ensign in 1791. He was with Wayne in his war with the Indians in the North-west, 1 and in 1799 was elected the first delegate to Congress from the North-western Territory. He was appointed the first governor of Indiana, and was one of the earliest officers in the field when the war of 1812 broke out. He served with distinction in that war, as a major- general. In 1824 he was elected to a seat in the Senate of the United States, and in 1828 he was appointed minister to the Republic of Colom- bia. In 1840 he was elected President of the United States, and died in April, 1841 — just one month after he took his seat 2 — at the age of sixty- eight years. JOHN TYLER. The Vice-President under Harrison was John Tyler, of Virginia. On the death of his superior, he became President. 3 He was born in March, 1790, and was educated at William and Mary College. He became a law- yer at the age of nineteen, and a member of the Virginia legislature when he was twenty-one years old. In 1816 he was elected to Congress, and served nearly two terms. In 1825 he was elected governor of Virginia, and in 1827 he took a seat in the United States Senate. He served in that body several years. He was President of the United States for four years, and then retired to private life. He died early in 1882, at the age of seventy-two years. JAMES KNOX POLK, The eleventh President of the United States, was born in North Carolina, in November, 1795. While he was a child, his father removed, with his family, to Tennessee. At the age of seventeen years James became a mer- chant's clerk, but left that business for the profession of law. He was educated at the University of North Carolina, and entered upon his pro- fession at the close of 1820, in Tennessee. Three years afterward he was elected a member of the legislature of that State, and in 1825 he was chosen a member of Congress, where he became conspicuous. He was elected speaker of that body (of which he was a member about fourteen years) in 1835. In 1839 he was chosen governor of Tennessee, and in 1844 he was elected President of the United States. He retired to private life in March, 1849, and died at Nashville, on the 15th of June following, at the age of fifty-four years. 1. Verse 6, page 198. 2. Verse 1, page 243. 3. Verse 2, page 243. THE PRESIDENTS OF THE REPUBLIC. 369 ZACHARY TAYLOR, The twelfth President of the United States, was born in Virginia, in Sep- tember, 1784. He was a soldier by profession, having entered the army at the age of twenty-four years, and remained in it until his death. He was a useful officer in the West during the war of 1812 ; and was active in the suppression of the " Black Hawk War," ' when he bore the com- mission of a colonel. He was a trusted leader in the war against the Seminoles in Florida. 2 In the war with Mexico 3 he was a successful com- mander, and on that account he was elected President of the United States in 1848. He died in July, 1850, at the age of sixty-five years, and was succeeded in office by the Vice-President. 4 MILLARD FILLMORE, General Taylor's successor, was born in the State of New York, in Janu- ary, 1800. His early opportunities for education were very limited. He was apprenticed to learn the trade of a fuller, but afterward studied law, and taught school. He practiced his profession in the interior of New York, and at Buffalo, until 1847, when he was appointed comptroller of his State. He had been in the State legislature as early as 1828, where he served three successive terms. He was sent to Congress in 1832, where he served for several years. He was elected Vice-President in 1848, and became President on the death of Taylor, in July, 1850. 6 He retired from public life in 1853, and has since then, until now [1864], resided in Buffalo. FRANKLIN PIERCE, The fourteenth President of the United States, was born in New Hamp- shire, in November, 1804. He was educated at Bowdoin College, and commenced the practice of the law in 1827. In 1829 he was elected a member of the New Hampshire legislature, and in 1833 was sent as a rep- resentative to Congress. He was elected to the United States Senate in 1837, which he left in 1842. He served as a brigadier-general in the war with Mexico, and in 1852 was elected President of the United States. He retired from office in 1857, and has since, until now [1864], resided at Concord, in his native State. JAMES BUCHANAN, The fifteenth President of the United States, was born in Pennsylvania, in April, 1791. He was educated at Dickinson College, where he was gradu- ated in 1809. He studied law, and commenced its practice in 1812. He was elected to the Pennsylvania legislature in 1814. He entered Congress in 1820, wherein he served, in both branches, many years. Mr. Buchanan was appointed minister to St. Petersburg in 1831, and, on his return, was elected to the United States Senate. He became secretary of state under Mr. Polk, in 1845, and was sent as minister to England by Mr. Pierce, in 1. Verse 4, page 238. 2. Verse 6, page 238. 3. Verse 3, page 246. 4, Verse 3, page 255. 5. Verse 3, page 255. 370 SUPPLEMENT, 1853. lie returned in 1856, and in the autumn of th.-.t year lie was elect- ed President of the United States. He retired to private lite in 1861, and died at his residence, near Lancaster, Pa , on the 1st of June, 1868. