[888]. Conn. Col. Records, vol. II, p. 236; Old Indian Chronicle, p. 36.

[889]. Acts United Colonies, vol. II, p. 357; Conn. Col. Records, vol. II, p. 384; Massachusetts Records, vol. V, p. 69; Plymouth Records, vol. V, pp. 182 f.

[890]. Bodge, Soldiers, p. 180.

[891]. Ibid., pp. 190 f. Cf. Conn. Col. Records, vol. II, p. 398. Hubbard, Indian Wars, vol. I, pp. 144 ff.; Mather, Philip's War, p. 108; Church, King Philip's War, pp. 53 ff. A Continuation of the State of New England (London, 1676), estimates the English losses as, killed and wounded, 207, and 600 Indians killed.

[892]. Plymouth Records, vol. V, p. 184; Conn. Col. Records, vol. II, p. 391.

[893]. Hubbard, Indian Wars, vol. II, p. 60.

[894]. Hubbard, Indian Wars, vol. I, p. 265; Church, King Philip's War, pp. 145 ff.

[895]. Cf. Bodge, Soldiers, pp. 304 ff.; N. H. Prov. Papers, vol. I, pp. 354 ff.; Massachusetts Records, vol. V, p. 72.

[896]. Belknap, History, vol. I, p. 129. He does not give the text, nor is it in the N. H. Prov. Papers, though there is a letter relative to it in the latter, vol. I, p. 365.

[897]. Conn. Col. Records, vol. II, pp. 297 f. The Assembly in Barbadoes drew a bill to prevent the importation of these Indian slaves from New England. Cal. State Pap., Col., 1674-75, p. 378.