Van der Donck's New Netherland, [23], n. 7.
Van Meteren, Nederlandsche Historic, [312], n. 18.
Vane, Sir Henry, the younger, favored the Antinomians, [267];
an ardent Puritan, [332];
arrives in Boston and is elected governor, [332];
a disciple of Cotton, [333];
defeat of, [336];
leaves the colony, [337].
Vaughan's Golden Fleece, [261], n. 7.
Vessel, the first Virginia, built by Captain Argall, [50].
Vestments objected to, in reign of Edward VI, [103];
bitter debates about, [108];
ceased to be abhorrent, [123].
Virginia Assembly petitions the king, [56];
proceedings of the first, [70], n. 15.
Virginia colony, the, [8];
emigrants set sail, [25];
code of laws and orders, [26];
character of the emigrants, [27];
arrival, [27];
first meetings with the Indians, [28];
the winter of misery, [29];
fear of attack from the Indians, [30];
food bought of the Indians, [31];
five hundred colonists arrive under Archer and Ratcliffe, [36];
settlements at Nansemond and the falls of the James River, [37];
famine of 1609-'10, [38];
only sixty survivors in June, 1610, [40];
arrival of Gates and Somers, [40];
Jamestown abandoned, [41];
arrival of De la Warr, [41];
De la Warr's government, [42];
flight of De la Warr, [43];
second lease of life, [43];
inefficient government of George Percy, [44];
martial law and slavery under Thomas Dale, [45];
ten men escape, [47];
Dale's services, [47];
private gardens allowed, [48];
tobacco cultivated, [49];
Argall's government and treachery, [50]- [52];
the Great Charter, 1618, [55], [173];
joy at its receipt, [56];
feared re-establishment of the old tyranny, [56], [70], n. 16;
wives supplied, [57];
the first homes, [58];
whole number of colonists, [58];
four fifths perished, [59];
petition to the king, [65], n. 5;
began raising silkworms, [76];
the silk-grass craze in, [79];
glass and iron works established and failed in, [83];
planted tobacco, [84];
struck root and its life assured, [85];
gained impetus from the king's opposition, [89];
government of, passed to the Crown, [92];
reached its greatest prosperity, [186], n. 8;
inhospitable to Lord Baltimore, [230];
opposes Roman Catholics, [231], [261], n. 9;
reckless living of people and clergy, [231];
expulsion of Lord Baltimore from, [232];
new emigration to, [344];
second generation of native Virginians appears, [345];
better ministers in the parishes and order in the courts, [345].
Virginia colony, map of, by John White, 1586, [8], [21], [22].
Virginia Company, letter of, to Governor Wyatt quoted, [22], n. 5;
code of laws and orders for its colonists, [26];
swindled and robbed, [52];
fall of the lottery, [53];
revival of interest, [53];
records destroyed, [54];
change in conduct of affairs, [55];
cruelty of agents paralleled by those of the East India Company, [67], n. 9;
overthrow of the company, [70], n. 16;
dissolved in 1624, [85], [89], [92];
organized for trading, [86];
passed out of the control of traders, [87];
King James interferes with the election, [88];
grants two charters and a liberal patent to the Pilgrims, [172];
also leave to establish a provisional government, [173];
Lord Baltimore a member and councilor of, [224], [229], [230];
attempt to take away privileges granted to the colonists, [230].
Virginia Company's Manuscript Records. See [Manuscript Records, Virginia Company].
Virginia Richly Valued, [79], m.; [95], n. 3.
Virginians obliged to pay quitrents in Maryland, [249].
Vries, David P. de, Voyages, [308], n. 7.