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, The sixteenth President of the United States, was born in Kentucky, in February, 1809. His early life was passed in hard labor on a farm in In- diana. In 1819 he made a trip to New Orleans on a flat-boat, as a hired hand. In 1830 he settled, with his lather, in Illinois, and made another trip to New Orleans. He led a company of militia in the " Black Hawk War."' He was elected to the Illinois legislature in 1834, at d served in that body eight years. Meanwhile he studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1837, at Springfield. He arose rapidly to di Unction in his profession. He was elected to Congress in 1846 ; and in 1800 be w; s elected President of the United States. He was re-elected in 1804, and died by the hands of an assassin, on the 15th of April, 1865. ANDREW JOHNSON, The seventeenth President of the United States, was torn in Raleigh, North Carolina, on the 29th of December, 1808, At the age of ten years he was apprenticed to a tailor in his native city. He pursued that trade a large portion of his life. In Greenville, Tennessee, he married ; and he was taught to write by his young wife. He held various public offices in Tennes-ee. from Alderman and Mayor of Greenville, to Governor of the State. He was also a Presidential elector, and successively a representa- tive of Tennessee in both houses of the National Congress. In the Sen- ate, when tiie civil war broke out, betook sides with the Unionists; and in 1864 he was elected Vice-President of the Republic. The death of Mr. Lincoln in April, 1865, gave Mr. Johnson the office of President. His term of office expired on the 4th of March, 1869. He died July 31, 1875. ULYSSES SIMPSON GRANT, The eighteenth President of the United States, was a native of Point Pleasant, Ohio, where he was born on the 27th of April, 1822. He received a military education at the West Point Military Academy, and performed gallant service in the army in Mexico. He was promoted to Captain, and left the army in 1854, to engage in civil pursuits. He was a merchant in Galena, Illinois, when the Civil War broke out, and he entered the great army of volunteers as Colonel of an Illinois regiment. Colonel Grant soon went through various official grades, and in 1864 he was commissioned Lieutenant-General,and became General-in-Chief of the armies of the Republic. In 1868, he was elected President of the United States (the first civil office be bad ever held), and filled the chair of State two terms of four years each. He retired to private life in March, 1877, and in May following he sailed for Europe with his family, the third ex-President of the United States who crossed the ocean. 1 Verse 4, page 238. A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS MENTIONED IN THIS BOOK. DISCOVERIES. 1002. America said to have been visited by Northmen. 1492. West India islands discovered by Columbus, October 11. 1497. Cabot discovers the American continent at Labrador, June 24. 1498. Columbus discovers the coast of South America, August. 1499. Amerigo Vespucci discovers the coast of South America. 1512. John Ponce de Leon discovers Florida. 1513. Balboa discovers the Pacific ocean. 1517. Cordova discovers Mexico. 1521. Cortez conquers Mexico. 1524, Verrazzani explores the coast from Cape Fear to Newfoundland. 1534. Cartier discovers the St. Lawrence, June. 1535. Cartier explores the St. Lawrence to Montreal. 1541. De Soto discovers the Mississippi river. 1562. Arrival of Huguenots in America. 1565. St. Augustine founded, and Huguenots massacred, September. 1583. New England coast explored by Sir H. Gilbert. 1585. Settlement attempted on Roanoke Island. 1587. Another settlement attempted on Roanoke Island. 1602. Cape Cod discovered and named by Bartholomew Gosnold, May 14. 1603. Coast of Maine discovered by Martin Pring, June. 1604. Annapolis, Nova Scotia, settled by the French. 1608. Quebec founded by Captain Champlain. 1609. Lake Champlain discovered by Champlain. " Hudson river discovered by Henry Hudson, September 21. SETTLEMENTS. 1606. London and Plymouth Companies chartered, April 20. 1607. English land in Virginia, and found Jamestown, May 23. 1608. Another company of emigrants land in Virginia. 1609. New charter given to the London Company. 1610. " Starving time" in Virginia. " Dutch trading vessels on the Hudson. 1613. Marriage of Rolfe and Pocahontas, April. 1614. New England coast explored by Captain Smith. " Connecticut river discovered by Adrian Block, 372 SUPPLEMENT. 1619. Meeting of the first representative assembly in Virginia, June 28. 1620. New charter granted to the Plymouth Company, November 3. " Negro slaves introduced into America, August. " Pilgrims land on the coast of Massachusetts, December 22. 1621. Dutch West India Company founded. " Schools for Indians established in Virginia. 1623. Albany, on the Hudsm, founded. " Fort Nassau builr. on the Delaware river, in New Jersey. " First settlement in New Netherland. 1629. First settlement in New Hampshire. 1632. Maryland charter granted, Juno. 1633. First settlement in Connecticut. " Dutch Church found a school in New Amsterdam. 1634. First settlement in Maryland, March. 1635. Meeting of first legislative assembly in Maryland, March 8. " Roger Williams banished from Massachusetts. 