UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 
 AT LOS ANGELES 
 
 r.s.n.A-!ORi..
 
 fr
 
 HISTORY 
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE, 
 
 FROM ITS FIRST DISCOVERY 
 
 TO 
 
 THE YEAR 1830; 
 
 DISSERTATIONS UPON THE RISE OF OPINIONS AND INSTITUTIONS, 
 
 THE GROWTH OF AGRICULTURE AND MANUFACTURES, 
 
 AND THE INFLUENCE OF LEADING FAMILIES 
 
 AND DISTINGUISHED MEN, 
 
 TO THE YEAR 1874; 
 
 EDWIN D. SANBORN, LL. D., 
 
 PROFESSOR IN DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. 
 
 MANCHESTER, N. H. : 
 
 JOHN B. CLARKE. 
 I87S-
 
 Entered, according to act of Congress, in the year 1875, by 
 
 JOHN B. CLARKE, 
 In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. 
 
 MIRROR OFFICE: JOHN B. CLARKE, 
 
 MANCHESTER, N. H.
 
 
 PREFACE. 
 
 The best historian is he who represents with the greatest fidelity the life 
 and spirit of the age he describes. It is not sufficient that what he records 
 should be true " for substance ; " it should be relatively as well as absolutely 
 true. ' " History," says Cicero, " is the light of truth." As truth is immuta- 
 ble, we should naturally infer that an impartial historian, like Thucydides, 
 might write "for eternity;" but, (while the facts of the past remain mv 
 changed, the opinions of succeeding generations concerning them are modi- 
 31 fied by the progress of knowledge!] Hence all history needs frequent revis- 
 i* ion. The oldest records receive the severest criticism. The study of the 
 \ Sanscrit language has shed a flood of light on the affinities and migrations of 
 X, early nations. The mythologies and traditions which connect the Orient 
 with the Occident have fallen before the victorious march of comparative 
 philology. The interpretation of the Rosetta stone, the Ninevite slabs and 
 the Babylonian cylinders has restored the lost records of Egypt and Mesopo- 
 tamia. The labors of Champollion, Lepsius, Layard, Rawlinson, Smith and 
 Cesnola have made monumental records more valuable than existing history. 
 Every generation receives a new version of old traditions respecting classic 
 lands. Greece and Rome often appear in a new dress, and the public ap- 
 proves of these antiquarian researches. Modern history is subjected to the 
 same searching analysis. Readers of the present day are not satisfied with 
 the estimate which historians have placed upon the English, French and 
 American Revolutions. The motives of men are now deemed better indices 
 of character than their actions. The progress of nations depends more upon 
 opinions and institutions than upon sieges and battles. The camp and the 
 court yield to the imperial sway of new ideas. The rise of Puritanism, in 
 the age of Elizabeth, left a deeper impression upon English history than the 
 9 dispersion of the Spanish Armada. The rise of Methodism better deserved 
 the notice of the annalist than the battles of Maryborough. All writers of 
 
 I
 
 IV PREFACE. 
 
 history must, therefore, look for the origin of great events in the current 
 opinions of the age when they occurred. Impressed with these convictions, 
 the writer of the following pages has attempted to reproduce the history of 
 New Hampshire and trace its institutions, social, political and religious, to 
 their true origin. The influence of illustrious men, of distinguished families, 
 of dominant parties, of prevailing creeds, has been carefully investigated and 
 briefly portrayed. The progress of the state in arts, arms and learning has 
 not been overlooked. 
 
 Public opinion seems to call for a new history of the state, i. Because 
 all the histories previously written are out of print. 2. Because no ex- 
 isting history covers the entire ground. 3. Because the progress of events 
 has thrown new light upon the past. 4. Because the history of New Hamp- 
 shire is rich in deeds of daring, suffering and heroism surpassing fable. 
 5. Because the men of every age require the records of the past to be re- 
 vised for their use.
 
 TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER I. Characteristics and Symbols of Different Epochs of Civil- 
 ization, 9 
 
 CHAPTER II. Causes of European Enterprise in the Fifteenth and Six- 
 teenth Centuries II 
 
 - CHAPTER III. The Agents of Modern Enterprise, 13 
 
 - CHAPTER IV. The Results of Modern Enterprise, 14 
 
 CHAPTER V. Aborigines of America, 17 
 
 CHAPTER VI. Title to the Soil, 22 
 
 CHAPTER VII. English Chartered Companies 24 
 
 CHAPTER VIII. Colonies Ancient and Modern, 25 
 
 CHAPTER IX. Early Explorers of the New England Coast, . . .27 
 
 CHAPTER X. Proprietors of New Hampshire, . . . .29 
 
 CHAPTER XI. First Settlers of New Hampshire, 32 
 
 CHAPTER XII. Political and Pecuniary Condition of the Plantations 
 
 from 1631 to 1641, 40 
 
 c.. .CHAPTER XIII. Social Condition of the Early Colonists, . . -47 
 CHAPTER XIV. Early Laws of Massachusetts, 49 
 
 CHAPTER XV. Early Laws of New Hampshire, 51 
 
 , CHAPTER XVI. Early Churches of New Hampshire, . . . -S3 
 
 CHAPTER XVII. Elements of Popular Liberty, 55 
 
 CHAPTER XVIII. Condition of New Hampshire after its Union with 
 
 Massachusetts, 58 
 
 CHAPTER XIX. Moral Epidemics ... 60 
 
 CHAPTER XX. Philip's Indian War, 65- 
 
 CHAPTER XXI. Revival of Mason's Claim, 74 
 
 ~ CHAPTER XXII. Organization of the New Government, . . .76 
 
 CHAPTER XXIII. Administration of Justice in the Early History of 
 
 New Hampshire, . . . . . . .81 
 
 CHAPTER XXIV. Administration of Cranfield, 83 
 
 CHAPTER XXV. Government under Dudley and Andros, . . .87 
 
 CHAPTER XXVI. King William's War, 89 
 
 CHAPTER XXVII. Civil Policy of New Hampshire during King Wil- 
 liam's War, 94 
 
 CHAPTER XXVIII. Queen Anne's War, 97 
 
 CHAPTER XXIX. Administration of Governor Shute, . . . . JOI
 
 vi CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER XXX. Emigrants from Ireland, 103 
 
 CHAPTER XXXI. Origin of the Militia System, in 
 
 CHAPTER XXXII. Lieutenant-Governor Wentworth's Administration, . 118 
 'CHAPTER XXXIII. New Hampshire an Independent Royal Province, 118 
 
 CHAPTER XXXIV. King George's War, 119 
 
 CHAPTER XXXV. Revival of Mason's Claim, 128 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVI. The Representatives of New Towns, . . .129 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVII. The Last French War 130 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVIII. Close of the War and Return of Peace, . . 141 
 CHAPTER XXXIX. Controversy about the Western Boundary, . . 143 
 
 CHAPTER XL. Origin of the Revolutionary War, 144 
 
 CHAPTER XLI. Officers and Ministers in New Hampshire in 1768, . 151 
 CHAPTER XLII. Origin of Dartmouth College, . . . -152 
 
 CHAPTER XLIII. Early Settlements in Cohos, 156 
 
 CHAPTER XLIV. The Wentworths in New Hampshire, . . . 160 
 CHAPTER XLV. Commencement of Hostilities with England, . . 165 
 CHAFI-ER XLVI. The Battle of Bunker Hill, . x . . . .167 
 CHAFPER XLVII. Formation of a New Government, .... 169 
 CHAPTER XLVIII. Movements of the Army under Washington, dur- 
 ing the year 1776, ... . 172 
 
 CHAPTER XLIX. Secession in New Hampshire during the last Century, 174 
 CHAPTER L. Military Operations in 1777 : Battle of Bennington, . . 182 
 
 CHAPTER LI. Capture of Burgoyne, 186 
 
 CHAPTER LII. Employment of Savages by the English, . . .188 
 CHAPTER LIII. Congregationalism in New Hampshire, . . . 191 
 
 CHAPTER LIV. Rise of Different Denominations, 196 
 
 CHAPTER LV. Insufficiency of the State and General Governments pre- 
 vious to the Adoption of the New Constitutions, . 198 
 
 CHAPTER LVI. Treatment of Loyalists, 200 
 
 CHAPTER LVII. Heavy Burdens Imposed on the People by the War, 
 
 and the Consequent Discontent, .... 203 
 CHAPTER LVIII. Captain John Paul Jones, ...... 206 
 
 CHAPTER LIX. General John Sullivan 207 
 
 CHAPTER LX. The New Constitution and the Parties Formed at its 
 
 Ratification, 209 
 
 CHAPTER LXI. Condition of New Hampshire after the Adoption of 
 
 the New Constitution, 213 
 
 CHAPTER LXII. Lands Held by "Free and Common Soccage." . . 217 
 
 CHAPTER LXIII. Internal Improvements, 218 
 
 CHAPTER LXIV. Administration of President Bartlett, . . . 224 
 
 CHAPTER LXV. Corn-Mills and Saw-Mills, 225 
 
 CHAPTER LXVI. Administration of John Taylor Gilman, . . . 228 
 CHAPTER LXVII. The Early Farin-House with its Furniture and Sur- 
 roundings, . . . . . . . -235 
 
 CHAPTER LXVIII. Development of Political Parties, .... 234 
 
 CHAPTER LXIX. Political Influence of the Clergy of New Hampshire, 238
 
 CONTENTS. VU 
 
 "CHAPTER LXX. Puritan Influence in New Hampshire, .... 245 
 CHAPTER LXXI. Internal' Condition of New Hampshire from 1805 to 
 
 1815 247 
 
 CHAPTER LXXII. Causes of the Second War with England, . . 249 
 CHAPTER LXXIIL Record of New Hampshire during the War for 
 
 Sailors' Rights, 252 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIV. The Hartford Convention, . . . . .258 
 CHAPTER LXXV. Domestic Affairs in New Hampshire Preceding and 
 
 During the War for "Sailors' Rights," . . . 259 
 
 CHAPTER LXXVI. Restoration of Peace 263 
 
 CHAPTER LXXVII. Dartmouth College Controversy, .... 268 
 
 CHAPTER LXXVIII. The Caucus System 286 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIX. The Toleration Act 287 
 
 CHAPTER LXXX. Decline of "The Era of Good Feelings," . . 289 
 CHAPTER LXXXI. Local Matters in New Hampshire during the Ad- 
 ministration of Monroe and Adams, . . . 292 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXII. Character of Hon. Benjamin Pierce, . . . 300 
 CHAPTER LXXXIII. Population of New Hampshire at Different Pe- 
 riods, ........ 302 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXIV. Money Coined and Printed, 303 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXV. Discovery and Settlement of the White Mountain 
 
 Regions . . . .307 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXVI. The Rivers of New Hampshire, . . . .311 
 CHAPTER LXXXVII. Climate and Scenery of New Hampshire, . . 317 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXVIII. The Isles of Shoals 323 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXIX. Influence of Distinguished Families in New 
 
 Hampshire, ....... 326 
 
 - CHAPTER XC. The Livermore Family 328 
 
 - CHAPTER XCI. The Pickering Family, 329 
 
 - CHAPTER XCII. The Weare Family 331 
 
 CHAPTER XCI 1 1. The Bartlett Family, 334 
 
 CHAPTER XCIV. The Webster Family, . 335 
 
 CHAPTER XCV. The Bar of New Hampshire, 338 
 
 CHAPTER XCVI. Jeremiah Smith, 339 
 
 CHAPTER XCVII. Ezekiel Webster . 340 
 
 -CHAPTER XCVIII. Daniel Webster 342 
 
 CHAPTER XCIX. Ichabod Bartlett, 343 
 
 CHAPTER C. Levi Woodbury, 345 
 
 CHAPTER CI. Common School Instruction, 346 
 
 CHAPTER CII. Academies, 352 
 
 CHAPTER CHI. Agriculture, 357 
 
 - CHAPTER CIV. Commerce of New Hampshire, ..... 362 
 CHAPTER CV. The Press, 364 
 
 - CHAPTER CVI. Banks, 366 
 
 - CHAPTER CVII. Manufactures 372
 
 Viii CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER CVIII. Railroads, 378 
 
 CHAPTER CIX. Geology of New Humpshire, 399 
 
 CHAPTER CX. The Flora and Fauna of New Hampshire, . . . 404 
 CHAPTER CXI. Undecided Questions in New England History, . . 405 
 CHAPTER CXII. Proper Names in New Hampshire, .... 410
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 CHARACTERISTICS AND SYMBOLS OF DIFFERENT EPOCHS OF CIV- 
 ILIZATION. 
 
 The temple and the palace are the true symbols of the earliest 
 civilization known to history. The king and priest occupy the 
 foreground of every old historic picture. The king holds the 
 key of power ; the priest the key of knowledge ; and the com- 
 mon people are their slaves. The sculptured temples of Elora, 
 the buried palaces of Nineveh and Babylon, the magnificent 
 ruins of Karnac and the pyramids of Egypt are all monuments 
 of royal and sacerdotal oppression. Fear and force then ruled 
 the world. The Greeks are the only people of all antiquity that 
 made reason supreme in government and religion, and thus 
 raised the masses of their population from bondage to free- 
 dom. They worshiped beauty in the works of nature and in 
 the creations of the imagination, and embodied their lofty ideals 
 in sculpture, painting, architecture, poetry, oratory and philoso- 
 phy. For a time their bema and theatre became the represen- 
 tatives of human progress. Their culture was the inheritance 
 of the race ; for they have been the teachers of all succeeding 
 generations. The light of their civilization shone on Rome. 
 Reason once more triumphed over brute force. Horace says : 
 
 "When conquered Greece brought in her captive arts, 
 She triumphed o'er her savage conquerors' hearts; 
 Taught our rough verse in numbers to refine, 
 And our rude style with elegance to shine." 
 
 Rome absorbed the blood and treasure of the nations and 
 made herself, through war and law, the mistress of the world. 
 For twelve hundred years, the camp and forum were the sym- 
 bols of her civilization. In the days of her decline Christi- 
 anity became a ruling power in the earth ; and during the dark 
 ages the monastery and castle embodied the power and wisdom 
 of Christendom. The history of the monk and the baron is the 
 real history of Europe for a thousand years. In England, be- 
 tween the conquest, A. D. 1066, and the reign of King John, 
 during a period of one hundred and fifty years, five hundred and
 
 10 HISTORY OF 
 
 fifty-seven religious houses, of all kinds, were established. Hen- 
 ry VIII. confiscated three thousand religious houses that yielded 
 revenue ; and the castles in his reign were probably as numer- 
 ous, for eleven hundred and fifteen were built in the brief reign 
 of Stephen. The population of England was then about two 
 and a half millions. The religious houses were all richly en- 
 dowed. They owned large landed estates, commodious and im- 
 posing buildings, with respectable libraries, .when a manuscript 
 was worth more than a small farm. A single monastery has 
 been known to feed five hundred paupers daily for years. At 
 that time there was no other provision for the poor. The cas- 
 tles of the nobles were impregnable fortresses, surrounded by 
 walls and moats, and defended by squadrons of mailed war- 
 riors. The feudal system regulated the tenure of land. The 
 king and his liege lords owned the entire territory of the king- 
 dom ; hence the large landed estates of the English nobility, 
 which are often equal, in extent and population, to one of our 
 counties. The conquering Normans ruled with an iron sway, 
 in church and state; and the conquered Saxon served with 
 abject humility, in war and peace. When the monastery and 
 castle lost their imperial power cannot now be accurately de- 
 termined. "It is remarkable," says Macaulay, "that the two 
 greatest and most salutary social revolutions which have taken 
 place in England, that revolution which, in the thirteenth century, 
 put an end to the tyranny of nation over nation, and that revolu- 
 tion which, a few generations later, put an end to the property of 
 man in man, were silently and imperceptibly effected. They 
 struck contemporary observers with no surprise and have received 
 from historians a very scanty measure of attention. They were 
 brought about neither by legislative regulation nor by physical 
 force. Moral causes noiselessly effaced, first the distinction be- 
 tween Norman and Saxon, and then the distinction between 
 master and slave. None can venture to fix the precise moment 
 at which either distinction ceased." The gentle influences of 
 the gospel proved to be more potent agents of reform than mailed 
 barons with their retainers, or Cromwell with his "ironsides." 
 Soon after the union of the Norman and Saxon and the abolition 
 of serfdom, the popular mind in Europe was stimulated to in- 
 tense activity, by the invention of printing and the mariner's 
 compass, by the revival of classical learning and the formation 
 of the modern languages. From these causes arose the refor- 
 mation which gave birth to the Puritans, who founded in the 
 wilderness "a church without a bishop and a state without a king" 
 and, from that hour, made the school-house and "meeting-house" 
 the symbols of modern civilization. Before these modest rep- 
 resentatives of American progress the temple and palace, the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. II 
 
 camp and forum, the monastery and castle, all bow down, like 
 the sheaves in Joseph's dream, and make obeisance. 
 
 CHAPTER II. 
 
 CAUSES OF EUROPEAN ENTERPRISE IN THE FIFTEENTH AND 
 SIXTEENTH CENTURIES. 
 
 Europe owes her love of liberty to the Greeks, her obedience 
 to law to the Romans. On the shores of the ^Egean Oriental 
 despotism first met, upon the battle-field, European indepen- 
 dence. The right triumphed ; and Marathon is dear to us to- 
 day, because there the cause of humanity was vindicated. Had 
 the setting sun, on that memorable day, gilded the victorious 
 banners of Persia, Grecian art, literature, oratory and liberty had 
 never existed ; and, for the next two thousand years, Zoroaster 
 and the Magi, instead of Socrates and the philosophers, might 
 have been the educators of our race. The history of Marathon 
 and Yorktown will never lose their interest, down 
 
 "To the last syllable of recorded time ;" 
 
 because a contrary result, in either case, would have changed 
 the destinies of the world. They were decisive battles in the 
 history of freedom. The same is true of the battle of Zama, 
 where Roman civilization won the victory for the advancing ages, 
 and made Rome the world's lawgiver. All ancient history ter- 
 minates in the "eternal city;" and from it all modern history 
 takes its departure. Rome has conquered the world three 
 times : by her army ; by her literature ; and by her jurisprudence. 
 Her last victory was the chief of the three. Roman literature 
 has developed modern mind ; Roman law has governed it. For 
 nearly a thousand years after the irruption of the Northern bar- 
 barians, Grecian literature was but little studied in Western 
 Europe. Constantinople was its home. After the fall of that 
 city in 1453, her scholars were exiled ; and learning followed the 
 course of the sun. The seer of that day might have used, by 
 prolepsis, the words of Berkeley : 
 
 " Westward the course of empire takes its way. " 
 
 The revival of learning awoke the European mind to intense ac- 
 tivity. The noble ideas of Grecian liberty and Roman law took 
 root in a virgin soil and brought forth abundant fruit. With this
 
 12 HISTORY OF 
 
 new-born zeal for study came additional means of gratifying it. 
 An obscure German, by the invention of movable types and the 
 press, rendered the universal diffusion of knowledge possible. 
 Next to the invention of letters stands that of printing. It has 
 enlarged indefinitely the bounds of knowledge and given a new 
 impulse to everything great and good in modern civilization. 
 " If the invention of ships, " says Lord Bacon, " was thought so 
 noble, which carrieth riches and commerce from place to place, 
 how much more are letters to be magnified, which, as ships, pass 
 through the vast seas of time and make ages so distant to par- 
 ticipate of the wisdom, illuminations and inventions, the one of 
 the other. " Prior to the use of types, it required nearly a year's 
 labor to copy a bible ; and the price of such a manuscript varied 
 from two hundred to one thousand dollars of our money ; and 
 that, too, when its value was ten or twenty times as much as it 
 now is. Some German mechanics and a wealthy goldsmith nam- 
 ed John Faust, of the city of Mentz, in quest of gain, invented 
 and executed this great work of human progress. The Bible was 
 the first book printed. It was offered for sale, by Faust, in Paris. 
 So astonished were the Parisians to find numerous copies of the 
 bible, exactly alike, that they accused the seller of employing 
 magic in their multiplication. He was supposed to be in league 
 with the Devil ! Strange that the loyal subjects of the Prince 
 ' of darkness should have so mistaken their master's character. 
 Faust was imprisoned, as a magician, and was only released on 
 confession of his valuable secret. This is supposed to be the 
 origin of the popular legend, entitled: "The Devil and Dr. 
 Faustus ; " or, as he is called by the illiterate, " Dr. Foster. " It 
 was a copy of this bible which kindled Luther's zeal for reform 
 in the church. He first saw it, in the monastery of Erfurt, where 
 he was in training for a monk. Dr. Staupitz, a man of rank in 
 the church, happened to be there inspecting the convent and, ob- 
 serving Luther's admiration of the discovered bible, gave him 
 the copy for his private study. He read it twice in course of 
 every year. He wrote thus of it : " It is a great and powerful 
 tree, each word of which is a mighty branch; each of these 
 branches have I shaken, so desirous was I to learn 'what fruit 
 they every one of them bore, and what they would give me. " 
 This was one of Gutenberg's private copies of the Latin Vulgate. 
 It could be read only by scholars. It was printed about 1450, 
 with metal types, every one cut separately, with the imperfect 
 tools then in use. It was a folio of six hundred and forty-one 
 leaves. Schoeffer, the associate of Gutenberg, introduced cast 
 types and thus perfected the art of printing. The study of the 
 bible made Luther the champion of the reformation. He em- 
 bodied his new opinions in ninety-five theses, which he nailed to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 13 
 
 the door of the church of Wittenburg ; and some one has said, 
 very justly, that the blows of his hammer shook all Christendom. 
 Thus, an Augustine monk, denouncing the corruptions of Ca- 
 tholicism, introduced a schism in religion and changed the entire 
 foundations of human government. Civil liberty was born of 
 religious liberty. 
 
 Nearly contemporary with the publication of the bible was 
 the practical use of the mariner's compass. That property of 
 the magnet which gives polarity to the needle was known sev- 
 eral centuries before the discovery of America. But navigators 
 were slow to employ this unerring guide in traversing the seas. 
 The French and Italians both claim the invention of the com- 
 pass, which opened to man the dominion of the sea. "The 
 common opinion," says Hallam, "which ascribes the discovery 
 [of the polarity of the magnet] to a citizen of Amalfi, in the 
 fourteenth century, is undoubtedly erroneous." It was, with- 
 out dispute, in general use during the fifteenth century, by the 
 Genoese, Spaniards and Portuguese. Soon after the discovery 
 of America, Vasco de Gama sailedj^und the " Stormy Cape, " 
 opened a new passage to India and changed the whole commerce 
 of the world. The story of his perilous voyage, "married to 
 immortal verse, " still lives in the Epic of the Portuguese Cam- 
 oens. These potent causes, the revival of classical learning, the 
 invention of printing and the compass, and the reformation in 
 the church, all contributed to awaken the common mind in Europe, 
 to give new force and intensity to public opinion, and to impart 
 increased energy to national enterprise. 
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 
 THE AGENTS OF MODERN ENTERPRISE. 
 
 Men of action and men of thought have existed in all ages. 
 In the oriental world, the men of action became warriors ; the 
 men of thought, priests. The sculptured slabs that lined the 
 walls of the temples and palaces of buried Nineveh and Baby- 
 lon show us nothing of Asiatic life but sieges and battles, pomps 
 and sacrifices. The blood of men flows upon the field, the blood 
 of beasts upon the altar ; enslaved people come before their rul- 
 ers laden with tribute and offerings. In Greece, the cradle of 
 liberty, and in Rome, the birth-place of law, men of affairs and
 
 14 HISTORY OF 
 
 men of reflection appeared as statesmen and philosophers, con- 
 suls and jurisconsults. In the dark ages, the baron and monk 
 controlled the people in " body, mind and estate. " After the 
 decline of feudalism, the abolition of serfdom and the rise of 
 free cities, political power was centralized ; and hereditary mon- 
 archs became its representatives. With the emancipation of 
 mind, by the revival of learning and religion, came improved agri- 
 culture, enlarged commerce and multiplied manufactures. Then, 
 monarchs, merchants and mechanics became the originators of 
 great enterprises and the heralds of material progress. Mon- 
 archs lent their names, merchants their funds and mechanics 
 their hands to the discovery and settlement of a newVorld. 
 Mechanics built and manned the ships, merchants furnished 
 supplies and wages, and monarchs gave charters and patents to 
 the explorers and colonists. These royal parchments were about 
 as useful to the navigators and pilgrims as were the gilded figure- 
 heads that adorned the prows of their ships. Yet, as society 
 was then constituted, they were as necessary to successful enter- 
 prise as " the cunning hand and cultured brain " of the artisan, 
 or the gathered treasures of merchant princes. Kings furnished 
 neither men nor means, yet they claimed the lion's share of the 
 profits. Isabella is a noble exception to the parsimonious and 
 mercenary character of European rulers. Her wise and gen- 
 erous patronage of Columbus shines out, amid that night of 
 ignorance, like a solitary star through the rent clouds of a mid- 
 night storm. 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 THE RESULTS OF MODERN ENTERPRISE. 
 
 In the infancy of science, as in that of the church, " not many 
 wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, were 
 called." The inventors, discoverers and explorers of the world 
 have been found oftener among artisans and sailors than among 
 scientists and philosophers. Such were Watt and Arkwright, 
 Fulton and Stevenson, Franklin and Morse. Columbus, poor 
 and friendless, leading his little boy through the streets of Mad-, 
 rid, beseeching one monarch after another to become god- 
 father to the progeny of his teeming brain, and finally receiv- 
 ing, from the generous queen, a suit of clothes to render his
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 15 
 
 presentation at court possible, shows, very plainly, that the 
 kingdom of science, like the kingdom of Heaven, "cometh 
 not with observation. " " Genius finds or makes a way. " The 
 eloquence of the veteran sailor won the ear of royalty, and a 
 woman became the sole patroness of the most memorable mari- 
 time enterprise in the history of the world. A continent was 
 discovered. But the main land was not first reached by Col- 
 umbus. The American continent was discovered by English 
 merchants. The parsimonious Henry VII. gave a patent to 
 John Cabot, a Venetian merchant living at Bristol, empower- 
 ing him and his three sons to sail into the Eastern, Western or 
 Northern sea, with five ships, at their own expense, to search for 
 new lands and undiscovered treasures. The avaricious king, 
 who contributed nothing but his sign manual to their commis- 
 sion, required these private adventurers to pay into his exchequer 
 one fifth of all their profits. Such kings deserve to be remem- 
 bered as examples of unmitigated selfishness. The Cabots 
 reached the continent nearly fourteen months before Columbus 
 on his third voyage touched upon the main land. A new patent 
 was issued, in 1498, to John Cabot, less favorable to the explorer 
 than the former ; and " the frugal king was himself a partner in 
 the enterprise. " Sebastian Cabot, one of the bravest, noblest 
 and purest of England's sons, explored the whole northern coast 
 of America from Albemarle Sound to Hudson's Bay, in latitude 
 67 30 north. The ocean was his home. He followed the seas 
 for half a century, and in extreme old age was so fond of his 
 profession that his last wandering ' thoughts and words revealed 
 his ruling passion. The fame of these first explorers of the New 
 World kindled a love of adventure in all the states of Western 
 Europe. The great monarchs of that age suspended, for a time, 
 their thoughts of war and indulged in dreams of avarice. They 
 were eager to occupy the lands, to work the mines and appropri- 
 ate the fruits of a continent which private enterprise had revealed. 
 They issued patents, commissioned captains and furnished ships 
 for new discoveries. Italians, Portuguese, Spaniards, French 
 and English swarmed in all the waters that wash the eastern 
 coast of North America. Like insects in the summer's sun, 
 
 "a thousand ways 
 
 Upward and downward, thwarting and convolv'd, 
 The quiv'ring nations sport. " 
 
 For a time, the fame of Columbus was eclipsed. Slanderous 
 tongues defamed his character, envious rivals wore his laurels, 
 cruel hands manacled his limbs, ungrateful sovereigns withheld 
 his reward, and an Italian adventurer gave his own name to the 
 new continent. Scarcely one of earth's great benefactors has 
 been more unkindly treated than Columbus. Death, which usu- 
 ally extinguishes envy, did not wholly silence rival claims. Old
 
 1 6 HISTORY OK 
 
 traditions have been revived to rob him of the originality of con- 
 ceiving as well as executing this great plan of discovery. From 
 very remote times there existed rumors of an unexplored land 
 beyond the pillars of Hercules. Greek and Roman writers made 
 frequent allusion to it. Plato, 400 B. c., speaks of an island 
 larger than Lybia and Asia, called Atlantis, far off in the ocean, 
 which was suddenly submerged by an earthquake. The Car- 
 thaginians and their ancestors, the Phoenicians, were the most 
 distinguished navigators of all antiquity. There can scarcely be 
 a doubt that the Phoenicians sailed round the Cape of Good 
 Hope ; but that abates not one tittle of the glory of Vasco de 
 Gama, who performed the same exploit more than two thousand 
 years later. Tradition also reports that Hanno, the Cartha- 
 ginian, sailed westward from the Pillars of Hercules for thirty 
 days in succession ; but, unfortunately, there is no existing record 
 of his voyage. The historian ^Elian, 200 B. c., contains an 
 extract from Theopompus, a writer in the time of Alexander the 
 Great, in which he alludes to a continent in the West, densely 
 populated and exceedingly fertile, with gold and silver in unlimi- 
 ted abundance. In a work ascribed to Aristotle similar allus- 
 ions are found. Seneca, the Roman philosopher, uttered a kind 
 of prophecy of its future discovery. He wrote : " The time will 
 come, in future ages, when the Ocean will loosen the chains of 
 nature and a mighty continent will be discovered. A new Tiphys 
 [or pilot] will reveal new worlds and Thule shall no longer be 
 the remotest of lands. " This was a happy conjecture which 
 time has confirmed. 
 
 The earlier traditions were chiefly composed of such stuff as 
 dreams are made of, and belong rather to the realms of imagin- 
 ation than history. The Northern nations of Europe, in the 
 dark ages, can furnish better claims to priority of discovery. 
 The Scandinavians, from their earliest history, were all seamen. 
 The Northmen were the terror of all Europe long before they 
 became its conquerors. The Saxons, Jutes and Angles, in their 
 native homes, were pirates. They came in ships to England in 
 the fifth century. Invited by the Celts as allies, they remained 
 as rulers. The Danes, some centuries later, imitated their ex- 
 amples, and for a time governed the island. Some eight or 
 nine hundred years ago, the Norwegians repeatedly visited 
 the American continent. This assertion, like every thing old, 
 is questioned ; yet the preponderance of evidence seems to con- 
 firm it. These old sea-kings visited and explored all the north- 
 ern shores, from Greenland to Rhode Island, and possibly still 
 farther south. They wintered, repeatedly, in a land which they 
 named Vinland, or wine land, from the abundance of grapes that 
 grew there. These were brave old vikings, who deserve a bet-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 17 
 
 ter name than that of pirates. That word, however, from its 
 etymology, may yet raise them to the rank of explorers. Ban- 
 croft rather discredits the Icelandic historian who claims this 
 discovery for his ancestors. He says : " The nation of intrepid 
 mariners, whose voyages extended beyond Iceland and beyond 
 Sicily, could easily have sailed from Greenland to Labrador ; no 
 clear historic evidence establishes the probability that they accom- 
 plished the passage. Imagination had conceived the idea that 
 vast uninhabited regions lay unexplored in the West ; and poets 
 had declared that empires beyond the ocean would one day be 
 revealed to the daring navigator. But Columbus deserves the 
 undivided glory of having realized that belief. " 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 THE ABORIGINES OF AMERICA. 
 
 The origin of the primitive inhabitants of the new world is 
 still an unsolved problem. No subject of human research has 
 been more fruitful in theories ; none less satisfactory in results. 
 Of all the divisions of our race, according to color, the red men 
 may claim a very early origin and a widely extended dominion. 
 They have flourished in Mongolia, Madagascar, China, Hindoo- 
 Stan, Egypt, Etruria and Palestine ; and with the inhabitants of 
 all these countries, the Indians, in their arts, customs and com- 
 parative anatomy, present stronger analogies than with the white 
 or black races. But with no one of them can they be identified. 
 Says Dr. Palfrey : "The symmetrical frame, the cinnamon color 
 of the skin, the long, black, coarse hair, the scant beard, the 
 high cheek bones, the depressed and square forehead set upon a 
 triangular conformation of the lower features, the small, deep- 
 set, shining, snaky eyes, the protuberant lips, the broad nose, the 
 small skull, with its feeble frontal development, make a combina- 
 tion which the scientific observer of some of these marks in the 
 skeleton, and the unlearned eye turned upon the living subject, 
 equally recognize as unlike what is seen in other regions of the 
 globe." Every science that throws light upon the origin and 
 affinities of races has been questioned, but the oracles are 
 dumb, or " palter with us in a double sense." We, to-day, know 
 no better whence they came than did the first explorers who 
 pronounced the natives "to be of tall stature, comely pro-
 
 l8 HISTORY OF 
 
 portion, strong, active, and, as it should seem, very healthful." 
 To them the Indians looked like earth-born aborigines, retaining 
 the solid structure and firmness of their kindred hills. There was 
 no sick, decrepit nor feeble person among them. Their war- 
 riors were brave, cunning and apparently invincible. 
 
 Their strength, beauty and valor were greatly exaggerated. 
 Upon further inquiry, it was found that none but the most robust 
 constitutions could survive the hardships to which their infancy 
 was exposed ; that a majority of every tribe died young ; that 
 the number of births among them hardly equaled that of the 
 deaths ; and that only the finest and healthiest specimens of the 
 race were preserved. The reason of the absence of diseased and 
 deformed persons arose from the fact that such were either borne 
 down by the hardships of savage life or left to die, unpitied and 
 alone. The same is true of those decrepit by age. They were 
 often exposed by their children and left to perish by starvation. 
 Of the sick, it has been aptly said : " Death was their doctor, 
 and the grave their hospital." Privation, imprudence and the 
 pestilence have often swept away whole tribes. More of the 
 aborigines of North America have probably fallen by disease 
 than by war. On the first arrival of the Pilgrims at Plymouth 
 the adjacent territory was literally desolated by an epidemic. 
 In profound peace they have often suffered most. Their indo- 
 lent and filthy habits induced disease. Their remedies were, for 
 the most part, mere charms and incantations ; and consequently 
 they " died like sheep." The Indians of our day know almost 
 nothing of vegetable remedies. They make use of amulets and 
 consecrated medicine-bags as curative agents ; and yet, civilized 
 men often have recourse to these savages to learn the healing 
 art' and, in their simplicity, acquire a knowledge of "simples." 
 Sometimes a veritable Indian doctor appears among us, with 
 more brass than copper in his face, and, by his gravity and so- 
 lemnity in consulting the astronomical signs, in watching the 
 " stellar influences," and in gathering herbs and balsams by 
 moonlight, imposes upon the unwary, and relieves his patients, 
 not of their diseases, but of their money. Their skill, speed, 
 strength, valor, wisdom and eloquence have all been greatly 
 over-estimated. The American Indians are capable of great ef- 
 forts, when strongly excited, and sometimes show respectable 
 reasoning powers ; but they are neither able to endure sustained 
 and continued labor of mind nor body. Their physical and 
 mental powers are undeveloped and weak. They are more re- 
 markable for agility than strength. They are fleet of foot for 
 limited journeys, and possess almost a canine sagacity of pursu- 
 ing game. When reduced to slavery, they droop and die. As 
 trained soldiers they are always inferior to the whites. They
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 19 
 
 succeed better in ambuscades and sudden onsets than in 
 pitched battles. 
 
 The aborigines, in their untutored state, possessed neither sci- 
 ence nor culture. In writing they never advanced beyond rude 
 pictorial inscriptions and hieroglyphics. Their implements were 
 made of stone ; their vessels of clay. Their languages abound 
 in metaphors and symbols. They multiply compounds and ex- 
 press a whole sentence in one long word ; hence, philologists de- 
 nominate their languages agglutinative or holophrastic. As in- 
 struments of thought, they are worthless. The Indians are nat- 
 urally stolid and taciturn, not eloquent. Lofty oratory is as rare 
 among them as exalted genius. Some of their speeches have 
 been preserved. They were mostly made at treaties, where the 
 red man, with subdued pride, yielded to the claims of the impe- 
 rious white man. Consequently they breathe a sorrowful spirit. 
 They are usually pathetic and touching, sometimes lofty and dig- 
 nified, often bold and magnanimous. They seldom discourse, 
 except on grave and momentous occasions, and then with evi- 
 dent preparation. 
 
 Their religion is peculiar. The tribes of North America have 
 no public worship. In this respect they differ from the Aztecs 
 of Mexico and Central America. They held, common assemblies 
 and reared public altars where their horrid rites were celebrated. 
 The religion of the northern tribes is chiefly private and particu- 
 lar ; each man entertaining his own superstitious notions respect- 
 ing his relations to his Deities. "The Indian god," says Mr. 
 Schoolcraft, " exists in a dualistic form ; there is a malign and a 
 benign type of him ; and there is a continual strife, in every pos- 
 sible form, between these two antagonistical powers, for the mas- 
 tery over the mind. Legions of subordinate spirits attend both. 
 Nature is replete with them. When the eye fails to recognize 
 them in material forms, they are revealed in dreams. Necro- 
 mancy and witchcraft are two of their ordinary powers." The 
 Great and Good Spirit, so much talked of by Indian admirers, as 
 corresponding to Jehovah of the Jews, seems to receive far less 
 notice from them than his malignant antagonist. The great ob- 
 ject of their worship is to propitiate or avert evil demons. They 
 literally pay divine honors to devils. All diseases are the work 
 of evil spirits ; hence incantations and exorcisms are among their 
 most potent remedies. They are fatalists with regard to their 
 own destiny. Every event is unalterably determined by fixed 
 laws ; hence they never blame their medicine men for failing to 
 make good their splendid promises. They believe in the im- 
 mortality of the soul. Departed spirits go to the islands of the 
 blest to be compensated for the evils suffered in this world. 
 Their mythology is a chaos of wild and incoherent fancies.
 
 20 HISTORY OF 
 
 Some portions of it have been gracefully illustrated by Mr. Long- 
 fellow, in that unique poem entitled " Hiawatha." 
 
 Their manners and customs have been graphically portrayed 
 by Mr. Cooper in " The Last of the Mohicans." Their virtues 
 have been eulogized by Mr. Catlin, who visited forty-five tribes 
 for the purpose of painting the portraits of their chiefs. He 
 says : " In all these little communities, strange as it may seem, 
 in the absence of all jurisprudence, I have often beheld peace, 
 happiness and quietness reigning supreme, for which even kings 
 and emperors might envy them. I have seen rights and virtues 
 protected and wrongs redressed. I have seen canjugal, filial 
 and paternal affection, in the simplicity and contentedness of 
 nature." His picture is painted in bright and glowing colors. 
 While reading his honest praise, we for the moment feel inclined 
 to adopt the reasoning of Rousseau and denounce civilized life 
 as a state of degradation and long for the return of that age of 
 primeval innocence when 
 
 " Wild in the woods, the noble savage ran." 
 
 Catlin's climax of Indian woes is thus stated : " White men, 
 whiskey, tomahawks, scalping knives, guns, powder and ball, 
 small-pox, debauchery, extermination." There is a dark side to 
 this picture, which the early settlers of New England saw to 
 their sorrow. They tried to live peaceably with the Indians and 
 could not. The apostle anciently prayed to be delivered from 
 "unreasonable and wicked men." Such were the savages of 
 New England, when the Puritans first set foot upon its shores. 
 The Indians of our day have, undoubtedly, been cheated by pol- 
 iticians, robbed by speculators and demoralized by adventurers. 
 The strong have deceived and oppressed the weak ; the crafty 
 have cheated the simple ; the Christian has corrupted the sav- 
 age ; and the words in which Bryant has expressed the lament 
 of an Indian chief are fearfully true : 
 
 "They waste us ay like April snow, 
 In the warm noon, we shrink away ; 
 And fast they follow, as we go 
 Towards the setting day, 
 Till they shall fill the land and we 
 Are driven to the western sea." 
 
 But there is no propriety in imputing modern vices and crimes 
 to our ancestors. The Massachusetts colonists sincerely sought 
 to civilize and christianize the red man. In a few years more 
 than four thousand praying Indians were gathered into churches 
 by Eliot and Mahew ; but, true to their natural instincts, when 
 war came they joined the enemies of the colonists and were ex- 
 terminated. When, therefore, the Indian eulogist points to the 
 decaying and retreating tribes of the South and West and tri- 
 umphantly asks : " Where are the Indians of New England ? " I
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 21 
 
 answer, with all confidence, Extinct by the Providence of God 
 through improvidence and crime their own executioners ! 
 
 New Hampshire, during colonial times, was possessed by as 
 many as twelve different tribes of Indians, taking their names 
 from some local peculiarity of the lands or streams where they 
 had their homes. Many of these names remain to this day, like 
 the old Celtic names in England, and mark the abodes of the 
 primitive inhabitants, while not a solitary descendant of theirs 
 lives within the limits of the state. Nashua, Souhegan, Amos- 
 keak, Swamscott, Merrimack, Winnipiseogee and Ossipee are of 
 Indian origin. The meaning of these names has been variously 
 given by different philologists. Such etymologies can rarely be 
 trusted. When foreigners first began to write Indian words as 
 they heard them from the savages, it was difficult to determine 
 their true sounds. It was rare for two authors to represent the 
 same name by the same letters. Winnipiseogee, it is said, has 
 been spelled in forty different ways. A few Indian names of 
 rivers and mountains have, probably, been rightly interpreted. 
 These enduring names are the only memorials the red men have 
 left upon the physical features of the state. 
 
 Mr. Hubert Hare Bancroft, of San Francisco, is preparing an 
 elaborate work on " The native Races of the Pacific States of 
 North America." The first volume, an octavo of 797 pages, 
 treats of the wild Indians alone. Of these he enumerates six 
 great families and more than seven hundred tribes, living in pre- 
 historic times, west of the Rocky Mountains. His purpose is 
 to delineate the character of the various races of aborigines 
 from the Arctic ocean to the Caribbean sea. His library of In- 
 dian lore amounts to about eighteen thousand volumes. As 
 these books all belong to modern times, it is doubtful whether 
 the collation of them will satisfactorily answer these great ques- 
 tions : Are the natives of America of one race ? Are they a 
 degraded people, or do they occupy now their highest plane of 
 development? Did they build those mighty structures whose 
 ruins exist to-day in Central America and Mexico ? If the red 
 men of the North were a distinct race, did they belong to the 
 stone or bronze age ? Mr. Bancroft will, undoubtedly, throw 
 great light upon the habits, customs and mythology of the abor- 
 igines of our country ; but no research of his, no critical sagac- 
 ity, can tell us whence they came or what was their primitive 
 condition. He evidently joins the ranks of Indian advocates. 
 He says : " Left alone, the natives of America might have un- 
 folded into as bright a civilization as that of Europe." All his- 
 tory teaches a different lesson. Savages do not rise by their 
 unaided efforts. Mr. Parkman, commenting upon Mr. Bancroft's 
 conclusions respecting the proper mode of dealing with our
 
 22 HISTORY OF 
 
 Indian tribes, who now number about three hundred thousand 
 souls, says : 
 
 "A word touching our recent Indian policy. To suppose that presents, 
 blandishments and kind treatment, even when not counteracted by the fraud 
 and lawlessness of white men, can restrain these banditti from molesting 
 travelers and settlers is a mistake. Robbery and murder have become to 
 them a second nature, and, as just stated, a means of living. The chief ene- 
 mies of peace in the Indian country are the philanthropist, the politician and 
 the border ruffian ; that is to say, the combination of soft words with rascal- 
 ity and violence. An Apache, a Comanche, or an Arapahoe neither respects 
 nor comprehends assurances of fraternal love. In most cases he takes them 
 as evidence of fear. The Government whose emissaries caress him and 
 preach to him, whose officials cheat him, and whose subjects murder him, is 
 not likely to soothe him into ways of peace. The man best fitted to deal 
 with Indians of hostile dispositions is an honest, judicious and determined 
 soldier. To protect them from ruffians worse than themselves, strictly to ob- 
 serve every engagement, to avoid verbiage, and speak on occasion with a de- 
 cisive clearness, absolutely free from sentimentality, to leave no promise and 
 no threat unfulfilled, to visit every breach of peace with a punishment as 
 prompt as circumstances will permit, to dispense with courts and juries and 
 substitute a summary justice, and to keep speculators and adventurers from 
 abusing them such means as these on the one hand, or extermination on the 
 other, will alone keep such tribes as the Apaches quiet. They need an officer 
 equally just and vigorous; and our regular army can furnish such. They 
 need an army more numerous than we have at present ; and as its business 
 would be to restrain white men no less than Indians, they need in the execu- 
 tive a courage to which democracy and the newspaper sensation-monger are 
 wofully averse. Firmness, consistency and justice are indispensable in deal- 
 ing with dangerous Indians, and so far as we fail to supply them we shall fail 
 of success. Attempts at conciliation will be worse than useless, unless there 
 is proof, manifest to their savage understanding, that such attempts do not 
 proceed from weakness or fear." 
 
 CHAPTER VI. 
 
 TITLE TO THE SOIL. 
 
 The right of property, in a new country, is based on discov- 
 ery, conquest or occupation. If occupation gives the best title, 
 the Indians certainly owned this continent ; for they possessed 
 it, from the frozen north to Patagonia. In a country previously 
 unexplored, cultivation would seem to be good evidence of own- 
 ership. It is a dictate of justice that any man may appropriate 
 and till so much of nature's wilderness as is necessary for his 
 support. " Moreover, the profit of the earth is for all : the king 
 himself is served by the field," says the wise man. The Indians 
 possessed, by metes and bounds, only a few acres of the entire
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 23 
 
 continent. It would not seem reasonable that God designed 
 that one half the earth should remain a wilderness ; and that 
 every roving hunter should hold a park of his own, and retain 
 it for his sole use, when the rest of the world was crowded with 
 inhabitants. Is it in accordance with natural justice, that a sin- 
 gle lordly savage should roam over thousands of acres, while 
 hundreds of other men, better than himself, were suffering for 
 food ? Were the wild beasts his as well as their lairs and feed- 
 ing grounds ? Had no stranger a right of warren in these pri- 
 meval forests ? Was the red man the sole proprietor of the soil 
 and of the game that fed upon it ? He was first there, and ac- 
 cording to the law of nations owned it by discovery. He had 
 the best title to that portion of the territory which he had culti- 
 vated that political philosophy ever devised. Possibly, if the 
 history of the aborigines could be recovered, he owned it by 
 conquest, for the mounds and remains of art testify to an earlier 
 occupation of the country than that of the red men. Accord- 
 ing to that body of rules made by the strong for the weak, called 
 International Law, the Indian was the rightful owner of the soil ; 
 but his title, being only vague and presumptive when tested by 
 natural justice, could be easily vacated by purchase or conquest. 
 The New England colonists did generally purchase their lands 
 from the Indians. They paid but small sums and in articles of 
 little value to themselves, yet the Indians prized them highly ; 
 and they alone had a right to judge of the worth of their terri- 
 tory and of the price of the goods given in exchange for it. 
 They sold willingly and received the pay with joy. The settlers 
 of New Hampshire were perhaps less careful than others to ex- 
 tinguish the Indian claim, because chartered companies and 
 royal proprietors assumed the ownership of the soil. And here 
 we may ask, what right had European monarchs to grant lands 
 more extensive than their own kingdoms ? King James I. of 
 England gave away territories ten times larger than his own lit- 
 tle realm, on the plea that English navigators had visited the 
 shores of the new world and thus acquired, by discovery, a title, 
 not only to all the coast but to all the land that lay behind it, 
 even to the Pacific Ocean. His charters extended from sea to 
 sea and from " the river to the ends of the earth." Human gov- 
 ernments are said to be of divine origin, because justice, reason, 
 conscience and inspiration all unite to enforce obedience to 
 them ; but neither justice vindicates, nor reason demonstrates, 
 nor conscience approves, nor scripture confirms a title to new 
 territory because it has fallen under the eye of an exploring nav- 
 igator or been marked by the foot-prints of an invading army. 
 But the public good seemed to require some rules called laws, 
 expressly or tacitly approved by the nations of Christendom, to
 
 24 HISTORY OF 
 
 regulate the conduct of explorers ; and this international code 
 was usually dictated by the strongest. So the world has ever 
 been governed ; for there is not a kingdom or state on earth that 
 is not based on conquest ; not a rood of land occupied by man 
 that was not wrested from previous owners by force. " I have 
 observed," said the infidel Frederick the Great, " that Provi- 
 dence always favors the strong battalions." 
 
 CHAPTER VII. 
 
 ENGLISH CHARTERED COMPANIES. 
 
 " A belt of twelve degrees on the American coast, embracing 
 the soil from Cape Fear to Halifax, except perhaps a little spot 
 then actually possessed by the French called Acadia, was set 
 apart by James I. in 1606, to be colonized by two rival compa- 
 nies." He divided this territory into two nearly equal parts ; 
 the one, called North Virginia, extending from the forty-first to 
 the forty-fifth degree of north latitude ; the other, named South 
 Virginia, from the thirty-fourth to the thirty-eighth degree. The 
 district lying between these limits was open to both companies ; 
 but neither was allowed to make settlements within one hundred 
 miles of the other. The northern portion was granted to a 
 company of " knights, gentlemen and merchants " from the west 
 of England called "the Plymouth Company;" the southern half 
 to a company of " noblemen, gentlemen and merchants," mostly 
 residing in the Capital and called "the London Company." 
 The king was the sole governor of these immense territories, 
 because he retained in his own hands the appointment of all 
 officers both at home and abroad. He also, like a feudal lord, 
 exacted homage and rent. One-fifth of all the precious metals 
 and one-fifteenth of copper were to be returned to the royal 
 treasury. So this English Solomon, who was called, by Sully 
 " the wisest fool in Christendom," granted lands to which he had 
 no title and exacted rents to which he had no claim. Not an 
 element of popular liberty was introduced into these charters ; 
 the colonists were not recognized at all as a source of political 
 power ; they were at the mercy of a double-headed tyranny com- 
 posed of the king and his advisers, the Council and their agents. 
 But liberty, like hope in Pandora's box, lay at the bottom. The 
 Council of Plymouth received a new charter dated November 3,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 25 
 
 1620, granting all the lands between the fortieth and forty-eighth 
 degree of North latitude, and from sea to sea. This territory 
 was called " New England in America." The Council held this 
 immense area " as absolute property, with unlimited jurisdiction 
 and the sole power of legislation." 
 
 CHAPTER VIII. 
 
 COLONIES ANCIENT AND MODERN. 
 
 It was a beautiful custom of the Greeks to send from home 
 their young adventurers, with a public consecration, under the 
 guardianship of their tutelary divinities. The colonists departed 
 as the children, not as the subjects, of the state. Their political 
 relations at home were exchanged for those of filial affection 
 and religious reverence abroad. They owed to their native land 
 nothing but patriotism and allegiance. In their new homes they 
 built temples and dedicated them to the gods their fathers wor- 
 shiped, and honored them with ancestral rights. Priests from 
 the metropolis ministered at the new altars. The sacred fire, 
 that was kept constantly burning on the sacred hearth of the 
 colony, was taken from the altar of Vesta in the Council Hall of 
 their old home. The colonies often surpassed the parent state 
 in wealth and commerce ; and thus the mother received both 
 honor and profit from the child. The colonial system of the 
 Greek republics was, in every instance, a sort of family com- 
 pact, limited in its scope and national in its purpose. Their 
 motives were too low, their views too contracted, for the promo- 
 tion of universal civilization. They did not emigrate, like our 
 ancestors, to secure civil liberty or to enjoy religious freedom. 
 There was nothing in the religion or culture of that age to in- 
 spire high purposes or to create the energy necessary for their 
 execution. 
 
 The colonies of Rome were purely military. Their sole ob- 
 jects were power and dominion. Emigrants from Rome, se- 
 lected by the government and forced from home, settled in the 
 conquered provinces and governed them by force, exacting men 
 for Roman armies and tribute for the Roman treasury. Extor- 
 tion and rapacity followed in the train of conquering armies, and 
 the provinces were often depleted and exhausted by Republican 
 and Imperial indictions. Taxation and slavery ruined the coun-
 
 2 6 HISTORY OF 
 
 try ; and the heart of the metropolis beat more faintly as the 
 extremities grew weaker. The colonies lived with the mother, 
 flourished and fell with her. They were mere instruments of 
 power, not agents of progress. 
 
 The dark ages had no colonies. It was the business of the 
 lord to fight, of the serf to toil. There was no surplus popula- 
 tion. War devoured the people and their substance, and there 
 was no cogent reason for emigration. All known countries were 
 alike ; and, until free cities arose, liberty had no home in Eu- 
 rope. After those causes which have already been enumerated 
 had operated to awaken the public mind and stimulate enter- 
 prise, modern colonies began to be formed. The Spaniards took 
 the lead in the planting of colonies upon the newly discovered 
 continent and islands. The West India settlements were made 
 by them, for the investment of capital in large estates, to be cul- 
 tivated by slaves. The owners seldom occupied the soil they 
 cultivated ; and they did not feel at home on their own planta- 
 tions. Like the Irish absentee land-owners, they lived in luxury 
 at the capital or in foreign lands, and extorted the means of 
 their enjoyment from their poor dependants by means of mid- 
 dle-men or overseers. This fact accounts even for the present 
 depressed condition of the West Indies. In Mexico and South 
 America, they sought chiefly for the precious metals, and when 
 mining became unprofitable their colonies declined. 
 
 The French colonies on this continent have never been very 
 flourishing. They have increased in numbers and remained sta- 
 tionary in culture. This is due partly to the influence of race, 
 but still more to that of religion. The French population con- 
 stitutes to-day the majority in Lower Canada. They are an ig- 
 norant, bigoted and priest-ridden people, opposed to progress, 
 material, moral and intellectual. They are averse to change in 
 laws, customs and the processes of labor, even when it would be 
 manifestly for their good. Their chief interest is in the church ; 
 and education and legislation must yield to its dictation. This 
 principle is the corner-stone of the papacy. Pius IX., the so- 
 called Vicar of Christ upon earth, in his recent Encyclical letter, 
 writes : 
 
 " Neither must we neglect to teach that royal power is given to some men 
 not only for the government of the world, but, above all, for the protection 
 of the church ; and that nothing can be more advantageous or more glorious 
 for kings and governors than to conform themselves to the words which our 
 most wise and courageous predecessor, Saint Felix, wrote to the Emperor 
 Zeno, ' to leave the church to govern herself with her own laws, and to allow 
 no one to put any obstacle in the way of her liberty ! ' In fact, it is certain 
 that it is for their interest, whenever they are concerned with matters relat- 
 ing to God, scrupulously to follow the order which he has prescribed, and 
 not to prefer but to subordinate the royal will to that of the priests of 
 Christ."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 2J 
 
 The New England colonies differed, in origin, purpose and re- 
 sults, from those of all other nations ancient and modern. The 
 Pilgrims came to this country to make a permanent home. The 
 motives that prompted their emigration were religious rather 
 than secular. Not gain but godliness drove them into the wil- 
 derness. In the words of the noblest orator among their de- 
 scendants, " A new existence awaited them here ; and when they 
 saw these shores, rough, cold, barbarous and barren, as they then 
 were, they beheld their country. That mixed and strong feeling 
 which we call love of country, and which is in general never ex- 
 tinguished in the heart of man, grasped and embraced its proper 
 object here. Whatever constitutes country, except the earth and 
 the sun, all the moral causes of affection and attachment which 
 operate upon the heart, they brought with them to their new 
 abode." 
 
 The New England colonies were chiefly devoted to the culti- 
 vation of the soil. This is the true secret of their unparalleled 
 success ; for agriculture is the oldest of all arts, the parent of 
 all civilization and the support of all permanent prosperity. 
 The Creator ordained it in the beginning as the chief occupa- 
 tion of man. Commerce and manufactures are its legitimate 
 offspring. These elements of national greatness are the natural 
 fruits of colonial industry. They have made the American peo- 
 ple invincible; for "a threefold cord is not easily broken." 
 
 CHAPTER IX. 
 
 EARLY EXPLORERS OF THE NEW ENGLAND COAST. 
 
 After the voyages of the Cabots, above described, the Por- 
 tuguese Caspar Cortereal, A. D. 1500, and the Florentine Ver- 
 razzano, A. D. 1524, in the employment of the French visited the 
 same coasts. Thus was laid the foundation of a future quarrel 
 respecting the title to these territories. In 1602, Bartholomew 
 Gosnold, a bold adventurer from England, who had previously 
 been a companion of Sir Walter Raleigh in his attempts to col- 
 onize Virginia, sailed across the Atlantic in a small bark, and 
 in seven weeks reached the continent near Nahant. He dis- 
 covered Cape Cod and, with four men, landed upon it. This 
 Cape was the first land in New England ever trod by the feet of 
 men from old England. Gosnold planned a colony, but it failed.
 
 28 HISTORY OF 
 
 The French now became dangerous rivals of the English in ex- 
 ploring these territories ; consequently a new love of adventure 
 sprung up in our fatherland. Merchants of Bristol raised one 
 thousand pounds and sent out two small vessels under the com- 
 mand of Martin Pring, or Prynne, in April, 1603. Pring visited 
 the coast of Maine and examined the mouths of the Saco, Ken- 
 nebunk and York rivers. He also visited the Piscataqua, being 
 the first navigator who approached the territory of New Hamp- 
 shire. He saw "goodly groves and woods and sundry sorts of 
 beasts, but no people." In his first voyage he commanded the 
 Speedwell, a ship of fifty tons and thirty men, and the Discoverer, 
 a bark of twenty-six tons and thirteen men. This visit was in 
 June, and the wilderness was robed in its best attire. They 
 explored the Piscataqua for twelve miles but concluded " to pierce 
 not far into the land. " Pring made a second voyage, and explor- 
 ed more accurately the coast of Maine. 
 
 In 1605, some English noblemen sent out George Weymouth 
 on an expedition of discovery. He visited the coast of Maine 
 also, and decoyed on board five of the natives, whom he carried 
 to England. Three of these Indians he gave to Sir Ferdinando 
 Gorges, then governor of Plymouth. Gorges took them to his 
 house and educated them, " for three full years, " that he might 
 learn from them the history of their native land. Sir John Pop- 
 ham, Chief Justice of the King's Bench, united with Gorges 
 in fitting out a new expedition. In May, 1607, two ships sailed 
 from Plymouth, with two of these Indians on board as guides and 
 interpreters. They planted a colony whose brief history is more 
 fully set forth in the next chapter. They named their first fort 
 St. George. The celebrated French explorer, Champlain, is said 
 to have visited the harbor of Piscataqua in July, 1605, and to 
 have discovered the Isles of Shoals. He landed upon the shores 
 of the river, probably at Odiorne's Point, which he called " Cape 
 of Islands," and made presents to some savages whom he found 
 there. If this report be authentic, he probably was the first 
 white man who set foot upon the soil of New Hampshire ; for we 
 have no evidence that Pring, in 1603, left his ship for the land. 
 
 The next adventurer that appears in the field of historical vis- 
 ion, on the shores of New England, is the famous John Smith, 
 whose whole biography surpasses the creations of the imagina- 
 tion. He was from 1606 to 1615 the most illustrious of Ameri- 
 can explorers. He claims, justly perhaps, "to have brought 
 New England to the subjection of Great Britain. " In 1614 he 
 examined the coast from Penobscot to Cape Cod and made a 
 map of the adjacent country, which he presented to Prince 
 Charles, who adopted the name which Smith had given to it, 
 and it was called " New England. " On this voyage he visited
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 29 
 
 the mouth of the Piscataqua and described it as " a safe harbor 
 and a rocky shore." Pring, as above related, entered the same 
 river in 1603 ; but the greater fame of Smith gave more im- 
 portance to his description and excited new interest in the lands 
 he visited. Several years, however, elapsed before other explor- 
 ers turned their prows to the same shores and entered the deep 
 waters of the Piscataqua. Smith also discovered the Isles of 
 Shoals and named them " Smith's Isles. " This name ought to 
 have been retained. The substitution of another robs the dis- 
 coverer of his true glory and, as in the case of Columbus, gives 
 to a subaltern the honor of the leader. 
 
 Capt. John Smith, himself the noblest of adventurers, says 
 in his description of New England : 
 
 "Who would live at home idly, or think in himself any worth only to eat, 
 drink and sleep, and so die ? or by consuming that carelessly his friends got 
 worthily I or by using that miserably that maintained virtue honestly ? or, for 
 being descended nobly, pine with the vain vaunt of great kindred, in penury ? 
 or (to maintain a silly show of bravery) toil out thy heart, soul and time 
 basely, by shifts, tricks, cards and dice ? or by relating news of others' actions 
 shark here and there for a dinner or a supper, deceive thy friends by fair 
 promises and dissimulation in borrowing where thou never intendest to pay, 
 offend the laws, surfeit with excess, burden thy country, abuse thyself, despair 
 in want and then cozen thy kindred, yea, even thine own brother, and wish thy 
 parents' death ( I will not say damnation) to have their estates ? though thou 
 seest what honors and rewards the world yet hath for those who will seek 
 them and worthily deserve them. " 
 
 CHAPTER X. 
 
 PROPRIETORS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 In every nation, community and tribe are found men of action 
 and men of reflection, adventurers and quiet stayers-at-home. 
 Those who emigrate explore new countries and subdue them, 
 found new states and govern them. Such men are usually pro- 
 gressive. Among them have been found the heroes, law-givers, 
 inventors and discoverers of the world. The passive members of 
 the household or state, who prefer to " abide by the stuff, " repair 
 and adorn the old homesteads, till their "natal soil " and live on 
 its fruits, promote the arts of peace and accumulate wealth. Both 
 classes are necessary to the highest civilization. The discovery 
 of a new continent stirred the ocean of life, through all Christen- 
 dom, to its very depths. All classes were seized with the ** ac- 
 cursed hunger of gold. " Kings and nobles were moved by
 
 30 HISTORY OF 
 
 ambition as well as avarice. In England, merchants, traders, 
 factors and adventurers sought to found families and acquire 
 landed estates. Even the pauper and criminal classes were 
 swept into the great western tide. Like David of old, each 
 leader had his retainers. " Every one that was in distress, 
 and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discon- 
 tented, gathered themselves unto him, and he became captain 
 over them." 
 
 Sir Humphrey Gilbert first attempted the colonization of Amer- 
 ica, but failed to make a permanent settlement. Sir Walter Ra- 
 leigh and Sir Richard Grenville were likewise unsuccessful. Sir 
 Ferdinando Gorges is by many regarded as "the Father of 
 English Colonization in America. " The voyages of Gosnold in 
 1602, of Pring in 1603, and of Weymouth in 1605, were under 
 the guidance and patronage of Gorges. As early as 1606, 
 through his influence a charter was obtained of King James, 
 under whose authority he planted a colony at the mouth of the 
 Sagadahoc, now Kennebec, of which George Popham, brother 
 of the Chief Justice of England, was president. It was named 
 Popham in honor of the chief justice, who with Gorges was 
 greatly instrumental in procuring the charter, though their own 
 names did not appear in it. Two ships and one hundred and 
 twenty men sailed from Old Plymouth, England, May 31, 1607, 
 O. S., to plant a colony on the coast of Maine. The charter 
 under which these planters acted gave to them " the continent 
 of North America, from the thirty-fourth to the forty-fifth degree 
 of north latitude, extending one hundred miles into the main 
 land, and including all islands of the sea within one hundred 
 miles of the shore. " 
 
 Gorges and the Earl of South Hampton petitioned for the 
 charter. It was granted to " the Council of Virginia." No copy 
 remains. This charter took precedence of all others. This col- 
 ony failed, the governor died within a year of his landing, and 
 the colonists returned to England in 1608, in a ship of their own 
 building, the first ship built on this continent. This colony, so 
 brief in duration, was of great importance to England, because 
 it gave to the government the plea of title by occupancy prior 
 to the French. Gorges says : " The planting of colonies in 
 America was undertaken for the advancement of religion, the 
 enlargement of the bounds of our nation and the employment 
 of many thousands of all sorts of people." It is doubted to 
 this day, whether profit or piety, gain or godliness, was the 
 stronger motive in Gorges. Mr. Poor, his eulogist, gives him the 
 credit of planting Plymouth. He obtained a charter for the 
 Pilgrims November 3, 1620. They sailed under the Virginia 
 charter, and Gorges sent the new one to them. Ferdinando
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 31 
 
 Gorges and John Mason were active members of the Council of 
 Plymouth. Gorges was a man of superior intellect and daunt- 
 less courage. During the reign of Elizabeth he was associated 
 with Raleigh, the scholar, statesman, warrior and "flower of 
 courtesy," in his attempts at colonizing Virginia. He was also 
 the friend of Essex, who was first the object of the queen's 
 love, then the victim of her rage. Gorges was involved in some 
 of the illegal plots of Essex and, like Bacon, whom Pope calls 
 
 "The wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind," 
 
 became the accuser of his benefactor and thus lost favor with the 
 people. In 1604 he was made Governor of Plymouth, in Eng- 
 land. Here his restless spirit chafed in confinement. He hid 
 his eye constantly fixed on the New World. Through his agency 
 John Smith was employed, by the Council of Plymouth, to ex- 
 plore New England. Gorges also fitted out an expedition of 
 his own, "under color of fishing and trade," commanded by 
 Richard Vines, in 1616, to gain more accurate knowledge of the 
 country and its inhabitants. "This course," says Gorges, "I 
 held some years together, but nothing to my private profit ; for 
 what I got in one way I spent in another, so that I began to 
 grow weary of that business, as not for my turn till better times." 
 Into these few lines is crowded the history of many noble 
 enterprises, planned by wise heads and executed by brave 
 hearts, which yielded no profit to the originators but greatly en- 
 riched posterity. 
 
 While Gorges was becoming despondent, under repeated 
 losses, he became acquainted with Captain John Mason, who 
 had been Governor of Newfoundland, who was also "a man 
 of action " and a kindred spirit. The union of these leaders 
 kindled new enthusiasm. They immediately sought and obtained 
 a grant of land in New England, to be the basis of their pro- 
 spective nobility. Copies of several charters still exist, differ- 
 ing in dates and origin, both from the king and Council of Ply- 
 mouth, covering territory which included a large portion of New 
 Hampshire as it is now bounded. Dr. Belknap quotes one 
 which granted " all the land from the river Naumkeag, now 
 Salem, round Cape Ann, to the river Merrimack ; and up each 
 of those rivers to the farthest head thereof ; then to cross over 
 from the head of the one to the head of the other, with all the 
 islands lying within three miles of the coast." This grant shows 
 the profound ignorance of the geography of the country, both of 
 grantors and grantees. They doubtless thought that the Naum- 
 keag had its origin far in the interior of the country, and that 
 the Merrimack through its whole course flowed eastward. The 
 territory thus granted was called MARIANA, probably meaning 
 the sea-board. The usual mode of describing territory in those
 
 32 HISTORY OF 
 
 charters was to make the coast between the mouths of two riv- 
 ers the southern boundery, then follow up those rivers sixty 
 miles for the eastern and western boundaries, then unite these 
 two points in the rivers by a straight line to complete the de- 
 scription. So " the Province of Maine " was granted by King 
 James to Gorges and Mason, on the tenth of August, 1622, 
 bounded by the rivers Sagadahoc, now Kennebec, and the 
 Merrimack. A patent from the Council of Plymouth, of the same 
 date, covering the same territory, is said to be in existence. Mr. 
 Palfrey says : " In the same year [1622] the Council granted to 
 Gorges and Mason the country bounded by the Merrimack, the 
 Kennebec, the ocean and the river of Canada, and this territory 
 was called LACONIA." It was so named from the lakes lying 
 within these boundaries. By other historians it is said to extend 
 "back to the great lakes and the river of Canada." What lakes 
 are meant by this vague description it is imposible to say ; nor 
 can the limits of that grant be determined. The Council gave 
 what they never owned, set bounds which had never been seen, 
 fixed lines that had never been surveyed and laid the foundation 
 for countless quarrels in future years. Under such auspices the 
 colonization of New Hampshire commenced. 
 
 CHAPTER XI. 
 
 FIRST SETTLERS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 _Soon after the grant of Laconia was made to Mason and 
 Gorges, they united with themselves merchants from six of the 
 principal cities of England and formed the " Company of La- 
 conia." They resolved to plant a colony on the Piscataqua river 
 to mine, trade and fish there. In the Spring of 1623 they sent 
 over several persons, with provisions and tools of every descrip- 
 tion necessary to make a permanent home. The exact date of 
 their arrival can not be ascertained. " No glories blaze round 
 the bark of the earliest dwellers at Piscataquack." Even the 
 name of the captain of that "nameless bark" is lost. The 
 State of New Hampshire lives to prove his existence. Among 
 the first immigrants were David Thompson, a Scotchman, and 
 Edward and William Hilton, who had been fishmongers of Lon- 
 don. This company of settlers formed two divisions. Thomp- 
 soiTand his men made their home near the mouth of the westerly
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 33 
 
 branch of the Piscataqua, where "Little Harbor" opens into 
 " the great and wide sea." 
 
 (On Odiorne's Point, near " Little Uarbor, " the first framed 
 house erected in the state was builtTj^The first settlers were 
 sent by the Laconia Company, " to found a plantation on Pis- 
 cataqua river, to cultivate the vine, discover mines, carry on the 
 fisheries, and trade with the natives.'^] The house first built, un- 
 der the direction of David Thompson, was called " The Manor 
 House ; " afterward, " Mason Hall ." ' The cellar and well still 
 exist, to tell their own story. At the second Portsmouth cen- 
 tennial, in 1823, Mr. Haven said : 
 
 " Two hundred years ago, the place on which we stand was an uncultivated 
 forest. The rough and vigorous soil was still covered with stately trees, 
 which had bffen for ages intermingling their branches and deepening their 
 shade. The river, which now bears on its bright and pure waters the treas- 
 ures of distant climates, and whose rapid current is stemmed and vexed by 
 the arts and enterprise of man, then only rippled against the rocks and re- 
 flected back the wild and grotesque thickets which overhung its banks. The 
 mountain, which now swells on our left and raises its verdant sides ' shade 
 above shade,' was then almost concealed by the lofty growth which covered 
 the intervening plains. Behind us, a deep morass, extending across the 
 northern creek, almost enclosed the little ' Bank' which is now the seat of so 
 much life and industry." 
 
 From a beautiful poetic apostrophe to this, ancient stream, I 
 will quote a single stanza : 
 
 " Through how many rolling ages 
 
 Have thy waters, broad and free, 
 In their grandeur and their beauty, 
 
 Swept their current to the sea ! 
 Thou hast seen the tangled wildwood, 
 
 Where the lonely wigwam rose ; 
 Thou hast echoed the wild war-whoop 
 
 When red men met their foes! " 
 
 These noble words, with the voice of the "sounding sea," 
 which now rolls " such as creation saw her, " (for 
 
 " Time writes no wrinkles on her azure brow, ") 
 
 carry us back, not merely to the infancy of our republic, but to 
 the first "upheaval " of our continent. It is enough, however, to 
 stand where our ancestors first landed, and commenced the im- 
 proving labors of ages yet to come and generations yet unborn. 
 
 fin 1631, "the Great House" was built by Humphrey Chad- 
 bourne7( about three miles up the Piscataqua from " Mason 
 Hall." ""The ground was then covered with strawberries, which 
 circumstance, for thirty years, caused that territory on which the 
 compact part of the city is now built to be called " Strawberry 
 Bank." yThis house was also the property of John Mason. In 
 1646 it passed into the hands of Richard Cutt; and at his de- 
 cease, in 1676, it became the property of his brother, President 
 John Cult, who, in 1680, bequeathed it to his son Samuel. In 
 1685 it was in ruins. So fell "the Great House."! 
 
 3
 
 34 HISTORY OF 
 
 On the north side of Little Harbor still stands the house of 
 Benning Wentworth, who was for twenty-five years Governor of 
 the Royal Province of New Hampshire. It is a very irregular 
 old pile, apparently built in several parts, rising one above an- 
 other, or attached as L's to the original structure. There are in 
 the house several very valuable pictures, handed down as heir- 
 looms to the descendants of the first owner. There is a good 
 portrait of the Earl of Strafford, who was beheaded in the time 
 of Charles I. It is copied from an original painting by Van- 
 dyck. The face is a very striking one, showing the energy, de- 
 cision and severity characteristic of the man. He was one of 
 the " great men " of that century, though, unfortunately, the sup- 
 porter of an imbecile ,and treacherous king. There is also a 
 full-length likeness of [Richard Waldron, jr., the son of that 
 brave old man who at Dover was hacked to pieces by the In- 
 dian^ Mrs. Hancock, likewise, graces those old and crumbling 
 walls, with a face and figure as beautiful and graceful as Hebe. 
 ^ Mr. Brewster, in his " Rambles about Portsmouth," has given 
 us the best description extant of the early settlement of that 
 city. He writes as follows : 
 
 "A few rods southwest of the fort, at Odiorne's Point, they erected their 
 fish flakes, which gave the name of Flake Hill to the knoll. During the first 
 few years of the existence of the colony, the people suffered every hardship ; 
 and, not being acclimated, many of them were carried off by disease. The 
 graves of such are still to be seen, a few rods north of the site of the fort ; 
 and it is worthy of remark that the moss-covered cobble-stones at the head 
 and foot of the graves still remain as placed by mourners two hundred and 
 fifty years ago, while a walnut and a pear tree, each of immense size, and 
 possibly of equal age with our state, stand like sturdy sentinels, extending 
 their ancient arms over the sleepers below." 
 
 Odiorne's Point, where Thompson and his party settled, is a 
 peninsula, in the town of Rye. It is at all times nearly sur- 
 rounded by water, and in the highest tides actually becomes an 
 island. Here the colonists reared the first house and other 
 structures necessary for labor and defence. They manufactured 
 salt for the curing of fish, cultivated the land and traded with 
 the natives. 
 
 The Hiltons went up the Piscataqua eight miles, to a place 
 which they called "the Neck," a point of land formed by a 
 tributary entering the principal river. The land was then cov- 
 ered, to the water's edge, with dense forests, beneath whose 
 shades wild beasts had their lairs. The rivers abounded with 
 fish and fowls. Here the brothers resolved to make their home. 
 The place was called, successively, Hilton's Point, Cocheco, 
 Northam and Dover. 
 
 Thompson, the overseer of the settlement at Little Harbor, 
 became discontented ; and, in the Spring of 1624, removed to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 35 
 
 an island in Massachusetts Bay, which has ever since borne 
 his name. 
 
 These two plantations owe their existence to ardent enthu- 
 siasm, extravagant expectations, and liberal contributions of 
 Gorges and Mason. For several years they made little pro- 
 gress ; and the expense of maintaining them far exceeded the 
 income they yielded to the proprietors. 
 
 The new movement that was made in 1631, in the settlement 
 of " Strawberry Bank," advanced slowly ; and, after the lapse of 
 thirty years from the arrival of the first settlers in the Piscataqua, 
 Portsmouth contained only fifty or sixty families. The Indians 
 in the vicinity remained at peace for several years, and quietly 
 hunted the wild beasts of the woods, whose skins they bartered 
 with the settlers for such goods as they needed. In 1628 the 
 colonists were alarmed at meeting the natives, in the forest near 
 Dover, hunting with fire-arms. Upon inquiry, they learned that 
 they had been sold by Thomas Morton, who had gathered 
 around him a dissolute company of disorderly persons and out- 
 laws, at a place since called Braintree, but named by him "Merry 
 Mount." Morton was seized by the magistrates of Plymouth, 
 and sent a prisoner to England. Future generations were made 
 bitterly to rue the day when this heedless wretch first put fire- 
 arms into the hands of the savages, fit does not appear that 
 ^ Mason and Gorges made any effort to extinguish the title of the 
 natives to the lands they occupied. These roaming red men 
 were not supposed by them to have any rights which white men 
 were bound to fespectA Those who actually occupied the soil 
 thought differently. Hon. Charles Bell, in his semi-centennial 
 discourse before the New Hampshire Historical Society, says : 
 " There is abundant evidence still surviving to show that every 
 rood of land occupied by the white men, for a century after they 
 sat down at Piscataquack, was fairly purchased from the Indian 
 proprietors and honestly paid for." 
 
 [l_n 1638, a settlement was begun on Swamscot river, by a small 
 ^company of immigrants from Massachusetts, who had been ban- 
 ished on account of heresy. Religious opinions then controlled 
 politics and legislation^] The questions of creeds were then 
 more prominent than those of rights. It was oftener asked, What 
 shall I believe ? than, What shall I do ? 
 
 [The leader of these Massachusetts exiles, John Wheelwright, 
 was a man of superior endowments and high culture. He was 
 educated for the ministry, but adopted Puritan opinions ; hence 
 he emigrated to Boston, in 1636, three years after "the learned, 
 mild and catholic Cotton," who immediately became, according 
 to Puritan usage, a teacher in the church of which Mr. Wilson 
 was pastorT\ Mr. Wheelwright was at once made a freeman in
 
 36 HISTORY OF 
 
 the state, and a member of that Boston church which was styled 
 " the most glorious church in the world, both for their faith and 
 order and their eminent gifts of utterance and knowledge." It 
 was agreed that the occupants of Mount Wallaston, now Quincy, 
 which was deemed an appendage of Boston, should constitute 
 a separate church, and that Mr. Wheelwright should become 
 their pastor. 
 
 A new actor now appears upon the stage. (^In 1634, Mrs. Anne 
 Hutchinson, wife of William Hutchinson, came to Massachusetts 
 from Alford, near Boston, England. She was a woman of su- 
 perior endowments and held peculiar religious views) She says : 
 " After our teacher, Mr. Cotton, and my brother, Mr. 'Wheelwright, 
 were put down, there was none in England that I durst hear." 
 She therefore followed Mr. Cotton to America. Mr. Wheel- 
 wright soon followed her and became her disciple. Mrs. Hutch- 
 inson came in the very vessel which bore a copy of the royal 
 commission for calling in the charters of the colonies. At such 
 a time local divisions, for any cause, were dangerous. Win- 
 throp thus alludes to her, in his history: "One, Mrs. Hutch- 
 inson, a member of the church of Boston, a woman of ready wit 
 and bold spirit, brought over with her two dangerous errors ; ist, 
 that the person of the Holy Ghost dwells in a justified person ; 
 2d, that no sanctification can help to evidence to us our justifi- 
 cation. From these errors grew many branches ; as first, our 
 union with the Holy Ghost, so as a Christian remains dead to 
 every spiritual action, and hath no gifts nor graces, other than 
 such as are in hypocrites ; nor any other sanctification than the 
 -Holy Ghost himself." \_Thi s belief was called "AntinomianismTj 
 ^Mrs. Hutchinson soon formed a powerful party, who favored het^ 
 views. She became a bold and caustic critic of the clergy who 
 opposed .her views, and denounced them as under a " covenant 
 of works?^ She held assemblies twice a week, for a time, for 
 those of "her own sex, at which nearly a hundred hearers were in 
 attendance. Governor Vane adopted her views. All the mem- 
 bers of the Boston church, except five, became her followers. 
 Among these five were Mr. Wilson, the pastor, and Winthrop, 
 late governor of the colony. The country towns opposed her. 
 \The controversy became fierce ; friends were estranged and the 
 public peace endangered.) When Wilson, the pastor, rose to 
 speak, Mrs. Hutchinson and her partisans rose and walked out. 
 Mr. Cotton was the colleague of Wilson, and was the favorite of 
 the new zealots. An Indian war was impending ; and when a 
 force was ordered to take the field for the salvation of the settle- 
 ments, the Boston men refused to be mustered, because they 
 suspected the chaplain, who had been designated by lot to ac- 
 company the expedition, of being under "a covenant of works."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 37 
 
 The colony was reduced to a state bordering on anarchy, by 
 the eloquence and zeal of one factious woman. Every church, 
 in every town of Massachusetts, and the " Great and General 
 Court" were divided and distracted by the abstract questions 
 that grew out of this discussion. 
 
 "On the occasion of these dissentions in the churches," the 
 General Court proclaimed a fast. Mr. Wheelwright was ap- 
 pointed to preach the sermon. The excitement was increased. 
 The contending factions became more violent. \Mr. Wheelwright 
 was charged by his opponents with the heresy of "antinomianism" \ 
 A majority of the church were his partisans ; it would not, therff^ 
 fore, be for the public good that they should try the offender. 
 The elders and civil magistrates succeeding in bringing the ac- 
 cused before the General Court, it was decided that in case of 
 "manifest heresy, dangerous to the state," the Court could pro- 
 ceed without the previous action of the church. Mr. Wheel- 
 wright was arraigned, heard and adjudged guilty of sedition and 
 contempt. The Boston church petitioned, and this act was re- 
 garded as an insolent contempt of court, to be punished by dis- 
 f ranchisement and banishment. Next a synod of all the churches 
 was called to settle differences. They sat and condemned eighty- 
 two errors of opinion. How marvelous must have been the sub- 
 tlety of those divines to detect^o many heresies in " the most 
 glorious church in the world." \JThe Court felt obliged, on ac- 
 count of the public welfare, to disfranchise and banish Mr. 
 Wheelwright. Many of his friends shared his fate. Some re^. 
 moved to Rhode Island ; others followed their leader to Exeter. ! 
 Mrs. Hutchinson, the prime mover of this "constructive trea*" 
 son," of course was involved in th? general condemnation of her 
 tenets. She is called by one historian "the master-piece of 
 woman's wit ; " by another, a woman " of a bold and masculine 
 spirit ; " by another, " the American Jezebel." 
 
 It is not probable that, in a heated controversy like this, 
 the blame was entirely on one side. Gov. Winthrop and the 
 other fathers in church and state pleaded that unity of feeling 
 was at that time essential to their very existence. The king 
 stood ready to seize their charter, and no plea at court was 
 stronger than the existence of dissensions on matters of relig- 
 ion. The savages were conspiring for their destruction, and 
 divided counsels and divided forces would ensure their ruin. 
 Mr. Palfrey, himself a Unitarian clergyman and an eminent 
 politician, vindicates the conduct of the Puritans, on the ground 
 that the right of self-defence, in a government, is paramount to 
 all others ; and whe.n the State is imperiled, the rights of indiv- 
 iduals must be sacrificed. Mr. Bancroft leaves the reader to in- 
 fer that he disapproves of the measures of the Puritans with
 
 38 HISTORY OF 
 
 reference to Mrs. Hutchinson. He shows that her principles, 
 adopted in Rhode Island, there yielded " the peaceable fruits of 
 righteousness." She, in her new home, so won the hearts of the 
 young men to her views, and by her eloquence and pretended 
 inspiration so moulded the social and political life of the new 
 plantation, that, to the leaders in Massachusetts, it "gave cause 
 of suspicion of witchcraft." It may be doubted whether a more 
 eloquent, persistent and influential woman ever lived. On a 
 wider theatre she would have produced greater results ; in these 
 little colonies she was stronger than the clergy and came near 
 defeating the magistrates. 
 