Waddington's Congregational History, [167], m.
Walker's First Church in Hartford, [317], m.; [321], m.
Ward's Simple Cobbler, [285], m.; [299], m.
Warwick, second Earl, intrigues to wreck the Virginia Company, [51], [68], n. 13;
protects Argall in his plundering, [52];
has Cavendish and others arrested, [69], n. 13;
loses influence in the company, [87];
made Governor in Chief and Lord High Admiral of all plantations in America, [252].
Waterhouse's Declaration of Virginia, [22], n. 6.
Watertown church, part of, ready to follow Hooker, [323];
one of the centres of discontent, [324].
Welde's Short Story of the Rise, Reign, and Ruine of Antinomianism, [330], m.; [336], m.; [339], m.; [340], m.; [347], n. 4.
Wentworth, friend of Calvert, [222].
West, insubordinate settlers under, [37], [60], n. 2;
Indians hostile to, [60], n. 2;
treacherous and cruel, [64], n. 4.
West India plants tried in Virginia, [82].
Weston Documents, [11], m.
Wethersfield, John Oldham and his company settled at, [324].
Weymouth kidnapped Maine Indians, [17].
Whale-fishing in Lake Ontario, [11].
Whelewright, brother-in-law of Mrs. Hutchinson, [336];
banished at November court following the synod, [337];
testimony regarding his sister-in-law, [348], n. 6.
Whelewright's sermon, [331], m.
Whincop charter not used, [184], n. 4; [186], n. 8.
Whiston, a place of Puritan assemblage, [142].
Whitaker, Alexander, praises Dale, [66], n. 9;
minister at Henrico, [168];
letters, [183], n. 3.
Whitaker's Good Newes from Virginia, [66], n. 9; [168].
Whitbourne, Captain, pamphlet on Newfoundland, [224], [258], n. 3;
letters of Wynne and others in, [229], m.
White, Father, Relatio Itineris, [243], m.; [244], m.; [263], n. 16;
on settlement of Montserrat, [261], n. 9; [263], n. 14, n. 16.
White, John, of Dorchester, an active colonizer, [189], [199], [203].
White, John, map of Virginia by, 1586, [8];
in Grenville Collection, [21], n. 4;
reproduced in the Century Magazine, [22], n. 4;
copy in Kohl Collection, [22], n. 4
White's, John, The Planter's Plea, [190], m.; [199], m.
Whitgift, Archbishop, efforts of, to suppress nonconformity, [122];
ordered Bownd's book called in, [132];
persecuted the Puritans at Scrooby, [153];
declared King James inspired, [161].
Whittingham, Dean of Durham, author of A Brieff Discourse, [135], n. 3;
on the Puritan side in Frankfort, [143].
Williams, Roger, in advance of his age, [256];
opposed the authorities in Massachusetts, [267];
early career of, [268];
refused preferments, [269], [307], n. 2;
flight of, to New England, [270];
refuses communion with the Boston church, [270], [307], n. 3;
opposed to compromise, [271], [307], n. 4;
his selection as minister at Salem opposed by the General Court, [271], [272];
removed to Plymouth, [272];
wrote a treatise on the dialect of the New England Indians, [273];
rebuked Bradford and wrote against the royal patents, [274], [281], [308], n. 9;
returned to Salem with some followers, [275];
his ideal too high for that age, [281];
preached without holding office, [281];
"convented at court," [281];
charges against, based on his book, "not so evil as at first they seemed," [282];
the broad principle laid down by, [283];
made teacher at Salem, [284];
fast-day sermon on eleven "public sins," [286];
dealt with ecclesiastically, [287];
scruples against enforced oaths, [289];
new charges against, [289];
champion of soul liberty, [290];
incorrigible, [290], [291];
trial and banishment, [292], [309], n. 12; [310], n. 13, 14, 16;
authorities, [310], n. 17;
on account of illness permitted to remain during the winter, [293];
a few friends faithful to, [293], [294];
escape to the Indians, [295];
abandons settlement at Seekonk River and founds Providence, [296];
banishment of, an act of persecution, [297];
character of, [301], [307], n. 1;
a collector of scruples, [301], [302], [314], n. 23;
tenderness and friendship for Winthrop, [302];
became a Baptist and renounced his baptism, [303];
a Seeker, [303], [304];
his moral elevation of spirit, [304];
ascendency over the Indians, [305];
an individualist, [291], [305];