1636. Providence, R. I., founded. " Hartford, Conn., founded, July 4. 1637. War against the Pequod Indians declared. " Pequods vanquished, June. " Harvard College founded. 1638. New Haven founded. " First settlement in Delaware, April. 1639. Connecticut settlers adopt a written constitution, January. " Newport founded. 1644. Rhode Island obtains a charter. 1655. Swedes on the Delaware subjugated by the Dutch. 1663. First settlement in North Carolina.. 1664. First permanent settlement in New Jersey. 1665. Representative government established in New Jersey. 1670. First settlement in South Carolina. 1673. George Fox, founder of the Quakers, visits America. 1674. First legislative assembly in South Carolina. 1677. Quakers settle West Jersey. 1680. Chirleston, S. C, founded. 1681. First legislative assembly of Quakers. " Pennsylvania charter granted, March 14. 1 682. Penn visits America. 1692. William and Mary College, in Virginia, founded. 1701. Yale College, in Connecticut, founded. 1732. Georgia charter granted, June. 1733. Savannah, Ga., founded, February. " Oglethorpe and Indians in council. 1738. College of New Jersey founded. COLONIES. 1619. Virginia colony founded. 1620. First European women in Virginia. 1621. Indians welcome the English to Massachusetts, March 26. " Virginia receives a written constitution. 1623. Virginia made a royal province. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE. 373 1626. York, or Manhattan Island, bought of the Indians. 1627. Partnership of London merchants and American settlers dissolved 1628. Salem, Mass., founded by Enclicot. " Charter for Massachusetts Bay province granted, March 14. 1629. Massachusetts charter surrendered to the settlers. 1630. Boston founded. 1633. Van Twiller governor of New Netherland. 1634. Representative government established in Massachusetts. 1638. Kieft governor of New Netherland. 1641. Beginning of representative government in New Netherland. 1642-1645. Indian war in Maryland. 1643. New England confederacy formed. 1644-1645. Rebellion in Maryland, and war with the Indians in Virginia 1647. Stuyvesant governor of New Netherland. 1649. Maryland Toleration Act passed. 1656. Quakers persecuted in Boston. 1660. Supreme authority of the people declared in Maryland. 1C62. Connecticut colony obtain a royal charter. 1663. Popular assembly in New Amsterdam. 1663. New charter granted to Rhode Island; 1664. New Netherland surrendered to the English. 1665. Union of Connecticut and New Haven colonies. 1674. First legislative assembly in South Carolina meet. 1675. King Philip's war breaks out. 1676. New Jersey divided into East and "West. " Bacon's rebellion in Virginia, and Jamestown destroyed. 1682. East Jersey bought by Quakers. 1683. Charter of Liberties granted to New York. 1687. Connecticut charter saved. 1688. Revolution in England, and King James driven away. 1689. Governor Andros expelled from New England, and King William's War breaks out. 1690. Schenectady destroyed by the French and Indians, and an expedi- tion against Quebec. 1691. Acadiu seized and plundered. " Maryland made a royal province. 1692. Massachusetts made a royal province, and Pennsylvania taken from William Penn. 1694. Penn's rights in Pennsylvania restored. 1692. Witchcraft in Salem. 1701. New frame of government given to Pennsylvania. 1702. War between the South Carolinians and Sjianiards in Florida. " The Jerseys united in a royal province. " Queen Anne's War begins. 1710. Nova Scotia made a British province. 1711. Indian war in North Carolina. 1713. Peace with the French and Indians. 1729. North and South Carolina separated. 1740. Georgians at war with the Spaniards in Florida. 1744. King George's War. 1745. Capture of Louisburg by the British. 374 SUPPLEMENT. 1746. French fleet under D'Anville destroyed. 1752. Georgia becomes a royal province. FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR. 1749. The Ohio Company chartered. 1754. Washington returns from his mission to the French commander. " March of colonial troops for the Ohio country, April 2. " Washington in command of the troops, May 30. " Colonial Congress meets at Albany, N. Y., June 19. " Surrender of Fort Necessity, July 4. 1755. Bradduck begins his march, June 10. " Battle on die Monongaheln, and defeat of Braddock, July 9. " Americans defeated by the French near Lake George, N. Y., Sep- tember 8. " French defeated at Lake George by the Americans, September 8. 1756. England declares war against France, May 17. " Oswego, N. Y., captured by the French, August 14. 1757. Fort "William Henry (Lake George) surrendered to the French, August 9. 1758. Lord Howe killed near Ticonderoga, N. Y., July 6. " The English repulsed at Ticonderoga, July 8. " Louisburg, Cape Breton, taken by the English, July 26. " Fort Frontenac, Canada, surrendered to the English, August 27. " Grant defeated near Fort du Quesne, Pa,, September 21. 1759. Ticonderoga (July 26) and Crown Point (August 1) abandoned by the French. " Fort Niagara, N. Y., surrendered to the English, July 25. " Battle of Montmorenci, near Quebec, July 31. " Battle on the Plains of Abraham, Quebec, September 13. " Quebec surrendered to the English, September 18. 1760. Attempt to recover Quebec — Battle at Sillery, April 28. " Montreal, Canada, surrendered to the English, and French domin- ion in America ended, September 8. 