 [Mr. Wheelwright and his exiled friends came to Exeter in 
 July, 1638.] They determined to make a permanent settlement 
 on the banks of the Swamscot ; accordingly they purchased the 
 land they wished to occupy of the Indian sagamores who then 
 possessed it. For two centuries there has been much discus- 
 sion about an earlier deed given to Mr. Wheelwright, dated May 
 17, 1629, by four Indian chiefs, then residents within the terri- 
 tory of the Laconia Company. Mr. James Savage, the best 
 authority in early American history that New England has pro- 
 duced, in his appendix to the first volume of Winthrop's History 
 of New England, has presented unanswerable arguments against 
 the genuineness and authenticity of the Wheelwright deed of 
 1629. Recently, Rev. Dr. Bouton, the State Historian of New 
 Hampshire, has proved beyond a doubt that deed to be a for- 
 gery. In his view, there is not one particle of evidence that Mr. 
 Wheelwright was then, or for several years after, either a visitor 
 or resident in this country. When Mr. Wheelwright came to 
 the Swamscot, in 1636, the Indians seemed to be the only per- 
 sons in the territory who could give any valid title to the soil. 
 Other eminent writers* have presented very able arguments in de- 
 fence of the deed. Cotton Mather, writing to George Vaughan, 
 Esq., in 1708, respecting the Indian deed to Wheelwright, says: 
 
 " All the wit of man cannot perceive the least symptom of a modern fraud 
 in your instrument. The gentleman whot litt upon it is as honest, upright 
 and pious a man as any in the world ; and would not do an ill thing to gain 
 a world. But the circumstances of the instrument itself, also, are such that 
 it could not be lately counterfeited. If it were a forgery, Mr. Wheelwright 
 himself must have been privy to it ; but he was a gentleman of the most un- 
 spotted morals imaginable; a man of most unblemished reputation. He 
 would sooner have undergone martyrdom than have given the least conniv- 
 ance to any forgery." 
 
 The fraud must have occurred after his death if at all. This 
 will relieve Mr. Wheelwright of all complicity with it. 
 
 There was then no representative of the grantor or grantee 
 upon the continent. The Council of Plymouth was dissolved ; 
 Mason, to whom they granted the territory, was dead, and his
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 39 
 
 heirs, being minors, did not for the next thirty years after his de- 
 cease renew their claim. The crown had no representative in 
 New England. Had this little handful of men been dropped 
 from the clouds, like rain, upon this wilderness, they could 
 scarcely have been more independent. They had no govern- 
 ment. For one year they were governed by a sense of natural 
 justice. ' If any form existed, it was a mere verbal agreement. 
 At the close of one year, on the 4th of July, 1639, they solemnly 
 subscribed a written instrument, which they called a " combina- 
 tion." This infant constitution is deeply imbued with Puritan- 
 ism. It shows religion still in the ascendency. As this agree- 
 ment of the settlers of Exeter was the first written constitution 
 in New Hampshire, it deserves to be copied entire. It is as 
 follows : 
 
 "WHEREAS it hath pleased the Lord to move the heart of our dread sov- 
 ereign Charles, by the grace of God king, &c., to grant licence libertye to 
 sundry of his subjects to plant themselves in the westerne parts of America, 
 We, his loyal subjects, brethren of the church in Exeter, situate and lying 
 upon the river Piscataqua, with other inhabitants there, considering with 
 ourselves the holy will of God and our necessity, that we should not live 
 without wholesom lawes and civil government among us, of which we are 
 altogether destitute ; do, in the name of Christ and the sight of God, com- 
 bine ourselves together to erect and set up among us, such government 
 as shall be, to our best discerning, agreeable to the will of God, professing 
 ourselves subjects to our sovereign lord King Charles, according to the lib- 
 ertyes of our English colony of Massachusetts, and binding ourselves sol- 
 emnly by the grace and help of Christ, and in his name and fear, to submit 
 ourselves to such godly and Christian lawes as are established in the realm 
 of England, to our best knowledge, and to all other such laws which shall, 
 upon good grounds, be made and enacted among us, according to God, that 
 we may live quietly and peaceably together, in all godliness and honesty. 
 Mo. 8. D. 4. 1639." 
 
 Under this organic law both rulers and subjects were bound 
 by the most solemn oaths which the English language could ex- 
 press, to discharge their respective duties with justice and fidel- 
 ity, in the fear of God. The very next year, Dover and Ports- 
 mouth made similar covenants ; and thus, within two years, three 
 constitutional governments were formed in the infant Republic 
 of New Hampshire.]
 
 40 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XII. 
 
 POLITICAL AND PECUNIARY CONDITION OF THE PLANTATION FROM 
 1631 TO 1641. 
 
 In 1629 Captain Mason procured a new patent from the 
 Council of Plymouth, including the large part of the territory 
 called Laconia, previously granted jointly to Mason and Gorges". 
 It is described as extending from " the middle of the Piscataqtra 
 up the same to the farthest head thereof, and from thence 
 northwestward until sixty miles from the mouth of the harbor 
 were finished ; also, through Merrimack river to the farthest 
 head thereof, and so forward up into the land westward until 
 sixty miles were finished ; and from thence to cross over land 
 to the end of sixty miles accounted from Piscataqua river, to- 
 gether with all islands within five leagues of the coast." It is 
 impossible to understand why this grant was made, nor to fol- 
 low, intelligibly, the metes and bounds affixed to it. It covers 
 less area than the preceding grant and gives no new privileges 
 to the grantee. Mason and Gorges are said to have divided 
 their former grant between themselves; Gorges taking the un- 
 occupied lands east of the Piscataqua, which he called Maine, 
 Qind Mason holding, under his new patent, the territory recently 
 granted, which he named New Hampshire, in honor of Hamp- 
 shire or Hants in England, which had been his old hornet] 1 The 
 settlers within the limits of Mason's patent also divided~mto 
 Upper and Lower Plantations and procured of the Council pa- 
 tents for their respective territories. To the west-country ad- 
 venturers was assigned " all that part of the river Piscataqua 
 called or known by the name of Hilton's Point,] with the south 
 side of said river up to the falls of Swamscot and three miles 
 into the main land for breadth." 
 
 [This grant was made to Edward Hilton. It included, within 
 itslimits, Dover, Durham, Stratham and a part of Newington and 
 Greenland?) The London adventurers, with similar prudence, se- 
 cured from the Council a grant "of that part of Laconia on 
 which the buildings and salt-works were erected, situated on 
 both sides of the river and harbor of Piscataqua, to the extent 
 of five miles westward by the sea-coast, then to cross over to- 
 wards the other plantation in the hands of Edward Hilton." 
 This vague description included Kittery, in Maine, and the 
 towns of Portsmouth, Newcastle, Rye, with a part of Newing- 
 ton and Greenland. Captain Thomas Wiggin was appointed 
 agent of the Upper Plantation, and Captain Walter Neal agent
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 41 
 
 of the Lower Plantation. About the same time, Humphrey 
 Chadbourne built " the Great House," as it was called, on the 
 bank of the main river, about three miles from its mouth. This 
 plantation had a saw-mill at Newichewannoc falls (now Ber- 
 wick) which Chadbourne, at a later period, managed for them. 
 The English proprietors of these lands sent over several cannon, 
 for the common defence, which their agents planted on Great 
 Island at the mouth of the harbor, on a high rock, about a bow- 
 shot from the shore. Here it was intended 'to build a fort. It 
 was presumed that " the redoubling noise of these great guns, 
 rolling in the rocks, would cause the Indians to betake them- 
 selves to flight." But they soon learned to distinguish between 
 the harmless roar and 
 
 " the terms of weight 
 Of hard contents, and full of force urg'd home. 
 
 The planters came near to open war on account of the occu- 
 pation of a point of land in Newington by Captain Wiggin, 
 which was equally convenient for the Upper Plantation. Cap- 
 tain Neal threatened, Captain Wiggin persisted, and an appeal to 
 arms was imminent, when mutual friends interposed and ad- 
 justed the dispute. No blood was shed ; and yet, by a negative 
 process adopted by some etymologists, it was called "Bloody 
 Point." 
 
 Upon the cessation of hostilities by land, a new foe ap- 
 proached their shores by sea. A famous pirate, named Dixy 
 Bull, rifled the fort at Pemaquid and captured several boats 
 along the shore, thus greatly alarming the settlers on the Piscata- 
 qua. The two plantations united in fitting out four pinnaces and 
 shallops, with forty men, to chase and conquer the pirates. Be- 
 ing joined by a bark, with twenty men, from Boston, they went 
 to Pemaquid in pursuit of the enemy. A storm arose, which 
 scattered Neal's little fleet, like that of ^Eneas of old, and drove 
 the pirate eastward beyond their pursuit. This Lilliputian navy 
 returned in- a shattered condition to the " deep waters " of the 
 Piscataqua. The peril of such an enterprise was greater than 
 that of Minos or Pompey in chasing, in different ages, pirates 
 from the Mediterranean Sea. The next year,fi633, the proprie- 
 tors of the Upper and Lower Plantations adjusted their bound- 
 ary lines, and made compromises where they encroached upon 
 one another. They also laid out the town of Hampton, though 
 no settlement was made there for several years. The company 
 of Laconia ordered these surveys and gave names to the towns, 
 agreeing with Wheelwright that his plantation upon the Swam- 
 scot should be called Exeter. When the agents of these planta- 
 tions were appointed, it was agreed that their " several busi- 
 nesses should be trading, fishing, tillage, building and the mak- 
 ing of salt." These ordinary pursuits did not satisfy Mason
 
 42 
 
 and Gorges. Their whole fortunes were embarked in these en- 
 terprises and, hitherto, they had received no adequate returns. 
 The colonies were not self-supporting. The proprietors paid 
 their laborers wages, supplied them with provisions, clothes, 
 utensils, medicines, articles of trade, tools for building, hus- 
 bandry and fishing, and stocked their farms with domestic ani- 
 mals of all kinds. Meal was imported from England ; grain 
 from Virginia, which was sent to Boston to be ground. The 
 lands were but slightly improved ; the lakes were unexplored ; 
 no mines were discovered but those of iron, and that was not 
 wrought. Vines were planted but yielded no fruit. The inter- 
 ests of the colonies were declining. The planters sold their 
 betterments to the proprietors, who in the midst of all these 
 discouragements did not 
 
 "bate one jot 
 
 Of heart or hope ; but still bore up and steer* d 
 Right onward." 
 
 Mason, with a merchant's hopefulness, made new investments, 
 expecting rich returns in some remote future!] Gorges, with a 
 statesman's ambition, saw with his mind's eye, in the long vista 
 of coming years, principalities, dominions,, and possibly thrones, 
 for himself and his heirs. Both these worthy gentlemen ex- 
 pected rich treasures from the mountains. The Spaniards had 
 been enriched by the mountains of Mexico and Peru; why 
 should not the mountains of New Hampshire prove equally rich 
 in the precious metals ? The most romantic tales had been cir- 
 culated respecting the natural beauty, fertility and resources of 
 the " North Countrie." There were lovely lakes, noble rivers, 
 " goodlie forests and faire vallies, and plaines fruitfull in corn, 
 vines, chesnuts, wallnuts, and infinite sorts of other fruits." In 
 fact, the country abounded in everything that could delight the 
 eye or please the taste. Gorges himself penned a glowing de- 
 scription of the natural scenery ; the wild beasts that invited 
 the hunter, and "the divers kinds of wholesome fish" that 
 would tempt old Izaak Walton to leave the Elysian fields, if he 
 could " drop a line " to these finny tribes. 
 
 In June, 1642, Darby Field, with two Indian guides, first as- 
 cended the White Mountains. In August of the same year 
 another party, led by Thomas Gorges and Richard Vines from 
 Maine, set out, on foot, to explore the " delectable mountains." 
 They penetrated the desert wilderness and climbed the rugged 
 sides of the " White Hills " from the East. They gave a very 
 extravagant and incoherent description of what they saw. Their 
 imaginations ran riot in marvelous inventions. They described 
 them as " extending a hundred leagues, on which snow lieth all 
 the year." On one of these mountains they found a plain of a 
 day's journey (it must have been a Sabbath day's journey),
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 43 
 
 whereon nothing grew but moss ; and, " at the further end of 
 this plain, a rude heap of mossy stones, piled up on one another, 
 a mile high, on which one might ascend from stone to stone, like 
 a pair of winding stairs, to the top, where was another level of 
 about an acre with a pond of clear water." The country beyond 
 was said to be " daunting terrible." They named those moun- 
 tains the " CHRYSTAL HILLS." Their provisions failed them be- 
 fore the beautiful lake was reached; and, though they were 
 within one day's journey of it, they were obliged to return home. 
 So the men of that age died without the sight. It is passing 
 strange that men, reputed honest, could make such a wild re- 
 port of regions that required no inventions to make them at- 
 tractive and wonderful. No gold was discovered, though the 
 proprietors confidently expected to find it. Even the colonists 
 were smitten with the " accursed hunger." They neglected agri- 
 culture, the only true source of national wealth, and sought for 
 riches in the sea, the forests and the mountains. The line and 
 the musket were more used than the plow and hoe. During ten 
 years of toil and privation they had hardly encroached at all 
 upon the wilderness. 
 
 In 1634 the proprietors appointed Francis Williams governor. 
 " He was a discreet, sensible man, accomplished in his manners, 
 and was very acceptable to the peopleT^] Laborers and materials 
 for building, ammunition, military stores, tools of every descrip- 
 tion and all necessary supplies were again forwarded from Eng- 
 land. The first neat cattle imported into th<2 colonies were from 
 Denmark, large in size, yellow in color. ^Shortly after the ap- 
 pointment of the new governor, the Plymouth Council was re- 
 quired to surrender its charter to the king. The members of 
 /the Council in England, nobles and merchant princes, had grown 
 indifferent to its welfare ; Mason and Gorges hoped for greater 
 favors from the king than from the Council of Plymouth. Mason 
 was the open enemy of the charterjj Gorges feebly defended it ; 
 but both these proprietors were willing to take their chance in a 
 lottery for the distribution of the territory of New England. 
 The different provinces, from the Penobscot to the Hudson, were 
 accordingly assigned, by lot, to the twelve living members of the 
 <* Corporation, and the colonists were left without house or home 
 on the soil they had subdued and cultivated. Enemies and fa- 
 natics at home traduced them ; the corporators abroad deserted 
 them ; the royal party oppressed them. Englishmen above the 
 rank of servants were forbidden to go to New England ; ships 
 bound thither were detained in the Thames, because of " the de- 
 parture of so many of the best, such numbers of faithful, free- 
 born Englishmen and good Christians." A squadron of eight 
 ships was detained by the Privy Council in May, 1638. It is
 
 44 HISTORY OF 
 
 said that Hampden and Cromwell were on board this fleet. Thus 
 the foolish king detained at home the axe that was prepared for 
 his own neck. A special commission was appointed by the Crown 
 to govern the New England colonies. The hand of Laud, the 
 Ahithophel of Charles, was in all this, who hoped that by agents 
 of his own nomination he could dictate laws and regulate the 
 church of this new world. The Massachusetts colonists pre- 
 pared for the worst. They were determined to fight for their 
 hearths and homes in the wilderness. "We ought," said min- 
 isters and people, " to defend our lawful possessions, if we are 
 able ; if not, to avoid and protract." 
 
 The charter was annulled in 1635. By this act the English- 
 men of Massachusetts, and those colonies of New Hampshire 
 that held land by their grants, had no rights and no property 
 there. Massachusetts and New Hampshire belonged, by lot, to 
 Gorges, Mason and the Marquis of Hamilton. The colonists, 
 'of course, were greatly alarmed, but not injured. The royal 
 power was waning ; the king could not execute his own decrees ; 
 the -church could not inflict its own penalties. The rack, the 
 dungeon and the scaffold, those bloody steps that lead up to the 
 temple of liberty, were . fast going into desuetude. Their work 
 was done. The colonies lived on, under their own charter, which 
 was a royal grant, distinct from that of the Council of Plymouth, 
 as though " the great swelling words of vanity " uttered in West- 
 minster Hall were but the lying oracles of a worthless idol. 
 "The Lord frustrated the design" of their enemies. Mason 
 was the chief instigator of these assaults of state and church 
 upon Massachusetts. His sudden death near the close of this 
 year of trials weakened the power of the accusers. Gorges 
 cared not to aid them. Mason, some time before his death, be- 
 sides retaining, as he supposed, all his former grants, purchased 
 of Gorges a portion of Maine. It lay, three miles in breadth, 
 on the northeast side of the Piscataqua, from its mouth to its 
 farthest head, including the saw-mill at Newichewannoc falls. 
 Gorges and Mason had expended their whole fortunes on these 
 plantations. Gorges thus enumerates some of his trials and losses : 
 
 " I began when there was no hopes, for the present, but of losse ; in that 
 I was yet to find a place, and, being found, it was itselfe, in a manner, dread- 
 full to behoulders ; for it seemed but as a desart Wildernesse, replete onely 
 with a kind of savage People and overgrowne trees. So as I found it no 
 mean matter to procure any to go thither, much lesse to reside there ; and 
 ihose I sent knew not how to subsist, but on the provisions I furnished them 
 withall. I was forced to hire men to stay there the winter quarter at ex- 
 tream rates." 
 
 This was certainly a hard case for one who hoped to become 
 " lord of the manor" in this new world, and to have a multitude 
 of serfs to do his bidding. Mason fared no better. His im-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 45 
 
 mense estate was swallowed up in outlays, supplies and wages ; 
 and at his death his New Hampshire claim was valued at ten 
 thousand pounds. By will he devised his manor of Mason Hall 
 to his grandson, Robert Tufton, and the residue of New Hamp- 
 shire to his grandson John Tufton, requiring each to take the 
 name of Mason. His widow could not continue the supplies to 
 agents and factors which her husband had furnished, and they 
 divided the goods and cattle among themselves, the agents tak- 
 ing the lion's share. Many of the settlers departed, and those 
 who remained kept possession of the lands and buildings and 
 claimed them for their own. 
 
 Mason and Gorges established no government over their col- 
 onies. They had ruled them precisely as a company of laborers 
 is directed, by agents and superintendents. Civil wrongs had 
 no redress but public opinion. The two plantations, for the 
 present being thrown upon their own resources, proceeded to 
 form a constitution for themselves. The inhabitants of Dover, 
 by a written instrument signed by forty-one persons, the exact 
 number that signed the first written organic law known to his- 
 tory, in the Mayflower, agreed to submit to the laws of England, 
 and such others as should be enacted by a majority of their num- 
 ber, until the royal pleasure should be known. . The date of the 
 Portsmouth "combination" is uncertain. Some time in 1640 
 the inhabitants of that plantation entered into a political coven- 
 ant and chose Francis Williams, who had been sent over by the 
 proprietors for that purpose, governor, and Ambrose Gibbins 
 and Thomas Warnerton assistants. 
 
 The first settlements at Hampton were made under the aus- 
 pices of the Massachusetts colony. The place was called by the 
 Indians Winnicunnet. The extensive salt-marsh in the vicinity 
 first attracted the attention of stock raisers. On the third of 
 March 1635 6, the General Court of Massachusetts ordered 
 the settlement of a plantation at Winnicunnet, and authorized 
 Mr. Dumer and Mr. John Spencer " to presse men to build a 
 howse," which was soon after built, and called "the Bound 
 Howse," probably to fix the northern boundary of that state. 
 The site of the house is now in Seabrook, nearly half a mile 
 north of the present line of Massachusetts. The expense of 
 building was to be paid from the treasury of the colony or " by 
 those that come to inhabit there." The architect of the famous 
 house was Nicholas Easton. It was finished in 1636. In 1638, 
 emigrants from Norfolk, England, were permitted by the General 
 Court to settle there, and at this date the plantation contained 
 fifty-six inhabitants. 
 
 In 1641, four distinct settlements had been made within the 
 present limits of New Hampshire Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter
 
 46 HISTORY OF 
 
 and Hampton. These were little democracies governed by the 
 people living within the respective limits of each. Hampton 
 was, by its origin, attached to Massachusetts. Portsmouth and 
 Dover were not sufficiently strong to maintain independent gov- 
 ernments. They naturally gravitated to the older colony on the 
 Bay. For about one year the proposed union was discussed by 
 the people ; and finally, on the fourteenth of April, 1641, it was 
 consummated by a legal instrument signed by commissioners 
 in presence of the only legislative body on the continent having 
 even a show of authority for such an act. The new citizens were 
 received with extraordinary favor. The test of church member- 
 ship, as a qualification for the freeman's franchise, was dispensed 
 with in respect to the New Hampshire voters. Her citizens were 
 permitted to vote and hold office without regard to religious quali- 
 fications. They were admitted, also, to equal rights and priv- 
 ileges, political and judicial, with the freemen of Massachusetts. 
 They were exempted from all public charges, except such as 
 should arise among themselves or for their own peculiar benefit. 
 They enjoyed their former liberties of fishing, planting and sell- 
 ing timber. They were allowed to send two deputies to the Gen- 
 eral Court ; and officers were named in the instrument of union, 
 who were authorized to appoint magistrates in the New Hamp- 
 shire towns. After the lapse of a year Exeter joined the new 
 union. This act was probably delayed on account of the sen- 
 tence of banishment which still hung over the head of their re- 
 vered pastor, Mr. Wheelwright. He immediately withdrew from 
 the newly acquired sovereignty of Massachusetts and retired, 
 with a few faithful followers, to Wells, Maine, and there gathered 
 a new church. The government of Massachusetts became at 
 once supreme in New Hampshire and continued in force thirty- 
 eight years. The government of England was too much dis- 
 tracted, at that time, to give any attention to her colonies. The 
 throne was tottering ; the church was rent into sects ; and civil 
 war was about to drench the whole land in fraternal blood. 
 Massachusetts had obstinately refused to surrender her charter, 
 though often required to do so. Under the royal seal she had 
 claims to vast territories yet unoccupied. She the more willingly, 
 therefore, encouraged the union with New Hampshire, because 
 of her constructive title to the soil. One clause in the royal 
 charter bounded her territory by a line drawn from east to west. 
 " three miles to the northward of Merrimack river or of any and 
 every part thereof." This was sufficiently indefinite to make 
 them owners of all the land that joined them, in all the patents 
 of Mason and Gorges. The political marriage of these sister 
 republics was consummated without opposition, for there was no 
 one to forbid the bans.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 47 
 
 CHAPTER XIII. 
 
 SOCIAL CONDITION OF THE EARLY COLONISTS. 
 
 In most of the early settlements in New England families 
 were the basis of the state. Husbands, wives and children emi- 
 grated from fatherland .together. So the Pilgrims founded New 
 Plymouth. We find but few allusions to the presence of women 
 in the plantations of Cocheco and Strawberry Bank. Mr. Quint 
 says "the only settlers at Cocheco, in the spring of 1623, 
 were Edward Hilton, William Hilton and Thomas Roberts and 
 their families." Mr. Farmer, in his Memoir of Winthrop Hil- 
 ton, says : "Whether Edward Hilton, at the time of his arrival, 
 was married or single does not appear." It is not probable 
 that many of these colonists brought their wives and children 
 with them. It appears from existing correspondence between 
 them and Capt. Mason, that the proprietors contributed quar- 
 terly to the support of their wives at home. In a letter of 
 Thomas Eyre to Mr. Gibbins, dated May, 1631, this paragraph 
 occurs : " Your wife, Roger Knight's wife, and one wife more, 
 we have already sent you, and more you shall have as you write 
 for them." In a schedule of goods sent to the colonists in 1632, 
 we find " 24 children's coates," showing the need of such gar- 
 ments in the infant state. Among the emigrants sent in 1634 
 there were twenty-two women. In a letter of Ambrose Gibbins 
 to Capt. Mason, dated August 6, 1634, we find the following 
 sentences : " A good husband with his wife to tend cattle and to 
 make butter and cheese will be profitable ; for maids, they are 
 soone gonne in this countrie." These allusions show that do- 
 mestic life was pretty thoroughly established within ten years 
 after the first company came. All the ages repeat the history of 
 the first : " It is not good for man to be alone." 
 
 "The earth was sad, the garden was a wild; 
 And man the hermit sighed, till woman smiled." 
 
 It is hardly credible that these little communities lived for ten 
 years without some form of worship, still the records of that 
 time make no mention of it. Among the articles sent over in 
 v 1633 we find " one communion cup and cover of silver, and one 
 small communion table cloth." In another inventory, near the 
 same date, we find " two service books" and a " psalter." 
 These entries show that " divine sen/ice" and " the Holy Com- 
 munion " were deemed essential to their welfare.
 
 48 HISTORY OF 
 
 The same agent, Mr. Gibbins, writes to Capt. Mason under 
 date of July 13, 1633, that some of his laborers had neither 
 " meat, money nor clothes." For himself, wife, child and four 
 men, he had but half a barrel of corn, and only one piece of 
 meat for three months. The men were working for four and 
 six pounds a year. The money for wages was also wanting, yet 
 the proprietors were constantly writing that they were incurring 
 great debts and large risks and receiving absolutely nothing in 
 return. It was a hard case both for the proprietors and for the 
 settlers. 
 
 Poverty and hardship, however, did not curb the passions 
 of the people. Crimes of the darkest dye were not uncom- 
 mon. Officers, both in church and state, were the slaves of 
 lust and avarice. George Burdet, after holding the position 
 both of governor and minister at Cocheco, was convicted of 
 adultery at Agamenticus ; Capt. John Underbill, governor of 
 that plantation, confessed the same crime. Hanserd Knollys, 
 or Knowles, is called by some historians an Anabaptist and an 
 Antinomian. Winthrop also calls him " an unclean person." 
 In England he was persecuted for non-conformity. In this 
 country he was a zealous Puritan. Thomas Larkham, a church- 
 man, came to Dover in 1640. He admitted to the church "all 
 that offered, though never so notoriously immoral or ignorant, if 
 they promised amendment." He assumed to rule both church 
 and state. Parties were formed by the friends of the two con- 
 tending clergymen. They resorted at first to spiritual, finally 
 to carnal, weapons. A civil war was prevented by the interposi- 
 tion of magistrates from Portsmouth. The two leaders, Knol- 
 lys and Larkham, left the scene of action about the same time. 
 Knollys, in 1640, went into voluntary exile, and his name 
 passed into history with some charges of heresy attached to it. 
 He has found an able vindicator in Rev. Alonzo Quint, who 
 fearlessly maintains that he was neither a Baptist nor an Anti- 
 nomian. Mr. Larkham privately took ship for England, in 
 1641, to avoid the shame of a scandalous crime which he had 
 committed. Rev. Stephen Bachiler, the founder of Hampton, 
 was accused of bigamy by his third wife whom he left behind 
 him, when in his old age he went to England and took a fourth 
 wife. Thomas Warnerton, who was associated with Gibbins in 
 the government of Strawberry Bank, was guilty of almost every 
 crime possible to a man in his condition. He was killed in a 
 lawless foray upon the Port of Penobscot in Maine, in 1644. At 
 the house of a friend he is said to have drunk " a pint of kill- 
 devil, alias Rhum, at a draught." If the proprietors had sent 
 over less "aqua vita," rum, beer and tobacco, the standard of 
 morals, doubtless, would have been higher in the plantations.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 49 
 
 After the death of Capt. Mason, his property was stolen by 
 his agents. About " one hundred head of great cattle," valued 
 at twenty-five pounds each, were driven to Boston and sold by 
 Capt. Norton who was a thief and a robber. These cattle were 
 " very large beasts of a yellowish color and said to be brought 
 by Capt. Mason from Denmark." After the desertion of the 
 plantation by Capt. Norton, " the rest of the stock, goods and 
 implements belonging to Capt. Mason were made away with by 
 the servants and others." 
 
 The worst passions of men often rage in times of the greatest 
 calamities. History teaches us that in times of pestilence, 
 earthquakes and conflagrations, the living rob and plunder the 
 dead and dying ! When penalties are removed, violence and 
 theft prevail. Lawless men always follow the train of civil- 
 ization as it moves forward into the wilderness. Such has been 
 the fact from the first to the last new settlement in America. 
 
 CHAPTER XIV. 
 
 EARLY LAWS OF MASSACHUSETTS. 
 
 Historians, jurists and critics of high authority have main- 
 tained that the colony charter of Massachusetts constituted the 
 first settlers a corporation and gave them no higher powers than 
 are usually granted to such bodies. " They had no authority to 
 inflict capital punishment, to establish courts of probate and ad- 
 miralty, to create a house of representatives, to levy taxes, nor to 
 incorporate towns, colleges, parishes and other like organiza- 
 tions." No political government can exist without these rights ; 
 consequently, from the natural law of self-preservation, they af- 
 firm that the colonists from the beginning assumed these powers 
 and continually exercised them, till their charter was recalled by 
 Charles II., in 1684. It was, say they, a bold step in the Pil- 
 grims to transport their charter across the ocean ; it was a still 
 bolder step to usurp powers which were never delegated to them. 
 Other authors equally able, possibly superior, vindicate the Puri- 
 tans from all these charges and show conclusively, from the 
 charter itself, that they were guilty of no usurpation in establish- 
 ing a firm government beneath the aegis of the royal charter. 
 Prof. Joel Parker, the. successor of Story in the Cambridge Law 
 School and, by general consent, the ablest jurist New Hampshire
 
 SO HISTORY OF 
 
 has produced, lays down and proves, by very cogent logic, the 
 following proposition : 
 
 1. "The charter is not and was not intended to be an act for the incor- 
 poration of a trading or merchants' company merely. But it was a grant 
 which contemplated the settlement of a colony, with power in the incor- 
 porated company to govern that colony." 
 
 2. "The charter ^authorized the establishment of the government of the 
 colony, within the limits of the territory to be governed, as was done by vote 
 to transfer the charter and government. 
 
 3. " The charter gave ample power of legislation and of government for 
 the plantation or colony, including power to legislate on religious subjects, 
 in the manner in which the grantees and their associates claimed and exer- 
 cised the legislative power." 
 
 Armed with such plenary powers by their charter, they pro- 
 ceeded to exercise them, according to their best judgment, in pro- 
 viding for the political safety and religious welfare of themselves 
 and their posterity. 
 
 By the charter, the supreme authority was vested in a gover- 
 nor, a deputy-governor and eighteen assistants, to be chosen by 
 the freemen from their own number, who constituted " the Court 
 of Assistants." The freemen at first constituted the General 
 Court. At their first meeting, in 1630, they voted to delegate the 
 legislative and executive powers to the Court of Assistants. In 
 1634, in consequence of the great increase of immigrants, the 
 freemen revolutionized their infant democracy and ordered two 
 deputies from each town to represent them in the General Court. 
 These deputies were required to be of the orthodox religion. 
 None but church members could be Freemen. So the church 
 controlled the state. The congregational form of church gov- 
 ernment was established by law. The militia system was among 
 the earliest institutions of the colony. Every male, above six- 
 teen years of age, was required to appear in arms once every 
 month ; at a later date this drill was limited to six days. The 
 inhabited territory was divided into towns, whose magistrates 
 were denominated " Select Men." These miniature states devel- 
 oped a spirit of republican independence arid educated the peo- 
 ple to self-government. 
 
 The administration of justice was exceedingly simple, direct 
 and efficient. The court of assistants was at first the chief 
 judicial bench. With the rise of counties came county courts, 
 held by magistrates nominated by the freemen and confirmed 
 by the General Court. The assistants exercised the powers of 
 justices of the peace. The jurors were chosen by the freemen. 
 The legal processes were simple and intelligible to all. The 
 practice of holding up the right hand, instead of kissing the 
 bible, was introduced by the Puritans. Slavery was recognized 
 by law. Captives in war, and even insolvent debtors, were sold 
 into servitude. The stocks, pillory and whipping-post were trans-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 51 
 
 ferred from their native land ; and even torture was allowed, 
 provided it was not "barbarous and inhuman" Here is a dis- 
 tinction without a difference ! 
 
 Heresy was punished by excommunication, disfranchisement, 
 banishment and death ; the reviling of magistrates and elders, 
 by fines and whipping. The aristocracy, in church and state, 
 was very sacred. Sumptuary laws were enacted against excesses 
 of every kind in food, drink and dress. As early as 1630, the 
 governor discouraged the drinking of toasts. Laws were made 
 against tobacco, immodest fashions, costly apparel and exorbi- 
 tant prices of goods ; but all these rules failed to secure the re- 
 sults sought by the legislators. The morals of the age were 
 relatively high but not absolutely pure. The Roman poet said 
 rightly : " You may expel nature by violence ; but she will return 
 and reign victorious over artificial restraints." 
 
 CHAPTER XV. 
 
 EARLY LAWS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 After the union of New Hampshire with Massachusetts, the 
 laws, customs and religion of the larger and older became those 
 of the weaker and younger colony. Dr. Belknap has given an 
 excellent summary of the laws adopted by Massachusetts. John 
 Cotton, one of the first ministers of Boston, an eminent divine 
 who came to the colony in 1633, left the impress of his mind 
 and creed upon the entire system of laws first adopted by the 
 colony. They were founded, chiefly, on the laws of Moses. 
 He maintained " that the government might be considered as a 
 theocracy, wherein the Lord was judge, lawgiver and king ; that 
 the laws which He gave Israel might be adopted, sd far as they 
 were of moral and perpetual equity ; that the people might be 
 considered as God's people, in covenant with him ; that none 
 but persons of approved piety and eminent gifts should be 
 chosen rulers ; that the ministers should be consulted in all mat- 
 ters of religion ; and that the magistrate should have a super- 
 intending and coercive power over the churches." By these 
 principles human opinions were subjected to the civil ruler, 
 and the church and state were indissolubly united. The only 
 safeguard against the worst religious despotism known to his- 
 tory was, that these laws must be adopted by a majority of the
 
 52 HISTORY OF 
 
 freemen. The clergy, of course, had a commanding influence 
 in the state, because none were voters but church members ; 
 none were church members but those who had been elected by 
 a majority of the church ; none were propounded but those ex- 
 amined and approved by the elders ; and none were examined 
 but those who were recommended by the pastors and teachers. 
 Here was a hierarchy of unlimited power; but the theatre of 
 its action was small and the props that supported it very weak. 
 Slavery, according to the old Roman law, was pronounced " con- 
 trary to nature," except when the result of capture, in war or 
 for crime. Its alleviations were then those of the Mosaic code. 
 Blasphemy, idolatry, witchcraft, adultery, unnatural lusts, mur- 
 der, man-stealing, false witness, rebellion against parents and 
 conspiracy against the commonwealth were made capital crimes. 
 The drinking of healths and the use of tobacco were forbidden. 
 The intercourse of the sexes was regulated by strict laws. The 
 ceremony of betrothing preceded marriage. Sumptuary laws 
 regulated dress, equipage and expenditures. Women were ex- 
 pressly forbidden to wear short-sleeved and low-necked gowns ; 
 and men were obliged to cut their hair short, that they might not 
 resemble women. This was an old custom of the Puritans, who, 
 from their close-cropped hair, contrary to the custom of the cav- 
 aliers, who wore long, flowing locks, were called " round-heads" 
 This sobriquet is said to have originated with the queen of 
 Charles I., who, on seeing Mr. Pym, the leader of the Long Par- 
 liament, passing the palace, said to the king, "who is that 
 ' round-headed ' man in the street below ? " No person not 
 worth two hundred pounds was allowed to wear gold or silver 
 lace, or silk hood and scarfs. Offences against any of these 
 laws were presentable by the grand jury, and, when not capital 
 in their nature, were punished by fines, imprisonment, the stocks 
 and whipping. In brief, these judicial Solomons undertook to 
 regulate the thoughts, words, deeds, dress and food of every 
 man, woman and child in the colony. The law was designed to 
 be omnipresent. The population of the four settlements in New 
 Hampshire at the period of the union was about one thousand ; 
 that of all New England twenty thousand. 
 
 NOTE. Occasionally we read of some of the customs of the days of the Puritans, which 
 are very interesting. At Dunstable, Mass., in 1651, dancing at weddings was forbidden; in 
 1660, William Walker was imprisoned a month for courting a maid without the leave of her 
 parents; in 1675, because " there is manifest pride appearing in our streets" the wearing of 
 lone hair or periwigs and "superstitious ribbons" was forbidden; also, men were forbidden 
 to keep Christmas, as it was a Popish custom." In 1677, a "cage" was erected near the 
 meeting-house for the confinement of Sabbath breakers, and John Atherton, a soldier, was 
 fined forty shillings for wetting a piece of an old hat to put into his shoes, which chafed his 
 feet while marching.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 53 
 
 CHAPTER XVI. 
 
 EARLY CHURCHES OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 The energetic proprietors of New Hampshire and Maine were 
 not moved to plant colonies in the wilderness to extend the area 
 of freedom or promote the interests of religion, but to aggran- 
 dize their houses and increase their private fortunes. Mason 
 and Gorges were not democrats but royalists ; not Puritans but 
 Cavaliers ; not Independents but Episcopalians. The men they 
 hired to fell the trees, till the soil, fish, hunt and mine, in the 
 new world, were not exiles for conscience' sake, but from love 
 of gain. No provision was made by masters or servants for the 
 preaching of the gospel. No man cared for their souls. The 
 first churches were formed at Hampton and Exeter. Hampton 
 claims precedence in time ; for, when the place was incorporated 
 as .a plantation, in 1635, some of the grantees were already 
 "united together by church government." "The original mem- 
 bers of the church and the first settlers of the town, generally, 
 were Puritans ; many of them were from the county of Norfolk, 
 England, where Christians of this class were very numerous." 
 They brought a pastor with them. They soon erected a church 
 of logs, where, literally shrouded " in a dim religious light," they 
 paid their vows to the Most High. The first pastor of this first 
 born church of a new state, and the father of the town, was t 
 Rev. Stephen Bachiler, an ancestor, on the mother's side, of * 
 Daniel Webster. The settlement at Exeter, the same year, be- 
 gan its existence by the organizing of a church and the found- 
 ing of a state. Eight members of the church of Boston fol- 
 lowed Rev. John Wheelwright in his compulsory exile, and at 
 once formed themselves into the first church of Exeter. These 
 were all Calvinists of the straitest sect. Thus the leaven of 
 Puritanism was hidden in two of the four rising towns of New 
 Hampshire ; and in process of time, through the influence of 
 Massachusetts, the whole lump was leavened. The History of 
 the New Hampshire Churches, by Rev. R. F. Lawrence, gives a 
 graphic account of the origin of the first church in Portsmouth. 
 
 II will quote a passage : " ' Therefore, Honorable and worthy 
 countrymen, ' said Captain Smith to the New Hampshire colo- 
 nists, ' let not the meanness of the word ys^ distaste you, for it 
 will afford you as good gold as the mines of Potosi, with less 
 hazard and charge, and more certainty and facility.' This
 
 54 HISTORY OF 
 
 discloses, in the briefest manner, the origin of Portsmouthy-^or 
 that lofty and self-forgetting devotion to great principles which 
 baptized many of the early settlements lining the New England 
 coast never set its seal on the brow of Strawberry Bank. The 
 first colonists, fishmongers of London, more intent on trade than 
 religion, arrived three years after the Pilgrims at Plymouth. 
 They first settled at Little Harbor, nor was it until seven years 
 that houses began to dot the ridge which ran along from Pitts 
 street to Chapel Hill, then called 'the Bank.' Here the church, 
 with its wholesome discipline and heavenly comforts, found no 
 early home. Though a chapel and parsonage seem to have been 
 built, no regular provision was made for a settled ministry until 
 1640, when twenty of the inhabitants deeded to some church 
 wardens fifty acres for a glebe. " The first preacher was Rich- 
 ard Gibson. "He was wholly addicted to the hierarchy .and 
 discipline of England, and exercised his ministerial function ac- 
 cording to the ritual." He remained in office but a short time, 
 and was succeeded by several temporary preachers till the people 
 built a new meeting-house and, in 1658, called and settled Rev. 
 Joshua Moodey from Massachusetts. He was a devout, earnest 
 and impressive preacher ; yet the original tendencies of the cel- 
 onists were so strong that it required thirteen years of assiduous 
 labor for him to gather a church. Finally, in 1661, the civil 
 authorities invited several churches to assist in the formation of 
 the first church in Portsmouth, and " in the ordination of offi- 
 cers therein. " 
 
 Dover was settled in 1623 ; after the lapse of seven years only 
 three houses had been erected. Its progress was very slow for 
 ten years, and, during all that time, there was no public religious 
 * instruction. After the territory passed into the hands of Puritan 
 owners, they sent out from the west of England some colonists 
 " of good estate and of some account for religion," and with them 
 a minister of their own faith. William Leveridge, an Oxford 
 graduate, " an able and worthy Puritan minister," came to Dover 
 in 1633, and remained about two years; then, for want of ade- 
 quate support, removed to Boston. He was succeeded by George 
 Burdett, a churchman, politician and an intriguing demagogue. 
 His popular talents made him governor, and, in that capacity, 
 he opened a correspondence with Archbishop Laud, the bitter 
 enemy of the Puritans. He not only deceived the people over 
 whom he ruled, but violated the laws he had sworn to execute. 
 He committed a heinous crime, in consequence of which he left 
 the Plantation and went to Agamenticus, in Maine. In July, 
 1638, Hanserd Knollys, a graduate of Cambridge, came to Bos- 
 ton. He had received episcopal ordination, but had joined the 
 Puritan party. At the invitation of "some of the more re-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 55 
 
 ligious," he came to Dover. Dr. Quint thus states the con- 
 dition of affairs when he arrived : 
 
 " When Knollys came to Dover, in 1638, he found a settlement originated 
 under Episcopal auspices, though enlarged under other influences ; a people 
 mixed in their character, none of them emigrants for conscience' sake, and 
 none of them Puritans of the Bay type ; the settlement a refuge for men 
 who could not endure the Massachusetts rigor ; no church organized after 
 fifteen years of colonial life, and a minister who, in spirit a churchman, was 
 corresponding with Archbishop Laud, and who was supported by a portion 
 of the people. ' Of some of the best minded' Knollys gathered a church. 
 But it was in the midst of a people who had generally no love for Puritan- 
 ism. Burdett left the town, but ' another churchman, ' Larkham, came in, 
 and by appealing to the looser elements succeeded in superseding Knollys." 
 
 Such was the origin of the first four churches of New Hampshire. 
 
 CHAPTER XVII. 
 
 ELEMENTS OF POPULAR LIBERTY. 
 
 In England, cities, boroughs and parishes have existed from 
 time immemorial ; but no such political organizations as towns. 
 The Pilgrim fathers found Holland divided into townships, which 
 regulated their own internal affairs through municipal officers of 
 their own selection. Of Holland Motley says : " It was a land 
 where every child went to school \ where almost every individual 
 inhabitant could read and write ; where even the middle classes 
 were proficient in mathematics and the classics, and could speak 
 two or more modern languages." Their industry and economy 
 are noticed with high commendation. The Pilgrims probably 
 gained from the Hollanders some of their excellent notions res- 
 pecting local legislation and public schools. 
 
 Town organizations in New England are the purest democ- 
 racies the world has ever known. They constitute the chief 
 safeguard to our national liberties. The militia, the town, the 
 school and the church are the corner stones of the temple of 
 liberty. Through their agency, we obtain free men, free thought, 
 free opinions and free speech. The town organizations in New 
 Hampshire grew naturally out of the plantations. The limited 
 number of settlers in each locality produced mutual dependence, 
 a community of interests and frequent deliberations upon the 
 common welfare. Each of the first four plantations became a 
 town when they made their " combinations " for the purposes of 
 local government and mutual safety, The town-meeting which
 
 56 HISTORY OF 
 
 grew out of these infant states was as purely democratic as the 
 ecclesia in ancient Athens. Here the whole body of freemen 
 met in deliberation ; and as there then existed no religious or 
 property qualifications for suffrage in New Hampshire, nearly 
 every adult man was a voter, and every such voter was person- 
 ally interested in the decrees of this popular assembly. After the 
 union with Massachusetts, these town-meetings assumed new 
 importance. In them the local power was delegated to a board 
 of selectmen, and the legislative power was conferred on depu- 
 ties who were to represent the towns in the General Court at 
 Boston. This delegation "of power to representatives laid the 
 foundation of the state and national republics. But the town 
 meeting was the freeman's school. There he learned to delib- 
 erate and to discuss and decide questions of public interest. 
 "Town-meetings," says De Tocqueville, "are to liberty what 
 primary schools are to science : they bring it within the people's 
 reach; they teach men how to use and how to enjoy it." In 
 these democratic assemblies, the planters resolved to defend their 
 homes against the incursions of savages, the aggressions of pro- 
 prietors and the prerogatives of monarchs. This element of 
 popular liberty was so important through the whole colonial his- 
 tory of New England, that it has been affirmed with great truth, 
 that the American Revolution had its birth in the town meetings 
 and school-houses of the scattered colonists. The king's com- 
 missioners of the revenue, writing from Boston in 1768, com- 
 plained of New England town-meetings, in which they said : 
 " The lowest mechanics disscussed the most important points of 
 government, with the utmost freedom." The cry of the Court 
 party was : " Send over an army and a fleet to reduce the dogs 
 to reason." 
 
 In 1647, Massachusetts established a system of free schools. 
 ^/ Scotland had some years earlier set up a system of parochial 
 schools under the control of the Presbyterian church, which in that 
 country was united with the state. These schools were designed 
 to educate all the children of each parish. The New England sys- 
 tem was more liberal than the Scotch and was under the super- 
 vision of the government and not of the church. It is the first 
 Y establishment of schools without tuition, open to all and free to 
 /'all, known to history. The formation of districts in each town 
 for the purposes of general education, near the beginning of 
 the present century, furnished another occasion for the local ad- 
 ministration of these schools by all the freemen residing in each 
 district. The school-house became a Hall of Legislation for the 
 little community that built and owned it ; and here taxes were 
 imposed, rules adopted and committees chosen for the govern- 
 ment and maintenance of the school.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. ,57 
 
 The church, like the school and town, became a seminary of 
 liberty. Most of the early churches were congregational in 
 government and discipline. All questions of interest in the 
 church were decided by major vote ; and the congregation gave 
 their voice in the same way when a pastor was called and set- 
 tled. Most of the early ministers were settled by the towns 
 where they officiated ; of course the entire body of the freemen 
 was called upon to vote for or against the candidate. 
 
 Thus all local affairs pertaining to law, learning and religion 
 were debated and decided by the votes of the towns in purely 
 democratic assemblies. The power of the press was soon ad- 
 ded to these other educational forces. The first newspaper in 
 "NNew Hampshire was issued on the seventh of October, 1756, at 
 Portsmouth. It was called the New Hampshire Gazette and 
 Historical Chronicle. It was owned and published by Daniel 
 Fowle, till the year 1784. Other editors succeeded him, who 
 have continued the paper to the present day. Other journals 
 of a similar character were soon published, till in process of time 
 the press became the most potent political educator in the state. 
 
 Trained in a similar school, the town-meeting of Providence, 
 R. I., thus addressed their friend, Sir Henry Vane, who is styled, 
 "under God, the sheet anchor of Rhode Island": "We have 
 long been free from the yoke of wolvish bishops ; we have sit- 
 ten dry from the streams of blood spilt by the wars of our na- 
 tive country. * * * We have not known what an excise 
 means ; we have almost forgotten what titles are. We have long 
 drunk of the cup of as great liberties as any people that we 
 can hear of under the whole heaven." 
 
 NOTE. Colonel Charles H. Bell, President of the New Hampshire Historical Society, has 
 a well-preserved copy of the first book printed and published in the state. It is entitled 
 "Good News from a Far Country, in Seven Discourses; Delivered in the Presbyterian 
 Church in Newbury, by Jonathan Panny, A. M., and Minister of the Gosple there, and now 
 Published at the desire of Many of the Hearers and Others." _ "Printed in Portsmouth by 
 Daniel Fowle, 1756." The book, with a modern binding, is in excellent condition, and is 
 printed upon clear type and good paper and is easily read.
 
 58 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XVIII. 
 
 CONDITION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE AFTER ITS UNION WITH 
 MASSACHUSETTS. 
 
 The growth of New Hampshire was not very rapid for many 
 years after its political union with an older and more prosperous 
 state. The four original plantations continued to be the centres 
 of population and influence. From them went forth small col- 
 onies and began settlements in the adjacent territories, which in 
 process of time became independent, so that nearly twenty sep- 
 arate towns have been incorporated from the territory first in- 
 cluded within the bounds of Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter and 
 Hampton. The laws, customs and religion of Massachusetts 
 immediately took root in the soil of New Hampshire. Exeter 
 and Hampton were at first annexed to the jurisdiction of the 
 courts of Ipswich, till the establishment of a new country called 
 Norfolk, which embraced the four settlements of New Hamp- 
 shire, with Salisbury and Haverhill in Massachusetts. This 
 county then included all the territory between the Merrimack 
 and Piscataqua. Salisbury was the shire town ; though Dover 
 and Portsmouth each had separate courts in which magistrates 
 of their own presided. An inferior court, consisting of three 
 justices, was established in each town, with jurisdiction in all 
 cases under twenty shillings. Here were the germs of the Su- 
 preme Court and Court of Common Pleas. For a few years the 
 associate magistrates were appointed by the General Court. In 
 1647, the towns of Dover and Portsmouth were allowed in joint 
 meeting to choose the associates ; so that a democratic element 
 \vas early introduced into the New Hampshire courts. In 1649, 
 the assembled wisdom of the two colonies condemned as sin- 
 ful the wearing of long hair, and the magistrates declared their 
 detestation and dislike of the practice " as a thing uncivil and 
 unmanly, whereby men do deform themselves, and offend sober 
 and honest men and do corrupt good manners." 
 
 The heirs of Capt. Mason now began to assert their claims 
 to the territory of New Hampshire. The eldest grandson of 
 Mason died in infancy. His brother Robert Tufton became 
 of age in 1650. After the lapse of two years, Mrs. Mason 
 sent over an agent named Joseph Mason to regain possession of 
 her husband's estate. He found Richard Leader occupying 
 lands at Newichewannoc and brought a suit against him in the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 59 
 
 court of Norfolk. A question arose whether the land in dis- 
 pute were not within the jurisdiction of Massachusetts. An 
 appeal was made to the General Court, who ordered a survey of 
 the northern boundary of their patent to be made. Two com- 
 petent surveyors, with Indian guides, proceeded up the Merri- 
 mack to find its most northerly head. The Indians affirmed 
 that it was at Aquedoctan, the outlet of the Winnipiseogee lake.* 
 The latitude of this place was found to be forty-three degrees, 
 forty-three minutes and twelve seconds. Experienced seamen 
 were then sent to the eastern coast who found a point of an 
 island in Casco Bay to be in the same latitude. A line was 
 then drawn through these two points, from the Atlantic to the 
 Pacific ocean, which was declared to be the northern boundary 
 of Massachusetts, within which the whole claim of Mason was 
 included. After thus throwing the aegis of their protection over 
 this immense territory, with a show of generosity they granted 
 to the heirs of Mason " a quantity of land proportionable to his 
 disbursements, with the privilege of the river. " The agent made 
 no further effort to recover Mrs. Mason's estate, but returned 
 home, hoping that the government of England would interpose. 
 As the Mason family had always belonged to the royalist party, 
 they expected no relief during the commonwealth and the pro- 
 tectorate of Cromwell. After the restoration of Charles II., 
 Robert Tufton, who now took the sirname of Mason, petitioned 
 the king for redress. The attorney-general reported that "Rob- 
 ert Mason, grandson and heir of Capt. John Mason, had a good 
 and legal title to the province of New Hampshire." This decis- 
 ion was made in 1662. The king did not act decisively in the 
 matter till 1664, when he appointed commissioners "to visit the 
 several colonies of New England, to examine and determine all 
 complaints and appeals in matters civil, military and criminal." 
 Imperial power was here delegated. The commissioners were 
 authorized to decide matters of the highest moment " according 
 to their good and sound discretion." Of course such dictation 
 was offensive, in the highest degree, to the colonists. The com- 
 missioners were treated with great coolness. No public honors 
 awaited their arrival in any town. They passed through New 
 Hampshire, taking affidavits and listening to the complaints of 
 disaffected persons. Among these was one Abraham Corbett, 
 of Portsmouth, who had been censured by the general court for 
 the assumption of power under the king, which they thought 
 was inconsistent with their chartered rights. Corbett drew up a 
 
 * NOTE. It is said that there are more than forty different modes of spelling the name of 
 this lake. There is no uniformity of the orthography of Indian names among early writers. 
 Each person endeavored to represent in letters the sounds which his ear caught from native 
 lips ; hence it is extremely difficult to trace the etymology of Indian names. The name of the 
 lake is now often written and pronounced Winnipesaukee.
 
 60 HISTORY OF 
 
 petition, praying for a separate government for New Hampshire. 
 A few seditious persons signed it ; the majority opposed it. The 
 commissioners were haughty and supercilious. They threatened 
 heavy penalties for disobediance to the king's mandates. The 
 people were alarmed. They appealed to the General Court for 
 an opportunity to exculpate themselves from all participation in 
 the sentiments expressed in the petition. Commissioners from 
 Massachusetts visited Dover and Portsmouth and from the as- 
 sembled people received assurances of their entire satisfaction 
 with the present government. Exeter did the same through their 
 minister Rev. Mr. Dudley. Corbett was arrested and brought 
 before the governor and magistrates of Massachusetts, "to answer 
 for his tumultuous and seditious practices against the govern- 
 ment," and was fined and disfranchised. Lest this bold vindi- 
 cation of their rights should seem disloyal to the king, they pro- 
 ceeded at once to obey his order respecting the fortification of 
 the harbors. Every male inhabitant of Portsmouth was required 
 to work one week, between June and October, on the fortifica- 
 tions on Great Island. In other respects the decrees of the 
 royal commissioners were little heeded. After their business was 
 completed they were recalled by the king, who was greatly dis- 
 pleased at the treatment they had received, and, by letter, com- 
 manded the colony to send agents to England, promising to hear 
 in person " all allegations, suggestions, and pretences to right or 
 favor on behalf of the colony." Here was, undoubtedly, a con- 
 flict of authority. They were disobedient to the king because, as 
 they maintained, his commission invaded their chartered rights. 
 They pleaded " a royal donation, under the great seal, as the 
 greatest security that could be had in human affairs." We can 
 easily forgive them for that particular act of disloyalty. 
 
 CHAPTER XIX. 
 
 MORAL EPIDEMICS. 
 
 Cicero remarks : " There is no opinion so absurd that it may 
 not be found in some one of the philosophers." Culture is no 
 safeguard against errors of opinion. The most learned are often 
 the most erratic. Astrology and alchemy originated with schol- 
 ars and men of science. In past ages, both the wise and igno- 
 rant have been disposed to ascribe whatever was mysterious or
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 6 1 
 
 inexplicable to spiritual agents. Hence, evil demons and those 
 who pretended to deal with familiar spirits have held an impor- 
 tant place in the popular creeds of all nations. Magicians, wiz- 
 ards and sorcerers have addressed themselves with immense 
 advantage to the love of the marvelous in men ; and thus impos- 
 ture has been enriched at the expense of popular credulity. 
 The mind has its diseases as well as the body ; and, like 
 
 "the thousand natural shocks 
 That flesh is heir to," 
 
 they are contagious. They spread by involuntary sympathy. 
 We, from our exalted throne of Sadduceeism, wonder at the su- 
 perstition and credulity of our fathers. Many volumes have 
 been written upon the Salem witchcraft. The ink is now hardly 
 dry, that lias recorded the pious horror of pantheists, positivists 
 and liberal Christians, concerning this sad delusion. 
 
 "'Tis true 'tis pity, 
 And pity 'tis 'tis true," 
 
 that such abominations should be committed anywhere under 
 the light of day, or in the gloom of night ; and, it is especially 
 grievous that religious men should perpetuate them. But it is 
 nothing strange that the Pilgrims and their children believed in 
 witchcraft, when it was the transmitted creed of all the preced- 
 ing ages. The Bible taught it ; the Church preached it ; the 
 law punished it, and the people feared it. The ignorant are 
 usually the greatest dupes of such delusions. On this point I 
 will quote the words of the late President Felton : 
 
 " Our fathers knew this better perhaps than we. Their earliest care was to 
 secure the benefits of learning to their posterity. The measures they took to 
 carry into practical effect this illustrious purpose were suggested partly by a 
 love of solid scholarship as warm as ever animated the heart of students 
 since their day, and partly by their firm belief that learning was to be the 
 great arm of their warfare against the Adversary of mankind. 
 
 Milton, in describing the conflict of Michael with the Prince of Darkness, 
 says: 
 
 "The griding sword, with discontinuous wound 
 Passed through him ; but the ethereal substance closed 
 Not long divisible." 
 
 For spirits, he afterwards adds, 
 
 " Cannot but by annihilating die." 
 
 Earlier than our fathers engaged in the struggle, Luther drove out the 
 Foul Fiend who haunted his cell and broke in upon his pious labors, by 
 hurling an inkstand at his Mephistophelian head. The battle was not fin- 
 ished by the learned weapons our fathers forged and wielded. The same 
 Ancient Adversary, cloven down by Michael, battered and bespattered by 
 Luther's inkstand, has stood the tug of war with modern science and educa- 
 tion. But he has been driven from the open field ; he has been humbled into 
 a "fantastic Duke of dark corners;" and finally, in our own day, he has lost 
 all the glory of the " archangel ruined ;" he has dropped even the Mediaeval 
 terrors of tail, hoof and horn ; he has become a mean, contemptible and 
 sneaking Devil. His greatest exploits are to rap under tables for silly women 
 and sillier men; to spell out painfully, by the help of whispers and winks
 
 62 HISTORY OF 
 
 and explanations of self-deluded bystanders, and with many an orthographic 
 blunder (for he has not learned phonography yet) a name or two in as many 
 hours; to construct awkward and unmeaning messages, and convey them 
 from the spirit-world to gaping fools around, by joggling tables' legs. Re- 
 duced to this most shabby and pitiable condition of Devilhood, I think the 
 armory of learning our fathers left us, if we burnish it up and use it aright, 
 will soon dislodge him from his crazy quarters, and disarm, if not annihilate 
 him." 
 
 The first victim of the law against witches in New England 
 was Margaret Jones of Charlestown. She was executed in 1648. 
 The charges against her were that her touch was malignant, pro- 
 ducing vomitings, pain, and violent sickness ; that the medicines 
 which she administered, as a doctress, though harmless in their 
 nature, produced great distress ; that her ill will towards those 
 who rejected her medicine prevented the healing of their mala- 
 dies ; that some of her prophecies proved true ; and that she 
 nourished one of those little imps of Satan called incubi. The 
 persons accused at first were old, wrinkled and decrepit women. 
 The witnesses were mischievous children and malignant fanatics. 
 Spectral evidence, ocular fascination, apparitions, and other un- 
 real creations of a diseased imagination were adduced as proofs 
 of guilt. " A callous spot was the mark of the Devil ; did age 
 or amazement refuse to shed tears, were threats after a quarrel 
 followed by death of cattle or other harm, did an error occur in 
 repeating the Lord's prayer, were deeds of great physical 
 strength performed, these all were signs of witchcraft." In 
 1656, Goodwife Walford was arraigned before the court of as- 
 sistants at Portsmouth, on complaint of Susanna Trimmings. 
 The complainant testified that on her return to her home, on the 
 thirtieth of March, she heard a noise in the woods like the rust- 
 ling of swine. Soon Goodwife Walford appeared and asked a 
 favor. On being refused, Mrs. Trimmings adds : " I was struck 
 as with a clap of fire on the back, and she vanished toward the 
 water side, in my apprehension in the shape of a cat." Other 
 testimony of a similar nature was produced, but it does not ap- 
 pear that the accused was convicted. The complaint was prob- 
 ably dropped at the next session of the court. The next trial 
 for witchcraft was at Hampton, September, 1680. A jury of 
 twelve men, on examination of the corpse of the child of John 
 Godfre, found, under oath, grounds of suspicion that the child 
 was murdered by witchcraft. Rachel Fuller, wife of John Ful- 
 ler, was arraigned and tried for the supposed crime ; and as no 
 record is found of the verdict, it is presumed that she was ac- 
 quitted. This subject seems to have slept in New Hampshire 
 till the great excitement in Salem in 1692 and 1693. But as 
 there were no newspapers to publish the doings of Satan either 
 in pandemonium or in Massachusetts, New Hampshire was but
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 63 
 
 little disturbed by the unjust accusations and judicial murders of 
 another state. 
 
 Unice Cole of Hampton was reputed to be a witch. Her 
 name has been " married to immortal verse " in Whittier's "Tent 
 on the Beach." It appears from the records of Hampton that 
 eight persons were drowned in sailing from that town to Boston, 
 on the eighth of August, 1657. Their fate was supposed to be 
 connected, in some way, with the mysterious words of Unice 
 Cole as the vessel rounded the point where her cottage stood. 
 A few stanzas from the poet illustrates her supposed agency in an 
 event which the recorder denominates " the sad hand of God." 
 This very phrase reveals the pendulous motion of the human 
 mind from faith to superstition. The poet thus writes : 
 
 " Once, in the old colonial days, 
 
 Two hundred years ago and more, 
 A boat sailed down through the winding ways 
 
 Of Hampton river to that low shore, 
 Full of a goodly company 
 Sailing out on the summer sea, 
 Veering to catch the land breeze light, 
 With the Boar to left and the Rocks to right. 
 
 ' Fie on the witch !' cried a merry girl, 
 
 As they rounded the point where Goody Cole 
 Sat by her door with her wheel atwirl, 
 
 A bent and blear-eyed, poor old soul. 
 'Oho!' she muttered, ' Ye're brave to-day! 
 But I hear the little waves laugh and say, 
 The broth will be cold that waits at home; 
 For it's one to go, but another to come ! ' 
 
 ' She's curs' d,' said the skipper ; ' speak to her fair; 
 
 I'm scary always to see her shake 
 Her wicked head, with its wild gray hair 
 
 And nose like a hawk and eyes like a snake.' 
 But merrily still with laugh and shout, 
 From Hampton river the boat sailed out, 
 Till the huts and the flakes on Star seemed nigh 
 And they lost the sceut of the pines of Rye. 
 
 Goody Cole looked out from her door: 
 
 The Isles of Shoals were drowned and gone, 
 Scarcely she saw the Head of the Boar 
 
 Toss the foam from tusks of stone. 
 She clasped her hands with a grip of pain, 
 The tear on her cheek was not of rain ; 
 ' They are lost ! ' she muttered, ' boat and crew i ' 
 ' Lord, forgive me, my words were true !' " 
 
 The first enactment by Massachusetts against Quakers, who 
 are denominated " a cursed sect of heretics," was made in Octo- 
 ber, 1656. The penalties, from time to time, were increased 
 from banishment to scourging, imprisonment and death. All 
 these penalties were inflicted upon the Quakers for several years 
 in succession. The law-makers of Massachusetts regarded tol- 
 eration as " the first born of abominations ; " they also imagined 
 that their political safety was endangered by a diversity of reli- 
 gious opinions in the state. New Hampshire, influenced by the
 
 64 HISTORY OF 
 
 opinions and laws of the elder colony, subjected Quakers to ar- 
 rest and punishment by whipping. In the winter of 1662, three 
 Quaker women were sentenced to be whipped through eleven 
 towns, with ten stripes apiece in each town. In answer to a 
 petition of the inhabitants of Dover, the General Court of Massa- 
 chusetts commissioned Richard Waldron (then spelled Wal- 
 dern) to act in execution of the laws against Quakers in that 
 town. Accordingly, under date of December 22, 1662, that 
 magistrate issued his warrant as follows : 
 
 "To the Constables of Dover, Hampton, Salisbury, Newbury, Rowley, 
 Ipswich, Windham, Lynn, Boston, Roxbury, Dedham, and until these vaga- 
 bond Quakers are out of this jurisdiction : You are hereby required in the 
 King's Majesty's name, to take these vagabond Quakers, Anna Colman, Mary 
 Tompkins and Alice Ambrose, and make them fast to the cart's tail, and 
 drawing the cart through your several towns, to whip them upon their naked 
 backs not exceeding ten stripes apiece, on each of them in each town, and so 
 convey them from Constable to Constable till they are out of this jurisdic- 
 tion, as you will answer it, at your peril, and this shall be your warrant. 
 
 RICHARD WALDRON." 
 
 In the first three towns above named this cruel decree was 
 literally executed. The victims of persecution were then res- 
 cued by Walter Barefoot, under pretence of delivering them to 
 the constables of Newbury ; but in reality for the purpose of 
 sending them out of the province. When we see the name of 
 the patriot and hero, Richard Waldron, appended to such a 
 barbarous mandate, we blush for the imperfections of man in 
 his best estate and cry out with Madame Roland, " Oh, Liberty ! 
 what crimes are committed in thy name." The interposition of 
 such an unprincipled intriguer as Walter Barefoot, to rescue 
 these victims of popular hate and legal vengeance, shows what 
 strange contradictions are found in human nature. This kind 
 act is said to have been almost the only redeeming trait in the 
 character of Barefoot
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 65 
 
 CHAPTER XX. 
 
 PHILIP'S INDIAN WAR. 
 
 When the Pequots were exterminated in 1637, by Massachu- 
 setts, the settlements of New Hampshire were too remote to feel 
 the shock of arms. From that time the people of New England 
 lived in peace with the Indians for thirty-eight years. It might 
 lie expected that old feuds would have been forgotten in that 
 lapse of time. It is supposed that the native population of New 
 England in 1620 was about fifty thousand. Of these four or 
 five thousand resided in New Hampshire. They generally dwelt 
 in the valleys of the rivers, and at such points as presented the 
 best opportunities for fishing. Civil war and pestilence had 
 greatly reduced the number of the aborigines on all the Atlantic 
 coast. The tribes were numerous, but the men were few in each. 
 There were as many as four sachems residing in the eastern and 
 southern parts of the state, who acknowledged a qualified alle- 
 giance to Passaconaway, the great sagamore of the Penacooks. 
 His home was near the present capital of the state. Concord 
 at its first settlement was named Penacook. Passaconaway was 
 renowned for his sagacity, duplicity and moderation. He was 
 also a famous magician. The neighboring tribes believed that 
 he could make water burn, trees dance, and turn himself into a 
 flame. He was always jealous of the whites, but was restrained 
 from attacking them by fear. At a great Indian festival held in 
 1660, this aged sagamore made his farewell speech to his as- 
 sembled subjects. He prophesied a general war, but entreated 
 them to remain neutral.. " Hearken," said he, "to the last words 
 of your father and friend. The white men are sons of the morn- 
 ing. The Great Spirit is their father. His sun shines bright 
 about them. Sure as you light the fires, the breath of heaven 
 will turn the flames upon you and destroy you. Listen to my 
 advice. It is the last I shall be allowed to give you. Remem- 
 ber it and live." This certainly was -excellent advice. It is 
 probably embellished a little in the translation by some one who 
 greatly admired Indian eloquence. Several versions of this 
 speech are extant, all differing in quantity and quality. All we 
 can say respecting it is, that it is true " for substance." He told 
 them, |urthermore, that he had been the bitter enemy of the 
 English, and, by his arts of sorcery, had tried his utmost to pre- 
 vent their settlement and increase, but could by no means sue-
 
 66 HISTORY OF 
 
 ceed. In the war which soon followed, the Penacooks were the 
 only Indians in New Hampshire who remained quiet. Wono- 
 lanset, the son and successor of Passaconaway, resisted the soli- 
 citations of Philip to avenge his own wrongs and those of his 
 race. He even withdrew, with his people, from their homes, that 
 he might not be drawn into the quarrel. 
 
 There exists among historians a great diversity of opinion 
 respecting the character and conduct of Philip, the author of a 
 widespread and desolating war in New England. Some writers 
 class him and some other Indian chiefs, such as Pontiac, Te- 
 cumseh and Black Hawk among the truly great heroes of earth. 
 They regard him as the victim of fortune and not the dupe of 
 folly. By such critics he is regarded as the projector of a vast 
 and comprehensive plan of exterminating the English and ele- 
 vating the Indians. His liberal policy embraced the entire In- 
 dian race. By his eloquence and perseverance he aroused most 
 of the neighboring tribes to a sense of their oppression and en- 
 enlisted them in " freedom's holy war." The contest with them 
 was for liberty or death. All men admire patriotism ; we may 
 not justly withhold it from one who attempted the liberation of 
 his race. He was defeated. He fell "from great undertakings," 
 not like Phaeton for want of skill, but like Cato for want of 
 means. Such are the conclusions of the Indian eulogists. They 
 are sentimentalists, who, like Rousseau, prefer savage to civil- 
 ized life, and deem the native wilds and noisy falls preferable to 
 cities and factories ; or they are authors or artists, who, like 
 Schoolcraft and Catlin, share the home of the Indians that they 
 may find materials to exalt the race by history and painting. 
 Such benefactors, of course, were loved and honored by the na- 
 tives. The history of Massasoit, the father of Philip, shows 
 that it was easy and useful to the natives to maintain peace with 
 the English. For forty years that chief faithfully kept the treaty* 
 made with the Plymouth colonists a few months after their ar- 
 rival. Philip was of a jealous, restless, ambitious and treacher- 
 ous temper. Mr. Palfrey denies that his views were wise, saga- 
 cious, patriotic, or comprehensive. He concludes his estimate 
 of his character, as follows : 
 
 " And the title of King, which it has been customary to attach to his name, 
 disguises and transfigures to the view the form of a squalid savage, whose 
 palace was a sty ; whose royal robe was a bear skin, or a coarse blanket, alive 
 with vermin ; who hardly knew the luxury of an ablution ; who was often 
 glad to appease appetite with food such as men who are not starving loathe ; 
 and whose nature possessed just the capacity for reflection and the degree of 
 refinement which might be expected to be developed from the constitution of 
 his race, by such a condition and such habits of life. * * The Indian 
 King Philip is a mythical character." 
 
 It is probable that Philip came to the resolution to engage in
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 67 
 
 war with some reluctance. It is said that he wept at what he 
 regarded as the fatal alternative, and that his young braves ex- 
 ceeded their leader in their love of vengeance and eagerness for 
 the fight. This wily chief soon found many of the adjacent 
 tribes rallying to his standard. He put himself at their head 
 and engaged in open war. Hostilities commenced in Swansey, 
 Massachusetts, in June 1675. Just before this attack, the Ind- 
 ians of Maine, called the Tarrateens, were excited to violence by 
 the reckless and foolish conduct of some American sailors, who 
 accidentally met the wife of Squando, sachem of the Pequawketts, 
 crossing the Saco with her little child in her arms. They had 
 heard that Indian children could swim as naturally as the young 
 of brutes, and determined to try the experiment. They wan- 
 tonly upset the canoe. The child sank ; the mother immediately 
 dived and recovered it, but the child soon died. The Indians 
 were justly enraged, and ascribed the death of the young child 
 to this brutal treatment. Squando, the father, became the in- 
 veterate foe of all the whites and eagerly sought revenge. 
 His fame was great as a magician, and this gave him a powerful 
 influence over the tribes of Maine and New Hampshire. Other 
 wrongs done to the Indians by the scattered settlers in Maine 
 were alleged as the cause of active hostilities in that state. 
 
 Within twenty days after Philip made his first attack, the whole 
 country for two hundred miles in extent was in a blaze of war. 
 The greatest terror everywhere prevailed. The Indians, dis- 
 persed in small parties, robbed and murdered the unprotected 
 settlers in Maine. They approached New Hampshire in Sep- 
 tember, 1675, and made their first onset on Oyster River, now 
 Durham. Here they burned two houses, killed two men in a 
 canoe, and took two captive. These soon made their escape. 
 Another party lay in ambush, on the road from Exeter to Hamp- 
 ton, where one man was killed and another captured. They con- 
 tinued their march eastward and attacked a house in Berwick, 
 where fifteen women and children were collected. All were 
 saved but two small children who could not climb the fence near 
 the house. They owed their escape to the intrepidity of a girl of 
 eighteen. As the Indians came up, she shut the door and held 
 it while the others fled. The Indians chopped down the door 
 with their hatchets, and entering knocked down the brave girl, 
 whom they left as dead, and pursued the fugitives. The heroine 
 recovered of her wounds ; yet no historian has recorded her 
 name. All the towns on the Piscataqua, and the settlements in 
 Maine, were in the utmost distress and confusion. Business 
 was suspended. Every man was obliged to provide for his own 
 safety and that of his family. The only method of protection 
 was to desert their homes and retire to garrisoned houses, and
 
 68 HISTORY OF 
 
 from convenient places of observation watch for the lurking foe. 
 Thus they were on their guard night and day,- subject to the most 
 fearful alarms, and every moment expecting assaults. From a 
 work entitled " Old Homes of New England," we extract the 
 following description of a house still standing in Durham, built 
 by Capt. John Woodman for a garrison, its present occupants 
 being the sixth or seventh generation of the same name dwell- 
 ing in it. 
 
 " It was the citadel of the early settlement. Round about it, from ten to 
 thirty rods distant, may yet be distinguished the cellars of houses which 
 mouldered at periods beyond the memory of any man living, clustering near 
 by that the occupants might speedily take refuge within its defences when 
 menaced by Indian raids. It stands on rising ground, three quarters of a 
 mile from Oyster River, commanding a view of the valley of that branch, by 
 which goods were brought from Portsmouth. It is constructed of solid white 
 pine logs a foot thick, some of them two feet in depth as high up as a few 
 feet above the second floor, thus forming a parapet to serve as a breastwork, 
 the roof being of moderate pitch, for use in some exigencies of Indian war- 
 fare, this mode of construction having been adopted in similar strongholds 
 in other places. On this upper tier of logs now rests a frame building, fin- 
 ishing out the second story and attic. It has in front the projection common 
 to such houses, to beat off assailants and prevent them from setting fire 
 from below. Its small windows and various port-holes and look-outs were 
 provided with heavy blocks of wood to protect the inmates from the enemies' 
 bullets. It has all been changed now, covered with clapboards and other- 
 wise modernized. It is commodious and sufficiently elegant for present needs 
 but as originally constructed it must have proved a formidable defense 
 against the weapons and methods of Indian warfare. 
 
 As the fisheries in the neighborhood were the best along the coast for sal- 
 mon, shad, and whatever products of the sea Indians chiefly delighted in, it 
 was natural that their temper should have been stirred to the quick, exasper- 
 ated by the indifference manifested by the settlers to their earlier claims. If 
 they wreaked resentment by frequent massacre and cruelties peculiarly sav- 
 age, their sense of wrong was aggravated by their want of power to drive off 
 the intruders or compel redress. Recent events of greater immediate inter- 
 est have blotted out the memory of these baptisms of blood, and the legends 
 that have floated down to us are too horrible for relief. Certainly no part of 
 the country was more constantly harassed, nowhere were more needed for- 
 tresses of strength. The Indians' own castles were girded about by thick-set 
 palisades, and this outer defense was likewise adopted by the settlers for 
 their garrison-houses. They well answered their purpose, and Belknap men- 
 tions an instance when upon alarm the inhabitants of Durham took refuge in 
 their fort. The Indians, some hundreds in number, invested it, but unable to 
 make any impression upon its solid walls, and themselves exposed to a gal- 
 ling fire from the port holes and roof, which rapidly reduced their force, were 
 obliged to retreat." 
 
 In October, 1675, the Indians made a second assault on Ber- 
 wick. Lieutenant Roger Plaisted sent out from his garrison 
 seven men, to make discoveries. They fell into an ambush 
 and three of the number were slain. The next day Plaisted, 
 with twenty men, went out to recover the dead bodies. They 
 were again surprised ; most of the men fled. Plaisted and two 
 of his sons, with one faithful friend, disdained to fly and were
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 69 
 
 killed. Here was displayed heroism far above that which wins 
 honors upon the tented field. The next day Captain Frost came 
 from Sturgeon Creek and buried the dead. Before the close of 
 the month the mill of Capt Frost was burned and an assault 
 made upon his garrison. He had only three boys with him ; 
 but by keeping up a constant fire and running hither and thither, 
 giving loud commands, as to a multitude, he saved his house and 
 the murderous savages retired. They then moved down the 
 river, plundering, burning and killing as they found people un- 
 guarded, till they reached Portsmouth. There they were terri- 
 fied by the firing of cannon, and fled. They soon after appeared 
 at Dover, Lamprey River and Exeter, committing outrages and 
 filling the inhabitants with constant alarm. At the end of No- 
 vember it was ascertained that more than fifty persons had been 
 killed between the Kennebec and Piscataqua. This was a large 
 number, when we reflect that a town then rarely contained more 
 than twenty or thirty men. The Indians had lost ninety of 
 their men. 
 
 The winter was severe ; the snow was four feet deep in De- 
 cember. The Indians were suffering from famine and sued for 
 peace. They came to Major Waldron and expressed sorrow for 
 their cruelties and promised to be quiet and peaceable in future. 
 By his mediation a peace was made with the whole body of 
 eastern Indians, which continued till the next August, and prob- 
 ably would have continued longer had the eastern settlers been 
 more thoughtful and conciliatory toward this irritable and capri- 
 cious race. But, during these seven months of quiet, captives 
 were restored and general joy pervaded every heart in the east- 
 ern colonies. 
 
 Meantime Massachusetts was suffering terrible desolation from 
 the ravages of Philip's subjects and allies. The towns of Brook- 
 field, Deerfield, Mendon, Groton, Rehoboth, Providence and War- 
 wick were burned in rapid succession. Lancaster was laid in 
 ruins and Mrs. Rowlandson carried away captive. At Northfield 
 Captain Beers was defeated and twenty of his men slain. At 
 Muddy Brook, in Deerfield, Captain Lothrop and more than 
 seventy young men, the pride of Essex County, were surprised 
 and murdered. Other similar disasters occurred in other towns. 
 The whole land was shrouded in gloom and every heart was 
 pierced with sorrow. Philip withdrew to a great swamp in 
 Rhode Island, apparently satiated with blood. There he con- 
 structed a rude fortification, enclosing six hundred wigwams. 
 He had large supplies and deemed himself impregnable. But 
 the troops of Massachusetts forced an entrance, burned the wig- 
 wams and slew a thousand of his braves. This was the ruin of 
 the savage warrior. His men that escaped the sword in the
 
 70 HISTORY OF 
 
 swamp were hunted like wild beasts in the woods. Their vic- 
 tories were everywhere turned into defeat. Soon Philip himself, 
 the cause of all these disasters, was captured and slain. With 
 his death the hopes of the allies went out like a candle, and the 
 land, for a time, enjoyed repose. Many of the followers of 
 Philip fled for protection to the tribes of New Hampshire. 
 They tried to identify themselves with the Penacooks, Ossipees 
 and Pequawketts who had agreed upon terms of peace. But 
 they could not remain concealed. Some of them were arrested 
 and punished. 
 
 In August, 1676, hostilities were renewed, through the agency 
 of these strange Indians. Massachusetts sent two companies 
 under Captain Joseph Syll and Captain Hawthorne, to aid the 
 people of New Hampshire. At Cocheco, on the sixth of Sep- 
 tember, they found about four hundred mixed Indians at the 
 house of Major Waldron, with whom they had made peace and 
 whom they regarded as a friend and father. The two captains, 
 recognizing among them many of the murderers of their breth- 
 ren, desired to seize them and hold them as prisoners for pun- 
 ishment. The Major dissuaded violence and had recourse to 
 stratagem. He proposed a sham fight, in the English style, the 
 next day. They consented ; and after first discharging their 
 muskets, they were quietly surrounded and disarmed. A sepa- 
 ration was then made of friends and foes. Wonolanset and the 
 Penacooks, with other friendly Indians, were dismissed in peace. 
 The strange Indians, who were fugitives from justice, were sent 
 as prisoners to Boston, where seven or eight of them were hung, 
 and the rest, to the number of about two hundred, were sold 
 into slavery in foreign lands. 
 
 Many regard the conduct of Major Waldron as an act of 
 treachery. The Indians certainly looked upon it as a breach of 
 faith which they never forgave. For fifteen long years they 
 nursed their vengeance and finally wiped out their scores in the 
 blood of the brave old councilor. The condition of Major 
 Waldron was one of fearful responsibility. The government 
 under which he lived demanded of him the sacrifice he made. 
 The strange Indians really had no claim on him for mercy. 
 They were disguised criminals mingling with innocent peace- 
 makers. Their hands were reeking with the blood of women 
 and children ; and although for the moment he consented to in- 
 clude them in the treaty with his friends, still the law required 
 that they should be separated. He was overruled by the repre- 
 sentatives of the government and surrendered to their power 
 those whom he had previously consented to protect. Major 
 Waldron undoubtedly desired to treat these outlaws according to 
 the rules of war. He wished to withdraw them from the enemy
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 71 
 
 and to save them alive ; but while his treaty was yet incomplete, 
 the agents of the government under which he was acting came 
 and refused to confirm what he had promised. They were or- 
 dered " to seize all who had been concerned with Philip in the 
 war." Here was a sad dilemma for the peacemaker. He could 
 not act on either side without giving offence. If he surrendered 
 the Indians, he must incur their perpetual displeasure ; if he 
 did not surrender them, he exposed himself to the charge of 
 treason to his own government. He decided to obey his superi- 
 ors. Most men, even those who condemn him, would have pur- 
 sued a similar course. His case was not unlike that of General 
 Sherman, when he made terms of surrender for the rebel army. 
 The government was dissatisfied with the conditions he pro- 
 posed and the enemy accepted, and required the stipulations 
 to be changed. The General hesitated not to obey the new 
 and more stringent requisitions. Let him who is disposed to 
 censure one of the greatest and best men of our early history 
 put to himself this question : How should I have acted in like 
 circumstances ? 
 
 After the surrender of these fugitive Indians, the Massachu- 
 setts companies, with some of Waldron's and Frost's men and 
 eight Indian guides from Cocheco, marched eastward in quest of 
 the enemy. The eastern settlements had been destroyed or 
 abandoned ; no enemy was found, and the expedition proved 
 fruitless. Rumor had published a report of the assembling 
 of a large body of Indians near the Ossipee ponds, where 
 they had intrenched themselves in a strong fort which a few 
 years before they had hired English carpenters to build for them 
 as a defence against the Mohawks. The companies set out on 
 the first of November, 1676, furnished with abundant supplies. 
 They traveled four days through the wilderness and met no liv- 
 ing man. They found the fort, but it was deserted. A scouting 
 party was sent about eighteen miles above, but the enemy was 
 nowhere found. The companies returned to Berwick after nine 
 days of profitless labor. A Penobscot Indian named Mogg put 
 them on this false scent. He came to Boston under pretence of 
 making peace for his tribe. In that capacity he was trusted, but 
 he proved a traitor to the English, and boasted of his success in 
 deceiving them into a covenant of peace. When the treachery 
 of Mogg was discovered, hostilities were again renewed. A 
 winter expedition was fitted out. Two hundred men, including 
 sixty Natick Indians, sailed from Boston on the first week of 
 February, under the command of Major Waldron. At Kenne- 
 bec he built a fort and left it under the command of Captain 
 Davis. At Pemaquid he held a conference with the Indians 
 respecting the delivery of prisoners for a ransom, and came
 
 73 HISTORY OF 
 
 near being surprised by the treacherous savages while conferring 
 with them. Their fraud was discovered and summarily pun- 
 ished. They returned to Boston on the eleventh of March, hav- 
 ing killed thirteen Indians and taken some valuable property 
 without loss to themselves. 
 