superior to his age and ours, [305];
his prophetic character, [306]
a John Baptist of the distant future, [306];
enthusiastic nature of, [307], n. 2;
needed no practical consideration to stir him to action, [308], n. 11;
magnanimity without a parallel, [310], n. 15;
removal of Williams and his friends the beginning of dispersions from the colony, [315];
prepared a harbor for all of uneasy conscience, [315].
Williams's letter to Mrs. Sadleir, [268], m.; [270], m.;
letters to Winthrop, [273], m.; [302], m.; [307], n. 5;
Reply to Cotton, [283], m.;
letters to Lady Barrington, [307], n. 1;
letter to John Cotton, the younger, [307], n. 2, 3, 4;
letter to Major Mason, [310], n. 15;
Bloudy Tenent, [311], n. 18.
Wilson, John, interprets battle of mouse and snake, [277];
on Williams's book, [282];
condemned by the Hutchinsonians, [333];
given to rhyming prophecies, [338].
Windebank, schemes of Cecilius Calvert with, [250].
Wine, efforts to produce, in Great Britain, [76];
in Virginia, [81].
Wingandacon, Indian name of the coast of North Carolina, [21], n. 3.
Wingfield deposed from leadership, [31];
recognizes Smith's services, [36];
plot against the life of, [61], n. 2;
warned Newport against Archer, [64], n. 3.
Wingfield's Discourse, [64], n. 3.
Winslow, of Plymouth, warns Williams from Seekonk River, [296].
Winslow's Briefe Narration, [172], m.; [175], m.; [185], n. 6.
Winsor's, Justin, Elder Brewster, [155], m.; [169], m.
Winsor's Narrative and Critical History of America, [21], n. 1.
Winthrop, John, principal figure in the Puritan migration, [202];
character and influence of, [204];
made a justice of the peace, [204], [217], n. 5;
elected governor, [210], [217], n. 6;
objected to a government directed from England, [208];
superseded by Dudley, [287];
recommended Narragansett Bay to Williams, [293], [294];
lenity toward Williams rebuked, [301];
moved house, begun at Newtown, to Boston, [318];
antipathy to Mrs. Hutchinson, [330];
ministers rally around, [332];
again made governor, [336];
chief inquisitor at the trial of Mrs. Hutchinson, [338];
evidence to prove Mrs. Hutchinson a witch, [340], [341];
wallows in superstition, [341].
Winthrop's Journal (Savage's), [252], m.; [272], m.; [290], m.; [291], m.; [294], m.; [301], m.; [307], n. 3; [309], n. 12; [310], n. 17; [318], m.; [323], m.; [329], m.; [336], m.; [339], m.; [340], m.; [341], m.; [344], m.; [348], n. 8; [349], n. 9.
Winthrop's Life and Letters, [198], m.; [217], n. 4, 5, 6; [218], n. 8.
Winthrop's Reasons for New England, [198], [204], [217], n. 4.
Wives for the Virginia colonists, [57], [71], n. 18;
supplied to Louisiana and Canada, [72], n. 18.
Women, proposal to send, to Virginia, [71], n. 18;
in Gates's party, [71], n. 18;
first two in the colony, [71], n. 18.
Wood, beauty of the, of certain American trees, [65], n. 7.
Woodnoth's Short Collection, [70], n. 16; [87], m.;
account of, [97], n. 10.
Wood's New England's Prospect, [18], m.; [318], m.; [319], m.
Words had the force of blows, [110].
Wright's Elizabeth and her Times, [142], m.
Wyatt, Sir Francis, name appended to The Tragicall Relation, [66], n. 9;
opinion of, on a divided government, [207].
Wyckoff, on Silk Manufacture, [95], n. 3.

Yeardley, Sir George, arrival in Virginia, [71], n. 17;
knighted, [134], n. 1;
instructed to administer oath of supremacy, [232].
Yong, Thomas, in the Delaware, [10];
seeks a Mediterranean in America, [11].
Young's Chronicles of Massachusetts, [217], n. 4; [317], m.
Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrims, [158], n. 3; [167], m.; [184], n. 4.
Yucatan, meaning of, [21], n. 3.
Yucca, clothing made from the fiber of the, [79], [80];
a "commoditie of speciall hope and much use," [80].

Zeal, passionate, often stupefies reason, [171].
Zurich and Strasburg cities of refuge for conservatives, [104];
differences between exiles at, and those of Geneva, [106], [107].
Zurich Letters, [135], n. 3.
Zwisck, Peter John, The Liberty of Religion, [312], n. 19.

Charles Alexander Nelson.
THE END.

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