1761. George III. ascends the throne. 1763. Peace concluded at Paris, February 10. " Florida ceded to Great Britain, February 10. " Pontiac's War. THE REVOLUTION. 1765. Stamp Act passed by the British Parliament, March 8. " Colonial Congress meet in New York, October 7. 1766. Stamp Act repealed, March 18. 1767. Duties levied on glass, paper, &c, June 29. 1768. Arrival of British troops in Boston, Mass., September 27. 1770. The " Boston Massacre," March 5. 1771. Battle with the " Regulators" in North Carolina, May 16. 1772. The Ga«pe schooner burned in Narraganset bay, R. I., June 9. 1773. Destruction of tea in Boston harbor, December 16. 1774. Boston "Port Bill" passed by Parliament, March 7. " Port of Boston closed, June 1, CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE. 375 1774. First Continental Congress meet in Philadelphia, September 5. 1775. Skirmishes at Lexington and Concord, Mass., April 19. " Ticonderoga captured by Allen and Arnold, May 10. " Crown Point captured by Seth Warner, May 12. " Washington chosen commander-in-chief, June 15. " Battle of Bunker Hill, near Boston, June 17. " Washington takes command of the army near Boston, July 3. 11 Surrender of St. Johns, Canada, November 3. " Arnold before Quebec, November 13. " Montreal surrenders to Montgomery, November 13. " Assault on Quebec, December 31. 1776. Norfolk, Va., destroyed by Governor Dunmore, January 1. " Boston evacuated by the British, March 17. " Repulse of the British at Charleston, S. C, June 28. " Declaration of Independence, July 4. " Battle on Long Island, N. Y., August 27. " Battle on Harlem Plains, N. Y., September 10. " Battle at White Plains, N. Y., October 28. " Capture of Fort Washington, N. Y., by the British, November 16. " Capture of Fort Lee, N. J., by the British, November 18. " Battle at Trenton, N. J., December 26. 1777. Battle at Princeton, N. J., January 3. " Diplomatic agent seut to Europe, March. " Destruction of stores at Peekskill, N. Y., March 23. " Tryon's marauding expedition in Connecticut, April 26, 27. " Meigs's expedition against Sag Harbor, L. I., May 23. " Burgoyne invades New York, June. " The Americans abandon Ticonderoga, July 5. " Battle at Hubbardton, Vt., July 7. " Capture of General Prescott by Americans, R. I., July 10. " Battle at Oriskany, Mohawk Valley, N. Y., August 6. " Sortie at Fort Schuyler (now Rome), N. Y., August 6. " Battle near Bennington, Vt., August 16. " Battle on the Brandywine, Pa., September 11. " Battle on Bemis's Heights, N. Y., September 19. " Massacre at Paoli, Pa., September 20. " British take Philadelphia, September 26. " Battle at Germantown, near Philadelphia, October 4. " Capture of Forts Clinton and Montgomery, on the Hudson, October 6. " Battle at Saratoga, N. Y., October 7. " Surrender of Burgoyne to Gates, October 17. " British fleet pass Forts Mifflin and Mercer, on the Delaware, No- vember 18. " Washington inarches to the Valley Forge, Pa., December 11. 1778. A treaty between the United States and France, and acknowledg- ment of the independence of the former, February 6. " Philadelphia evacuated by the British, June 18. " Battle at Monmouth, N. J, June 28. " Battle and massacre in the Wyoming Valley, Pa., July 4, 5. " Arrival of a French fleet under D'Estaing, July 8. " Battle at Quaker Hill, R. L, August 29. 376 SUPPLEMENT. 1778. Massacre by Indians and Tories at Cherry Valley, N. Y., November 11. " Capture of Savannah, Ga., by the British, December 29. 1779. Capture of Sunbury, Ga., bv the British, January 9. " Battle of Kettle Creek, Ga.^ February 14. " Battle at Brier Creek, Ga., March 3. " Capture of Stony Point, N. Y., by the British, May 31. " Capture of Verplanck's Point, N. Y., by the British, June 1. " Tryon's raid in Connecticut, July 5 to 12. " Recapture of Stony Point by the Americans, July 16. " Capture of the British garrison at Paulus's Hook, N. J., August 19 " Castine, Me., captured by the British, August 13. " Sullivan's chastisement of the Indians in Western New York, Au. gust and September. " Siege of Savannah, Ga., by the Americans and French, September. " Paul Jones's victory off the coast of Great Britain, September 23. " Assault on Savannah, and abandonment of siege, October 9. 1780. Charleston, S. C, besieged by the British, April and May. " Skirmish at Monk's Corner, S. C, April 14. " Surrender of Charleston to the British, May 12. " Skirmish on the Waxhaw, S. C, May 29. " Battle at Springfield, N. J., June 23. " Arrival of a French fleet and army at Newport, R. I., July 10. " Battle at Rocky Mount, S. C, July 30. " Battle at Hanging Rock, S. C, August 6. " Battle at Sander's Creek, S. C, August 16. " Defeat of Suinter at Fishing Creek, S. C, August 18. " Meeting of Arnold and Andre at Haverstraw, N. Y., to arrange the business of treason, September 22. " Execution of Andre" at Tappan, N. Y., October 2. " Battle on King's Mountain, S. O, October 7. " Battle at Fish Dam Ford,S. C, November 12. " Battle at Blackstock's, S. C, November 20. 