 As there seemed to be no immediate prospect of peace, the 
 government resolved to employ in their service the Mohawks 
 who had long been the inveterate enemies of the eastern tribes. 
 They hesitated for a time respecting the propriety and rectitude 
 of this act. The Mohawks "were heathen," but the example of 
 Abraham in forming a confederacy with the "heathen" Amonites, 
 in recovering his kinsman Lot from the hands of their common 
 enemy, confirmed them in their purpose. Their doubts were al- 
 layed by the Scripture precedent ; messengers were dispatched 
 to the Mohawks and they were eager and ready for a fight with 
 their ancient adversaries. This alliance with savages proved a 
 misfortune to the English, for they murdered, indiscriminately, 
 those who were friendly and those that were hostile to the whites, 
 and their conduct, it is thought, diverted, in later years, the 
 friendly Indians to the side of the French. The eastern Indians 
 were excited to new ferocity by the incursions of the Mohawks. 
 Scattered parties were robbing, plundering, burning and murder- 
 ing in the vicinity of Wells and Kittery, and even within the 
 bounds of Portsmouth. These outrages continued for nearly a 
 year. Repeated expeditions were sent against them. The Ind- 
 ians were often superior in the fight. In one instance, in a bat- 
 tle at the mouth of the Kennebec, Capt. Sweet and sixty of his 
 men were left dead or wounded on the field. The summer of 
 1677 was passed in constant alarms and fights. During the au- 
 tumn and winter following the Indians remained inactive, though 
 they were masters of the situation. 
 
 In the spring of 1678 commissioners were appointed to make 
 a formal treaty of peace with Squando and other eastern chiefs. 
 They met at Casco, now Portland. It was stipulated in the 
 treaty that the inhabitants should return to their native homes 
 on condition of paying one peck of corn, for each family, annu- 
 ally, to the Indians, and one bushel to Major Pendleton who was 
 a great proprietor. The Indian title to the lands of Maine was 
 thus recognized, and the settlers were humiliated by the pay- 
 ment of tribute to their savage foes. It was the best treaty that 
 could then be made. The war had lasted three years ; and while 
 Philip had been slain and his allies dispersed, the eastern Ind- 
 ians had become formidable. Famine was staring the colonists 
 in the face ; their foes were too remote and too much scattered 
 to allow of systematic warfare ; therefore, they cheerfully sub- 
 mitted to these degrading conditions. In Maine they virtually
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 73 
 
 acknowledged the supremacy of the aborigines. New Hamp- 
 shire retained its independence, though greatly crippled in 
 wealth and men. 
 
 The whole burden of the war fell upon the colonists. They 
 were too proud or too wary to ask aid of England, lest by so 
 doing they should encourage royal encroachments. Massachu- 
 setts had long been accused of aiming at independence of the 
 crown, and New Hampshire was in full sympathy with her sister 
 republic. 
 
 During all this period of sorrow and distress the air and the 
 earth were full of signs, omens, portents and wonders. Modern 
 science had not yet banished superstition. People were too 
 much occupied to study nature's laws. They had not leisure to 
 become wise and they were too much distracted to be rational. 
 A majority of the men at that age believed the atmosphere to be 
 peopled with spirits who brought with them 
 
 "Airs from heaven or blasts from hell." 
 
 Our fathers could, conscientiously, say with Alonzo, in the play : 
 
 "Methought the billows spoke, and told me of it : 
 The winds did sing it to me, and the thunder, 
 That deep and dreadful organ-pipe, pronounced" 
 
 the coming woe. 
 
 " Philip's war commenced in June, 1675, and lasted three years. 
 Six hundred of the inhabitants of New England were cut off, 
 twelve or thirteen towns utterly destroyed, and six hundred build- 
 ings consumed by fire. It is computed that about one man in 
 eleven, out of all capable of bearing arms, was killed, and every 
 eleventh family burnt out ; that one eleventh of the whole militia 
 and of all the buildings of the United Colony were swept off by 
 this war. " 
 
 An extract from a letter of Major Waldron, dated April 18, 
 1677, reveals the distress occasioned by Indian depredations in 
 New Hampshire and Maine : 
 
 "nth instant, 2 men more kill'd at Wells. I2th, 2 men, one woman 
 and 4 children killed at York & 2 houses burnt. I3th, a house burnt at Kit- 
 tery and 2 old people taken captive by Simon and 3 more, but they gave ym 
 their liberty again without any damage to their psons. I4th, a house sur- 
 prised on south side Piscatay and 2 young women carried away thence. i6th, 
 a man killed at Greenland and his house burnt, another sett on fire, but ye 
 Enemy was beaten off & ye fire put out by some of our men who then recov- 
 ed, also, one of the young women taken 2 days before who sts there was but 
 4 Indians ; they run skulking about in small p'ties like wolves. We have 
 had p't's of men after them in all quarters w'ch have sometimes recovered 
 something they have stolen, but can't certainly say they have killed any of 
 ym ; Capt ff rost is after them in Yorkshire." 
 
 It would require the most exalted Christian excellence to love 
 such enemies, or spare them when once captured. 
 
 NOTE. Major Waldron was one of the great men in the early history of Ne_w Hampshire. 
 He held, at different times, every important office in the Province. He acted in every public
 
 74 HISTORY OF 
 
 station with great fidelity, sometimes with unpardonable severity. He was at first commander 
 of the militia, then speaker of the assembly, councilor, acting governor, and the only chief 
 justice of New Hampshire who ever sentenced a citizen for lugh treason. Edward Cove, of 
 Hampton, was tried by him for rebellion. His sentence was drawn up in the barbarous lan- 
 guage of the old English law. He was ordered "to be carried back to the place from whence 
 lie came, and from thence to be drawn to the place of execution and there hanged by the 
 neck, and cut down alive ;" and it was further ordered "that his entrails be taken out and 
 burnt before his face, and his head cut off, and his body divided into four quarters, and his head 
 and quarters disposed of at the King's pleasure." This horrible decree was commuted to 
 imprisonment, and the zealous opponent of a tyrannical governor was finally pardoned and 
 his property restored. 
 
 CHAPTER XXI. 
 
 RENEWAL OF MASON'S CLAIM. 
 
 We, who live in "ceiled houses," with better furniture than 
 kings could command three hundred years ago, can scarcely 
 conceive of the hardships endured by our ancestors in New 
 Hampshire during the first century after its settlement. From 
 the day when Philip first lighted the torch of war, in 1675, there 
 were continued hostilities, with brief intervals of peace, for fifty 
 years ; and the citizen who had lived through that period had 
 endured " hardness as a good soldier " longer than the Roman 
 veteran when he was released from active service. But our 
 fathers found no discharge in that war. They were compelled 
 to fight on for their hearths and altars ; for their children and 
 country. There fell upon them, at once, a storm of woes such 
 as can scarcely be paralleled in history. Indians lay in wait for 
 their blood ; proprietors sought to rob them of their property ; 
 monarchs usurped their government; pestilence thinned their 
 ranks ; famine wasted their strength, and Frenchmen sent sav- 
 ages to murder their families. This combination of destructive 
 agents might be very aptly symbolized by the flying and creep- 
 ing things that devoured the land of ancient Israel, when the 
 prophet exclaimed : " That which the palmer-worm hath left 
 hath the locust eaten ; and that which the locust hath left hath 
 the canker-worm eaten ; and that which the canker-worm hath 
 left hath the caterpillar eaten." Still, they gained skill, energy 
 and courage from these very disasters. Like the oak upon 
 Mount Algidus, to which the poet compares ancient Rome, they 
 derived strength from the very axe that pruned their branches. 
 While the Indian war was raging with its utmost fury, in 1675, 
 Robert Mason again renewed his claim to New Hampshire and
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 75 
 
 petitioned the king for redress. The question was submitted to 
 the king's legal advisers, one of whom was the learned Sir 
 William Jones ; and they reported " that John Mason, Esquire, 
 grandfather to the petitioner, by virtue of several grants from 
 the Council of New England, under their common seal, was in- 
 stated in fee in sundry great tracts of land in New England, by 
 the name of New Hampshire, and that the petitioner, being heir- 
 at-law to the said John, had a good and legal title to said land." 
 The colony of Massachusetts was immediately summoned to 
 answer, before the king, to the charge of usurping jurisdiction 
 over territory owned and claimed by the heirs of Mason and 
 Gorges. Edward Randolph, the kinsman of Mason, a man of 
 great energy and ability, was the bearer of the king's letter. On 
 his arrival in Boston, he made known his mission to Governor 
 Leverett, who read the king's letter to the Council, and they 
 responded, in brief, that " they would consider it." Randolph 
 then passed through New Hampshire, informing the people of 
 his business. Occasionally a disaffected person was ready to 
 complain of the government of Massachusetts, as in all well 
 regulated communities and families there is usually some one 
 who is ready to be the "accuser of his brethren." The great 
 majority of the people, however, were highly incensed against 
 the royal messenger. The inhabitants of Dover, in town-meet- 
 ing, " protested against the claim of Mason, declaring that they 
 had, bona fide, purchased their lands of the Indians, recognized 
 their subjection to the government of Massachusetts under 
 whom they had lived long and happily, and by whom they were 
 now assisted in defending their estates and families against the 
 savage enemy." How much is revealed by this pathetic protest ! 
 Had Mason then been put in possession of the entire state of 
 New Hampshire, it would not have sold at auction for a sum 
 sufficient to defray the expenses of that single Indian war, then 
 raging. Major Waldron was appointed to petition the king in 
 their behalf. The people of Portsmouth, likewise, appointed 
 four of their citizens to " draft " a similar petition for them. 
 
 The governor of Massachusetts reproved Randolph for en- 
 deavoring to excite discontent among the people. He replied, 
 " if he had done amiss, they might complain to the king." 
 After a brief stay of six weeks he returned to England, charg- 
 ing the magistrates of Boston with oppression, and calling on 
 the king to free the people of New Hampshire from their gal- 
 ling yoke. After his departure the Council of Massachusetts, 
 with the advice of the elders of the church, sent agents to Eng- 
 land to answer, in person, to such allegations as might be made 
 against them. On their arrival a hearing was ordered before 
 the chief justices of the king's bench and common pleas. The
 
 76 HISTORY OF 
 
 agents disclaimed all title to the land claimed by Mason, and 
 asserted the right of jurisdiction only over that portion of 
 the territory within the limits of the charter of Massachusetts. 
 The judges declined to determine the ownership of the soil ; but 
 decided that neither the proprietor nor Massachusetts had the 
 right of jurisdiction over New Hampshire. It was accordingly 
 decreed that the four towns of Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter and 
 Hampton were beyond the bounds of Massachusetts. This 
 opened the way for the establishment of a separate government 
 for New Hampshire. The secretary of state therefore informed 
 the colony of Massachusetts that it was the king's pleasure that 
 the two colonies should be separated ; and that all commissions 
 issued by Massachusetts within the limits of New Hampshire 
 should be null and void. The claimant, however, was obliged 
 to declare, under his hand and seal, that he would demand no 
 back rents due prior to the separation ; and that he would con- 
 firm to all settlers their title to their lands and houses on con- 
 dition of their payment to him of sixpence in the pound of the 
 entire value of their property. On these terms a commission 
 was issued on the eighteenth of September, 1679, under the royal 
 seal, for the government of New Hampshire as a royal province. 
 The union with Massachusetts, which had existed for thirty-eight 
 years, was arbitrarily dissolved, contrary to the expressed wishes 
 of all the parties interested. This union had been pleasant and 
 profitable to both colonies, and was sundered with the special 
 regret of the citizens of New Hampshire. It was the more un- 
 welcome to them because it was planned to favor the claim of 
 Mason, and thus deprive them of their property and their gov- 
 ernment. 
 
 CHAPTER XXII. 
 
 ORGANIZATION OF THE NEW GOVERNMENT. 
 
 The stormiest period of our colonial history was during the 
 reign of the Stuarts, the most impracticable and unfortunate of 
 royal families. Every one of them was innocent of any design 
 to promote the independence of the colonies ; their blunders 
 helped them ; their ruin saved them. Charles the First attempt- 
 ed to patch up for himself "a madman's robe" of power, but utterly 
 failed ; so that it was truthfully said of him, " nothing so be-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 77 
 
 came him in his life as the leaving of it." Charles the Second, 
 the meanest and most profligate of all the English monarchs, val- 
 ued power and wealth only as they contributed to his pleasures. 
 He lived "in wantonness," a pensioner of the hereditary foe of the 
 English church and English liberty, and died in the Catholic 
 communion, showing that his whole life was a " practical lie." 
 This man, 
 
 " Whose promise none relied on, " 
 
 instituted for New Hampshire a new form of government. The 
 royal commission was brought to Portsmouth on the first day of 
 January, 1680. It ordained a president and council, with very 
 liberal powers, to represent the king and constitute the executive 
 branch of the government. John Cutts (often written Cutt) was 
 appointed president, and Richard Martyn, William Vaughan and 
 Thomas Daniel of Portsmouth, John Oilman of Exeter, Chris- 
 topher Hussey of Hampton and Richard Waldron of Dover 
 councilors, with permission to choose three other qualified per- 
 sons out of the several parts of the province, to be added to 
 them. The president was to nominate a deputy who was to 
 preside in his absence. The council was authorized to admin- 
 ister justice, with the right of appeal to the king when the sum 
 in dispute exceeded fifty pounds. They also regulated the 
 militia and appointed officers. They were required to issue writs 
 for the calling of a popular assembly to establislutheir allegiance, 
 assess taxes and provide for the public defence". The king, how- 
 ever, retained the right to annul all laws that he did not ap- 
 prove. He could also discontinue the representation of the peo- 
 ple at his pleasure. The whole constitution was artfully con- 
 trived to give a show of great popular liberty and at the same 
 time leave the king the supreme ruler of the land. Charles 
 hated parliaments as did his " martyred " father ; he therefore 
 provided for the suspension of the representative branch of the 
 provincial government, in case they should become insubordinate. 
 Liberty of conscience was allowed to all Protestants ; but special 
 favor was shown to the church of England. 
 
 This commission was brought to Portsmouth by the same 
 Edward Randolph who had made himself so offensive to the 
 people on a former mission in behalf of the heirs of Mason. A 
 more unwelcome messenger could not have been found. The 
 people were dissatisfied with the change ; and the officers named 
 in the commission received with manifest reluctance the honors 
 conferred upon them. These men were all artfully selected to 
 make the government acceptable to the people. They were the 
 most trusted and honored men of the province. They had serv- 
 ed the people faithfully, in war and peace, during their connec- 
 tion with Massachusetts, and enjoyed the confidence and respect
 
 78 HISTORY OF 
 
 of all the freemen. The number of voters in Portsmouth was 
 seventy-one ; in Dover sixty-one, in Hampton fifty-seven ; and in 
 Exeter only twenty. On the twenty-second day of January, the 
 councilors took the oaths of office. They chose three other per- 
 sons to fill the places designated in the commission. The coun- 
 cil was organized by appointing Martyn treasurer and Roberts 
 marshal. The president nominated Waldron as his deputy. 
 
 A few disaffected persons only approved of the new order of 
 things ; the mass of the people looked upon themselves as en- 
 snared by the royal charter. They were deprived of the priv- 
 ilege of electing their rulers, which the other colonies of New 
 England still enjoyed, and they expected their titles to their prop- 
 erty soon to be called in question. A general assembly was sum- 
 moned. The persons who were judged qualified to vote were 
 named in the writs ; and the oath of allegiance was adminis- 
 tered to every voter. A fast was proclaimed to ask the divine 
 blessing on the approaching assembly and " the continuance of 
 their precious and pleasant things." The first meeting of the 
 assembly was held at Portsmouth on the sixteenth of March. 
 Prayer was offered and a sermon preached by Rev. Joshua 
 Moody. This custom of listening to an election sermon became 
 an established custom in New Hampshire in the next century. 
 Among the first acts of this new legislature was the preparation 
 of a letter to the general court at Boston, expressing in the most 
 ample terms their gratitude for their kind protection and ex- 
 cellent government. This was accompanied with the assurance 
 that the separation was compulsory and was by them submitted 
 to with reluctance. The hope was expressed that they might 
 still be united for the common defence against a common enemy. 
 The world's history furnishes few examples of a union so har- 
 monious and mutually acceptable to both parties as that between 
 these infant states. The assembly then proceeded to frame a 
 code of laws. The following preamble, full of the spirit of in- 
 dependence, was first enacted : " That no act, imposition, law or 
 ordinance should be made or imposed upon them, but such as 
 should be made by the assembly and approved by the assembly 
 and council." They then proceeded to enumerate fifteen crimes 
 punishable with death. Idolatry and witchcraft were among 
 them. They in fact merely re-enacted the laws of Massachusetts, 
 under which they had been living for so many years. The spirit 
 of these was derived from the Mosaic code. The other penal 
 laws were such as have, in the main, been continued to this day. 
 To prevent future controversies, the boundaries of towns and 
 grants of land were to remain unaltered. Juries were to decide 
 disputed claims. The president and council constituted the su- 
 preme court, with a jury when the parties so elected ; and three
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 79 
 
 inferior courts were constituted at Portsmouth, Dover and Hamp- 
 ton. One company of infantry was enrolled in each town, one 
 company of artillery at the fort, and one company of cavalry, 
 all under the command of the veteran Major Waldron. So the 
 new administration was opened under the same laws which pre- 
 vailed during the recent union with Massachusetts. There were 
 but slight changes in any of the departments of the government. 
 
 Soon, however, the royal arm was stretched out, not for pro- 
 tection but for robbery. The people were very jealous of the 
 least infringement of their rights. The king's first aggressive 
 act was in the imposition and collection of duties on trade. Ed- 
 ward Randolph had been appointed the royal surveyor of ports 
 and collector of revenue throughout New England. He made 
 proclamation that all vessels should be entered and cleared by 
 him. In the execution of his commisssion he seized a vessel 
 belonging to Portsmouth. The master complained of- this act 
 to the council. Randolph was summoned to answer to the com- 
 plaint, but assumed an air of insolence toward the court. He 
 was, however, fined and compelled to ask pardon, publicly, for 
 the insult offered to the council. He appealed to the king. 
 His deputy Walter Barefoot, having published a decree that all 
 vessels should be entered and cleared by him, was also indicted 
 and fined. The king's officers were decidedly unpopular ; and 
 the king's income from the commerce of the colony was a minus 
 quantity. Randolph met with no better success in Boston. His 
 name and office were everywhere odious. In December, 1681, 
 Mason arrived from England, with a mandamus from the king to 
 admit him to a seat in the council. He was accordingly allowed 
 to sit. He soon revealed the object of his mission. He wished 
 to constrain the people to take leases of him. He assumed all 
 the powers of a proprietor, forbidding the cutting of wood and 
 timber and threatening to sell their houses for rents due. The 
 citizens petitioned for protection and the council forbade Mason 
 and his agents to act independently of the laws. Mason re- 
 fused to sit longer in the council ; and when they threatened to 
 deal with him as an offender, he published a summons to the 
 president and several members of the council to appear before 
 his majesty in three months. This was deemed a "usurpation ", 
 and he escaped arrest by fleeing to England. 
 
 While these events were in progress the President Cutts died, 
 and Major Waldron, his deputy, succeeded him. The first presi- 
 dent was universally beloved by the people. He was a man of 
 integrity and patriotism, and his memory is still cherished in 
 the towns where he lived. The place where his ashes repose 
 is still pointed out in the populous part of the city, where was 
 once the orchard of the opulent merchant. The death of the
 
 80 HISTORY OF 
 
 president produced some changes in the council : Richard Wald- 
 ron, jr., was elected to fill his father's place ; Anthony Nutter 
 was chosen in the place of Mr. Dalton deceased. Henry Dow 
 was made marshal instead of Roberts who resigned. During 
 the brief period remaining of this administration nothing worthy 
 of special notice occurred, except a second seizure of a vessel 
 by deputy-surveyor Barefoot and a second fine of twenty pounds 
 imposed upon him by the council. 
 
 At this date there was little to encourage immigration ; and, 
 if possible, less to cheer the hearts of the permanent residents. 
 The exports of the province, consisting chiefly of lumber, were 
 in little demand in the other plantations. Importations were 
 small, as the ships that entered the harbor at Portsmouth 
 usually sold their cargoes elsewhere and came there empty to be 
 filled with lumber. The fisheries had declined ; and none were 
 then cured in New Hampshire. One passage from a communi- 
 cation made to " the Lords of Trade " in England, by the coun- 
 cil, deserves especial notice. It is to us truly touching in its 
 tone : 
 
 " In reference to the improvement of land by tillage, our soil is generally 
 so barren and the winters so extreme cold and long, that there is not pro- 
 vision enough raised to supply the inhabitants, many of whom were in the 
 late Indian war so impoverished, their houses and estates being destroyed 
 and they and others remaining still so incapacitated for the improvement of 
 the land (several of the youth being killed also), that they even groan under 
 the tax or rate assessed for that service, which is, a great part of it, unpaid 
 to this day." 
 
 They speak in this letter of the insufficiency of the armament 
 of the fort on Great Island. It consisted of eleven small guns. 
 " These were bought and the fort erected at the proper charge of 
 the towns of Dover and Portsmouth at the beginning of the 
 first Dutch war, about the year 1665, in obedience to his maj- 
 esty's command, in his letter to the government under which the 
 province then was." His majesty's foreign wars taxed heavily 
 these poor colonists; but his majesty's exchequer paid none of 
 their bills. It was a glorious privilege to live under a king.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 8 I 
 
 CHAPTER XXIII. 
 
 ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE IN THE EARLY HISTORY OF NEW 
 HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 In the infancy of a state the laws are few, the processes of 
 justice simple ; and the bench is guided in its decisions by equity 
 and common sense, rather than by precedents. Until 1641 the 
 several plantations of New Hampshire, being voluntary associa- 
 tions and with but small populations, secured substantial justice 
 by agents and officers appointed by the several companies. After 
 the union with Massachusetts in 1641, regular courts were organ- 
 ized which continued till 1680, when the colony was made a sep- 
 arate government and a new code of laws and new courts were 
 ordained by an assembly chosen by the people. A superior 
 court was established and three inferior courts to be holden at 
 Dover, Hampton and Portsmouth. The president of the prov- 
 ince, the council, consisting of ten members, and the assem- 
 bly constituted the supreme court. This was evidently mod- 
 eled after the English parliamentary court organized for the 
 trial of offences against " the peace and dignity of the state." 
 A jury was allowed, if the parties desired it. Either party, if 
 dissatisfied, could appeal to the king in council, if the amount 
 in dispute exceeded fifty pounds. During the administrations of 
 the royal governors, the courts were often modified by such ar- 
 bitrary rulers as Cranfield, Barefoot and Andros. In some 
 instances, law and justice were synonymous with a dictator's de- 
 crees. Councilors and judges were removed, with cause or 
 without, as the governor's prejudices determined. A new organi- 
 zation of the courts was made by the legislative assembly in 
 1699, which continued in vogue without material change till 
 1771. Justices of the peace in their respective towns were au- 
 thorized by this enactment to hear and try all actions of debt 
 and trespass, where title to real estate was not involved, if the 
 matter in issue did not exceed forty shillings. Either party was 
 allowed to appeal to a higher court when dissatisfied. " After 
 the temporary constitution was formed, in January, 1776, judges 
 were appointed on the 27th day of the same month by the leg- 
 islature for the courts of the several counties, and of the supe- 
 rior court of judicature. It would appear that the jurisdiction 
 of the courts was not changed beyond a few technicalities, so as 
 to conform more correctly to the new formed and independent 
 government ; and so remained during the war with England." 
 
 6
 
 82 HISTORY OF 
 
 An act was passed January 5, 1776, in reference to the several 
 courts, which reads thus : " All which courts shall respectively 
 hold and exercise like jurisdiction and authority within their 
 respective counties, in all matters and causes arising within such 
 counties as the Superior Court of Judicature, Inferior Court of 
 Common Pleas, and Court of General Sessions of the Peace, 
 heretofore respectively held and exercised within this colony, or 
 by law ought to hold and exercise." In March, 1791, the state 
 was divided into five counties, and the courts were modified to 
 suit this new division. 
 
 The first settlers of Strawberry Bank and Hilton's Point were 
 bold, hardy and independent adventurers. They sought the wil- 
 derness from motives of gain rather than of godliness. Profit, 
 not, piety prompted them to roam. They sought to live by trade 
 rather than by toil. When they " bade their native land good 
 night," they left behind them the restraints of society, education 
 and religion. For the first ten years of their residence in their 
 new homes, no records of the administration of justice exist. 
 It is probable that the local governors, who represented the pro- 
 prietors and the property of the plantations, were somewhat ar- 
 bitrary in their treatment of offenders. Doubtless crimes were 
 perpetrated and punished ; for in the smallest communities bad 
 men are always found. " I have chosen you twelve," said our 
 Savior, " and one of you is a devil." This is a pretty fair ratio 
 of knaves and cheats to the good and true men of every age. 
 We expect about one in twelve to betray his trusts and de- 
 fraud his creditors ; and a progressive people increases rather 
 than diminishes this average. Only ten years after the first set- 
 tlement at Little Harbor, crimes of such enormity were com- 
 mitted that the local governor dared not punish them. In Octo- 
 ber, 1633, Capt. Wiggen wrote to the governor of Massachu- 
 setts requesting him to arraign and try a notorious criminal. 
 The governor intimated that he would do so if Pascataquack 
 lay within their limits, as was supposed. This is said to be the 
 first official intimation that Massachusetts claimed to own New 
 Hampshire. Other petitions of the same kind followed ; and 
 New Hampshire criminals were tried and sentenced by Massa- 
 chusetts courts. Sometimes a prisoner escaped to his own col- 
 ony, and men of the baser sort there protected him against the 
 officers of the law. After the union of the two colonies in 1641, 
 the- courts of Massachusetts, superior and inferior, were estab- 
 lished in New Hampshire. Substantial justice was administered 
 and the land had rest. No period of our colonial history was 
 so free from harassing litigations, civil and criminal, as that 
 passed under the jurisdiction of the Bay State. After the ad- 
 vent of royal governors, controversies were multiplied, violence
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 83 
 
 usurped the place of law ; and, as in the iron age of the old 
 poets, Justice, "last of the celestials," left the land. Law-suits 
 respecting land titles, royal tribute and the king's pines pro- 
 voked the hostility of the people, and mobs prevented the exe- 
 cution of the decrees of royal courts. The Revolution put an 
 effectual estoppel to such suits. Under__the_new government 
 the people created their own courts and compelled suitors to 
 obey their mandates. It deserves notice, however, that under 
 the various governments of the colony and state, for two hun- 
 dred years, very few of the justices were eminent for their knowl- 
 edge of law. "Under the colonial government," says Hon. 
 William Plumer, " causes of importance were carried up, for de- 
 cision in the last resort, to the governor and council, with the 
 right in certain cases a right seldom claimed of appeal to 
 the king in council. As the executive functionaries were not 
 generally lawyers, and the titular judges were often from other 
 professions than the legal, they were not much influenced in 
 their decisions by any known principles of established law. So 
 much, indeed, was the result supposed to depend on the favor 
 or aversion of the court, that presents from the suitors to the 
 judges were not uncommon, nor perhaps unexpected." Possi- 
 bly the learned Chancellor of King James I. was not, after all, 
 the " meanest of mankind." 
 
 CHAPTER XXIV. 
 
 ADMINISTRATION OF CRANFIELD. 
 
 Mason had now learned from experience that the people, if 
 governed by officers of their own choice, would never admit his 
 title to their lands. He therefore besought the king to appoint 
 a new president who would favor his claims. Mason, by sur- 
 rendering one-fifth of the quit-rents to the king for the support 
 of a royal governor, procured the appointment of Edward Cran- 
 field as lieutenant-governor and commander-in-chief of New 
 Hampshire. Avarice was Cranfield's ruling passion ; and the 
 proprietor approached him through that avenue by mortgaging 
 to him the whole province for twenty-one years as security for 
 the payment of one hundred and fifty pounds per annum to the 
 new governor. Thus Cranfield became personally interested in 
 Mason's claim. His commission was dated May 9, 1682. It
 
 84 HISTORY OF 
 
 granted almost unlimited powers. The members of the old 
 council were retained and three new members were nominated, 
 including Mason. Very soon after entering upon his office, 
 Cranfield suspended from the council the popular leaders, Wal- 
 dron and Martyn. The people soon learned that Cranfield was 
 clothed with extraordinary powers ; and that both their liberty 
 and property were in peril. He could veto all acts of the legis- 
 lature and dissolve them at his pleasure. The judges also were 
 appointed by him. At the first session of the assembly, which 
 he called in November, he with royal condescension restored 
 Waldron and Martyn to the council ; acting arbitrarily, both in 
 their suspension and restoration. The assembly generously 
 voted two hundred and fifty pounds for his support. This sop, 
 for the hour, filled the gaping jaws of this greedy Cerberus ; but 
 the next session, a few months later, he summarily dissolved, be- 
 cause they refused to raise further sums for the support of the 
 government. This act created at once popular discontent. " A 
 mob collected in Exeter and Hampton, headed by Edward Gove, 
 a member of the dissolved assembly, and with noise and confu- 
 sion declared for " liberty and reformation." Gove passed from 
 town to town, calling on the people to rise ; but the majority 
 were not ready for revolt. Gove, finding his cause unsupported, 
 surrendered himself to the officers of the government, was tried 
 for treason and condemned to death. His rash followers were 
 pardoned. He was not executed, but was sent to London and 
 imprisoned in the tower. 
 
 On the fourteenth of February, 1683, the governor called on 
 the inhabitants of New Hampshire " to take their leases from 
 Mason within one month," with threats of confiscation in case 
 of neglect to do so. Very few persons complied with this requi- 
 sition. The courts were then arranged so as to secure a verdict 
 in every case for Mason. The notorious Barefoot was made 
 judge ; the council was filled with the creatures of the governor; 
 the juries were selected from those who had taken leases of the 
 proprietor. With matters thus arranged, Mason commenced 
 actions of ejection against the principal inhabitants of the sev- 
 eral towns. No defence was made. The verdict in every case 
 was for the plaintiff, and he was legally put in possession of the 
 forfeited estates ; but, so strong was the popular hatred against 
 him, he could neither keep nor sell them. The government 
 became a mere instrument of oppression. The citizens were 
 harassed beyond endurance. The people, as a forlorn hope, re- 
 solved to petition the king for protection. This was done in se- 
 cret. Nathaniel Weare of Hampton was appointed their agent 
 to present their petition to his majesty. The remainder of this 
 turbulent administration was a series of collisions with the assem-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 85 
 
 bly, the people and the pulpit. Cranfield was a perverse, arrogant, 
 impracticable schemer ; and repeated failures in his high-handed 
 measures made him desperate. He undertook to rule without 
 the assembly, and thus involved himself in difficulty with the 
 home government. While he remained in office he succeeded 
 in making everybody unhappy and uncomfortable. He owed 
 the Rev. Joshua Moody a special spite.. He determined to 
 bring this sturdy independent to terms. Accordingly he issued 
 an order in council, requiring ministers to admit all persons of 
 suitable years and not vicious to the Lord's supper ; and their 
 children to baptism ; and that if any person desired baptism or 
 the sacrament of the Lord's supper to be administered accord- 
 ing to the liturgy of the church of England, it should be done. 
 The train was now laid for an explosion, and this Guy Fawkes 
 held the matches. The governor himself, with Mason and 
 Hinckes, appeared in Mr. Moody's church the next Sabbath, de- 
 siring to partake of the Lord's supper, and requiring him to 
 administer it according to the liturgy. He at once declined to 
 do so. Moody was arraigned for disobedience to the king's 
 command. He made a suitable defence, pleading that he was 
 not episcopally ordained and therefore not legally qualified for 
 the service demanded. The governor gained over several re- 
 luctant judges and Moody was sentenced to " six months' im- 
 prisonment, without bail or mainprise." Mr. Moody was imme- 
 diately taken into custody, without taking leave of his family, 
 and held in durance for thirteen weeks. He was released then, 
 by the interposition of friends, under charge from the governor to 
 preach no more in the province. He was therefore invited to take 
 charge of a church in Boston, where he remained till 1692, when 
 his persecutors had been removed. Mr. Moody was far in ad- 
 vance of his age in toleration. He did not believe in hanging 
 Quakers or witches ; but chose rather to rescue them from their 
 persecutors. For these reasons, the memory of that good man 
 is still cherished in all the churches where he was known. 
 
 Mr. Brewster, in his "Rambles about Portsmouth," says : " In 
 thirty years, Mr Moody wrote four thousand and seven hundred 
 sermons ; or two and one-half each week. In those days ser- 
 mons generally occupied one hour." The people had not then 
 approached that limit of brevity in pulpit performances pre- 
 scribed by an eminent English judge ; his rule for the length of 
 a sermon was, " twenty minutes, with a leaning to mercy." 
 
 The governor, being foiled in all his plans, proceeded to levy 
 and collect taxes without the sanction of the assembly. His 
 officers were resisted ; they were assailed with clubs in the street 
 and scalded with boiling water in the houses. In process of time 
 the agent of the colony was heard in England, and the lords of
 
 86 HISTORY OF 
 
 trade decided that Cranfield had exceeded his instructions and 
 the king granted him leave of absence, rewarding his loyalty with 
 an office in Barbadoes. So the colony was relieved of one tyrant 
 to give place to another ; for Walter Barefoot, his deputy, reign- 
 ed in his stead. Cranfield seems not to have possessed one 
 element of nobility of character or generosity. He was deceitful 
 and treacherous, as well as vindictive and malicious. His suc- 
 cessor, during his short administration, walked in his steps. He 
 continued the prosecutions instituted by Mason, and allowed 
 persons to be imprisoned on executions which the lords of trade 
 had pronounced illegal. The service of these writs was attended 
 with peril to the officials. In Dover, the rioters who resisted the 
 sheriffs were seized during divine worship in the church. The 
 officers were again roughly handled, and one young lady knock- 
 ed down one of them with her bible. Both Barefoot and Mason 
 received personal injuries, at the house of the former, from two 
 members of the assembly who went thither to converse about 
 these suits. Mason was thrown upon the fire and badly burned; 
 and Barefoot, attempting to aid him, had two of his ribs broken. 
 Mason commenced the assault. It was an unseemly quarrel for 
 a prospective baron and an actual governor. During the year 
 1655 a treaty was made with the eastern Indians which was 
 observed by them for about four years. In 1686, Mason, having 
 hitherto been defeated in his attempts to recover the cultivated 
 lands of the state, turned his attention to the unoccupied por- 
 tions. He disposed of a large tract of a million acres, on both 
 sides of the Merrimack, to Jonathan Tyng and nineteen others., 
 for a yearly rent of ten shillings. The purchasers had previously 
 extinguished the Indian title. He also leased for a thousand 
 years, to Hezekiah Usher and his heirs, " the mines, minerals 
 and ores " within the limits of New Hampshire, reserving to 
 himself one-fourth of the "royal ores" and one-seventeenth 
 of the baser sort.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 87 
 
 CHAPTER XXV. 
 
 GOVERNMENT UNDER DUDLEY AND ANDROS. 
 
 Kings and royal governors seem to have been ordained of 
 God to set up, maintain and perpetuate " a school of affliction " 
 for the New England colonists, who certainly were meet for the 
 kingdom of heaven, if " much tribulation " could fit them for it. 
 Charles II., in the latter part of his reign, grew more rapacious ; 
 he could scarcely become more wicked. He seized every char- 
 ter, at home and abroad, which impeded his despotic march. 
 The royal charter of Massachusetts had for nearly a century 
 shielded her against the assaults of savages, corporations and 
 monarchs, a climax of human ills such as few rising states are 
 ever called to endure. Their " anointed king," as they defer- 
 entially called him, resolved to take that province under his own 
 protection. Randolph was the malicious " accuser of his breth- 
 ren," who stimulated the avaricious monarch to lie in wait for 
 the innocent. He traversed the ocean like a shuttle, eight times 
 in nine years, to effect " a consummation so devoutly to be wish- 
 ed." He succeeded ; and the charter was declared forfeited. It 
 was never surrendered. The people resolved " to die by the hands 
 of others rather than their own." New England was henceforth 
 to be under one president. This was in one respect favorable ; 
 for there would be fewer wolves " to cover and devour " the flock. 
 The king died before his arbitrary plans were consummated. 
 His brother, James II., was more bigoted and cruel than his 
 predecessor. No agent of his has a single bright page in history. 
 His officials were all men "after his own heart" ; and no Judas 
 or Nero ever possessed less of the " milk of human kindness." 
 It is not strange that the reputation of William Penn has suf- 
 fered at the hands of Macaulay, for being known as the friend 
 of such a monster. He appointed Joseph Dudley president of 
 New England in May, 1685 ; and, about one year and a half 
 later, the infamous Andros, whose reputation for meanness is 
 only eclipsed by that of his contemporary, Judge Jeffreys. He 
 was styled " Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of the Ter- 
 ritory and Dominion of New England. " These men were both 
 armed with frightfully inquisitorial powers. No right, privilege 
 or franchise was safe from their grasp. They were virtually em- 
 powered to make laws and execute them ; to assess taxes and 
 collect them. Where popular assemblies were ordained, they
 
 88 HISTORY OF 
 
 could easily evade their use or decrees. The provinces were 
 now in the hands of tyrants, whose only object was to enrich 
 themselves and increase their power. The press was restrained, 
 liberty of conscience invaded, excessive taxes levied and landed 
 titles annulled. Sir Edmund Andros began, with fair professions 
 and conciliatory measures, to lure the unwary into his snares. 
 His true character was soon revealed ; and he became an object 
 of popular aversion. Mason had obtained a decision in the 
 king's court against Vaughan, who had appealed from the judg- 
 ment rendered against him in New Hampshire. This armed the 
 proprietor with new powers, and he proceeded to vindicate his 
 claim to the soil with new energy. But in the midst of his pros- 
 ecutions Mason was arrested by death, in the fifty-ninth year of 
 his age. He left two sons, John and Robert, as heirs of all his 
 quarrels. His life was full of trouble and destitute of honor 
 or profit. 
 
 While the political heavens were shrouded in deepest gloom, 
 as the people gazed upon the storm in an agony of despair, they 
 suddenly beheld 
 
 "a sable cloud 
 
 Turn forth her silver lining on the night." 
 
 The despotism of James II. had gone beyond the people's en- 
 durance. They had arisen in their might and driven the perjured 
 tyrant from his throne and realm. The arrival of this intelli- 
 gence filled the people with joy. Andros imprisoned the man 
 who brought the news. The people of Boston rose in arms, 
 arrested the governor, Andros, and his principal adherents, and 
 sent them as state prisoners to England, to await the decision of 
 the new government. The people of New Hampshire were for 
 a time left without a responsible government. A-Convention 
 was called, composed of deputies from all the towns, to deliber- 
 ate upon their exigencies. At their meeting in January, 1690, 
 after some unsatisfactory discussion of other plans, they resolved 
 on a second union with Massachusetts. A petition to this effect 
 was readily granted by their old ally, till the king's pleasure 
 should be known. The old laws and former officials for a time 
 resumed their sway ; but this union was brief. The king was, for 
 some reasons, averse to the people's wish. Their old adversaries, 
 the heirs of Mason, were again in the field. They had sold their 
 claim to Samuel Allen of London for seven hundred and fifty 
 pounds. Through his influence the petition was not granted ; 
 and the same Allen was made governor and his son-in-law, John 
 Usher, lieutenant-governor. Thus the people of New Hamp- 
 shire were again furnished with a governor, a creature whom 
 they little needed and greatly hated. Again war, pestilence and 
 famine were at their doors. The Indians were upon the war
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 89 
 
 path ; the governor was exercising the vocation of a civil rob- 
 ber, and the small-pox was raging in the land with fearful deso- 
 lation. The times were dark ; their souls were tried ; their hearts 
 were sad ; but their trust was in God. 
 
 CHAPTER XXVI. 
 
 KING WILLIAM'S WAR. 
 
 When James II. was expelled from England he fled to France, 
 and the king of that country espoused his cause. This led to a 
 war between England and France which lasted from 1689 to the 
 peace of Ryswick, in 1697. It was called " King William's War." 
 The English colonies were all involved in it. The English king 
 not only brought woes upon them by his accession to power, but 
 entailed them by his abdication of it. It is difficult to see why 
 such scourges of mankind are permitted to live. The patriarch 
 so felt when he exclaimed, " Wherefore do the wicked live, be- 
 come old, yea, are mighty in power ? " The philosophic poet 
 answers the question by another equally puzzling : 
 
 " If storms and earthquakes break not heaven's design, 
 Why then a Borgia or a Catiline?" 
 
 The Indians had, for some time previous to the English Rev- 
 olution, shown signs of hostility. Some of those Indians who 
 had been seized, contrary to treaty stipulations, thirteen years 
 before, by Major Waldron and others, had returned from slav- 
 ery. They did not appeal in vain to the love of vengeance so 
 characteristic of the red men. A confederacy was formed be- 
 tween the tribes of Penacook and Pigwackett [or Pequawkett]. 
 They determined to surprise the Major and his neighbors, with 
 whom they professed to live on terms of friendship. They were 
 also excited to war by the emissaries of the Baron de Castine, a 
 French nobleman who had settled as an Indian trader on lands 
 between the Penobscot and Nova Scotia to which both the French 
 and English laid claim. This representative of an ancient noble 
 house had made his home with savages, and established in his 
 house a harem of Indian women. He furnished the Indians 
 with muskets and thus stimulated them to fight. Under pretence 
 of punishing some violation of the laws of neutrality, Andros 
 visited the house of the baron and plundered it, in the spring 
 of 1688. Castine, of course, was exasperated at this act of folly
 
 90 HISTORY OF 
 
 and roused the Indians, who were his devoted friends, to avenge 
 his wrongs. Other causes were alleged for the rising of the In- 
 dians. Some, doubtless, were just ; for the early settlers of 
 Maine were not very punctilious in keeping their treaties with 
 the natives. The Indians, with cause or without it, were deter- 
 mined to shed blood. On the evening of the twenty-seventh of 
 June, 1689, two squaws entered the house of Major Waldron, 
 then eighty years of age, and asked permission to lodge by the 
 fire. This hospitality was granted. In the night they rose, un- 
 barred the gates and gave a signal for the conspirators to enter. 
 The brave old man, roused by the entrance of the crowd, seized 
 his sword, and for some time defended himself. He was finally 
 stunned by a blow upon the head. They then cut off his nose 
 and ears, placed him in a chair on a table in his own hall and 
 mocked him, shouting, " Judge Indians again ! " Making sport, 
 too, of their debts to him for goods he had sold them, they 
 gashed his aged breast with their hatchets, and each fiend cried 
 out, "Thus I cross out my accounts ! " At length, the venerable 
 old councilor, whose " natural force was not abated " by age, 
 reeled and fell from the loss of blood, and died amid the exulta- 
 tions of his torturers. The assassins burned his house and 
 those of his neighbors ; and, after butchering twenty-three inno- 
 cent citizens, stole away to the wilderness. Such is Indian war- 
 fare. It has less nobility and magnanimity in it than the assaults 
 of a beast of prey. 
 
 Some historians affirm that every act of treachery and cruelty 
 recorded against the red man has its parallel in the history of 
 civilized warfare. This may be true, but these acts of white 
 men are the exceptions not the rule. If modern nations always 
 violated treaties whenever a powerful ally could be secured ; if 
 it were their habit to begin hostilities without previous notice, 
 to fight from coverts and ambuscades, to fall upon their ene- 
 mies by stealth when alone and unarmed, to scalp and torture 
 their captives, to dash infants against trees and rocks and com- 
 pel women to wade, for hundreds of miles, through deep snows, 
 barefoot and half clad, then, and then only, would the cases be 
 parallel and the character of the red men would be fairly vindi- 
 cated. The defence set up for the barbarities of that night of 
 horror in Dover is that Major Waldron had, many years before, 
 broken his pledge of peace with some of these Indians. Sup- 
 pose the charge to be true, in all its length and breadth, how 
 does that excuse the wanton cruelties inflicted on his neighbors, 
 on innocent women and helpless children ? The recital of the 
 horrors of that fearful visitation even now fills the mind with 
 terror. We shudder at the picture which the imagination pre- 
 sents of that dreadful scene. The captives, men, women and
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. gi 
 
 children, with the scalps of the dead, were carried to Canada 
 and sold to the French. The history of some of those captives 
 surpasses fable. Sarah Gerrish, the granddaughter of Major 
 Waldron, was taken with the rest.* In the journey, on foot, her 
 escape from perils of flood, fire and starvation was almost a 
 miracle. She was purchased by a lady in Canada, who treated 
 her kindly and educated her in a nunnery. A single act of 
 gratitude is recorded on that eventful night. The life of a wo- 
 man was spared through the intervention of an Indian whom she 
 had protected when " the strange Indians " were seized thirteen 
 years before. 
 
 Companies of armed men were immediately sent out in search 
 of the invaders. Captain Noyes was sent to Penacook and 
 Captain Wincal to Winnipiseogee, but they could do little more 
 than destroy the standing corn of the Indians who had fled. 
 Massachusetts sent men in large numbers to the eastward, but 
 little was accomplished by them. While these forces were on 
 their march, the Indians, lurking in the woods about Oyster River, 
 surprised eighteen men at work and killed seventeen of them. 
 They also attacked and burned a house heroically defended by two 
 boys, who refused to surrender till a promise was made to spare 
 the lives of the family. They perfidiously murdered three or 
 four of the children, impaling one upon a sharp stake before the 
 eyes of his mother. 
 
 In the beginning of the year 1690, Count de Frontenac, gov- 
 ernor of Canada, eager to annoy the English and gain renown 
 with his sovereign, Louis XIV., sent three parties of French and 
 Indians into the American settlements. These murderous bands 
 carried death and desolation along their whole march. One 
 company, numbering fifty-two men, came to Salmon Falls in the 
 month of March. Here they succeeded in surprising the vil- 
 lage. Thirty-four of the bravest were killed and the remainder, 
 numbering fifty-four, mostly women and children, were taken 
 prisoners. The houses, barns and cattle were burned. The 
 captives suffered untold miseries in their dreary ma'rch to Can- 
 ada. One man was roasted alive ; and while the fires were 
 kindling around him, pieces of his own flesh were hewn from his 
 body and hurled in his face. Children were dashed against trees 
 because their mothers could not quiet them. These marauders 
 were pursued by one hundred and forty men, who were hastily 
 gathered from the neighboring to\vns, and a drawn battle was 
 fought in the woods. Only two Indians were killed and the rest 
 escaped. In the following May, the Indians attacked Newing- 
 ton, burning the houses, killing fourteen people, and capturing 
 six. In July, they attacked and killed eight men while mowing 
 in a field near Lamprey River. They also attempted to take a
 
 92 HISTORY OF 
 
 garrison at Exeter, but were repulsed. A bloody battle was 
 fought on the sixth of July in Lee, in which fifteen brave men 
 were killed and several wounded. In the march of the enemy 
 westward, from Lamprey River to Amesbury, they killed forty 
 people. Life and property were everywhere insecure. No one 
 knew an hour beforehand where the blow would next strike. 
 No person could enjoy a quiet meal or an hour's rest. The air 
 was full of groans and the ground was strown with the dead. 
 
 The advent of these savage bands from Canada turned the 
 eyes of the colonists to that country as the source of their ca- 
 lamities. They resolved to invade that country. Every nerve 
 was strained to fit out a suitable fleet. The command was given 
 to Sir William Phipps, a patriot and an honest man, but incompe- 
 tent to such hazardous service. Two thousand men were placed 
 on board. They did not reach Quebec till October. Sickness 
 invaded the troops 5 ; they became discouraged and the enterprise 
 was given up. The New England ships were scattered on their 
 return, by storms ; one was wrecked. The remnant of the 
 troops, with the governor, returned in May. For some time after 
 this repulse the colonies aimed only to protect their frontiers. 
 For a season hostilities in Maine were suspended by a treaty 
 with the Abenaquis. They brought in ten captives and settled 
 a truce till May i, 1691. In June, they assaulted a garrison at 
 Wells, and were repulsed. They then began to commit murders 
 at Exeter, Rye and Portsmouth. They continued these desul- 
 tory attacks for many months, till the commencement of the 
 year 1693, when they became comparatively quiet. Their means 
 were spent, not their rage. Their diminished resources, not their 
 extinguished hate, arrested them. Their braves were in captiv- 
 ity and they could only recover them by treaty. Accordingly they 
 came to Pemaquid and entered into a solemn covenant to aban- 
 don the French and become subjects of England ; to perpetuate 
 peace and refrain from private revenge ; to restore captives and 
 to give hostages for the due performance of their engagements. 
 This truce Was hailed with joy by the people of New Hampshire. 
 Their trade had been nearly ruined ; their harvests had been de- 
 stroyed ; their homes burned ; their friends tortured and slain ; 
 and at one time they were so despondent as to contemplate the 
 desertion of the province. There were neither men, money nor 
 provisions for the garrisons. The province owed four hundred 
 pounds but had nothing with which to pay the debt. Massachu- 
 setts aided them but little, because of their domestic feuds in 
 politics and the general devotion of the people to the prosecu- 
 tion of witches. 
 
 The peace with the Indians was of short duration. In less 
 than a year, solely through the influence of the French Jesuits,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 93 
 
 they were again on the war path. New Hampshire, then the 
 Niobe of our infant republics, was once more called to weep for 
 her slaughtered children. Oyster River was again the object of 
 Indian fury. Ninety-four persons were killed and carried away. 
 Twenty houses were burned, five of which were garrisoned. 
 The atrocities of this campaign, if possible, exceeded those of 
 former years. The young wife of Thomas Drew was taken to 
 Norridgewock ; there, in winter, in the open air, in a storm of 
 snow " she brought forth her first born son," whom the Indians 
 immediately destroyed. The sufferings she afterwards endured 
 in captivity are almost incredible. She was at length restored 
 to her husband, and lived to the age of eighty-nine years. The 
 Jesuit historian of France relates, with exultation, that these 
 atrocious deeds had their origin with the French missionaries. 
 He also lauds the heroic daring of Taxus, the bravest of the 
 Abenaquis, in executing these fearful massacres. The scalps 
 taken in this whole foray were sold in Canada to Count Fron- 
 tenac. During the year 1695 there was little movement among 
 the Indians. In 1696, they again resumed hostilities and visited 
 the towns of New Hampshire. On the twenty-sixth of June 
 they made an attack on Portsmouth Plain and took nineteen 
 prisoners. Captain Shackford, with a company of militia, im- 
 mediately went in pursuit of them and overtook them between 
 Greenland and Rye, while they were taking their morning meal. 
 He recovered all the prisoners. The place has ever since borne 
 the name of " Breakfast Hill." Other towns suffered from In- 
 dian invasions during this and the following year. After the 
 peace of Ryswick, in 1698, Count Frontenac informed the In- 
 dians that he could no longer support them in a war against the 
 English, with whom his nation had made peace. He therefore 
 advised them to bury the hatchet and restore their captives. 
 They soon assembled at Casco and entered again into solemn 
 covenant to observe and do all that they had promised in pre- 
 vious treaties. This treaty they kept till the French needed 
 their services again. This fact shows what stimulated the In- 
 dians to their deeds of blood and violence. 
 
 The French have often been commended for their kind treat- 
 ment of the red men. Their conduct has been contrasted with 
 that of the English. They always live in peace with the Indians'; 
 the English generally oppress them. There is some truth in 
 the charge. The French easily assimilate with the Indians. 
 They descend to their level. They often intermarry with them, 
 and their offspring usually inherits all the vices and none of the 
 virtues of the parents. The " half-breeds " are the worst speci- 
 mens of humanity extant. Amalgamation always degrades the 
 superior race ; never elevates the inferior. The French are also
 
 94 HISTORY OF 
 
 praised for their missionary labors. Many of their priests have 
 been self-denying and devoted servants of Christ among the In- 
 dians, but during the French and Indian wars they inspired 
 the red man with ferocity rather than forgiveness ; they made 
 him hate rather than love his enemy ; they taught him " to keep 
 no peace with heretics " and made him, with his savage nature, 
 " two-fold more the child of hell " than themselves. The chief 
 cause of the hostility of the Indians to the English settlers was 
 the destruction of the game and fish by the building of mills 
 and the planting of colonies. In Canada the progress of civil- 
 ization has been so slow, that the forests still rise and the rivers 
 still flow in the solitude of primeval nature. The Indians, there- 
 fore, have never removed. 
 
 CHAPTER XXVII. 
 
 CIVIL POLICY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE DURING KING WILLIAM'S WAR. 
 
 The assault of foes without usually arrests the feuds of fac- 
 tions within a state. It was not so with New Hampshire during 
 King William's war. The governor was hostile to the interests 
 of the people. James Usher, Esquire, though an American by 
 birth, had little sympathy with the province he was called to 
 govern. He had been a friend of Andros and was personally 
 interested in Mason's claim. The transfer from Mason to Allen 
 was only a change of name. The claim was just as odious as 
 ever. Usher lacked tact, skill and common sense. He was 
 conceited, imperious and insolent. Those qualities, in such a 
 crisis, were peculiarly ill-timed and offensive. He was illiter- 
 ate ; his speeches were coarse and reproachful as well as incor- 
 rect. He was zealous in the enforcement of Allen's title, which 
 the people were resolved to resist even unto death. He also 
 busied himself in determining the boundaries of the state and 
 of the separate towns. In 1694, he granted a charter to twenty 
 petitioners from Hampton for the town of Kingston. During 
 his administration Newcastle was separated from Portsmouth, 
 and Stratham united with Exeter. To his repeated calls for 
 money, the plea of poverty was rendered. To his urgent de- 
 mand for the renewal of the duties on wines and spirituous liq- 
 uors, they replied that the exposed state of the country required 
 all their available resources. His employer, Allen, failed to pay
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 95 
 
 his salary as he promised. His aggressive policy upon the peo- 
 ple moved them to petition King William to supersede him by 
 the appointment of William Partridge of Portsmouth lieutenant- 
 governor. This change was made in January, 1697, much to 
 the mortification and chagrin of Usher. He submitted to the 
 change with an ill grace. He and Allen, who had come to Amer- 
 ica to assume the reins of power, labored to break up the gov- 
 ernment by the change of councilors. These controversies 
 continued till the Earl of Bellomont became governor of New 
 England. He was a nobleman of liberal culture, enlarged views 
 and pleasing manners. He was a friend of the people, " a rare 
 bird " among royal governors in these gloomy times. Governor 
 Bellomont came to New Hampshire on the last day of July, 1699. 
 It was his only visit to the state. His speech to the Council 
 and Assembly of the Province of New Hampshire reveals the 
 political and social relation of the people at that time. He 
 says : 
 
 " I am very sensible of the great sufferings you have sustained all this 
 last war, by this province being frontier towards the Eastern Indians a 
 cruel and perfidious enemy in their own nature, but taught and encouraged 
 to be more so by the Jesuits and other Popish missionaries from France, 
 who were not more industrious, during the war, to instigate their disciples 
 and proselytes to kill your people treacherously, than they have been since 
 the peace to debauch those Indians from former subjection to the crown of 
 England : insomuch as at the present they seem to have departed from their 
 allegiance to the Crown and revolted to the French. I have taken such 
 measures as quickly to find out whether these Indians will return to their 
 obedience to the Crown or not. * * Upon report of his Majesty's engin- 
 eer, whom I sent to view the fort on Great Island and the harbor of this 
 town, I find the situation is naturally well disposed ; but the fort so very 
 weak and unable, that it requireth the building a new and substantial one to 
 secure you in time of war. You will do well to take this matter into consid- 
 eration as soon as may be. This Province is well situated for trade ; and 
 your harbor here on the Piscataqua river so very good that a fort to secure 
 it would invite people to come and settle among you ; and as you grow in 
 number, so will your trade advance and flourish ; and you will be useful to 
 England, which you ought to covet, above all things, not only as it is your 
 duty, but as it will also be for your glory and interest." 
 
 This last sentence is very significant. It reveals the entire 
 policy of the mother country toward her colonies. To promote 
 English interests was both their duty and their glory. It was 
 honor enough for these poor New England planters to toil and 
 die to aggrandize the power that drove them from home. 
 
 Allen's commission continued in force till Bellomont arrived. 
 He ruled but one year, and Partridge, who had been removed to 
 make room for him, was restored as lieutenant-governor ; and the 
 councilors who had refused to sit with Usher and Allen resum- 
 ed their places. From the date of Bellomont's administration, 
 for forty-two years, New Hampshire and Massachusetts were
 
 96 HISTORY OK 
 
 ruled by the same royal governors. The other departments of 
 the government were distinct, each having its own courts, coun- 
 cils and legislatures. The administration of the accomplished 
 and popular favorite Bellomont was very brief. He died at New 
 York in March, 1701, universally lamented. The people could 
 heartily say what the courtly Roman poet addressed to the ab- 
 sent Augustus : 
 
 " Return, oh gentle prince, for, thou away, 
 Nor lustre has the sun, nor joy the day. 
 
 Before the Earl's death, Allen began to agitate his claims to 
 the soil. The people, weary of strife, were inclined to compro- 
 mise. The settlement of this apparently interminable dispute 
 was near its conclusion when Allen died. His son and heir 
 revived the controversy. King William died in 1702. Queen 
 Anne ascended the English throne. A change of rulers in " the 
 old country " usually produced a modification of government in 
 the new. Joseph Dudley, who had formerly been president of 
 New England, was appointed governor of Massachusetts and 
 New Hampshire. The assembly of the latter state conciliated 
 him with a gift, and afterwards voted him a fixed salary, as the 
 queen required. The suits which Allen originated had not yet 
 been settled. His appeals to the English crown were still unde- 
 cided. After Allen's death in 1705, his son Thomas renewed 
 the suit, and on petition to the queen he was allowed to bring a 
 writ of ejectment in the New Hampshire court. The entire his- 
 tory of the controversy was reviewed, but the verdict was for the 
 defendants. An appeal to the queen's counsel was taken, but 
 before a hearing was had Allen died. His death ended the suit, 
 and his heirs did not renew it during the lifetime of that genera- 
 tion. There is probably no controversy on record that involved 
 so many parties, continued so many years and created so many 
 law-suits as Mason's claim to New Hampshire. Kings and 
 queens, nobles and plebeians, proprietors and councilors, courts 
 and legislatures, for nearly a century, were constantly agitating 
 the question of the right of soil of this wild, rough and rocky 
 state. Generation after generation of claimants died, but still 
 the controversy lived. Judges of the king's bench and of the 
 state courts again and again decided cases at issue, but still the 
 spirits which avarice had conjured up "would not clown at their 
 bidding." The people outlived their prosecutors, and the fire 
 went out for want of fuel. 
 
 In 1730 certain queries were addressed by the Lords of Trade 
 and Plantations in London to the Legislature of New Hamp- 
 shire. From the answers officially made to those queries, we 
 glean the following facts : The number of inhabitants was about
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 97 
 
 ten thousand whites and two hundred blacks. The militia con- 
 sisted of eighteen hundred men, in two regiments of foot and one 
 company of horse in each. The trade of the province was lum- 
 ber and fish. Five vessels belonged to the province, of about 
 one hundred tons each. The ships from other provinces and 
 countries visiting New Hampshire averaged about four hundred 
 tons burden. Only about forty of the provincials were sailors. 
 British goods via Boston to the amount of five thousand pounds 
 sterling were annually imported. A considerable trade was kept 
 up with the_W.est. Indies, whence rum, sugar, cotton and molasses 
 were brought. The revenues of the province were three hundred 
 and ninety-six pounds, by excise. The other expenses of govern- 
 ment, amounting in all in times of peace to fifteen hundred 
 pounds, were raised by direct taxes. 
 
 Dr. Dwight, in 1796, thus records his impressions of the early 
 planters in New Hampshire : 
 
 " Their land was granted over and over again, in successive patents ; and, 
 with the different patentees, they had many perplexing disputes. Their cli- 
 mate was more severe and their soil less fruitful than that of Massachusetts 
 and Connecticut. They were more divided in their principles and less har- 
 monious in their measures than the people of those colonies. At the same 
 time they had no stable government of sufficient rigor to discourage dissen- 
 sions. They were not a little perplexed by loose ministers and magistrates ; 
 such as always withdraw from regular, well-principled society to indulge their 
 mischievous dispositions in rude, imperfect communities. The Indians in 
 their neighborhood at the same time were formidable, while the settlers were 
 few, feeble and incompetent for their own defence. The government of 
 Great Britain paid them, for many years, very little attention." 
 
 CHAPTER XXVIII. 
 
 QUEEN ANNE'S WAR. 
 
 William III., during the last year of his life, resolved on a war 
 with France and Spain for the balance of power in Europe. By 
 the will of Charles II. of Spain, the crown of that country fell 
 to Philip of Anjou, nephew of Louis XIV. The acquisition of 
 such a kingdom, with its numerous dependencies, would render 
 the French monarch, then the head of the Bourbon family, a 
 dangerous neighbor. The Emperor of Germany, the king of 
 England and the Netherlands formed a "grand alliance" to 
 arrest such a perilous growth of power. When Queen Anne 
 came to the throne, she adopted the policy of her predecessor, 
 
 7
 
 98 HISTORY OF 
 
 and declared war in May, 1702, against France. It was called 
 " the war of the Spanish Succession." This war cost England an 
 immense sacrifice of life, with sixty-nine millions of pounds ; 
 and yet it was continued so long that the parties in the quarrel 
 had changed places, and when peace was concluded the Bour- 
 bon was allowed to sit on the throne of Spain. Louis abandoned 
 the Pretender and yielded to England Newfoundland, Hudson's 
 Bay and St. Christopher's. Spain gave up to her Gibraltar and 
 Minorca. 
 
 " Yet reason frowns on war's unequal game, 
 Where wasted nations raise a single name ; 
 And mortgaged states their grandsires' wreaths regret, 
 From age to age in everlasting debt." 
 
 The English colonies were involved in this accursed strife. The 
 scattered inhabitants in the wilds of New Hampshire were com- 
 pelled to fight for their life and liberty, to prevent a miserable, 
 imbecile Bourbon from sitting on the Spanish throne ! The In- 
 dians fought for the French. A congress of chiefs met Governor 
 Dudley at Casco, in June, 1703, and in lofty language pledged 
 their fidelity to the colonists. "The sun," said they, is not more 
 distant from the earth than our thoughts from war." Yet within 
 six weeks the whole eastern frontier was in a blaze ! Not a house 
 from Casco to Wells was passed by. " Neither the milk-white 
 brows of the ancient nor the mournful cries of tender infants " 
 were pitied. Cruelty became an art. sCl^e prowling Indian 
 lurked near every dwelling. The farmer at his toil, the wor- 
 shiper at the altar, the mother beside her cradle and the in- 
 fant slumbering in it were the victims of the merciless savage ; 
 and all this to determine who should be king of Spain ! Again 
 and again was every town in New Hampshire visited and the 
 shocking atrocities of former years repeated. The men culti- 
 vated their fields with arms at their sides or within their reach ; 
 the women and children shut themselves up in garrisoned houses, 
 " and sometimes, when their husbands and sons had been mur- 
 dered, heroically defended themselves. No night passed without 
 posting sentinels ; no day without careful search for concealed 
 foes. Not a meal was taken with quiet repose. It was impossi- 
 ble to enjoy the meagre comforts which "fire, famine and slaugh- 
 ter " had spared. Their very dreams were terrific ; because, in 
 them, the scalping-knife seemed to flash before their eyes and 
 the war-whoop to resound in their ears. To most men a prema- 
 ture death would be preferred to such a life. It was one long 
 protracted agony of apprehension, alarm, terror and suffering ! 
 The French missionaries were regarded as the authors of all 
 these outrages ; hence our fathers naturally hated them. They 
 also became willing to exterminate the natives, as this seemed 
 the only means of preserving themselves. The Indians disap-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 99 
 
 peared as soon as their homes were invaded ; they could not en- 
 dure regular warfare. Hence a bounty was offered for Indian 
 scalps : ten pounds to regular soldiers ; twice that sum to volun- 
 teers ; and to hunting parties, who scoured the woods as for 
 wild beasts, " the encouragement of fifty pounds per scalp " was 
 offered. This lesson was taught by the French. They rewarded 
 the Indians for the scalps of white men. Companies were often 
 sent from New Hampshire in pursuit of the Indians ; but they 
 seldom met with success. It was easy for the natives to hide in 
 the boundless forests of Maine and New Hampshire. The brave 
 Col. Hilton, in 1705, with two hundred and seventy men, went on 
 snow-shoes to Norridgewock, on the Kennebec, to attack the 
 enemy in their winter quarters ; but the expedition proved un- 
 successful. In 1707 the colonists resolved to attack Port Royal 
 in Acadia. The conquest of this stronghold seemed essential 
 to the security of their trade and fishery. New Hampshire fur- 
 nished her quota of troops ; but the expedition was a failure, 
 owing to a quarrel between the military and naval officers. Such 
 a defeat disheartened the people. 
 
 Meantime the Indians were constantly making inroads upon 
 the settlements. Every town lost valuable citizens who were cut 
 off by the prowling savages. Durham and Dover lay in the track 
 of the Indians from east to west ; and they were oftener assailed 
 than other towns. " Exeter," says Judge Smith, escaped hostil- 
 ities till 1690. I have drawn a circle, round our village as a 
 centre, twenty-five miles in diameter. The number of killed and 
 captives within this circle, during a period of forty years, ex- 
 ceeded seven hundred." In 1710 the brave Winthrop Hilton 
 fell, while at work in his own woods. He was "among the most 
 fearless of the brave, the most adventurous of the daring." " His 
 sharp black eye and his long bright gun struck terror into the 
 hearts of the savages." They thirsted for his blood. He and 
 his men were armed ; but their guns were wet, and no defence 
 could be made. Col. Hilton was the grandson of Edward Hil- 
 ton, who is, by many, regarded as the founder of New Hampshire. 
 He settled at Dover in 1623, where he resided for fifteen or 
 twenty years, and then removed to Exeter. His grandson was a 
 man who served faithfully "his God and his country." The 
 people of the whole province mourned for him, as for a father. 
 
 During the same year, 1710, the English nation resolved to aid 
 the colonies in the conquest of Acadia, a name that had almost 
 passed from the memories of men till Longfellow gave it im- 
 mortality in his story of Evangeline. It was called, by the 
 French, Acadie. The English furnished six ships of war, the 
 New Englanders thirty, with four regiments of soldiers. In six 
 days they reached Port Royal, which immediately surrendered ;
 
 100 HISTORY OF 
 
 and the place was called Annapolis, in honor of the queen. This 
 success encouraged the English and their colonies to attempt the 
 conquest of Quebec. Magnificent preparations were made for a 
 siege. The English sent fifteen ships of war and fifty-six trans- 
 ports. The veteran troops of Maryborough were selected for the 
 enterprise. When joined by the New England conscripts, the 
 army numbered, according to Dr. Belknap, six thousand and five 
 hundred men ; but from an estimate of the commander, quoted 
 below, there were about twelve thousand men. A fleet so nu- 
 merous, so well equipped and so well manned had never sailed 
 from Boston harbor. Sir Hoveden Walker was appointed ad- 
 miral. By his obstinacy or ignorance, in countermanding the 
 orders of the pilots, the expedition failed. In a dark and stormy 
 night in August eight ships were wrecked and eight hundred and 
 eighty-four men were drowned. The admiral thought this disas- 
 ter providential ; otherwise, says he, had they reached Quebec, 
 " ten or twelve thousand men must have been left to perish of 
 cold and hunger ; by the loss of a part, Providence saved all the 
 rest." This is turning one's stupidity to good account. This 
 failure excited the Indians to renewed effort. Exeter, Durham 
 and Dover again suffered from the sleepless vengeance of the 
 skulking foe. But the time of deliverance was at hand. The 
 peace of Utrecht, concluded in April, 1713, suspended for a 
 season the use of the hatchet, scalping-knife and fire-brand. 
 As soon as the French ceased to aid the Indians, their chiefs 
 were prompt to make peace. Immediately after the proclama- 
 tion of peace, a vessel was sent to Quebec to bring home the 
 captives. When she returned with her precious freight, multi- 
 tudes thronged the beach, to witness the landing of long lost rel- 
 atives. Mothers peered with anxious gaze into the crowd to de- 
 tect the lineaments of their children. Long absence and strange 
 costumes had so changed the forms and faces of loved ones 
 that they could not be recognized. When they became known, 
 parents and children, husbands and wives, welcomed one another 
 with warm embraces and gushing tears. The captives had for- 
 gotten their native tongue ; so that they were compelled to gaze 
 upon faces once familiar in mute ecstasy. Some of the cap- 
 tives failed to return. They had intermarried with the Indians 
 and had become attached to their wild and careless mode of life. 
 They preferred the wigwam in Canada to the cot where they 
 were born. Such are the vicissitudes of war ; and such are the 
 changes, wrought by habit, on plastic natures. 
 
 During the continuance of the war, the civil government pur- 
 sued the even tenor of its course, with general satisfaction to all 
 parties. Its chief business was to assess taxes and collect them ; 
 to raise men and money, which was no easy task in a country
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. IOI 
 
 long wasted by war. Governor Dudley showed untarnished loy- 
 alty to the crown and commendable moderation toward the peo- 
 ple. The assembly represented him to the home government 
 as " a prudent, careful and faithful governor." He was more 
 acceptable to the people because he was opposed to the claims 
 of Allen. Usher, the lieutenant-governor, grew more patriotic 
 during the war, but not more popular. The assembly could 
 never be persuaded to vote him a salary. While on duty, he 
 complained of insufficient accommodations. He declared that 
 "negro servants were much better accommodated in his house 
 than the queen's governor was in the fort." Usher was avari- 
 cious, but that was the common attribute of all royal governors ; 
 he was fond of power, yet no patriotic Brutus slew him "be- 
 cause he was ambitious." During this war, paper money, "the 
 cheap defence of nations " in distress, came into general use. 
 The first newspaper in the colonies was established in Boston, 
 in 1704, by Samuel Green, and called the "Boston News-Letter." 
 In 1720 the "Boston Gazette" was issued; in 1721 the "New 
 England Courant." 
 
 CHAPTER XXIX. 
 
 THE ADMINISTRATION OF GOVERNOR SHUTE. 
 
 In October, 1715, Eliseus Burgess was appointed Governor of 
 Massachusetts and New Hampshire. He remained in England, 
 and the executive power in the province devolved on the lieu- 
 tenant-governor, George Vaughan. He was a native of the 
 state, the son of Major William Vaughan who acted a very 
 prominent part in resisting the claims of Mason and Allen. 
 His son had been the agent of the province in England, and 
 had thus become known to some of the ministers of the crown. 
 His appointment was deemed a compliment to the state, because 
 he was a son of one of her popular leaders. He was, unfortu- 
 nately, but ill fitted for his responsible station. His first official 
 act rendered him unpopular. The general court, when sum- 
 moned by him, refused to raise money by impost and excise for 
 a longer time than one year ; therefore he dissolved them. At 
 the next session he recommended " the establishment of a per- 
 manent revenue to the king ; " but the people preferred the old 
 custom of raising taxes. New Hampshire at this time was well
 
 102 HISTORY OF 
 
 provided with governors. Dudley had retired, without resigning, 
 expecting to be superseded. Burgess did not condescend to 
 visit the state ; and Samuel Shute was appointed Governor-Gen- 
 eral of New Hampshire. Shute entered upon his duties in Oc- 
 tober, 1716. He abandoned the policy of Vaughan, but intro- 
 duced another element of discord by dismissing six of the old 
 councilors and appointing six in their places, all from Portsmouth. 
 The farmers were jealous of these commercial rulers and peti- 
 tioned for a more equal distribution of the public honors. There 
 was also in Portsmouth a local quarrel respecting the erection of 
 a new parish ; and the parochial difficulty was carried into the 
 council. Money was very scarce. A proposition was made to 
 issue ten thousand pounds in bills on loan ; after some disagree- 
 ment of the two houses, the next assembly issued fifteen thousand 
 pounds, on loan, for eleven years, at ten per cent. A contro- 
 versy also arose between the two highest officials. The lieuten- 
 ant-governor claimed that he was the true and sole executive 
 when the governor was absent from the state. He therefore 
 declined to obey his superior when the mandate came from his 
 home in Massachusetts. The town of Hampton adopted the 
 views of Vaughan, which subjected the town to a summons from 
 the governor to answer for a libel. They gave bonds for their 
 future loyalty. The offending subaltern was removed and John 
 Wentworth, Esq., was appointed in his place. He was the grand- 
 son of Elder William Wentworth, who came to Exeter in 1639, 
 and was the founder of a very distinguished family, who for sev- 
 eral generations exercised a controlling influence in the govern- 
 ment of the state. This aged servant of God, then over eighty, 
 was sleeping in a garrisoned house in Dover when the Indians 
 attacked that town, in 1689. The barking of a dog awoke him 
 just as the Indians were opening the door. He threw his body 
 against the door and expelled the intruders ; then, lying upon 
 his back, held the door with his feet till his cry alarmed the peo- 
 ple. The balls that were aimed at him passed through the door, 
 but above his body. Thus was the good man saved. His 
 grandson was commissioned by George I., Mr. Addison then 
 being secretary of state. Mr. Wentworth had long been engaged 
 in mercantile pursuits ; and, by his practical skill and natural 
 good sense, was eminently fitted for the responsible station he 
 was called to fill. After an interval of peace, the state was 
 recovering its prosperity. Her resources began to be developed. 
 Her forests, iron mines and fisheries were attracting the atten- 
 tion of capitalists and corporations. The white pines_of New 
 Hampshire were in demand for the masts of ships in England, 
 and were allowed to enter her ports free of duty. Numerous 
 laws had been made to protect such trees. A law of 1708 pro-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 103 
 
 hibited the cutting of pines that were twenty-four inches in 
 diameter. The royal navy needed them; and ought not the 
 forests of New Hampshire to yield a revenue to the king ? 
 
 It was difficult at this date to determine who owned the uncul- 
 tivated lands. The assigns of Allen still claimed them, and the 
 colonists had, many years before, admitted that claim. Within 
 the boundaries of the towns the citizens owned the timber. 
 Hence the people were desirous of establishing new townships. 
 The manufacture of tar and turpentine became a source of profit ; ^"iX" 
 but a few merchants monopolized the business, and at one time 
 three thousand trees, prepared for use, were destroyed in the 
 night. This source of income was soon exhausted by the rapid 
 destruction of the trees. The culture of hemp was also intro- 
 duced ; but it failed to be profitable or was soon abandoned for 
 the raising of crops for food. The manufacture of iron received 
 legislative encouragement, and a strip of land two miles in width, 
 north of Dover, was given for iron works. It was forbidden to 
 be carried out of the province, under penalty of a heavy fine. 
 
 During the year 1718 the Indians began to make attacks upon 
 the settlements in Maine, under pretence of seeking redress 
 for the wrongs inflicted on them by the whites. They com- 
 plained that continual encroachments were made upon their 
 hunting grounds by settlers, which drove off the game ; that 
 the_ building of mills and dams on the rivers destroyed their 
 fisheries. Governor Shute had held a conference with them the 
 preceding year, and had promised that trading-houses should be 
 established among them, and that a smith should be sent to them 
 to keep their guns in repair. The unhappy contentions at home 
 prevented the fulfillment of this promise ; and this failure was 
 imputed to treachery. The Indians kept no records; and of 
 course deeds which they had given for parcels of land could not 
 be certified to their minds. They denied their solemn covenants 
 or charged that the instruments were signed when they were 
 drunk, or that no equivalent was given. Thus a new purchase 
 must be made every few years, or they would complain that they 
 had been wronged. When they consented to the settlements of 
 the whites, and to the erection of mills, they knew not that their 
 game and fish would be driven away. After learning this they 
 hated the whites and sought to kill them. The French in their 
 neighborhood ever encouraged this hostility and supplied them 
 with arms. They were charmed, too, with the labors of French 
 missionaries. They loved the pomp and ceremonies of the 
 Catholic worship, which required no self-denial. With all the 
 extravagant eulogies which have been heaped upon Jesuit mis- 
 sionaries in America, it may be doubted whether the natives 
 have been made wiser or better by their conversion to Roman-
 
 104 HISTORY OF 
 
 ism. The Indians of Central America and Mexico are all nom- 
 inal Christians ; and more degraded specimens of our race can 
 scarcely be found on earth. They walk in the Catholic proces- 
 sions and worship images, paying devout reverence to a doll 
 lifted on high to represent the Virgin Mary ; but they have no 
 knowledge of duty or virtue. The English, from the first land- 
 ing on the continent, regarded the soil as theirs by discovery 
 and the inhabitants as subjects of their king. In war they treat- 
 ed them as rebels, in peace as dependents. They were required 
 to acknowledge their allegiance to the British crown. The 
 French treated them as allies and equals. The Jesuits lived 
 among them as friends and spiritual guides. One of their 
 sachems, being asked why they so loved the French, replied, 
 " Because the French have taught us to pray to God, which the 
 English never did." The French did more : they cherished their 
 hatred of the English ; they stimulated their love of vengeance ; 
 they used them as their own favored allies in war. The Jesuits 
 early established a mission among the Abenaquis. Sabastian 
 Rasle, a man of culture, refinement and benevolence, left all the 
 comforts of civilized life for a home in the Indian village of 
 Norridgewock, on the Kennebec. Here he built a church and 
 adorned it with costly decorations. A bell was bought, from 
 Canada, to call the Indian hunters and warriors to matins and 
 vespers. The most glowing accounts have been given of the 
 success of Father Rasle in christianizing these rude savages. 
 The innocence, confidence and devotion of Eden returned again 
 to bless these wigwams in the primeval forests. By his charming 
 conversation, rapt devotion and unselfish beneficence, he won the 
 hearts of the natives and swayed them at his will. Dr. Belknap 
 gives us the other side of this beautiful moral picture. He says 
 of Father Rasle : 
 
 " He even made the offices of devotion serve as incentives to their feroc- 
 ity. * * * With this Jesuit the Governor of Canada held a close corres- 
 pondence ; and by him was informed of everything transacted among the 
 Indians. By this means their discontent with the English, on account of 
 their settlements made at the eastward, was heightened and inflamed ; and 
 they received every encouragement to assert their title to the lands in ques- 
 tion and molest the settlers by killing their cattle, burning their hay, robbing 
 and insulting them." 
 
 The wrongs done to the Indian by those eastern settlers were 
 chiefly imaginary ; in a great measure the creation of the French 
 Jesuit. In the winter of 1721 Colonel Westbrooke was sent to Nor- 
 ridgewock to seize Rasle. He escaped ; but they took his strong 
 box in which were found letters confirming all their suspicions 
 of his hostility to the English. The Governor of Canada was 
 deeply implicated in exciting these Indians to acts of violence. 
 The Indians were greatly exasperated at the attempt to seize
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 105 
 
 their spiritual guide. The next summer they resumed their old 
 practices of waylaying and murdering men, women and children 
 in all the towns they had been wont to visit. In Dover, in June, 
 1724, they entered the house of Mr. Hanson, a non-resistant 
 Quaker, killed and scalped two little children and took his wife, 
 with her infant, her nurse, two daughters and a son, and carried 
 them off. These prisoners were ail sold to the French as slaves, 
 in Canada. The sad father converted all his property into gold 
 and went through the wilderness to ransom his wife and chil- 
 dren. He obtained all but his eldest daughter, and returned. 
 But the loss of this child wrung his heart with anguish. He 
 returned to Canada again ; but fatigue and sorrow wasted his 
 strength, and he lay down and died in a strange land. These 
 outrages being repeated for two years, the colonists resolved to 
 destroy Norridgewock. Captains Moulton and Harmon, both 
 of York, with one hundred men surprised the village, killed the 
 Jesuit and eighty Indians, and brought away the spoils. 
 
 The success of the expedition to Norridgewock and a pre- 
 mium of one hundred pounds offered for scalps called out sev- 
 eral volunteer companies to visit Indian villages. One company, 
 commanded by Captain John Lovewell of Dunstable, became 
 famous in New Hampshire history, both for its success and de- 
 feat. It consisted at first of thirty men, afterwards of seventy. 
 It made three expeditions into the eastern part of the state. 
 Two were successful ; the last disastrous. On the second foray 
 they killed ten Indians encamped for the night in the town of 
 Wakefield, near a pond since called " Lovewell's pond." On 
 their return to Dover they enjoyed a triumph such as no Ro- 
 man consul ever received. It was a cordial, sincere and grate- 
 ful outpouring of the people's gratitude. In Boston they re- 
 ceived the bounty which had been promised. Thus encouraged, 
 Lovewell and his brave men marched the third time into the 
 wilderness. He had forty-six men. They went to Ossipee pond, 
 and on its west shore built a fort. Here the surgeon, one sick 
 man and eight guards were left. The remaining thirty-four 
 marched northward twenty-two miles, to another pond, where 
 they encamped. In their explorations they were discovered by 
 two parties of Indians, numbering forty-one men, under the com- 
 mand of the sachem Paugus, who had been scouting on the 
 Saco and were returning to the lower village of Pequawkett, 
 about a mile and one half from the pond. Lovewell and his 
 men, before their march round the pond, had left their packs 
 without guard, on a plain at the southeast end of the pond. 
 Following their trail, the Indians found those packs and thus 
 learned their weakness. They lay in ambush to surprise them 
 on their return. Captain Lovewell and eight of his men fell at
 
 106 HISTORY OF 
 
 the first fire of the Indians. The survivors retreated a little and 
 renewed the fight. They had no food nor drink. At noon their 
 savage foes, by signs and infernal yells, indicated an order for 
 their surrender. They declined their request and fought on " till 
 the going down of the sun." The war-whoop grew fainter, the as- 
 saults less vigorous ; the Indians were greatly weakened ; Pau- 
 gus * was slain. They retired at the coming on of evening, car- 
 rying with them their dead and wounded, leaving the whites 
 masters of the field. Only nine of Lovewell's men were free 
 from wounds. Of the injured, eleven were able to walk. It 
 was the hardest problem of the entire struggle to dispose of 
 those who could not move. It would be certain death to re- 
 main with them ; and they had no power to remove them. They 
 were compelled to leave their disabled and dying companions to 
 fall into the hands of their merciless foes. Ensign Robinson 
 requested them to lay his loaded gun by his side, that he might 
 kill one more Indian. After the moon arose they returned to 
 their fort. It was deserted. A fugitive from the battle had re- 
 ported to the guard the probable defeat of their friends. They 
 therefore abandoned the fort and went home. They left some 
 provisions there, which greatly relieved the distressed soldiers. 
 Lieutenant Farwell, the chaplain, who had in his pocket the 
 record of their march, and one other person perished in the 
 woods from loss of blood and privation. The others, after se- 
 vere suffering, came in one by one to their old homes and were 
 kindly cared for by friends and the public. Colonel Tyng of 
 Dunstable, with a company of men, went to the scene of action 
 and buried the dead. This was one of the fiercest and bloodiest 
 battles ever fought with the Indians. They had the advantage 
 of numbers and of an ambuscade. Some writers estimate their 
 number as high as eighty. Hence they fought with uncommon 
 bravery and fury. 
 
 [From the Boston Centinel.] 
 
 LOV ELL'S POND. 
 The seine of 1725 of a desperate encounter with the savages. 
 
 Ah ! where are the soldiers that fought here of yore ? 
 The sod is upon them, they'll struggle no more, 
 The hatchet is fallen, the redman is low : 
 But near him reposes the arm of his foe. 
 
