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AMERICAN ANNALS ;

OR.

A CHRONOLOGICAL

HISTORY OF AMERICA

FROM ITS DISCOVERY IN MCCCCXCII TO MDCCCVI.

IN TWO VOLUMES.

BY ABIEL HOLMES, D.D. A.A.S. S.H.S.

MINISTER OF THE FIRST CHURCH IN CAMBRIDGE.

SUUM QUÆQUE IN ANNUM REFERRE.

TACIT. ANNAL.

VOL. II.

COMPRISING A PERIOD OF ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTEEN YEARS.

CAMBRIDGE,

PRINTED AND SOLD BY W. HILLIARD.

1805.

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Checked
May 1913

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DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS, TO WIT:

BE it remembered, that on the fourteenth day of October, A. D. 1805

in the thirtieth year of the Independence of the United States of America, ABIEL HOLMES, of said district, has deposited in this office, the title of a book, the right whereof he claims as author, in the words following, to wit: "AMERICĂN " ANNALS; or a Chronological HISTORY OF AMERICA from its discovery in 1492 to 1806, in two volumes. By ABIEL HOLMES, D. D. A. A.S. S.H.2 "Minister of the First Church in Cambridge. -Suum quæque in annum re"ferre. Tacit. Annal."

In conformity to the Act of the Congress of the United States, intitled, "A "Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, "and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times there" in mentioned :" and also to an Act intitled, " An Act supplementary to an Act « intitled, An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of "maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during #the times therein mentioned; and extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing, engraving, and etching historical and other prints." N. GOODALE, Clerk of the District of Massachusetts.

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A true copy of Record,

Attest, N. GOODALE, Clerk. }

THE

NEW YORK

PULION -RY

Astor, Lenox 11 den
Foundations.

1900

23787

AMERICAN ANNALS.

1692.

THE Revolution in England forms an epoch New Char

sachusetts.

Sir W.

in American history. The effects of it were the ter of Mas most sensibly felt in the colony of Massachusetts. When the colonists resumed their charter in 1689, they earnestly solicited its reestablishment, with the addition of some necessary powers; but the king could not be prevailed on to consent to that measure, and a new charter was obtained. Sir William Phips May 14arrived at Boston on the fourteenth of May, with Arrival of this charter, and a commission, constituting him Phips, as governor.' He was soon after conducted from his governor. house to the town house by the regiment of Boston, the militia companies of Charlestown, the magistrates, ministers, and principal gentlemen of Boston and the adjacent towns. The charter was first published, and then the governor's commission. Thre venerable, old charter governor Bradstreet next resigned the chair. After the lieutenant governor's commission was published, the oaths were adminis- Govern tered; and the new government thus became organized.

ment or

ganized.

the new

The province, designated by the new charter, Difference contained the whole of the old Massachusetts colo- between ny, to which were added the colony of Plymouth, and the old the province of Maine, the province of Nova Scotia, charter, and all the country between the province of Maine

I The king complimented the New England agents for the first time with the nomination of their governor; and they agreed to nominate Sir William Phips. The commission constituted him captain general over the colonies of Connecticut and Rhode Island. In the last of these colonies the authority was attempted to be exercised; but without effect. Hutchinson.

the extent

of the pro

vince;

1692. and Nova Scotia, as far northward as the river St. in regard to Lawrence, also Elizabeth islands, and the islands of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. Under the old charter, all the magistrates and officers of state were chosen annually by the general assembly. By the new charter, the appointment of the governor, lieutenant governor, secretary, and all the officers of the admiralty, was vested in the crown. Under the old charter, the governor had little more share in the the gover- administration than any one of the assistants. He

nor;

had the power of calling the general court; but he could not adjourn, prorogue, or dissolve it. To such acts the vote of the major part of the whole court was necessary. The governor gave commissions to civil and military officers; but all such officers were elected by the court. Under the new charter, there was to be an annual meeting of the general court on the last Wednesday in May; but the governor might discretionally call an assembly at any other times, and adjourn, prorogue, and dissolve it at pleasure. No act of government was to be valid without his consent. He had, with the consent of the council, the sole appointment of all military officers, and of all officers belonging to the courts of justice. Other civil officers were elected by the two houses; but the governor had a negative on the choice. No money could issue out of she assist the treasury, but by his warrant, with the advice and consent of the council. Under the old charter, the assistants or counsellors were elected by the votes of all the freemen in the colony; and were not only, with the governor, one of the two branches of the legislature, but the supreme executive court in all civil and criminal causes, excepting those cases where, by the laws, an appeal to the general court was allowed. The new charter provided, that, on the last Wednesday of May annually, twenty eight

ants;

sentatives;

counsellors should be newly chosen by the general 1692. court or assembly. The representatives, under the the repreold charter, were elected by freemen only. Under the new charter, every freeholder, of forty shillings sterling a year, was a voter, and every other inhabitant, who had forty pounds sterling personal estate. The new charter contained nothing of an ecclesiasti- the church. cal constitution. With the exception of Papists, liberty of conscience, which was not mentioned in the first charter, was by the second expressly granted to all.

eral court.

Writs having been immediately issued on the gov- June 8. ernor's arrival, the general court met on the eighth First genof June. An act was then passed, declaring, that all the laws of the colony of Massachusetts bay and the colony of New Plymouth, not being repugnant to the laws of England, nor inconsistent with the charter, should be in force, in the respective colonies, until the tenth of November, 1692, excepting where other provision should be made by act of assembly.'

A strange infatuation had already begun to pro- Witchcraft. duce misery in private families, and disorder throughout the community. The imputation of witchcraft was accompanied with a prevalent belief of its reality; and the lives of a considerable number of innocent people were sacrificed to blind zeal, and superstitious credulity. The mischief began at Salem in February; but it soon extended into various parts of the colony. The contagion however was principally within the county of Essex. Before the close of September, nineteen persons were executed, and one pressed to death, all of whom asserted their in

nocence. 3

I The construction, given to the terms "general court or assembly," was, that it included the whole three branches.

2 Hutchinson, ii. 5—15. Adams N. Eng. 156, 157. The Charter of William and Mary is in the Appendix of Neal's Hist. of N. Eng. and in Minot's Continuation of Hutchinson.

3 Coll. Hist. Soc. v. 76. Hutchinson, ii. 59. Calef, Part v. Giles Co

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