1781. Mutiny of Pennsylvania troops, January 1. " Battle at the Cowpens, S. O, January 17. " General Greene's retreat, N. C, January and February. " Mutiny of New Jersey troops, January 18. " Battle near Guilford Court House, N. C, March 15. " Battle at Hobkirk's Hill, S. C, April 25. " Capture of Augusta, June 5. " Siege of Ninety-Six, S. C, June 18, 19. " Arnold destroys New London, Conn., September 6. " Massacre at Fort Griswold, Conn., September 6. " Battle at Eutaw Springs, S. C, September 8. " Siege of Yorktown, Va., commenced, October 9. " Surrender of Cornwallis, at Yorktown, October 19. 1782. British Parliament resolve to end the war, March 4. " Savannah, Ga., evacuated by the British, July 11. " Preliminary treaty of peace signed at Paris, November 30. " Charleston, S. C, evacuated by the British, December 14. 1783. Cessation of hostilities proclaimed in America, April 19. " Formation of the Cincinnati Society, June 19. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE. 377 1783. Definitive treaty of peace signed at Paris, September 3. " American army disbanded by order of Congress, November 3. " New York evacuated by the British, November 25. " Washington parts with his officers at New York, December 4. " Washington resigns his commission to Congress, at Annapolis, Md., December 23. 1787. National Constitution adopted in convention, at Philadelphia, Sep- tember 17. ! THE NATION. 1789. The first Congress under the National Constitution assembles at New York, March 4. " Inauguration of Washington as the first President, at New York, April 30. 1790. Harmar defeated by the Indians on the Maumee, in Indiana, Oc- tober 17, 22. 1791. Vermont admitted to the Union, March 4. " St. Clair defeated by the Indians in Ohio, November 4. 1792. Kentucky admitted into the Union, June 1. 1794. Wayne defeats the Indians on the Maumee, in Ohio, August 20. " " Whisky Insurrection " in Pennsylvania. 1795. Jay's Treaty with Great Britain ratified, June 24. " Treaty with the Indians at Greeneville, Ohio, August. 1796. Tennessee admitted into the Union, June 1. " Washington's Farewell Address issued, September. 1797. John Adams inaugurated second President, at New York, March 4. 1798. A provisional army to fight the French, authorized, May. 1799. Death of Washington at Mount Vernon, December 14. 1800. Seat of the National Government removed to Washington city. 1801. Jefferson inaugurated third President, March 4. " War with Tripoli commenced, June 10. 1802. Ohio admitted into the Union, November 29. 1803. Louisiana purchased from France, April 30. 1804. The frigate Philadelphia destroyed at Tripoli by Decatur, February 16. " Hamilton murdered in a duel by Burr, at Weehawken, N. J., July 12. 1805. Peace concluded with Tripoli, June 4. 1806. British " Orders in Council," May 16. " Bonaparte's " Berlin Decree," November 21. 1807. Affair between the Chesapeake and Leopard, June 22. " British armed vessels ordered from American waters by the Presi- dent of the United States, July. " Burr tried for treason at Richmond, Va., and acquitted, September. " Embargo on commerce declared by Congress, December 22. 1809. Madison inaugurated the fourth President, March 4. 1811. Battle between the President and Little Belt, May 16. " Battle of Tippecanoe, Ind., November 7. 1812. Louisiana admitted into the Union, April 8. " Declaration of war against Great Britain, June 19. SECOND WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE. 1812. Hull invades Canada, July 12. " Surrender of Mackinaw, Mich., July 17. 378 SUPPLEMENT, 1812. Van Home defeated, August 5. l " Miller victorious August 9. > " Hull surrenders Detroit, August 16. " The Essex captures the Alert August 13. " The Constitution captures the Guerritrre, August 19. " Battle on Queenstown Heights, Canada, October 13. " The Wasp captures the Frolic, October 18. " The United States captures the Macedonian, October 25. " The Constitution captures the Java, December 29. 1813. Massacre at Frenchtown, Mich., January 23. " The Hornet captures the Peacock, February 24i " Madison inaugurated President a second time, March 4. " Capture of York, or Toronto, Canada, April 27. " First siege of Fort Meigs, Ohio, May 1, 5. " Fort George, Canada, captured by the Americans, May 27. " Battle at Sackett's Harbor, N. Y., May 29. " The Shannon captures the Chesapeake, June 1. " Battle at Stony Creek, Canada, June 6. " British repulsed at Craney Island, June 22. " Defense of Fort Stephenson, Ohio, August 2. " The Pelican captures the Argus, August 14. " Massacre at Fort Minims, Ala., August 30. " The Enterprise captures the Boxer, September 5. " Capture of a British fleet on Lake Erie, by Perry, September 10. " Battle on the Thames, in Canada, October 5. " Battle at Chrysler's, in Canada, November 11. " Burning of Newark, Canada, December 10. " Capture of Fort Niagara, N. Y., by the British, December 19. " Desolation of the Niagara frontier by the British, December. 