 The bugle is silent, the war-whoop is dead ; 
 There's a murmur of waters and woods in their stead; 
 And the raven and owl chant a symphony drear, 
 From the dark-waving pines o'er the combatants' bier. 
 
 There is a tradition that John Chamberlain, one of the sharp-shooters of the age, shot 
 Paugus. For some time they attempted to shoot one another from their coverts ; but their 
 guns were foul and only flashed in the pans. Being known to one another, they agreed to go 
 down to the water, cleanse their guns and renew the fight. _ Finding that Paugus was too 
 expeditious for him Chamberlain did not wait to withdraw his ramrod, nor to prime his gun, 
 (for the well worn piece would prime itself, by the aid of a sharp blow of the hand,) but fired 
 and drove both the rod and the ball through the heart of his foe.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. IOJ 
 
 The light of the sun has just sunk in the wave, 
 And a long time ago sat the sun of the brave. 
 The waters complain, as they roll o'er the stones, 
 And the rank grass encircles a few scattered bones. 
 
 The names of the fallen the traveler leaves 
 
 Cut out with his knife in the bark of the trees. 
 
 But little avail his affectionate arts, 
 
 For the names of the fallen are graved in our hearts. 
 
 The voice of the hunter is loud on the breeze, 
 There's a dashing of waters, a rustling of trees, 
 But the jangling of armour hath all passed away, 
 No gushing of life-blood is here seen to-day. 
 
 The eye that was sparkling no longer is bright ; 
 The arm of the mighty, death conquered its might ; 
 The bosoms that once for their country beat high, 
 To those bosoms the sods of the valley are nigh. 
 
 Sleep, soldiers of merit, sleep, gallant of yore, 
 The hatchet is fallen, the struggle is o'er. 
 While the fir-tree is green and the wind rolls a wave ; 
 The tear-drop shall brighten the turf of the brave. 
 
 A. K. 
 
 Massachusetts and New Hampshire united, other colonies re- 
 fusing to act, in sending commissioners to the governor of Can- 
 ada to remonstrate with him for his conduct in exciting the Ind- 
 ians to war. Theodore Atkinson was sent on the part of New 
 Hampshire. On their arrival they recited the complaints of the 
 colonists to the Marquis de Vaudreuil. He, at first, denied the 
 allegations and assumed an air of offended dignity. Mr. Atkin- 
 son then produced his letters to Father Rasle confirming all his 
 charges. His tone was then softened and he consented to the 
 redemption of prisoners, sixteen of whom were ransomed at an 
 exorbitant price, and terms were agreed upon for the recovery of 
 ten more. The governor requested the commissioners to hold 
 an interview with the Indians. A delegation came but could not 
 be persuaded to propose reasonable terms of peace, because 
 Father LeChase, a Jesuit, controlled them. The commissioners 
 then returned with the ransomed captives. 
 
 The Indians made one more attack upon citizens in Dover. 
 Their purpose was to recover the family of the Quaker Hanson, 
 who had been redeemed by the father. They killed one man and 
 shot another named John Evans, stripped, scalped and beat him 
 with their guns, till he was thought to be dead. But after this 
 inhuman torture he recovered and lived fifty years. A peace 
 was finally concluded with the Indians in December, 1725. 
 
 Massachusetts and New Hampshire bore the entire expense 
 of this war. It must be remembered that, if we admit all the 
 charges of the Indians against the eastern settlers, New Hamp- 
 shire never wronged them in any particular. No charge was 
 brought against their citizens except that they belonged to a 
 hated race. Bradford in his History of Massachusetts says :
 
 IO8 HISTORY OF 
 
 " There are no proofs that the people of Maine committed acts 
 of injustice or aggression on the natives ; and there was no 
 other cause to be assigned for their work of destruction than 
 that false statements were made to them of the views and de- 
 signs of the English." 
 
 CHAPTER XXX. 
 
 EMIGRANTS FROM IRELAND. 
 
 Ireland was subjected to the arms of Henry II., in 1171-2. 
 He left the Irish princes in possession of their territories, and 
 bestowed some land on English adventurers, appointing Earl 
 Richard de Clare, surnamed " Strongbow," seneschal of the 
 kingdom. This division of imperial power disturbed the peace 
 of the island and led to repeated rebellions. In the reign of 
 James I. the Earl of Tyrone raised the standard of insurrection ; 
 and, after being once pardoned, renewed the conflict, was de- 
 feated and fled to Spain. A large tract of land in the province 
 of Ulster was confiscated and offered on liberal terms to new 
 settlers. James, being by birth a Scotchman, induced a colony of 
 his countrymen from Argyleshire to settle in Ulster, in 1612. 
 They were Scotch Presbyterians. During the next twenty years 
 many clergymen of that denomination, with their flocks, emi- 
 grated to Ireland and added strength and prosperity to the col- 
 ony. They of course became objects of intense hate to their 
 Irish neighbors, who only waited a convenient opportunity to 
 rise and avenge their wrongs. In 1641, they attempted to ex- 
 terminate the entire Protestant population of Ireland ; and so 
 far succeeded that forty thousand of them were suddenly mas- 
 sacred in different parts of the island. Some authorities place 
 the number as high as two hundred thousand. " No age, no sex, 
 no condition, was spared. But death was the slightest punish- 
 ment inflicted by the rebels ; all the tortures which wanton 
 cruelty could devise, all the lingering pains of body, the anguish 
 of mind, the agonies of despair, could not satiate the revenge of 
 the Irish." This rebellion 
 
 "dragged its slow length along" 
 
 till, in 1649, th e sword of Cromwell avenged the blood of slaugh- 
 tered saints, and, by making a solitude, conquered peace. After
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 109 
 
 the restoration in 1660, James, the brother of Charles, a bigoted 
 Catholic, was appointed Viceroy of Scotland. The Scotch Pres- 
 byterians were the objects of his hatred and persecution. He 
 let loose upon them the dogs of war, and among them such 
 monsters of cruelty as James Graham of Claverhouse. " The 
 chief of this Tophet upon earth, a soldier of distinguished cour- 
 age and professional skill, but rapacious and profane, of violent 
 temper and obdurate heart, has left a name, wherever the Scot- 
 tish race is settled on the face of the globe, which is mentioned 
 with a peculiar energy of hatred." This persecution drove 
 multitudes into exile. Large numbers fled to Ireland to join 
 the remnant of their brethren whom the knives of Catholic 
 assassins had spared. Among these were many of the immediate 
 ancestors of the " Scotch Irish " who came to this country in 
 1718 and settled, the next year, in Londonderry. One century 
 later an unknown poet thus commemorates their arrival at 
 Portland. 
 
 "In the summer one thousand seven hundred eighteen, 
 
 Our pious ancestors embark' d on the Ocean ;_ 
 Oppress' d by the minions and dupes of their king, 
 They quitted sweet Erin with painful emotion. 
 On the wide swelling wave, 
 All dangers they brave, 
 
 While fleeing from shackles prepar'd for the slave, 
 In quest of a region where genius might roam, 
 And yield an asylum as dear as their home. 
 
 "Undaunted they press'd to their prime destination, 
 Allur'd by the prospects that Freedom display'd, 
 And such was the warmth of their fond expectation, 
 That dangers unnumber'd ne'er made them afraid. 
 How serene was the day, 
 And how cheerful and gay, 
 
 Were those pilgrims when anchor'd in old Casco bay ; 
 Their prayers, like incense, ascended on high, 
 And fond acclamations then burst to the sky." 
 
 One hundred and twenty families constituted this band of 
 exiles. They suffered terribly from the cold and famine during 
 the first winter. They were relieved by supplies from Boston. 
 Early in the spring of 1719, sixteen families of this company, 
 with Rev. James McGregore as their pastor, selected a tract of 
 land above Haverhill, then called Nutfield, and immediately be- 
 gan a settlement. It was afterwards named Londonderry from 
 their old home in Ireland. These people were industrious, eco- 
 nomical, thrifty and virtuous. They had sufficient property to 
 enable them to build comfortable houses and provide for the 
 profitable culture of the soil. They introduced the Irish potato 
 and the manufacture of linen into New Hampshire. In every 
 house was heard the hum of " the little wheel," turned by the 
 foot of the spinner. Great profits accrued from this branch of 
 domestic industry, and it was soon introduced into other towns 
 and states. Their numbers increased so rapidly that in four 
 years after the formation of their church it numbered two hun-
 
 110 HISTORY OF 
 
 dred and thirty members. Their pastor, Rev. James McGregore, 
 was a wise and good man. He died in 1729, aged seventy-two. 
 His name is still held in affectionate remembrance by the de- 
 scendants of those early settlers of Derry. This Scotch-Irish 
 population, which contributed greatly to the good order, good 
 laws, good habits and good works of the state, flowed into adja- 
 cent towns and into other states. Chester, Harrytown, after- 
 wards called Derryfield and now Manchester, were partially 
 settled by them. The number of their descendants in 1842 
 was estimated at twenty thousand. 
 
 The first settlers of Londonderry found great difficulty in 
 securing an act of incorporation. They first petitioned Gover- 
 nor Shute for a grant and failed, because their true character 
 was not understood. They then applied to Massachusetts and 
 to the agent of Allen for a title ; but were told that the lands 
 were in controversy and their request was denied. They then 
 obtained a deed of their territory from the grandson of Rev. 
 John Wheelwright who purchased of the Indians. Finally, in 
 1722, New Hampshire, having learned the worth of these new 
 citizens, gave them a grant of a township ten miles square. 
 The lines were so vaguely described that the claims of other 
 towns and other owners have not been entirely adjusted to 
 this day. 
 
 The grantees of Londonderry were actual settlers, farmers 
 who came to live on the soil and improve it. Chester was set- 
 tled about the same time, but the owners were non-residents. 
 They sold shares in the town as the shares of a railroad are 
 sold. The settlers paid rent for their lands. Some grew weary 
 of the annual payments and abandoned their claims ; others 
 sold their right for a small price. The inhabitants were not 
 homogeneous. Some of the Londonderry people came there 
 and settled. They differed in religion and habits from those of 
 English origin. " They had different modes of living. The 
 Irish ate potatoes ; the English did not. The Irish put barley in 
 their pot liquor and made barley broth ; the English put beans 
 in theirs and had bean porridge. Intermarriages were consid- 
 ered improper." In process of time they became assimilated. 
 
 Professor Park, in his obituary of Dr. S. H. Taylor, thus al- 
 ludes to the eminent men who have descended from the Scotch 
 emigrants of 1719, and in subsequent years : 
 
 "Among teachers are McKeen of Bowdoin and Aiken of Union College; 
 Professors Jarvis Gregg, W. A. Packard, Joseph McKeen, Rev. James 
 Means and Dr. S. H. Taylor. Among clergymen are Rev. David McGregor, 
 son of the first pastor of Londonderry, ancestor of a large and distinguished 
 family; Rev. Samuel Taggart of Colerian, Mass.; Rev. James Miltimore of 
 Newburyport ; Rev. Rnfus Anderson of Wenham, who, at the close of his 
 life, was preparing a historical work on 'Modern Missions to the Heathen,'
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. Ill 
 
 and whose son, Dr. Rufus Anderson of Boston, is the historian of Missions 
 under the care of the American Board; Rev. Silas McKeen of Biadford, 
 Vt.; Rev. Dr. Morrison and Rev. Tames T. McCollom. Among the jurists 
 and statesmen are John Bell, member of the Provincial Congress ; John and 
 Samuel Bell, both Governors of New Hampshire, and Judge Jeremiah Smith. 
 Among the military men are General George Reid and General John 
 Stark. Of those who have become eminent in New Hampshire, six have 
 been Governors of the state ; nine have been members of Congress ; five, 
 Judges of the Supreme Court ; two, members of the Provincial Congress 
 and one of these was a signer of the Declaration of Independence." 
 
 CHAPTER XXXI. 
 
 ORIGIN OF THE MILITIA SYSTEM. 
 
 During the first years of the existence of the Upper and 
 Lower Plantations, the agents appointed by the proprietors 
 united in themselves both civil and military power. They had 
 arms for offence and defence ; but were not called upon to use 
 them till 1631, when they called out the militia to settle the title 
 to a point of land in Newington, claimed by both agents, which 
 was afterwards called " Bloody Point," although no blood was 
 shed. In 1632, Capt. Walter Neal, with forty armed men, un- 
 der the lead of the Massachusetts colony, pursued, " with four 
 pinnaces and shallops," the famous pirate Dixy Bull. No sold- 
 ier by profession joined the colony till 1631. Then one "soldier 
 for discovery " was sent over by the company. For several years 
 after this unsuccessful "naval expedition" there was little call 
 for arms and munitions of war; still, as early as 1635 nearly 
 half the invoice of imported goods consisted of weapons of war. 
 In 1640, when the Dover factions, following the rival clergymen 
 Larkham and Knollys, were raising tumults and threatening 
 bloodshed, Francis Williams, governor of the Lower Plantation, 
 being appealed to, sent a company of the militia to the Neck 
 and " quelled the riot." After the union of New Hampshire 
 with Massachusetts, in 1641, the laws of the elder colony con- 
 trolled the military organizations of the younger ally. During 
 the wars that followed with the Indians and French, every man 
 became a soldier and every house was made a garrison. The 
 facts are related in another portion of this work. When New 
 Hampshire became a royal province, in 1679, "the militia was 
 organized and was made to consist of one company of foot in
 
 112 HISTORY OF 
 
 each of the four towns of Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter and Hamp- 
 ton, one company of artillery at the fort, and one troop of 
 horse. Richard Waldron of Dover was appointed to the com- 
 mand of these troops with the rank of major." The fort then 
 contained eleven guns of small weight and power, purchased at 
 the expense of Portsmouth and Dover. Until 1718, the organ- 
 ization of the militia was left to the governor and council. In 
 the French and Indian wars, most of the troops were volunteers. 
 Some were " impressed " according to old English custom. The 
 first militia law, in 1718, required all persons from sixteen to 
 sixty years of age, except negroes and Indians, to perform mili- 
 tary service. Each captain must call out and drill his company 
 four times each year. The arms of the soldiers and penalties 
 for neglect of duty or disobedience to orders were minutely 
 specified. This law was amended in 1719, so that a warrant or 
 " warning " under the hand and seal of the commanding officer 
 was " a sufficient impress " to render the delinquent liable to a 
 heavy fine in case of disobedience. The common punishments 
 for minor offences were, at ihe discretion of the commander, 
 " the bilboes, laying neck and heels, riding the wooden horse or 
 running the gauntlet." The number of men in active service 
 was constantly increasing as the perils of the country multiplied. 
 In 1679 six companies were deemed sufficient for the defence of 
 the province ; in 1773 twelve regiments were enrolled and ready 
 for duty when called. In 1775, when the government assumed 
 a new form, the militia laws were subjected to revision. In 
 1776 a new act was passed, providing for two classes of soldiers 
 a Training Band and an Alarm Band. The first band con- 
 tained all the able-bodied men in the province, except persons 
 in official station, negroes, mulattoes and Indians, from the age 
 of sixteen to fifty. The alarm band included men from sixteen 
 to sixty-five not assigned to the other division. These were to 
 be called out, on sudden emergencies, by drum-beats and beacon 
 lights. When soldiers were needed, if volunteers failed to en- 
 list the quotas were filled by draft from those enrolled. This 
 law mentioned every article of the soldier's equipment. It re- 
 mained in force during the Revolutionary war.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 113 
 
 CHAPTER XXXII. 
 
 LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR WENTWORTH'S ADMINISTRATION. 
 
 Governor Shute left the province in 1723, and the duties of 
 the executive devolved on Mr. Wentworth. During the war with 
 the Indians he managed the affairs of the state with great pru- 
 dence and discretion ; and the people showed their respect for 
 him by frequent grants of money. He conducted the treaty with 
 the Indians in person, at Boston. On his return, the assembly 
 in their address of congratulation said that " his absence seemed 
 long ; but the service he had done them filled their hearts with 
 satisfaction." As soon as peace returned the next great topic 
 of public interest was the boundary line between Massachusetts 
 and New Hampshire. If New Hampshire had been a Paradise, 
 its possession could not have been' more eagerly sought by nu- 
 merous suitors. The Indians claimed it ; the assigns of Mason 
 claimed it ; Massachusetts claimed it ; and the actual settlers 
 claimed it. Everybody wished to own the state ; few cared to 
 aid it. When money was to be made, all were active ; when 
 money was to be paid, all were passive. Massachusetts claimed, 
 according to the terms of her original charter, all the lands from 
 three miles northward of the Merrimack at its mouth to its 
 source, including a large part of the entire state. There had 
 been a controversy about this line for many long years ; but 
 when war was at their doors it slept. Both provinces were now 
 anxious to get possession of the soil. New Hampshire was 
 alarmed ; she was about to be absorbed by her more powerful 
 neighbor. She numbered only ten thousand inhabitants ; Massa- 
 chusetts had one hundred and twenty thousand. The contend- 
 ing states proceeded to lay out towns. Massachusetts, under 
 pretence of rewarding the brave soldiers who survived Love- 
 well's fight, assigned them large tracts of land within the territory 
 claimed by New Hampshire. Nine townships were thus laid out 
 on the banks of the Merrimack. The smaller state was equally 
 busy. Epsom, Chichester, Gilmanton and Bow were granted. 
 The last named town was partially within the tract claimed by- 
 Massachusetts. So many grants were made that settlers could 
 not be found to occupy them. The chief result of this legisla- 
 tion was an expensive and tedious litigation, which lasted 
 many years. 
 
 On the twenty-ninth of October, 1727, a violent earthquake oc- 
 
 8
 
 114 HISTORY OF 
 
 curred. Flashes of light were observed to accompany a heavy 
 roar resembling distant thunder which announced the shock. 
 The sea was in deep commotion. The earth shook and trembled. 
 Chimneys were cleft asunder, and " the pewter on dressers rat- 
 tled, and in some instances was thrown down." Several lighter 
 shocks were felt during the following night. During this year 
 George I. died ; and the assembly, which had continued its own 
 existence five years, was according to custom dissolved. A new 
 assembly was summoned by writs issued in the name of George 
 II. The people disliked long terms of office ; and, as early as 
 1724, had attempted to limit the sessions of the assembly to 
 three years. In 1727 the triennial act was passed and received 
 the governor's sanction. The freehold estate of a representa- 
 tive was fixed at fifteen hundred pounds ; that of an elector at 
 fifty pounds. This was the first organic law enacted by the peo- 
 ple independent of commissioners and royal orders. But there 
 were defects in the provisions of this law which led to much 
 controversy in future. The house then proceeded to reform the 
 courts ; the council were opposed and the governor dissolved 
 the assembly. The same persons, for the most part, were re- 
 elected ; the same speaker was chosen, whose election the gov- 
 ernor vetoed ; and under the new speaker a stormy session was 
 held. Crimination and recrimination passed between the speaker 
 and the house ; till, finally, in a fit of indignation, the house re- 
 solved to petition the king to annex them to Massachusetts. The 
 coming of a new governor for a time arrested these unhappy feuds. 
 William Burnet, son of the Bishop of Sarum, so well known as 
 an author and the intimate friend of William III., had been ap- 
 pointed Governor of Massachusetts and New Hampshire. He 
 was a highly accomplished scholar and statesman. He had been 
 governor of New York and New Jersey where his administration 
 rendered him the favorite of the people. It was the policy of 
 the English cabinet to secure permanent salaries for their pro- 
 vincial governors. Massachusetts long refused to comply with 
 this reasonable requisition. New Hampshire voted two hun- 
 dred pounds sterling for the annual salary of the governor, and 
 the allowance made from it by him to the lieutenant-governor. 
 Burnet visited New Hampshire but once before his death. He 
 was succeeded by Jonathan Belcher. He was a native of Bos- 
 ton, eminent as a merchant and possessed of a large fortune. 
 He was courteous to strangers, faithful to friends and severe to 
 enemies. The appointment was generally popular, but proved to 
 be fruitful in controversies. His first quarrel was with Went- 
 worth, whom he accused of duplicity because he wrote a compli- 
 mentary letter to himself and Shute at the same time, not know- 
 ing which would be his superior in office. Belcher limited his
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 115 
 
 perquisites, crippled his influence and removed his son-in-law, 
 Theodore Atkinson, from office. This hostility to Wentworth led 
 to the formation of a party hostile to the governor. But Went- 
 worth was removed by death, December twelfth, 1730. By his 
 excellent character and judicious administration of public af- 
 fairs, in war and peace, he won the confidence of the people, 
 and left an untarnished reputation as the best possible legacy 
 to his fourteen surviving children. Two had died before him. 
 
 He was succeeded by David Dunbar, an Irishman by birth, 
 and a bankrupt colonel of the British army. He was needy, 
 greedy and arrogant. He possessed no qualifications that fitted 
 him for his new position. He immediately joined the oppo- 
 sition to Belcher and thus lent his influence to secure a sepa- 
 rate government for New Hampshire. She was in danger of be- 
 ing made an appendage of a sister state. Belcher and his 
 friends favored the union with Massachusetts ; the people op- 
 posed it. The objections urged to an independent existence 
 were its poverty, sparse population and limited resources. There 
 were less than two thousand houses in the whole state. Lumber 
 and fish constituted their principal exports. The entire revenue 
 of the state, from duties and excise, was only four hundred 
 pounds, while the government expenses were fifteen hundred. 
 Still the idea of political sovereignty delighted the people. The 
 opposition, therefore, saw the necessity of enlarging the state 
 and increasing her income. They sought, first of all, to deter- 
 mine her boundaries. Every inch of the soil of New Hamp- 
 shire was covered by conflicting claims. Massachusetts claimed 
 the largest and best part of it. Her claim was founded on her 
 charter given by William and Mary, which substantially covered 
 the same territory which was granted by the first charter of 
 James I. New Hampshire, like the hdrse in the fable, invited a 
 royal rider to aid in the expulsion of her foe from her domains. 
 After the failure of a joint committee from both provinces, who 
 met at Newbury in 1731 to settle the long and complicated dis- 
 pute, New Hampshire petitioned the king to decide the contro- 
 versy. John Rindge, a merchant of Portsmouth, was appointed 
 their agent in London. Being obliged to return home in 1732, 
 he left the business with John Tomlinson, who proved to be a 
 zealous, persistent and efficient agent of the state. He fur- 
 nished twelve hundred pounds from his private purse to defray 
 the necessary expenses of the agency. After this he was, if 
 possible, twelve hundred-fold more earnest in securing a victory 
 for the state ; otherwise he had no responsible debtor. The posi- 
 tion of Governor Belcher was a delicate one. He was the chief 
 magistrate of both provinces; he must offend one of them. He 
 favored Massachusetts. He probably acted honestly, but gained
 
 Il6 HISTORY OF 
 
 the good will of neither party. He was the target for the mis- 
 siles of archers on every side. He was persecuted by slanders, 
 forgeries and perjuries, at home and abroad. Every species of 
 intrigue was adopted by the contending parties to gain their ob- 
 ject. Speculators, projectors, adventurers, courtiers, officials, 
 proprietors, politicians and some honest men were parties to the 
 quarrel. Usually self-interest was the source of the water that 
 drove the mill. Arguments and sophistries were used, which 
 if successful would greatly have injured those who advanced 
 them. Even the claims of Mason and Allen were revived by 
 both parties. This was simply suicidal, not patriotic ; 
 
 " But as some muskets so contrive it, 
 As oft to miss the mark they drive at, 
 And though well aimed at duck or plover, 
 Bear wide and kick their owners over." 
 
 In England the controversy was referred to the Lords of 
 Trade. They recommended a board of twenty commissioners, 
 five of whom should be a quorum, selected from the neighboring 
 royal provinces, to sit at Hampton on the first of August, 1737. 
 According to the royal decree, they met at the time appointed. 
 The assemblies of the two states convened at the same time, that 
 of Massachusetts at Salisbury, that of New Hampshire at Hamp- 
 ton Falls. With the utmost vigilance and jealousy they watched 
 one another. Skillful advocates acted for the states. The alle- 
 gations were patiently heard and considered, and a verdict ren- 
 dered which decided nothing. It was only hypothetical, based 
 on the question whether the new charter of Massachusetts con- 
 veyed the same territory as the old ; if so, Massachusetts was 
 the victor ; if not, New Hampshire. So the controversy was no 
 less, but the costs were much greater. After long and angry 
 altercations both parties, being weary of fighting and paying for 
 it, agreed to make the king their umpire ; and the stupid Guelph, 
 who hated " boetry and books," became something more than a 
 figure-head to the ship of state. His decision took everybody 
 by surprise. He pleased New Hampshire and offended Massa- 
 chusetts. George II. assumed that when the first charter was 
 given neither grantor nor grantees knew the northern course of 
 the Merrimack. Where it was known on the south its origin 
 seemed to be in the west, and not in the north ; therefore he 
 decided that the northern boundary of Massachusetts should be 
 a curved line, following the course of the river at three miles' 
 distance on the north side, beginning at the Atlantic ocean and 
 ending at a point due north of Pawtucket Falls, now Dracut, 
 thence due west to his majesty's other governments. As the 
 eastern line of "his other governments" was not then establish- 
 ed, this little clause in due time yielded new disputes. By this 
 decision New Hampshire gained a large accession of territory
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 117 
 
 beyond all she had sought. "It cut off from Massachusetts 
 twenty-eight townships between the Merrimack and Connecticut 
 rivers, besides large tracts of vacant land which lay intermixed, 
 and districts from six of their old towns which lay north of the 
 Merrimack river," besides lands west of the Connecticut which 
 were then of doubtful ownership. 
 
 While the states were contending about the lines which sepa- 
 rated them they became widely separated in feeling, and the 
 harmony of those " good old times " when they fought together 
 against kings, Indians and proprietors was for a time interrupt- 
 ed. The governor and his deputy still pursued one another with 
 unrelenting hate. They fought on no common theatre. States 
 and cabinet ministers were their allies. Dunbar, as surveyor- 
 general of the woods, was so vigilant in arresting wood-cutters 
 and confiscating boards that had been sawed from royal pines, 
 that he was personally assailed by the irritated owners. He was 
 mobbed at Exeter, and he accused, unjustly, the governor of 
 connivance at the escape of the rioters. His letters and those 
 of other personal enemies had weight at court, for the king was 
 as fond of the royal pines as Charles II. was of the royal oak. 
 Possibly he saw them " in his mind's eye " when he gave the 
 territory on which they grew to New Hampshire. Dunbar re- 
 turned to England where he was imprisoned for debt, but he was 
 still a favorite of the court and escaped this " durance vile " for 
 another office more profitable than that he had abandoned. 
 
 The enemies of Belcher succeeded in persuading the king first 
 to censure, then to remove him from office. On his return to 
 England he was able to justify himself and regain the royal favor. 
 
 In 1732, the first Episcopal church was erected in Portsmouth, 
 callecfQGeen's Chapel. It was consecrated in 1734, and Rev. 
 Arthur Browrr-beeaffi^rectoiu^ei-tixe society. In 1735 a fearful 
 epidemic raged in New England, called the " throat distemper." 
 It resembled the modern diphtheria. It raged for more than a 
 year. Children, for the most part, were its victims. At Hamp- 
 ton Falls it was very fatal. Twenty families lost all their chil- 
 dren. In the whole province one thousand persons, most of 
 whom were under twenty years of age, died of this terrible dis- 
 ease. It extended from Maine to Carolina, and was not modi- 
 fied by seasons. It has appeared in the state not less than six 
 time since, but never with such general mortality. Its true cause 
 is still unknown. 
 
 It deserves special notice that no public execution occurred in 
 New Hampshire during the first one hundred and sixteen years 
 of its existence. Many of the great criminals in early times 
 escaped by flight. Some were pardoned, others had their sen- 
 tences commuted. For smaller offences, whipping, the pillory,
 
 Il8 HISTORY OF 
 
 fines and imprisonment were deemed sufficient. On the twenty- 
 seventh of December, 1739, two women, Sarah Simpson and 
 Penelope Kenny, were hung in Portsmouth for the murder of an 
 infant. This event constituted an era in the judicial history of 
 the state. 
 
 CHAPTER XXXIII. 
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE AN INDEPENDENT ROYAL PROVINCE. 
 
 After George II. had settled the boundaries of his two royal 
 provinces, he determined to set up a new political boundary and 
 make New Hampshire independent of Massachusetts and only 
 dependent on himself. Accordingly, in 1741, he appointed a 
 governor who was to be solely enjoyed by New Hampshire. He 
 nominated Benning Wentworth, Esq., son of the late Jieutenant- 
 governor, who so long and successfully administered the affairs 
 of the province. Benning Wentworth was a merchant of good 
 repute, but bankrupt by reason of the failure of the Spanish 
 government to pay him, as she agreed, for a large consignment 
 of timber for the royal navy. The refusal of Spain to do justice 
 in the premises was one cause of the war between that kingdom 
 and England. Mr. Wentworth thereby became a national man ; 
 and through the influence of the zealous and efficient agent of 
 New Hampshire, Mr. Tomlinson, he obtained this new position. 
 The assembly voted him, at first, a salary of two hundred and 
 fifty pounds ; and afterwards doubled it, when a state loan of 
 twenty-five thousand pounds had been issued, by royal license, 
 for ten years. 
 
 The year 1743 was distinguished by the visit of the great 
 English preacher Whitefield. He preached at Portsmouth dur- 
 ing his stay there of three weeks, with marked success. In 1744 
 he again labored in the same city with great zeal and earnest- 
 ness, in spite of a severe illness ; but, as he himself expressed 
 it, "he felt a divine life, distinct from his animal life, which 
 made him laugh at his pains." The great revival of religion at- 
 tending and following the steps of this remarkable man aroused 
 new interest in the cause of education. From it, remotely, 
 sprang Dartmouth College. The converted Indians supplied the 
 school of Eleazar Wheelock at Lebanon with pupils in 1762, and 
 in 1766 one of them, Samson Occum, then a preacher, visited
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 119 
 
 England to obtain funds for the permanent establishment of 
 " Moor's Charity School." He succeeded in raising a large 
 amount through the influence of Whitefield, received the pat- 
 ronage of the queen, and the noble institution thus endowed 
 was removed in 1769 to Hanover, N. H. 
 
 CHAPTER XXXIV. 
 
 KING GEORGE'S WAR. 
 
 Ever since the conquest, in 1066, for more than eight centuries, 
 England and France have been political rivals. For more than 
 one third of that long period they have waged open war against 
 one another. The chief causes of hostility have been avarice, 
 ambition and the balance of power. The people who fought 
 their bloody battles and paid the debts that were rolled up in 
 prosecuting them had very little interest in the causes or results 
 of these national contests. The colonists of both countries 
 fought for the supremacy of fatherland, and gained as their re- 
 ward taxation and tyranny. In 1744, after about thirty years of 
 armed truce (it could hardly be called peace-), open war again 
 raged between France and England. It was waged to deter- 
 mine what one of several claimants should sit upon the throne 
 of Austria. In such a worthy cause the people of New England 
 engaged heart and soul. It has been the custom of all nations, 
 since lawless piracy passed into legitimate commerce, to secure, 
 in various waters, harbors, islands and strongholds for the pro- 
 tection of their ships. This has been the special policy of those 
 nations who have aimed at supremacy upon the seas. So Eng- 
 land to-day has naval defences in all parts of the world. She 
 controls Hong Kong, Bombay, St. Helena, Gibraltar, Jamaica, 
 the Musketo Coast and Vancouver's Island. A neutral ship 
 can scarcely sail in any waters without passing under the 
 guns of England. Webster, in language never surpassed in 
 beauty and force, speaks of her as " a power which has dotted 
 over the surface of the whole globe with her possessions and 
 military posts ; whose morning drum-beat, following the sun and 
 keeping company with the hours, circles the earth daily with 
 one continuous and unbroken strain of the martial airs of 
 England." 
 
 By the treaty of Utrecht, in 1713, England received from
 
 120 HISTORY OF 
 
 France Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and ceded to her the 
 little barren island of Cape Breton, which is separated from 
 Nova Scotia by the narrow channel of Canso. This place 
 has fewer attractions than almost any other portion of the habit- 
 able globe. Its winters are so long and cold that no vegetation 
 comes to maturity. Storms and tempests assail it, icebergs float 
 around it, and perpetual fogs rest upon it. As early as 1501 
 French mariners from Brittany gave name to this desert island, 
 " from their remembrance of home." Its fine harbors and its 
 facilities for defence constituted its only value to a commercial 
 nation. On the southeast side of this island, commanding an 
 excellent harbor, with deep waters nearly six miles in length, the 
 French had built the city of Louisburg. This had been fortified 
 by twenty-five years of toil, at an immense expense ($5,250,000). 
 The city had all the defences of an ancient capital, high walls, 
 moat and draw-bridge, flanked with towers and bastions, and 
 defended by heavy batteries. It seemed impregnable. This 
 city England and her colonies resolved to capture. The enter- 
 prise, resting, as it did, mainly on New England, seemed per- 
 fectly Quixotic. William Vaughan, son of Lieutenant-Governor 
 Vaughan of Portsmouth, claimed the merit of suggesting it. He 
 certainly bore a conspicuous part in the capture of the city. At 
 the eastern extremity of Nova Scotia, England owned a small 
 island called Canso. The French from Cape Breton took 
 this by surprise, before the news of war had reached New Eng- 
 land. They destroyed the fort arid buildings on the island ; and 
 carried eighty men prisoners to Louisburg. These men, after a 
 few months, were dismissed on parole and sent to Boston. They 
 brought to Governor Shirley an accurate account of the city and 
 its defences. He solicited aid from England to conquer it. The 
 towns of Massachusetts were eager for the fight. Her legisla- 
 ture, by a majority of only one vote, determined to undertake 
 the expedition. William Vaughan was in Boston when the de- 
 cision was made ; and, full of enthusiasm, expressed in person 
 the plan of Governor Shirley to the legislature of New Hamp- 
 shire, then in session at Portsmouth. They at once approved 
 the enterprise, and New Hampshire furnished three hundred 
 and four men, to whom the celebrated Mr. Whitefield gave as a 
 motto : " Nothing is to be despaired of, with Christ for a leader." 
 Other colonies assisted, but New England alone furnished men. 
 William Pepperell of Kittery commanded these volunteers. Their 
 rendezvous was at Canso. Through fogs and storms they 
 reached their destination in safety ; but were compelled to re- 
 main there some time, on account of the fields of ice that were 
 floating southward. Here Commodore Warren's squadron met 
 them. He had been ordered to that point by the English govern-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 121 
 
 ment. The united forces waited three weeks for the ice to disap- 
 pear and yet were not discovered by the enemy so near them. 
 Various ingenious plans were proposed for the capture of the 
 city ; but finally they resolved to attempt it in the ordinary way. 
 On the last day of April, 1745, one hundred vessels, bearing only 
 eighteen guns and three mortars, and carrying the New England 
 troops, sailed into the bay of Chapeau-Rouge in sight of the 
 frowning battlements of Louisburg. Her walls were defended 
 by one hundred and eighty-three pieces of heavy ordnance and 
 sixteen hundred men. One-fifth of this number were deemed 
 sufficient to repel any attacking force. The besiegers were not 
 tacticians, but farmers, fishermen, mechanics and lumbermen. 
 But they had been inured to toil and privation in the Indian 
 wars. They could do and dare all that might become men. 
 Besides the guns in the city, the harbor was defended by two 
 batteries, containing in both sixty heavy cannon. Yet the New 
 England troops landed at once, and " flew to the shore like 
 eagles to the quarry." The French who came down to repel them 
 were driven into the woods. On the next day William Vaughan 
 of New Hampshire led four hundred volunteers, chiefly from his 
 own state, by the city, which he greeted on passing with three 
 cheers, and took his stand near the northeast harbor. Here 
 he set fire to some French warehouses. The smoke, driven by 
 the wind into the royal battery, so annoyed the gunners that 
 they spiked their cannon and retired to the city. Vaughan hired 
 an Indian to creep through an embrasure and open the gate. 
 He then entered and wrote to the Generalissimo as follows: 
 " May it please your honor to be informed that, by the grace of 
 God and the courage of thirteen men, I entered the royal bat- 
 tery about nine o'clock, and am waiting for a reinforcement and 
 a flag." Vaughan held the fort against those who came, to the 
 number of one hundred, to retake it. 
 
 The preparations for the siege continued fourteen days. Dur- 
 ing all the nights the troops were employed in dragging the 
 heavy guns, on hastily formed sledges, across a deep morass. 
 Though wading in deep mud, they brought them all safely within 
 cannon-shot of the city. Several unsuccessful attacks were 
 made upon the defences of the city ; finally it was resolved to 
 breach or scale the walls. These were so strong that there was 
 almost no probability of success. At length, on the fifteenth of 
 June, it was announced in the city that a French ship-of-war of 
 sixty-four guns, laden with supplies, had been decoyed into the 
 midst of the English fleet and captured. This discouraged the 
 garrison. They could not long hold out with their present sup- 
 plies. The governor, Duchambon, a weak and irresolute officer, 
 sent a flag of truce ; and terms of capitulation were agreed upon
 
 122 HISTORY OF 
 
 and the city was surrendered. Probably an enterprise was never 
 undertaken which promised so little and yielded so much. The 
 men, on entering the city, were astonished at their own temerity 
 in the attempt. They could impute their success only to a divine 
 interposition. They never could have taken the city by assault; 
 and it is probable that the siege would have soon been raised by 
 the arrival of fresh supplies. They had been favored by the 
 weather during their whole stay on the island ; which, soon after 
 the surrender of the city, became so severe as to peril life in the 
 morass where they had been at work. 
 
 The news of this victory was received with universal joy 
 throughout the colonies, and with unfeigned surprise in Europe. 
 Pepperell and Warren were made baronets, and parliament reim- 
 bursed to the colonies the expenses of the expedition. New 
 Hampshire received, for her share, sixteen thousand three hun- 
 dred and fifty-five pounds sterling. Vaughan, the most noble 
 hero of the siege, obtained no recognition from the Court, and 
 died in obscurity, while attempting to press his claims upon the 
 royal notice in London. Warren, the English Admiral, claimed 
 the honor of this victory ; and, under oath in the admiralty court, 
 testified that himself "did subdue the whole island of Cape 
 Breton." Still it is quite manifest to the candid reader of the 
 history of that expedition, that probably it never would have 
 been undertaken, and certainly never would have been success- 
 ful, but for the skill, energy and heroic daring of New Hampshire 
 men ; and of the New England volunteers, William Vaughan, 
 not William Pepperell, was the soul of the whole enterprise. 
 
 The conquest of Louisburg led to more enlarged plans of in- 
 vasion. Shirley, full of enthusiasm and prompted by patriotism, 
 conceived the plan of wresting from the French their entire pos- 
 sessions on this continent. He met Warren and Pepperell at 
 Louisburg after their victory, and consulted them concerning 
 the feasibility of his plan. He then wrote to the British minis- 
 try urging it upon their notice. His proposition seemed wise ; 
 the British secretary of state, the Duke of Newcastle, in April, 
 1746, sent a circular letter to all the governors of the colonies, 
 as far south as Virginia, to raise as many men as they could 
 spare and form them into companies of one hundred each and 
 hold them ready for action. It. was his purpose that the New 
 England troops should meet the British fleet and army at Louis- 
 burg, and thence proceed up the St. Lawrence to Quebec. The 
 soldiers from New York and the southern provinces were ordered 
 to meet in Albany, to march thence to Crown Point and Mon- 
 treal. The colonies were to meet all the necessary expenses and 
 depend on England for a reimbursement. In New Hampshire 
 there was some delay, because the governor had no authority
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 123 
 
 without the royal consent to issue bills of credit to meet the de- 
 mands of the army. Shirley, the moving spirit of the whoie en- 
 terprise, persuaded Wentworth to rely on the English honor to 
 pay the bills, as they had done in case of Louisburg, and issue 
 the sum required. It was thought by some persons that, although 
 New Hampshire and Massachusetts had their own governors, 
 one mind controlled both. New Hampshire voted to raise and 
 support one thousand men and two ships of war. Col. Atkinson 
 was appointed commander. The New Hampshire troops were 
 ordered to march to Albany ; but the small-pox prevailing there, 
 they diverted their course to Saratoga. It was feared that Nova 
 Scotia and Cape Breton would be captured by the French. Or- 
 ders were therefore issued for the troops from New Hampshire, 
 Massachusetts and Rhode Island to sail for that region and 
 " drive the enemy out of Nova Scotia." But before this decree 
 could be executed, a report came that a large fleet from France 
 had arrived at Nova Scotia under the command of Duke D'An- 
 ville. The people of New England now began to fear a war on 
 their own shores and possibly the conquest of all their territory. 
 Hence every hand was employed in self-defence. Old forts 
 were repaired ; new ones were built; and all the strongholds 
 were strengthened. A new battery of sixteen heavy guns was 
 added to the fort at the entrance of Piscataqua harbor; and 
 another of nine thirty-two pounders placed at the extremity of 
 Little Harbor. While these works were in progress, news was 
 brought by some prisoners released from the French, that great 
 distress and confusion prevailed on board their fleet. The of- 
 ficers were divided in council. English letters which had been 
 intercepted by a French cruiser were brought to Chebucto, a 
 bay near Halifax, where the fleet lay. An English fleet was ex- 
 pected to follow the French to America. So these letters in- 
 formed them. This news created dissension among the officers. 
 The men were wasted by pestilence ; eleven hundred were buried 
 at Halifax and hundreds more in the sea ; the fleet was crip- 
 pled by storms ; and under such circumstances they could do 
 nothing. The commander, utterly dispirited, committed suicide ; 
 and the second in command, in a fit of insanity fell on his own 
 sword. They resolved, however, to attack Annapolis, but as they 
 sailed from Chebucto they were overtaken by a storm ; some of 
 their ships were wrecked and the rest returned home. So ended 
 this magnificent plan of conquest. The result only finds a par- 
 allel in the dispersion of the Spanish Armada in the reign of 
 Elizabeth. 
 
 During all this time the English had been unaccountably re- 
 miss in action. Seven times the fleet sailed from Spithead, and 
 seven times returned. Only two English regiments ever reached
 
 24 HISTORY OF 
 
 Ixmisburg. The whole summer was wasted and nothing accom 
 ; dished. The colonies were in an agony of suspense, and were 
 sending their forces to different points, where the danger seemed 
 imminent, without advantage to any one. After the cloud of 
 peril from France was dissolved, Colonel Atkinson marched 
 with his regiment to the shores of lake Winnipiseogee. There 
 they passed a winter in plenty, with no foe near them. They 
 were without discipline, without employment, and soon without 
 morals. They spent their time in sporting, hunting and fishing. 
 Some deserted ; all became weary of this listless mode of life. 
 The following summer was spent in idleness and disorder till 
 they were finally disbanded. But, during all this period of inac- 
 tion, the frontiers of New England were harassed beyond en- 
 durance by the French and Indians. Before the adjustment of 
 the boundary between the two states, many townships had been 
 granted, both by Massachusetts and New Hampshire, within the 
 limits of the latter state as fixed by George II. The valleys of 
 the Merrimack, Ashuelot and Connecticut rivers had been ex- 
 tensively explored and settled. As late as 1745 many of these 
 towns were known only by their numbers, by Indian names, or 
 by local peculiarities. For example, Charlestown was called 
 Number-Four ; Westmoreland, Great Meadow ; Walpole, Great 
 Fall ; Hinsdale, Fort Dummner ; Keene, Upper Ashuelot ; and 
 Swanzey, Lower Ashuelot. On the Merrimack, Concord was 
 known as Penacook ; Pembroke, Suncook ; Boscawen, Contoo- 
 cook ; Hopkinton, New Hopkinton ; Merrimack, Souhegan-East ; 
 and Amherst, Souhegan-West. On the Piscataqua and its 
 branches were the towns of Nottingham, Barrington and Roch- 
 ester. All these settlements* were on the frontiers of the state 
 as it was then occupied ; and were peculiarly exposed to hostile 
 attacks from the savages, both Indian and French, for they dif- 
 fered but little in their mode of warfare. The French had more 
 knowledge and of course were more criminal. They were ever 
 ready to 
 
 " Cry Havoc, and let slip the dogs of war, " 
 
 and the innocent were torn and mangled without pity. The 
 people of New Hampshire were willing to receive all the new 
 territory which the king decided to give them ; but they were not 
 willing to defend it. They maintained that the towns granted 
 and the forts built by Massachusetts ought to be protected by 
 her. The defence of her own frontiers required this. On the 
 west side of Connecticut river stood Fort Dummer. Hinsdale, 
 
 * A line drawn from Rochester to Boscawen, Concord, Hopkinton, Hillsborough, Keene 
 and Westmoreland constituted the frontier of the New Hampshire settlements. These towns 
 were the points of attack by the Indians in "King George's War." In these and adjacent 
 towns about one hundred persons were killed, wounded or captured during the war from Julv 
 t, i745i to June 17, 1749.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 125 
 
 on the east side, had in common the same name. Massachusetts 
 had erected and maintained this border defence till the royal de- 
 cision gave it to New Hampshire. The assembly declined to pro- 
 tect this post, because of its remoteness and the expense. It was 
 also without access by regular roads. The governor dissolved 
 the assembly that refused this reasonable expense and called 
 another, whom he eloquently besought to assume the burden. 
 They also refused ; and Massachusetts undertook the defence 
 of this and other posts established above it on the Connecticut. 
 
 All the horrors and atrocities of former Indian wars were re- 
 newed. There was no safety for private houses. Every oc- 
 cupied house must be turned into a garrison. No field labor 
 could be performed with safety. Harvests were destroyed, 
 houses burned, cattle killed and men, women and children in- 
 humanly massacred or dragged into slavery. No man walked 
 abroad unarmed. It was unsafe to step out of the stockade to 
 milk a cow or feed an animal. The lurking foe seemed omni- 
 present. They were scattered in small parties along the whole 
 frontier. When people wanted bread, they were obliged to visit 
 the mills with an armed guard. Indians often lay in ambush 
 about the mills. The upper towns on the Connecticut and Mer- 
 rimack were all visited. Some of them were decimated ; others 
 lost only one or two inhabitants. 
 
 The year 1746 was memorable in the history of Concord, then 
 called Rumford. This region, in early times, had been the home 
 of the far-famed Passaconaway the great sachem of Penacook. 
 It was therefore a favorite resort of the Indians, both in peace 
 and war. From an address delivered by Mr. Asa McFarland, on 
 the occasion of the erection of the Bradley monument, the fol- 
 lowing description of Concord, as it then was, is copied : 
 
 "Where pleasant villages have grown up, north of us, set a few houses 
 and give a garrison to each of these outposts. Immediately west of this 
 monument let there be a few lots reserved from barrenness, and a guard-house 
 there also. Over our broad intervals, let a few acres be under culture ; and 
 just as well tilled as would naturally be the case in a new and terror-stricken 
 frontier town. Let thick forests clothe most of the soil, and animals dwell 
 therein which make night hideous. Let bears rustle in the farmer's corn- 
 field, and wolves howl around his sheep-folds ; let moose and deer go down 
 at noon to drink at a stream, from the far distant sources of which the species 
 now flee before the huntsman." 
 
 Such was the settlement which hostile Indians approached, on 
 Sunday, August 10, 1746. Capt. Ladd, from Exeter, had come 
 with his company to Rumford to protect the citizens. The Con- 
 cord and Exeter soldiers united numbered about seventy. The 
 men, not excepting the clergyman, worshiped with arms at 
 hand and sentinels stationed without. The Indians dared not 
 make their attack on the Sabbath. The next day eight of the
 
 126 HISTORY OF 
 
 company were sent out on the Hopkinton road to perform some 
 special service. About three-fourths of a mile from the settle- 
 ment they fell into an ambuscade, and five of their number 
 were killed and hewn to pieces by the Indians. On the twenty- 
 second of August, 1837, Richard Bradley, a descendant of 
 Samuel Bradley the leader of that heroic band of martyrs, 
 erected a fitting monument to their memory on the spot where 
 they fell. This is a noble granite shaft which, being cut from 
 " the everlasting hills, " will, without doubt, transmit the history 
 of their patriotism to the latest posterity. 
 
 It was a favorite practice of the Indians to carry their prison- 
 ers away to Canada. They received a reward from their sale ; 
 and the French, by the exorbitant prices demanded for their 
 redemption, paid the expenses of the war. The prospect of an 
 expedition to Canada, in 1746, induced many .soldiers who were 
 on duty on the frontiers to enlist in the army of invasion. The 
 protection of those exposed towns being withdrawn, the inhabi- 
 tants were obliged to leave their farms to be pillaged, their houses 
 to be burnt. They buried some articles of property and carried 
 others with them ; but the most of their goods were left to be 
 appropriated or destroyed by the enemy. In the spring of 1747 
 Massachusetts resumed her protection of these deserted forts 
 and towns. In March of that year, Capt. Phineas Stevens, who 
 commanded a company of rangers, numbering thirty men, came 
 to Number-Four and took possession of it. It was a common 
 stockade fort made of the trunks of trees about fourteen feet in 
 length, set in the ground. It covered about three-fourths of an 
 acre. Within ten days after the arrival of Capt. Stevens, this 
 fort was surrounded by a mixed army of French and Indians, 
 numbering from four to seven hundred men. A simultaneous 
 attack was made on all sides, under the command of an experi- 
 enced leader, Gen. Debeline. When the ordinary modes of as- 
 sault failed, they attempted to burn it. Says Capt. Stevens in 
 his report : 
 
 "The wind being very high, and everything exceedingly dry, they set fire 
 to all the old fences, arid also to the log house about forty rods from the fort, 
 to the windward, so that in a few minutes we were entirely surrounded by 
 fire, all which was performed with the most hideous shouting from all quar- 
 ters, which they continued in the most terrible manner till the next day at 
 ten o'clock at night, without intermission ; and during that time we had no 
 opportunity to eat or sleep," 
 
 Among other modes of assault, they loaded a carriage with 
 combustibles, rolled it up to the paling, and thus set the fort on 
 fire. But even this failed to do its work. The French officer 
 then demanded a surrender through a flag Of truce accompanied 
 by fifty men. The men within unanimously resolved to fight. 
 Finding the fort impregnable, the enemy left it. Only two of its
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 127 
 
 brave defenders were wounded. This was the most gallant 
 achievement of the whole war. Commodore Sir Charles Knowles 
 was so highly pleased with the conduct of Capt. Stevens, that he 
 presented him with an elegant and costly sword as a reward of 
 his bravery. The township, when incorporated, took the name 
 of Charlestown in commemoration of this act of justice from 
 Sir Charles. 
 
 The lower towns did not escape attacks. Hopkinton, Con- 
 cord, Suncook, Rochester, Nottingham, Winchester and Hins- 
 dale all lost some of their valued citizens. The war was carried 
 on with great want of skill and energy, if not with positive in- 
 difference, by the English. After the failure of Shirley's pro- 
 posed invasion of Canada, they made no aggressive movements. 
 It was suspected, by some persons, that England allowed this 
 dangerous enemy to harass the colonies, that they might feel 
 more keenly their dependence on the mother country. This was 
 the expressed opinion of Peter Kalm, a Swedish traveler. They 
 were already enforcing that restrictive policy in trade which, in 
 after years, led to the Revolution. The colonies were required 
 to buy and sell only in English ports. If they discovered any 
 silver or gold, it was the perquisite of the king. In fact, they 
 were making their children perfect through sufferings ; and bit- 
 terly did they rue their neglect of them in after years. 
 
 The Indians killed fewer of their captives than in former 
 years. They valued their redemption money too highly. They 
 also discontinued some of their former modes of torture, such 
 as roasting their prisoners by a slow fire, cutting out their tongues, 
 cutting off their noses, and carving away morsels of thefr flesh 
 to be thrown in their faces. They compelled none to run the 
 gauntlet ; they even showed pity to the sick and feeble. This 
 does not indicate the existence of compassion, but a develop- 
 ment of avarice. They wished to save their captives that they 
 might sell them for money. 
 
 Near the close of 1748, a treaty of peace was concluded be- 
 tween England and France, at Aix la Chapelle. " Humanity 
 had suffered without a purpose, and without a result." No ques- 
 tion in dispute had been settled. Neither party had made any 
 acquisition of wealth or territory. England yielded up Cape 
 Breton, whose conquest had shed such glory on the colonial 
 arms, and received in return Madras. The spirit of war slum- 
 bered only a few years, and all the old questions in dispute 
 \\ere again revived in the subsequent "French and Indian war." 
 The fruit of King George's war, to the colonists, was debt, dis- 
 grace and degradation. The soldiers, accustomed to camp-life, 
 carried its loose morality into rural life and society lost its purity, 
 industry and economy.
 
 128 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XXXV. 
 
 REVIVAL OF MASON'S CLAIM. 
 
 While the controversy was pending respecting the boundaries 
 of New Hampshire before the king, in 1738, the wise politicians 
 of Massachusetts found a lineal descendant of Capt. Mason, 
 who bore the name of John Tufton Mason. A claim was set up 
 for him to the lands originally granted to his ancestor, on a plea 
 of a defect in the sale made by John and Robert Mason, in 
 1691, to Samuel Allen. The purchaser then thought that he 
 was dealing with honest men and securing a valid title to the 
 premises deeded to him. But in that conveyance, by a fiction 
 of law, the lands were supposed to be in England instead of 
 New Hampshire, so that they might be under the control of the 
 king's court. Possibly Mr. Allen chose that it should be so. 
 This fiction, however, was the means of vacating the title, and 
 the estate reverted to the heirs of Mason. In the excitement 
 of parties, intriguing politicians resolved to gain by purchase 
 what they feared they should lose by litigation. They first pur- 
 chased that portion of Mason's grant that lay within the juris- 
 diction of Massachusetts for five hundred pounds. Tomlin- 
 son, the vigilant agent of New Hampshire, hearing of this ne- 
 gotiation, approached Mr. Mason, who had been sent to London 
 to promote the interests of Massachusetts, and proposed to buy 
 his claim on New Hampshire. He offered to sell it to the 
 assembly of the state for one thousand pounds in New England 
 currency. The bargain was not immediately closed but left for 
 future controversy. After the final adjustment of the lines, in 
 1741, Mason returned to America, but did not urge the sale of 
 his claim for several years. In 1744 it was brought before the 
 assembly by Gov. Wentworth, but the intense excitement about 
 the Louisburg expedition prevented definite action upon it. 
 Mason himself joined the expedition. On his return, in 1746, 
 he notified the assembly that he should sell to others if they 
 failed to close the bargain immediately. After discussion, they 
 accepted his terms ; but it was too late. On the very day of 
 their acceptance he conveyed the property, by deed, to twelve of 
 the leading men of Portsmouth, for fifteen hundred pounds. 
 
 This deed led to long and angry disputes between the pur- 
 chasers and the assembly. They at one time agreed to sur- 
 render their claim to the assembly, provided the land should be
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. I2Q 
 
 " granted by the governor and council." The assembly were 
 jealous of these officials and would not accept the offer. The 
 people murmured, and the legislators threatened ; but the new 
 proprietors stood firm. They proceeded to grant new townships 
 on the most liberal terms, asking no reward for the land occupied 
 by actual settlers, only insisting on immediate improvements in 
 roads, mills and churches. They reserved in every town one right 
 for a settled minister, one for a parsonage and one for a school, 
 and fifteen rights for themselves. This generous conduct gained 
 them friends and they soon became popular with all parties. 
 The heirs of Allen threatened loudly to vindicate their claim, 
 but never actually commenced a suit. So the matter ran on, 
 under this new proprietorship, till the Revolution, like a flood, 
 swept away all these rotten defences and gave to actual settlers 
 a title, in fee simple, to their farms. 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVI. 
 
 THE REPRESENTATIVES OF NEW TOWNS. 
 
 When war was at their doors, and the scalping-knife gleamed 
 above their heads, the people gave no heed to domestic quarrels 
 or "private griefs." They fought till the foe disappeared, then 
 public war was exchanged for political contests. The governor 
 and the legislature .were seldom in harmony. The chief magis- 
 trate was the representative of the king, the assembly of the peo- 
 ple ; hence mutual jealousies and mutual hostility sprang up. 
 Governor Wentworth had resolved to protect those towns and 
 forts that had been acquired from Massachusetts by the new 
 boundary line. He introduced into the legislature of 1748 six 
 new members, from towns that had been cut off from Massachu- 
 setts. The house refused them seats. Here was open war be- 
 tween the executive and the legislative branch of the govern- 
 ment. Precedents were cited to sustain both parties. The tri- 
 ennial act of 1727 was deficient, because it did not decide who 
 should issue the writs that were necessary to the election of new 
 members. The house claimed that they alone should determine 
 who should sit with them in making laws. The governor main- 
 tained that the right to send representatives was founded on 
 royal commissions and instructions ; and that he, acting under 
 the king's direction, alone held the right of issuing writs for new
 
 130 HISTORY OF 
 
 elections. The controversy was suspended during the war. At 
 its close, in 1749, it assumed new importance. 
 
 For three years the governor and council waged incessant 
 war with the assembly. The public interests were neglected. 
 The treasurer's accounts were not audited ; the recorder's office 
 was closed ; and the soldiers, who had so heroically defended 
 the frontiers of the state, were unpaid. The public bills of 
 credit depreciated from fifty-six to thirty per cent.; and the gov- 
 ernor's salary declined in the same ratio. The excise could 
 neither be farmed nor collected. No authenticated documents 
 could be obtained ; in a word, no public business could be trans- 
 acted. The people were suffering a sort of papal interdict, un- 
 der a royal governor and a democratic legislature. An attempt 
 was made to remove the governor ; but he had the ear of the 
 English minister and the papers were not presented. The peo- 
 ple again agitated the project of annexation to Massachusetts ; 
 but all desperate remedies failed, and in due time the parties 
 became weary of the fight. In 1752 a new assembly was called. 
 They met in better temper. Moderate councils prevailed ; a 
 popular speaker was elected. Meshech Weare, a man of rising 
 meril, in favor with both parties, occupied the chair. A re- 
 corder was chosen, who entered at once upon his duties ; the 
 treasurer's accounts were settled ; the governor's salary was in- 
 creased ; and an era of good feelings commenced. Thus the 
 new representatives gained their seats, and the public business 
 again commanded the attention of the assembly. 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVII. 
 
 THE LAST FRENCH WAR, CALLED " THE SEVEN YEARS* WAR." 
 OR "THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR." 
 
 If any thing could show the folly of war for the adjustment 
 of national boundaries, or for the balance of power, it would be 
 that absurd clause of the treaty of Aix la Chapelle, which de- 
 clares that "all things should be restored on the footing they 
 were before the war." Cape Breton, "won by Americans, was 
 given up by England." The conquest of Lduisburg was ascribed 
 to divine interposition ; what, then, was the restoration of it to 
 France ? The glory of a great victory was forever eclipsed by 
 an inglorious surrender of the prize. The peace, however, was
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 131 
 
 only nominal. The fires of war for a season slumbered, only to 
 blaze with intenser heat on a wider theatre. The contest in pre- 
 vious wars had been for the Atlantic coast, for barren islands and 
 unproductive promontories that might serve as safeguards of com- 
 merce. Now^ the destiny of a continent hung in the scale. The 
 policy of France was grand and comprehensive. She already 
 possessed the St. Lawrence, the lakes and the adjacent territo- 
 ries. She looked with anxious solicitude toward the great valley 
 of the Mississippi. By planting her colonies in the rear of the 
 English and commanding the great water communications of the 
 north and west, she confidently expected to be mistress of the 
 continent. The French already had settlements in Canada and 
 Louisiana. By establishing a chain of forts from the St. Law- 
 rence to the mouth of the Mississippi, they could then extend 
 their power both east and west. 
 
 The colonies of England received grants of territory from sea 
 to sea. The honor of the mother country and the interests of 
 her colonies were at stake. The Earl of Holderness, secretary 
 of state, wrote to the governors of the American colonies re- 
 commending union for their mutual defence. Accordingly seven 
 colonies sent delegates to Albany, to consult for the common 
 welfare and to secure the friendship of the Six Nations. The 
 commissioners from New Hampshire were Atkinson, Wibird, 
 Sherburne and Weare. The Six Nations were represented at 
 the conference and received presents from the convention and 
 private donations from the New Hampshire delegates. A plan 
 of union was adopted, on the fourth of July, 1754, just twenty- 
 two years before the Declaration of Independence. The name 
 of Franklin appears in both. He drew up the plan of union, 
 but it failed. It was rejected in America because it yielded too 
 much power to the king ; in England, because it gave too much 
 to the people ! The English ministry, fearing to allow the colo- 
 nists to control so great a war, resolved to conduct it with their 
 own armies, making the colonial militia their allies. 
 
 New England was again called upon to resist the depreda- 
 tions of Indians. They appeared in August, 1754, at Baker's 
 town on the Pemigewasset, and killed a woman and took several 
 captives. They committed similar outrages at Stevens' town and 
 at Number-Four. From this town eight persons were carried into 
 captivity ; Mr. James Johnson, his wife and three children were 
 among them. Mrs. Johnson was delivered of an infant the next 
 day, whom she named " Captive." The fate of Johnson was ex- 
 ceedingly distressing. He was paroled at Montreal, to secure 
 money for the redemption of his family. The severity of wintei 
 prevented his return within the limits of his parole. On his ar- 
 rival he and his family were imprisoned, his money confiscated
 
 132 HISTORY OF 
 
 ar.d. in addition to these calamities, all the family were attacked 
 by the small-pox. His wife and children were released after 
 eighteen months of suffering. Mr. Johnson was held in prison 
 three years and, strange to say, on his return to Boston was im- 
 prisoned there under suspicion of being a spy ! 
 
 Number-Four and Fort Dummer again petitioned New Hamp- 
 shire for protection and were refused. They then applied to 
 Massachusetts and received aid. In the spring of 1755, the 
 English planned three expeditions : one against Fort DuQuesne, 
 another against Niagara, and a third against Crown Point. For 
 the last expedition New Hampshire raised five hundred men, 
 under command of Colonel Joseph Blanchard. 
 
 Here it becomes necessary to recite the history of some of 
 the prominent actors in those stirring scenes that followed. No 
 history of New Hampshire would be complete without a bio- 
 graphical sketch of General John Stark. His life is identified with 
 the most remarkable events of its records in the eighteenth cen- 
 tury. He was of Scotch descent. His father, Archibald Stark, 
 came to Nutfield (now Londonderry) in 1721. He, about fif- 
 teen years later, having lost his house by fire, removed to a 
 place then called Harrytown, and settled upon a lot a short 
 distance above the Falls of Amoskeag. He had four sons, Wil- 
 liam, John, Samuel and Archibald, all of whom were officers in 
 " the seven years' war." John Stark was born at Londonderry, 
 in 1728. At the age of twenty-four, in company with his brother 
 William, David Stinson and Amos Eastman, he went on a hunt- 
 ing expedition to Baker's river, in the town since called Rum- 
 ney. Baker's river flows into the Pemigewasset. It was so 
 named from Capt. Thomas Baker, who in 1720 led a scouting 
 party into that region and destroyed a company of Indians. 
 Their chief, Wattanummon, fell by Baker's own hand.* Game was 
 abundant in this region, consisting of beavers, bears, catamounts, 
 wolves and wildcats. In about six weeks of forest life this 
 party had collected furs valued at five hundred and sixty pounds 
 sterling. < On the twenty-eighth day of April, 1752, John Stark, 
 while collecting his traps, was surprised by ten Indians. His 
 brother William and Stinson were in a canoe upon the river. 
 The Indians fired upon them and killed Stinson. William Stark 
 escaped, possibly by his brother's hardihood in striking up the 
 guns of the Indians as they fired. For this act of daring they 
 
 *The following account of that battle is taken from a published letter of M. B. Goodwin, 
 Esq., dated Plymouth, May 3, 1875: 
 
 From the cupola of this hotel you look down upon the junction of Baker's river with the 
 Pemigewasset, which was the scene of a bloody drama in the early history of this state, the 
 destruction of an Indian village which was planted there one hundred and sixty-three years ago. 
 The first pale-faces of whom history preserves any account, who visited this place, was the 
 company of "Marching Troops against the Enemy at Cohos" under Captain Thomas Ba- 
 ker. Tflty left Northampton in the early summer of 1712, struck up the Connecticut to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 133 
 
 beat him severely. He and Eastman were taken to lake Mem 
 phremagog, the headquarters of the St. Francis tribe. There 
 they were compelled to run the gauntlet. The young braves 
 stood in two lines armed with clubs or sticks, with which they 
 beat the captive as he passed, who carried in his hands a pole 
 six or eight feet long, surmounted with the skin of an animal. 
 Eastman, in his transit, was nearly beaten to death. Stark used 
 his pole with such vigor, swinging it right and left, that he es- 
 caped with slight injury. This feat pleased the old Indians who, 
 as spectators, enjoyed the sport at the expense of their young 
 warriors. They then directed Stark to hoe their corn. He at 
 first carefully hoed the weeds and cut up the corn by the roots ; 
 finally he threw his hoe into the river, saying, " it was the busi- 
 ness of squaws, and not of warriors, to hoe corn." This gave 
 the Indians still greater pleasure and they adopted him by the 
 title of " Young Chief." Afterwards he was a favorite, and in 
 his old age still testified to the uniform kindness of his captors. 
 He was shortly redeemed by Capt. Stevens, who was sent to re- 
 cover Massachusetts prisoners. His ransom was fixed at one 
 hundred and three dollars ; that of his friend Eastman at sixty. 
 The state never repaid either sum. 
 
 " Lower Cohos" now Haverhill, thence over the height of lands to the source of what from 
 this expedition took the name of Baker's river, and so down the stream to its junction with 
 " the west branch of the Merrimack " as the Massachusetts records has it now the Pemige- 
 wasset river. At the confluence of these two streams, in the "Crotch," they found "the 
 Enemy" "the terrible tawnies, as old Cotton Mather called the "original proprietors." 
 On detecting traces of the savages, Baker sent forward scouts who, on getting _near the 
 junction, discovered a sequestered Indian village with their clusters of wigwams in circles 
 upon the interval, the corn of their scanty husbandry freshly springing from the surrounding 
 fields. The budding and blossoming spring was distilling its fragrance, the rule being to put 
 in the crops "when the oak leaf became as large as a mouse's ear." The squaws were busy 
 at their work and the little ones were gamboling like lambs along the banks. But a few war- 
 riors were at home, the most of them being in pursuit of game. The reconnoitering party 
 came back and reported what they had seen. 
 
 Captain Baker at once put his company in motion, silently crept upon the unsuspecting vil- 
 lage, and poured upon them their deadly musketry ; some fell, the rest fled into the forests. 
 Their wigwams were set on fire, their rich furs, stored in holes like the nests of bank swallows 
 along the shores, were destroyed, and crossing hastily to the southerly shore of Baker's river 
 they pushed with the utmost speed down the Petnigewasset, with the yells of the maddened 
 warriors ringing from the hills behind them. They had destroyed the headquarters of the 
 Pemigewas jets, the royal residence of Walternumus their sachem, situated on what is the 
 upper outskirts of Plymouth village. The spot now answers well to the description which 
 history and tradition give ; and the multitude of Indian relics which have been found in the 
 locality makes it certain. The town has a pleasant name, but Pemigewasset would have 
 been better. 
 
 When Baker had retreated some six miles down the road, the infuriated savages led by Wal- 
 ternumus were upon them, and they were compelled to give battle in a dense forest at a pop- 
 lar plain in what is now Bridgewater. In the heat of the battle the sachem and Baker were 
 confronted. They both fired at the same instant ; the sachem leaped into the air with a yell, 
 falling dead with a ball through his heart, and Baker's eyebrow being grazed by the sachem's 
 ball. In the dismay and momentary retreat of the Indians at the loss of their chief ? Baker 
 pushed down the river with the utmost speed, and the Indians were soon upon their heels. 
 When arrived at the brook now known as the outlet of Webster Lake; in Franklin Village, 
 the company, utterly exhausted with hunger and fatigue, came to a halt in despair. A friendly 
 Indian belonging to the company saved them. He directed each man to build a fire, cut a 
 number of sticks, burn the ends as though used for roasting meat, leave them by_ the fires and 
 hasten forward. Their pursuers were immediately upon the scene, and counting each stick 
 ;is representing a man they followed no more, concluding the pale-faces too strong for them. 
 Perhaps the original name of Baker's Town, which Salisbury bore, arose from this event.
 
 134 HISTORY OF 
 
 In March, 1753, Mr. Stark became the guide of an exploring 
 party to the Coos territory. In 1754 he again guided Capt. 
 Powers with thirty men, sent by governor Wentworth, to the Up- 
 per Coos, to remonstrate with the French who were said to be 
 erecting a fort there. They found no French ; but visited the 
 beautiful intervals where Newbury and Haverhill are now sit- 
 uated. They were the first English explorers of this region. 
 Upon the breaking out of " the seven years' war," Stark was 
 made second lieutenant in " Rogers' Rangers " attached to Blan- 
 chard's regiment. These men were rugged foresters, every man 
 of whom, as a hunter, "could hit the size of a dollar at the dis- 
 tance of a hundred yards." They were inured to cold, hunger 
 and peril. They often marched without food, and slept in winter 
 without shelter. They knew the Indians thoroughly. They 
 were principally recruited in the vicinity of Amoskeag Falls. 
 Their early habits had accustomed them to face wild beasts, 
 savage men and fierce storms. In the summer of 1755, Rogers 
 and his men were ordered to visit Coos and erect a fort. A sub- 
 sequent order directed them to Fort Edward, on the east of the 
 Hudson, about forty-five miles north of Albany. They arrived 
 there in August, a short time before the attack made by Baron 
 Dieskau on Johnson's provincial army at the south end of lake 
 George. The French were defeated with the loss of their leader. 
 
 The camp of Johnson was attacked on the eighth of Septem- 
 ber. A party from Fort Edward discovered some wagons burn- 
 ing in the road. Capt. Nathaniel Folsom, with eighty New 
 Hampshire men and forty from New York, went out to recon- 
 noitre the place. They found the wagoners and cattle dead ; 
 but no enemy was near. Hearing the report of guns toward 
 the lake, they hastened to the scene of action. On their march 
 they found the baggage of the French under a guard, whom they 
 dispersed. Soon the retreating army of Dieskau appeared in 
 sight, and Folsom, posting his men behind trees, kept up a well 
 directed fire till night. The enemy retired with great loss. Only 
 six of the New Hampshire troops were killed. The French lost 
 their ammunition and baggage, with a large number of men. This 
 regiment then joined the regular army, and its men were em- 
 ployed as scouts. 
 
 Another regiment was raised in New Hampshire, commanded 
 by Col. Peter Gilman. These were also employed in the same 
 service. Their familiarity with savage warfare, their skill in the 
 use of arms, their courage and enterprise, rendered them the 
 most efficient soldiers in the army. In autumn these regiments 
 were disbanded and returned home. The three expeditions 
 planned this year all signally failed. 
 
 By the operations near Crown Point, which alone could claim
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 135 
 
 ore successful battle, the Indians were roused to greater violence. 
 The whole frontier was undefended. As early as 1752 it was in 
 contemplation to extend the settlements of New Hampshire up 
 the Connecticut river to the rich meadows of Cohos, as the 
 region was then called. A party was sent, in the spring of 1750, 
 to explore this region. The Indians watched their movements 
 and suspected their purpose. A delegation of the St. Francis 
 tribe was sent to remonstrate against this proposed occupation 
 of their best lands. They came to Number-Four and complained 
 to Capt. Stevens of this new encroachment. He informed the 
 governors of Massachusetts and New Hampshire of their mis- 
 sion, and they discouraged the new enterprise. It was then 
 laid aside. Two other Indians also came to Canterbury, where 
 they were entertained more than a month. They carried off two 
 negroes, one of whom escaped. This fact revealed their treach- 
 ery. The next year, 1753, Sabatis, one of the two who captured 
 the negroes, with a companion came again to Canterbury, and 
 being reproved for his former treachery he and his friend became 
 insolent and threatened violence. They were treated to strong 
 drink till they became nearly helpless, then were decoyed into 
 the woods and slain. The murderers were arrested and carried 
 in irons to Portsmouth, but were rescued by a mob. This un- 
 punished murder of the two Indians was never forgiven. No 
 treaties, conferences or presents could induce them to say, " the 
 blood was wiped away." 
 
 This fresh incentive, added to their natural ferocity, prompted 
 them to renew their old depredations, robberies, burnings and 
 murders in Hopkinton, Keene, Walpole, Hinsdale and other 
 frontier towns. At Bridgman's fort they surprised three families, 
 fourteen in all, and carried them to Canada. One of them, the 
 wife of Caleb Howe, by her sufferings and intrepidity gave rise 
 to a narrative called " The Fair Captive." After the failure of 
 the campaigns of 1755, and the death of Braddock, Governor 
 Shirley was raised to the chief command. He planned another 
 expedition to Crown Point. Another regiment was called for 
 from New Hampshire. Nathaniel Meserve was appointed Col- 
 onel. But before Shirley's plan was executed, he was super- 
 seded by Lord Loudon. He was characterized by a " masterly 
 inactivity." Franklin said of him : " He was entirely made up 
 of indecision. He was like St. George on the signs, always on 
 horseback, but never rode on. " The plan of the campaign 
 for 1756 was nearly the same as that of the preceding year. 
 Crown Point, Niagara and Fort du Quesne were the posts to be 
 won. Though the two nations had been fighting for a year, 
 war was not declared against France till May 17, 1756. The 
 dilatory motions of Lord Loudon strongly contrasted with the
 
 136 HISTORY OF 
 
 activity of Montcalm. In the winter of 1756, Rogers was again 
 called upon to enlist and command a corps of rangers. John 
 Stark was appointed one of his lieutenants. No great military 
 enterprise was undertaken this year. " The rangers were con- 
 stantly on foot, watching the motions of the enemy, cutting off 
 their supplies and capturing sentinels at their posts. They some- 
 times used the scalping-knife, in retaliation for the cruelties of 
 the French and their savage allies." In January, 1757, a detach- 
 ment of the rangers marched from Fort William Henry to in- 
 tercept supplies of the enemy. They were partially successful ; 
 but, on their return, about three miles from Ticonderoga, they 
 were attacked from an ambush, by a force double their own. 
 Then followed one of the most desperate and bloody battles of 
 the entire war. Rogers was twice wounded ; Captain Spikeman 
 was killed ; and Lieutenant Stark, being then senior commander, 
 by his almost incredible efforts saved the crippled company 
 from annihilation. In the reorganization of the corps, he was 
 appointed captain of one company. Once, by his vigilance and 
 foresight, Stark saved Fort William Henry from capture. It was 
 on the seventeenth of March, 1757. A French army of twenty- 
 five hundred men advanced upon that post, presuming that the 
 Irish troops would be celebrating St. Patrick's day, as they were, 
 but the rest of the army under Stark's command were ready for 
 action ; and the enemy was repulsed with great loss. In the fol- 
 lowing August the same fort was surrendered to the Marquis de 
 Montcalm, under express stipulations that the garrison should be 
 allowed the honors of war and be safely escorted to Fort Ed- 
 ward. The Indians were dissatisfied with the terms of surrender. 
 They hung upon the rear of the retiring army, which amounted 
 to about three thousand. They at first began to plunder ; soon 
 they raised the war-whoop and rushed like fiends upon the un- 
 armed troops. They butchered and scalped their helpless vic- 
 tims, mingling their inhuman yells with the groans of the dying. 
 Of the New Hampshire regiment, eighty fell in this inglorious 
 massacre. Montcalm made no effort to stay the slaughter. It 
 is difficult to account for his indifference to honor, fame and 
 treaty covenants. His memory can never be relieved from the 
 weight of condemnation which all good men of all time will 
 heap upon it. The very shores of that " Holy Lake " echo to- 
 day with curses upon his inhumanity. Montcalm, in his letter 
 to the minister, as quoted by Mr. Bancroft, did attempt the res- 
 cue of the English, crying out to the Indians, " Kill me," using 
 prayers and menaces and promises, " but spare the English who 
 are under my protection." He also urged the troops to defend 
 themselves, escorted more than four hundred who remained of 
 the captives on their way, and ransomed those whom the Ind- 
 ians had carried off.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 137 
 
 Thus ended the magnificent preparations of this year. Losses 
 and defeats stained the entire records of the English and colo- 
 nial history for three years. The home government was regen- 
 erated by the elevation of " the great Commoner," William Pitt, 
 to the premiership of England. He said, with conscious power, 
 " I can save this country and nobody else can." " His presence 
 was inspiration ; he himself was greater than his speeches." 
 He gave to the colonies equality of military rank in offices be- 
 low that of colonel, and cheered them with the prospect of a 
 reimbursement of their expenses. Near the close "of the year 
 1757 two hundred and fifty recruits were raised in New Hamp- 
 shire, placed under Major Thomas Tash, and stationed at Num- 
 ber-Four. Thus, for the first time, this post was occupied by 
 New Hampshire troops. The state was then in a condition of 
 extreme despondency. Great losses of men, stores and forts 
 discouraged the people. The provisions they had gathered with 
 severe toil, and borne like beasts of burden to their military 
 posts, were possessed by the enemy, who in plenty danced 
 around the scalps of their murdered brethren. But the spirit of 
 Pitt awoke them from their midnight dream of desolation. He 
 called on them for men, as many as their numbers would allow 
 them to raise, promising arms, ammunition, tents, provisions 
 and boats from England, and assuring them that he would earn- 
 estly recommend the parliament "to grant them a compensa- 
 tion " for other expenses. Thereupon the assembly of New 
 Hampshire cheerfully voted to raise eight hundred men for the 
 year. The regiment of Colonel John Hart served at the west, 
 under Abercrombie. Colonel Meserve with one hundred and 
 eight carpenters embarked for Louisburg to recapture a city dis- 
 gracefully given up in 1748. At this place General Amherst 
 commanded. This body of mechanics were seized with the 
 small-pox, which was the common scourge of armies in those 
 days. All but sixteen were rendered unfit for service by it. 
 Colonel Meserve and his eldest son died of this disease. Me- 
 serve was a shipwright by profession, a skillful, energetic and 
 excellent citizen and officer. Lord Loudon presented him a 
 piece of plate while he served in his army, acknowledging 
 " his capacity, fidelity, and ready disposition in the service of 
 his country." 
 
 Louisburg was again taken, but the attack on Ticonderoga was 
 unsuccessful. It was one of the saddest defeats of the war. 
 The plan, at the outset, promised success. On the morning of 
 July fifth, 1758, the whole army of sixteen thousand men em- 
 barked in bateaux upon Lake George for Ticonderoga, a place 
 situated on the western shore of Lake Champlain about eighty 
 miles north of Albany. The order of march presented a
 
 138 HISTORY OF 
 
 splendid military show. The regular troops formed the centre j 
 the provincials the wings. Rogers' Rangers played a very im- 
 portant part in the siege. The attack continued for three days ; 
 but resulted in the final defeat of the English, with the loss of 
 Lord Howe and nearly two thousand soldiers killed, wounded 
 and prisoners. England mourned the loss of her brave com- 
 mander and her gallant soldiers ; the colonies wept for sons, 
 brothers and fathers. It was their own soil that drank the blood 
 of their kindred. 
 
 But better days were in the future. The sun yet rode in 
 brightness behind the clouds. The next year's labors were 
 crowned with glorious success. The English army felt the stim- 
 ulus of young blood in her commander. They had been re- 
 lieved by Pitt " of a long and melancholy list of lieutenant-gen- 
 erals and major-generals," whose dilatory habits of routine 
 rested like an incubus upon the army. The premier now re- 
 solved on vigorous action. Niagara, Ticonderoga and Quebec 
 were the points of assault. The campaigns were all successful. 
 On the Plains of Abraham, "the battle-field of empire," was 
 fought the battle which decided the destiny of this continent. 
 It was then and there determined whether despotism or democ- 
 racy, Catholicism or protestantism , should govern the souls and 
 bodies of men in America. The brave Wolfe and the gallant 
 Montcalm were the representatives of these opposing elements 
 of civilization. They both fell lamented by many brave men ; 
 but progress was decreed for this continent in the eternal pur- 
 poses, and God employed that nation to promote it which time 
 and history have proved to have been best fitted for the work. 
 This was one of the decisive battles of the world. A contrary 
 result would have changed the whole current of human civiliza- 
 tion. Here was a conflict of ideas, and not the mere encounter 
 of brute forces. Pitt himself recognized the divine interposition 
 in his triumph. " The more a man is versed in business," said 
 he, " the more he finds the hand of Providence everywhere." 
 " America rung with exultation ; the towns were bright with illu- 
 mination, the hills with bonfires ; legislatures, the pulpit, the 
 press, echoed the general joy; provinces and families gave 
 thanks to God." 
 
 But the war, for New Hampshire, was not ended. The St. 
 Francis Indians remained to be chastised. They were the sav- 
 age rangers of the old French wars with England. They had 
 built a village of forty wigwams at the confluence of the St. Law- 
 rence and St. Francis rivers. To this place they had brought 
 the plunder obtained by numerous savage forays into New 
 Hampshire. A Catholic church had been erected there by French 
 Jesuits. A bell brought from France called the dusky worship-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 139 
 
 ers to matin and vesper services. Wax candles shed a " dim 
 religious light " on the altar, on crosses, pictures and a silver 
 image of the Virgin Mary. A small organ aided the rude 
 choir in their devotions. A Catholic friar "of good Jesuitical 
 qualities" regulated both church and state in this little republic 
 of freebooters and assassins. The last act of these savages that 
 provoked General Amherst to order an attack upon them was 
 the detention of Captain Kennedy as a prisoner, whom he had 
 sent with a flag of truce to negotiate a peace. On the thirteenth 
 of September, 1769, Captain Rogers received the following 
 orders : 
 
 " You are this night to join the detachment of two hundred men who 
 were yesterday ordered out, and proceed to Missisquoi Bay, from which you 
 will proceed to attack the enemy's settlement on the south side of the St. 
 Lawrence, in such a manner as shall most effectually disgrace and injure the 
 enemy and redound to honor and success of his Majesty's arms. Remem- 
 ber the barbarities committed by the enemy's Indian scoundrels on every oc- 
 casion where they have had opportunities of showing their infamous cruel- 
 ties towards his Majesty's subjects. Take your revenge; but remember that 
 although the villains have promiscuously murdered women and children, of 
 all ages, it is my order that no women or children should be killed or hurt. 
 When you have performed this service you will again join the army wherev- 
 er it may be." 
 
