Phips, Sir William, builds Fort William Henry, [97]; his connection with witchcraft, [210]; accusation of his wife, [214].
Pigot, Sir Robert, defends Newport, [387].
Pilgrims, the, not strictly Puritans, [280]; their church, [280], [281], [282]; land at Cape Cod, [307].
Pillory, one described, [365].
Piscataqua, capture proposed, [80]; sail down, [159]; Earl Bellomont's opinion of, [197].
Plymouth Bay, [268], [274], [275].
Plymouth Beach, [269].
Plymouth, on Smith's map, [21]; establishes a trading-house at Castine, [76]; dispossessed, [76], [77]; the colony patents, [133]; Plymouth described, [262]: Pilgrim memorials, [263]-[267]; pictures of the "Landing," [264]; first duel at Plymouth, [266]; the colony seal, [267]; the compact, [267]; first execution, [267]; Pilgrim laws and chronicles, [268]; Burial Hill, [268], [276], [277], [278], [279]; the harbor, [268], [269]; names of the settlement, [270]; why it was chosen, [271]; desolated by a plague, [272], [273]; French make the first landing, [274], [275]; other settlements called Plymouth, [276]; Pilgrims' first church, [278]; church customs, [279], [280]; Leyden Street, [283], et seq.; the town in 1627, [284]; Governor Bradford's, [286]; Allyne House, [287]; Cole's Hill, [288]; Plymouth Rock, [289]; the Landing, [290], [291]; Samoset, [292]; entry of Massasoit, [293], [294]; Clark's Island, [295], et seq. See article, Clark's Island, Plymouth Beach, [296].
Plymouth, England, [270].
Plum Island, [421].