1814. Battle of the Horse Shoe (Creek War), Ala., March 27- " Capture of the Essex at Valparaiso, March 28. " The Peacock captures the Epcrvier, April 29. " Capture of Oswego, May 5. " The Reindeer captured by the Wasp, June 28. " Fort Erie, Canada, taken by the Americans, July 3. " Battle at Chippewa, Canada, July 5. " Battle at Niagara Falls, Canada, July 25. " Attack on Stonington, Conn., April 9-12. " Battle at Fort Erie, August 15. " Battle at Bladensburg, Md., August 24. " Washington city captured and partly burned, August 24. " The Wasp captures the Avon, September 1. " Battles on land and water at Plattsburg, N. Y., September 11. " Battle near North Point, Md., September 12. " Bombardment of Fort McHenry, Baltimore, September 13, 14. " Attack on Fort Bower (now Morgan), Ala., September 15. " Sortie at Fort Erie, September 17. " British expelled from Pensacola, Fla., by Jackson, November 7. " Battle on Lake Borgne, La., December 14. " Battle below New Orleans, La., December 23. M Treaty of peace between the United States and Great Britain, De cembcr 24, CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE. 379 1815. Battle near New Orleans, January 8. " The President captured by a British squadron, January 15. " Peace proclaimed, February 18. " The Constitution captures the Gyane and Levant, February 20. " The Hornet captures the Penguin, March 23. " War with Algiers, March. " Decatur sent against Algiers, May. " Algerine frigate captured, June 17. 1816. Indiana admitted into the Union, December 11. 1817. Monroe inaugurated President, March 4. " Mississippi admitted into the Union, December 10. 1818. Jackson expels the Spaniards from Florida, April. " Jackson seizes Pensacola, Fla., May 24. " Illinois admitted into the Union, December 3. 1819. Alabama admitted into the Union, December 14. " Florida ceded to the United States by Spam. 1820. Maine admitted into the Union, March 15. 1821. Missouri admitted into the Union, August 10. 1824. Lafayette visits the United States, August. 1825. John Quincy Adams inaugurated President, March 4. 1826. Death of Jefferson and Adams, July 4. 1828. Tariff law obnoxious to cotton planters passed, May 15. 1829. Andrew Jackson inaugurated President, March 4. 1832. Black Hawk War, on the Mississippi. " Rebellion in South Carolina, November. " Jackson's proclamation against the rebels, December 10. 1833. Compromise act, proposed by Henry Clay, passed, March 3. " Removal of the public money from the United States Bank, October. 1835. War with the Seminole Indians, Florida, commenced, December. " General Thompson and companions murdered in Florida, Decem- ber 28. " Major Dade and his command massacred in Florida, December 28. 1836. Arkansas admitted into the Union, June 15. " Governor Call, of Georgia, invades the Seminole country, October. " He fights them at Wahoo Swamp, November 21. 1837. Michigan admitted into the Union, January 26. " Van Buren inaugurated President, March 4. " Commencement of the Canadian " Rebellion.' 1841. General Harrison inaugurated President, March 4. " Harrison dies, April 4. " Tyler (Vice-President) inaugurated President, April 6. 1842. End of the Seminole War. " Threatened civil war in Rhode Island. 1845. Resolutions for the admission of Texas signed by Tyler, March 1. " Florida admitted into the Union, March 3. " Polk inaugurated President, Maroli 4. " Texas formally admitted in the Union, December 27. WAR WITH MEXICO. 1846. Army of Observation in Texas. " First blood shed in the war with Mexico, April 26, 3S0 SUPPLEMENT. 1846. Battle at Palo Alto, Texas, May 8. " Battle at Resaca de la Palma, Texas, May 9. " Congress declares war with Mexico, May 11. " General Taylor captures Matamoros, Mexico, May 18. " Monterey, Mexico, surrendered to Taylor, September 24. " Battle at Bracito, Mexico, December 25. " Iowa admitted into the Union, December 28. 1847. Battle at Buena Vista, Mexico, February 23. i " Battle at Sacramento, Mexico, February 28. \ " Vera Cruz surrenders to General Scott, March 27. " Battle at Cerro Gordo, Mexico, April 18. " Battle at Contreras and Churubusco, Mexico, August 20. " Battle at MolinosdelRey, Mexico, September 8. " Battle at Chapultepec, Mexico, September 12, 13. " Scott enters the city of Mexico a conqueror, September 14. " Battle at Huamantla, Mexico, October 9 1848. Treaty of peace signed at Guadalupe Hidalgo, February 2. " Wisconsin admitted into the Union, May 29. 1849. Zachary Taylor inaugurated President, March 5. 1850. Death of President Taylor, July 9. " Fillmore (Vice-President) inaugurated President, July 10. " California admitted into the Union, September 9. " Fugitive Slave Bill passed, September 9. 1853. Pierce inaugurated President, March 4. 1854. " Missouri Compromise " virtually repealed, June. 1857. Buchanan inaugurated President, March 4. " Dred Scott decision, March 6. 1858. Minnesota admitted into the Union, May 11. 1859. Oregon admitted into the Union, February 14. " John Brown's raid into Virginia, October 16. 1860. Secession of South Carolina from the Union declared, December 20. 1861. Secession of Mississippi declared, January 9. " United States steamship Star of the West fired on, January 9. " Secession of Florida declared, January 10. " Secession of Alabama declared, January 11. " Secession of Georgia declared, January 19. " Kansas admitted into the Union, January 29. " A " Southern Confederacy " formed at Montgomery, Ala., February 4. " Jefferson Davis chosen President, February 9. " Lincoln inaugurated President, March 4. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. 1861. Fort Sumter attacked by the insurgents, April 12. " Fort Sumter evacuated, April 14. " President Lincoln calls for 75,000 troops, April 15. " Volunteer troops attacked in Baltimore, April 19. " More than 64,000 more troops called for, May 3. " Virginia invaded by National forces at Alexandria, May 24. " Battle at Big Bethel, Va., June 10. " Battle at Romney, Va., June 11, CHRONOLOGICAL TAfiLE. 