 This was one of the most difficult and perilous enterprises 
 ever undertaken by mortal man. The march lay for hundreds 
 of miles through an unbroken wilderness. The enemy was 
 before and behind them ; but Rogers and his Rangers never 
 quailed before dangers. The company immediately left Crown 
 Point, embarked in bateaux and rowed north on Lake Cham- 
 plain to Missisquoi Bay. Here they left their boats and provis- 
 ions with a trusty guard and entered the lonely wilderness. 
 After two days' march they were overtaken by the guard they 
 had left at the bay with the intelligence that four hundred French 
 and Indians had seized their boats and provisions, and that two 
 hundred of them were now on the trail of the explorers. They 
 still pressed on, and on the twenty-second day after leaving 
 Crown Point the Indian village was discovered from the top 
 of a tall tree, about three miles distant In the evening Major 
 Rogers and two of his men, disguised like Indians, passed 
 through the village. They found the Indians in the greatest 
 glee, celebrating a wedding. Rogers wrote in his journal : " I 
 saw them execute several dances with the greatest spirit." The 
 Rangers, by various calamities, had been reduced to one hun- 
 dred and forty-two men. These, being divided into three sections, 
 advanced against the slumbering Indians at three o'clock in the 
 morning. " The Rangers marched up to the very doors of the 
 wigwams unobserved, and several squads made choice of the 
 wigwams they would attack. There was little use of the mus-
 
 140 HISTORY OF 
 
 ket ; the Rangers leaped into the dwellings and made sure work 
 with the hatchet and knife. Never was surprise more complete." 
 After destroying the foe they set fire to the houses. They burn- 
 ed all but three, which they reserved for their own use. The 
 lurid glare from these smoking huts revealed a horrid spectacle. 
 It showed more than six hundred scalps of white men elevated 
 on poles and fluttering in the wind to grace the infernal orgies 
 of the preceding day. Many women and children probably per- 
 ished in the flames ; only twenty were taken, and none were 
 intentionally killed. Two hundred Indian warriors were slain. 
 This was accomplished with the loss of one private, a Stock- 
 bridge Indian, and the wounding of one officer and six Rangers. 
 The village abounded in wealth, the accumulation of years of 
 robbery. The Rangers took with them such treasures as they 
 could conveniently carry. Among them were two hundred guin- 
 eas in gold and a silver image of the Virgin weighing ten pounds. 
 When this work of vengeance was complete the greatest perils 
 of the war awaited them. Three hundred French and Indians 
 were upon their trail. The enemy were well supplied with pro- 
 visions ; the victorious Rangers were dying of hunger. Rogers, 
 learning that his path was ambushed, resolved to return by way 
 of the Connecticut river. General Amherst had ordered sup- 
 plies to be forwarded for their use to the mouth of the Ammon- 
 oosuc river. For eight days they marched in a body towards 
 the sources of the Connecticut. At length they reached Lake 
 Memphremagog, where their provisions were utterly exhausted. 
 They then divided into three parties, under skillful leaders, in- 
 tending to rendezvous at the mouth of the Ammonoosuc. One 
 company was overtaken by the enemy. Some were killed ; seven 
 were captured ; but two of these escaped. On their arrival at 
 the place of rendezvous they found no provisions. Lieutenant 
 Stevens, who had been sent with succor, waited two days for the 
 Rangers, then departed leaving no food. Major Rogers, with 
 Captain Ogden and an Indian boy, embarked on a raft of dry 
 pine trees to float down the Connecticut to Number-Four. He 
 thus describes his perilous voyage : 
 
 " The current carried us down the stream, in the middle of the river, where 
 we kept our miserable vessel with such paddles as could be split and hewn 
 with small hatchets. The second clay we reached White River falls, and 
 very narrowly escaped running over them. The raft went over and was lost ; 
 but our remaining strength enabled us to land and march by the falls. At 
 the foot of them Capt. Ogden and the Ranger killed some red squirrels and 
 a partridge, while I constructed another raft. Not being able to cut the 
 trees I burnt them down, and burnt them at proper lengths. This was our 
 third day's work after leaving our companions. The next day we floated 
 down to Watocjuichie falls, which are about fifty yards in length. Here we 
 landed and Captain Ogden held the raft by a withe of hazel bushes, while 
 we went below the falls to swim in, board and paddle it ashore ; this being
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 141 
 
 our only hope of life, as we had not strength to make a new raft. I suc- 
 ceeded in securing it; and .the next morning we floated down within a short 
 distance of Number-Four. Here we found several men cutting timber, who 
 relieved and assisted us to the fort. A canoe was immediately dispatched 
 up the river with provisions, which reached them in Coos four days after, 
 which, according to my agreement, was the tenth after I left them. Two days 
 after I went up the river with two other canoes, to relieve others of my party 
 who might be coming this way." 
 
 The several parties in moving westward toward the place of 
 destination suffered untold horrors from cold and hunger. Win- 
 ter was approaching. Rogers reached the Ammonoosuc on the 
 fifth of November. Other parties came in later. They sub- 
 sisted on roots, nuts, birch bark and such small animals as they 
 could kill. They devoured their leather straps, their cartouch 
 boxes, their moccasins and even their powder-horns after they 
 had been sodden in boiling water. The weak in mind went mad ; 
 the weak in body died. They even ate the bodies of their mur- 
 dered comrades ! To such fearful sufferings were those heroic 
 Rangers subjected to free the people of New Hampshire from 
 their relentless foes who had, from the first history of the state, 
 hung like a dark cloud upon its northern horizon. 
 
 CHAPTER XXXVIII. 
 
 After the capture of Quebec, the rest of Canada fell an easy 
 prey to the invading army. That city was the key to all the 
 French possessions ; and by its fall the English became masters 
 of all the northern portion of the continent. For the service of 
 the war in 1760, New Hampshire raised eight hundred men, who 
 were commanded by Colonel John Goffe. Their place of ren- 
 dezvous was at Number- Four; thence they opened a road 
 through the wilderness directly to Crown Point. They then pro- 
 ceeded with the English army down the lake, and captured with 
 little opposition the forts of St. John and Chamblee. Montreal 
 was surrendered without fighting. This event completed the 
 campaign. After fifteen years of anxiety, toil and privation, 
 peace returned to New Hampshire. Captives were restored and 
 the joy was heightened by the subjection of the Indians and 
 their treacherous allies to the power of England. The expenses 
 of the war had been paid in paper money, the last resort of a 
 people in distress, a substitute for the precious metals easy to
 
 142 HISTORY OF 
 
 make but hard to pay. It always depends for its value on pub- 
 lic opinion ; and always becomes d.-;:tciated as the national en- 
 thusiasm declines. Paper iiiorky I.....! been issued several times 
 before, in periods of great dibifjjj; but it never commanded 
 the confidence of the people. In 1755, paper bills were issued 
 under the denomination of " ne;v tenor ;" of which fifteen shil- 
 lings were equal to one dollar. The same expedient was adopted 
 in the two following years ; but a rapid depreciation of these 
 bills followed, and they continued to decline till silver became 
 the standard of value, in 1760. During the continuance of ac- 
 tive operations in war the harvests were bountiful, and there 
 was little suffering for food at home or in the army ; but during 
 the years 1761 and 1762, there was a severe drought and the 
 crops were cut off so that it became necessary to import corn. 
 At the time of this drought, in the summer, a fire raged in the 
 woods of Barrington and Rochester with intense fury for weeks, 
 destroying a large amount of the best timber. It was only ar- 
 rested by the rains of August. Pitt, the greatest premier in 
 English history, showed himself "honorable " in practice as well 
 as in title. As he promised before the war, he recommended a 
 reimbursement of the expenses of the colonies ; and by his per- 
 sonal influence obtained it. His administration gave to Eng- 
 land new life ; to her colonies new hope. Both countries for a 
 time enjoyed unparalleled prosperity. Pitt was popular at 
 home and abroad, except with the narrow-minded, wrong-headed 
 Guelph who wore the crown. George III. hated the minister 
 who had added to his dominions nearly a third part of the hab- 
 itable globe. The monarch stood in awe of his subject. His 
 rush-light policy became invisible amid the solar blaze of Pitt's 
 imperial genius. The king removed him from office, attempted 
 to silence him with " a peerage and a pension ; " and, when the 
 spirit he had evoked " would not down at his bidding," longed 
 for the hour "when decrepitude or age should put an end to 
 him as the trumpet of sedition." Thus the Commons lost their 
 wisest counselor ; the colonies their staunchest supporter.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 143 
 
 CHAPTER XXXIX. 
 
 CONTROVERSY ABOUT THE WESTERN BOUNDARY. 
 
 It was a favorite theory of the Philosopher of Malmesbury, 
 that war is the natural state of mankind. If we class the feuds, 
 factions and contentions of political parties under the head of 
 war, history abundantly confirms his theory ; for when public 
 warfare ceases, domestic strife begins. It would seem that con- 
 troversy, about men or measures, creeds or policies, is a neces- 
 sary concomitant of political existence. When the seven years' 
 war ended by the definitive treaty of peace at Paris, in 1763, a 
 quarrel sprung up at once between New Hampshire and New 
 York respecting the ownership of Vermont. Both states claimed 
 it by royal grants. Charles II. conveyed to his brother James 
 " all the land from the west side of Connecticut river to the 
 east side of Delaware bay. New York claimed Vermont under 
 this grant. George II., in deciding the boundaries of New 
 Hampshire, allows her line to extend westward " till it meets 
 with the king's other governments." New York, in her contro- 
 versies with Connecticut, had tacitly permitted the boundaries 
 of that colony to extend to a line drawn twenty miles east of 
 Hudson's river. Massachusetts had claimed the same bound- 
 ary, though denounced by New York as an intruder. On this 
 disputed territory the governor of New Hampshire proceeded 
 to lay out towns and receive large fees and presents from grant- 
 ees for his official services. Thus his coffers were replenished 
 and his private estate largely increased. He preferred men 
 from other states to those of his own, because they were 
 " better husbandmen " and more liberal donors. During the 
 year 1761, sixty townships, six miles square, were granted on the 
 west, and eighteen on the east side of the river. The governor, 
 with a wise regard to his descendants, reserved grants to himself 
 and heirs of five hundred acres in each township, freed perpet- 
 ually from taxation. The whole number of grants made on the 
 west side of the river within four years amounted to one hun- 
 dred and thirty-eight. The land fever rose to a fearful height. 
 Speculators swarmed on every hand. The governor, proprietors 
 and middle men became rich, while the settlers were fleeced, 
 and received for their money imperfect titles and a legacy of 
 lawsuits. New York resisted these grants and oppressed the 
 settlers who received them. They appealed to the king to set-
 
 144 HISTORY OF 
 
 tie the question. He in the plenitude of his wisdom, with ad- 
 vice of council, declared " the western banks of Connecticut 
 river, where it enters the province of Massachusetts Bay, as far 
 north as the forty-fifth degree of latitude, TO BE the boundary 
 line between the two provinces of New Hampshire and New 
 York." One controversy was closed by this decree, and another 
 was opened. The western bank of the river was declared to be 
 the boundary between the states. The actual settlers on the 
 disputed territory claimed that the operation of this decision 
 was future; the government of New York assumed that it was 
 retrospective and applied to the past. This led to litigations as 
 long continued as the war of Troy. The arm of power, as usual, 
 triumphed, and the innocent tillers of the soil paid the penalty 
 of defeat. 
 
 CHAPTER XL. 
 
 ORIGIN OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. 
 
 Want is a universal stimulant. All animated nature moves in 
 obedience to it. Artificial wants give birth to civilization. Where 
 men are satisfied with mere existence, without comforts or lux- 
 uries, there is no progress. Tacitus tells us of a race of men 
 that subsisted by the chase and, to escape at night the teeth 
 and claws of the creatures they hunted by day, swung them- 
 selves to sleep in cradles made by interlacing the branches of 
 tall trees ; and they asked no favors of gods or men. They dis- 
 appeared when a better race occupied the soil. Necessity creates 
 wants and constrains men to supply them. Climate determines 
 the kind of shelter, the amount of clothing and the quality of 
 food which men need for the protection of life. By a natural 
 law, therefore, the northern man in the temperate zone is made 
 vigorous, industrious and progressive ; the tropical man in the 
 torrid zone is made effeminate, indolent and stationary. But 
 with accumulated wealth comes luxury. The rich and powerful 
 supply their pleasures at the expense of the poor and industrious. 
 This fact is beautifully illustrated by Archdeacon Paley : " If 
 you should see a flock of pigeons in a field of corn ; and if (in- 
 stead of each picking where and what it liked, taking just as 
 much as it wanted and no more) you should see ninety-nine of
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 145 
 
 them gathering all they got into a heap, reserving nothing for 
 themselves but the chaff and the refuse ; keeping this heap for 
 one, and that the weakest, perhaps worst, of all the flock ; sitting 
 round and looking on, all the winter, whilst this one was devour- 
 ing, throwing about and wasting it ; and, if a pigeon more hardy 
 and hungry than the rest touched a grain of the hoard, all the 
 others instantly flying upon it and tearing it to pieces ; if you 
 should see this, you would see nothing more than what is every 
 clay practised and established among men." So by the accident 
 of birth, the feeblest and worst person in the nation, often a 
 child, an idiot, a madman or a fool, is set on high to rule over 
 others, to live on their earnings and to own them, "body, mind 
 and estate." Kings never have enough. They are always in want ; 
 they want sailors and soldiers to fill their armies and man their 
 ships ; they want money to pay their expenses and gratify their 
 tastes. To us who have learned that the people alone own their 
 estates' and tax them as they choose, it seems absurd even to 
 read of the claims of a hereditary dunce like George III., in- 
 sane half his life and unreasonable the other half, upon the ter- 
 ritory, productions and inhabitants of half a continent. We 
 read with astonishment that the tall pines of the unexplored 
 forests were called " the king's timber ; " and the unsunned mines 
 in the recesses of the earth, " the king's treasure ; " and the ex- 
 cise and imposts raised from the productive industry of the peo- 
 ple, " the king's revenue." Kings have brought nothing to 
 America but wars and taxes. All that the English kings did for 
 their colonies is expressed in three sentences in Colonel Barre's 
 indignant reply to Minister Grenville : " They planted by your 
 care ! No ! your oppression planted them in America. * * * * 
 They nourished by your indulgence ! They grew by your neg- 
 lect. ***** They protected by your arms ! They have 
 nobly taken up arms in your defence." The whole speech de- 
 serves to be inscribed in letters of gold upon the walls of every 
 legislative hall in the country. 
 
 When England no longer needed the arms of Americans to 
 subdue her enemies, she began to seize their wealth to replenish 
 her treasury. For more than a quarter of a century previous to 
 the peace of Paris, England, under the specious plea of "regu- 
 lating commerce," had been indirectly taxing her colonies. As 
 soon as they had any trade worthy of the name, it was burdened 
 with duties. The mothei country required all their exports to be 
 carried to her markets ; and if they sought to import goods from 
 other nations, they were at once burdened with duties so heavy 
 as to become prohibitory. The restrictions laid upon manufact- 
 ures were so minute and oppressive as to savor of feudalism. 
 As Pitt said, the colonies "were not allowed to manufacture a
 
 146 HISTORY OF 
 
 hob-nail." In 1750, parliament positively forbade the manu- 
 facture of steel and the erection of certain iron works. These 
 regulations of trade, restrictions on commerce and prohibitions 
 of art created discontent but no rebellion. But, in 1764, the 
 king began to feel the want of more money. The expenses of 
 " the seven years' war " had added to the national debt more than 
 three hundred millions of dollars. The colonies had been bene- 
 fited by the conquest of Canada and the subjugation of the Ind- 
 ians. Therefore they must pay for the expenses of those bat- 
 tles which they had fought and the victories which they had won. 
 The pretence for taxing America was " to defray the expenses of 
 protecting, defending and securing it." Another motive lay 
 beneath this cloak. England had become jealous of the rising 
 independence of her colonies. It was feared that they might 
 shake off their allegiance to their dear mother. They must 
 therefore be taught to know their place. This could be done 
 in no better way than by taxing them without their consent. 
 Resolutions passed both houses of parliament to quarter troops 
 in America and support them at the expense of those who were 
 to be overawed by them ; also, to raise money by a duty on for- 
 eign sugar and molasses and by stamps on all papers legal and 
 mercantile. The stamp act was introduced in 1764. The f ram- 
 ers of it boasted that it would execute itself, because all un- 
 stamped papers would be illegal ; and all controversies respect- 
 ing such papers would be decided by a single judge, who was 
 a crown officer, in the admiralty courts. But, 
 
 "The best laid schemes o'mice and men 
 Gang aft a-gley. " 
 
 Neither the law nor its executive officers could accomplish the 
 work. The heavy duties previously imposed on imported goods 
 led, first, to a contraband trade ; secondly, to the disuse of all ar- 
 ticles so taxed. English cloths were no longer worn ; domestic 
 manufactures supplied their place. The rich gave up their lux- 
 uries ; the poor their comforts. Patriotism supplanted all other 
 passions, affections and appetites. Life, domestic and public, 
 seemed to be regulated with sole reference to the defeat of Brit- 
 ish legislation. This interruption of trade proved very injuri- 
 ous to England and stimulated her legislators to severer meas- 
 ures. Then came the stamp act, which it was thought could be 
 evaded by no domestic pledges or political unions. The an- 
 nouncement of this law led to more decided opposition. Asso- 
 ciations were formed to resist it, called " Sons of Liberty." They 
 adopted the words of Pitt as their motto : " Taxation and repre- 
 sentation are inseparable." The final passage of the bill was 
 on the eighth of March, 1765. It was soon after approved by 
 the king. On the night of its passage, Franklin, then in Lon-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 147 
 
 don, wrote to Charles Thompson : " The sun of liberty is set ; 
 the Americans must light the lamps of industry and economy." 
 His correspondent replied : " Be assured we shall light torches 
 of quite another sort." The spirit of this remark breathed from 
 all lips. The people were roused to determined resistance. 
 They resolved that the stamps should neither be distributed nor 
 used. George Meserve, Esq., son of Colonel Meserve who 
 died at Louisburg, a native of Portsmouth, was appointed stamp- 
 distributor for New Hampshire. He was in England at the time 
 of his appointment. He soon returned. On his arrival in Bos- 
 ton, he found the very air filled with curses against the law and 
 imprecations upon its agents. Upon the recommendation of 
 his friends, he resigned his office. The people of Portsmouth, 
 hearing of his arrival, hung his effigy in hay-market. It was ac- 
 companied by those of Lord Bute and the Devil. These images 
 hung through the day ; and at night were, carried with great 
 tumult through the town and burned. When Mr. Meserve 
 reached his native town, he was immediately surrounded by a 
 crowd, and compelled publicly to resign his office so odious to 
 his townsmen. 
 
 The stamped paper intended for use in New Hampshire 
 reached Boston on the thirtieth of September. As there was no 
 one present authorized to receive it, Governor Barnard placed 
 it in the Castle. The law was to go into operation on the first 
 of November. That inauspicious day was regarded as an occa- 
 sion of mourning. The New Hampshire Gazette was lined with 
 black. The bells tolled ; the colors on the ships were at half- 
 mast ; the people from the neighboring towns flocked to Ports- 
 mouth ; and in the afternoon a funeral procession was formed, 
 and a coffin inscribed " Liberty aged 145, stampt," was carried 
 through the streets, with all the parade of a military funeral ; 
 but, under pretence of remaining life, it was not interred, but 
 brought back in triumph, with a new motto, " Liberty revived." 
 After this manifestation of disorder, associations were formed 
 in all the leading towns to aid the magistrates in preserving the 
 peace. The governor and the crown officers remained quiet. 
 They dared not meet the popular storm. All the business of 
 the state was transacted as though no stamps were required to 
 make it legal. 
 
 Petitions, numerously signed, were sent to England for the re- 
 peal of the act. There had ever been a formidable opposition 
 to the measure in parliament. The ablest men of the country 
 were the friends of America. Hence it was not very difficult 
 to procure the repeal of the offensive law. Pitt, the greatest 
 statesman of his age, said: "My position is this ; I will main- 
 tain it to my last hour, taxation and representation are insepar-
 
 148 HISTORY OF 
 
 able. This position is founded on the laws of nature ; it is 
 more it is in itself an eternal law of nature ; for whatever is 
 a man's own is absolutely his own : no man has a right to take 
 it from him without his consent ; whoever attempts to do it at- 
 tempts an injury ; whoever does it commits a robbery. I am of 
 opinion that the stamp act ought to be repealed, totally, abso- 
 lutely and immediately." It was repealed on the eighteenth day 
 of March, 1766 ; and the American people for a time mani- 
 fested a joy extravagantly disproportioned to the occasion. Only 
 one tooth of the British lion had been extracted. His jaws were 
 yet strong to mangle his victim. England still claimed "the 
 right to bind America in all cases whatsoever." She had only 
 lifted her hand to gain strength for a firmer and deadlier grasp. 
 
 The new governor of New Hampshire, John Wentworth, ar- 
 rived at Charleston, South Carolina, in March, 1767, and jour- 
 neyed thence by land to Portsmouth. He was received with 
 unbounded demonstrations of joy and respect by the citizens 
 and magistrates. The general court met in September, and 
 voted a salary of seven hundred pounds with an allowance for 
 house rent. His salary as surveyor of the woods was also 
 seven hundred pounds. Governor Wentworth came into power 
 at the most critical period in the history of our country. There 
 was a temporary lull in the storm of opposition, at his arrival ; 
 but a sense of wrong still rankled in the hearts of the people. 
 The law requiring the colonies to maintain the troops quartered 
 among them still remained in force. The changes of ministers 
 were frequent during these troublous times. A new administra- 
 tion was formed, in July, 1766, with William Pitt, the friend of 
 America, at its head. He was now the Earl of Chatham. He 
 sat with the lords and not with the commons. The voice that 
 had rung across seas and continents, in defence of freedom, had 
 become weak ; the eagle eye, which could gaze unblenched upon 
 the very sun of power, had lost its lustre ; that manly form, 
 whose presence could awe the most august legislative assembly 
 on earth, was bowed with age and disease. Pitt was no longer 
 master of the occasion. He was too ill to attend the sessions 
 of parliament ; too irresolute to enforce his opinions upon the 
 king. In his absence his colleague, Mr. Townsend, introduced 
 another bill for the taxing of glass, paper, painters' colors and 
 tea. It was readily passed and received the king's approval. 
 This was met with the most determined opposition in America, 
 by assemblies, associations and individuals. In ' Boston, mobs 
 were frequent ; the governor and other magistrates were assaulted 
 and fled to the castle for safety. The arrival of seven hundred 
 British troops, from Halifax, was a new cause of tumult, disor- 
 der and violence. Collisions took place between the citizens
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 149 
 
 and soldiers and even between the boys and the soldiers. Though 
 the British parliament censured, with great severity, the rebel- 
 lious spirit of the legislatures and people of the colonies, still 
 they deemed some concessions necessary. Accordingly, on the 
 fifth of March, 1770, the very day of the murder of four citizens 
 in Boston by the British soldiers, Lord North proposed the re- 
 peal of all duties imposed by the act of 1767 except that on tea. 
 This measure was carried against a violent opposition. By the 
 reservation of tea, the English government determined to adhere 
 to the right to tax her colonies. In Boston, the tea when im- 
 ported was destroyed ; in New Hampshire, it was, by the advice 
 of the governor and magistrates, reshipped, without disorder, 
 and sent to Halifax. This act was repeated ; and the second 
 cargo, like the first, left the port ; but not till the consignee's 
 house was assaulted and he had appealed to the governor for 
 protection. The citizens, in town meeting assembled, interposed 
 their vote to secure its reshipment. The colonies were a unit in 
 their resistance to taxation without representation. The adher- 
 ents of the government were a small minority in every state. 
 
 The crisis was approaching, and the people seemed resolved 
 to meet it. The colonial assemblies had appointed " committees 
 of correspondence " and proposed a continental congress. The 
 assembly of New Hampshire, in May, 1774, appointed a similar 
 committee. The governor, who was anxious to defeat that meas- 
 ure, dissolved it. He appeared in person and ordered the sheriff 
 to bid all persons "to disperse and keep the king's peace." 
 They heard him respectfully and, after he retired, adjourned to 
 another house, where they wrote letters to all the towns to send 
 deputies and money for their fees, to Exeter, for the purpose of 
 choosing delegates to the general congress. They also appoint- 
 ed a day of fasting and prayer, to be observed in all the churches, 
 on account of the gloomy state of public affairs. The day was 
 devoutly observed ; and the other requests were complied with. 
 The money was conscientiously raised and eighty-five delegates 
 were sent to Exeter, where they chose Nathaniel Folsom and 
 John Sullivan, Esquires, to represent New Hampshire in the 
 proposed congress, which met at Philadelphia in the September 
 following. Contributions were also raised for the relief of the 
 citizens of Boston who were suffering from the suspension of 
 business in consequence of the Boston Port Bill. The gover- 
 nor's influence was gone. He attempted secretly to aid Governor 
 Gage in building barracks for his soldiers in Boston, by sending 
 carpenters from New Hampshire ; but even his own relatives 
 denounced him as "an enemy to the community." At this 
 dark hour of his official life, he wrote to a friend : " Our atmos- 
 phere threatens a hurricane. I have strove in vain, almost to
 
 150 HISTORY OF 
 
 death, to prevent it. If I can at last bring out of it safety to 
 my country and honor to our sovereign, my labors will be joy- 
 ful." Alas ! " Othello's occupation was gone." Royal gover- 
 nors were no longer needed in America. The people had re- 
 solved to govern themselves. They had ceased to plan and had 
 begun to act. 
 
 An order had been raised by the king in council, prohibiting 
 the exportation of gunpowder to America. A British ship of 
 war was also ordered to Portsmouth to take possession of Fort 
 William and Mary. The people anticipated its arrival and, un- 
 der the leadership of Major John Sullivan and John Langdon, 
 on the fifteenth of December, 1774, proceeded to Newcastle, 
 entered the fort, took the captain and his five soldiers pris- 
 oners and carried away one hundred barrels of gunpowder. 
 The next day another company removed fifteen cannon, with 
 the small arms and stores from the fort. The guns, powder 
 and military stores were secreted in the adjTct!flt "Towns, and 
 afterwards were used in defence of the country. At a sec- 
 ond convention of deputies held at Exeter, in January, 1775, the 
 heroic leaders of this attack on the fort, Major Sullivan and 
 Captain Langdon, were chosen delegates to the next general 
 congress to be holden at Philadelphia in May following. Mr. 
 Brewster, in his " Rambles about Portsmouth," gives a detailed 
 account of the capture of the fort and the removal of the pow- 
 der and guns. He makes Captain Thomas Pickering the chief 
 actor in this bold enterprise. He first suggested it to Major 
 Langdon. He was the leader of the boats' crews that seized 
 the fort. He first waded ashore, from his own boat, about mid- 
 night. " The rest of the company landed unperceived by any 
 one, when Pickering, in advance of the main body, scaled the 
 ramparts of the fort and seized the sentinel with his muscular 
 arm, took his gun and threatened death if he made the least 
 alarm. Signals of success were given to the company, which 
 soon had charge of the sentinel, while Captain Pickering entered 
 the quarters of Captain Cochran ; and before he was fairly 
 awake, announced to him that the fort was captured and he was a 
 prisoner." This narrative is based on traditions current among 
 the descendants of Captain Pickering. It shows, if true, that Ma- 
 jors Sullivan and Langdon were not the leaders, but associates, 
 in one of the most daring achievements of the Revolution.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 151 
 
 CHAPTER XLI. 
 
 OFFICERS AND MINISTERS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE IN 1768. 
 
 According to a Register of New Hampshire published for 
 1768, we find the following account of its civilians and clergy- 
 men. 
 
 John Wentworth, Esq., Governor. 
 
 John Temple, Esq., Lieutenant-Governor. 
 
 Hon. Theodore Atkinson, Daniel Warner, M. H. Wentworth, 
 James Nevin, Theodore Atkinson, jr., Nathaniel Barrell, Peter 
 Livius, Jonathan Warner, Daniel Rindge, Diniel Pierce, an4 G. 
 Jaffrey, Esquires, Councilors. 
 
 Hon. Theodore Jaffrey, Esq., Secretary. 
 
 Hon. George Jaffrey, Esq., Treasurer. 
 
 Hon. Peter Gilman, Esq., Speaker of the House. 
 
 The House consisted of thirty-one members, representing 
 thirty-two towns. Portsmouth sent three representatives ; Do- 
 ver, Hampton and Exeter, two each. 
 
 Superior Court of Judicature : Justices Hon. Theodore At- 
 kinson, Chief Justice ; Thomas Wallingford, Meshech Weare and 
 Leverett Hubbard, Esquires, Associates; Wyseman Claggett, 
 Esq., Attorney-General ; Mr. George King, Clerk ; Thomas 
 Pecker, Sheriff. 
 
 Inferior Court of Common Pleas : Hon. Daniel Warner, John 
 Wentworth, Clement March and Peter Livius, Esquires, Justices ; 
 Hunking Wentworth, Clerk. 
 
 John Wentworth, Esq., Judge of Probate ; William Parker, 
 Esq., Register. 
 
 Daniel Pierce, Esq., Register of Deeds. 
 
 Mr. Eleazer Russell, Postmaster for Portsmouth. 
 
 Wyseman Claggett, Esq., Notary Public. 
 
 Hon. William Parker, Deputy Judge of Admiralty. 
 
 Mr. John Sherburne, Register. 
 
 Hon. James Nevin, Collector of Customs. 
 
 Robert Trail, Comptroller. 
 
 Leverett Hubbard, Surveyor and Searcher. 
 
 John Tucker, Naval Officer ; Eleazev Russell, Deputy. 
 
 Eight practising attorneys are mentioned. Sixty-eight minis- 
 ters of the gospel are registered. Eight regiments of militia 
 were then in existence. Eighty justices of the peace are enu- 
 merated, including all the state officials above named. In 1800
 
 152 HISTORY OF 
 
 the number was 472; in 1815 about one thousand had been 
 commissioned. It deserves notice, that in 1768 the principal 
 offices were confined to a few families ; and frequently one man 
 served his state in several important capacities. 
 
 CHAPTER XLII. 
 
 ORIGIN OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. 
 
 BY PROF. H. E. PARKER. 
 
 
 
 Dartmouth College grew out of the Christian enterprise and 
 missionary spirit of the Rev. Eleazar Wheelock. A pastor 
 greatly beloved, a preacher of rare gifts, possessor of a hand- 
 some competency by patrimony and marriage, his influence, tal- 
 ents and means he devoted with ardor to Christian and philan- 
 thropic ends. Settled over a Congregational society, at Leba- 
 non, Conn., but not receiving a full support from the society, he 
 thought it right to employ a portion of his time in other than 
 parish labors ; and like Eliot and Brainerd, animated with a deep 
 desire for the christianization and civilization of the Indians, he 
 opened a school, about the year 1740, in his own house, for the 
 education of Indian youth, receiving also English youth, whom 
 he hoped would become missionaries among the Indians. His 
 work soon attracted the attention of the philanthropic and be- 
 nevolent. Mr. Joshua Moor, of Mansfield, who owned a house 
 and two acres of land adjoining Mr. Wheelock's residence, pre- 
 sented them to the latter for the occupancy of his school, to 
 which, in commemoration of the donor, he gave the name of 
 "Moor's Indian Charity School."* 
 
 Other benefactors, in the colonies (one of the largest of whom 
 was Sir William Johnson) and in the mother country, gave con- 
 tributions to further the objects of the school. A board of gen- 
 tlemen of the highest character was formed in England to re- 
 ceive the contributions made in Great Britain for the object, ex- 
 
 * It is an interesting fact that the celebrated Mohawk chief, Joseph Braut (Thayendane- 
 gea), \vas, with Samson Occum, among the first of Dr. Wheelock's pupils. The correspon- 
 dence between Dr. Wheelock and Sir William Johnson was quite active upon the subject of 
 the school, and Joseph was himself employed as an agent to procure recruits for it. Thus 
 in a letter from Sir William to the Doctor, dated Nov. 17, 1761, he says " I have given in 
 charge to Joseph to speak in my name to any good boys (Indian) he may see, and encourage 
 them to accept the generous offers now made to them, which he promised to do, and return 
 as soon as possible, and jhat without horses." Stone's Life of Brant, vol. ist, page 21.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 153 
 
 cept those made in the northern part of the realm, for which the 
 Scottish Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge 
 acted as almoners. At the head of the English board was the 
 eminent and excellent William, Earl of Dartmouth, secretary for 
 the colonies, himself a liberal donor, and using his influence to 
 secure gifts from other quarters, the king himself cheerfully and 
 generously responding. At about the same time, and significant 
 of the esteem entertained towards him abroad, Mr. Wheelock 
 received from the University of Edinburgh the title of Doctor 
 of Divinity. 
 
 With that prudential wisdom always a characteristic of his 
 movements, Dr. Wheelock secured increasing public confidence 
 in his undertaking by inviting a few gentlemen of the highest 
 standing in Connecticut to act as a Board of Trust, supervising 
 his management of the school and its funds. In carrying out 
 the objects he had in view, particularly in preparing missionaries 
 for the Indians, the need was soon felt of a more extended course 
 of education, and Dr. Wheelock, with the approval of the board 
 of trust in Connecticut, and also of friends in Great Britain, 
 engrafted a college course of instruction upon that already estab- 
 lished in the school. This led to the contemplation of a change 
 of locality, for Yale being already established it did not seem 
 best to have another college within the bounds of the Connecti- 
 cut colony. As soon as the proposed change became known 
 several places sought for the institution. Liberal offers came 
 from more than one town in Western Massachusetts. The city 
 of Albany made generous offers. One liberal proposal was made 
 for its transfer to the banks of the Mississippi. But none, on 
 the whole, were so inviting as those from the province of New 
 Hampshire, seconded by the excellent, large-hearted colonial 
 governor of New Hampshire, John Wentworth. After a care- 
 ful inspection by Dr. Wheelock, in company with one or two of 
 his trustees, of many different localities in the province, the town 
 of Hanover, about midway in the valley of the Connecticut 
 between the northern and southern boundaries of New Hamp- 
 shire, was selected as the site for the new college, and the name 
 of Dartmouth was given to it in honor of the pious and illustrious 
 English earl who had been so serviceable a patron of the 
 Indian school, the germ, of which the college was the flower. 
 Through the services of Sir William Johnson and Governor 
 Wentworth a royal charter was obtained for the college in 1769, 
 from George the Third. 
 
 In the latter part of the summer of the following year the 
 transfer of the institution was made. The long and tedious 
 journey, as roads were then, of a couple of hundred miles, was 
 made by a part of Dr. Wheelock's family in a coach which had
 
 154 HISTORY OF 
 
 been presented to him ; but by the rest, with all the students, on 
 foot ; the company, numbering some seventy in all, wending 
 their way along the streams and through the forests, driving a 
 few swine before them, the meat most easily raised in the new 
 settlements. So they moved on that novel spectacle of a col- 
 lege turned emigrant-pioneer settler up into the then northern 
 wilderness, for Hanover had barely been entered by settlers ; 
 not a half dozen years had elapsed since the first family had 
 located within its limits, and the primeval forest had to be felled 
 where Dr. Wheelock erected the first log structures. 
 
 One reason which had led to the selection of the new site was 
 its nearer proximity to the Indian tribes Dr. Wheelock hoped to 
 benefit. Neither previously nor subsequently, however, did the 
 results of his efforts in behalf of the Indians realize his hopes, 
 although it is difficult to conceive how those efforts could have 
 been more wisely or energetically conducted. Apart from other 
 causes, the French and Indian war proved very unpropitious in 
 its influence in keeping pupils away from the school before its 
 removal from Connecticut ; and afterwards the Revolutionary 
 War, in which the Indians were again arrayed against the colo- 
 nists, was similar in its effects. Still, with all that was untoward 
 and disappointing, Dr. Wheelock's efforts for the Indians did 
 accomplish much good ; nor is its amount to be measured alto- 
 gether by the one hundred and fifty or more Indian youth who 
 were under his instruction ; although such instances as the cele- 
 brated Colonel Brant and the eloquent preacher Joseph Occum, 
 both of whom, as mentioned on the preceding page, were among 
 his Indian pupils, sufficiently attest the value of his educational 
 efforts for the Indian. He originated a large amount of mis- 
 sionary labor, reaching in its influence the Mohawks, Delawares, 
 Mohegans, Narragansetts, Oneidas, Senecas, and others, besides 
 the varied good which resulted in his awakening and giving form 
 to benevolent interest and sympathy, both in this country and 
 abroad, towards our Indian tribes. 
 
 Dr. Wheelock lived only nine years after the founding of the 
 college, and was succeeded in the presidency by his son, who 
 continued in office thirty-six years. 
 
 There have been, including its present energetic head, seven 
 presidents of the college, all with but a single exception clergy- 
 men, and, as a body, conspicuous for their pulpit and administra- 
 tive abilities ; alike eminent as preachers and divines, and suc- 
 cessful as executive officers. 
 
 Near the close of the last century a Medical Department be- 
 came connected with the college, which, from the first, hasbeen 
 distinguished by having among its lecturers some of the most 
 honored names of the medical profession in our Northern States.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 155 
 
 A Scientific Department has been in successful operation for 
 twenty-one years. In accordance with an act of the legislature, in 
 1866, establishing "The New Hampshire College of Agriculture 
 and the Mechanic Arts," and authorizing its location at Hanover, 
 in connection with Dartmouth College, this new department has 
 been organized and put in operation. Two magnificent edifices, 
 especially for this department, have already been erected, and a 
 valuable farm, contiguous to the college grounds, is also in the 
 possession of the department and available for its purposes. 
 Through the liberality of General Sylvanus Thayer the means 
 have been furnished for establishing in the college an especial 
 " School of Civil Engineering," designed mainly as a supplemen- 
 tary post-graduate course. The valuable Astronomical and Me- 
 teorological Observatory was established mainly through the lib- 
 erality of the late George C. Shattuck, LL.D.,'of Boston. The 
 libraries of the institution contain about fifty thousand volumes. 
 Fifty-seven permanent scholarships, besides other funds, are avail- 
 able for the gratuitous assistance of students. 
 
 The college may be said to have been fortunate in the class of 
 students frequenting its halls, since they have not been so much 
 those sent to college as those who have sought college advantages. 
 Hence, perhaps, is the explanation why its graduates have to so 
 great an extent been efficient workers in after life. Says one 
 long familiar with the operations and influence of the institution, 
 though himself a graduate of Yale : 
 
 "The whole country is indebted to Dartmouth College, as may be seen from 
 its Triennial Catalogue, and facts known to all. It has sent forth more than 
 nine hundred able ministers of the gospel, who have done good service to the 
 churches in all parts of the land, and many of our best foreign missionaries, 
 like Goodell, Temple, Poor, Spaulding and Wright. It has furnished thir- 
 teen governors of states, thirty-one judges of courts, and several of these 
 chief-justices of states, and one chief-justice of the United States; four cab- 
 inet officers, five diplomatic agents abroad, that have done honor to their 
 country; more than fifty members of Congress, eighteen United States Sen- 
 ators, eighty-nine college professors, and thirty-one presidents of colleges. 
 It has filled seventeen theological chairs and thirteen medical chairs with its 
 graduates, to say nothing of more than one thousand medical gentlemen of 
 skill, and distinguished men in all the walks of life." 
 
 A hundred years have passed since the founding of the col- 
 lege ; its friends may appeal to its history thus far as giving in- 
 creasing illustration and emphasis to the words of Mr. Webster, 
 in his celebrated plea for his Alma Mater before the supreme 
 court of the United States : 
 
 "Dartmouth College was established under a charter granted by the prov- 
 incial government ; but a better constitution, or one more adapted to the con- 
 dition of things under the present government, in all material respects, could 
 not now be found. Nothing in it was found to need alteration at the Revo- 
 lution. The wise men of that day saw in it one of the best hopes of future 
 times, and commended it, as it was, with parental care to the protection and 
 guardianship of the government of the state."
 
 156 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XLIII. 
 
 EARLY SETTLEMENTS IN COHOS. 
 
 All the northern portion of the state, which, in 1773, received 
 the name of Grafton county, was originally called Cohos or Ca- 
 wass. As late as 1760, there was no settlement by white men 
 in the Connecticut valley above Charlestown, and only three . 
 towns were settled south of this point. Hinsdale was settled in 
 1683, Westmoreland in 1741 and Walpole in 1752. These towns, 
 except Walpole, were settled by emigrants from Massachusetts ; 
 for until 1741 the north line of that province was supposed to 
 include these towns. Hinsdale (Fort Dummer) and Charles- 
 town (Number-Four) were military posts maintained most of the 
 time by the province of Massachusetts, to guard the frontiers 
 against the Indians. In 1754, Captain Peter Powers of Hollis, 
 N. H., was appointed by the government of that province to 
 lead an exploring party into the Cohos region. They left Rum- 
 ford (now Concord) on the fifteenth of June, 1754, and pene- 
 trated through the wilderness as far north as Northumberland, 
 then returned and encamped on what is now the " Common," at 
 Haverhill Corner, on the sixth of July, 1754. During " the seven 
 years' war," no further attempt was made to explore or settle 
 the Cohos country. In 1761, when the colonies no longer feared 
 the forays of the French and Indians, the spirit of emigration re- 
 vived in the older towns, and some brave men and braver wo- 
 men ventured into these unoccupied regions of the north. War 
 had revealed to them the " Cohos Meadows." The " Little Ox 
 Bow " on the east of the Connecticut, and the " Great Ox Bow " 
 on the west side, were then " cleared interval." The Indians 
 had cultivated them in their imperfect way, for the raising of 
 corn. They still occupied these meadows, but were now friendly 
 to the whites. They had formerly resisted the encroachments 
 of the English upon these rich lands. The country abounded 
 with game, bear, deer, moose and fowls. The streams yielded 
 the best of fish, salmon and trout. The soil was fertile and 
 easily tilled. While the Indians were strong and were backed 
 by the French, they allowed no pale-faces to make even a tem- 
 porary stand in this region. Major Rogers and his rangers had 
 humbled them ; the last war had made them English subjects, 
 and they with silence and sorrow permitted new comers to live 
 among them. Haverhill and Newbury derived their names from
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 157 
 
 Colonel James Bailey of Newbury, Mass., and Captain John 
 Hazen of Haverhill, Mass., who first planned the settlement of 
 these towns. The work was begun in 1761. For the next ten 
 years, settlements advanced into the interior and northern por- 
 tions of the state quite rapidly. 
 
 Mr. Webster, in his autobiography, says : " Previous to the 
 year 1763, the settlements of New Hampshire had little or no 
 progress into the country for sixty or seventy years, owing to 
 the hostility of the French in Canada and the neighboring In- 
 dians, who were under the influence of the French." Salisbury 
 was one of those towns granted by Benning Wentworth, and was 
 at first called Stevenstown, from one of the proprietors. Set- 
 tlements were made in it as early as 1750. It was incorporated 
 in 1768. Among the early settlers was Ebenezer Webster, the 
 father of Daniel and Ezekiel Webster. He, with his wife, " trav- 
 eled out of the road or path, for it was no better, and they were 
 obliged to make their way, not finding one, to their destined 
 place of habitation." "My father," adds Mr. Webster, "lapped 
 on a little beyond any other comer, and when he had built his 
 log cabin and lighted his fire, his smoke ascended nearer to 
 the North Star than that of any other of his majesty's New 
 England subjects. His nearest civilized neighbor, on the north, 
 was at Montreal." 
 
 Coos is an Indian name signifying " crooked," and is said to 
 have been given originally to a bend in the Connecticut river 
 and the territory on either side of it, including in New Hamp- 
 shire the towns of Lancaster, Northumberland and Stratford ; 
 and in Vermont, Lunenburg, Guildhall and Maidstone. Lan- 
 caster was granted and incorporated in 1763, by Benning Went- 
 worth. The proprietors were David Page and sixty-nine others. 
 Besides these seventy shares, six others were reserved for the 
 governor and for public uses. The settlers came into this un- 
 broken wilderness in 1764. There was then no mill for the 
 grinding of corn nearer than Charlestown, a distance of one 
 hundred and ten miles. About thirty years after the first settle- 
 ment, a Congregational church was formed and Rev. Joseph 
 Willard installed as pastor. His salary was eighty pounds per 
 annum. 
 
 All the towns founded in the wilderness, in our country, have 
 a common history. The description of one is almost identically 
 the description of all. The later settlements escaped the Indian 
 wars, but in other respects the toils and triumphs, the joys and 
 sorrows, the sufferings and successes, were nearly identical. 
 Here is the picture of a new settlement drawn by a master's 
 hand: 
 
 " Soon the ax gives its clear, metallic ring through these valleys. The
 
 158 HISTORY OF 
 
 giant Anaks of the forest creak, groan, stagger and come thundering to 
 the ground. Fires roar and rush through the dry fallow. In the dim night, 
 flames gleam from either side across the creek. Smoke obscures the sun, 
 giving the day the mystic hue of Indian summer. The sprouting hay grows 
 rank among the stumps. The reapers sing as they bind the tall and golden 
 sheaves. 
 
 Rude but pleasant homes rise along these hill-sides. The buzz of the 
 wheel, the stroke of the loom, tell of domestic industry, of the discreet and 
 beautiful women, once so aptly described by a king's mother. Hearts are 
 knit for life, while fingers are busy in knitting the woolen or flaxen fibre. 
 Nuptials are celebrated in homespun. Little children look out the windows 
 and run among the trees. The town-meeting is called. The school-house 
 goes up. The master is abroad. Mutual necessities and hardships among 
 neighbors awaken mutual interest and hospitalities. Each has a helping 
 hand to rear up a house for the new comer, to sow and harvest the fields of 
 a sick brother. The funeral, as it files through the woods to the final rest- 
 ing place, calls out a long and sympathetic procession. It does not cost the 
 living the last pittance to bury their dead. Those scant in pocket can afford 
 to die. Poor laws are superseded by the laws of kindness and reciprocity. 
 
 Gone is that Arcadian age ! Gone " the men, famous for lifting up axes 
 against the thick trees !" 
 
 " Each in his narrow cell forever laid, 
 
 The (brave) forefathers of the hamlet sleep." 
 
 From Charlestown to Haverhill, more than seventy miles, 
 there was no road, only a bridle path, indicated by marked trees- 
 This was often hedged up by fallen trees or made impassable by 
 freshets. Mr. Mann, one of the first settlers of Orford, trav- 
 eled over this path in 1765. " At Charlestown he purchased 
 a bushel of oats for his horse and some bread and cheese for 
 himself and wife and set forward, Mann on foot wife, oats, 
 bread and cheese and some clothing on horseback." Clare- 
 mont then contained two families ; Cornish, one ; Plainfield, 
 one ; Lebanon, three ; Hanover, one ; and Lyme, three. Think 
 of the loneliness, the privation, the hardships of these first oc- 
 cupants of the wilderness. No sounds broke the silence of the 
 primitive forests but the howling of the winds, the crash of fall- 
 ing trees or the growl of beasts of prey. A rude cabin was 
 their only shelter ; game or fish, for a time, their principal food, 
 and water from the spring their only beverage. The wife lived 
 alone while the husband was abroad felling trees or securing 
 food. Comfort was unknown. Consider, also, the royal con- 
 descension that inserted in the charters of these new towns such 
 provisions as these : " As soon as there shall be fifty families 
 resident and settled, they shall have the liberty of holding two 
 fairs annually ; also, a market may be opened and kept one or 
 more days in each week as may be thought most advantageous 
 to the inhabitants." 
 
 Two classes of persons, with very distinctly marked charac- 
 ters, penetrated these northern wilds. The leaders were men of 
 intelligence, energy and property. They had two objects in view ;
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 159 
 
 to furnish permanent homes for themselves and their posterity 
 and to acquire wealth by the rise of their lands. They in a few 
 years had comfortable houses with good furniture for that day. 
 They were men of strong religious principle and early made 
 provision for the preaching of the gospel. They brought with 
 them some domestic animals, such as cows, swine and sheep ; 
 and were soon able to supply their tables with meat. There 
 was another class, so poor as to need help to reach their new 
 homes. They came on foot bearing all their property upon their 
 shoulders. Such persons needed guides and overseers ; and 
 had not men of more enterprise furnished them shelter, food and 
 work, they must have perished. The fare of all classes, at first, 
 was scanty. Their buildings were made of logs. When food 
 became more plenty, they ate meat once in a day. Porridge of 
 beans, pease or milk furnished their other meals. Bowls, dishes 
 and plates were usually of wood. The more wealthy used pew- 
 ter and tin. 
 
 In the summer of 1770 the Connecticut valley, from North- 
 field, Mass., to Lancaster, N. H., was visited by a species of 
 army worm which devoured most of the standing crops and re- 
 duced the people nearly to starvation. In their maturity, the 
 worms were as long as a man's finger and as large in circumfer- 
 ence. The body was brown, with a velvet stripe upon the back 
 and a yellow stripe on each side. They marched from the north 
 or northwest and passed to the east and south. They were the 
 most loathsome and greedy invaders that ever polluted the earth. 
 They covered the entire ground, so that not a finger's breadth 
 was left between them. In their march, they crawled over houses 
 and barns, covering every inch of the boards and shingles. 
 Every stalk of corn and wheat was doomed by them. The in- 
 habitants dug trenches ; but they soon filled them to the surface 
 and the remaining army marched over their prostrate compan- 
 ions. They continued their devastations more than a month ; 
 then suddenly disappeared, no one knows how or where. Eleven 
 years later a second visitation of the same worm was made, 
 but they were then few in number. Potatoes and vines were 
 not eaten by them. Pumpkins were abundant and were very use- 
 ful in sustaining the lives of men and animals during the autumn. 
 The atmosphere was also black with flocks of pigeons, which 
 were caught in immense numbers, and their meat dried for 
 winter use. The feathers were used for bedding. Before this 
 time, only straw or the bare floor had formed the couches of the 
 poorer classes. 
 
 In 1771 a great freshet occurred in the Coos country. The 
 rich meadows of Newbury and Haverhill were not only sub- 
 merged by water, but, in some places, buried two or three feet
 
 l6o HISTORY OF 
 
 in sand. Thus they lost their crops for that year, and the use 
 of their fertile lands for several years to come. Cattle, sheep, 
 swine and horses were swept away ; and, in some instances, fam- 
 ilies were caught in the dwellings by the tide, and were saved 
 with great difficulty by boats. Severe suffering followed this 
 sudden flood, the greatest, perhaps, known on the Connecticut 
 river. 
 
 CHAPTER XLIV. 
 
 THE WENTWORTHS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Wentworth is a name of distinction in English history. "The 
 ancient and honorable family of Wentworths," says Thoresby, 
 in his history of Leeds, "which for six hundred years hath borne 
 the honor of knighthood, was seated four years before that in 
 the county of York. The ancient and chief seat of this princi- 
 pal branch of this noble family hath been for many ages at 
 Wentworth Woodhouse, in the wapentake of Strafford, whence 
 they spread into other parts." Thomas Wentworth, the Earl of 
 Strafford, who, next to Cromwell, was the greatest man of the 
 English Revolution, belonged to this family. He was beheaded 
 on the twelfth of May, 1641. The great ancestor of the Went- 
 worths of New Hampshire was William Wentworth, who, ac- 
 cording to " Burke's Peerage and Baronetage," emigrated from 
 the county of York, the ancient home of the race, to Boston in 
 1628 (it should be 1638), and removed subsequently to New 
 Hampshire in 1639. He became a preacher of the gospel, and 
 is known in history as Elder Wentworth. He first preached at 
 Exeter. He also lived and preached at Dover. When the Ind- 
 ians attacked that town in 1689, Elder Wentworth, then over 
 eighty years of age, was sleeping in Heard's garrison. He was 
 awaked by the barking of a dog, just as the Indians were enter- 
 ing. He sprang to the door, forced out the savages, and falling 
 on his back placed his feet against the floor, and thus prevented 
 their entrance till his call for help alarmed the people who were 
 near. The balls shot at the door passed through it and above 
 his body, leaving the heroic veteran unharmed. "This bold 
 act," says Judge Smith, "will embalm the name and memory of 
 this brave old man and sincere Christian as long as our records
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. l6l 
 
 shall endure ; and will give him a renown greater, far greater, 
 and more widely spread, than the good fortune of having so 
 many governors among his descendants. His was true glory. 
 The good fortune may happen to any man." He died at Do- 
 ver, at the age of ninety. John Wentworth, his second son, was 
 lieutenant-governor of New Hampshire from 1717 to 1729. 
 The character of Lieutenant-Governor John Wentwortth is thus 
 drawn by Rev. John M. Whiton : 
 
 " From his father, Elder Wentworth, he received a Christian education, 
 which exerted much influence on his subsequent life. For a time he fol- 
 lowed the seas and commanded a ship, in which he carefully maintained the 
 morning and evening worship of God. As a merchant, his integrity, benev- 
 olence" and public spirit procured him general esteem. He was charitable to 
 the poor, .courteous and affable to all, and attentive to the institutions of re- 
 ligion. For the most part of a period of thirteen years, some of them 
 marked with the perplexities of an Indian war and a high degree of party 
 excitement, he conducted the affairs of the province with singular wisdom 
 and moderation ; and with the exception of a controversy between him and 
 the Assembly, near the close of his administration, to the satisfaction of the 
 people. He possessed their confidence and affection while living, and car- 
 ried with him their respect when he descended to the grave." 
 
 His family consisted of sixteen children. One of his sons, 
 Benning Wentworth, was governor of New Hampshire from 1741 
 to 1766. For' twenty-five years, in stormy times and during two 
 bloody wars, he sat at the helm of state, and perhaps adminis- 
 tered her affairs as well as most men could or would have clone 
 in the same circumstances. He succeeded in pleasing neither 
 king nor people. He was virtually superseded, though time 
 was courteously given him for resignation. He was succeeded 
 by his nephew John Wentworth, who had appeared at court to 
 present the petition of the province against the stamp act. He 
 thus became acquainted with men in power, and by his courtly 
 manners won their favor. His intercession prevented the cen- 
 sure and removal of his uncle and secured for him the oppor- 
 tunity of retiring with credit. John Wentworth was commis- 
 sioned as GovernoK of New Hampshire and " Surveyor of the 
 King's Woods in North America." The king had a great fond- 
 ness for timber. His father, Mark Hunking Wentworth, was a 
 merchant who amassed a large fortune by foreign trade. He 
 was also a member of the council and one of the Masonian 
 proprietors who purchased Mason's claim, to the unoccupied 
 lands of New Hampshire. His son John was the last, and 
 perhaps the most illustrious, of the royal governors. He was a 
 graduate of Harvard, and was distinguished for his love of 
 learning. After his flight from the country, his estate was con- 
 fiscated except what was required to pay his debts. His father, 
 fearing that the estate would prove insolvent, with great gen- 
 erosity relinquished his claims to his son's property, that other
 
 1 62 HISTORY OF 
 
 creditors might not be losers by him. He was the largest cred- 
 itor of all. 
 
 John Wentworth had been trained to mercantile pursuits in 
 early life. The distinguished family to which he belonged were 
 devoted to merchandise. This was the most direct road to 
 wealth and power. The people of Portsmouth received and 
 handled all the exports and imports of the province, hence 
 many of them became rich. It was the seat of the legislature 
 and of the courts, till in 1770 the province was divided into 
 five counties by the legislature. Several sessions passed before 
 the points of difficulty respecting boundaries and privileges 
 could be adjusted. In 1771, the king gave his approbation of 
 the division, and separate courts were established in Rocking- 
 ham, Hillsborough and Cheshire. The counties of Strafford 
 and Grafton, being sparsely settled, were attached in the judi- 
 cial circuit to Rockingham, till the governor and council should 
 deem them competent to exercise separate jurisdictions. This 
 was so ordered in 1773. The counties, except Cheshire, were 
 named by the governor in honor of English noblemen who 
 were his personal friends. 
 
 In 1771, paper currency, which had been from its origin a 
 perpetual nuisance, was abolished and silver and gold became 
 the legal tender in all business transactions. The predecessor 
 of John Wentworth, the Hon. Benning Wentworth, had amassed 
 a large fortune ; a portion of it by questionable means. He 
 virtually sold grants of townships to scheming "proprietors ; and 
 reserved in each five hundred acres to himself.L Miter his death 
 the title to much of his estate began to be disputed. The gov- 
 ernor himself proposed in council the question, " Whether the 
 reservation of five hundred acres in several townships, by the 
 late governor, Benning Wentworth, in the charter grants, con- 
 veyed the title to him ? " Seven of the eight councilors an- 
 swered the question in the negative, and the reserved lands were 
 offered to private settlers. 
 
 The dissenting councilor, Peter Livius, being dissatisfied be- 
 cause, in the reappointment of justices of the common pleas for 
 the new counties he had been omitted by the governor, resolved 
 to procure his removal. He proceeded to England, with six 
 specific charges of maladministration, and presented them to 
 the lords of trade. A long and tedious examination followed, 
 records and witnesses were examined, and the governor was, af- 
 ter an appeal, triumphantly acquitted on every charge. But the 
 case was carried from the lords of trade, who were inclined to 
 report the charges verified, to a committee of the privy council, 
 and before this high tribunal the governor was justified. That 
 the decision was righteous appears from the general approbation
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 163 
 
 of it by the people and the legislature at home. Till this period 
 the governor's fame had suffered no eclipse. This was in 1773. 
 He had uniformly endeavored to promote the public welfare by 
 encouraging commerce, constructing highways, establishing courts 
 and fostering learning. He signed the charter of Dartmouth 
 College, contributed liberally to its funds, attended its first com- 
 mencement, and took a deep interest in its welfare. 
 
 It is to be regretted that a man so noble in character, so gen- 
 erous in action, so pacific in temper, should have fallen on evil 
 times ; but he did not appreciate the character of the people he 
 ruled. He hoped for reconciliation and labored to promote it ; 
 but he could no more resist the on-rush of the revolution, than 
 the Danish Canute could stay the tide of old ocean. 
 
 Doctor Dwight in his travels, says of him : " Governor Went- 
 worth was the greatest benefactor of the Province of New 
 Hampshire, mentioned in its history. He was a man of sound 
 understanding, refined taste, enlarged views and a dignified 
 spirit. His manners, also, were elegant and his disposition en- 
 terprising. Agriculture, in this province, owed more to him 
 than to any other man. He originated the formation of new 
 roads and the improvement of old ones. All these circum- 
 stances rendered him very popular, and he would probably 
 have continued to increase his reputation, had he not been pre- 
 vented by the controversy between Great Britain and her colo- 
 nies. As the case was he retired from the chair with an unim- 
 peachable character, and with higher reputation than any other 
 man who, at that time, held the same office in the country." 
 
 John Wentworth performed his last official act on the Isles of 
 Shoals, in September, 1775. He had previously retired to the 
 fort and put himself under the protection of the Scarborough, a 
 British ship of war, where he remained till the fort was dis- 
 mantled. He then went to Boston. From that city he came as 
 near to Portsmouth as he could with safety, to adjourn the re- 
 bellious assembly. His house had been pillaged after he re- 
 tired to the fort. Wentworth was the last, and probably the 
 best, of the royal governors. He aimed to be loyal to the king 
 and true to the people. But the two things were incompatible. 
 He possessed business tact, executive energy, a pacific temper, 
 and a cultivated taste. In ordinary times he would have made 
 a popular and successful governor ; but, at the perilous crisis of 
 his administration, no man could serve two masters. If he was 
 true to the king, he was false to the people. Still, during a 
 considerable portion of his official life, he was highly acceptable 
 to his fellow-citizens. He went to England soon after leaving 
 the province, and was there created a baronet and appointed 
 lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick.
 
 164 HISTORY OF 
 
 John Wentworth of Somersworth, a contemporary of the gov- 
 ernor, was in public life more than thirty years. He was dis- 
 tinguished as an officer in the militia, a legislator and a judge. 
 John Wentworth, jr., his son, was also one of the staunchest whigs 
 ' of the Revolution. No man of that troublous period has a 
 \purer and nobler official record. He died in 1787, aged 42. 
 
 After the flight of Governor Wentworth, the people of New 
 Hampshire were without a responsible government. They ac- 
 cordingly proceeded, in January, 1776, to form a constitution to 
 remain in force during " the unhappy and unnatural contest with 
 Great Britain." In the following June, on the fifteenth day of 
 that month, they made and published the following Declaration 
 of Independence : 
 
 "Whereas it now appears an undoubted fact, that notwith- 
 standing all the dutiful petitions and decent remonstrances from 
 the American colonies, and the utmost exertions of their best 
 friends in England on their behalf, the British Ministry, arbi- 
 trary and vindictive, are yet determined to reduce by fire and 
 sword our bleeding country to their absolute obedience ; and 
 for this purpose, in addition to their own forces, have engaged 
 great numbers of foreign mercenaries, who may now be on their 
 passage here accompanied by a formidable fleet to ravish and 
 plunder the sea-coast ; from all which we may reasonably ex- 
 pect the most dismal scenes of distress the ensuing year, unless 
 we exert ourselves by every means and precaution possible ; and 
 whereas we of this colony of New Hampshire have the example 
 of several of the most respectable of our sister colonies before 
 us for entering upon that most important step of disunion from 
 Great Britain, and declaring ourselves FREE and INDEPEND- 
 ENT of the crown thereof, being impelled thereto by the most 
 violent and injurious treatment; and it appearing absolutely 
 necessary in this most critical juncture of our public affairs, 
 that the honorable the Continental Congress, who have this im- 
 portant object under immediate consideration, should be also in- 
 formed of our resolutions thereon without loss of time, We do 
 hereby declare that it is the opinion of this assembly that our 
 delegates at the continental congress should be instructed, and 
 they are hereby instructed, to join with the other colonies in de- 
 claring the thirteen united colonies a free and independent 
 state solemnly pledging our faith and honor, that we will on 
 our parts support the measure with our lives and fortunes, and 
 that in consequence thereof, they, the continental congress, on 
 whose wisdom, fidelity and integrity we rely, may enter into and 
 form such alliances as they may judge most conducive to the 
 present safety and future advantage of these American colo- 
 nies : Provided, the regulation of our internal police be under 
 the direction of our own Assembly."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 165 
 
 CHAPTER XLV. 
 
 COMMENCEMENT OF HOSTILITIES WITH ENGLAND. 
 
 The colonial legislatures claimed entire and exclusive author- 
 ity in all matters relating to their own domesfic and internal 
 affairs. They denied the right of any power on earth to tax 
 them but themselves. The British government maintained that 
 the King of England, with advice of parliament, " had, hath 
 and of right ought to have, full power and authority to make 
 laws and statutes of sufficient force and validity to bind the 
 colonies and people of America in all cases whatsoever." On 
 this principle, mother and daughter separated. The mother 
 made concessions, adopted measures of conciliation, and re- 
 duced the duties to a mere nominal sum ; still, so long as the 
 principle was asserted, the rebellious daughter remained obsti- 
 nate. Had the tax levied been but one penny per annum for 
 each colony, the resistance would have been equally determined. 
 Indeed, there can scarcely be a doubt that seven years of pa- 
 tience, instead of seven years of fighting, with the ablest states- 
 men and orators of England as friends of America, might have 
 secured to the colonies absolute equality of political rights. Had 
 the patriots of that age so waited and so acted, we their descend- 
 ants might to-day have been the subjects of a hereditary mon- 
 arch. Our counties might have been the property of counts, 
 and our independent yeomen who own their farms and till them, 
 who choose their pastors and support them, who make their 
 laws and obey them, might have been the dependents of some 
 "born gentleman," like the Duke of Sutherland, who with great 
 condescension visits his peasants twice a year and gives them 
 advice, builds roads and allows them to walk in them, founds 
 churches and sends them rectors, provides cottage's and requires 
 of the tenants a rent which abridges the commonest comforts of 
 life. The colonies were determined to be free. They deemed 
 all concessions a snare, and experience has proved that they 
 judged wisely. The English government, finding that the colo- 
 nies would not submit, resolved to subdue them. 
 
 In April, 1775, there were three thousand royal troops in 
 Boston, under General Gage. The business of that city had 
 been ruined by adverse legislation. Traders had no business, 
 citizens no bread. " An exceeding great and bitter cry " went 
 up through the land. The adjacent towns not only sent food to 
 Boston, but collected stores for the coming war. A magazine
 
 1 66 HISTORY OF 
 
 of provisions and ammunition had been established at Concord, 
 Mass. General Gage, on the nineteenth of April, sent troops 
 to destroy it. A company of provincial militia had assembled 
 at Lexington to resist the British troops. Major Pitcairn, on 
 seeing them, rode forward in front of his columns and cried, 
 " Disperse, ye rebels ! lay down your arms and retire." As the 
 men whom he called rebels did not obey, he gave orders to fire, 
 and seven Americans fell and nine were wounded. The rest re- 
 tired pursued by the British. This was the first bloody act of 
 that great drama which was destined to free a continent. The 
 British regulars succeeded in destroying or removing most of 
 the stores, but they paid dearly for this trifling result. They 
 lost, before their return, two hundred and seventy-three men, 
 killed, wounded and missing, while the provincials lost only 
 eighty-eight ! The last tie to the mother country was broken. 
 Reconciliation was now impossible. The news of the first 
 bloodshed was borne on the wings of the wind to every hamlet, 
 to every dweller within the limits of the thirteen colonies. Men 
 sprang to arms as though moved by a single impulse. They 
 made solemn pledges with one another to do or die, " to be 
 ready for the extreme event." Almost with one voice, they 
 echoed the burning words of Henry : " Give me liberty, or give 
 me death !" 
 
 The people of New Hampshire were so inured to war, that 
 they never could be wholly unprepared for it. An old law re- 
 quired every male inhabitant, from sixteen to sixty years of age, 
 to own a musket, bayonet, knapsack, cartridge-box, one pound 
 of powder, twenty bullets and twelve flints. Every town was re- 
 quired to keep, in readiness for use, one barrel of powder, two 
 hundred pounds of lead and three hundred flints, besides spare 
 arms and ammunition for those who were too poor to own them. 
 Even exempts, as old as the discharged Roman veterans, were 
 obliged to retain their arms. The militia was regarded as the 
 right arm of the public defence. It was organized into com- 
 panies and regiments and subjected to frequent drills under their 
 officers. In most of the townships laid out by proprietors or 
 royal governors, a " training ground " was as commonly reserved 
 as a parsonage. Like the Jews of old in restoring and guarding 
 their broken walls, they " made their prayer " and " set their 
 watch." Volunteer companies also enlisted for the defence of 
 the country. After the first blood was shed, every means that 
 could convey the intelligence to the eye or ear was used to spread 
 the alarm. Beacons were lighted, drums beaten, guns fired, and 
 bells rung to warn the people of their danger. 
 
 "Then there was hurrying to and fro ; in hot haste" 
 
 men made ready their armor, women prepared their clothes and 
 buckled on their harness.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 167 
 
 CHAPTER XLVI. 
 
 THE BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL. 
 
 The first Continental Congress met in Philadelphia, on the 
 fifth day of September, 1774. All the colonies were represented. 
 Fifty-five members attended, each colony having sent as many 
 as it pleased. In this congress there was no distinction be- 
 tween the large and small colonies ; each had one vote, because, 
 as General Sullivan said, " a little colony has its all at stake as 
 well as a great one." This congress published a "bill of rights," 
 which was equivalent to bringing against Great Britain a bill 
 of wrongs. A great gulf was thus fixed between the two coun- 
 tries. The second congress assembled in the same city, on the 
 tenth of May, 1775, after the first blood had been shed at Lex- 
 ington, and continued in session until the close of the Revolu- 
 tionary war and the adoption of a definite form of government. 
 By this congress, Washington was chosen generalissimo of the 
 American troops, on the fifteenth of June, 1775, and the Dec- 
 laration of Independence passed July fourth, 1776; and they 
 assumed the name and title of "The United States of America." 
 The same congress appointed three major-generals, Artemas 
 Ward, Charles Lee, and Philip Schuyler ; one adjutant-general, 
 Horatio Gates ; and eight brigadier-generals, of whom John Sul- 
 livan of New Hampshire was one. The people of the New 
 England states did not wait to be .summoned to the defence of 
 their country. When they heard of her peril, they snatched their 
 firelocks from the smoke-stained walls, and hastened to " the 
 camp of liberty." 
 
 The veteran Stark, after the French and Indian war. settled 
 in Starktown, afterwards called Dunbarton, and there culti- 
 vated his farm and cared for his mills. The news of the battle 
 of Lexington reached him in his saw-mill. He immediately went 
 to his house, changed his dress, mounted his horse and hastened 
 to the theatre of war. On the road, he called his patriotic 
 countrymen to arms. He was known to many of them, and his 
 name was a tower of strength. Medford was named as a place 
 of rendezvous. There in the hall of a tavern, afterwards called 
 " New Hampshire Hall," he was chosen, by hand vote, colonel 
 of the assembled militia. A regiment containing thirteen com- 
 panies was soon formed and reduced to tolerable discipline by 
 their commander. On the twenty-third of April, only four days
 
 1 68 HISTORY OF 
 
 after the battle of Lexington, two thousand men, from almost 
 every town in New Hampshire, had reported themselves at head- 
 quarters for duty, and were desirous "not to return till the 
 work was done." Some of these, however, returned ^ others were 
 formed into two regiments under the authority of Massachusetts. 
 In May, on the meeting of the Provincial Congress of New 
 Hampshire, they voted to raise two thousand men to be formed 
 into three regiments. The commanders of these were John 
 Stark, James Reed and Enoch Poor. These were the first col- 
 onial regiments, out of Massachusetts, that were placed under 
 the command of General Ward, who had been recently ap- 
 pointed commander-in-chief of the forces of that colony. Gen- 
 eral Putnam held a subordinate command. 
 
 Colonel Prescott, who, like Marshal Ney, deserves to be styled 
 "the bravest of the brave," was detailed with one thousand 
 men to throw up a breastwork of earth on Breed's Hill, on the 
 night of the sixteenth of June. Bunker Hill had been proposed 
 by the committee of safety, but Prescott " received orders to 
 march to Breed's Hill." On the morning of the seventeenth of 
 June, Stark's regiment, then at Medford, and Reed's, near 
 Charlestown neck, were ordered by Ward to march to Colonel 
 Prescott's aid. In marching over Charlestown neck, where the 
 soldiers were exposed to the constant fire of an English man-of- 
 war and two floating batteries, Captain Henry Dearborn, walk- 
 ing by the side of Stark, suggested the propriety of a more rapid 
 march to escape the balls of the enemy. Stark replied : " One 
 fresh man in action is worth ten tired ones, " and continued to 
 move with the same measured step, through the shower of iron 
 hail that was constantly falling around them. Next to Prescott, 
 Stark brought the largest number of men into the field. The 
 position of the New Hampshire troops was at a rail fence, about 
 forty yards in the rear of the redoubt, toward the Mystic river. 
 Newly mown hay, that lay upon the ground, was stuffed between 
 the rails to form a very imperfect breastwork. A regiment of 
 Welsh fusileers was opposed to Stark's troops. They marched 
 up the hill with seven hundred men. The next day only eighty- 
 three appeared on parade. The destructive fire of Stark's men 
 had nearly annihilated a regiment that had gained renown at the 
 battle of Minden. When the redoubt was abandoned by Col- 
 onel Prescott, because his men had neither bayonets nor ammu- 
 nition with which to continue its defence, Stark drew off his 
 forces in good order, without pursuit by the enemy. " On the 
 ground where the mowers had swung their scythes in peace 
 the day before, the dead," relates Stark, " lay as thick as sheep 
 in a fold." The New Hampshire troops during the action twice 
 drove back the foe in their front, and held them in check while
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 the little band were retreating from the breastwork, before they 
 left the exposed position they had so " nobly defended." Of 
 the Americans in that memorable battle, one hundred and forty- 
 five were killed and missing, and three hundred and four wound- 
 ed, from about fifteen hundred in all. Stark's regiment lost fif- 
 teen killed and missing , and sixty were wounded. Of Reed's 
 regiment, three were killed, one missing, and twenty-nine wound- 
 ed. General Gage reported the killed and wounded of his own 
 army at one thousand and fifty-four. The number engaged was 
 double that of the Americans. 
 
 Dr. Warren, the Hampden of the American Revolution, though 
 holding a high commission in the Massachusetts army, fought as 
 a volunteer ; and, after passing through the blood and smoke of 
 the fight at the redoubt, was killed during the retreat by a 
 British officer, who borrowed the gun of a private to do this deed 
 of blood. Major Andrew McClary, one of the bravest of New 
 Hampshire's sons, fell by a chance shot of a cannon, as the re- 
 tiring army was marching over Charlestown neck. 
 
 " The battle of Quebec," says Mr. Bancroft, " which won half 
 a continent, did not cost the lives of so many officers as the 
 battle of Bunker Hill which gained nothing but a place of en- 
 campment." If there be truth in history, the moral effect of 
 that day is due quite as much to the bravery of the New Hamp- 
 shire troops as to that of the " Spartan band" from Massachu- 
 setts, under the command of Colonel Prescott, of whom it is 
 said, " his bravery could never be enough acknowledged or ap- 
 plauded." This battle taught the British to respect American 
 character and to fear American valor. " A yankee rabble " had 
 become " an invincible army." 
 
 CHAPTER XLVII. 
 
 THE FORMATION OF A NEW GOVERNMENT. 
 
 After the flight of John Wentworth and the dissolution of the 
 royal government, New Hampshire for a time was without any 
 regularly constituted rulers. The convention that met at Exeter 
 in May, 1775, was the spontaneous creation of the towns, acting 
 upon their own authority. This convention, in which one hun- 
 dred and two towns were represented by one hundred and thirty- 
 three members, established post-offices and appointed commit-
 
 1 70 HISTORY OF 
 
 tees of supplies and of safety. The general direction given to 
 these committees was like that given to the Roman consuls in 
 times of peril : " That they should take care that the republic 
 received no detriment." In fact, these extemporized officers 
 were supreme in power as they were supposed to be unerring in 
 wisdom. Their instructions, however, were renewed from time 
 to time till the six months for which the assembly was elected 
 expired. The provincial records were seized by authority of this 
 assembly. Three different issues of bills were made during this 
 year, amounting in all to forty thousand pounds. These bills, 
 signed by the treasurer, were for a time received at their full 
 value. Besides the three regiments at Cambridge, a company 
 of artillery was raised to man the forts, and a company of ran- 
 gers who were stationed on the Connecticut river. Two other 
 companies were held in readiness to march whenever they should 
 be needed. The whole militia constituted twelve regiments. 
 The field officers were appointed by the convention ; the inferior 
 officers were chosen by the companies. Four regiments were 
 denominated " minute men," because they were required to go 
 at a minute's warning to the field of danger. During the follow- 
 ing winter, sixteen companies of New Hampshire militia, of 
 sixty-one men each, supplied at headquarters the place of the 
 Connecticut forces whose time had expired. They served till 
 Boston was evacuated. 
 
 When the time came for the convention to be dissolved by 
 limitation, they asked direction of the continental congress then 
 in session, with respect to their duty. They were advised to call 
 a new convention for the purpose of establishing a permanent 
 government for the province. They finally ordered every town 
 of one hundred families to send one representative, and one 
 additional representative for every additional hundred families. 
 They also decreed that each elector should possess real estate 
 valued at twenty pounds, and each candidate for election one 
 of three hundred pounds. A census had been previously order- 
 ed which showed the entire population of the province to be 
 eighty-two thousand two hundred souls, and the number of rep- 
 resentatives eighty-nine. The representatives were to be paid 
 by their respective towns and to continue in office one year. 
 They met at Exeter on the twenty-first of December, 1775, and 
 assumed the name of the House of Representatives of New 
 Hampshire. The men who composed this body were not states- 
 men nor lawyers, only citizens of " large round-about common 
 sense." They of course made some mistakes in framing or- 
 ganic laws for a sovereign state. They selected a council of 
 twelve to constitute an upper house. These elected their own 
 president. No act could be valid till it had passed both houses,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 171 
 
 and all money bills must originate with the house of represen- 
 tatives. They omitted to establish an executive branch of the 
 new government. Hence the two houses while in session were 
 obliged to provide for this service, and during adjournments to 
 delegate it to committees of safety numbering from six to six- 
 teen. Meshech Weare, " an old, tried and faithful public ser- 
 vant," was chosen president of the council, also president of 
 the executive committee of safety, and in 1776 was appointed 
 chief justice of the supreme court. All these offices he held 
 during the war. 
 
 Such an accumulation of high and responsible trusts has rarely 
 rested upon one man by a popular election. The highest 
 confidence was reposed in his integrity and patriotism. The 
 hatred of royalty was so intense that every trace of it was swept 
 away. The sign-boards that bore the royal face were torn 
 down ; pictures and coats-of-arms in private houses were re- 
 moved 01 reversed ; the names of streets that bore the words 
 " king " or " queen " were changed, and even the half-pence that 
 bore the image of George III. were refused in payment of dues. 
 
 This assembly established, anew, the courts, made paper 
 money a legal tender, passed a law against counterfeiters, and 
 changed the name of the " colony " or " province " to that of 
 " the State of New Hampshire." They also built a ship of war 
 for the infant navy of the country at Portsmouth. It was com- 
 pleted in sixty days after the keel was laid, bore thirty-two guns 
 and was called the " Raleigh." 
 
 I quote the following facts from the pen of Hon. G. W. 
 Nesmith : 
 
 "The Convention of 1778 made the office of councilor elective by the 
 people ; Rockingham county choosing five of the number, Strafford two, 
 Hillsborough two, Cheshire two, and Grafton one. 
 
 There was another convention called to revise the state constitution, in 
 1781. It had nine sessions, continuing its own existence for the term of two 
 years. Its president was George Atkinson. General Sullivan was its secre- 
 tary. We have the address of this convention before us, issued in May, 
 1783, from which it appears that the convention had twice recommended, 
 among other things, to give the executive arm of the government more 
 power and efficiency, by creating the office of governor. 
 
 This amendment was twice submitted to the people, and as often rejected 
 by them. The convention, however, recommended that the president 
 should be elected by the people. This amendment was adopted, and for the 
 first time, in 1784, Meshech Weare was elected by the people to the office 
 of president of the State ; but on account of bad health he resigned this 
 office before the expiration of the political year. John Langdon, General 
 Sullivan and Josiah Bartlett severally afterwards were elected president, 
 until March, 1793, when our present constitution went into force, and Josiah 
 Bartlett was chosen governor"
 
 172 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XLVIII. 
 
 MOVEMENTS OF THE ARMY UNDER WASHINGTON, DURING THE 
 
 YEAR 1776. 
 
 The year in which the independence of the colonies was de- 
 clared was a period of great calamities. The United States 
 began their political existence without resources to sustain it ; 
 without men, food, clothes or tents for their armies, or money 
 for their wages. Boston was evacuated on the seventeenth of 
 March, 1746, and the British army, consisting of about seven 
 thousand men, accompanied by some fifteen hundred families of 
 loyalists, sailed immediately for Halifax. On the nineteenth of 
 the same month, Washington sent five regiments, under General 
 Heath, to New York; and having fortified Boston, soon fol- 
 lowed his advance guard and made New York his headquarters. 
 
 In March, 1776, the two houses of the legislature of New 
 Hampshire, sitting at Exeter, published their new " Plan of Gov- 
 ernment" and appointed all necessary officers, judicial, military 
 and civil, for the administration of state affairs. They also as- 
 signed good and sufficient reasons for this step ; but at the same 
 time made this declaration respecting a possible restoration of 
 harmony : " We shall rejoice if such a reconciliation between 
 us and our parent state can be effected as shall be approved by 
 the continental congress." The Declaration of Independence, 
 brought by express to Exeter in the following July, was re- 
 ceived with unbounded joy. It was read to the assembled citi- 
 zens of that town by the patriot, John Taylor Oilman, and pub- 
 lished in other towns, with bonfires, bells, drums and other 
 demonstrations of exultation. The New Hampshire delegates 
 who signed that declaration, the most important ever published 
 in human history, not even excepting Magna Charta, were Jo- 
 siah Bartlett, William Whipple and Matthew Thornton. The 
 writing of their names on that paper made them immortal. 
 
 The legislature continued in service the three regiments of 
 the preceding year with their commanders. These followed 
 General Washington to New York. They also raised a fourth 
 regiment in the western part of the state, which was destined for 
 service in Canada. It was commanded by Colonel Bedel. The 
 other three regiments, soon after their arrival in New York, 
 were placed under the command of General Sullivan, who was 
 sent to reinforce the American troops that were retreating from
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 173 
 
 Quebec before a superior force. That invasion had proved dis- 
 astrous. One detachment of New Hampshire troops had been 
 previously captured by a body of English and Indians, at a place 
 called " The Cedars" forty miles above Montreal. Colonel Bedel 
 of New Hampshire was stationed with about four hundred men 
 and two cannon at the narrow pass of the cedars. This pass 
 was about forty-five miles above Montreal, and General Thomas, 
 at Sorel, was about as far below. Bedel left his post at the ap- 
 proach of the enemy, under pretence of securing a reinforce- 
 ment. The post was left in the care of Major Butterfield who, 
 from cowardice, as some affirm, surrendered without a blow. 
 
 From the Memoir of General John Stark the following facts 
 are taken. After the evacuation of Boston, Colonel Stark was 
 ordered, with two regiments, to proceed to New York, where he 
 remained till May, when his regiment with five others were or- 
 dered to march by way of Albany to Canada. At the mouth of 
 the Sorel he met the retreating army commanded by General 
 Thomas. This officer died of the small-pox and the command 
 devolved on General Arnold, who employed himself in plunder- 
 ing the merchants of Montreal for his private emolument. He 
 was soon superseded by General Sullivan, who planned an expe- 
 dition against Trois Rivieres, which proved a failure, as Colonel 
 Stark had predicted. A retreat became necessary. It was con- 
 ducted with great skill and prudence by General Sullivan, and 
 the army, weary and worn, thinned by the small-pox and the bul- 
 lets of the enemy, reached St. Johns without loss of men or 
 property. Here everything was burnt, and the army proceeded 
 in boats to Isle aux Noix. Colonel Stark was the last to leave 
 the shore, as the advanced guard of the enemy approached the 
 smoking ruins. On the eighteenth of June, 1776, the army en- 
 camped upon the Isle aux Noix ; and, before the enemy could 
 procure boats to pursue them, they had again embarked and 
 safely landed at Crown Point. The New Hampshire troops un- 
 der General Sullivan were, on the first of July, stationed at Ti- 
 conderoga and Mount Independence. General Gates became 
 their superior officer. About one third of them had died of 
 small-pox and putrid fever. In war, disease often destroys more 
 men than the weapons of the foe. When the danger of an at- 
 tack on Ticonderoga, for that season, was passed, these troops 
 marched south and joined the retreating army of Washington. 
 
 On the twenty-seventh of August, 1776, occurred the disas- 
 trous battle on Long Island, in which five hundred Americans 
 were killed and wounded, and eleven hundred made prisoners 
 A portion of the New Hampshire troops were in this engage- 
 ment, under General Sullivan, who was himself captured by the 
 enemy. Washington found it necessary to abandon New York
 
 174 HISTORY OF 
 
 and all the strongholds in the vicinity. He retreated with the 
 mere skeleton of an army, less than three thousand men, giving 
 up successively to the pursuing foe Newark, New Brunswick, 
 Princeton and Trenton, till after three weeks of intense suffer- 
 ing, on the seventh of December, he reached the Delaware. 
 The next day, the remnant of the American army, pinched with 
 cold and hunger, crossed that river in boats and sat down in 
 despair on the soil of Pennsylvania. After a few days of rest, 
 Washington resolved to recross the Delaware and attack the 
 Hessians at Trenton, while they were keeping Christmas and 
 given up to feasting and drunkenness. The plan succeeded, and 
 the most important victory of the war was achieved. It gave new 
 life to the exhausted soldiers and the despairing country. Gen- 
 eral Sullivan and Colonel Stark, with the New Hampshire troops, 
 contributed largely to this happy result. The term for which 
 the New Hampshire men enlisted had expired ; and through the 
 influence of Stark they enlisted for another period of six weeks, 
 that they might once more meet the British veterans in the field. 
 Colonel Stark led Sullivan's advance guard ; and we can hardly 
 doubt that the brave conduct of his men, on that memorable 
 day, secured the victory. The same troops were also engaged 
 in the battle of Princeton. These were the " times that tried 
 men's souls." Stark's men served during the six weeks of their 
 new enlistment ; and two regiments of militia which had been 
 sent by New Hampshire to reinforce the army of Washington 
 remained till the following: March. 
 
