[424]. Cf. F. J. Turner, “Social Forces in American History”; Magazine of History, vol. XIII, p. 117.
[425]. Cf. the very suggestive article by F. J. Turner, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” Proceedings of State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1894, pp. 79-112.
[426]. Farnham Papers (Maine Historical Society, Portland, 1901), vol. I, pp. 96 ff. For the numerous grants of this period, cf. H. S. Burrage, Colonial Maine, pp. 197-226.
[427]. The patents may be found in the Farnham Papers, passim. The most accurate narrative account is that of Burrage, Colonial Maine. The Trelawney and Cammack patents, and an extremely valuable correspondence relating to conditions at this time, are in the Trelawney Papers; Maine Historical Society, 1884. Cf. also, J. P. Baxter, George Cleeve of Casco Bay (Gorges Society, Portland, 1885), pp. 27 ff.
[428]. Farnham Papers, vol. I, p. 159; Gorges, Briefe Narration, p. 79; Burrage, Colonial Maine, pp. 216 ff.
[429]. Bradford, Plymouth, p. 317.
[430]. J. Winthrop, History, vol. I, p. 156; Massachusetts Records, vol. I, p. 119.
[431]. Dudley's reply, in Bradford, Plymouth, p. 320.
[432]. J. Winthrop, History, vol. I, pp. 162, 174.
[433]. The section of the treaty relating to America is in the Farnham Papers, vol. I, p. 176.