381 1861. Congress meet in extraordinary session, July 4. '* Battle near Carthage, Mo., July 5. " Battle at Kich Mountain, Va., July 11. " Bat le near Centreville, Va., July, 18. " Richmon 1 becomes the headquarters of the Confederates, July 20. " Battb of Bull Bun, Va., July 21. " Battle at Wilson's Creek, Mo., August 10. " Capture of forts at Ilatreras Inlet, N. C, August 20. " Bat le at Carnifex Ferry, Va., September. 10. " Battle at Ball's Blutf, Va., October 30. " Battle at Belmont, Mo., November 7. " Capture of Port Royal Entrance, S. C, Novemler 7. 1862. Battle at Mill Spring, Ky., January 19. " Capture of Roanoke Island, N. C, February 8. " Capture of Fort Donelson, Tenn., February 16. " Battle at Pea Rid^e, Ark., March 5, 8. " The Congress and Cumberland sunk by the Mcrrlmac, March 8. " First appearance of the Monitor, March 9. " Newbern, N. C, captured, March 14. " Battle at Shiloh, Tenn., April 6, 7. " Capture of Island No. 10, Mississippi river, April 7. " Capture of Fort Pulaski, Ga , April 11. " Capture of New Orleans, April 25. " Norfolk, Va., ciptured by the Nationals, May 10. " Natchez, on the Mississippi, captured, May 12. u Confederates evacuate Corinth, Miss., May 29. " Battle at Fair Oaks, Va., May 31, June 1. " Memphis, Tenn., surrendered to the Nationals, June 6. " Seven days' battles on the Virginia peninsula commence, June 25. " The President calls for 300,000 more troops, July 1. " Battles between Manassas and Washington city, August 23 to 30. " Battle at South Mountain, Md., September 14. " Surrender of Harper's Ferry to the Confederates, September 15. " Battle at Antietam creek, Md., September 17. " Battle at Fredericksburg, Va., December 13. " Battle at Iuka, Miss., September 19. " Battle near Murfreesboro', Tenn., December 29, January 4. 1863. Tlie President's Emancipation Proclamation issued, January 1. " Capture of Arkansas Post, Ark., January 11. " Passage of a conscription act, March 3. " Battle of Chancellorsville, May 2, 3,4. " Grant's six battles in Mississippi, May 1 to 17. " Lee invades Maryland, June. " Capture of Confederate "ram " Atlanta, June 17. " West Virginia admitted into the Union, June 20. " Battle at Gettysburg, Pa., July 1, 2, and 3. " Surrender of Vicksburg, Miss., July 4. " Capture of Port Hudson by National troops, July 8. " Great riot in New York city, July 13-16. " Morgan's guerilla band broken up in Ohio, July 26. " Fort Smith, Ark., captured by National troops, September 1. 382 SUPPLEMENT. 1863. Little Rock, Ark., captured by National troops, September 10. " Battle of Chickarnauga, Ga., September 19. " Battle of Chattanooga, Ga., November 23. " Knoxville, Tenn., besieged, November 18 to 29. 1864. President orders a draft for 300,000 more men, February 1. " Grant created a lieutenant-general, March. " General Sherman's invasion of Mississippi, February 3, 21. " Battle of Olustee, Fla., February 20. " Capture of Fort De Russey, La., March 13. " Battle of Cane river, La., March 26. " Massacre at Fort Pillow, Tenn., by Forrest's forces, April 12. " Grant orders a general forward movement, May 3. " Battles in the Wilderness, Va., May 5, 6, 7. " Battles at Sahine cross-roads, Pleasant Grove and Pleasant nil], La^ May 8, 9. " Passage of the Red river rapids by Porter's fleet, May 11. " Lee falls back to Richmond early in June. " The Potomac Army on the south side of James river in June. " Destruction of the Alabama, June 19. " Third invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania, July. " Chambersburg, Pa., destroyed by the Confederates, July 30. " Petersburg and Richmond besieged, July, August, and September. " The Weldon railway seized by the National troops, August 18. " Capture of forts and dispersion of the Confederate fleet near Mo bile, August. " Capture of Atlanta, Ga., September 2. " The President recommends public thanksgivings. " Sheridan's victory at Winchester, Sept. 19. " Nevada admitted into the Union, October 31. " Slavery abolished in Maryland, November 1. " Sherman leaves Atlanta for Savannah, November 14. " Hood invades Tennessee, November. " Milledgeville, the capital of Georgia, captured, November 20. " Battle at Franklin, November 30. " Sherman enters Savannah, December 21. 1865. Slavery abolished in Missouri, January. " Capture of Fort Fisher, January 15. " Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution adoptod by OorgreeK, January 31. Slavery abolished in Tennessee, February. " Capture of Columbia, the capital of South Carolina, February 17. " National troops enter Charleston, February 18. " Capture of Wilmington, North Carolina, February 21. " Flight of the Confederates from Richmond, April 2. " President Lincoln enters Richmond, April 4. " Surrender of Lee's army, April 9. " Assassination of the President, April 14. " Andrew Johnson inaugurated President, April 15. " Surrender of Johnston's Army, April 26. " Capture of Jefferson Davis, May 10. " Close of the Civil War, May. CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE. 383 1866. Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution adopted by Congress, June 13. 1868. President Johnson impeached, tried, and acquit'ed, March, April and May. 1869. Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution adopted by Congress, February 28. " President Grant inaugurated, March 4. 