 CHAPTER XLIX. 
 
 SECESSION IN NEW HAMPSHIRE DURING THE LAST CENTURY. 
 
 Vermont adopted an independent government in 1777. Prior 
 to 1749 no towns had been chartered in her territory by either of 
 the states claiming jurisdiction over it. Benning Wentworth was 
 then governor of New Hampshire and had been authorized, by 
 a royal commission, to make grants of townships in Vermont. 
 He first chartered Bennington, which he named for himself. He 
 then wrote to the governor of New York to ascertain if his 
 grants would interfere with any previous titles granted by that 
 state. In April, 1750, Governor George Clinton wrote as follows : 
 " This province [New York] is bounded eastward by Connecticut
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 175 
 
 river ; the letters patent from King Charles II. and the Duke of 
 York expressly granting " all lands from the west side of the Con- 
 necticut river to the east side of Delaware bay." Other letters 
 passed between the two governors ; but Wentworth refused to 
 listen to arguments adverse to the claims of New Hampshire 
 and proceeded to grant other towns in the disputed territory, to 
 the number of one hundred and thirty-eight. Fourteen thou- 
 sand acres had been assigned to the king's officers in reward for 
 faithful services. In 1764, in consequence of an appeal made to 
 the king by the two provinces, his majesty decided in favor of 
 New York. For a time the government of New Hampshire 
 ceased in Vermont. New York would consent to no compro- 
 mise. She regarded all grants made by Governor Wentworth as 
 null and void. She enacted laws hostile to the claims of the set- 
 tlers, who were at once roused to opposition. Hence arose a 
 controversy which resulted in the independence of Vermont. 
 As early as 1776 a convention of delegates from the New Hamp- 
 shire Grants, having met at Dorset, showed by their votes their 
 determination to be a separate state. In 1777 a constitution was 
 formed, and the delegates assembled at Windsor and, for the 
 first time, enacted laws for their government. They assumed 
 the name of the " State of Vermont." Sixteen towns on the 
 east side of the Connecticut river petitioned, to be admitted to 
 the new state. They alleged that the original grant to John 
 Mason did not include their territory, and, inasmuch as their ex- 
 istence depended on a royal commission which was now annulled 
 by the Revolution, they were free to choose their own rulers. 
 Their petition was referred to the freemen of Vermont (who met 
 at Bennington, June 11, 1778). They decided (thirty-seven 
 towns, out of forty-nine represented, voting for the resolution) 
 that these sixteen towns and any others that might choose to 
 unite with them should have leave to do so. 
 
 These towns were Cornish, Lebanon, Dresden (a name then 
 given to a district belonging to Dartmouth College), Lyme, Or- 
 ford, Piermont, Haverhill, Bath, Lyman, Apthorp (now divided 
 between Littleton and Dalton), Enfield, Canaan, Cardigan (now 
 Orange), Gunthwaite (now Lisbon), Morristown (now Franconia), 
 and Landaff. Opposition to this union soon arose in the towns 
 and in the state of New Hampshire. Meschech Weare, then 
 president of the province, remonstrated with the officers of the 
 new state of Vermont, against this dismemberment of New 
 Hampshire. Only ten of the towns sent representatives to the 
 next session of the Vermont legislature. 
 
 The terms of admission of these New Hampshire towns also 
 led to a controversy in the legislature of Vermont, and a minor- 
 ity withdrew from that body, after protesting against the action
 
 \l 
 
 176 HISTORY OF 
 
 of the majority in refusing to receive the sixteen towns on equal 
 terms with themselves. 
 
 The dissenting members called a convention of all the towns 
 in New Hampshire and Vermont who favored the union, to meet 
 a-t Cornish, N. H., in December, 1778. The records of this con- 
 vention have not been preserved. They made four propositions 
 by which the controversy might be settled : i, by committees 
 from the towns of the two states ; 2, by arbitrators selected from 
 other states ; 3, by reference of the whole matter to congress for 
 their adjudication ; 4, by the formation of a new state from the 
 towns on both sides of the river. The legislature of Vermont, 
 in February, 1779, took measures to dissolve this troublesome 
 union, and sent a committee to the legislature of New Hamp- 
 shire in session at Exeter, in April, 1779, to inform them of this 
 result A committee from the Cornish convention had preceded 
 Mr. Allen, the representative of Vermont. 
 
 The legislature of New Hampshire was not disposed to yield 
 one iota of its jurisdiction on either side of the river ; but re- 
 solved to acquiesce in the decision of congress respecting the 
 independency of the towns on the west side of the Connecticut. 
 Vermont was now troubled on every side. New Hampshire 
 claimed her entire territory ; New York also claimed it ; Massa- 
 chusetts claimed a portion of it, and congress was adverse to her 
 independence. Congress, however, sent a committee to inquire 
 into the condition of the New Hampshire Grants. They went, 
 returned and reported ; but no record is made of their report. 
 Finally the contest became alarming ; the peace of the country 
 was endangered by these adverse claims. Congress again con- 
 sidered the subject and advised the various parties to submit all 
 their disputes to the decision of congress. They did not seem 
 to suppose that the freemen who tilled the soil of Vermont and 
 bore the burdens of its defence had any rights which they were 
 bound to regard. The resolutions related chiefly to those states 
 that claimed the territory. Meantime the settlers were advised 
 to be quiet. But they had declared their independence and were 
 determined to maintain it. In December, 1779, Governor Chit- 
 tenden and council sent a spirited memorial to congress, vindi- 
 cating their claims to a separate political existence and profes- 
 sing their purpose to defend them. They also declared their 
 willingness to bear their full share of the burdens of the national 
 war against Great Britian. Congress several times attempted 
 to hear and decide the question in dispute, but never acknowl- 
 edged the existence of Vermont as a state, nor allowed her del- 
 egates to be heard by them, except as private citizens. After 
 about one year's consideration of the matter they finally post 
 poned it. But the people whose interests were involved, in New
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 177 
 
 Hampshire and Vermont, refused to allow the matter thus to 
 rest. The settlers in the southeastern part of Vermont prefer- 
 red the jurisdiction of New York. As congress had left their 
 case undecided, they moved to form a new state out of the towns 
 on both sides of the Connecticut. As no unity of views existed 
 in the disaffected towns, a convention of delegates from both 
 sides of the river was called to meet at Walpole, November 15, 
 1780, to compare opinions. 
 
 Committees from both sides of the river conferred together, 
 and reported that a union of all the towns granted by New 
 Hampshire was desirable and necessary, and they recommended 
 the calling of a convention, in which every town interested should 
 be represented, to meet at Charlestown, N. H., on the third Tues- 
 day of January, 1781. Three parties were now in the field : Ver- 
 mont, her recreant sons who preferred some other jurisdic- 
 tion to that of the state, and the citizens of New Hampshire 
 living in the towns upon the river. They were all intensely ex- 
 cited, and eager for victory. The delegates from the disturbed 
 towns met at Charlestown according to notice. Forty-three 
 towns were represented from the two states. No journal of the 
 convention exists. The result of their deliberations was favora- 
 ble to the government of Vermont. Twelve delegates from New 
 Hampshire protested and withdrew. A committee was appointed 
 to confer with the legislature of Vermont which was to meet at 
 Windsor during the next month, and the convention adjourned 
 to meet at Cornish while the legislature of Vermont should be 
 in session. 
 
 A petition came to the legislature of Vermont, at the same 
 session, from the settlers west of the Green Mountains, desiring 
 union with Vermont and protection from that state. Both peti- 
 tions received a favorable response. They voted to receive all 
 towns east of the Connecticut to the distance of about twenty 
 miles, if two thirds of said towns approved the union. The leg- 
 islature then adjourned till the following April. At their ad- 
 journed meeting the following towns in New Hampshire sent in 
 their allegiance, to wit : Hinsdale, Walpole, Surry, Gilsum, Al- 
 stead, Charlestown, Acworth, Lempster, Saville, Claremont, New- 
 port, Cornish, Croydon, Plainfield, Grantham, Marlow, Lebanon, 
 Grafton, Dresden, Hanover, Cardigan, Lyme, Dorchester, Ha- 
 verhill, Landaff, Gunthwaite, Lancaster, Piermont, Richmond, 
 Chesterfield, Westmoreland, Bath, Lyman, Morristown and 
 Lincoln. 
 
 Thirty-six towns in Vermont approved of the union, eight voted 
 against it, and six made no returns. Thus the union was con- 
 summated. Twenty-eight towns in New Hampshire sent rep- 
 resentatives to the legislature of Vermont, then sitting at Wind- 
 
 12
 
 178 HISTORY OF 
 
 sor. Provision was then made for the union of these towns with 
 the counties opposite to them in Vermont, except the southern 
 tier of towns, which were made into a new county to be called 
 Washington. Provision was also made for the trial of suits 
 already commenced in the New Hampshire courts, and for pro- 
 bate jurisdiction for the newly united towns. They then adjourn- 
 ed to meet at Bennington in the following June. At this session 
 eleven towns from the western portion of Vermont were admit- 
 ted to the union against the wishes of many of the towns in New 
 Hampshire. The next legislature of this new state met at 
 Charlestown in October, 1781. Mr. Hiland Hall, in his History 
 of Vermont, reports as present at Charlestown one hundred and 
 thirty-seven members, representing one hundred and two towns 
 in Vermont and New Hampshire. Of these, sixty represented 
 forty-five towns in New Hampshire. Two councilors and the 
 lieutenant-governor were from the same side of the river. Other 
 authorities affirm that fifteen towns east of the river sent no del- 
 egates ; eighteen were certainly represented. The most distin- 
 guished citizens of those towns were elected. Charlestown ex- 
 erted an important influence in favor of union with Vermont. 
 The town was not originally chartered by New Hampshire. 
 Massachusetts had been the protector of this and other frontier 
 towns on the Connecticut. New Hampshire had neglected them. 
 They therefore sought to live under another government. These 
 citizens acted from high and pure motives, as they viewed their 
 relations to surrounding states. They honestly believed that 
 New Hampshire had no claim to their allegiance, and that they 
 were free to choose their own rulers. So they acted ; not from 
 mere selfish motives, as some have affirmed, to secure power and 
 bring the capitol to their side of the river, but to establish a firm 
 and stable government for the people on both sides. 
 
 In August, 1781, congress again resumed the consideration 
 of affairs in Vermont. They began to hold out inducements of 
 her ultimate reception into the Federal Union ; but they dis- 
 suaded the citizens of that state from annexing towns in New 
 Hampshire or New York to their original territory. They ap- 
 pointed a committee to confer with a committee from Vermont 
 respecting the admission of the state into the Union. Agents 
 had been already appointed at Charlestown, to present the peti- 
 tion of the new state, with all its accessions, to congress for ad- 
 mission. At first the congressional committee declined to meet 
 them, because they represented the enlarged territory. The 
 matter was referred to congress and the conference was granted. 
 The result of the conference was the reaffirming of the first pro- 
 position of congress to receive Vermont as an equal member of 
 the confederacy, whenever she should relinquish her claim to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 179 
 
 towns in New Hampshire and New York. Of course Vermont 
 was, by this resolution, required to retrace her steps and aban- 
 don her allies. At that time she was not prepared to yield so 
 much to congress to secure her independence. When the legis- 
 lature of Vermont met at Charlestown, Oct. n, 1781, as above 
 recorded, Thomas Chittenden had been reflected governor ; but 
 of lieutenant-governor there was no choice. The house elected 
 Elisha Paine of Lebanon, formerly of Cardigan. Bezaleel 
 Woodward of Dresden was one of the councilors. Thus the 
 officers were selected, in part, from New Hampshire towns. 
 
 When the commissioners returned from Washington the legis- 
 lature of Vermont convened, Oct. 16, 1781, to consider the 
 terms proposed by congress in committee of the whole. They 
 resolved not to recede from their previous plan of union, and 
 positively refused to abandon their new allies. They also ap- 
 pointed nine commissioners to meet an equal number from 
 each of the states of New Hampshire and New York for the 
 mutual adjustment of their jurisdictional claims. 
 
 While the session of the Vermont legislature lasted at Charles- 
 town, there was much fear that New Hampshire might attempt 
 their dispersion. There was a state of feverish excitement in 
 both states. During that session a regiment of New Hamp- 
 shire troops arrived in Charlestown, as was supposed, to over- 
 awe the legislators. Colonel Reynolds, who was in command, 
 was advised that his force was too small for conquest ; too large, 
 if it was only sent to intimidate the legislature. He gave no ac- 
 count of his plans or those of his superior officers. No attempt 
 was made by him to disturb the session of the legislature. On 
 receiving the news of the capture of Cornwallis at Yorktown, 
 the legislature adjourned to meet at Bennington, Jan. 31, 1782. 
 Meantime party spirit was very violent, and a civil war was im- 
 minent. Courts and judicial officers were duplicated in all coun- 
 ties that contained towns originally belonging to New Hamp- 
 shire. The new county of Washington, which was formerly a 
 part of Cheshire, had courts in the same place, though not at 
 the same time, under the jurisdiction of two states. The sheriff 
 appointed by Vermont was Nathaniel S. Prentiss. The sheriff 
 from New Hampshire was Colonel Enoch Hale. Both were 
 men of mark and had held high offices in the previous history 
 of the country. The war for a while centered in these two men. 
 Sheriff Prentiss, in attempting to serve a writ in Chesterfield, 
 Nov. 14, 1781, was interrupted and driven from his purpose by 
 two men who protected the defendant against whom the writ 
 was issued. Prentiss procured a warrant for these disturbers of 
 his peace,- arrested them, and confined them in the jail at 
 Charlestown. These citizens appealed to the assembly of New
 
 180 HISTORY OF 
 
 Hampshire, and the assembly, on the twenty-eighth of November, 
 1781, empowered Colonel Hale to release the prisoners. They 
 also authorized the arrest of all persons attempting to exercise 
 judicial authority in towns east of the Connecticut river. Col- 
 onel Hale proceeded to Charlestown to execute the decrees of 
 the New Hampshire legislature, but Sheriff Prentiss, being a 
 bold man, and not having tl] fear of the New Hampshire legis- 
 lators before his eyes, proceeded to arrest and imprison Colonel 
 Hale ! Armed, as he supposed, with plenary power to call for a 
 posse, he made a requisition on General Bellows of Walpole to 
 call out the militia for his liberation. This requisition being ap- 
 proved by the committee of safety in New Hampshire, they or- 
 dered General Bellows, in concert with General Nichols of Am- 
 herst, to march, with the troops under their command, to Char- 
 lestown and release Colonel Hale. They also ordered Francis 
 Blood of Temple to furnish provisions for the troops. Governor 
 Chittenden immediately ordered Lieutenant-Governor Elisha 
 Paine of Lebanon to call out all the militia of Vermont east of 
 the Green Mountains, if necessary, to prevent the liberation of 
 Colonel Hale. He also sent a committee to Exeter to secure, 
 if possible, a peaceful settlement of the quarrel. Mr. Prentiss 
 was "one of this delegation. The New Hampshire committee of 
 safety, on the seventh day of January, 1782, made the following 
 entry on their records : " Nathaniel S. Prentiss of Alstead, in 
 the county of Cheshire, was apprehended and brought before 
 the committee. Upon examination, it appearing that he had 
 acted within this state as an officer under the pretended and 
 usurped authority of the state of Vermont, so called, he was com- 
 mitted to gaol !" This act added new fuel to the fires of con- 
 tention, and they blazed with ten-fold fury. New Hampshire 
 also made a proclamation, ordering all the people of the revolt- 
 ed towns, within forty days, to present themselves before some 
 magistrate of New Hampshire and subscribe a declaration ac- 
 knowledging the jurisdiction of that state to extend to the Con- 
 necticut river. They also ordered the militia of all the counties 
 to hold themselves in readiness to march against the rebels ! 
 At this crisis congress again interposed. They prevailed on 
 General Washington, then in Philadelphia, to write a letter, 
 dated January i, 1782, to Governor Chittenden, advising a re- 
 linquishment of their late extensions of territory as an indis- 
 pensable preliminary to their admission into the union. He in- 
 timated that a failure to comply with this reasonable request 
 would cause the United States to regard them as enemies to be 
 coerced by military power ! The letter produced the desired 
 result. The statesmen of Vermont saw that their true interests 
 lay in union with the confederacy, and with their original tcrri-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 1 8 1 
 
 tory only. The assembly met at Bennington, according to pre- 
 vious notice, on the thirty-first of January, 1782. Taking ad- 
 vantage of the absence of the members from New Hampshire, 
 they proceeded to define the limits of Vermont by the western 
 bank of the Connecticut river, thus leaving the New Hampshire 
 towns that had acted with them to provide for their own welfare. 
 Thus was the inauspicious union severed, which only a few 
 months previous they had pronounced inviolate, and pledged 
 their sacred honor in its defence. When the members from New 
 Hampshire towns arrived they were not permitted to take their 
 seats in the assembly; they accordingly left their alienated 
 friends with expressions of great bitterness. This action of 
 the Vermont legislature virtually ended the controversy, though 
 the excitement still continued. The towns thus rejected very 
 soon quietly returned to their old allegiance ; and the State of 
 New Hampshire, acting with great lenity, received back her er- 
 ring children with joy, and, in subsequent years, appointed some 
 of the actors in this drama of secession to places of power and 
 honor. They could hardly fail to do so, for the leading men 
 in the revolt were among the most distinguished citizens of the 
 towns they represented. The town of Dresden, as the seat of 
 Dartmouth College was then called, was represented in the leg- 
 islature of Vermont that sat at Charlestown in October, 1781, 
 by Professor Bezaleel Woodward, brother-in-law of the presi- 
 dent of the college, and General Ebenezer Brewster, then, per- 
 haps, the most influential citizen of that little town. Hanover 
 proper was represented by Jonathan Wright and Jonathan 
 Freeman, who was afterwards trustee of the college and mem- 
 ber of congress. This rebellion ended so suddenly and subsid- 
 ed so rapidly that few men of this age know of its existence.* 
 
 * The author is indebted to Rev. H. H. Saunderson for many facts and dates in the above 
 chapter.
 
 182 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER L. 
 
 MILITARY OPERATIONS OF 1/77- BATTLE OF BENNINGTON. 
 
 Short enlistments and temporary recruits had been proved to 
 be very inconvenient in the previous service ; accordingly New 
 Hampshire raised three regiments for three years, or during the 
 war. The commanders were Joseph Cilley, Nathan Hale and 
 Alexander Scammell. The men were furnished with new French 
 arms and ordered to rendezvous at Ticonderoga, under the im- 
 mediate command of Brigadier-General Poor. He was younger 
 in the service than Colonel Stark, and this irregular promotion by 
 congress gave offence to Stark, and he retired from the army in 
 disgust. Ticonderoga was regarded as the Gibraltar of Amer- 
 ica. It was therefore made a special object of assault by the 
 British under Burgoyne, and was taken. On the retreat, Colo- 
 nel Hale's regiment was detailed to cover the rear of the in- 
 valids, and was thus left far behind the main army. An ad- 
 vanced party of the enemy attacked him at Hubbardton, in 
 Rutland county, Vt., seventeen miles southeast of Ticonderoga. 
 A severe skirmish ensued in which several officers and one hun- 
 dred men were taken prisoners. The remainder of the army 
 fell back to Saratoga. There was, on the way, a second engage- 
 ment, at Fort Anne, in which Captain Weare, son of the presi- 
 dent of the state, was mortally wounded. He soon after died 
 at Albany. 
 
 After the evacuation of Ticonderoga, the people of the New 
 Hampshire Grants implored aid of the committee of safety at 
 Exeter, to protect them from the advancing enemy. The legis- 
 lature being summoned, they divided the entire militia into two 
 brigades, giving command of the first to William Whipple ; of 
 the second to John Stark. They ordered one fourth of Stark's 
 brigade and one fourth of three regiments of Whipple's brigade 
 to march immediately under Stark, " to stop the progress of the 
 enemy on our western frontiers." The state could vote to raise 
 troops but could not pay them. The treasury was empty. In 
 this emergency, the patriotism of Mr. Langdon, speaker of the 
 house, became conspicuous. He offered to loan the country 
 three thousand dollars in coin and the avails of his plate and 
 some West India goods on hand, remarking that if the Ameri- 
 can cause should triumph, he should be repaid ; but in case of 
 defeat the property would be of no use to him. He also vol-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 183 
 
 unteered, with other distinguished citizens, to serve as privates 
 under General Stark. 
 
 Among the distinguished patriots of that crisis was Captain 
 Ebenezer Webster. The state authorized him to enlist soldiers 
 for the common defence. He, on learning the danger from the in- 
 vasion of Colonel Baum, enlisted a company of sixty men, chiefly 
 from the towns of Salisbury and Andover. His personal popu- 
 larity as an officer influenced many of these men, his neighbors 
 and friends, to join the army. They rendezvoused at Charles- 
 town, and thence marched to Bennington and joined the brigade 
 of Stark. Captain Webster and his company performed signal 
 service in the events that followed. 
 
 The appointment of Stark was received with enthusiasm 
 throughout the state. The people confided in him ; they knew 
 his dauntless courage and keen sagacity, and, with one voice, 
 bade him "God speed," and prophesied his success. Volun- 
 teers, in great numbers, flocked to his standard. All classes 
 were eager " to take the woods " for " a Hessian hunt." Their 
 confidence was not disappointed. Stark made his headquarters 
 at Charlestown. As his men arrived, he sent them to Manches- 
 ter, twenty miles north of Bennington, to join the forces of Ver- 
 mont under Colonel Warner. Here Stark joined him. Gen- 
 eral Schuyler, commander of the northern department, sent to 
 them General Lincoln to conduct the militia under their com- 
 mand to the west side of Hudson's river. Stark declined to 
 obey, alleging that he was in the service of New Hampshire, 
 and her interests required his presence at Bennington. He was 
 reported to congress and they passed a vote of censure upon 
 Stark, which in a few days they were obliged to change to a vote 
 of thanks. He knew his business and duty better than they. 
 Following out his own plan, Stark collected his forces at Ben- 
 nington, and left Warner with his regiment at Manchester. 
 Stark's object was to meet and resist Colonel Baum, who had 
 been sent from Fort Edward by Burgoyne to rob and plunder 
 the people of Vermont, and thus secure horses, clothes and pro- 
 visions for the British army. He had under him about fifteen 
 hundred men, Germans, tories and Indians. Stark sent Colonel 
 Gregg, with two hundred men, to stay the advance of the Ind- 
 ians who preceded the main army. Gregg retreated before the 
 red men ; but on the next day, the fourteenth of August, Stark 
 came to his relief, and a skirmish followed in which thirty of the 
 enemy were killed ; among them two chiefs. The Indians then 
 began to desert saying that " the woods were full of Yankees." 
 The next day a heavy storm of rain delayed the contest. On 
 the sixteenth of August reinforcements from Berkshire, led by 
 Colonel Symonds, and from Pittsfield, led by Rev. Thomas Al-
 
 184 HISTORY OF 
 
 len, joined the army of Stark which now amounted to sixteen 
 hundred men. Bryant, in his song entitled "Green Mountain 
 Boys," thus describes their condition before the battle : 
 
 " Here we halt our march and pitch our tent 
 
 On the rugged forest ground, 
 And light our fire with the branches rent 
 
 By winds from the beeches round. 
 Wild storms have torn this ancient wood, 
 
 But a wilder is at hand, 
 With hail of iron and rain of blood, 
 
 To sweep and waste the land." 
 
 The enemy selected a favorable position, and constructed 
 breastworks of logs and timber brought from the houses in the 
 vicinity, which they tore down for that purpose. They were 
 also defended by heavy artillery; and a reinforcement under 
 Colonel Breyman, with two heavier cannon, was approaching to 
 aid them. General Stark* assigned a position to every subaltern. 
 Colonels Hubbard and Stickney, with two hundred men, were 
 posted on the right to attack the tory breastwork. The flanking 
 parties, which took a circuitous route to reach their posts, were 
 supposed by the British to be deserting. General Stark took 
 his position with the reserve. The battle was opened at three 
 o'clock, P. M.J by Colonel Nichols on the left, and was immedi- 
 ately responded to by Colonel Herrick on the right. Colonel 
 Stickney's regiment from New Hampshire was divided ; a de- 
 tachment from it was ordered to the rear. Captain Webster's 
 station was in front of the log fort. After the signal for action 
 from General Stark, the assault was general. " It thundered all 
 round the heavens." The Americans in front fought in the 
 woods. The shot from the fort flew too high, often cutting off 
 the limbs of trees which fell upon their heads. Otherwise, little 
 injury was done. Captain Webster, who, as General Stark after- 
 wards affirmed, was so begrimed with powder that he could 
 hardly be distinguished from an Indian, became impatient of 
 delay and shouted to his men : " Boys, we must get nearer to 
 them." They then rushed to the breastwork, which Captain 
 Webster was among the first to scale. Thus the fort was taken 
 after two hours of hard fighting. Two pieces of cannon and a 
 large number of prisoners were also captured. 
 
 Just at the moment of victory, it was announced that Brey- 
 man with his reinforcement was marching to the rescue. Hap- 
 pily, Warner's regiment came in at the same time. Stark rallied 
 his men and renewed the fight. They fought " till the going 
 clown of the sun," and completely routed the enemy, taking 
 from them two other pieces of artillery, all their baggage wagons 
 
 * There is a tradition that General Stark, just before entering the engagement, made one 
 of his eccentric speeches to his men. It was well known to most of his troops that he 
 called his wife "Molly." He made this laconic address: "There's the enemy, boys. We 
 must flog them, or Molly Stark sleeps a widow to-night."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 185 
 
 and horses. " The fruits of this victory," says the biographer of 
 Stark, " obtained by raw militia over European veterans, tories 
 and savages, were four pieces of brass artillery, eight brass-bar- 
 reled drums, eight loads of baggage, one thousand stand of 
 arms, many Hessian dragoon swords, and seven hundred and 
 fifty prisoners. Two hundred and seventy fell on the field of 
 battle. The loss of the Americans was about thirty, and forty 
 were wounded. But the most important result of this victory 
 was the restoration of confidence to the desponding armies of 
 America, while it gave a death-blow to the hopes of the in- 
 vader." The traditional speech of General Stark has been em- 
 bodied in a patriotic ballad by Fitz-Greene Halleck. Here is a 
 stanza : 
 
 " When on that field, his band the Hessians fought, 
 
 Briefly he spoke before the fight began : 
 Soldiers, those German gentlemen were bought 
 
 For four pounds eight and seven pence, per man, 
 By England's king: a bargain, it is thought. 
 
 Are we worth more ? let's prove it, while we can ; 
 For we must beat them, boys, ere set of sun, 
 
 Or my wife sleeps a widow. It was done I" 
 
 The battle of Bennington may be called the decisive battle of 
 the Revolution ; for there can scarcely be a doubt that a con- 
 trary result would have exposed all New England to devasta- 
 tion ; and the boast of Colonel Baum, that he would march 
 through Vermont to Boston, might have been literally fulfilled. 
 But a kind Providence had otherwise ordered. " One more such 
 strike," said Washington, " and we shall have no great cause 
 for anxiety as to the future designs of Britain. The entire ex- 
 pense of the whole campaign was ,16,492, 123. iod., which, be- 
 ing paid in depreciated currency, yielded to the creditors less 
 than two thousand dollars. One dollar of hard money paid for 
 thirty-three in continental bills ! After this battle, Burgoyne 
 wrote to Lord George Germaine : " The Hampshire Grants, un- 
 peopled and almost unknown in the last war, now abound with 
 the most active and rebellious race on the continent, and hang 
 like a gathering storm upon my left." This indicates the whole- 
 some fear which Stark's soldiers had inspired in the commander- 
 in-chief of the invading army. On the eighteenth of Septem- 
 ber following this memorable victory, Stark and his volunteers 
 joined the main army under General Gates. They were ad- 
 dressed by him and requested to remain, but they replied that 
 "their time had expired, they had performed their part, and 
 must return to their farms, as their harvests now awaited them." 
 General Stark returned to New Hampshire to report progress. 
 He held no communication with congress, alleging as a reason, 
 that they had failed to reply to his former letters. " His return 
 was a triumphal march ; " he had conquered the public enemy
 
 1 86 HISTORY OF 
 
 and humbled his private foes. Congress not only joined in the 
 public gratitude, but, by a tardy act of justice, promoted him to 
 the rank of brigadier-general. 
 
 CHAPTER LI. 
 
 CAPTURE OF BURGOYNE. 
 
 Burgoyne, flushed with victory at Ticonderoga, and the retreat 
 of the American forces, advanced with sounding proclamations, 
 declaring that " Britons never retrograde." But his condition 
 grew more critical the farther he advanced. The northern army 
 was reinforced by the militia of all the neighboring states. 
 General Whipple marched to the field of danger with a large 
 part of his brigade. The fame of Stark drew around him nearly 
 three thousand volunteers. He led his soldiers to Fort Ed- 
 ward and conquered the garrison left there by the British com- 
 mander, then descended the Hudson and so stationed his troops 
 as to prevent the retreat of Burgoyne. The two armies first 
 met at Stillwater, on the Hudson, about twenty-five miles north 
 of Albany, on the nineteenth of September, 1777, where a bloody 
 battle was fought, in which Lieutenant-Colonels Adams of Dur- 
 ham and Colburn of New Marlborough and Lieutenant Thomas 
 were slain upon the field ; other brave officers were wounded ; 
 Captain Bell died in the hospital. 
 
 The second battle, which was decisive, occurred on the seventh 
 of October, at Saratoga. The New Hampshire troops deserve 
 a large share of the honor of this great victory. In this engage- 
 ment Lieutenant-Colonel Connor and Lieutenant McClary were 
 killed, with a great number of their men. Colonel Scammell 
 was also wounded. General Poor, on that eventful day, led 
 the attack on the left front of the British; General Morgan 
 assaulted their right. Both parties fought with desperation. In 
 less than one hour the enemy yielded ; the Americans pursued 
 them to their entrenchments. Arnold, then true to his country, 
 fought like a tiger and marked all his pathway with the blood 
 of the enemy. Night separated the combatants. The next day 
 revealed the helpless and hopeless condition of Burgoyne. He 
 was surrounded ; his supplies were cut off ; no aid from Clinton 
 could reach him. He summoned a council of war, and with one
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 187 
 
 accord they advised a surrender. The entire army, amounting 
 to five thousand seven hundred and ninety-one . men, became 
 prisoners of war. The entire loss cf the British army in their 
 march from Canada was ten thousand. Their arms were the 
 property of the victor, though they marched out of their camp 
 with the honors of war. They were sent to Boston with a pledge 
 that they would fight no more during the war. General Whipple 
 was one of the officers who led the escort. 
 
 After this victory, which diffused general joy throughout all 
 the land, the New Hampshire troops marched forty miles in 
 fourteen hours and forded the Mohawk near its mouth that they 
 might prevent Clinton from sending troops northward to sack 
 Albany. Hearing of the surrender of Burgoyne, Clinton retired 
 to New York, and the New Hampshire volunteers pushed on to 
 Pennsylvania, joined Washington's army and fought the enemy 
 with him at Germantown, where Major Sherburne, the aid-de- 
 camp of General Sullivan, fell. They passed that fearful winter 
 in huts at Valley Forge, where the sufferings of the American 
 army scarcely find a parallel in history. 
 
 With the fall of Burgoyne the danger from Canada ceased, 
 and the scene of war was removed to the south. The middle 
 states had yielded few victories and numerous defeats. New 
 Hampshire men everywhere bore their full share of perils and 
 sufferings. In the battle of Monmouth they fought with such 
 bravery under Colonel Cilley and Lieutenant-Colonel Dearborn, 
 as to receive special commendation from the commander-in-chief. 
 So intense was the heat on that summer day, June 28, that many 
 men in both armies died from exposure to it. Their tongues 
 were so parched with thirst that they swelled and protruded 
 from their mouths. The following winter they passed in huts at 
 Reading. A detachment of them was sent during the summer 
 of 1778 to Newport, R. I., to aid the French fleet in their at- 
 tack upon the British at that station. General Sullivan was in 
 command. Owing to the want of cooperation by the French, 
 the enterprise failed.
 
 788 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LIL 
 
 EMPLOYMENT OF MERCENARIES AND SAVAGES BY THE ENGLISH. 
 
 England attempted to reduce her disobedient children to sub- 
 jection by hired assassins and merciless savages. Her own sub- 
 jects must be forced into the service by the brutal press-gang ; 
 for many of them were decidedly opposed to the war. The pious 
 king, George III., though he confessed some scruples about be- 
 coming " a man-stealer," resolved to employ mercenaries. He 
 first applied to Russia, then to Holland, for recruits ; but both 
 these countries indignantly rejected the degrading proposal. He 
 next turned to the needy, greedy and vainglorious princes and 
 dukes of the petty states of Germany. They readily sold their 
 subjects to the rich sovereign, as an English nobleman would 
 sell the right of warren in his forests. The poor victims of 
 power were hunted down in the fields or shops or streets, where 
 they were pursuing their humble callings, and were sent into a 
 foreign service, without food or clothes suitable to their condi- 
 tion ; and were then crowded together in British ships of war, 
 to endure in transportation " the horrors of the middle passage." 
 They almost robbed the cradle and the grave to secure the re- 
 quired number. Twenty-nine thousand one. hundred and sixty- 
 six soldiers were thus furnished from six of the petty states of 
 Germany. Brunswick and Hesse-Cassel hunted and sold a large 
 majority of them. The total loss from these recruits was eleven 
 thousand eight hundred and fifty-three. Probably about the 
 same number of Indians were decoyed into the service of the 
 English. 
 
 Dr. Dwight, speaking of the perils of the first settlers of New 
 England, says : 
 
 " The greatest of all the evils which they suffered were derived from the 
 savages. These people, of whom Europeans still form very imperfect con- 
 ceptions, kept the colonists, after the first hostilities commenced, in almost 
 perpetual terror and alarm. The first annunciation of an Indian war is its 
 actual commencement. In the hour of security, silence and sleep, when 
 your enemies are supposed to be friends quietly employed in hunting and 
 fishing, when they are believed to be at the distance of several hundred 
 miles and perfectly thoughtless of you and yours ; when thus unsuspecting, 
 thus at ease, slumbering on your pillow, your sleep is broken up by the war- 
 whoop ; your house, your village, are set on fire ; your family and friends are 
 butchered and scalped ; yourself and a few other wretched survivors are 
 hurried into captivity to be roasted alive at the stake, or to have your body 
 stuck full of skewers and burnt by inches. You are a farmer and have gone
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 189 
 
 abroad to the customary business of the field ; there you are shot down 
 from behind a tree in the hour of perfect security, or you return at evening 
 and find your house burnt and your family vanished, or, perhaps, discover 
 their half-consumed bones mingled with the ashes of your dwelling, or your 
 wife murdered and your little ones lying beside her after having been dashed 
 against a tree." 
 
 When the Indians were stimulated by the French to murder 
 the defenceless inhabitants of the English colonies, their con- 
 duct received not only denunciation but execration. During the 
 Revolutionary war the English made use of the same allies, in 
 butchering and scalping their brethren. Chatham, with peerless 
 eloquence and pathos, denounced this inhuman custom and in- 
 voked the aid of the bishops to arrest it. During the year 1778, 
 the Wyoming, Mohawk, Schoharie and Cherry Valleys were con- 
 verted into theatres of bloodshed and violence by the union of 
 tories and Indians. On the second day of July, 1778, eleven 
 hundred of these white and red savages entered the lovely val- 
 ley of Wyoming, when the strong men were engaged in the 
 army, conquered the feeble force sent to resist them, burned the 
 houses, desolated the land, murdered the women and children 
 except a remnant that escaped to the neighboring mountains to 
 die of hunger. Travelers and historians agree in describing this 
 infant colony as one of the happiest spots of human existence, 
 for the hospitable and innocent manners of the inhabitants, the 
 beauty of the country and the luxuriant fertility of the soil. In 
 an evil hour the junction of European with Indian arms 
 converted this terrestrial paradise into a hideous desolation. 
 Campbell, the poet, in his beautiful poem entitled, " Gertrude 
 of Wyoming," has "married to immortal verse" the beauty, 
 glory and desolation of this once " Happy Valley." The open- 
 ing lines read thus : 
 
 " On Susquehanna's side, fair Wyoming! 
 
 Although the \vild flowers on thy ruined wall 
 And roofless homes a sad remembrance bring 
 
 Of what thy gentle people did befall, 
 
 Yet thou weft once the loveliest land of all 
 That see the Atlantic wave their morn restore. 
 
 Sweet land ! may I thy lost delights recall, 
 And paint thy Gertrude in her bowers of yore, 
 Whose beauty was the love of Pennsylvania's shore." 
 
 The massacre of the innocent inhabitants of this valley ex- 
 cited both the indignation and compassion of Congress. They 
 resolved to chastise the savages who "wrought this deed of 
 blood." General Sullivan was appointed to that service. He 
 led an army up the Susquehanna into the country of the Senecas. 
 It was an unexplored and pathless region. The general had to 
 contend with nature as savage and wild as the men whom he 
 pursued. His sagacity led and his prudence supplied the army. 
 Their rations were scanty, but their courage was manly. They
 
 jgo HISTORY OF 
 
 suffered patiently and triumphed gloriously. They met the 
 enemy, composed of lories and Indians, upon the Susquehanna, 
 and drove them into the forest. The victorious troops then 
 marched into western New York and destroyed the deserted Ind- 
 ian towns which had already begun to wear the aspect of civilized 
 life. The Indians suffered according to the old Jewish law, "an 
 eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." It seems a hard case, 
 as we view it, that these infant settlements of the red men should 
 be annihilated ; but in that day there was no safety to the whites, 
 but in the literal application of the maxim of that stern cove- 
 nanter, John Knox : "Tear down the nests and the rooks will 
 fly away." Having chastised the heathen, Sullivan returned to 
 Easton, in Pennsylvania, having lost forty men ; and among them 
 Captain Cloyes and Lieutenant McAulay of New Hampshire. 
 Major Titcomb, another brave officer, was badly wounded. These 
 victorious troops joined the main army in Connecticut, and 
 passed the third winter of their service in huts at Newtown. 
 In the year following, 1780, the New Hampshire troops served 
 at West-Point; and afterwards in New Jersey, where General 
 Poor died. Three regiments belonged to the regular army this 
 year. They passed the next winter in huts at a place called 
 Soldier's Fortune, near Hudson river. The three regiments 
 were at the close of the year reduced to two, and commanded by 
 Generals Scammell and Reed. 
 
 CLOSE OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. 
 
 During all the long years of privation, suffering and bloodshed 
 of the American war for liberty, New Hampshire furnished her 
 full share of men and means for the conflict. The courage of 
 her citizens never wavered ; their hope of victory never abated. 
 They were poor and in distress ; yet, "out of their deep poverty" 
 they contributed to the wants of their common country ; and from 
 their already bereaved hearts sent out the only and well beloved 
 sons to fight her battles. The soldiers from New Hampshire 
 were familiar with every battlefield, from Canada to Yorktown. 
 They shared the woe of every defeat and the joy of every vic- 
 tor}'. They were present at the last great battle when Cornwallis 
 surrendered and in which the heroic Scammell laid down his life 
 for his country. They remained in the army till " the last armed 
 foe expired " or left the country. They waited at their post of 
 duty till the obstinate George III. from his throne declared "his 
 revolted subjects" "free and independent states." Every yoke 
 was broken, and New Hampshire was a sovereign state with her 
 sister republics. 
 
 A report made in congress in 1790, bv General Knox, gives the proportion of soldiers to 
 population furnished by each of the colonies in the Revolution as follows: Massachusetts
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 19 1 
 
 (including Maine), one in seven of her population; Connecticut, one in seven; New Hamp- 
 shire, one in eleven ; Rhode Island, one in eleven ; New Jersey; one in sixteen ; Pennsyl- 
 vania, one in sixteen ; New York, one in nineteen ; Maryland, one in twenty-two ; Delaware, 
 one in twenty-four; Virginia, one in twenty-eight ; Georgia, one in thirty-two ; South Caro- 
 lina, one in thirty-eight; North Carolina, one in fifty-four. Connecticut had less population 
 at the period of the Revolution than either Virginia, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, 
 North Carolina or South Carolina ; nevertheless she furnished more troops for the war than 
 any one of these great states. 
 
 CHAPTER LIII. 
 
 CONGREGATIONALISM IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 The first ministers of New Hampshire were settled by major 
 vote of the town in which they officiated. This mode of settle- 
 ment continued till 1818, when the rights of other denomina- 
 tions were acknowledged, and church and state, or rather town 
 and state, were separated. The Congregational denomination 
 was called " the standing order," till the other denominations 
 gained a legal position in the state. The number of Congrega- 
 tional and Presbyterian churches now in the state is one hun- 
 dred ninety-four ; only six of these are Presbyterian. Sixty-nine 
 towns have no clergyman belonging to either of these two de- 
 nominations. The Methodists and Baptists are annually gain- 
 ing upon the Congregationalists, and probably will soon equal 
 them in the number of churches though they will scarcely equal 
 them in membership during the present century. The Metho- 
 dists now have one hundred twenty-three churches ; the PYee- 
 will Baptists one hundred twenty-one. The original Baptists 
 number thirty-five. Of the other ten sects that are established in 
 the state, the number ranges from one to twenty-two churches. 
 The early ministers of the Congregational order were men of 
 mark in their respective towns, thoroughly educated and well 
 grounded in the doctrines of the so-called orthodox theology. 
 The first convention of Congregational ministers was held at 
 Exeter, July 20, 1747. Their object was to promote harmony, 
 peace and good order among the churches ; and to secure unity 
 of belief and efficiency of action among the ministers of the 
 province. Seventeen clergymen obeyed the summons, which was 
 issued by a private conference of a few leading men. At their 
 first meeting they deemed it inexpedient to make any declara- 
 tion of faith with respect to points of doctrine. They reached, 
 in part, that result negatively, by enumerating the prevailing the- 
 ological errors of the day. They resolved, First, "That we will,
 
 l<)2 HISTORY OF 
 
 to the best of our ability, both in our public ministrations and 
 private conversations, maintain and promote the great and im- 
 portant doctrines of the Gospel, according to the form of sound 
 words delivered to us by Christ and his apostles ;" Second, "That 
 we will take particular notice of several doctrinal errors which 
 have more remarkably discovered themselves of late in several 
 places, among some persons who would seem zealous of reli- 
 gion : ist, That saving faith is nothing but a persuasion that 
 Christ died for me, in particular ; 2d, That morality is not of 
 the essence of Christianity ; 3d, That God sees no sin in his 
 children ; 4th, That believers are justified from eternity ; 5th, 
 That no unconverted person can understand the meaning of the 
 Scriptures ; 6th, That sanctification is no evidence of justifica- 
 tion ; and that we will be very frequent in opposing these errors 
 and in inculcating those truths with which they militate." They 
 also agree to discourage uneducated men from entering the min- 
 istry, and to oppose all unwarrantable intrusion by persons who 
 are not legally authorized to exercise the functions of a minis- 
 ter. They also advise frequent visits and interchange of views 
 among pastors, and to withhold recommendations from all can- 
 didates who are not licensed by some association. They ap- 
 pointed a committee to confer with the church in Durham re- 
 specting some reported disorder among its members. At an 
 adjourned meeting the committee reported that a portion of the 
 church had separated from the original organization and were 
 holding meetings at which very disorderly, vile and absurd 
 things were practised, such as " profane singing and dancing, 
 damning the devil, spitting in the faces of persons whom they 
 apprehended not to be of their society, and other similar acts to 
 the dishonor of God and scandal of religion." They were un- 
 able then to gain a hearing from the separatists. 
 
 In 1750, they opened a correspondence with English Congre- 
 gationalists. They are called by them "Brethren of the Dis- 
 senting Interest in England." An interesting correspondence 
 followed, revealing a strong sympathy between the English Dis- 
 senters and the New Hampshire Congregationalists. 
 
 At their annual meeting at Hampton, September 25, 1754, 
 they discussed the proper subjects to be enforced in their re- 
 spective pulpits. They agreed to preach once a quarter upon 
 the following subjects : ist, Carelessness in religion ; 2d, Fam- 
 ily religion and government ; 3d, Sabbath-breaking ; 4th, Intem- 
 perance ; and on the day of the annual Fast to inculcate as 
 many of these important subjects as possible. 
 
 At the annual meeting at Somersworth, September 26, 1758, 
 they petitioned Governor Benning Wentworth to grant a charter 
 for a college, setting forth at large the necessity and utility of
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 193 
 
 such an institution, and expressing the belief that a fund could 
 be raised in the state for the support of the necessary officers. 
 They concluded their memorial by saying : " We are pursuadcd 
 that if your Excellency will, first of all, favor us with such a 
 charter, we shall be able soon to make use of it for the public 
 benefit ; and that your Excellency's name will forever be re- 
 membered with honor." By neglecting to grant this reasonable 
 request, the governor lost his only chance of honorable remem- 
 brance by posterity. At this same meeting, it was voted that 
 the convention should, for the future, be held annually at Ports- 
 mouth, and should be known by the name of the " Convention 
 of Ministers at Portsmouth." The number in attendance was 
 usually about twenty. 
 
 In September, 1761, the convention, by their committee, con- 
 gratulated George III. on his accession to the English throne. 
 The address is remarkable for its loyalty, beginning thus : " We, 
 your Majesty's most dutiful and loyal subjects, ministers of the 
 Congregational churches in and about Portsmouth, the principal 
 town of your Majesty's Province of New Hampshire, beg leave, 
 from these remote parts of your dominions, upon the first op- 
 portunity of our convening, to present before the throne this 
 humble testimony of our loyal duty and affection to your Maj- 
 esty, whose accession to the British crown gives the highest joy 
 and satisfaction to all his subjects." The whole address is most 
 laudatory of his Majesty's character and conduct, and full of 
 warm congratulations on the late success of the British arms. 
 Ten years later, the same body would have been as eloquent in 
 complaints, and as eager to be released from his Majesty's sway 
 as they were at first to welcome it. It is a little singular that 
 such bold and manly advocates of the moral virtues should 
 have indulged in such extravagant compliments to their new 
 sovereign. However, it was the fault of the times. The elder 
 Pitt himself used more fulsome flattery to George III. than his 
 warmest friends were wont to employ ; and was constantly cast- 
 ing himself, metaphorically, at the feet of his king. 
 
 But we have changed all that. Our age has lost its reverence 
 for official station. At a meeting in July, 1762, a testimonial to 
 the excellent character and remarkable labors of the Rev. Eleazar 
 Wheelock, in founding and supporting Moor's Charity School, 
 in Lebanon, Conn., signed by twenty-five clergymen of that 
 state, was laid before the convention. They say : " We esteem 
 his plan (of educating Indians) to be good ; his measures pru- 
 dently and well concerted ; his endowments peculiar, his zeal 
 fervent, his endeavors indefatigable for the accomplishment of 
 this design, and we know no man like-minded who will naturally
 
 194 HISTORY OF 
 
 care for their state. May God prolong his life and make him 
 extensively useful in the kingdom of Christ." 
 
 They also give unequivocal testimony to the fidelity, honesty 
 and economy of the Rev. Eleazar Wheelock in managing the 
 funds committed to his care for the education of the Indians. 
 The New Hampshire convention cordially approved of his work, 
 and recommended it to the good will of churches under their 
 care. They did not, however, attempt to dictate to the public 
 how they should dispose of their contributions for education. 
 They mention " the corporation erected in the Province of Mas- 
 sachusetts Bay" (meaning Harvard College), as claiming their 
 benefactions as fully as the school in Connecticut, designed to 
 educate the aborigines. In September, 1770, the convention 
 sent a memorial to the general assembly, asking aid for mis- 
 sionary labor among the new settlements of the province. They 
 say, in closing their memorial : " It appears to your memorial- 
 ists that, in many respects, it will be of great advantage to his 
 Majesty's government, as well as for the benefit of particular 
 properties, and the encouragement of the settlers in the new 
 townships, that some provision be speedily made, whereby the 
 knowledge of Christianity and a sense of their duty to God, 
 their King and Author, may be preserved among those scattered 
 inhabitants of the wilderness." John Wentworth was then gov- 
 ernor of the province. The very presentation of such a memo- 
 rial, with the expectation of aid for itinerant missionaries in the 
 new settlements, reveals the paternal regard which the General 
 Assembly was supposed tojentertain for the religious welfare of 
 the people. Such a communication addressed to the legislature 
 at this day would be regarded as entirely irrelevant and possi- 
 bly hostile to their duties as law-makers. It would at once raise 
 the cry of union of church and state. 
 
 In September, 1772, the convention voted to have a collection 
 among themselves, for pious and charitable uses, at their annual 
 meetings. The first collection yielded two pounds seven shil- 
 lings and six pence, lawful money. This money, with such other 
 contributions as might be made during the year, was appropriated 
 to the education of Mr. Ewer's son, if he should be found by 
 their committee, Doctors Langdon, Haven and Stevens, to be 
 worthy of their charity. Before the adjournment, nine shillings 
 and seven pence more were added to the first collection. In the 
 year 1774, Rev. Samuel Langdon, of Portsmouth, was appointed 
 president of Harvard College. An address of congratulation 
 was prepared by a committee, and presented to the reverend 
 Doctor; also filed among their records. They say in that ad- 
 dress, " From the long and intimate connection that has sub- 
 sisted between us, we think we have reason to expect that your
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 195 
 
 appointment to this honorable station will be an extensive bles- 
 sing to the country. The prospect of this is sufficient to over- 
 balance that regret which we feel at your removal from our 
 neighborhood." A very devout and grateful response was made 
 by Doctor Langdon, and the record of these transactions is sign- 
 ed by the venerable Jeremy Belknap, as clerk. These facts show 
 us that, at that early day, in the little province of New Hamp- 
 shire there were learned and illustrious ministers of the gospel. 
 
 In 1785 we find the following record: "Whereas the civil 
 government appear, at present, disposed to introduce the an- 
 nual public election by a public religious service, we think it our 
 duty to countenance that laudable disposition of our civil 
 fathers, * * * therefore, voted unanimously, that we will, by 
 the leave of Providence, endeavor to meet together on the day 
 of the next election wherever said election may be, and so on 
 from year to year, and that our brethren of every denomination 
 be invited, by public advertisement, to meet with us on said 
 day." This seems to have given their sanction to the annual 
 election sermons, which were delivered by the most distin- 
 guished clergymen of the state, and frequently published, for 
 many years before and after this date. 
 
 This abstract of record shows how the clergy of New Hamp- 
 shire were employed during the last century. It reveals their 
 creed, conduct and character. It shows, ist, That they were 
 decided champions of dogmatic theology, and the uncompro- 
 mising opponents of heresy ; 2d, That they were the devoted 
 friends of education ; 3d, That they preached morality as an 
 essential element of true religion ; 4th, That they appropriated 
 four Sabbaths, besides the annual Fast day, to national sins ; 
 5th, That they were, in that day, advisers and counselors of the 
 legislature, as well as petitioners for righteous laws ; 6th, That 
 they encouraged the home missionary enterprise, in behalf of 
 the new settlements in the state ; yth, That they, by word and 
 deed, were the leading men of the community, in every measure 
 that appertained to the highest welfare of the people ; 8th, 
 That they were almost the only literary men of that period ; and 
 that some of them, like Jeremy Belknap and President Langdon, 
 were authors of high repute. 
 
 Hon. Joseph B. Walker, of Concord, describing the ministry 
 in New Hampshire a hundred years ago, says : 
 
 " The old New Hampshire minister was almost invariably a well educated 
 man. The expression, common in the old town charters, ' a learned ortho- 
 dox minister ' was by no means a conventional one merely. It appears, 
 upon examination, that of the fifty-two settled ministers in the province in 
 1764, no less than forty-eight were graduates of colleges; while, in the county 
 of Rockingham, thirty-one of the thirty-two, and perhaps all, had received a 
 liberal education one at the University of Scotland, one at Yale, and 
 twcntv-nine at Harvard."
 
 196 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LIV. 
 
 RISE OF SEPARATE DENOMINATIONS. 
 
 As late as 1750, there were only thirty churches of the stand- 
 ing order. Other denominations were then but little known. 
 This fact reveals the slow progress of religion in the state. A 
 small society of Quakers was organized in 1701. The first Bap- 
 tist church was formed in 1755. Their gain, on an average, till 
 the year 1800, was about one new church annually. An Episco- 
 pal chapel was built in Portsmouth* as early as 1638. In May, 
 1640, a grant of fifty acres of land "for a glebe" was set apart 
 by the governor and inhabitants of Strawberry Bank, and deeded 
 " to Thomas Walford and Henry Sherburne, church wardens, 
 and their successors forever, as feoffees, in trust." A parsonage 
 and the chapel had been previously erected upon the glebe. The 
 prayer-books and communion service were sent over by Captain 
 Mason. The first company who settled at Portsmouth and 
 Dover were inclined to Episcopacy. Winthrop says : " Some of 
 them were the professed enemies to the way of our churches." 
 Prior to the beginning of this century, but few Episcopal churches 
 existed in this state. The Methodists were first known in New 
 Hampshire in 1792. They did not come to New England till 
 after the close of the Revolutionary war. 
 
 The Freewill Baptists originated in 1780. Elder Benjamin 
 Randall of New Durham is their reputed founder ; but there is 
 another claimant for this honor. John Shepard, Esq., of Gil- 
 manton, solemnly affirmed, near the close of his life, " that the 
 Freewill system was all opened to his mind by the Spirit of 
 God, months before any other person knew it; that he then 
 
 *" About sixty years ago, President Timothy Dwight, of Yale college, Connecticut, visited 
 Portsmouth, and states in his Book of Travels that the number of dwellings was six hundred 
 and twenty-six, although he thinks that Newmarket was united with it in the enumeration as 
 one district. He says almost all were built of wood. Their contiguity to each other in the 
 compact part of the town he thought very dangerous if fires should occur, as the conflagra- 
 tion might become extensive. But up to that time Portsmouth had not suffered much by fire. 
 We think not more than a dozen dwellings had been burned, so far as any record appears, 
 and a few other buildings. The jail had been burned, but we have not the date. 
 
 President Dwight died in 1817. Before his death he had occasion to learn what ruin fire 
 had caused in this town. That of 1813 was terrible. The light of it was seen twenty-five or 
 thirty miles back in the country. 
 
 Sixty years ago there were seven places of worship ; now there are ten. One society that 
 existed then, the Sandemanian, has become extinct. Another, the Independent, has also 
 ceased. The Universalist society was then in its infancy, and small. The Methodists had 
 not commenced a stated meeting then. Rev. Doctors Buckminster and Parker were in the 
 full tide of prosperity as pastors of the two Congregational churches. Rev. Hosea Ballou, 
 afterwards very prominent among the Universaiists, was preaching to the society of that 
 denomination in this place. 1 '
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 197 
 
 revealed it, in March, 1780, to Elder Edward Locke and Elder 
 Tozar Lord ; and with them spent a week locked up in the house 
 owned by Mr. Piper of Loudon, fasting and praying and seeking 
 the will of God." He also affirmed that they ordained one 
 another; and then went to New Durham and ordained Elder 
 Randall. From this humble origin, the number of the denom- 
 ination has been constantly increasing. It now has schools, 
 academies, theological seminaries and a college under its con- 
 trol in New England. 
 
 The first Universalist society in the state was established at 
 Portsmouth in 1781. The Christian denomination arose about 
 the beginning of this century. Elder Abner Jones from Ver- 
 mont is its reputed founder. It is an off -shoot from the Freewill 
 Baptists and is quite numerous in New Hampshire. There are 
 within the state two families of Shakers, who date their arrival 
 here in 1792. 
 
 Fifty years ago these numerous denominations were very hos- 
 tile to each other ; and much of the preaching of that day was 
 given to sectarian controversies. A better day has dawned upon 
 us ; and as partisan zeal is abated, brotherly love has increased. 
 
 From 1775 to 1800, the people were so deeply agitated with 
 the Revolution, the new constitution and other great political 
 questions, that religion scarcely occupied their thoughts. There 
 were faithful preachers and devout hearers in those days, but 
 they were a small minority. The Revolutionary war was, in 
 itself, disastrous to religion ; but the alliance with France was 
 still more injurious. The opinions of Voltaire found many ad- 
 herents among the officers of the army. The works of Godwin 
 and Thomas Paine were also read with eagerness by the young 
 sceptics of the age. Unbelief became popular and faithful fol- 
 lowers of Christ were pointed at "with the finger of scorn." 
 Near the close of the eighteenth century, revivals of religion be- 
 came more frequent, the results of them more permanent ; and 
 "the churches had rest and were edified." The New Hamp- 
 shire Missionary Society, which has been of inestimable advan- 
 tage in providing the preaching of the gospel for feeble churches 
 and sparse populations, was founded in 1801.
 
 198 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LV. 
 
 INSUFFICIENCY OF THE STATE AND GENERAL GOVERNMENTS PRE- 
 VIOUS TO THE ADOPTION OF NEW CONSTITUTIONS. 
 
 During the whole period of the Revolutionary war, the United 
 States had no efficient government. From 1775 to 1781 they 
 had a federal union for the purposes of defence, and " they 
 were held together by the ties of a common interest, by the 
 sense of a common danger, and by the necessities of a common 
 cause, having no written bond of union. In short, they were 
 held together by their fears," or rather crushed together by ex- 
 ternal calamities. The articles of confederation were adopted 
 by congress in November, 1777. Maryland, last of the old 
 thirteen states, adopted them March i, 1781. On the next day 
 congress assembled under this new form of government. This 
 was " the shadow of a government without the substance." It 
 could make laws, but could not execute them ; it could call for 
 armies, but could not raise them ; it could assess taxes, but could 
 not collect them. In a word, its enactments were advisory, not 
 authoritative. The country tried this form of union for the tAvo 
 remaining years of the war and for six subsequent years of 
 peace, and found it wanting. 
 
 Virginia took the lead in recommending a convention of the 
 states for the adoption of a new constitution. At the first meet- 
 ing of the delegates at Annapolis, Md., in September, 1786, only 
 five states were represented. Another convention was called in 
 the following May, to meet in Philadelphia. Most of the states 
 approved the measure, but only twenty-nine delegates appeared 
 on the first day; in process of time others came, and on the 
 twenty-eighth of May, 1787, the convention began its session 
 with closed doors, and sat four months and then reported a 
 draft of a new constitution which was to go into operation 
 when nine states had adopted it. New Hampshire was the ninth 
 state to approve it and her vote was taken at Concord, June 21, 
 1788. On the fourth of March, 1789, the first congress under 
 the new constitution assembled, and on counting the votes pre- 
 viously cast, George Washington was declared President of the 
 United States. 
 
 While the general government was forming a permanent con- 
 stitution, the states, also, were giving attention to their organic 
 laws. New Hampshire had already passed through five differ-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 199 
 
 ent forms of government. The earliest was the Proprietary gov- 
 ernment, when it was subject to the rules and orders of the Com- 
 pany of Laconia, of which John Mason was the head. The 
 second was that of the separate towns, when each for itself 
 made a " combination " for the security of life and property. 
 The third was the Colonial government from 1641 to 1680, 
 when the state was ruled by the laws of Massachusetts. To 
 this succeeded the Royal government which, with a slight inter- 
 ruption from 1690 to 1692, when Massachusetts resumed her 
 sway, continued till the beginning of the Revolutionary war. 
 Early in 1776, a temporary " Plan of Government " was adopted 
 to continue through the war. This was republican in form 
 though exceedingly defective in its details. The executive power 
 was delegated to a committee of safety when the assembly was 
 not in session. In 1779 a convention was called to form .a new 
 constitution. Their work was rejected by the people. An- 
 other convention was called in 1781. The delegates met at 
 Concord and organized by choosing Hon. George Atkinson 
 president, and Jonathan M. Sewall secretary, both of Ports- 
 mouth. Among the leading men of that convention were 
 Judge Pickering of Portsmouth ; General Sullivan of Dur- 
 ham ; General Peabody of Atkinson ; Judge Wingate of Strat- 
 ham ; Hon. Timothy Walker of Concord ; Captain Eben- 
 ezer Webster of Salisbury ; General Joseph Badger of Gilman- 
 ton; Timothy Farrar of New Ipswich and Ebenezer Smith of 
 Meredith. The army and the forum, as usual, furnished the 
 most influential members. In all such assemblies a few leading 
 minds plan the work and the majority vote for it. This conven- 
 tion sat only a few days, assigned their work to a committee of 
 seven and adjourned till the following September. A draft of a 
 new constitution was made by them and presented to the con- 
 vention at their adjourned meeting. A bill of rights was also 
 submitted by the same committee. This new organic law was 
 sent to the people for their action upon it in town meetings. 
 The objections urged against it were so numerous that, at the 
 third session of the convention in January, 1782, the new con- 
 stitution was thoroughly revised and recommitted for a report 
 in the following August. A new draft was then presented, ap- 
 proved and again sent to the people for their ratification. The 
 convention then adjourned till the next December. This form 
 of government was generally approved, but, several amendments 
 being deemed necessary, the convention again adjourned till 
 June, 1783. On the nineteenth day of the preceding April, the 
 eighth anniversary of the battle of Lexington, peace between 
 England and the United States was proclaimed ; accordingly 
 "the Plan of Government" adopted in 1776, to continue during
 
 200 HISTORY OF 
 
 the war, expired by self-limitation. The people of the state in 
 their town meetings voted to prolong that temporary govern- 
 ment for one year. The constitutional convention in June, 
 1783, after making several important alterations and additions, 
 again submitted the constitution to the people, who by a consid- 
 erable majority adopted it, and in June, 1784, the new form of 
 government became the organic law of the state. It was intro- 
 duced by religious solemnities. A sermon was delivered before 
 the legislature at Concord on the second day of June, which 
 custom was observed at every annual election for nearly half a 
 century afterwards. 
 
 This constitution, with some slight amendments, such as the 
 advance of public opinion required, has remained in force to 
 this day. This fact reveals the wisdom of the delegates of that 
 famed convention, which continued its existence for more than 
 two years and held nine sessions. The history of this important 
 instrument, containing both a bill of rights which could scarcely 
 be improved, and permanent rules for the guidance of the law- 
 makers of a sovereign state, shows that it was repeatedly dis- 
 cussed, criticised, revised and virtually amended by the legal 
 voters in their democratic town meetings. A high degree of in- 
 telligence characterized the people of New Hampshire at that 
 day, for their successors for two generations have lived in con- 
 tent under a constitution whose every clause was submitted to 
 the legal voters of 1784. 
 
 CHAPTER LVI. 
 
 TREATMENT OF LOYALISTS. 
 
 All questions of expediency have two sides, and naturally 
 give rise to opposing parties. Men are so constituted, that, in 
 all controversies which are argued from moral evidence, they 
 necessarily become partisans. It is said that spectators never 
 witness a conflict between brute beasts, without taking sides ; a 
 fortiori would they lend their sympathies to one or the other of 
 two political parties. Says Archbishop Whately : " Not only 
 specious but real and solid arguments, such as it would be diffi- 
 cult or impossible to refute, may be urged against a proposition 
 which is nevertheless true, and may be satisfactorily established 
 by a preponderance of probability."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 2OI 
 
 At the origin of the Revolution there were men, as it was 
 natural there should be, who adhered to the old regime. They 
 had been loyal to the king all their lives, and they saw no good 
 reason for rebellion. Others, more patriotic or more enthusias- 
 tic, denounced them as tories or traitors and began soon to 
 hate them and persecute them. The loyalists returned their ill- 
 will with interest, and the two parties at orice were separated by 
 an impassable gulf. Those who adhered to the royal cause 
 either sought protection in flight, or joined the army of the en- 
 emy. Those who turned against their brethren became their 
 most malignant and cruel foes. They even hounded on the 
 savages to destroy with tomahawk and scalping-knife the very 
 neighbors with whom, in other days, they " took sweet counsel 
 and walked to the house of God in company." A civil war is 
 the most terrible ordeal which men are ever called to pass 
 through. Proscription and confiscation by the majority always 
 fall with crushing weight upon the minority. " Woe to the van- 
 quished," cried the conquering Gaul, Brennus, as with false 
 weights he appropriated the redemption money of the old Ro- 
 mans ; " woe to the vanquished " was the only rule to which 
 loyalists were subjected, whether they were passive or active, 
 flying or fighting. Congress recommended a sweeping confisca- 
 tion of all their property to replenish their exhausted treasury ; 
 but so many agents fingered the money in its passage, that but 
 a small share of it reached its destination. The legislature of 
 New Hampshire proscribed seventy-six persons who had for va- 
 rious reasons, and at different times, left the state. The whole 
 estate of twenty-eight of these was confiscated. No distinction 
 was made between British subjects occasionally resident in the 
 state, American loyalists who had absconded through fear, and 
 avowed tories who took up arms against their country. They 
 were together put upon the black list as outlaws ; as men who had 
 " basely deserted the cause of liberty, and manifested a disposi- 
 tion inimical to the state and a design to aid its enemies in their 
 wicked purposes." Some show of justice was observed toward 
 the creditors of the proscribed, and some compassion was shown 
 to their deserted families : but all this kindness was discretion- 
 ary with the county trustees, who were authorized to take pos- 
 session of the estates, real and personal, of tories, and to sell 
 them at auction. The net profit of all those sales to the state 
 was hardly worth computing. Irresponsible power is always 
 abused ; and patriots are not exempt from the common infirmi- 
 ties of our race.
 
 202 HISTORY OF 
 
 CIRCULATING MEDIUM. 
 
 All civilized nations, in modern times, have issued paper 
 money in periods of distress, [t is an expedient which has often 
 produced temporary relief, but has usually resulted in national 
 bankruptcy. No legislature can give intrinsic value to engraved 
 paper, unless silver and gold are pledged for its redemption. 
 An irredeemable currency always depends for its circulation 
 on public opinion. That is ever fluctuating ; and so is the value 
 of the money that is based upon it. The bills of credit, issued 
 during colonial times, and the continental paper money of the 
 revolutionary period, all depreciated in value ; and in some in- 
 stances became absolutely worthless. All the earlier wars in 
 which the colonies engaged were maintained by a paper cur- 
 rency, which always declined in value in proportion to the length 
 of time it was in use. The reimbursement of several of these 
 issues, by the British government, gave the people greater con- 
 fidence in the paper money that was afterwards issued by con- 
 gress. But, when millions of continental notes were thrown 
 upon the public, having no security for their redemption but fu- 
 ture taxation, no human power could prevent their decline in 
 value. In New Hampshire such bills were made a legal tender ; 
 but this law led to countless frauds and hastened the deprecia- 
 tion of the money. The law was retrospective and made it 
 legal to pay old debts with notes that were fast becoming worth- 
 less. This was, of course, ruinous to trade and unjust to the 
 creditor. Business was nearly suspended ; silver was hoarded ; 
 knaves only prospered. The community held meetings, made 
 speeches, petitioned congress for relief ; and finding nothing but 
 circulars and specious arguments in favor of the worthless bills 
 in return, for a time sat down in despair. But paper money 
 gradually disappeared, and by common consent went into dis- 
 use. Silver and gold reappeared and public confidence revived. 
 All the states issued bills of their own which, while in use, va- 
 ried from their par value to one shilling in the pound. Con- 
 gress, during the war, issued two hundred millions in paper 
 money, which rapidly passed through every stage of decline 
 from par to zero, and finally became a dead loss. 
 
 SOCIAL AND MORAL EFFECTS OF THE WAR. 
 
 For eight long years the scattered and impoverished people 
 of the United States were passing through the blood and smoke 
 of the Revolutionary war. Scarcely for one hour, during all 
 that period, did the blood cease to flow or 'the smoke to rise 
 from the wasted land. Fire, famine and slaughter brought pov-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 203 
 
 erty, privation and suffering to every hearth-stone. From many 
 a darkened window little children peered out into the mingled 
 storm and demanded their sire "with' tears of artless inno- 
 cence." The whole number of men who enlisted in the conti- 
 nental army during the entire war was 231,791. New Hamp- 
 shire furnished of these 12,497. I* * s sa ^ e to affirm, though offi- 
 cial statistics make the number less, that nearly one half of 
 these were killed or disabled, and many of the other half had 
 formed habits which unfitted them for industry or virtue. Camp 
 life, if long continued, always makes men averse to the continu- 
 ous labors of the field and shop. While the war lasted, agri- 
 culture and manufactures necessarily declined. When peace re- 
 turned it was difficult to revive them. Towns had been burned, 
 cities sacked, fields desolated and the cheapest necessaries of 
 civilized life, in many instances, must be created anew. If la- 
 borers could be found, capital was wanting. A depreciated cur- 
 rency crippled the hands of the industrious. Knaves, cheats 
 and swindlers were watching to entrap the unwary. Morals had 
 declined. Old Puritan customs had been suspended by the fiat 
 of war. The Sabbath had been desecrated ; the salaries of pas- 
 tors declined with the currency of the times. They were obliged 
 to minister with their own hands to their necessities, rather than 
 to minister with their minds to their flocks. The alliance with 
 France had introduced French infidelity ; and the high army 
 officers placed the teachings of Voltaire above those of the 
 Scriptures. It required long years of patient industry and care- 
 ful economy of the wise and good, to restore the habits and vir- 
 tues of " the good old times." 
 
 CHAPTER LVII. 
 
 HEAVY BURDENS IMPOSED ON THE PEOPLE BY THE WAR, AND 
 THE CONSEQUENT DISCONTENT. 
 
 " Peace hath her victories, 
 No less renowned than war," 
 
 wrote Milton, after he had experienced the conflicts and 
 triumphs of both. The victories of peace are achieved by 
 moral forces, and are often harder to be secured than those 
 where " fields are won." In our country, the same men who led 
 our armies presided in our legislatures. Washington, " first in
 
 204 HISTORY OF 
 
 war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen," 
 guided the helm of state after the adoption of the new constitu- 
 tion. At the same time, his companion in arms, General John 
 Sullivan, presided over the people of New Hampshire. But, 
 during the period of transition, from the restoration of peace, 
 1783, to the commencement of Washington's administration in 
 1789, the whole country was in a condition of feverish excite- 
 ment. Rebellion, on a great scale, had resulted in independ- 
 ence ; many of the people began to think that rebellion was a 
 wholesome remedy for all social and political evils. In New 
 Hampshire the whole population was poor, was in distress and in 
 debt. The government, which was of their own creation, seemed 
 to them to be able but unwilling or incompetent to aid them. 
 They charged their distress upon the courts that enforced the 
 payment of honest debts, upon the legislature which failed to 
 make money plenty in every man's pocket. They attempted to 
 suppress both courts and legislature by violence. The wildest 
 theories were broached and the most impracticable measures 
 proposed. They fondly dreamed that paper money would sup- 
 ply all their wants. They accordingly demanded large issues of 
 paper bills " funded on real estate and loaned on interest," or 
 irredeemable paper bills ; no matter how or when payable, paper 
 bills must be had or the unwilling government must be com- 
 pelled to yield to the people whose creature it was. They were 
 determined " to assert their own majesty, as the origin of power, 
 and to make their governors know that they were but the exec- 
 utors of the public will." The legislature passed stay-laws and 
 tender-laws, but no substantial relief came. The people of New 
 Hampshire, after the return of peace, were in the condition of a 
 patient enfeebled by long disease ; they clamored for curative 
 processes and popular nostrums which only increased the fatal 
 malady. They held primary meetings, town meetings, county 
 and state conventions, which resulted in the formation of an 
 abortive party which demanded the abolition of the inferior 
 courts and equal distribution of property and the canceling of 
 all debts. This unmitigated agrarianism, it was thought, would 
 bring back " the age of gold." The people of Massachusetts 
 had set the example of rebellion against the courts of the law 
 and the officers of the government. 
 
 Daniel Shay was the leader of the malcontents and the rebels 
 were not subdued without an organized military force and the 
 loss of some lives. During the session of the legislature in 
 September, 1786, a crowd of discontented citizens from the 
 counties of Rockingham and Cheshire, armed with bludgeons, 
 scythes, swords and muskets, marched, with martial music, to 
 Exeter and surrounded the church where the legislature was in
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 205 
 
 session, and entering the house demanded a compliance with 
 their insane petition. The president, General Sullivan, then 
 performed the office of the wise and good man, described by 
 Virgil two thousand years ago : 
 
 " As when in tumults rise the ignoble crowd, 
 Mad are their motions and their tongues are loud ; 
 And stones and brands in rattling volleys fly, 
 And all the rustic arms that fury can supply ; 
 If then some grave and pious man appear, 
 They hush their noise and lend a listening ear ; 
 He soothes with sober words their angry mood, 
 And quenches their innate desire for blood." 
 
 All this the venerable hero and wise counselor accomplished, 
 still the mob refused to disperse. They held the legislature " in 
 durance vile," and even refused to allow the president room 
 when he attempted to leave the house ; but, when they heard 
 the cry from without : "Bring out the artillery," they retired for 
 the night. The next day a numerous body of the state militia 
 and cavalry drove them from their encampment without blood- 
 shed, arresting about forty of the conspirators and dispersing 
 the rest. Thus ended this absurd rebellion, and with it the 
 popular demand for paper money. 
 
 Daniel Webster, New Hampshire's noblest son, who in later 
 years earned for himself the title of " Defender and Expounder 
 of the Constitution," in one of his speeches in the senate dis- 
 coursed as follows respecting legal tender : 
 
 " But what is meant by the ' constitutional currency,' about which so 
 much is said? What species or forms of currency does the constitution 
 allow, and what does it forbid ? It is plain enough that this depends on 
 what we understand by currency. Currency, in a large and perhaps in a 
 just sense, includes not only gold and silver and bank notes but bills of ex- 
 change also. It may include all that adjusts exchanges and settles balances 
 in the operations of trade and business. But if we understand by currency 
 the legal money of the country, and that which constitutes a lawful tender 
 for debts, and is the statute measure of value, then, undoubtedly, nothing is 
 included but gold and silver. Most unquestionably there is no legal tender, 
 and there can be no legal tender, in this country, under the authority of thi.s 
 government or any other, but gold and silver, either the coinage of our own 
 mints or foreign coins, at rates regulated by congress. This is a constitu- 
 tional principle, perfectly plain and of the very highest importance. The 
 states are expressly prohibited from making anything but gold and silver a 
 tender in payment of debts ; and although no such express prohibition is 
 applied to congress, yet, as congress has no power granted to it, in this re- 
 spect, but to coin money and regulate the value of foreign coins, it clearly 
 has no power to substitute paper, or anything else, for coin, as a tender in 
 payments of debts and in discharge of contracts. Congress has exercised 
 this power fully in both its branches. It has coined money, and still coins 
 it ; it has regulated the value of foreign coins, and still regulates their value. 
 The legal tender, therefore, the constitutional standard of value, is estab- 
 lished, and cannot be overthrown. To overthrow it would shake the whole 
 system. The constitutional tender is the thing to be preserved, and it ought 
 to be preserved sacredly, under all circumstances."
 
 206 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LVIII. 
 
 CAPTAIN JOHN PAUL JONES. 
 
 The connection of John Paul Jones, the most famous naval 
 commander of our revolutionary times, with Portsmouth deserves 
 special notice. The real name of this brave captain was John 
 Paul. He was a Scotchman, son of the gardener of the Earl of 
 Selkirk. He commenced a life at sea at the age of fifteen ; and 
 after a suitable apprenticeship took command of a merchant 
 vessel. During a voyage to Tobago, his crew mutinied ; and in 
 an assault made upon himself Captain Paul killed the leader. 
 He was tried for manslaughter at Tobago and honorably acquit- 
 ted. On his return to England, where the story had preceded 
 him greatly exaggerated, he was threatened with a second trial, 
 contrary to right and law. To escape injustice he emigrated to 
 America, adding to his family name the nomme de guerre of 
 Jones. He immediately took service under Commodore Hop- 
 kins in the expedition against New Providence. His gallant 
 conduct in this expedition gave him command of a sloop of 
 twelve guns. With this vessel he captured several prizes. His 
 next command was of a new ship of war, built at Portsmouth, 
 called the Ranger. This vessel was a privateer, carrying eight- 
 een guns and one hundred and fifty men. She sailed from 
 Portsmouth early in 1778. Captain Jones landed at White- 
 haven, Cumberlandshire, and set fire to one of the vessels in 
 the harbor ; but the inhabitants succeeded in extinguishing the 
 flames. He then sailed along the coast of Scotland, landing on 
 the estate of the Earl of Selkirk, with the intention of taking 
 him prisoner ; but his absence in parliament defeated that pur- 
 pose. His crew, however, plundered the palace and carried 
 away the plate and other valuables. For this he was censured ; 
 but the laws of privateering then in use would justify private 
 warfare. The property, however, was returned by Dr. Franklin, 
 then minister to France, whither Jones sailed with his booty. 
 He again put to sea, with the Ranger, and appeared off the 
 Irish coast. Learning that a royal ship, called the Drake, mount- 
 ing twenty-two guns, was in the harbor of Waterford, Jones chal- 
 lenged her captain to combat, mentioning, at the same time, his 
 force of men and metal. The challenge was accepted, the battle 
 fought, and Jones, as usual, was victorious. The British loss in 
 this engagement was one hundred and five killed and seventy-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 207 
 
 two wounded. Captain Jones lost only twelve men and nine 
 were wounded. Soon after this victor}' he left the Ranger for 
 the command of "the Bonne Homme Richard" in which he 
 achieved such glorious success on the high seas and on the 
 coast of England. With his change of vessels his connection 
 with New Hampshire ceased. 
 
 CHAPTER LIX. 
 
 GENERAL JOHN SULLIVAN. 
 
 General S-ullivan has been the subject of cold commenda- 
 tion or of severe criticism by the historians of the American 
 Revolution. Because he was unsuccessful in one or two of his 
 military campaigns, his services as a warrior have been under- 
 valued. In this department of the public service, success is 
 equivalent to merit. But General Sullivan has other claims to 
 respect and veneration from the citizens of New Hampshire, 
 besides his military career. He is one of the great men of our 
 state, whose worthy deeds posterity should not willingly let die. 
 His father, John Sullivan, was a native of Limerick, Ireland, 
 born in 1692. He was a man of culture and gave to his sons a 
 private education which enabled them to share in many depart- 
 ments of public life. The father of General Sullivan emigrated 
 to this country in 1723. His acquaintance with his future wife 
 commenced on the voyage from their native land. He settled 
 at Berwick in Maine, where his son John was born in 1740. 
 Some authorities maintain that his home was on the New Hamp- 
 shire side of the river, in Dover. His education was limited to 
 his father's instruction and such meagre tuition as the common 
 school then afforded. He studied law with Hon. Samuel Liver- 
 more* of Portsmouth, with whom he afterwards served as dele- 
 gate in congress from New Hampshire. As a student-at-law he 
 gave evidence of superior ability, and in some instances took 
 charge of cases in justice courts when Mr. Livermore was ab- 
 
 *Mr. C. W. Brewster gives the following account of John Sullivan's introduction to lawyer 
 Livermore's family: It was not far from the year 1758, that a lad of seventeen years, with 
 a rough dress, might have been seen knocking at the door of this house and asking for the 
 Squire, who listens to his application and inquires: "And what can you do, my lad, if I take 
 you? "Oh, I can split wood, take care of the horse, attend to the eardcnine;; and perhaps find 
 some spare time to read a little, if you can give me the privilege." He was immediately in- 
 stalled in the kitchen ; and by the aid of his study, intelligence and enterprise soon passed 
 into the office and the parlor; and at length became the colleague in office of his master.
 
 2oS HISTORY OF 
 
 sent. Mr. Sullivan established himself in business in Durham, 
 which became his permanent home. His practice was extensive, 
 and as an advocate he held a high rank. " He was self- 
 possessed, gifted with strong power of reasoning, a copious and 
 easy elocution, and the effect of these qualities was aided by a 
 clear and musical voice." 
 
 He received a major's commission in the militia in 1772, and 
 thus commenced his military career, which is recited elsewhere 
 in this history. In the first convention which met at Exeter, in 
 1774, after the dissolution of the last legislative assembly of the 
 state by John Wentworth, Mr. Sullivan and Nathaniel Folsom 
 were appointed delegates to represent the province of New 
 Hampshire in the first general congress which was to meet in 
 Philadelphia in the following September. Near the close of 
 that year, John Sullivan and John Langdon, with a gallant band 
 of patriots, took possession of Fort William and Mary, im- 
 prisoned the garrison and carried away one hundred barrels 
 of powder. This bold enterprise cut him off forever from hope 
 of royal favor. In January, 1775. these leaders of the first as- 
 sault upon royal power in New Hampshire were elected by the 
 second independent convention of the state, again assembled at 
 Exeter, representatives to the second continental congress. This 
 repeated evidence of the confidence of the people in Mr. Sul- 
 livan shows how he was regarded as a leader in war and legisla- 
 tion. In June of that year he was made one of the eight 
 brigadier-generals selected by congress to manage the Revolu- 
 tionary war. 
 
 Some anecdotes are recorded which illustrate the tact and skill 
 of General Sullivan in managing a mob. In October, 1782, the 
 people in the western part of the state were determined to pre- 
 vent the regular session of the court at Keene. General Sullivan 
 was then attorney-general of the state. The court was helpless 
 as to a posse comitatus, for the people were opposed to them. 
 General Sullivan became their sole defender. In the woods be- 
 fore entering the town, he took from the portmanteau of his 
 servant his regimentals and "arrayed himself in full military 
 attire the blue coat and bright buttons which he had worn in 
 the retreat from Long Island, the cocked hat whose plume had 
 nodded over the foe at Brandywine, and the sword which at 
 Germantown had flashed defiance in front of battle. Thus 
 equipped, he mounted his powerful gray charger and conducted 
 the court into town." The judges took their seats without mo- 
 lestation. Sullivan, with noble port and majestic mien, stood 
 erect in the clerk's desk. His presence awed the turbulent 
 throng. He addressed them with boldness and dignity. They 
 shouted ''The Petition !" "The Petition !" He ordered them to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 209 
 
 present their petition. He received it and passed it over to the 
 court. He then addressed the crowd, courteously but firmly re- 
 buked their temerity in attempting to interrupt the business of the 
 court, and peremptorily ordered them to withdraw. They obeyed 
 with reluctance, but without violence. Arthur Livermore, then 
 a youth of sixteen, witnessed this scene ; and even in extreme 
 old age retained a lively recollection of the skill, eloquence and 
 personal appearance of Sullivan. " I thought," he said, " if I 
 could only look and talk like that man, I should want nothing 
 higher or better in this world." 
 
 In the riot at Exeter, in 1786, when a company of armed men 
 surrounded the house where the legislature was sitting, General 
 Sullivan came out and addressed the mob, and ordered them to 
 disperse. Though they did not obey his mandate till they feared 
 an assault from the hastily armed militia, still the manly pres- 
 ence, heroic bearing and glowing eloquence of General Sullivan 
 were never forgotten by those who witnessed the scene. 
 
 In a work ascribed to President John Wheelock and entitled 
 " Sketches of the History of Dartmouth College," we find the 
 following allusion to General Sullivan. In the month of January, 
 1789, "the senate and house of representatives passed an act 
 granting to the trustees of Dartmouth College a valuable tract 
 of eight miles square, about forty-two thousand acres, lying 
 north of Stewartstown. The forcible and energetic eloquence 
 of General Sullivan, that eminent commander in the Revolu- 
 tionary war, in the debate on the subject cannot be forgotten. 
 It drew him from his bed, amidst the first attacks of fatal dis- 
 ease ; and it was the last speech he ever made in public." 
 
 CHAPTER LX. 
 
 THE NEW CONSTITUTION AND THE PARTIES FORMED AT ITS RATI- 
 FICATION. 
 
 In no state was there a deeper interest manifested concerning 
 the adoption of the constitution than in New Hampshire. This 
 was the ninth state in the order of voting, and a favorable vote 
 would at once give vitality to the new government. The first 
 session of the convention to consider the subject was held at 
 Exeter in February, 1788. The most distinguished statesmen 
 and civilians of the state were among its members. General 
 
 14
 
 210 HISTORY OF 
 
 John Sullivan was its president; and John Langdon, Josiah 
 Bartlett, John Taylor Oilman, John Pickering, Samuel Liver- 
 more, Joshua Atherton and Joseph Badger sat in the council, to 
 deliberate, discuss and vote upon this question of momentous 
 interest. 
 
 " Long time in even scale the battle hung." 
 
 Mr. Atherton led the opposition. His attack upon that clause 
 which guarantied the slave trade till 1808 was especially pa- 
 thetic and eloquent. No modern advocate of human rights has 
 surpassed him in the passion and logic of his arguments. The 
 decision of the question was so doubtful, that the friends of the 
 constitution asked for an adjournment that the minds of the 
 people of the state might be more fully known. The conven- 
 tion adjourned to meet in Concord in the following June. A 
 session of four days was sufficient to complete the work. The 
 last day was one of intense interest to the members and specta- 
 tors. The final vote stood fifty-seven in favor of the constitu- 
 tion and forty-six against it. "While the secretary was calling 
 over the names of the members and recording their votes, there 
 was a death-like silence ; every bosom throbbed with anxious 
 expectation." Every class of the immense crowd that thronged 
 the church was in some way interested in the result ; some from 
 honest convictions of its expediency, some from hope of gain, 
 some from its influence in other states, and many from decided 
 hostility to its provisions. Messengers were dispatched in every 
 direction to announce the result of the vote of New Hampshire, 
 and to assure the hesitating states that a government was le- 
 gally established without their aid. The convention of New 
 York was then in session, and the news from New Hampshire 
 undoubtedly hastened, if it did not modify, the votes of its 
 members. At Portsmouth, the chief commercial town in the 
 state, the ratification was celebrated by every demonstration of 
 popular good will. 
 
 NEW POLITICAL PARTIES IN THE UNITED STATES. 
 
 The only parties in colonial times, with the exception of those 
 that were local or personal, were the supporters and opponents 
 of the royal prerogative, distinguished, as in England, by the 
 familiar names of whigs and tories. In the war for Independ- 
 ence the tory party became extinct. The most bigoted of them 
 left the country ; others, by reluctant concessions to the whigs, 
 were allowed to remain as citizens in the Union. The parties 
 known as federalists and anti-federalists appeared for the first 
 time in the convention that framed the constitution. This di-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 211 
 
 vision of parties is the most natural that could be conceived of, 
 in the condition of our country at that time. The federalists 
 wished to strengthen the general government at the expense of 
 the individual states that entered into the confederation; the 
 anti-federalists desired to maintain the independence of the 
 states at all hazards, and give to the central government no 
 powers inconsistent with it. The constitution, as finally adopted, 
 was a compromise between the two parties. It was impossible 
 to organize the government on any other terms. If either party 
 had insisted on the adoption of its own principles, no organic 
 laws would have been framed, and each state would have re- 
 tained that political independence which had been achieved by 
 all in the Revolutionary war. So governments are always estab- 
 lished when the power to form them resides with the people. 
 " The essence of politics is compromise," says Lord Macaulay. 
 The history of the United States shows that where this remedy 
 for party or sectional feuds is denied, war is the only alternative. 
 After the government went into operation under the new consti- 
 tution, every important measure took the name of federal or re- 
 publican, according as its advocates belonged to one of those 
 parties. Hence, the Funding System of Hamilton, the National 
 Bank, the proclamation of Neutrality, the Alien and Sedition 
 laws, the repeal of the Judiciary Act, the purchase of Louisiana, 
 the Embargo, and the second war itself, were all assailed by the 
 opposition. Federalists and republicans violently opposed one 
 another, at first from principle, afterwards from habit, though 
 they often changed places. 
 
 On the fourth of July. 1788, the ten states which had ratified 
 the constitution held a magnificent celebration of that event in 
 the city of Philadelphia. Every symbol, ornament and repre- 
 sentation that could make the occasion imposing and attractive 
 was displayed to the public admiration. Hon. James Wilson, 
 who had been an active member of the constitutional conven- 
 tion, made an eloquent oration, in which he said, concerning the 
 new form of government : " Delegates were appointed to delib- 
 erate and propose. They met and performed their delegated 
 trust. The result of their deliberations was laid before the peo- 
 ple. It was discusssed and scrutinized, in the fullest, fairest 
 and severest manner, by speaking, by writing, by printing, by in- 
 dividuals and by public bodies, by its friends and its enemies. 
 What was the issue ? Most favorable, most glorious to the sys- 
 tem ! In state after state, at time after time, it was ratified, in 
 some states, unanimously ; on the whole by a large and respect- 
 able majority." 
 
 The day and the occasion allowed a little exaggeration. The 
 ratification had not been secured without bitter controversy.
 
 212 HISTORY OF 
 
 Party spirit ran high, and sometimes broke out in acts of vio- 
 lence. The cities were generally in favor of the new constitu- 
 tion, because they hoped from it a renewal of trade and com- 
 mercial prosperity. The rural districts were opposed to it. In 
 Providence, R. I., a mob of a thousand men, headed by a judge 
 of the supreme court, compelled the citizens to omit that part 
 of their fourth of July celebration which had special reference 
 to the ratification of the constitution. In other cases, mobs At- 
 tacked the offices of papers that advocated its adoption. The 
 strong passions which years of war had kindled were easily ex- 
 cited by opposition. Those who opposed the war had been sub- 
 jected to imprisonment, confiscation and even death. Those 
 who opposed the new order of things were deemed worthy of 
 similar treatment. The special friends of the constitution called 
 themselves federalists and their opponents anti-federalists, though 
 the names in no sense revealed the principles of the two par- 
 ties, and might with propriety have been interchanged. 
 
 The new constitution was something more than a league of- 
 fensive and defensive ; and its supporters were something more 
 than federalists, a word, which, from its etymology, signifies the 
 supporters of a league or covenant. The federalists advocated 
 a strong central government, in all its delegated functions 
 above and superior to the individual states. The anti-federalists 
 were not opposers of the union, but of consolidation. They 
 held to the sovereignty of the states, and to a strict interpreta- 
 tion of the powers granted by the states to the general govern- 
 ment. They manifested no disposition to resist the will of the 
 majority; but advocated a speedy alteration of the constitution, 
 so as to accord more fully with state rights. While the adop- 
 tion of the constitution was under discussion in the several 
 states, all the objections were urged against it which were 
 brought forward in the convention that framed it. It was at its 
 birth the child of compromises. So it continued to be after its 
 adoption. Some objected that it gave too much power, others 
 that it gave too little, to the general government
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 213 
 
 CHAPTER LXI. 
 
 CONDITION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE AFTER THE ADOPTION OF THE 
 
 CONSTITUTION. 
 
 
 
 After the establishment of a responsible government over the 
 entire union, New Hampshire advanced, slowly but surely, in 
 legislation, finance, education and morals. After the patient 
 endurance of their distresses for a few years, the people ascer- 
 tained both their origin and remedy. They learned that industry 
 and economy and not violence nor legislation could restore the 
 general prosperity. War had brought in its train burdensome 
 taxes, heavy debts, a depreciated currency and degraded morals. 
 With fewer laborers, larger returns from the soil and shop were 
 demanded ; with diminished resources, increased revenues were 
 needed. When the large souled patriots of that age saw their 
 true interests, they took heart and banished fear. They accepted 
 as a necessity past losses, and labored with energy for future 
 gains. They were successful ; they gradually rid themselves of 
 debt by purchasing their depreciated bills at a heavy discount 
 and securing, on the credit of the state, liberal loans to meet the 
 wants of the treasury. 
 
 Wise men were called to administer the affairs of the state. 
 After the adoption of the state constitution, in 1784, the long- 
 tried, faithful and honest public servant, Meshech Weare, was for 
 the last time elected president. Exhausted by the onerous 
 duties of a long public life, and enfeebled by age, he resigned 
 his office before the year expired; and, after a lingering illness, 
 died on the fifteenth of January, 1786, aged 73. He had held 
 almost every important position in the state, and had maintained 
 an untarnished reputation in all. General John Sullivan was 
 elected to the vacant chair in 1786. During a period of trouble, 
 confusion and violence, he presided over the state with dignity, 
 discretion and success. He was succeeded in the chief mag- 
 istracy of the state, in 1788, by John Langdon. The affections 
 of the people vibrated like a pendulum between these illustri- 
 ous men, the one distinguished most as a commander ; the other 
 as a civilian. But in anticipation of the organization of the 
 general government under the new constitution, Mr. Langdon 
 was elected to the United States Senate. His colleague was 
 Paine Wingate. Samuel Livermore, Abiel Foster and Nicholas 
 Gilman were chosen to represent the state in the first congress.
 
 214 HISTORY OF 
 
 In 1789, General Sullivan was again elected president of the 
 state. During this year, the last in which he held the presidency, 
 General Washington visited New England. He came to Ports- 
 mouth, where he met his companion in arms, much to the joy of 
 General Sullivan and the satisfaction of a grateful people, who 
 welcomed their chief with ever} 7 demonstration of delight. 
 
 During the next year, important measures were adopted by 
 the congress of the United States to give stability and perma- 
 fcency to the government and place the public credit upon a firm 
 foundation. Provision was made for funding the debt of the 
 nation. Two hundred million dollars of the old continental cur- 
 rency had been redeemed for five millions, forty dollars of 
 paper for one of silver. Many persons proposed that the certi- 
 ficates of indebtedness for fifty-four million dollars, now due, 
 should be purchased at their present worth and not for their orig- 
 inal value. But a more honorable policy finally prevailed and 
 the credit of the country was restored. After a long and heated 
 discusssion, the state debts were assumed by the general govern- 
 ment. This was not brought about without a discreditable com- 
 promise between the friends and enemies of the measure. The 
 influence and votes of certain southern members were secured 
 by a promise of locating the seat of government on the Potomac. 
 The sum of the foreign, domestic and state debts was about 
 eighty millions of dollars. Alexander Hamilton was the author 
 of this plan, which finally proved of immense advantage to all 
 parties. 
 
 New Hampshire was dissatisfied with the amount granted to 
 her by the general government, as her share of twenty-one mil- 
 lion five hundred thousand dollars of state debts assumed by the 
 United States. She had contributed to the support of the war 
 three hundred and seventy-five thousand and fifty-five dollars, 
 and received in return only three hundred thousand dollars. 
 Other states received more than they had expended. This dis- 
 tribution was regarded as unjust, and called forth a spirited 
 memorial to congress on the subject. The legislature set forth 
 in forcible language their objections to the measure ; and in 
 conclusion solemnly " remonstrated against the said act, so far 
 as it relates to the assumption of the state debts," and requested 
 that " if the assumption must be carried into effect, New Hamp- 
 shire might be placed on an equal footing with other states." 
 Virginia and New Hampshire were at that early day found fight- 
 ing shoulder to shoulder for state rights. 
 
 This hostility to the funding system of Hamilton was not the 
 only instance in which the rights of New Hampshire were as- 
 serted in opposition to the general government. During the 
 war of the Revolution the people of Portsmouth were actively
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 215 
 
 engaged in privateering. Early in 1788, John Paul Jones sailed 
 from Portsmouth in the Ranger, a ship destined to capture Eng- 
 glish commercial vessels. This bold captain afterwards per- 
 formed marvelous exploits in this department of naval warfare. 
 The citizens of Portsmouth also fitted out a privateer named 
 The McClary. This vessel was authorized by the legislature to 
 make prizes of British ships. She captured and brought home 
 an American vessel bound to a port of the enemy laden with 
 supplies. She was adjudged by the court of the state a lawful 
 prize and given over to her captors. The owners of the vessel 
 afterwards appealed to congress for redress ; and the case being 
 referred to the United States court, the judgment of the court 
 below was reversed ; and the value of the prize and her cargo 
 was ordered to be refunded to the owners. The legislature 
 remonstrated against this " violation of the dignity, sovereignty 
 and independence of the state." In conclusion, they say : " Can 
 the rage for annihilating all the power of the states, and redu- 
 cing this extensive and flourishing country to one domination, 
 make the administrators blind to the danger of violating all the 
 principles of our former governments, to the hazard of convul- 
 sions in endeavoring to eradicate every trace of state power ex- 
 cept in the resentment of the people ? " The language of the re- 
 monstrance was sufficiently bold and spirited ; but it produced 
 no impression and no answer except a demurrer, which, accord- 
 ing to the authority of Judge Harrington of Vermont, " is where, 
 one party having told his story, the other party says, what then ? " 
 
 Here " a little story " of President Lincoln is very pertinent 
 by way of illustration. During the late rebellion, when the 
 border states, one after another, were making bitter complaints 
 against the aggressions of the general government, the president 
 said he was reminded of the remark of an old lady in Spring- 
 field, who, being overburdened with work, allowed her large 
 family of children to take care of themselves. When any one of 
 them made a loud outcry from the pain occasioned by a fall, a 
 cut finger, or a blow from some older child, she exclaimed, " I 
 am glad to hear that ; for I know that one child is still alive." 
 New Hampshire never failed to show a vigorous vitality, in peace 
 and war ; but, at this crisis, discretion was regarded as the better 
 part of valor, and the decision of the United States court be- 
 came "the supreme law of the land." 
 
 During the year 1787, the last dispute about the boundaries 
 of Mason's grant was adjusted. The Masonian proprietors 
 claimed that the western line of the original grant, which was 
 sixty miles from the sea, should be a curve to correspond with 
 the coast line of the Atlantic ocean. The legislature was peti- 
 tioned to determine the question. It was finally decided that
 
 2l6 HISTORY OF 
 
 sixty miles should be measured from the sea into the interior 
 from the south and east lines of the state, and that the western 
 termini of these two lines should be united by a straight line, 
 and the part of the state so cut off should constitute the Ma- 
 sonian grant. Between this straight line and the curve, which 
 the proprietors claimed, a large territory was left open to dis- 
 pute. The proprietors purchased the title to this segment of 
 the state. At the same time the heirs of Allen, whose purchase 
 of Mason had been declared null and void seventy years be- 
 fore, revived their claim to the same territory under dispute. 
 The Masonian proprietors compromised this claim, and, after 
 one hundred and thirty years of dispute about bounds and titles, 
 the land had rest. 
 
 During the first twenty years of the existence of the new con- 
 stitution of the United States, the local legislatures usurped 
 many of the functions of the general government. The legisla- 
 ture of New Hampshire established post-offices and post-routes, 
 issued patents, determined the value of her paper money when 
 greatly depreciated, chartered banks, and regulated all kinds of 
 internal improvements. In 1791 they established "four routes 
 for posts, to be thereafter appointed, to ride in and through the 
 interior of the state." The mail in the country was then carried 
 on horseback, once in two weeks. The post-rider received a 
 small salary from the state, for carrying public letters and pa- 
 pers ; and a postage of six pence on single letters for every 
 forty miles, and four pence for any less distance. Post-offices 
 were established in ten of the principal towns ; and post-masters 
 were allowed two pence on every letter and package that passed 
 through their hands. These provisions, limited as they were, 
 were of immense importance in facilitating communications be- 
 tween different parts of the state. At that time the postal de- 
 partment of the general government was very defective, and 
 several weeks were required to convey intelligence from the seat 
 of government to the interior of New Hampshire. The state 
 legislature in some instances secured to inventors the exclusive 
 right to their inventions, thus exercising the "duties of commis- 
 sioners of patents. The necessity of the case rendered such 
 legislation expedient. 
 
 The state constitution of 1784 provided for its revision after 
 seven years. Accordingly a convention was called for that pur- 
 pose in 1791. The delegates met at Concord on the seventh of 
 September, 1791, and chose Samuel Livermore president, and 
 John Calf secretary. After a brief session they appointed a 
 committee to revise the constitution and propose amendments, 
 and then adjourned to February, 1792. The late Governor 
 Plumer was the most active member of this committee. He
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 217 
 
 was particularly anxious to secure the abolition of all religious 
 tests in the organic laws of the state. He therefore proposed, 
 instead of former provisions, an amendment broad enough to in- 
 clude Roman Catholics and Deists. This failed ; but a propo- 
 sition to strike from the constitution that clause which requires 
 office-holders to be " of the Protestant religion" was voted by 
 the convention, but rejected by the people. The convention 
 which met in 1850 again recommended its repeal, almost unan- 
 imously, but the people, by a large majority, refused to adopt 
 the change, and that clause still remains in the constitution. 
 
 The convention called in 1791 met four times, and twice sub- 
 mitted amendments to the people ; one of which shows a re- 
 markable phase of the public mind, which proposed to exclude 
 attorneys-at-law from a seat in either branch of the legislature. 
 They also recommended the enlargement of the senate and the 
 diminution of the house ; but all these propositions failed, and 
 only some unimportant changes were adopted by the people, 
 among them, the substitution of governor for president, as the 
 title of the chief magistrate. The state was also divided into 
 districts for the choice of the twelve senators. The legislature 
 was authorized, from time to time, to make these districts " as 
 nearly equal as may be," " by the proportion of direct taxes 
 paid by the said districts." The constitution thus modified has 
 remained in force to this day, with a single amendment recom- 
 mended by the convention of 1850, which strikes out those 
 clauses which ordained a property qualification for the governor, 
 senators and representatives of the state. Although it is gen- 
 erally admitted that the senate is too small and the house too 
 large to secure the best results of a republican government, still 
 the people have never chosen to change this ancient constitution 
 of the two houses. 
 
 CHAPTER LXII. 
 
 LANDS HELD BY "FREE AND COMMON SOCCAGE." 
 
 When America was discovered, the feudal system prevailed in 
 all Europe. This was admirably planned to perpetuate serfdom 
 and arrest progress. In the county of Kent, in England, the 
 old Saxon tenure of free and common soccage had been pre- 
 served. This system imposed and entailed but few burdens
 
 2 l8 HISTORY OF 
 
 upon the holder of land. It was devisable by will and not for- 
 feited by crime. It was subject to the law of primogeniture ; 
 but that was modified by local customs among which was " gav- 
 elkind" or an equal distribution among all the male chil- 
 dren. James I., when he issued his patent to the Council of 
 Plymouth, made the grant to be holden by them and their as- 
 signs in free and common soccage, like his manor of East 
 Greenwich in the county of Kent, and not in capite, or by knight- 
 service. This caprice of the monarch was of immense import- 
 ance to the occupants of this grant. They assumed from the 
 beginning that they owned their estates in fee simple ; hence, 
 as early as 1641, "the great and general court of Massachu- 
 setts " ordered and declared " that all lands and heritages shall 
 be free from all fines and licenses upon alienations, and from all 
 heriots, wardships, liveries, primer seisin, year and day waste, 
 escheats and forfeitures upon the death of parents or ancestors, 
 natural or unnatural, casual or judicial, and that forever." Here 
 a whole catalogue of grievances, that had been the growth of 
 centuries, was swept away by a single enactment ; and the mod- 
 ern Solomon retained nothing of his royal prerogatives and feu- 
 dal duties but one fifth of all the gold and silver in the land, 
 which was never destined to glitter upon his person or clink in 
 his coffers. By the voluntary and cordial union of New Hamp- 
 shire with Massachusetts, in 1641, her laws became our laws. 
 The frequent, emigrations from the older to the younger state 
 strengthened those bonds. There are probably no two states in 
 the Union, whose customs, habits, laws and institutions are more 
 nearly identical. 
 
 CHAPTER LXIII. 
 
 INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS. 
 
 Highways are a very good standard of civilization. The sav- 
 age has paths or trails where men on foot can move in single 
 file, but no roads. Half-civilized nations construct bridle-paths 
 in which sure-footed mules or horses may creep along and earn' 
 the traveler up the sides and over the ridges of lofty mountains. 
 Matured art builds a royal highway or railroad over the same 
 rugged steeps, and conveys in safety both men and goods over 
 ranges once deemed insuperable. Among nations governed by
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 219 
 
 a monarch, the best road is called " the king's highway," be- 
 cause it serves for the transportation of the " king's troops " 
 and munitions of war to the field of conflict. The great mili- 
 tary roads of the Romans were made for this purpose, and were 
 classed among the most wonderful creations of their practical 
 skill. Macaulay tells us that a traveler, even at midnight, can 
 discover when he passes from a Protestant to a Catholic coun- 
 try in Europe, by the condition of the roads. Protestantism 
 and progress are always associated. The jolting of the carriage 
 and the clashing of the wheels reveal a land where " ignorance 
 is the mother of devotion " and the enemy of liberty. 
 
 In our own state, we have had every variety of road, from the 
 bridle-path marked only by "spotted trees" to the railroad 
 where passengers and freight move at a speed of thirty miles an 
 hour. This progress is happily indicated by the different modes 
 of ascending the White Mountains. First, explorers climbed 
 their rugged sides, carefully picking their way among trees and 
 rocks. Next, a bridle-path was cleared, so that even ladies 
 could ride on safe, well trained horses, to the summit. Now a 
 railroad lifts the lame and lazy, without the motion of a muscle, 
 to the highest point in New England, where winds and storms 
 expend their utmost fury. The first roads that were made 
 through the woods were very imperfect, unfit for carriage use. 
 The trees were felled and the stones removed, so that a man or 
 woman on horseback could travel over them with tolerable ease. 
 The streams were forded or crossed by rafts or boats, when they 
 could be had. The common mode of travel was on horseback. 
 Rev. Grant Powers, in his " Historical Sketches," has given us 
 a graphic account of a perilous ride of a lady in 1731. Mrs. 
 Anna Powers, the wife of Captain Peter Powers of Hollis, on a 
 summer day went to visit her nearest neighbor ten miles from 
 her home. The Nashua river was easily forded in the morning ; 
 but a sudden shower in the afternoon had caused it to overflow 
 its banks. The lady must return to her home that evening. 
 The horse entered the stream and, immediately losing his foot- 
 hold, began to swim. The current was rapid and the water 
 flowed above the back of the horse. He was swept down the 
 stream, but still struck out for the opposite bank. At one in- 
 stant his fore feet rested on a rock in the stream, and he was 
 lifted above the tide. In a moment he plunged forward again, 
 and threw his rider from her seat. She caught his flowing mane 
 and in a few moments the strong animal bore her up the steep 
 bank, and both were saved. Such incidents were not uncom- 
 mon before the age of bridges. As the settlements advanced 
 into the interior the roads were made better, and carriages, with 
 some difficulty, passed over them. The bridge over the Piscata-
 
 220 HISTORY OF 
 
 qua, connecting the towns of Newington and Durham, just be- 
 low the outlet of Little Bay, built in 1794, was a magnificent 
 structure for that day. Dr. Dwight thus describes it : 
 
 " Piscataqua bridge is formed in three sections ; two of them horizontal, 
 the third arched. The whole is built of timber. The horizontal parts on 
 wooden piers or trestles, distant from each other twenty-three feet. Of these 
 there are one hundred and twenty-six; sixty-one on the northwestern and 
 sixty-five on the southeastern side of the arch. The arch is triple, but no 
 part of the work is overhead. The chord is two hundred and forty-four feet, 
 and the versed sine nine feet and ten inches. This arch is the largest in the 
 United States, contains more than seventy tons of timber, and was framed 
 with such exactness that not a single stick was taken out after it had once 
 been put in its place. The whole length of the planking is two thousand 
 two hundred and forty-four feet. The remaining three hundred and fifty-six 
 are made up by the abutments and the island. The expense was sixty-eight 
 thousand dollars." 
 
 The first bridge over the Connecticut was built near Bellows 
 Falls, in 1785, by Colonel Enoch Hale. The first New Hamp- 
 shire turnpike, from Portsmouth to Concord, was chartered in 
 1796. Soon after this, a second was built from Claremont to 
 Amherst, a third from Walpole to Ashby and a fourth from Leb- 
 anon to Boscawen. During the first quarter of the nineteenth 
 century, corporations were authorized to build such roads and 
 take toll of all travelers ; but as wealth increased the people 
 became weary of these impediments to locomotion and made the 
 turnpikes free highways. 
 
 Mills were among the first wants of the colonists. In some 
 of the interior settlements men often carried their corn ten 
 miles to be ground ; sometimes upon their backs. The only al- 
 ternative was to pound the corn in mortars much as the Ind- 
 ians were wont to do. The first settlers of Portsmouth and 
 Dover were obliged to carry their corn to Boston to be ground ; 
 but they soon had a mill both for sawing and grinding at New- 
 ichewannoc falls. This was the Indian name for Berwick. 
 
 In 1748, the inhabitants of Rumford, Canterbury and Con- 
 toocook petitioned His Excellency, Benning Wentworth, to fur- 
 nish soldiers to man a deserted garrison in Rumford for the 
 following reasons: because, as they say in their petition, "we 
 are greatly distressed for want of suitable gristmills ; that Mr. 
 Henry Lovejoy has, at great expense, erected a good mill at a 
 place the most advantageously situated to accommodate the three 
 towns. This is the only mill in the three towns that stands un- 
 der the command of the garrison." They therefore pray that 
 the garrison may again be manned that they may enjoy the use 
 of the mill protected by its cannon. Mills 'for the carding of 
 wool and the dressing of cloth were also among the earliest 
 wants of a people whose clothing was entirely of domestic 
 manufacture. The labor of that day was mostly manual. The
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 221 
 
 f aimer and mechanic could each say with an apostle of old: 
 " These hands have ministered to my necessities." Rev. David 
 Sutherland of Bath, says : 
 
 " The people in early times were a very plain people, dressing in home- 
 spun cloth. Every house had its loom and spinning-wheel, and almost every 
 woman was a weaver. Carding-machines were just introduced, [at the be- 
 ginning of the nineteenth century] and clothiers had plenty of work. The 
 first coat I had cost me a dollar and a half per yard, spun and woven by one 
 of my best friends ; and I know not that I ever had a better. For many 
 years there was not a single wheeled carriage in town. People who owned 
 horses rode them; and those who had them not went on foot. Husbands 
 carried their wives behind them on pillions. More than one half of the 
 church-going people went on foot. Sleighs or sleds were used in winter. I 
 have seen ox-sleds at the meeting-house. For years we had no stoves in the 
 meeting-house of Bath ; and yet in the coldest weather, the house was always 
 full."* 
 
 SHIP-BUILDING. 
 
 In the early history of New Hampshire ship-building was one 
 of the most profitable branches of industry. Lumber and staves 
 were among the chief exports of the state for several years of 
 its infancy. Its forests abounded in timber ; when this became 
 known in Europe, the export of masts, spars and ship timber 
 furnished employment for many of its inhabitants. Merchant 
 vessels, fishing schooners and ships for the royal navy were built 
 at all convenient places. The king, as above stated, claimed the 
 largest and tallest pines for his own use. Later in the history 
 of the state vessels were built in the same place for home ser- 
 vice. The timber used in the construction of the Constitution 
 frigate, the famous "Old Ironsides," was taken from the woods 
 of Allenstown, on the border of the Merrimack, fifty miles from 
 the ship-yard. So of the Independence seventy-four, the Con- 
 gress and several other vessels of war. Ships of war were also 
 built at Portsmouth in early times, viz : the Faulkland of fifty- 
 four guns, in 1690 ; the Bedford Galley, thirty-two guns, in 1696 ; 
 the America of forty guns, in 1749; the Raleigh of thirty-two 
 guns, in 1776; the Ranger of eighteen guns, in 1777; and a 
 ship of seventy-four guns, called the AMERICA, was launched at 
 Portsmouth, November 5, 1782, and presented to the king of 
 France by the congress of the United States. An examination 
 of the custom-house books kept at Boston shows that as early 
 as 1769 forty-five vessels were registered from New Hampshire. 
 Massachusetts then had only seventy built in that state. From 
 that day to the present, ship-building has ever been an impor- 
 tant branch of industry on the banks of the Piscataqua. 
 
 * A part of the Dr. Chadbourne house at the corner of Main and Montgomery streets, in 
 Concord, is the oldest building in that city. It was built about 1726, as a block-house for de- 
 fence against the Indians, and contains timber enough to make half-a-dozen of the shells 
 which serve for modern houses. Both the first male and the first female white child born in 
 Concord first saw the light in the house.
 
 222 HISTORY OF 
 
 THE STEAMBOAT A NEW HAMPSHIRE INVENTION. 
 
 Hon. Clark Jillson of Worcester, Mass., in a letter to the Bos- 
 ton Journal, dated February 22, 1874, says: " There is no re- 
 liable historical evidence to show that John Fitch was the inven- 
 tor of steam navigation in this country, from the fact that the 
 progress of that art cannot be traced back to him but it can be 
 traced to Robert Fulton, and from him directly to Captain Sam- 
 uel Morey, and to no one else." The same holds true with 
 regard to the claims of James Rumsey. The writer adds : " It 
 is settled, beyond all question, that Mr. Morey had launched his 
 boat upon the waters of New Hampshire before Fulton accom- 
 plished the same thing in New York. It is also a well estab- 
 lished fact that Fulton visited Morey, at his home, for the pur- 
 pose of witnessing his successful experiment before he [Fulton] 
 had launched any kind of steam craft upon the Hudson ; and 
 it can be shown that Morey had been engaged in such experi- 
 ments for years before ; so that the first practical steamboat ever 
 seen upon American waters was invented by Captain Samuel 
 Morey, the author of steam navigation as we see it to-day." 
 This statement is confirmed by irrefutable testimony. We not 
 only have the claim to the invention made by Mr. Morey in his 
 life time, but the testimony of contemporaries who knew the 
 facts, and of eye-witnesses who saw the boat in motion upon 
 the Connecticut river. The declarations of unimpeachable wit- 
 nesses seem to prove that Fulton borrowed the most valuable 
 portions of his invention from Mr. Morey. There can be no 
 doubt that visits were exchanged between Mr. Morey and Mr. 
 Fulton, and that the plans of .Mr. Morey and his boat actually 
 moving by steam upon the water were seen and studied by Ful- 
 ton some years before he succeeded in propelling a boat by 
 steam upon the Hudson. 
 
 Rev. Cyrus Mann, a native of Orford and familiar with the 
 history of the town and of its citizens, vindicates the claims of 
 Mr. Morey, in the Boston Recorder, in 1858. He writes : "So 
 far as is known, the first steamboat ever seen on the waters of 
 America was invented by Captain Samuel Morey of Orford, N. 
 H. The astonishing sight of this man ascending the Connecti- 
 cut river between Orford and Fairlee, in a little boat just large 
 enough to contain himself and the rude machinery connected 
 with the steam boiler, and a handful of wood for fire, was wit- 
 nessed by the writer in his boyhood, and by others who yet sur- 
 vive. This was as early as 1793, or earlier, and before Fulton's 
 name had been mentioned in connection with steam navigation." 
 This testimony is definite and explicit. The boat was seen in 
 motion by the writer and by others still living when he wrote.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 223 
 
 We cannot for a moment doubt that Captain Samuel Morey, 
 by his own unaided powers, invented a steamboat which he used 
 on the Connecticut river some fourteen or fifteen years before 
 the two claimants of this invention above mentioned successfully 
 launched similar boats upon any other waters in America. Ful- 
 ton's first voyage was from New York to Albany, in 1807. It 
 must be admitted that Fulton was the first man who made the 
 steamboat moved by paddles "a practical business success." 
 But there are abundant proofs that he did not invent the princi- 
 ple by which the boat was propelled ; and from the well attested 
 fact that he visited Mr. Morey at Orford, and saw his little boat 
 self-moved upon the Connecticut some years prior to his own 
 successful trial of the same principle at Albany, it is possible, nay 
 probable, that Mr. Fulton borrowed the invention from Mprey. 
 As early as 1780, Mr. Morey began his experiments upon steam, 
 heat and light. He often visited Professor Silliman of Yale 
 College, and conferred with him respecting the value of his dis- 
 coveries. He took out two patents for the use of steam in pro- 
 pelling machinery before Fulton took out any, and Fulton saw 
 two of Morey's models of boats before his successful boat, the 
 " Clermont," was built. The contemporaries of Captain Morey 
 in Orford firmly believed him to be the inventor of the first 
 steamboat ever moved by paddle wheels in America, possibly 
 the first in the world. Men who saw the boat move upon the 
 river have recorded their testimony in his favor. The living 
 relatives of Mr. Morey have in their possession papers confirm- 
 ing the truths above stated ; and they affirm that during his last 
 illness, just before his death, Captain Morey believed and af- 
 firmed that he was the first inventor of a steamboat, and that 
 Fulton saw his models and his boat years before the " Cler- 
 mont " moved on the Hudson. 
 
 Mr. Bishop in his History of American Manufactures says, 
 that on the fifth of June, 1790, "the steamboat built by John 
 Fitch, propelled by twelve oars, made her first trip on the Dela- 
 ware, as a passenger and freight boat between Philadelphia and 
 Trenton, performing eighty miles between four o'clock A. M. and 
 five P. M., against a strong wind all the way back, and sixteen 
 miles of the distance against current and tide. She thus ac- 
 complished the most successful experiment in steam navigation 
 as yet made in Europe or America. During four months she 
 continued to perform regularly advertised trips between Phila- 
 delphia, Trenton, Burlington, Bristol, Chester, Wilmington and 
 Gray's Ferry, running about three thousand miles in the sea- 
 son." Allowing this record to be true, it would seem that this 
 invention, like many others, may be claimed by two or more 
 persons, acting independently of each other.
 
 224 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXIV. 
 
 ADMINISTRATION OF PRESIDENT BARTLETT. 
 
 Prior to the Revolutionary war, public offices were confined 
 to a few leading families. A majority of these were citizens of 
 Portsmouth. This was the only commercial town in the prov- 
 ince, and merchants accumulated wealth more rapidly than 
 farmers. Riches, royal favor and education, to a great extent, 
 determined the candidates for office. The king, of course, se- 
 lected his friends for governors, judges and councilors ; the 
 people were guided by the same rule. The king's prerogative 
 and the people's rights at length came into collision. War was 
 the consequence. While the people were achieving their lib- 
 erty, forming their constitution, organizing their government, 
 enacting their laws, regulating their finance and providing for the 
 general welfare, men of valor, culture and wisdom were selected 
 as commanders, governors, judges and legislators. They were 
 the right men in the right place, and were long retained in office. 
 Such men were Weare, Sullivan, Langdon, Bartlett and Gilman. 
 In 1790 the popular favorite as soldier and civilian, General Sul- 
 livan, was appointed judge of the United States district court 
 under the new constitution. It is very rare to find one man em- 
 inent as a warrior, jurist and statesman. Hon. John Sullivan 
 filled the positions of general, governor and judge with unques- 
 tioned ability. In the election of his successor there was no 
 choice by the people. From the three candidates, Josiah Bart- 
 lett, John Pickering and Joshua Wentworth, the legislature 
 chose, as chief magistrate, Josiah Bartlett. He was an eminent 
 physician of Kingston, who gained great distinction in his pro- 
 fession by his successful treatment of patients attacked by a 
 malignant distemper in 1735 and in 1754. He had been pro- 
 moted to places of civil power by Governor John Wentworth, but 
 lost his favor by his zealous defence of the people's rights in 
 1775. He was made one of the justices of the superior court in 
 1782, and chief justice in 1783, and held those offices for nearly 
 eight years. He served as chief magistrate from 1790, four years, 
 with great acceptance to the public. In all his official relations 
 he was a high-minded, honorable and patriotic servant of the 
 people. He was selected, in every instance, for the trust reposed 
 in him, not for his party attachments, but for his fitness for the 
 place. Men in those days prized wisdom more than party. Dr. 
 Bartlett is said to be the only physician who ever occupied a
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 225 
 
 seat upon the bench of the supreme court of the state. After 
 his election as president he, with great magnanimity, appointed 
 his rival, Hon. John Pickering, to the seat he had vacated as 
 judge, which place he filled with honor to himself and satisfac- 
 tion to the public for five years. During the administration of 
 President Bartlett the revised constitution went into operation 
 and very important laws were passed regulating the highest in- 
 terests of the state. Finance received special attention. The 
 depreciated paper money was bought up and provision made for 
 the liquidation of the debts of the state. The increase of com- 
 merce in Portsmouth was thought to require greater banking 
 facilities, and in 1792 the first bank in New Hampshire was in- 
 corporated with a capital of one hundred and sixty thousand 
 dollars. In 1791 a law was enacted requiring the state to raise 
 seven thousand five hundred pounds sterling for the support of 
 common schools. This law placed the education of the people 
 upon a solid foundation. The same year the New Hampshire 
 Medical Society was established, which has contributed greatly 
 to the elevation of the medical profession in the state. Dr. Jo- 
 siah Bartlett was its first president. Toward the close of his 
 fourth year in office President Bartlett, owing to the increasing 
 infirmities of age. resigned the chair of state and retired to pri- 
 vate life. He was soon after this event " gathered to his fathers," 
 old and full of honors. 
 
 CHAPTER LXV. 
 
 CORN-MILLS AND SAW-MILLS. 
 
 The earliest instrument used for converting corn into meal 
 was a stone mortar. In process of time the mortar was made 
 ridged and the pestle notched at the bottom, so as to grate 
 rather than pound the grain. Still later, the pestle was confined 
 in a vertical condition by a cover, and turned by a horizontal 
 crank. In process of time the mill was enlarged and the sweep 
 was turned by a mule or by oxen. Finally, two stones were in- 
 troduced and wind or water became the motive power. Water- 
 mills existed in Rome under the empire. They were soon made 
 known all over Europe ; though hand-mills and cattle-mills were 
 retained in private houses for a long time after the erection of 
 water-mills. Wind-mills were common in Holland and Ger-
 
 226 HISTORY OF 
 
 many in the fifteenth century. The want of small streams in 
 the level countries in the north of Europe led to the use of 
 wind-mills. Corn-mills propelled by water became common in 
 England after the first Crusades. The warriors, in their travels 
 through Europe and the East, saw and adopted many useful in- 
 ventions. It has been asserted that wind-mills were first built 
 in America by the Dutch colonists. This may be doubted ; for 
 a wind-mill, the first of the kind in New England, was taken 
 down in 1632, in Watertown and rebuilt in Boston. This very 
 year a pinnace, belonging to Captain Neal of Boston, was sent 
 from the Piscataqua settlements, with sixteen hogsheads of corn 
 to be ground at the wind-mill on Copp's Hill recently erected 
 there ; for there was no nearer mill. 
 
 The first saw-mill in New England, propelled by water, was 
 probably built by New Hampshire colonists on Salmon Falls 
 river, at a place called Newichewannoc in 1631. Provision 
 was also made about the same time for a grist-mill by the pro- 
 prietor of New Hampshire. From this time mills were rapidly 
 multiplied in the colony, both for sawing and grinding ; but in 
 the ship-building region of Portsmouth, the saw-mills far out- 
 numbered the flour-mills. Before the Revolution, New Hamp- 
 shire imported grain and flour ; but the war interrupted all trade 
 and more attention was given to the raising of maize and wheat. 
 By this means mills were multiplied. Previous to 1776 Exeter 
 had ten corn-mills within its limits. Clapboards were exported 
 from Plymouth, Mass., as early as 1623, but they were probably 
 sawed and shaved by hand ; for the annals of Plymouth men- 
 tion the erection of the first water-mill in that colony in 1633. 
 Beekman states in his History of Inventions, that the first saw- 
 mill in England was erected in 1663. In early periods the 
 trunks of the trees were split with wedges and then hewn into 
 boards and planks. Later in the history of Europe, saw-pits 
 were used, and boards were cut by two men, one standing above 
 and one below the log, in a saw-pit. Saw-mills driven by wind 
 or water are said to have been built in Germany as early as the 
 fourth century; but they were so little used that one author 
 places their invention in the seventeenth century. There were 
 saw-mills at Augsburg in 1322. Though they were introduced 
 so late into England, they were for nearly a century often fired 
 by mobs, who feared that sawyers would be thrown out of em- 
 ploy by their frequent use. It seems from this narrative, that 
 Captain Mason surpassed in enterprise the business men of 
 his native land, for he anticipated his countrymen by thirty 
 years, in erecting a saw-mill to convert the forests of New Hamp- 
 shire into ship timber. This he did when " bread was either 
 brought from England in meal, or from Virginia in grain, and
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 227 
 
 sent to the wind-mill at Boston, there being none erected here." 
 In 1682, white pine merchantable boards were worth in New 
 Hampshire thirty shillings per thousand feet ; white oak pipe- 
 staves three pounds ; wheat five shillings, Indian corn three 
 shillings per bushel, and silver six shillings per ounce. In 1661, 
 the selectmen of Portsmouth granted Captain Pendleton liberty 
 " to set up his wind-mill upon Fort Point, toward the beach, be- 
 cause the mill is of such use to the people." In 1692, after the 
 Indians destroyed the mills of York, ancient Agamenticus, the 
 inhabitants of that town contracted with a citizen of Ports- 
 mouth to erect a mill for grinding their corn. Special privileges 
 were granted him for this new accommodation of people living 
 iu both states. When Lancaster was first settled, in 1764, there 
 was no corn-mill nearer than Charlestown, which was one hun- 
 dred and ten miles distant ; and all the surrounding country was 
 a wilderness. 
 
 The first cotton factory in New Hampshire was established at 
 New Ipswich, in 1804. In 1823 the state contained twenty- 
 eight cotton and eighteen woolen factories, twenty-two distilleries, 
 twenty oil-mills, one hundred and ninety-three bark-mills, three 
 hundred and four tanneries, twelve paper-mills and fifty-four 
 trip-hammers. The progress of manufactures in New Hamp- 
 shire was very rapid from 1820 to 1830. The amount of capital 
 authorized and incorporated within the five years preceding 1825 
 was nearly six millions of dollars. Since that time manufactures 
 have become the ruling industry of the state. 
 
 IRON WORKS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Iron ore abounds in various localities in New Hampshire ; 
 but the working of it has never proved profitable. Iron ore was 
 early discovered in the vicinity of Portsmouth, and a quantity of 
 it was shipped to England by the agent of Captain Mason, in 
 1634. Mr. Gibbons then wrote : "There is of three sorts one 
 sort that the myne doth cast forth as the tree doth gum, which is 
 sent in a rundit. One of the other sorts we take to be very 
 rich, there is a great store of it. For the other I do not know." 
 This is sufficiently indefinite to satisfy a German metaphysician. 
 Early in the eighteenth century, a chronicler speaks of "the 
 noted Iron-works at Lamper Eel River; "but they were soon dis- 
 continued. The same fate has attended the works set up at 
 Exeter, Winchester, Gilmanton and Franconia. Large sums have 
 been expended, at the last named place, in the erection of fur- 
 naces ; but they have not been actively worked for some time 
 past. "The specular oxyd at Piermont is one of the richest 
 ores in the United States, yielding from sixty to ninety per cent, 
 of metallic iron."
 
 228 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXVI. 
 
 ADMINISTRATION OF JOHN TAYLOR OILMAN. 
 
 The Gilman family have been among the most distinguished 
 in our commonwealth. Exeter was their home. The ancestor 
 of this illustrious race first came to Hingham and became a 
 freeman of Massachusetts. He followed, in his old age, his 
 three sons to Exeter, where he died. The descendants of these 
 men all took an active part in building up the township of Exe- 
 ter and promoting the welfare of the province. Nicholas Gilman 
 held most responsible offices during the Revolutionary war. He 
 was the father of John Taylor Gilman, who was first elected 
 governor of the state in 1794. He held this office eleven years 
 in succession, and, after an interregnum, three years more, 
 making fourteen in all. No other man has held, and probably 
 no other man ever will hold, the same elective office so long, 
 and no man ever has filled it, nor probably ever will fill it, with 
 greater credit to himself and honor to the state. Judge Smith, 
 remarking of the citizens of Exeter, says : " It is no disparage- 
 ment to any other family here to say that, in numbers and every- 
 thing that constitutes respectability, the Gilmans stand at the 
 head." 
 
 The administration of Governor Gilman marked a period of 
 progress material, social, moral, literary and religious. Society 
 was assuming a permanent form. Many important political and 
 financial questions had been already settled. The constitution 
 of the United States had gained full sway over all classes of cit- 
 izens. The name anti-federal no longer described appropriately 
 any political party. All were federalists with respect to their 
 support of the central government. But the fundamental prin- 
 ciples which gave birth to these opposing parties still lived. One 
 class advocated the supremacy of the general government ; an- 
 other maintained that the individual states had never surrendered 
 their sovereignty. Hamilton was the great leader of the party 
 which, under the name of Federalists, advocated the centraliza- 
 tion of power. Jefferson was the founder of another party 
 which, under the name of Republicans, vindicated state rights, 
 and ultimately opposed all the leading measures of the other 
 party. While Washington held the helm of state, his prudence, 
 wisdom and reputation served to allay party animosities, though 
 the Father of his country did not escape the venomous attacks
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 229 
 
 of partisans. He was assailed by the basest of calumnies dur- 
 ing the Revolutionary war, but his own manuscripts and letters 
 have been sufficient to refute them all, and reveal, in private 
 and public, the integrity of that great man 
 
 _ "Who has left 
 His awful memory 
 A light for after times." 
 
 Washington was regarded as a federalist, though he was never 
 under the influence of party spirit, so far as men could judge. 
 Without boasting, he might have made the language of Milton 
 his own : 
 
 " All my mind was set 
 
 Serious to learn and know, and thence to do 
 What might be public good : myself I thought 
 Born to that end, born to promote all truth 
 And righteous things." 
 
 All his opinions were formed with candor and maintained with 
 firmness. No other public man of that age was supposed to be 
 free from party prejudices. The governor and a large majority 
 of the legislature of New Hampshire were federalists. They 
 supported the administration of Washington. While he was in 
 power, the topic which excited the most violent controversy was 
 Jay's treaty. The Revolutionary war had left many important 
 questions between the two countries unsettled.. Boundaries were 
 to be established, claims to be adjusted, commerce to be regu- 
 lated and the rights of citizenship to be determined. A treaty 
 was negotiated by Mr. Jay, containing twenty-eight distinct pro- 
 visions, some of them of vital importance to both the " high 
 contracting parties." The treaty was in many respects objec- 
 tionable, and in others defective, yet it was the best that could 
 then be secured. England was still haughty and imperious, and 
 not very kindly disposed to her rebellious children. This treaty 
 was condemned in advance by the republicans, who were gen- 
 erally favorable to the French and hostile to the English even 
 when they brought gifts. When the articles became known the 
 whole treaty was denounced, seriatim, by a considerable party in 
 every town and state in the Union. This hostility was shown in 
 many cases by acts of violence and lawless mobs. This great 
 national matter, which the senate alone had a right to decide, 
 was debated in the primary meetings of the people. Portsmouth 
 held a town meeting and voted an address against the treaty. 
 Private citizens of the highest respectability, feeling aggrieved 
 by this rash act, prepared a counter address approving of the 
 treaty. The opponents of this measure were determined to pre- 
 vent the transmission of the address to the president. They 
 marched through the streets armed with clubs, insulted the sign- 
 ers of the address, broke their windows, defaced their fences 
 and broke down their shade trees ; and with outrageous impu-
 
 230 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 dence threatened greater violence unless the offensive document 
 were surrendered to them. After a " day's uproar " the riot was 
 quelled, the leaders were arrested and peace was restored. 
 Judging from the numerous mobs in different and distant por- 
 tions of the Union where hostility was shown to this treaty by 
 such illegal means, we infer that the citizens of that age were 
 more excitable and pugnacious than their descendants now are. 
 The treaty, despite the opposition, was legally ratified, and not 
 only did the men of that period acquiesce in it but every gene- 
 ration since has pronounced the verdict just. We wonder now 
 that anybody should have thought otherwise. Washington fa- 
 vored its ratification and his "good sense " probably turned the 
 scale in its favor. One of the senators from New Hampshire, 
 Mr. Langdon, voted against it. The legislature of the state in 
 1795 unanimously approved of the treaty in the strongest terms. 
 They expressed " undiminished confidence in the virtue and 
 ability of the minister who negotiated the treaty, the senate who 
 advised its ratification, and in the President, the distinguished 
 friend and father of his country, who complied with this advice." 
 The history of this heated controversy shows how easy it is for 
 excited partisans to mistake their true interests. 
 
 The material and social progress of the people of New Hamp- 
 shire has already been noticed under the head of internal im- 
 provements and general education. During the long and pros- 
 perous administration of Governor Oilman, roads, turnpikes, 
 mills and factories were built, and schools, academies and liter- 
 ary, scientific and religious societies were multiplied. In 1798, 
 a medical school was established at Dartmouth College by Dr. 
 Nathan Smith of Cornish. For some time he was the only pro- 
 fessor in that department of education. He made the school a 
 success ; and from it have gone forth more than a thousand 
 thoroughly educated and skillful practitioners of the healing art. 
 Many of them have held the front rank in their vocation, both 
 as professors and physicians. When we remember that Dr. 
 Smith was a self-made man, without the advantages of literary 
 or scientific culture, we are astonished at the results of his ex- 
 ecutive energy, perseverance and high scholarship. He was in 
 his own sphere a man of genius. He planned for coming ages. 
 He was far in advance of the men of his time. He foresaw the 
 wants of the future and provided for them. His name and fame 
 are among the richest legacies which the sons of New Hamp- 
 shire have inherited. His works are more eloquent in his praise 
 than the "pens of ready writers." In 1810 the state became 
 the patron of the medical school and built for it a convenient 
 and spacious college building. Here the students both of the 
 medical and academical departments have since received their 
 instruction in chemistry.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 231 
 
 Manufactories of cotton and wool were erected about the be- 
 ginning of the' nineteenth century in the state. In Mr. Jay's 
 treaty, in 1795, the exports of cotton were so small from this 
 country as to escape the notice of the busy diplomatists. The 
 first factory for the manufacture of cotton was built at New 
 Ipswich, in 1804. Others soon followed till at the present day 
 a large portion of the wealth of the state is invested in such 
 mills. During the same year the northern portion of the state 
 was erected into a separate county by the name of Coos. It 
 contained at that time only eight incorporated towns. The num- 
 ber has since increased to twenty-five, besides some seventeen mi- 
 nor settlements, denominated Locations, Purchases and Grants. 
 Lancaster, the shire town, was settled as early as 1763. Its 
 growth was retarded by the Revolutionary war. In 1775, the 
 entire population of the county was only two hundred and 
 twenty-seven persons, of which Lancaster, the most populous of 
 the six settlements, contained sixty-one. In 1803, the new county 
 had about three thousand souls. It contains now more than 
 thirteen thousand. The same legislature authorized the build- 
 ing of a turnpike through the Notch of the White Mountains, 
 twenty miles in extent, at an expense of forty thousand dollars. 
 This road, winding down to the west line of Bartlett through 
 this gigantic cleft in the mountains, presents to the traveler 
 some of the most sublime and some of the most beautiful scenery 
 which the sun, in his entire circuit, reveals to the curious eye. 
 
 During Washington's second term of service as president, the 
 French Revolution was in progress. This, like a political earth- 
 quake, shocked all the nations of Christendom. Our own coun- 
 try was deeply agitated by it. France had been our ally in war ; 
 many felt deep gratitude to her for that timely service. A large 
 party in the country felt that the French people in their struggle 
 against regal and sacerdotal oppression could do nothing wrong ; 
 and that the English, our obstinate foes while we were achiev- 
 ing our liberty, could do nothing right. Relying on this partiality 
 of a large party in the country, the French minister, M. Genet, 
 who arrived in 1793, put on airs, became insolent and began to 
 fit out privateers in the ports of the United States, to cruise 
 against nations hostile to France, and to set in motion an ex- 
 pedition against the Spanish settlements in Florida. W T ashing- 
 ton had previously issued a proclamation of neutrality. It was 
 not heeded by the officious minister and his recall was demanded. 
 The French Republic found Washington in earnest, and they 
 sent a more acceptable envoy. But their aggressions upon our 
 commerce and their insolent treatment of our government united 
 all parties in the condemnation of these national outrages. The 
 government prepared for open war ; some collisions actually
 
 232 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 occurred upon the sea. In 1796, Mr. Pinckney had been sent as 
 minister to France. After two months' residence in Paris, he was 
 peremptorily ordered to leave the city. The French government 
 continued to commit depredations upon our commerce and re- 
 fused to liquidate our just claims upon its treasury. One more 
 effort was made by the United States to settle the controversy 
 by negotiation. Three envoys were sent with full powers to 
 adjust all questions in dispute. When they arrived, the French 
 Directory, like a company of banditti, demanded of them a sum 
 of money as a preliminary step to a treaty. This of course was 
 indignantly refused and the embassy failed in its mission. There 
 was but one voice among all parties at home respecting this in- 
 sult ; that was : " Millions for defence but not one cent for trib- 
 ute." After further consideration, the French Directory pro- 
 posed peace and ministers were promptly sent in answer to their 
 call. On their arrival they found Bonaparte at the head of the 
 government, as First Consul. With this responsible head, in 
 September, 1800, they concluded a treaty which satisfied both 
 countries and for a time restored the former good will between 
 them. New Hampshire, with great unanimity, supported Presi- 
 dent Adams in his foreign policy. The legislature prepared an 
 address to him, expressing the fullest approval of his purpose to 
 humble France and the most decided denunciation of French 
 aggressions. This measure received the unanimous vote of the 
 senate and had only four opposing votes in the house. 
 
 During the last four years of Washington's administration, 
 many important difficulties were adjusted. The controversy with 
 England was put to rest by Mr. Jay's treaty, though the party 
 spirit which it evoked lived on. In 1795, after three campaigns, 
 two of which were unsuccessful, against the western Indians, a 
 treaty was concluded which for a season quieted these fierce 
 savages. During the same year, a treaty with Spain was made, 
 which established the boundaries between the Spanish posses- 
 sions on this continent and the United States. Peace was also 
 made with the Algerines, a nest of pirates who had for years 
 laid the whole Christian world under tribute. The United 
 States, then destitute of a navy, had been compelled to pay large 
 sums to these outlaws for the redemption of captives ; and even 
 under the new treaty an annual tribute was promised to the 
 Dey, a sort of modern Minotaur, who demanded blood or money. 
 The quarrel with France remained to be settled when Washing- 
 ton delivered his "farewell address" in 1797. Under his suc- 
 cessor party lines were more closely drawn and federalists and 
 republicans began that struggle for supremacy in the national 
 councils which, under different party names, has been perpetu- 
 ated to this hour.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 233 
 
 The eighteenth century closed when partisan warfare was at 
 its height, and the press, on both sides, teemed with bitter sar- 
 casm and malignant abuse. This important date in our history 
 suggests some reflections upon the condition of New Hampshire 
 as it then was. It would be difficult to find a colony or state 
 within the period of authentic history that suffered more or 
 achieved more in the same number of years, than New Hamp- 
 shire prior to the peace with Great Britain in 1783. Her en- 
 tire record for one hundred and sixty years is stained with sweat 
 and blood. Her citizens labored and suffered during all that 
 period with unparalleled patience. From four inconsiderable 
 plantations in 1641, she had grown in 1800 to be a populous 
 state of two hundred and fourteen thousand inhabitants distribu- 
 ted over nearly two hundred flourishing towns. But from the hour 
 when the forests of Dover and Portsmouth first rang with the 
 blows of the woodman's axe, in 1623, till the close of the Revol- 
 utionary war, there was no rest from toil, scarcely any from war, 
 to all its citizens. For nearly all that long and dreary march of 
 armies and pressure of labor, the title to the very soil they had 
 won from the wilderness was in dispute. The Indians were con- 
 stantly upon their track, and no hiding-place was so secret or 
 remote as to render its occupant safe from the tomahawk and 
 scalping-knife. Foreign wars consumed their property and ex- 
 hausted their men. The government under which they lived 
 and to which they owed allegiance was changed almost as often 
 as the wages of Jacob by his crafty father-in-law. The king 
 ruled them only for his own advantage. Even Massachusetts, 
 with whom for many years she enjoyed a peaceful alliance, 
 finally became ambitious of enlarging her possessions, and un- 
 generously obtained and appropriated nearly one half of New 
 Hampshire. The people of the state found no security at home 
 or abroad, but in their own brave hearts and strong arms. They 
 made themselves homes and achieved a fame in arms and in 
 arts, which " none of their adversaries could gainsay nor resist." 
 
 CONDITION OF THE PEOPLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE AT THE BEGINNING OF 
 THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. 
 
 Let us now, with the light of memory and tradition lingering 
 on the track, point backward the glass of history and descry the 
 farmer in his field, the mechanic in his shop, and the minister 
 at his altar, as they severally lived and labored seventy years 
 ago, 
 
 "As when, by night, the glass 
 Of Galileo, less assur'd, observes 
 Imagin'd lands and regions in the moon." 
 
 We can scarcely conceive of a more independent, self-reliant,
 
 234 HISTORY OF 
 
 hearty, healthy and hopeful denizen of earth than the farmer of 
 that age. He lived upon the produce of his own soil ; was 
 warmed by fuel from his own woods, and clothed from the flax 
 of his own field or the fleeces of his own flock. No flour, hams, 
 lard nor oil was then imported. Broadcloths and cotton fabrics 
 were scarcely known. The oxen and swine which yielded the 
 " fresh meat " in winter and the " salt meat " in summer were 
 fed and fattened by himself. Trade was carried on chiefly by 
 barter. Little money was needed. The surplus produce of the 
 farm, or the slaughtered swine not needed by the family, were 
 carried to market in the farmer's " double sleigh " and exchanged 
 for salt, iron, molasses and other stores not produced at home. 
 So the year went round, marked by thrift, contentment and 
 prosperity. 
 
 " Happy the man whose wish and care 
 
 A tew paternal acres bound; 
 Content to breathe his native air, 
 In his own ground." 
 
 The mechanic was the peer and helper of the farmer. Every 
 tiller of the soil needed a house and barn, tools and furniture, 
 clothes and shoes. The skill and craft which produced these 
 necessaries were often brought to the employer. The mechan- 
 ics were itinerant, working where they were needed, and receiv- 
 ing for their labor the products of the farm or loom, or stores 
 from the larder or cellar. Carpenters, blacksmiths, masons, 
 tailors and shoemakers, who plied the most useful and neces- 
 sary of all handicrafts, were found in every town of any consid- 
 erable population. 
 
 The church and school-house were among the earliest public 
 structures reared. The creed of the Puritans discarded all or- 
 naments within and without the sacred edifice. The people of 
 New Hampshire, though not Puritans in name, adopted their 
 religious customs. The church of the new town was generally 
 built upon an eminence. It has been said that such sites were 
 selected that the worshipers might more easily discern the ap- 
 proach of the Indians who often lay in wait for them during 
 divine service. The " meeting-house " was high, long and broad, 
 with heavy porticos at each end containing stairs by which the 
 galleries were reached. The pews were square with seats on all 
 sides. " The broad aisle " was the post of honor. The pulpit 
 was reached by a long flight of steps, and a dome-shaped sound- 
 ing board was suspended over it. Here the " minister," who 
 was settled by the major vote of the town, indoctrinated his 
 people. From his lips they literally received the law. His ser- 
 mon was the only fountain of theology from which his hearers 
 could drink. Libraries, if they existed at all, were few, and the 
 books selected, being chiefly sermons and expositions of portions
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 335 
 
 of the Bible, were not extensively read. Religious papers were 
 unknown, and biographies of children of precocious piety and 
 sainted Christians too good for earth had not then been written. 
 A large proportion of the entire population attended church. 
 No blinds excluded the blazing suns of summer ; no fires soft- 
 ened the intense cold of winter. The hearers listened devoutly 
 to long, doctrinal sermons, even when the breath of the preacher 
 was frozen as it escaped his lips. " The minister of the stand- 
 ing order," possibly the only thoroughly educated man in the 
 town, " mighty in the scriptures " and austere in morals, was re- 
 garded by the children of his flock with awe, by the parents with 
 reverence. If a warm heart beat beneath his clerical robes, if 
 the love of souls beamed from his eye, shone in his face and 
 dropped from his tongue, then 
 
 "Truth from his lips prevailed with double sway, 
 And fools who came to scoff remained to pray." 
 
 CHAPTER LXVIL 
 
 THE EARLY FARM-HOUSE WITH ITS FURNITURE AND 
 SURROUNDINGS. 
 
 The primitive log-house, dark, dirty and dismal, rarely out- 
 lived its first occupant. With the progress of society in a new 
 town, it would look like premeditated poverty for the son to be 
 content with the first shelter that his father reared in the wilder- 
 ness. The first framed houses were usually small, low and cold. 
 The half house, about twenty feet square, satisfied the unam- 
 bitious. The double house, forty by twenty feet in dimensions, 
 indicated progress and wealth. It was designed for shelter, not 
 for comfort or elegance. The windows were small, without blinds 
 or shutters. The fire-place was sufficiently spacious to receive 
 logs of three or four feet in diameter, with an oven in the back 
 and a flue nearly large enough to allow the ascent of a balloon. 
 A person might literally sit in the chimney-corner and study as- 
 tronomy. All the cooking was done by this fire. Around it, 
 also, gathered the family at evening, often numbering ^six to 
 twelve children, and the cricket in the hearth kept company 
 to their prattle. Thus with the hardships came the comforts of 
 life, in the days " lang syne." 
 
 The furniture was simple and useful, all made of the wood
 
 336 HISTORY OF 
 
 of the native forest-trees. Pine, birch, cherry, walnut and the 
 curled maple were most frequently chosen by the " cabinet- 
 maker." Vessels of iron, copper and tin were used in cooking. 
 The dressers, extending from floor to ceiling in the kitchen, con- 
 tained the mugs, basins and plates of pewter which shone upon 
 the farmer's board at the time of meals. A writer for the New 
 Hampshire Patriot has recently given his recollections of the 
 kind of life I am here describing. I will quote a few para- 
 graphs. 
 
 "In 1815, travel was mostly on horseback, the mail being so carried in 
 many places. Hotels were found in every four to eight miles. Feed for 
 travelers' teams was, half baiting of hay, four cents ; whole baiting, eight 
 cents ; two quarts of oats, six cents. The bar-room fire-place was furnished 
 with a ' loggerhead,' hot, at all times, for making ' flip.' The flip was made 
 of beer made from pumpkin dried on the crane in the kitchen fire-place, and 
 a few dried apple-skins and a little bran. Half mug of flip, or half gill 
 ' sling,' six cents. On the table was to be found a ' shortcake,' the manu- 
 facture of which is now among the lost arts ; our ' book ' cooks can't make 
 them. Woman's labor was fifty cents per week. They spun and wove most 
 of the cloth that was worn. Flannel that was dressed at the mill, for women's 
 wear, was fifty cents a yard; men's wear, one dollar. 
 
 Farmers hired their help for nine or ten dollars a month some clothing 
 and the rest cash. Carpenters' wages, one dollar a day; journeymen car- 
 penters, fifteen dollars a month ; and apprentices, to serve six or seven years, 
 had ten dollars the first year, twenty the second, and so on, and to clothe 
 themselves. Breakfast generally consisted of potatoes roasted in the ashes, 
 a ' bannock ' made of meal and water and baked on a maple chip set before 
 the fire. Pork was plenty. If ' hash ' was had for breakfast, all ate from 
 the platter, without plates or table-spread. Apprentices and farm boys had 
 for supper a bowl of scalded milk and a brown crust, or bean porridge, or 
 pop-robbin. There was no such thing as tumblers, nor were they asked if 
 they would have tea or coffee ; it was ' Please pass the mug.' " 
 
 The post of the housewife was no sinecure. She had charge 
 both of the dairy and kitchen, besides spinning and weaving, 
 sewing and knitting, washing and mending for the " men folks." 
 The best room, often called " the square room," contained a bed, 
 a bureau or desk, or a chest of drawers, a clock, and possibly 
 a brass fire-set. Its walls were as naked of ornaments as the 
 cave of Macpelah. We are describing a period which antedates 
 the advent of pictures, pianos, carpets, lace curtains and Vene- 
 tian blinds. It was an age of simple manners, industrious hab- 
 its and untarnished morals. Contentment, enjoyment and lon- 
 gevity were prominent characteristics of that age. The second 
 volume of the New Hampshire Historical Collections contains a 
 list of nearly four hundred persons, who died in New Hampshire 
 prior to 1826 between the ages of ninety and a hundred and 
 five years. The average age of a hundred and thirty-three coun- 
 cilors who lived in the early history of the state was seventy 
 years. It deserves notice, also, that many of the provincial gov- 
 ernors and Revolutionary officers of the state lived to extreme
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 237 
 
 old age. Fevers and epidemics sometimes swept away the peo- 
 ple ; but consumption and neuralgia were then almost unknown. 
 The people were generally healthy. Their simple diet and 
 active habits produced neither " fever nor phlegm." 
 
 After preparing comfortable shelters for their families, the 
 early settlers in every town turned their thoughts to the house of 
 God. Most of the townships were granted on condition that "a 
 convenient house for the worship of God" should be built 
 within two years from the date of the grant. Even when the pro- 
 prietors lived in " log huts, " the " meeting-house " was a framed 
 building. Its site was some high hill ; possibly because the tem- 
 ple stood on a mountain, but probably because it must be a 
 watch-tower against the Indians as well as a " house of prayer." 
 In shape it was a rectangle flanked with heavy porticos, with 
 seven windows upon each side. Here every family was repre- 
 sented on the Sabbath. During the hour of intermission, the 
 farmers and mechanics gathered round some merchant or pro- 
 fessional man, whose means of information exceeded theirs, to 
 learn the important events of the week. The clergymen were 
 then settled by major vote of the town and all tax-payers were 
 assessed for his salary accoiding to their ability. The people 
 went to church on foot or on horseback, the wife riding behind 
 the husband on a " pillion." Chaises, wagons and sleighs were 
 unknown. Sometimes whole families were taken to " meeting " 
 on an ox-sled. 
 
 The Sabbath developed the social as well as religious senti- 
 ments. The ordinary visits of neighbors, like those of angels, 
 were "rare." The people lived like the parishioners of Chaucer's 
 "pore Personn," "fer asondur." Traveling was difficult and la- 
 borious. Neither men nor women were ever idle. Books were 
 few ; newspapers and letters were seldom seen at the country 
 fireside. News from England did not reach the inland towns 
 till five or six months after the occurrence of the events re- 
 ported. Intelligence from New York was traveling a whole 
 week before it reached New Hampshire. In 1764 the mail 
 was carried only twice in a week from New York to Philadel- 
 phia, and, after the close of the Revolutionary war, the mail was 
 carried between those cities by a post-boy on horseback. Now 
 tons of mailed matter are daily passing on the same route. 
 Men and women dressed in home-made fabrics and ate the pro- 
 duce of their own farms. A quotation from "Forefathers' song," 
 written in the seventeenth century, will reveal many facts in a 
 few words : 
 
 " The place where we live is a wilderness wood 
 Where grass is much wanting that's fruitful and good; 
 Our mountains and hills, and our valleys below, 
 Being commonly covered with ice and with snow :
 
 238 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 And when the north-west wind with violence blows, 
 Then every man pulls his cap over his nose; 
 But if any's so hardy and \vi!l it withstand, 
 He forfeits a finger, a foot or a hand." 
 
 Another stanza describes their daily food, not their "daily 
 bread," with more truth than poetry : 
 
 "If fresh meat be wanting to fill up our dish, 
 
 We have carrots and pumpkins and turnips and fish; 
 
 And, is there a mind for a delicate dish, 
 
 We repair to the clam-banks and there we catch fish. 
 
 Instead of pottage and puddings and custards and pies, 
 
 Our pumpkins and parsnips are common supplies ; 
 
 We have pumpkins at morning, and pumpkins at noon, 
 
 If it was not for pumpkins, we should be undone." 
 
 CHAPTER LXVIII. 
 
 DEVELOPMENT OF POLITICAL PARTIES. 
 
 In the dark ages, when the people, groaning under the iron 
 heels of petty despots, asked for relief or reform, the old barons 
 used to say : " We are unwilling to change the laws of England." 
 When the king and his nobles called on the church to conform 
 to the laws of the land, the prelates were wont to reply : " We 
 consent, saving our order " ; and when anxious litigants peti- 
 tioned against " the law's delay " for speedy justice, the courts 
 replied with one consent : " We must stand by the decisions." 
 These maxims were too sacred to be expressed in English, so 
 they were embalmed in Latin. A dead language aptly repre- 
 sented a dead law. Every age and nation has its conservatives 
 and reformers ; its progressive and stationary politicians. Writ- 
 ten constitutions for societies, institutions and nations rarely 
 satisfy more than one generation. Jefferson doubted whether it 
 was right for one generation to legislate for another ; for a youth- 
 ful people to make organic laws for those who should live in its 
 maturity and hoary age. The numerous amendments already 
 made and demanded in our own constitution indicate the truth 
 of his remark. The English constitution consists of laws, cus- 
 toms, charters and precedents. It is not written except in the 
 entire history of the country, civil, judicial and ecclesiastical. 
 Yet, under this varying and uncertain instrument, the most im- 
 portant reforms have been made by legislation. So slavery was 
 abolished in England. We cut the Gordian knot with the sword, 
 and possibly a whole century will be required to staunch the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 239 
 
 bleeding wounds of the nation. No new cause of controversy 
 has arisen since the adoption of the federal constitution. Some 
 causes of dissension were incorporated in its very substance. In 
 the infancy of the nation the questions of finance, tariff, slavery 
 and state rights were as prominent as they are to-day, and it is 
 remarkable that secession was broached very early in New Eng- 
 land. Many eminent northern men about the beginning of this 
 century favored it, and some secretly, some openly, advocated it. 
 Among these secessionists were some of the most eminent men 
 of New Hampshire. The late Governor Plumer, writing to John 
 Quincy Adams in 1828, says : "'During the long and eventful 
 session of congress of 18034 I was a member of the senate, 
 and was at the city of Washington every day of that session. In 
 the course of the session, at different times and places, several 
 of the federalists, senators and representatives from the New 
 England states informed me that they thought it necessary to 
 establish a separate government in New England, and if it should 
 be found practicable to extend as far south as to include Penn- 
 sylvania ; but in all events to establish one in New England. 
 They complained that the slave-holding states had acquired, by 
 means of their slaves, a greater increase of representatives in 
 the house than was just or equal ; that too great a portion of 
 the public revenue was raised in the northern states ; and that 
 the acquisition of Louisiana and the new states that were formed 
 and those to be formed in the west and in the ceded territory 
 would soon annihilate the weight and influence of the northern 
 states in the government." Mr. Plumer also adds : " I was 
 myself in favor of forming a separate government in New Eng- 
 land, and wrote several confidential letters to a few of my friends 
 recommending the measure." This letter was written in conse- 
 quence of the published assertion of President Adams that the 
 object of "certain leaders "of the federal party in Massachu- 
 setts in 1805 " was, and had been for several years, the dissolu- 
 tion of the Union and the establishment of a separate confed- 
 eracy." The biographer of Governor Plumer has quoted from 
 the published letters of many New England statesmen, jurists 
 and divines similar sentiments, so as to place the fact beyond a 
 doubt that secession was meditated at the north in the very in- 
 fancy of our national life. It deserves notice that the clergy of 
 that period were generally federalists, and when the southern 
 states, under the lead of Jefferson, gained the supremacy in the 
 national councils, they took a decided stand against the doctrines 
 and measures of the republican party. Hon. William Plumer, 
 jr., writes in the life of his father: "In 1793 Timothy Dwight, 
 of Yale college, and, like most of the eminent New England di- 
 vines of that day, a leading politician, wrote thus to a friend :
 
 240 HISTORY OF 
 
 ' A war with Great Britain we at least in New England will not 
 enter into. Sooner would ninety-nine out of a hundred separate 
 from the Union than plunge ourselves into such an abyss of mis- 
 ery.' " Oliver Wolcott, lieutenant-governor of Connecticut, re- 
 peatedly advocated a separation of the New England states from 
 \he Union. In 1796 he wrote : " I sincerely declare that I wish 
 the northern states would separate from the southern the mo- 
 ment that event [the election of Jefferson] shall take effect." 
 Mr. Plumer adds : " This plan of disunion thus rife in Con- 
 necticut in 1796 may not improbably be regarded as the germ of 
 that which appeared at Washington in 1808-9, and which showed 
 itself for the last time where it was first disclosed, in the Hart- 
 ford convention of 1814." 
 
 Parties are the natural outgrowth of free thought. They are 
 necessary to the perpetuity of free institutions. Irresponsible 
 power cannot be safely intrusted to any man or any body of 
 men. Majorities are often as tyrannical as despots. Hence our 
 own liberties will ever be most secure when the advocates and 
 opponents of measures of mere expediency are quite equally 
 balanced. The federal party maintained the supremacy for 
 twelve years after the adoption of the constitution. The suc- 
 cessor of Washington, John Adams, was a man of sterling integ- 
 rity, a profound statesman, a true patriot and an eminent orator. 
 Jefferson styles him " the colossus of debate " in the constitu- 
 tional convention. He possessed less popular talent and less 
 political sagacity than his illustrious rival. Adams approached 
 the object of his desires by a straightforward course. Jefferson 
 was more facile, yielding and devious in his march to victory. 
 He was a man of the world; his enemies say an "intriguer," an 
 " infidel " and a " demagogue." These are hard names ; they 
 are bestowed on him by men who opposed and hated him. He 
 was certainly successful in his plans, and became the founder of 
 a party which has ruled the country for more than one half the 
 period of its existence. No finite mind of to-day can positively 
 affirm that he did not administer the affairs of the country with 
 as much wisdom, integrity and patriotism as the great leader of 
 the federalists would have exhibited. Mr. Jefferson undoubtedly 
 made mistakes. So did Mr. Adams ; and posterity still points 
 to those mistakes as the true cause of his loss of power. New 
 Hampshire adhered implicitly to the doctrines of the federalists 
 till 1805, then the republicans were victors. Senator Plumer 
 then wrote to Uriah Tracy : " Democracy has obtained its long 
 expected triumph in New Hampshire. John Langdon is gov- 
 ernor elect. His success is not owing to snow, rain, hail or bad 
 roads, but to the incontrovertible fact that the federalists of this 
 state do not compose the majority. Many good men have grown
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 241 
 
 weary of constant exertions to support a system whose labors 
 bear a close affinity to those of Sisyphus." Governor Plumer 
 was then wavering. He had held the most important offices in 
 the gift of the state, and had executed their duties as an uncom- 
 promising federalist. He became in a few years the leader, the 
 honored and trusted standard-bearer, of the democratic party, 
 whose every measure he had previously opposed and whose very 
 name he hated. The fact that such conversions are common in 
 party politics shows that neither party is so wise or good as its 
 advocates would have us believe, nor so wicked and corrupt as 
 its opponents would represent them. Burke in his old age re- 
 sisted the opinions he advocated in his youth, so that it has 
 been said of him that his mind resembled some mighty conti- 
 nent rent asunder by internal convulsions, each division being 
 peopled with its own giant race of inhabitants. It is a difficult 
 task for a man to undo the work of years and conquer his own 
 overgrown reputation, but politicians are frequently called to 
 perform that unwelcome service, and, what is still worse, to be- 
 come the assailants of those whose votes and voices have lifted 
 them into the sunlight of popular favor. 
 
 John Langdon was a man of untarnished reputation, a true 
 patriot and a wise statesman. He was first nominated as a can- 
 didate for the chief magistracy of the state in 1802. He then 
 received eight thousand seven hundred and fifty-three votes. 
 After three years of trial he was triumphantly elected, in 1805, 
 by a majority of four thousand. The senate, house and council 
 were all the same party. The state was completely revolution- 
 ized in politics. Hon. Samuel Bell, whose name afterwards be- 
 came so illustrious in high official stations, was that year elected 
 speaker of the house. The party which then came into power 
 maintained their position, with slight interruptions, for more than 
 thirty years. 
 
 It is generally supposed that high culture, whether of the 
 head or heart, tends to repress party spirit ; and that prejudice 
 and intolerance are always associated with ignorance and bru- 
 tality. Hence, political parties which are sustained by the edu- 
 cated and religious portion of the community assume to be su- 
 perior to their opponents on that very account. Thucydides 
 maintains, in his history, that " as long as human nature remains 
 the same, like causes will produce like effects." The masses 
 who suffer understand their own wants better than their rulers 
 or teachers. Scribes and Pharisees, monarchs and nobles, are 
 not apt to favor reforms or to lift from men's shoulders the bur- 
 dens they have imposed. If the voice of the people is ever the 
 voice of God, it is when they cry for bread or plead for rights. 
 Jack Cade was a better patriot than Richard II., when, as the 
 
 16
 
 242 HISTORY OF 
 
 advocate for the people, he demanded "the abolition of slavery, 
 freedom of commerce in market towns without toll or impost, 
 and a fixed rent on lands instead of service due by villenage." 
 Revolutions usually begin with the lowest classes of society. 
 The men over whom David became captain were " poor, discon- 
 tented and in debt." Cromwell describes the first recruits of 
 the army of the Puritans as " old, decayed serving-men, tapsters 
 and such kind of fellows." When the Corsican lieutenant com- 
 menced his brilliant career, his army was formed of the canaille 
 of Paris. To-day, the chartists in England demand "universal 
 suffrage, annual parliaments, vote by ballot, electoral districts 
 and payment of members of parliament," and who in our coun- 
 try would pronounce their claims unjust ? Politics travel up- 
 ward ; morals and manners downward. Whigs, in opposition, 
 often become tories in power. The same has repeatedly proved 
 true of hostile parties in our country. It is the very nature of 
 a government to be avaricious of power ; and rulers are inclined 
 to use, in the promotion of their own interests, more than has 
 been delegated to them. The republicans at first were in favor 
 of a strict construction of the constitution ; yet in the purchase 
 of Louisiana, Jefferson himself admitted that he exceeded his 
 constitutional authority. When the national bank was estab- 
 lished in 1791, a warm debate arose between federalists and re- 
 publicans with regard to the constitutionality and expediency 
 of such an institution. This question caused the first important 
 division of opinion in the cabinet of Washington. Hamilton 
 and Knox supported the measure ; Jefferson and Randolph op- 
 posed it. In subsequent years, the parties of which Hamilton 
 and Jefferson were founders battled for the same views, till the 
 hostility of General Jackson worked the ruin of the bank. The 
 other leading measures of the federal party, the funding system, 
 the proclamation of neutrality, Jay's treaty, the internal taxes, 
 the alien and sedition laws, had all been more or less unpopular. 
 Mr. Jefferson, on his accession to office, sought to allay the vio- 
 lence of party feelings by the declaration : "We are all republi- 
 cans ; we are all federalists ;" still the spirit he had raised would 
 not down at his bidding. The late administration party, now 
 in the opposition, became bitter assailants of every measure 
 proposed by Jefferson and his supporters. The foreign rela- 
 tions of our country excited the most bitter controversies. 
 
 From 1805 to 1815, the people in every state had no rest 
 from these disturbing questions. The administration of Mr. 
 Jefferson, so prosperous at its commencement, was clouded and 
 overcast toward its close by the injustice of foreign powers. 
 This rendered necessary, in the opinion of the government, a 
 system of non-intercourse and embargo laws, and led finally to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 243 
 
 a war with England. The entire commerce of the United 
 States was annihilated by the British Orders in Council and the 
 Decrees of Napoleon, between May, 1806, and December, 1807. 
 There was no safety upon the high seas. Between the French 
 Scylla and the English Charybdis ruin was inevitable. The 
 Americans lost more than one hundred millions of property by 
 these maritime robbers. England was then the proud mistress 
 of the seas. She dictated international laws to less powerful 
 navigators. She claimed the right to board and search Ameri- 
 can vessels and to take from them not merely contraband goods, 
 but sailors whom she claimed as her subjects. On the twenty- 
 second of June, 1807, without provocation, she attacked and 
 crippled the Chesapeake, an American man-of-war, and took 
 from her by force four of her seamen. Such acts, repeatedly 
 committed and arrogantly defended, kindled the resentment of 
 every patriotic American ; still party ties were so strong that the 
 federalists rather apologized for English aggressions than con- 
 demned them. Among these lovers of fatherland were found 
 many of the literati and clergymen. The ministers regarded 
 England as the bulwark of the Protestant faith, and France as 
 the hot-bed of atheism. There was truth in these assertions ; 
 but neither of them could justify the outrages of England upon 
 our citizens or our commerce. England has "maintained, till the 
 year 1868, that no subject of hers could alienate his allegiance 
 to his native country. "Once a subject always a subject" was 
 her doctrine. Under this plea she ordered her cruisers to board 
 American vessels and seize all English subjects found there. 
 Previous to the declaration of war in 1812, more than six thou- 
 sand seamen had been thus forcibly abstracted from American 
 vessels. Sometimes American citizens were seized. 
 
 CHAPTER LXIX. 
 
 POLITICAL INFLUENCE OF THE CLERGY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 The aristocracy of New England were the ministers and mag- 
 istrates. Much of the hereditary reverence of the old world 
 for these officials, sacred and secular, still clung to them in the 
 new. Mrs. Stowe, in her " Minister's Wooing " and in " Oldtown 
 Folks," has very graphically illustrated the influence of both 
 classes in the early history of our country. The ministers of
 
 244 HISTORY OF 
 
 Massachusetts created, guided and controlled public opinion, 
 both religious and political. In fact they made the two identi- 
 cal. James Otis, the popular leader, who was denounced by 
 royalists as an " incendiary, a seditious firebrand and leveler," 
 was defended from the pulpit by the burning eloquence of May- 
 hew, who cried on the annual Thanksgiving day of 1762, " I do 
 not say our invaluable rights have been struck at ; but if they 
 have, they are not wrested from us ; and may righteous Heaven 
 blast the designs, though not the soul, of that man, whoever he 
 may be among us, that shall have the hardiness to attack them." 
 The same patriotic, heroic advocate of the people's rights wrote 
 to James Otis in 1766 : "You have heard of the communion of 
 the churches. While I was thinking of this in my bed, the great 
 use and importance of a communion of colonies appeared to 
 me in a strong light." He proceeded to suggest the sending of 
 circulars to all the colonies, "expressing a desire to cement 
 union among ourselves." "A good foundation for this," he 
 added, " has been laid by the congress of New York ; never 
 losing sight of it may be the only means of perpetuating our 
 liberties." This first suggestion of a political union of all the 
 colonies was almost the dying message of the good old man. 
 It was written on the last day of health. Through the who.le 
 period of our revolutionary struggle, the Congregationalists were 
 not only loyal to the best interests of the people, but the most 
 effective promoters of them. Bancroft says of the clergy of 
 Boston, in 1768 : " Its ministers were still its prophets ; its pul- 
 pits, in which, now that Mayhew was no more, Cooper was ad- 
 mired above all others for eloquence and patriotism, by weekly 
 appeals inflamed alike the fervor of piety and liberty." 
 