1873. President Grant inaugurated, March 4. 1876. Centennial celebration at Philadelphia, May 10 to November 10. 1877. President Hayes inaugurated, March 4. PRONOUNCING VOCABULARY PEOPEE NAMES IN THIS SERIES OF HISTORIES. Abenakes (ah-ben'-e-kes) Abercromhie (ab-er-krom'-be) Acadie (ah-ka' -de-a) Acapulco (ah-ka-pool'-ko) Agua Nueva (ag'-wah-nwa'-vah) A Fx-ia- C ha pe 1 1 e ( dks-lah-shap'-el) Alabama (ah-lah-bah'-mah) Albemarle (ahl'-be-marl) Alleghany (ah-le-ga'-ne) Alleghanies (ah-le-ga'-nes) Algerine (ahl-je-reen r ) Algonquin (ahl-gon'-kin) Alfamaha (ahl-iah-mah-haw') Amelia (ah-meeV -yah) Amerigo Vespucci (ah-md-ree'-go ves-poot' -she) Amherst (am'-erst) Ampuclia (am-poo '-dhee-ah) Amsterdam (am'-ster-dam') Andastes (an-dah'-stes') Andre (on'-drd) Andalusia (an-da-lu'-she-a) Annapolis (an-nap'-o-lis) Antietam (an-tee'-tarn) Apaches (ap-ah'-shes) Apallachee (ap-al-lah'-chee) Apallachian (ap-al-lah' -che-an\ Appomattox (ap-po-mat'-tox) Aquiday (ah' -k wee-day) Arbuthnot (ar-buth'-not) Argall (ar'-gaul) Arista (ah-rees'-tah) Arkansas (ark' -an- saw) Armada (ar-mah'-da) Armistead (ar' -mis -ted) Asia (a'-she-a) Assinniboins (ah-sin'-ne'-boim) Attiouandrious (ah-ti-ivwid'-e-rons) Autossee (o'-tos-see) Axel (awks-el') Bahamas (bd-hd'-mahs) Bailey (ba'-li) Bajador (fiah'-yad-ar) Balfour (bahl'-foor) Barbadoes (bar-ba'-dbz) Barre (bar'-ra) Baton Rouge (bat'-vn roozh) Baume (baivm) Beaufort (bo'-furt) Beauregard (b&-ra-gard) Beausejour (bo-seh'-jure) Behring (beer'-ing) Belle Isle (bel-eeV) Belgium (bel'-ge-uin) Bergen (burg'-en) Berkeley (burk'-ly) Berlin (behr-leen') Bexar (ba-har') Bingham (bing'-um) Boleyn (bo-lain') Bonhoinme Richard (bon-om' reef-8hc.ru Borgne (born) Bordeaux (bar-do') Boquet (bo-ka') Bracito (brah-the'-io) Breyman (bray'-mun) Buchanan (buk-an'-an) Buena Vista (bwe'-nah vees'-tah) Burgoyne (bur-goin') Byllinge (bil'-ling) 386 PRONOUNCING VOCABULARY. Calhoun (kal-homS) ( 'alifornia (kal-i-for'-ni-a) < lamanches {ka-mon'shes) Campbell (kam' el) Canary (kan-a'-re) Canonchet (kan-on'-s/i, /) Cape Breton {tape brit'-Cn) Caramelli (kar-ti-im l'-h | Cardenas (kar'-de-nax) Carlisle (kar-lile') Carnifex (kar'-ne-fex) Carteret (kar'-te-re/) Cartier (kar-te-ay') Casimer (kas'-see-nier) Castile (kas-(eel') Castine (kax-teen 1 ) Cerro Gordo (thar'-ro gor'-do) Chambly {sham'-ble) Chapultepec (cha-pool'-te-jx-k) Chef Menteur (shef-men'-tvn') Chemung (she-mnng') Cherbourg (sher'-bourg) Chesapeake (ches'-a-j/eek) Chickahominy (rhick-a-hom'-i-ny) Chickamauga (chik-a-maw'-gah ) Chippcwas (chip'-pe-ways) Chihuahua (chee-wah'-wah) Chrysler's (krise'-lers) Churubusco (choo-roo-boos'-ko) Cbabon (sha'-bong) Chan. plain (sham-plain') Chapultepec (chah-pool'-Za-peek) Chattahoochee (chat-lah-ooch'-ee) Chattanooga (chat-tuh-noo'-guh) ( lhaudiere (sho-de-t It r' ) chauncey (chan'-ce) Coahui la (ko-ah-weel'-ah ) Cleopatra (kle-o-pah'-tra) Coligny (ko-leen'-ye) Combahee (kom-ba-hee') Congaree (kong-a-ree') Connecticut (kon-net'-i-cut) Contreras (kon-tra'-ras) Coosa {koasah) Cortez (kor'-tez) Cortoreal (kor-to-re-awl r ) Cordilleras (kor-tlil'-yer-ras) Cordova (kor'-do-ralt ) Corinth (kor'-inth) Crimea (kre-mee'-ah) < Jroghan (kro'-un) Cuba (koo'-bah) Cyaue (si-an') Daeotah (dah-ko'-tah) Dalton (dawl'-tim) Darien u(ah-re-en') Dauphin (do'-feen) D'Anvillc (don-veel') D'Aylloo { larborn (dehr'-burn) D'Estaing (dehs-taing / ) 7)e Fleury (dehjlew'-ry) De Gourges (deh goorg') De Grasse (deh grass') De Heiater (deh hi'-ster) De Kalb (deh kalb') De La Roque (deh lah roke 1 ) De Medici (deh ?ned'-e-chee) De Monts (deh mone-a>ik'-e-shaws) Pizarro (pe-zah'-ro) Plymouth ( p/im'-ut/i) Pocahontas ( po-ka-fwn '-tits) Poicters ( poi-teers') Pocanokets | po-ka-no'-kets) Pontiac f jio/i-/i -iik') Popham ( jiiip'-iiiii) Portsmouth ( portz'^muth) Pot ore ' X)o-to'-ni(ik) Powha.au 1 - 1 (pon)-ha-tans r ) Preble ( preb'-'l) Puebla i pweb'-lah) Pulaski (pu-las'-ki) Q Qnaboag (kiraw'-boge') Quebec (ke-bekf) Quinipiac (kwin-ne-jx-ak') Raleigh (vaw'-le) Rappahannock {rap-a-han'-ok) Renoboth (re-ho'-outA) ■ Reno (ree'-no) Resaca de la Palma (rasaMca da hi /in/' -//m/i) Rial) (re'-awl) Ribault in '-bo) Hio Grande (ri'-o grahnd 1 ) Rio de la Plata (ri'-o da la p/a/i'-li/h I Roanoke un-a-noke') Roberval 1 m'-iii ///-vol) Rolfe {/■<>//) Rosecrane 1 ro^'-kranz) Ryswiek (riz'-trik) S Saco (mw'-ko) Sagadahock (sah-gah-dah-hok r ) St. Castine (sent kast-een') St. Malo (sent mah'-lo) St. Pierre (sent peer 1 ) Saltillo (smrl-tii/'-ijo, San Joan d'Ulloa (sahn hwan dah-oo-loo'-afi\ San Luis Potosi (sahti loo'-is po-to-Mi ) Saratoga (sah-rah-U/'-ijnh ) Sayle (sale) Schenck (skehnk) Schoepf (spop) Seminole (sem'-i-nole) Shawnoese (shaw'-no-eez) Shiloh ixhy'-lo) Sigel (see'-g I) Sioux (sooz) Stanwix (sta/i'-i.r) Stringham (string'-um) Stuyvesunt (sty'-ve-sunfy T Tacubaya (tab-koo-bi'-a) Tallapoosa ( /al-lah-jHx/sa/i) Taney (taw'-m 1 Texel (feaK-'J) Thucidides (thusid'H ) U Osselincx i 0O8-& l-li/iks') Utah (11' -tab) Utrecht (u'-trekt) Vera Cruz (va-raJi krnoz') Verrazzani (va'-ralhzah'-ru > W Wampanoags 1 wavmrpdh-nof-agt Weehawken ( m < -laurk'-'n ) Weymouth ( int'-i/mili ) Wiltwyck (wiit'-wik) Winder 1 wine'-cU r) Wocoken (wo-ko'-ken) Wordeu (wur'-d'n) Yamacraw (yam-a-kraw') Yamassee (yam-asa '1 Yeardley yijn ril'-b > Yucatan (u-ka-(an') Zenger (zang'er) Zollicoffer (zoMi-kof-W) '