 The clergy of New England in their annual election sermons 
 before the state legislatures were expected to indicate the wants 
 of the people, to point out the blessings to be gained and the 
 evils to be shunned by wise legislation. In Massachusetts res- 
 olutions were passed requesting the clergy to enlighten the peo- 
 ple on important public measures. No law affecting the general 
 welfare could be enacted without their aid ; even the recruiting 
 officers besought the eloquence of the pulpit to promote enlist- 
 ments. New Hampshire, though not so rigidly Puritan as the 
 colonies of Plymouth and Massachusetts, yet followed the ex- 
 ample set by her elder sister in church and state. The Fast- 
 Day sermon never failed to enumerate the sins of the people, 
 national and individual ; the Thanksgiving sermon called on all 
 classes to praise God for his goodness, and the Election sermon 
 revealed the political wants of the state and taught the law- 
 makers their responsibility to God. So the ministers of the 
 " standing order " became politicians in the highest and noblest
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 245 
 
 sense. They sought to make human law identical with the di- 
 vine. They were followers of Washington and Adams and were 
 nearly all federalists. When a new party arose friendly to the 
 French and hostile to the English, the ministers, through dread of 
 French atheism and love of English protestantism, became 
 active partisans and thus lost their influence in the state. When 
 the republicans. gained the ascendency the ministers were virtu- 
 ally disfranchised, and many can remember the time when it 
 required great heroism in a clergyman to go to the polls. 
 
 Edward St. Loe Livermore, a distinguished- jurist and states- 
 man, said in 1808, in a public address : " It is a happiness for 
 our country to observe that the ministers of religion are truly 
 federal, and only two solitary exceptions can be found in New 
 Hampshire. These are rare birds very like unto black swans. 
 How can other ministers exchange with them or admit them into 
 their desks ? Why do they not have councils upon them and 
 have them dismissed ? It is conceived that ministers should be 
 of pure morals and sound orthodoxy, at least as to the funda- 
 mental principles of the religion of Christ, and that a council 
 would dismiss them for deficiency in either ; and are they not 
 the humble followers of infidels, and by their example, words 
 and actions doing all in their power to promote the cause of 
 Antichrist ? Let ministers and people consider these proposi- 
 tions and answer as they please." 
 
 CHAPTER LXX. 
 
 PURITAN INFLUENCE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Supposing the Puritans to have been such and so great as they 
 have been represented to be, what has New Hampshire to do 
 with them ? Much every way ; for though the early settlers of 
 this state were neither Puritans nor Pilgrims, their laws, schools, 
 religion and government were patterned after those of Massa- 
 chusetts, and were thus a legitimate legacy from puritanism. 
 What was good or bad in the one state was equally good or bad 
 in the other. The two states were under one government for 
 nearly two generations of men ; and that, too, in the infancy of 
 our republic, when the younger state would naturally imitate the 
 older. Such was the result. The town, the school, the church 
 and the state were identical in the two republics. New Hamp-
 
 246 HISTORY OF 
 
 shire, therefore, quarried the corner stones of its political and 
 ecclesiastical structure from the mine of puritanism. Thus her 
 origin was ennobled. The Puritans were simple in habits : plain 
 in dress ; bold in speech ; stern in morals ; bigoted in religion ; 
 patient in suffering ; brave in danger ; and energetic in action. 
 But what have the clergy done for New Hampshire ? Let us in- 
 quire what has been done in morals, religion and education ; 
 and whatever that is is chiefly due to them. Ministers of the 
 gospel have been the originators and promoters of educational 
 institutions. The' common schools have been cherished, super- 
 intended and elevated by them. Academies have been built 
 and sustained by their fostering care. It is hardly probable that 
 an instance can be found in the history of our state, where an 
 institution of learning, a social library, a lyceum or a literary 
 association has been established without the active and constant 
 support of the clergymen of the place. Ministers have been the 
 models in style, pronunciation and delivery whom all the young 
 lovers of oratory have imitated. The college was founded by a 
 clergyman, and has, with a single exception, been presided over 
 by clergymen. Its most active supporters have been from that 
 profession. During the years of its sore trial, when the state 
 attempted to seize its franchise, its chief defenders were Con- 
 gregational clergymen. Dr. McFarlancl, at the risk of reputa- 
 tion and usefulness, sometimes wrote two columns a week in de- 
 fence of the old board and their measures. Others fought in 
 the same battle and with similar peril. The clergyman in every 
 town has been among the first to discover and encourage rising 
 merit among the sons and daughters of the flock. Hundreds of 
 young men have received a liberal education through the aid and 
 counsel of faithful pastors, who otherwise might have remained 
 for life "mute and inglorious" upon their native hills. Dr. 
 Samuel Wood of Boscawen, during his long, successful ministry, 
 fitted at his own home more than one hundred young men for 
 college. Those who could not immediately pay one dollar a 
 week for board and tuition he trusted ; to some indigent stu- 
 dents he forgave their debt. Upon -the subjects of morals, 
 religion, reforms and revivals it is superfluous to speak in this 
 connection. To recite what has been done in these respects by 
 the ministers of all denominations would require a complete 
 history of the moral and spiritual progress of the state from its 
 origin. The other learned professions have been co-workers 
 with them ; but it is not my purpose to speak of them here and 
 now. By such agencies as I have indicated New Hampshire 
 has risen to an honorable rank among her sister states. Her 
 schools, academies and churches compare favorably with those 
 of other more attractive portions of our countiy.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 247 
 
 CHAPTER LXXI. 
 
 INTERNAL CONDITION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE FROM 1805 TO 1815. 
 
 The political revolution which transferred the government of 
 the state in 1805 from the federalists to the republicans produced 
 no serious disturbance among the citizens. Party spirit had 
 previously run so high that it could scarcely have been increased 
 without breaking out in open violence. The majority in favor 
 of the change was so large that the defeated party yielded 
 gracefully to the decision of the people. Prior to this date the 
 important offices of the state had been held by the same incum- 
 bents for many years in succession. A kind of official aristoc- 
 racy had grown up in the community. John Taylor Gilman had 
 held the office of governor eleven years. Governor Langdon, 
 his successor, was a Revolutionary patriot, and had been during 
 a large part of his life in high official stations. Joseph Pearson 
 had been secretary of state for nineteen years. This fact reveals 
 the confidence of the legislature in his integrity and competency 
 for the station. He was succeeded by Philip Carrigain. Na- 
 thaniel Gilman was elected treasurer in place of Oliver Peabody. 
 Hon. Simeon Olcott, one of the senators in congress, was re- 
 moved by death, and Nicholas Gilman was chosen to succeed 
 him. He was the first republican elected to either branch of 
 congress since the advent of the new party to power in New 
 Hampshire. Most of the senators and representatives from 
 New England were still of the federal party. The legislature, 
 after an appropriate reply to the governor's message and an ex- 
 pression of " their utmost confidence in the virtuous and mag- 
 nanimous administration of President Jefferson," proceeded to 
 consider the local interests of the state. An English professor 
 of history says that we can best ascertain the true social and 
 political condition of any people by inquiring what are the laws, 
 and who made them ? Let us apply this test to the present 
 epoch. The new administration made no violent innovations. 
 The old laws for the most part remained in force. Among the 
 new enactments was a statute prohibiting the circulation of pri- 
 vate notes as a medium of exchange, and another limiting all 
 actions for the recovery of real estate to twenty years. Pre- 
 scription by common law had for centuries been regarded as a 
 valid title to land and hereditaments. The length of time nee-
 
 248 HISTORY OF 
 
 essary to constitute a title against adverse claimants had not 
 before been determined in New Hampshire by statute. If a 
 person had occupied lands " under a bona fide purchase " for 
 six years, he could not be ejected by the true owner without the 
 recovery of his betterments if he chose to appeal to the court 
 for protection. Laws were also passed regulating the internal 
 police of the state, appointing guardians of indolent, profligate 
 and intemperate persons, regulating the making and selling of 
 bread, the inspection of beef and the collection of damages 
 caused by floating lumber. At the same session of the legisla- 
 ture, provision was made for the division of the towns into 
 school districts, with special regard to the convenience and edu- 
 cation of the entire population. Thus the common school, with 
 its untold blessings, was brought into the neighborhood, if not 
 to the very door, of every citizen of the state ; and the school- 
 house, usually placed in the geographical centre of the district 
 that owned it, not only served as a seat of learning for the chil- 
 dren, but was often used by the parents for political, judicial 
 and religious purposes. Here the local caucus, the justice court 
 and the infant church helped to educate the common mind in 
 policy, law and religion. Themes of the highest interest to 
 church and state have often been thoroughly discussed and 
 wisely decided in these primitive homes of science and litera- 
 ture. In them, also, the inventors, discoverers and legislators 
 of the state received their elementary, sometimes their entire 
 education. 
 
 By the legislature of 1805, The New Hampshire Iron Factory 
 Company, at Franconia, was incorporated. This very useful 
 institution maintained a healthy and progressive existence for 
 many years, and did much to develop that most necessary of all 
 the useful ores, and to advance the permanent prosperity of the 
 surrounding country. Recently, on account of the high price of 
 personal labor, its operations have been suspended.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 249 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIL 
 
 CAUSES OF THE SECOND WAR WITH ENGLAND. 
 
 England and France had been waging with one another an 
 internecine war. Each of these powerful nations forbade neu- 
 tral powers to trade with her mortal foe. Great Britain, by her 
 orders in council, interdicted our trade with France. Bona- 
 parte, by way of retaliation, decreed capture and confiscation to 
 all American vessels trading with England. Our ships and their 
 cargoes became the plunder of both nations. British cruisers 
 boarded our vessels and impressed all seamen who could not 
 prove that they had not English blood in their veins. They 
 also blockaded our harbors and, in one instance, attacked and 
 disabled an American man-of-war while quietly riding in our own 
 waters. The insolence of England became intolerable. She 
 had no peer upon the high seas. Her navy consisted of more 
 than a thousand me'n-of-war, while the Americans had only seven 
 effective frigates and perhaps fifteen sloops-of-war. It was not 
 in the power of the Americans to protect her merchants or chas- 
 tise her enemies ; she therefore retained her vessels at home by 
 an embargo. 
 
 On the expediency of this measure the country was divided. 
 The federalists, who were inclined to apologize for the aggres- 
 sions of England, bitterly assailed the law. The suspension of 
 all commerce, the enhanced prices of imported articles, in- 
 creased the popular discontent, and although the legislature of 
 1808 voted an address to President Jefferson approving of his 
 entire policy, yet the people in the August election of members 
 of congress reversed that decision. A federal delegation was 
 elected, and in the following November federal electors for pres- 
 ident were chosen. The politics of the state were again changed. 
 In the spring of 1809 the republicans lost their ascendency in 
 the town elections. Jeremiah Smith, the federal candidate, was 
 elected governor by a majority of about two hundred votes. The 
 council was still republican. In the legislature the power of the 
 federalists was supreme. Moses P. Payson was made president 
 of the senate, George P. Upham speaker of the house, Nathaniel 
 Parker secretary of state, and Thomas W. Thompson treas- 
 urer. These were all prominent men in the history of the state. 
 Mr. Thompson was afterwards elected to the senate of the 
 United States. The governor-elect was one of the ablest men
 
 250 HISTORY OF 
 
 our state has produced. He was a native of Peterborough, and 
 for several years had discharged the duties of chief justice of 
 the superior court of New Hampshire with distinguished ability. 
 
 On the fourth of March, 1809, Mr. Madison was inaugurated 
 president of the United States. He pursued the policy of his 
 predecessor with slight modifications. The embargo was so un- 
 popular that the administration deemed it wise to change the 
 name though they retained the principle. They made a law pro- 
 hibiting all commercial intercourse with France and England, 
 with a proviso that in case either of those countries should re- 
 peal their injurious edicts against American commerce the non- 
 intercourse act should at once cease with respect to that nation. 
 This law, of course, relieved our government of the blame of re- 
 stricting trade, and made the foreign powers responsible for 
 their aggressions upon a neutral nation. This change of policy 
 produced a corresponding change in New Hampshire. In 1810 
 the republicans resumed their power and Governor Langdon was 
 reelected by a majority of more than one thousand. Every de- 
 partment of the state government was again in the hands of the 
 republicans. William Plumer, formerly a distinguished federal- 
 ist but now an ardent supporter of the doctrines he once op- 
 posed, was chosen president of the senate, and Charles Cutts 
 speaker of the house. Mr. Cutts belonged to the distinguished 
 family of Portsmouth whose founder was the first president of 
 the province of New Hampshire in 1679. Charles Cutts, during 
 the session in which he was speaker, was elected to the senate 
 of the United States. In 1811 the same party was victorious. 
 
 In 1812 Gov. Langdon retired from public life in consequence 
 of the infirmities of age. He enjoyed, in his quiet home at 
 Portsmouth, the respect and reverence of a grateful people. His 
 revolutionary services were never forgotten. His declining years 
 were solaced by the kind intercourse of friends and the conso- 
 lations of religion. He took a deep interest in the circulation 
 of the Bible and contributed liberally to the funds of the New 
 Hampshire Bible Society, of which he was one of the founders. 
 
 Party spirit was now at its height. The controversies about 
 men and measures were exceedingly bitter, often malignant. 
 About this period a new political power arose in the state in the 
 person of Mr. Isaac Hill and in the issues of the New Hamp- 
 shire Patriot, of which he was the editor. Mr. Hill, having spent 
 the first fourteen years of his life upon a farm, was apprenticed 
 to Mr. Joseph Cushing, publisher of the Amherst Cabinet, in 
 1802. There he devoted himself with increasing assiduity to 
 labor and study. Every leisure moment was given to reading, 
 writing and debating, and by this self-culture he made himself 
 one of the most accomplished journalists of our country. In
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 251 
 
 April, 1809, when he had obtained his majority, he removed to 
 Concord and purchased a paper called The American Patriot, 
 which had been edited by William Hoit, jr., for about six months, 
 and changed its name to " The New Hampshire Patriot." The 
 first number of this paper bears this motto : " Indulging no pas- 
 sions which trespass on the rights of others, it shall be our true 
 glory to cultivate peace by observing justice." Mr. Hill was 
 an uncompromising republican. Speaking of the federalists in 
 his introductory address he says : 
 
 " Theirs is the cause of Great Britain, inasmuch as they coincide with and 
 justify her aggressions on the principles of right and justice, on the laws of 
 nature and of nations ; theirs is the cause of our enemy, because they stig- 
 matize our government in every act, whatever its tendency, and because no 
 subterfuge, however mean, is left unessayed to incite to distrust and oppo- 
 sition. In our views of foreign nations we shall treat alike French injustice 
 and British perfidy. While we consider the latter as far outstripping the 
 former, we cannot but dwell with more emphasis on that power who has 
 ability and inclination to do us much injury than upon him who, though he 
 have enough of the last, has comparatively little of the first requisite to mo- 
 lest us. We cannot forget the murder of our citizens, the impressment of 
 our seamen, the seizure and confiscation of our property and the many in- 
 sults and menaces on our national flag." 
 
 When we remember that these charges were literally true, and 
 that history h is confirmed them, we do not wonder at the strong 
 language which so often flowed from his pen. In the nine years 
 preceding the war nine hundred American vessels had been cap- 
 tured and condemned in British courts, and more than six thou- 
 sand seamen had been taken from American vessels and trans- 
 ferred to English ships or imprisoned ! In our day public 
 sentiment is as sensitive as an aspen leaf to the slightest breeze 
 of English insolence. The seizure of a single American citi- 
 zen, contrary to the rules of international law, would be deemed 
 a sufficient cause for official interposition. We cannot wonder, 
 therefore, that our fathers, sixty years ago, deeply felt the "bit- 
 ter, burning wrongs " which England for years persistently in- 
 flicted upon our country. For several years after Mr. Hill 
 became an editor there were only two republican papers in the 
 state, while there were ten supported by the federalists. The 
 new champion of republicanism warred almost alone. He was 
 the Ulysses of the party, a man of great sagacity, energy and 
 perseverance. After the clouds which obscured the vision of 
 contemporaries have been lifted, history pronounces Mr. Hill a 
 wise statesman and an honest patriot. Like all political par- 
 tisans he was severe, sometimes unjust, to opponents, but his 
 heart was true as the needle to the pole to what he deemed the 
 best interests of the country. His fellow-citizens showed their 
 approbation of his course by bestowing upon him, for many 
 years in succession, the highest honors in their gift.
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIII. 
 
 RECORD OF NEW HAMPSHIRE DURING THE WAR FOR "SAILORS* 
 
 RIGHTS." 
 
 War was declared against Great Britain by the United States 
 on the eighteenth of June, 1812. Congress and the people 
 were nearly equally divided on the question of an appeal to 
 arms. The declaration was carried by a small majority. Sec- 
 tional interests influenced the minds of voters. The South and 
 West favored the war. New England was generally opposed to 
 it. Manufactures were then deemed of little importance com- 
 pared with the commerce and fisheries of that section of the 
 country. It was thought that war would ruin the prosperity of 
 New England ; hence the violent opposition of the wise and 
 wealthy citizens of the North. Lawyers and legislators, teachers 
 and authors, merchants and ministers, denounced the war and its 
 supporters. The dissolution of the Union was then regarded as 
 necessary to the welfare of New England. Opinions in favor of 
 secession were freely expressed in private and in public, by indi- 
 viduals and assemblies. The Federalist convention, held in 
 Boston on the thirty-first day of March, 1811, resolved that the 
 non-intercourse law, just then passed, " if persisted in must and 
 will be resisted." Jeremiah Mason, the ablest lawyer our 
 country has produced, said to Mr. Plumer, in August, 1811: 
 "The federalists of Massachusetts will make a great effort at 
 the next spring elections ; and if they fail, they will forcibly re- 
 resist the laws of congress." " Resistance," said Dr. Parish, in 
 April, 1811, "is our only security." 
 
 Josiah Quincy, in January, 1811, speaking of the bill for the 
 admission of Louisiana, in congress, said : " If this bill passes, 
 it is my deliberate opinion that it is virtually a dissolution of 
 the Union ; that it will free the states from their moral obliga- 
 tions ; and, as it will then be the right of all, so it will be the 
 duty of some, to prepare definitely for a separation, amicably if 
 they can, violently if they must. The bill, if it passes, is a death- 
 blow to the constitution. It may afterwards linger ; but, linger- 
 ing, its fate will, at no very distant period, be consummated." 
 
 Allen Bradford wrote to Elbridge Gerry, under date of Octo- 
 ber 18, 1811 : "If our national rulers continue their anti-com- 
 mercial policy, the New England states will by and by rise in 
 their wonted strength, and with the indignant feelings of 1775,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 253 
 
 sever themselves from that part of the nation which thus wickedly 
 abandons their rights and interests." These sentiments, uttered 
 by leading men of New England, were not the hasty ebullitions 
 of party spirit, but the deliberate expressions of matured con- 
 victions. Disunion was not merely a threat, but a purpose, with 
 many influential opponents of the war. In the spring of 1812, 
 William Plumer, who had formerly advocated the views of the 
 federal party, but, like John Quincy Adams and other distin- 
 guished statesmen, had become an earnest and conscientious op- 
 ponent of them, was brought forward for governor. His former 
 friends, who accused him of apostasy, assailed him with un- 
 stinted censure and acrimony. The federalists nominated again 
 John Taylor Oilman, a gentleman of the old school, a man of 
 high purpose, firm resolve and sterling integrity. His great 
 popularity, from former services and revolutionary memories, 
 gave him decided advantage in a political canvass. The parties 
 were so nearly balanced that there was no election by the peo- 
 ple ; but in the convention of the two houses, on the fourth of 
 June, 1812, Mr. Plumer was chosen governor by one hundred 
 and four votes against eighty-two for Mr. Gilman. The house 
 was republican. 
 
 The governor entered at once upon the discharge of the du- 
 ties of his new station, and worked in perfect harmony with the 
 existing administration. A few brief extracts from his diary 
 will show what he did in support of the war. Under date of 
 June 23, he writes : "In the evening, I received by an express, a 
 letter from Major-General Dearborn, stating that he was offi- 
 cially informed that the government of the United States had 
 declared war against Great Britain, and requesting me to order 
 out one company of artillery and one of infantry of the de- 
 tached militia, and place them under command of Major Up- 
 ham of the United States army at Portsmouth, for the defence 
 of the sea-coast." 
 
 June 24 : "I issued orders to General Storer to order out the 
 troops, in conformity with this requisition." July 7 : "Last even- 
 ing, I received a requisition from General Dearborn to send one 
 company of detached militia to defend the northern frontier of 
 the state. To-day I issued orders to General Montgomery to call 
 them out from his brigade, and station them at Stewartstown and 
 Enrol." July 21: "I issued an order to General Storer, requiring 
 him to send one company of the detached infantry of his brigade 
 to Portsmouth harbor, and to detach a suitable major to take 
 command of the troops at Forts Constitution and McClary ; and 
 also to General Robinson to send one company of the detached 
 artillery from his brigade to the same place, for the defence of 
 the sea-coast."
 
 254 HISTORY OF 
 
 These military requisitions profoundly agitated the minds of 
 the quiet citizens of the state. Words had passed into acts; 
 and prophecy had become reality. The fiery eloquence of in- 
 dignant patriots now flashed from the sword and bayonet, and 
 were soon to speak in thunder tones from the mouths of cannon. 
 
 "Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro," 
 
 and by the fireside, in the streets, and in all places of concourse, 
 men talked of war and its consequences. The generation then 
 upon the stage knew its horrors only by tradition and history ; 
 and when a son of a family or a hired man was "drafted" to 
 guard the sea-coast or frontiers, the household bewailed him as 
 one dead. 
 
 Governor Plumer, in his first message to the legislature, pre- 
 sented some new views with respect to corporations, which have 
 since been adopted in the state by all parties. They are found in 
 the following extract : " Acts of incorporation have within a few 
 years greatly increased in this state ; and many of them, being 
 of the nature of grants, cannot with propriety be altered without 
 previous consent of the grantees. Such laws ought therefore to 
 be passed with great caution ; many of them should be limited 
 to a certain period, and contain a reservation authorizing the 
 legislature to repeal them whenever they cease to answer the 
 end for which they were made or prove injurious to the public 
 interest." This is sound doctrine and deserves to be inscribed 
 in letters of gold on every state-house and hall of legislation in 
 the land. In reply to the governor's call for men and means to 
 carry on the war, the legislature said : " We are all Americans ; 
 we will cordially unite in maintaining our rights in supporting 
 the constitutional measures of our government, and in repelling 
 the aggressions of every invading foe." The citizens of New 
 Hampshire were moved by the same patriotic spirit which actu- 
 ated their representatives. They flocked to our national stand- 
 ard wherever it was set up. Her volunteers were found in every 
 fierce encounter by sea and land. Whole companies, from vari- 
 ous parts of the state, marched together to the war. Her sailors 
 fitted out privateers and preyed upon the commerce of the 
 haughty "mistress of the seas." Mr. Brewsterin his "Rambles 
 about Portsmouth " has this graphic picture of privateering in 
 that town : " Hete we are in the memorable year, 1812, on the 
 old wharf at Point of Graves, beholding the first privateer fit- 
 ting out after the declaration of war. That schooner is the 
 Nancy; and that man with two pistols in his belt and his vest 
 pockets filled with loose gunpowder is Captain Smart. There is 
 a large company of spectators on the wharf looking at the little 
 craft. But off she goes to the mouth of the St. Lawrence, and, 
 like a small spider entrapping a bumble-bee, she soon returns
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 255 
 
 with her prize." No less than fourteen ships sailed from the 
 same port, on the same errand, during the first year of the war. 
 These privateers were commissioned by the United States, " to 
 take, burn, sink and destroy the enemy wherever he could be 
 found, either on high seas or in British ports," and with unpar- 
 alleled success they executed their mission. British merchant- 
 men laden with valuable cargoes were captured by them, and 
 large fortunes were acquired by these hardy navigators. They 
 probably proved more annoying to the English people than our 
 ships of war. Our sailors also fought with Perry on Lake Erie, 
 and with Macdonough on Lake Champlain ; and by their bravery 
 and energy contributed to the glorious victories under both 
 those peerless officers. On the land they also followed Miller 
 and McNiel to the very cannon's mouth ; and with them shared 
 the perils of the desperate onset and the honors of triumphant 
 victory. The army and navy of the Republic were small, but 
 more than two thousand New Hampshire freemen were found in 
 these departments of the public service. The land campaigns 
 during the first year of the war were generally disastrous. The 
 disgraceful surrender of General Hull, with two thousand men, 
 at Detroit, and the defeat of General Van Rensselaer on the 
 borders of Canada, near the beginning of the war, chilled the 
 popular enthusiasm and appalled the stoutest hearts in the coun- 
 try. The republicans were mortified and disheartened. They 
 ascribed their failures to the opposition of the federalists, who 
 in turn charged them with incapacity and reckless folly. 
 
 The absence of many voters in the army and navy and the in- 
 creased popular discontent changed the politics of the state. 
 In March, 1813, Governor Gilman, after a. retirement of eight 
 years, was again called to the gubernatorial chair. This office 
 he held for three years in succession. Both branches of the 
 legislature were also opposed to the existing administration, and, 
 of course, to the vigorous prosecution of the war. They were 
 willing to act on the defensive in case of an invasion of the soil 
 of New Hampshire, but would not consent that the militia of 
 the state should be led into the territory of the enemy for ag- 
 gressive warfare. Canada has been the Scylla against which our 
 hopes have often been wrecked, from the impetuous Arnold to 
 the last Fenian officer who has meditated its conquest. The in- 
 vasion of this province gave occasion to the federalists to deny 
 the power of the president to call out the militia of the states 
 and place them under the officers of the United States. The 
 governors of Massachusetts and Connecticut refused to comply 
 with the requisitions of General Dearborn, on the ground that 
 they were the proper judges of the necessity of such a call and 
 at that time they saw no reason to enforce it. They admitted
 
 256 HISTORY OF 
 
 the right of the president to command the militia of the states 
 in person, but he could not delegate that power to others. Gov- 
 ernor Gore of Massachusetts, in the senate of the United States, 
 expressed the common state-rights views of his party as follows : 
 " The president is commander-in-chief of the militia when in the 
 actual service of the United States ; but there is not a title of 
 authority for any other officer of the United States to assume 
 the command of the militia." 
 
 Governor Plumer, writing to John Quincy Adams of the peo- 
 ple of New Hampshire, says : " Though dismemberment has its 
 advocates here, they cannot obtain a majority of the people or 
 their representatives to adopt or avow it." During the whole 
 period of the war, the parties in New Hampshire were so nearly 
 equal that neither of them dared to advance very ultra opinions. 
 They were a mutual check upon each other. " Neither party 
 was strong enough to .feel confident of success and neither so 
 weak as to despair of victory." Such a political condition is 
 really the best pledge of integrity and the strongest antidote to 
 corruption in the administration of a republic. 
 
 During the year 1813 the northern frontier was the chief 
 theatre of war upon the land. General Harrison commanded 
 the army of the " West," near the head of Lake Erie. General 
 Dearborn, the commander-in-chief under the president, and a 
 New Hampshire man by birth, held the " Centre," on the Nia- 
 gara river. General Hampton, on the borders of Lake Cham- 
 plain, had charge of the department of the " North." The Ind- 
 ians mingled freely in the fight, but generally, as in the Revo- 
 lutionary war, were found on the side of the British. Many 
 bloody battles were fought with various success. If we contem- 
 plate only the contests upon the land, it would be difficult to 
 affirm that our country made progress during the year. At sea 
 and on the lakes, the American navy was in a majority of cases 
 triumphant. Of the campaign of 1814, the results were gen- 
 erally favorable to the Americans. In two of the engagements 
 of this year, the battle of Chippewa and that of Niagara, New 
 Hampshire troops were particularly conspicuous. 
 
 The bloody battle of Chippewa, a town on the Canada shore, 
 about two miles above Niagara Falls, was fought on the fifth of 
 July, 1814. General John McNiel, major of the eleventh regi- 
 ment, succeeded to its command by the fall of his superior 
 officer Colonel Campbell. He was attached to the forlorn hope, 
 a single brigade, which was required to cross a bridge of Street's 
 creek under the fire of a British battery. McNiel showed all 
 the coolness and self-possession which characterized General 
 Stark in leading his regiment over Charlestown Neck to meet 
 the enemy on Bunker Hill. For his gallant conduct on this
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 257 
 
 occasion he was promoted by congress. On the twenty-fifth day 
 of the same month was fought the battle of Bridgewater, one of 
 the most sanguinary engagements of the whole war. The Ameri- 
 cans lost eight hundred and fifty-eight men ; and the English 
 eight hundred and seventy-eight. Their force was greatly supe- 
 rior. The battle began at sunset of a hot and sultry day and 
 continued till midnight. The moon shone calmly on the fierce 
 conflict, and the roar of the cataract ceased to be noticed, while 
 the booming of cannon occupied every moment, rolling in terrific 
 reverberations over divided and hostile territories. In the in- 
 tense excitement of battle, the men heeded not the rush of waters 
 nor the din of war. So Livy informs us that an earthquake 
 passed during the fight at Lake Trasimenus, and the combatants 
 knew it not. 
 
 On that memorable evening Colonel McNiel, while reconnoi- 
 tering the enemy's line, received a shot in the knee from a car- 
 ronade, which crippled him for life. He still clung to his horse, 
 till he was so weakened by the loss of blood that his men were 
 obliged to carry him to a place of safety. The conduct of Col- 
 onel Miller of Peterborough has been so graphically described 
 by Mr. Barstow in his history of New Hampshire, that I will 
 quote the narrative : 
 
 " The British artillery, posted on a commanding height, had annoyed our 
 troops during the earlier part of battle. ' Can you storm that battery ? ' said 
 General Ripley to Miller. ' I'll try, sir,' replied the warrior ; then turned to 
 his men, and, in a deep tone, issued a few brief words of command : ' Twenty- 
 first^ attention I Form into column. You will advance up the hill to the storm 
 of the battery. At the word, " Halt" you will deliver your fire at the port- 
 light of the artillerymen, and immediately carry their guns at the point of 
 the bayonet. Support arms forward march ! ' Machinery could not have 
 moved with more compactness than that gallant regiment. Followed by the 
 twenty-third, the dark mass moved up the hill like one body, the lurid light 
 flickering on their bayonets as the combined fire of the enemy's artillery and 
 infantry opened murderously ttpon them. They flinched not, faltered not. 
 The stern, deep voice of the officers, as the deadly cannon-shot cut yawning 
 chasms through them, alone was heard ' Close up steady, men steady.' 
 Within a hundred yards of the summit, the loud 'Halt' was followed by a 
 volley, sharp and instantaneous as a clap of thunder. Another moment, 
 rushing under the white smoke, a short, furious struggle with the bayonet, 
 and the battle was won. The enemy's line was driven down the hill, and 
 (heir own cannon mowed them down by platoons. This brilliant success 
 decided the fate of the conflict, and the American flag waved in triumph on 
 that hill, scorched and blackened as it was by the flame of artillery, purpled 
 with human gore and encumbered by the bodies of the slain."
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIV. 
 
 THE HARTFORD CONVENTION. 
 
 The continuance of the war for three years exhausted the re- 
 sources of the country, not then abounding in wealth, increased 
 the burdens of taxation and enhanced the prices of all the 
 necessaries of life. In such a state of distress it was easy to 
 excite popular discontent. When the citizens were again and 
 again told that the administration had wasted the treasures of 
 the nation upon profitless schemes of conquest, and had shed 
 the blood of thousands of brave men to redress imaginary 
 wrongs, a majority of the people of New England adopted these 
 views of the war. Many boldly maintained that the soldiers 
 and revenues of the eastern states should be withheld from the 
 control of congress, and devoted to their own defence. The 
 northern states were also urged to make a separate peace with 
 the enemy, and leave the general government to its fate. On 
 the fifteenth day of December, 1814, a convention was holden 
 at Hartford, Conn., to consider the interests of New England in 
 distinction from the whole country, and, if deemed necessary, to 
 provide for an independent northern confederacy. Only two 
 delegates represented New Hampshire. The convention delib- 
 erated in secret. Its history has since been written, and the 
 men who participated in it affirm that nothing treasonable was 
 proposed or advocated. Still the existence of such a conven- 
 tion, at such a crisis, sectional in character, hostile to the admin- 
 istration, and sitting with closed doors, cast suspicion upon its 
 authors and abettors and subjected them, in subsequent years, 
 to political outlawry. It is said that Governor Gilman proposed 
 a special session of the legislature, to consider the question of 
 sending delegates from New Hampshire to this convention ; but 
 a majority of the council, being republicans, refused their con- 
 sent. Consequently only two counties, Grafton and Cheshire, 
 were represented at Hartford. This assembly, after its adjourn- 
 ment, published an address to the people, reciting the grievances 
 of New England and proposing such amendments to the consti- 
 tution of the United States as they supposed would prevent their 
 future recurrence. The unexpected cessation of the war pre- 
 vented the further discussion of these matters. The public dis- 
 tress was relieved by peace ; and the convention and its pro-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 259 
 
 posed reforms became subjects of bitter denunciation with the 
 republican party. Says Schele De Vere : 
 
 " Up to the civil war, we were subdivided politically and socially. In one 
 aspect we had states, each with its own image and superscription: a Mas- 
 sachusetts, haughty, self-conscious in its subtle refinement, or a South Caro- 
 lina, equally proud of its aristocratic culture and good breeding ; the one 
 producing thinkers and statesmen, the other, poets and politicians. But 
 they had no thought in common, and no neutral ground on which they would 
 condescend to meet ; hence, they were farther apart in their thoughts and 
 their writings than Frenchmen and Germans. The painful lack of national 
 feeling exhibited in the Hartford Convention was but reproduced in the 
 reckless attempt at nullification ; and at that time, either state would have 
 seen the other perish without a thought of the nation's greatness or the na- 
 tion's honor." 
 
 CHAPTER LXXV. 
 
 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE PRECEDING AND DURING 
 THE WAR FOR " SAILORS 5 RIGHTS." 
 
 While the cloud of war was distinctly visible above the politi- 
 cal horizon, but prior to its commencement, several local mat- 
 ters of public interest occupied the attention of the people. It 
 was customary in the early history of our country to raise money 
 by lottery for the general welfare. Roads were built, literary in- 
 stitutions founded and religious societies aided, by such ques- 
 tionable means. A lottery had been authorized by the legisla- 
 ture, for the construction of a road through the Dixville Notch 
 in the northern part of the state. Tickets had been issued, ex- 
 ceeding the prizes by the sum of thirty-two thousand one hun- 
 dred dollars ; but through the failure of agents, the loss of tick- 
 ets and the expense of management, only fifteen hundred dollars 
 came into the state treasury. This unprofitable and demoraliz- 
 ing process of raising funds was at this time discontinued ; and, 
 with the moralists of the present day, its former existence ex- 
 cites profound regret. During the year 1811, the people of New 
 Hampshire were greatly disturbed by the failure of three of 
 their principal banks. The announcement of the bankruptcy of 
 three such institutions in a small state, and nearly at the same 
 time, produced unusual commotion in business circles. Men 
 had not then become accustomed to the almost daily defalca- 
 tions of officials entrusted with corporate funds. Banks then 
 seldom suspended specie payments ; and the absolute failure of a
 
 260 HISTORY OF 
 
 moneyed institution was almost as rare as an earthquake. The 
 Hillsborough, Cheshire and Coos Banks, by illegal issues and 
 excessive loans, had thrown so many of their bills upon the 
 market that they were unable to redeem them and were com- 
 pelled to suspend payment. The directors could not escape 
 censure ; for the public could justly charge their losses either 
 upon their carelessness or dishonesty. Those men who incurred 
 the public displeasure with great difficulty regained their former 
 popularity. 
 
 During this year the legislature decreed a fixed salary to the 
 judges of the court of common pleas, instead of the uncertain 
 fees which they had previously received. This principle has 
 since been applied to other offices, such as judges of probate 
 and high sheriffs. 
 
 In 1812, provision was made for the erection of a state prison. 
 It was built of granite, in a thorough and substantial manner, at 
 an expense of thirty-seven thousand dollars. It was placed un- 
 der the control of the governor and council. During its entire 
 history, to the present time, it has ranked among the best regu- 
 lated penitentiaries in the country. The reformation of crim- 
 inals has been a special object with the managers of this insti- 
 tution. Moral and religious instruction has been imparted, and 
 in many instances the prisoners have been improved in charac- 
 ter and conduct. Before the erection of this prison, eight crimes 
 were punishable with death in New Hampshire. In 1812 the 
 criminal code was revised, and the number of capital offences 
 was reduced to two, treason and murder. Imprisonment was 
 substituted for the whipping-post and pillory. With the progress 
 of civilization and religion, severe penalties have everywhere 
 been mitigated ; and death has been confined to those crimes 
 which imperil the very existence of the state. In England, petty 
 larceny used to be punished with death ; and it was no uncom- 
 mon thing to see a score of criminals executed together on a 
 single morning. In 1836 a new law swept from the statute- 
 book twenty-one capital offences ; and since that date the num- 
 ber has been reduced to three, and executions have become 
 quite rare in England. 
 
 In our own state, imprisonment for debt disgraced our juris- 
 prudence till the year 1841. This law was no respecter of per- 
 sons. Any man, high or low, wise or foolish, might by misfor- 
 tune or imprudence become its victim. The judicial records of 
 the state show that the learned and the ignorant, the honorable 
 and the degraded, have been inmates of the same prison, some- 
 times occupants of the same cell. In 1805, Hon. Russell Free- 
 man, who had been a councilor in the state and speaker of the 
 house of representatives, was imprisoned in Haverhill jail for
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 261 
 
 debt. Two other persons were confined in the same room for 
 the same cause. Josiah Burnham, one of the debtors, a quar- 
 relsome and brutal fellow, enraged at the complaints made of 
 his ravenous appetite and ungovernable passions, fell upon Mr. 
 Freeman and his companion and murdered them both. This 
 atrocious deed of blood excited general indignation throughout 
 the state against the perpetrator. He was tried and hung for 
 the offence in the following year, and Rev. David Sutherland, of 
 Bath, preached a sermon to the immense crowd that assembled 
 to witness the execution. The barbarous law that immured 
 debtors in jail like felons, and in company with felons, the 
 double murder in one room, the eagerness of the people to see 
 the gallows and the culprit hang upon it, all show the manners 
 and morals of the times. Such scenes are among the things of 
 the past; and other crimes, less revolting but equally sinful, 
 have usurped their place. 
 
 Parties that have gained power by severe struggles often resort 
 to questionable measures to retain it. So good laws are some- 
 times repealed and bad laws enacted ; old institutions pulled 
 down and new ones set up ; courts reconstructed and constitu- 
 tions amended to suit the exigencies of the majority. At the 
 June session of the legislature in 1813, the "superior court of 
 judicature " was changed to " the supreme judicial court." With 
 a change of name came a change of officers. Only one of the 
 judges of the old court was retained. Arthur Livermore, who 
 had been chief justice, was appointed associate justice in the 
 new court. Jeremiah Smith of Exeter, who had formerly held 
 the same position, was made chief justice and Caleb Ellis of 
 Claremont was selected to fill the remaining seat. The feder- 
 alists professed a desire to make the court more efficient ; and 
 maintained that, as the officers were created by the legislature, 
 the same body had a right to vacate them. The republicans 
 denounced the measure as illegal because the judges were com- 
 missioned " during good behavior " and could be removed only 
 by impeachment. Such ought to be the tenure of a judge's 
 office ; but majorities seldom regard the rights of individuals if 
 the interests of their party are in conflict with them. Two of 
 the old judges determined not to submit to the new law. Rich- 
 ard Evans and Clifton Claggett, in the autumnal sessions of the 
 courts in the counties of Rockingham, Strafford and Hills- 
 borough, appeared and opened the courts as in former years, 
 ordering the jurors to be sworn and clients to be heard. Thus 
 two sets of judges were at the same time holding rival courts, 
 each claiming supreme power under the state constitution. The 
 lawyers, jurors and a majority of the people recognized the new 
 court. In Hillsborough county the high sheriff escorted the old
 
 262 HISTORY OF 
 
 judges to the court-house ; while the new court, attended by his 
 deputies, were obliged to perform the business before them in a 
 school-house. Shortly after these judicial collisions Governor 
 Oilman called together the legislature, and Josiah Butler, sheriff 
 of Rockingham county, and Benjamin Pierce, sheriff of Hills- 
 borough county, were removed by address ; and from that time 
 the new court ceased to be interrupted. It is not creditable to 
 any party to attempt to destroy the independence of the judiciary 
 from motives of mere political expediency. Judges may be 
 legally removed for sufficient cause ; but want of sympathy with 
 an existing administration does not furnish ground of impeach- 
 ment or removal. 
 
 During the session of 1813, Kimball Union Academy was in- 
 corporated. It was liberally endowed and named by Hon. Daniel 
 Kimball of Plainfield. Its funds have since been largely in- 
 creased by the widow of its founder. It has been one of the 
 most excellent of literary institutions ; and to-day ranks among 
 the very best classical and English academies of our country. 
 
 Besides the ordinary calamities incident to a state of war, the 
 loss of men and means, the increase of prices and taxes, the 
 town of Portsmouth was visited by a destructive conflagration 
 in November, 1813. Nearly four hundred buildings were laid in 
 ashes. Many of the finest dwelling-houses and stores were 
 burnt. An area of fifteen acres was devastated. The heavens 
 at night were so illumined by the blaze that the light was seen 
 at the distance of one hundred miles. This calamity, coming as 
 it did, after the ruin of her commerce and fisheries by war, pro- 
 duced great suffering among the citizens of Portsmouth. Aid 
 in money and provisions was liberally furnished to the homeless 
 from different parts of New England. 
 
 War, pestilence and famine, like the Furies of ancient my- 
 thology, usually do their work in company. During the con- 
 tinuance of the war a malignant epidemic called " the spotted 
 fever " prevailed in the northern states. Its attack was sudden 
 and often fatal, sometimes decimating the population of small 
 towns.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 263 
 
 CHAPTER LXXVI. 
 
 RESTORATION OF PEACE. 
 
 It is said that Franklin once reproved a man for calling the 
 Revolutionary war " the war of Independence." " Sir," said he, 
 " you mean the Revolution ; the war of Independence is yet to 
 come. That was a war for Independence, but not of Independ- 
 ence." Hence, we speak with propriety of " the second war for 
 Independence ;" for, prior to this time, the United States had 
 been only nominally free. They were socially and commercially 
 dependent on Europe. England exercised a dangerous politi- 
 cal influence in the American legislatures ; she had also gained 
 an undue social influence at the hearths, and a controlling reli- 
 gious influence at the altars, of the people, when, in 1812, the 
 war for seamen's rights commenced. Had the United States 
 submitted, as a large and influential party desired, to the inso- 
 lent conduct of England upon the high seas, the blood of the 
 Revolution would have been shed in vain. A three years' war 
 taught this imperious " mistress of the seas " that there were 
 blows to take as well as blows to give ; and, although the terms 
 of peace were adopted without allusion to "sailors' rights," still, 
 by the tacit consent of both parties, that unwelcome cause of 
 controversy was allowed to sleep, and American ships have 
 since that day sailed unmolested over all waters, and "the right 
 of search " has been confined to slavers or ships laden with 
 goods which both nations declared contraband. In the Ashbur- 
 ton treaty, Mr. Webster, acting for the United States, claimed 
 that " the American flag shall protect all that sail under it." 
 This principle was not denied by the English minister ; and the 
 matter for which the war of 1812 was declared is now consid- 
 ered forever settled. The last and the most glorious battle of 
 that war was fought at New Orleans, on the eighth of January, 
 1815. General Andrew Jackson, who had previously subdued 
 the Creek Indians in Florida, was the hero on that memorable 
 occasion. The Americans lost only seven men killed and six 
 wounded. The loss of the English was more than one hundred 
 to one of the Americans. The treaty of peace had been signed 
 at Ghent, in Belgium, by the commissioners of the two nations on 
 the twenty-fourth of December of the preceding year. Had the 
 telegraphic wires then been in existence, the bloody battle of 
 New Orleans would not have been fought ; but that victory was
 
 264 HISTORY OF 
 
 worth more to the weaker party than all the previous conflicts 
 of the war. Without it, the peace of the country would have 
 been less secure. This was the most brilliant achievement of 
 the war. Its moral influence was incalculable. The news of 
 an honorable peace, immediately following it, was hailed every- 
 where with lively demonstrations of joy. 
 
 The burdens of the war had been more severely felt in New 
 England than in other sections of the country. There the op- 
 position was most violent and party spirit most bitter. For three 
 years the federalists retained the political ascendency in New 
 Hampshire, and at the close of the war still enumerated, with 
 apparent satisfaction, the heavy burdens which the state en- 
 dured. Governor Gilman, at the June session of the legislature 
 in 1815, congratulated the people on the restoration of peace, 
 and added : " The calamities of the war have been severely felt ; 
 the loss of the lives of multitudes of our countrymen, the ex- 
 pense of treasure, depreciation of national credit, a large debt 
 and multiplied taxes. What have we gained ?" Time has an- 
 swered that question which then seemed unanswerable. More 
 than fifty years of profitable commerce and mutual respect be- 
 tween the nations that prosecuted the war have proclaimed the 
 success of the contest, more eloquently than Fame with her iron 
 voice and hundred tongues could publish it. The war was waged 
 for the freedom of the seas, and there the United States won 
 the most successful and impressive victories. The majority of 
 the legislature, though hostile to the war, did not fail to do jus- 
 tice to the brave men whose valor had gained for the country 
 imperishable renown. They affirmed that " the legislature, in 
 common with their fellow-citizens, duly appreciated the impor- 
 tant services rendered to their country, upon the ocean, upon the 
 lakes, and upon the land, by officers, seamen and soldiers of the 
 United States, in many brilliant achievements and decisive vic- 
 tories, which will go down to posterity as an indubitable memo- 
 rial that the sons of those fathers who fought the battles of the 
 Revolution have imbibed, from the same fountain, that exalted 
 and unconquerable spirit which insures victory while it stimu- 
 lates the exercise of humanity and courtesy to the vanquished.' 
 At the March election in 1816, the republican party returned to 
 power. Hon. William Plumer was elected governor by a major- 
 ity of two thousand votes.* The legislature also had a majority 
 of the same party. William Badger was elected president of 
 the senate and David L. Morrill speaker of the house. The 
 
 * He received twenty thousand six hundred and fifty-two votes ; and his opponent, Mr. 
 Shcafe, received eighteen thousand three hundred and twenty-six. This was the largest pop- 
 ular vote that had ever been cast in the state. The increased interest of the citizens in the 
 annual elections is indicated by the larger number of votes in proportion to the population. 
 In 1790, only one vote in seventeen of the inhabitants was thrown for tha chief magistrate; 
 in i&oO) one in eleven; in 1810, one i:i seven, and in 1816, one in six.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 265 
 
 violence of party feeling was gradually subsiding, and " the era 
 of good feelings " was dawning upon the state. 
 
 The summer and autumn of 1816 were uncommonly cold. 
 The mean annual temperature in the southern part of the state 
 was 43. Snow fell upon the ninth of June, even upon the sea- 
 board ; and the month of August alone was free from frost. 
 The crops were destroyed by the severe cold, and the people be- 
 came disheartened and began to covet serener skies and a more 
 fertile soil. Ohio was then inviting immigrants, and the citizens 
 of New Hampshire began to desert the sterile farm, the harsh 
 climate and humble homes of their native state for the more 
 genial air and richer soil of the new states. That process of 
 depletion has been steadily acting ever since ; and, during the 
 last decade of our history, New Hampshire has lost instead of 
 gaining population. The great West and the rising manufactur- 
 ing towns have both drawn so largely upon the agricultural dis- 
 tricts, that they are now declining in numbers and wealth ; and 
 some of the less productive portions of the state are fast falling 
 to decay. 
 
 In a republic it is natural that those who administer its affairs 
 should wish their friends to occupy all places of trust and power. 
 "To the victors belong the spoils" is now the law of American 
 politics. When a party falls from power all the officials in the 
 state, from governor to door-keeper, retire to private life. All 
 laws offensive to the new party are at once repealed. The 
 martyrs of the minority become the heroes of the majority. 
 When the republicans came into power in 1816, they immediatly 
 proceeded to redress the wrongs, private and public, real and 
 imaginary, which the federalists had perpetrated during the war. 
 The judiciary received early attention. The law of 1813, estab- 
 lishing the supreme judicial court, was promptly repealed ; and 
 the judges who owed their places to this law were deprived of 
 their dignity. William Merchant Richardson, Samuel Bell and 
 Levi Woodbury, gentlemen eminent for their moral worth and 
 legal learning, were raised to the bench of the superior court. 
 Benjamin Pierce, distinguished for his revolutionary services and 
 his private virtues, was restored to the office of sheriff of Hills- 
 borough county. His new term of service was rendered mem- 
 orable by a noble act of philanthropy. Three aged men were 
 then lying in Amherst jail for debt. No crime but poverty was 
 alleged against them. One of them had been in durance four 
 years. The veteran Pierce was moved with pity at their helpless 
 condition. He paid the debts for which they had been impris- 
 oned. The sum required made large inroads upon his limited 
 estate ; still he decreed and executed the liberation of the urifor-
 
 266 HISTORY OF 
 
 tunate debtors and received the hearty commendation of every 
 contemporary whose heart was not embittered by party hate.* 
 
 Josiah Butler, the other sheriff who refused compliance with 
 the law of 1813, and Clifton Claggett, one of the degraded judges, 
 were nominated for congress. Mr. Evans, who was also removed 
 from the bench, would have been honored with the others, had 
 not his failing health rendered him incompetent to the discharge 
 of high official duties. Thus the new party rewarded those who 
 had led their " forlorn hope " when they were in the minority. 
 In such cases " poetic justice " culminates in partisan gratitude. 
 David L. Merrill and Clement Storer were elected to the United 
 States senate in place of Jeremiah Mason and Thomas W. 
 Thompson. The state then had six members in the lower house, 
 all republicans ; and the electoral vote of the state was given 
 for James Monroe, whose political principles were so liberal as 
 to command the respect of all parties. In the summer of 1817, 
 President Monroe visited New England and was received with 
 unbounded joy by all parties. The zeal of the federalists in 
 welcoming the chief magistrate of the nation was the subject of 
 severe criticism in some of the republican journals. President 
 Monroe proceeded as far north as Hanover in New Hampshire. 
 We find the following record of incidents that occurred during 
 this brief visit : 
 
 "At Enficld, in this state, the President called at the ' Habitation of the 
 Shaker community.' The elder came forth from the principal house in the 
 settlement and addressed the President : ' I Joseph Goodrich welcome James 
 Monroe to our habitation.' The President examined the institution and 
 their manufactures, tarried with them about one hour, and was highly pleased 
 with the beauty of their fields, their exemplary deportment and habits, the 
 improvements in their agriculture, buildings and manufactures, and with 
 their general plain though neat appearance. 
 
 At Hanover he unexpectedly met with an old acquaintance in the widow 
 of the late revered and lamented President Wheelock. This lady was a native 
 of New Jersey, was at Trenton at the time of the Hessian defeat, in which 
 our gallant Monroe took a part as lieutenant of a company and was wounded ; 
 she was the person who dressed his wound after he was conveyed to the 
 house in which she then was. The President did not recognize her at first, 
 but as ' remembrance rose ' the interview became peculiarly affecting to the 
 two principal individuals, and highly interesting to the large circle of ladies 
 and gentlemen present. A letter from a friend at Hanover remarks : ' We 
 
 * The following notice of the liberation of these men appeared at the time in the Amherst 
 Cabinet, December, 1818: 
 
 THB PRISONERS SET FREE! We are happy to announce to the public, that the poor pris. 
 oners so Ion?; retained in Amherst gaol for prison-charges, viz., MOSES BREWER, ISAAC 
 LAWRENCE and GEORGE LANCEY, were yesterday released from confinement and 
 set free by the liberality of Gen. PIERCE, the newly appointed Sheriff of the county. The 
 feelings of these men on the occasion, whose prospects, but a few days since, were imprhon- 
 
 ty am 
 
 their confinement, General Pierce read to them a handsome and feeling Address, which he 
 then handed to Captain Brewer, as their discharge, or ' passport,' as he kindly expressed it, 
 from prison.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 267 
 
 were delighted with the short visit of the President. For his sake the 
 hatchet was buried for at least twenty-four hours a short truce, but a merry 
 one.' 
 
 At Biddeford, Maine, the President was introduced to the venerable Dea- 
 con Samuel Chase, now in the ggih year of his age. He addressed the Pres- 
 ident with the simplicity of a Christian and the affection of a father. It was 
 an interesting scene. The good old man at parting rose and with all the 
 dignity of an ancient patriarch pronounced his blessing. 
 
 While at Portsmouth the President spent that part of the Sabbath which 
 was not devoted to public, divine service, with that eminent patriot and 
 Christian, John Langdon. His tarry at the mansion of Gov. L. was proba- 
 bly longer than the time devoted to any individual in New England. It is 
 thus that the President evinced his partiality to our most distinguished and 
 illustrious citizen.'' 
 
 The state-house at Concord was built in 1817, at an expense 
 of eighty thousand dollars. The citizens of Concord contributed 
 liberally to the building fund. Governor Plumer recommended 
 the state appropriation for this purpose in 1816. The location 
 of the state-house excited a furious contest, not only in Concord 
 but in the legislature and throughout the state. Theoldstate- 
 house had been nearer the north end of the main street. The 
 dwellers in that vicinity were influenced by pecuniary considera- 
 tions to demand of the legislature that the new building should 
 stand upon the old site. The representatives who were their 
 " boarders " were persuaded by them to adopt their interested 
 views ; and, as Mr. Toppan of Hampton said, they became " the 
 representatives of their respective boarding-houses, rather than 
 of the state." The spot selected for the new house was de- 
 nounced as " a quagmire and a frog-pond." Colonel Prescott of 
 Jaffrey amused the house with an account of the frogs he had 
 seen leaping about in the cellar, which might be expected at some 
 future time, should the court be held there, " to make as much 
 noise in it," he said, " as I do now." The council was divided 
 on this momentous subject ; and Governor Plumer, whose in- 
 fluence was supposed to decide the question, incurred great cen- 
 sure from many of his political friends. He had become unpop- 
 ular with some leading men of the republican party, though the 
 people were still his warm supporters. Messrs. Morrill, Pierce, 
 Claggett, Quarles and Butler were for various reasons unfriendly 
 to him. Morrill as speaker of the house impeded his plans in 
 the constitution of committees. Pierce and Quarles in the 
 council also opposed him. Still his policy prevailed ; and for 
 more than fifty years there has been no complaint of " croakers " 
 in the cellar of the state-house ; but rather of those " that came 
 up and covered " the upper floors. 
 
 In January 1817, John Quincy Adams, then minister to Eng- 
 land, wrote a long letter to Governor Plumer in commendation 
 of his message, of which he says : 
 
 " It was republished entire in one of the newspapers of the most exten-
 
 268 HISTORY OF 
 
 sive circulation, not as, during our late war, some of our governors' speeches 
 were republished, to show the subserviency of the speakers to the bulwark 
 of our holy religion and to the press-gang, but, professedly, for the pure, 
 patriotic and genuine republican sentiments with which it abounded. It has 
 been a truly cheering contemplation to me to see that the people of New 
 Hampshire have recovered from the delusions of that unprincipled faction 
 which, under the name of Federalism, was driving them to the dissolution 
 of the Union, and, under the name of Washington, to British re-coloniza- 
 tion to see them returning to the counsels of sober, moderate men, who are 
 biased by no feelings but those of public spirit and by no interests but those 
 of their country." 
 
 He also bears unequivocal testimony to the moral effects of 
 the late war, in which " our victories," he says, " have placed our 
 character as a martial people on a level with the most respecta- 
 ble nations of Europe." 
 
 Governor Plumer closed his official life in 1819, by declining 
 a reelection. In the spring of that year, Hon. Samuell Bell of 
 Chester was chosen governor by a large majority over William 
 Hale of Dover, the candidate of the federalists. But little in- 
 terest was manifested in the canvass. The storm of war had 
 been succeeded by the calm of peace ; and party leaders, like 
 exhausted athletes, retired from the arena of controversy to re- 
 cruit their strength for a new conflict. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXV1L 
 
 DARTMOUTH COLLEGE CONTROVERSY. 
 
 Eleazar Wheelock, the founder of Dartmouth college, was a 
 man large in heart, prudent in counsel, sagacious in design and 
 energetic in execution. He was a Puritan in creed and an evan- 
 gelist in practice. He was a herald of modern revivals and 
 anticipated the age of missions by nearly half a century. In the 
 field of literary enterprise, he was gathering a harvest before 
 other educators were aware that the seed-time had arrived. 
 Hon. Nathaniel Niles, distinguished for his dispassionate judg- 
 ment and eminent legal learning, a trustee of the college as early 
 as 1793, a contemporary of the elder Wheelock and cognizant of 
 the entire history of the college to the date of his record, in 
 1815, writes as follows: 
 
 " The venerable Dr. Eleazar Wheelock had, by his zeal, enterprise, ad- 
 dress and indefatigable exertions, created an Indian charity school, and as- 
 tonished everybody. He had procured for it great pecuniary resources and 
 an extensive and powerful patronage. He had extensive views and a daring
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 269 
 
 mind, and projected the conversion of it into a college in the wilderness. He 
 applied for a charter, obtained it and fixed on Hanover, forty or fifty miles 
 distant from all considerable settlements, for the place, of its establishment. 
 In any other man this would have looked like a wild and hopeless project, 
 but what this wonderful man had already achieved produced a general con- 
 fidence that he would succeed. I believe that no one of the trustees first 
 appointed (himself excepted) lived within one hundred miles of this place, 
 to which there was then no path that deserved the name of a road. They 
 were part of them in Portsmouth and its vicinity and part in Connecticut. 
 Probably all of them wanted confidence in their own abilities to manage such 
 a concern, and presumed, on the evidence of what he had already done, that 
 he was equal to this prodigious enterprise, and said to themselves : ' Our 
 wisdom directs us to permit him both to devise and execute his bold projects. 
 We cannot do better than to rest satisfied with the encouragement we can 
 give him by sanctioning his proposition.' It was wise in them to do so. 
 Thus the management of everything, almost, was left to him, while the board 
 took the responsibility on themselves. Such seem to have been the views of 
 the trustees who were, at first, so distant as seldom to give a general attend- 
 ance at the board. Additional circumstances gave the president a decided 
 control in the board itself. One of his sons-in-law had been appointed a 
 trustee by the charter. In 1773 Mr. Woodward, another son-in-law, and Dr. 
 Burroughs, who looked up to the president as to an almost infallible judge, 
 were elected, and in 1776 Mr. Ripley, another son-in-law, was elected. 
 The votes of the members had generally the same effect as would have re- 
 sulted from the president's having as many votes of his own, and formed a 
 majority when there were present a bare quorum. These, except Mr. Pat- 
 ten, were near at hand, while the other trustees were at a great distance and 
 seldom attended. If the influence of the president was thus supreme in the 
 board it was not less so in the executive. He had for his assistant instruc- 
 tors two sons, two sons-in-law, and Dr. John Smith. The last was, in sort, 
 adopted into his family, and had imbibed sentiments so profoundly obse- 
 quious that he was probably never known, understandingly, to thwart any of 
 the president's views ; so that, in effect, the president had in his own hands 
 the uncontrolled direction of all the elections, appointments, instruction and 
 government in every department. His authority extended even beyond his 
 life. He had been authorized to appoint his successor, and he did appoint 
 his son, who had been a tutor for seven years and had witnessed the exposi- 
 tion of the character exhibited by his father. In such circumstances it was 
 extremely natural, if not almost unavoidable, for him, unless he had more 
 than a common share of common sense and common modesty, to regard as 
 devolving on himself all the powers which had been exercised by his prede- 
 cessor. He was sole heir to his father, as to his office, and might perhaps 
 honestly think he was also heir to his abilities. Besides there were circum- 
 stances which strongly tended to create in him a belief that he was well 
 qualified to copy his father's example, and therefore worthy of the same 
 confidence, authority and preeminence. He had commanded a regiment in 
 the army, and naturally felt in himself that spirit of domination incident to 
 the military character. He.no doubt, thought he knew how togovein. 
 Further, he had (according to his own account) the esteem and confidence 
 of many great men in America, France and Great Britain. These items, 
 united in one round sum, were enough to turn any man's head, unless he was 
 something more than common. Here we see the occasion of the president's 
 exorbitant claims and his dolorous complaints." 
 
 Slight differences of opinion between the second president and 
 his colleagues sprang up from the very beginning of his adminis- 
 tration. The matters in dispute were at first local and ecclesiasti-
 
 270 HISTORY OF 
 
 cal ; then literary and financial, and finally they became personal 
 and official. They agitated first the church, then the village and 
 faculty. They passed to the legislature and the state court, and 
 finally, by appeal, the controversy was decided by the supreme 
 court of the United States. The question at issue was supposed 
 to involve the existence and usefulness of every eleemosynary 
 institution in the country. In his pastorate in Lebanon, Conn., 
 the first president of the college was a Congregationalist. When 
 he came to Hanover he deemed it expedient in the organization 
 of a new church to adopt the Presbyterian form of government. 
 The Scotch fund for the education of Indians, in connection 
 with Moor's Charity School, was of course controlled by Presby- 
 terians ; and a cordial sympathy with the donors was thought 
 to be essential to the highest success of their benefactions. 
 Even at that early day the differences between the Congregation- 
 alists and Presbyterians were regarded as no bar to the change 
 of church relationship from one to the other. But it sometimes 
 happens that very slight differences, even in external matters, 
 lead to very grave disputes ; and the bitterness of the contro- 
 versy is in the inverse ratio to its importance. 
 
 As we have no other authority, both contemporary and au- 
 thentic, respecting the church difficulties in Hanover, we again 
 quote from the careful, considerate and, in some sense, the official 
 record of Judge Niles. He writes : 
 
 " At an early day, Dr. E. Wheelock collected a church at Dartmouth Col- 
 lege. It may be considered as consisting of two branches, distinguished by 
 the distance of their local situations ; one of them being in the vicinity of 
 the college and the other in Hartford, Vermont. This union took place 
 while neither part was able to provide preaching for itself. After some time, 
 however, the members living in Hartford erected a house for public wor- 
 ship, and generally supported preaching in it, while those near the college 
 assembled for worship, with the members of college, first in the chapel and 
 afterwards in the meeting-house. Yet they celebrated the Lord's supper, 
 sometimes at Hanover and sometimes at Hartford, and although they thought 
 themselves Presbyterians, they often found it convenient to have church 
 meetings. They met on occasion of the election of Dr. Worcester as pro- 
 fessor of Divinity, and passed several votes expressive of their being, and 
 designing to continue to be, Presbyterians, and that Dr. Smith was, and that 
 they chose he should continue to be, their pastor. This was an offensive 
 disappointment to the body of professors and others on the Plain. They had 
 on some account become dissatisfied with Dr. Smith, both as pastor and 
 teacher, although they loved him as a man and as a neighbor ; and having 
 expected that the professor of Theology, when one should be appointed, 
 would be both teacher and pastor, and the election of Dr. Worcester being 
 highly pleasing to them, they found themselves greatly disappointed in their 
 hopes by these votes, which they suspected had been passed with a view to 
 prevent the professor-elect from accepting the appointment, and still to hold 
 them unpleasantly confined under the administration of Dr. Smith." 
 
 Dr. Worcester having declined to accept the professorship 
 tendered to him, Roswell Shurtleff was elected to that chair in
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 271 
 
 1804. This appointment by the trustees put a new face upon 
 the controversy. A majority of the church members resided in 
 Hartford. It was in their power to control, by major vote, all 
 the plans of those who resided in Hanover. A long correspon- 
 dence ensued ; various propositions were made by the minority ; 
 but all were rejected. That portion of the church and congre- 
 gation who resided upon the Plain, with few exceptions, desired 
 that Prof. Shurtleff should officiate as colleague to Dr. Smith. 
 This request was preferred to him in September, 1804. He de- 
 clined the invitation. Then the Hanover branch of the church 
 requested the Hartford branch to allow Prof. Shurtleff to receive 
 " ordination at large " and take the pastoral care of the Hanover 
 people, while Dr. Smith should continue to officiate at Hartford. 
 This proposition was declined. Then the Hanover branch peti- 
 tioned for a mutual council to determine whether two churches 
 should be formed, by a local division, leaving one in New Hamp- 
 shire and the other in Vermont. This petition was rejected. 
 Thereupon the Hanover people called an ex parts council to ad- 
 vise with them concerning their difficulties. The council recom- 
 mended a division. This result was not accepted by the Hart- 
 ford people. The trustees were requested to interpose their 
 official power and settle the dispute. They so far succeeded as 
 to secure a mutual council, who said : "We judge it expedient 
 that there be but one church at present in connection with Dart- 
 mouth College, denominated as formerly, consisting of two 
 branches, one on the east side and the other on the west side of 
 Connecticut river, under the same covenant as heretofore ; that 
 each branch have an independent and exclusive right of admit- 
 ting and disciplining its own members ; that each branch, also, 
 have the exclusive privilege of employing and settling a minister 
 of their own choice ; " with other exclusive rights and powers to 
 be enjoyed by each branch, as though it constituted a distinct 
 and separate church. This decree of council was variously in- 
 terpreted; the Hartford branch claimed, under its provisions, 
 supremacy in the government of the entire church ; and the 
 Hanover branch claimed independency, from the same authority, 
 and proceeded to adopt a congregational form of government. 
 We quote from Judge Niles : 
 
 " Those members of the church living in Hanover, and who had been 
 formed into a Congregational church, after having in vain solicited the church 
 to which they belonged to unite with them in calling a council to enquire 
 into the expediency of a division, invited an ex parte council for advice; and 
 afterwards at the desire of the president, Mr. Shurtleff was allowed to ex- 
 change with other ministers, with an exception of those clergymen who, as 
 the sketcher expresses it, ' dared to encroach on Presbyterian ground, to inter- 
 fere with its government, extract its members to form them into a new eccle- 
 siastical mac/line.' Here is a just portrait of the president's own liberal 
 Catholicism. A number of his brethren thought themselves oppressed, and
 
 272 HISTORY OF 
 
 believed it would contribute to their comfort and edification to become a dis- 
 tinct church, and wished for counsel and advice respecting the subject. They 
 wished to have the concurrence of their brethren in the choice of the coun- 
 selors, but this was refused. They called in a council of ministers, and 
 these ministers are prohibited from preaching at Hanover. For what? Why 
 because they had ' encroached on Presbyterian ground? What did they do ? 
 They interfered with presbyterian government, by counseling some of its 
 subjects, who said they were opposed. So then, these brethren must remain 
 in their present connexion, unless they should go an hundred miles to find a 
 Presbytery to whom they might complain; and ministers of the gospel must, 
 as to the president, be silenced, because they dared to encroach on Presby- 
 terian ground." 
 
 The president, John Wheelock, * and Prof. John Smith who was 
 acting as pastor of the old church, still favored the presbyterian 
 form of government and were opposed to the new church. Here 
 was planted a seed which grew and became a mighty tree whose 
 branches, in some sense, overshadowed the whole land ! " Behold 
 how great a matter a little fire kindleth." From 1804 to 1814, 
 the controversy was chiefly local, disturbing the harmony of the 
 village church and impeding the vigorous administration of the 
 college, both in the faculty and board of trust. At the latter 
 date the public became interested in the quarrel, and began to 
 take sides as their political or religious preferences inclined. 
 During the whole of the year 1815 the press in New Hampshire 
 probably devoted as much space to Dartmouth College as to 
 political matters. In some instances the leading journals of the 
 state devoted five or six columns to original articles pertaining 
 to the college controversy. The parties mutually charged each 
 other with bigotry, intolerance and hypocrisy. The dispute soon 
 became political in its character ; and federalists and republi- 
 cans became earnest defenders of particular forms of ecclesiasti- 
 cal government. The republicans in this case were generally 
 Presbyterians, and the federalists Congregationalists. The for- 
 mer assailed, the latter defended, the action of the majority of 
 the faculty and trustees. At the June session of the legislature 
 in 1815, President Wheelock called on that body to redress his 
 wrongs real and imaginary. The following extract from his 
 " Memorial " contains the charges preferred by him against the 
 trustees. Speaking of himself, he says : 
 
 "Will you permit him to suggest there is reason to fear that those who 
 hold in trust the concerns of this Seminary have forsaken its original prin- 
 ciples, and left the path of their predecessors. It is unnecessary to relate 
 how the evil commenced in its embryo state ; by what means and practices, 
 
 Judge Barrett, in his memorial address on the Life and Character of the Hon. Charles 
 Marsh, thus speaks of President John Wheelock : "As the son, heir, and successor of Dr. 
 Eleazar Wheelock, the founder and first president of the college, he conceived and was ap- 
 parently acting upon the idea that, although under the charter the college was a private 
 eleemosynary corporation, yet it was in reality a corporation sole, and he was the sole cor- 
 porator. His course of administration, in reference to all its interests, seemed to indicate that 
 he regarded it as really a private foundation, in the benefits of which the public might_ share 
 under such a practical governance as to him should seem meet ; and that it was his right to 
 subordinate the public interests to his own personal views and purposes."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 273 
 
 they, thus deviating, have in recent years, with the same object in view, in- 
 creased their number to a majority controlling the measures of the Board ; 
 but more important is it to lay before you, that there are serious grounds to 
 excite apprehensions of the great impropriety and dangerous tendency of 
 their proceedings ; reasons to believe that they have applied property to 
 purposes wholly alien from the intentions of the donors, and under peculiar 
 circumstances to excite regret ; that they have in the series of their move- 
 ments to promote party views transformed the moral and religious order of the 
 institution by depriving many of their innocent enjoyment of rights and priv- 
 ileges, for which they had confided in their faith ; that they have broken down 
 the barriers and violated the charter, by prostrating the rights with which it 
 expressly invests the presidential office ; that to subserve their purpose, they 
 have adopted improper methods in their appointments of executive officers, 
 naturally tending to embarrass and obstruct the harmonious government and 
 instruction of the seminary; that they have extended their powers which 
 the charter confines to the college, to form connection with an academy, in 
 exclusion of the other academies in the state, cementing an alliance with its 
 overseers, and furnishing aid from the college treasury for their students ; 
 that they have perverted the power, which by the incorporation they ought 
 to exercise over a branch of Moor's Charity School, and have obstructed the 
 application of its fund according to the nature of the establishment and the 
 design of the donors ; and that their measures have been oppressive to your 
 memorialist in the discharge of his office." 
 
 While the population was sparse in the newly settled towns 
 on the banks of the Connecticut, it was natural that unions should 
 be formed by the inhabitants of adjacent towns for the support 
 of the gospel. We are not surprised, therefore, that Hartford, 
 in Vermont, and Hanover, in New Hampshire, gathered in early 
 times their scattered population into one church ; but when each 
 town became strong enough to act alone, it seems marvelous 
 that the majority, living at a distance from the college commu- 
 nity, should compel them to perpetuate a reluctant and offensive 
 union with themselves. The efforts to be released were persist- 
 ent and numerous. For years in succession, the Hanover peo- 
 ple petitioned, labored and contended for an independent ex- 
 istence ; a majority of the trustees advised a separation ; two 
 ministerial councils approved it ; the Orange Association in Ver- 
 mont twice recommended it. The president, however, refused his 
 consent, because one strong arm of his power would be broken 
 by placing him in the minority of the village church. He re- 
 garded the ecclesiastical feud as the fruitful source of all his 
 woes. It was a nucleus about which other official difficulties 
 clustered. "The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out 
 water." The old channel is ever enlarging and new tributaries 
 flow in. The vague and magniloquent indictment, which the 
 president presented to the legislature, was followed by an ex- 
 panded appeal to the public entitled, " Sketches of the History 
 of Dartmouth College," from the same pen, with a second pam- 
 phlet by Dr. Parish, a warm friend of the president, entitled "A 
 Candid Analytical Review of the Sketches." in which the learned 
 
 18
 
 274 HISTORY OF 
 
 Doctor made a special plea for the "venerable president." These 
 publications called out vindications, replies, rejoinders and sur- 
 rejoinders, 
 
 " Thick as Autumnal leaves that strew the brooks 
 In Valombrosa." 
 
 Every newspaper in the state took sides on this local question. 
 The specific counts in the president's pompous complaint were 
 the violation of religious ordinances, the perversion of the Phil- 
 lips fund, and usurpation of the powers of government and in- 
 struction in the college. He seemed to regard himself, as his 
 honored father was, as "corporation sole," in the administration 
 of the pecuniary and literary affairs of the college. The trustees 
 claimed a share in the government and instruction of the college 
 and appealed to the charter for authority. One clause in that 
 instrument is thus worded : 
 
 "And we do further, of our special grace and certain knowl- 
 edge and mere motion, will, give and grant unto the said trustees 
 of Dartmouth College, that they and their successors, or a major 
 part of any seven, or more of them, which shall convene for that 
 purpose, as above directed, may make and they are hereby fully 
 empowered, from time to time, to make and establish such ordi- 
 nances, orders and laws, as may tend to the good and wholesome 
 government of the said college and all the students and the 
 several officers and ministers thereof, and to the public benefit of 
 the same, not repugnant to the laws and statutes of our realm of 
 Great JBritain, or of this our province of New Hampshire, and not 
 excluding any person of any religious denomination whatsoever 
 from free and equal liberty and advantages of education, or from 
 any of the liberties and privileges or immunities of the said college, 
 on account of his or their speculative sentiments in religion or of his 
 or their being of a religious profession different from said trustees of 
 said college. And such ordinances, orders, or laws, which shall, 
 as aforesaid, be made, we do by these presents, for us, our 
 heirs and successors, ratify, allow of and confirm as good and 
 effectual to oblige all the students and the several officers and 
 ministers of said college. And we do hereby authorize and em- 
 power the said trustees of Dartmouth College, and the president, 
 tutors and professors by them elected and appointed, as afore- 
 said, to put such ordinances, laws and orders into execution to 
 all intents and purposes." Such are the powers vested in the 
 trustees to govern and regulate all the collegiate duties and 
 conduct of all the officers, ministers and students of the college. 
 
 At the annual meeting of the trustees holden by adjournment 
 at Dartmouth College, August 24, 1815, after some unsatisfactory 
 correspondence between the president and the board, Mr. Paine
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 2 75 
 
 submitted the following preamble and resolution, which were 
 adopted with two dissenting votes : 
 
 "Cases sometimes occur when it becomes expedient that corporate bodies, 
 whatever confidence they may feel respecting the rectitude and propriety of 
 their own measures, should explain the ground of them to the public. Such 
 an explanation becomes peculiarly important when the concerns committed 
 to their care are dependent on public opinion for their prosperity and suc- 
 cess. Into such a situation the trustees of Dartmouth College consider 
 themselves to be now brought. Under a sense of this duty they have already 
 cheerfully submitted their past acts to the inspection of a committee of the 
 legislature of the State, and from a similar view of duty they now proceed 
 to state the reasons that lead them to withdraw their further assent to the 
 nomination and appointment of Dr. John Wheelock to the presidency of 
 Dartmouth College. 
 
 First. He has had an agency in publishing and circulating a certain anon- 
 ymous pamphlet, entitled, ' Sketches of the History of Dartmouth College 
 and Moore's Charity School,' and espoused the charges therein contained 
 before the committee of the legislature. Whatever might be our views 
 of the principles which had gained an ascendency in the mind of President 
 Wheelock, we could not, without the most undeniable evidence, have believed 
 that he could have communicated sentiments so entirely repugnant to truth, 
 or that any person, who was not as destitute of discernment as of integrity, 
 would have charged on a public body as a crime those things which notori- 
 ously received his unqualified concurrence, and some of which were done by 
 his special recommendation. The trustees consider the above-mentioned 
 publication as a gross and unprovoked libel on the institution, and the said 
 Dr. Wheelock neglects to take any measure to repair an injury which is 
 directly aimed at its reputation, and calculated to destroy its usefulness. 
 
 Secondly. He has set up and insists on claims which the charter by no fair 
 construction does allow claims which in their operation would deprive the 
 corporation of all its powers. He claims a right to exercise the whole execu- 
 tive authority of the college which the charter has expressly committed to 
 ' the trustees, with the president, tutors, and professors by them appointed.' 
 He also seems to claim a right to control the corporation in the appointment 
 of executive officers, inasmuch as he has reproached them with great severity 
 i'or choosing men who do not in all respects meet his wishes, and thereby 
 embarrass the proceedings of the board. 
 
 Thirdly. From a variety of circumstances, the trustees have had reason 
 to conclude that he has embarrassed the proceedings of the executive officers 
 by causing an impression to be made on the minds of such students as have 
 fallen under censure for transgressions of the laws of the institution, that if 
 he could have had his will they would not have suffered disgrace or 
 punishment. 
 
 Fourthly. The trustees have obtained satisfactory evidence that Dr. 
 Wheelock has been guilty of manifest fraud in the application of the funds 
 of Moor's school, by taking a youth who was not an Indian, but adopted by 
 an Indian tribe, under an Indian name, and supporting him on the Scotch 
 fund, which was granted for the sole purpose of instructing and civilizing 
 Indians. 
 
 Fifthly. It is manifest to the trustees that Dr. Wheelock has in various 
 ways given rise and circulation to a report that the real cause of the dissatis- 
 faction of the trustees with him was a diversity of religious opinions between 
 him and them, when in truth and fact no such diversity was known to exist, 
 as he has publicly acknowledged before the committee of the legislature ap- 
 pointed to investigate the affairs of the college 
 
 The trustees adopt this solemn measure from a full conviction that the
 
 276 HISTORY OF 
 
 cause of truth, the interest of this institution, and of science in general, re- 
 quire it. It is from a deep conviction that the college can no longer prosper 
 under his presidency. They would gladly have avoided this painful crisis. 
 From a respect to the honored father of Dr. Wheelock, the founder of this 
 institution, they had hoped that they might have continued him in the presi- 
 dency as long as he was competent to discharge its duties. 
 
 They feel that this measure cannot be construed into any disrespect to the 
 legislature of New Hampshire, whose sole object in the appointment of a 
 committee to investigate the affairs of the college must have been to ascer- 
 tain if the trustees had forfeited their charter, and not whether they had ex- 
 ercised their charter powers discreetly or indiscreetly not whether they 
 had treated either of the executive officers of the college with propriety or 
 impropriety. They will ever submit to the authority of law. The legisla- 
 ture have appointed a committee to examine the concerns of the college and 
 the school generally. The trustees met that committee with promptitude, 
 and frankly exhibited every measure of theirs which had been a subject of 
 complaint, and all the concerns of the institution as far as their knowledge 
 and means would permit. They wish to have their acts made as public as 
 possible. The committee of the legislature will report the facts, and the 
 trustees will cheerfully meet the issue before any tribunal competent to try 
 them, according to the principles of their charter. 
 
 They consider this crisis as a severe trial to the institution ; but they be- 
 lieve that in order to entertain a hope that it will flourish and be useful they 
 must be faithful to their trust, that they must not approve of an officer who 
 labors to destroy its reputation and embarrass its internal concerns. They 
 will yet hope that under the smiles of Divine Providence this institution 
 will continue to flourish, and be a great blessing to generations to come. 
 
 THEREFORE RESOLVED, That the appointment of Dr. JOHN WHEELOCK 
 to the presidency of this college by the last will of the Rev. ELEAZAR 
 WHEELOCK, the founder and first president of this college be, and the same 
 is hereby, by the trustees of said college, disapproved. And it is further 
 
 Resolved, That the said Dr. JOHN WHEELOCK, for the reasons aforesaid, 
 be, and he is hereby, displaced and removed from the office of president of 
 said college. 
 
 Resolved, That for the reasons before stated the said trustees deem the 
 said Dr. JOHN WHEELOCK unfit to serve the interests of the college as a 
 trustee of the same, and that therefore he be displaced and removed from 
 the said office of a trustee of said college, and that the trustees will, as soon 
 as may be, elect and appoint such trustee as shall supply the place of the 
 said Dr. JOHN WHEELOCK as a trustee.* 
 
 Resolved,_ That for the reasons aforesaid, the said Dr. JOHN WHEELOCK 
 be, and he is hereby, removed from the office of professor of history in this 
 college." 
 
 The removal of Dr. Wheelock gave new intensity to the quar- 
 rel. The crisis had come ; there were no neutrals in the state. 
 Every man was a friend or enemy of the college. The contro- 
 versy became political ; and the college question took precedence 
 of the interests of the state and nation. 
 
 On the twenty-seventh day of June, 1816, an act was passed 
 by the New Hampshire legislature entitled an "Act to amend 
 the Charter and enlarge and improve the Corporation of Dart- 
 mouth College." This act virtually constituted a new Univer- 
 sity, with a board of twenty-five overseers, all politicians of 
 course, whose power was in one sense omnipotent, because, like
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 277 
 
 the Roman tribunes, they could arrest all the proceedings of 
 the trustees by a simple veto. The number of the trustees was 
 so enlarged as to give a majority of that body to the dominant 
 party in the state. Under this act the " Dartmouth University" 
 was set up side by side with Dartmouth College, whose guardians 
 and professors refused to submit to the new board and the new 
 act of incorporation. After the passage of the legislative act, 
 the trustees, in August, 1816, put upon their records the follow- 
 ing facts, with explanations. We have room only for the facts. 
 
 "The trustees of Dartmouth College have been informed through 
 the public newspapers that the legislature of New Hampshire, 
 at their last June session, passed an act in the following words, 
 viz. [Here the act is recited.] 
 
 The trustees deem it their duty to place on their records the 
 following facts : 
 
 At the session of the legislature of the state holden in June, 
 A. D. 1815, Doctor John Wheelock, the then president of the 
 college, presented a memorial to that body, in which he charged 
 a majority of the trustees ot the college with gross misbehavior 
 in office. 
 
 Doctor Wheelock's memorial was committed to a joint com- 
 mittee of both branches of the legislature, and he was fully 
 heard before the committee ex parte, neither the trustees nor the 
 members then present being notified or heard. 
 
 The legislature thereupon appointed the Honorable Daniel A. 
 White, Nathaniel A. Haven and Rev. Ephraim P. Bradford, a 
 committee to repair to the college and investigate facts and re- 
 port thereon. The same committee did, in August following, 
 meet at the college, heard both Doctor Wheelock in support of 
 his charges against the trustees and their defence, and at the 
 session of the legislature in June last made their report, which 
 has been published. 
 
 The report of facts made by Messrs. White, Haven and Brad- 
 ford was committed to a joint committee of both branches, and 
 this last committee in their report expressly decline considering the 
 report of facts as the proper ground upon which the legislature 
 ought to proceed in relation to the college, 
 
 The trustees were not notified at any stage of the proceedings 
 to appear by themselves or agent before the legislature and 
 answer the charges exhibited against them by the said Wheelock. 
 
 Thomas W. Thompson, Elijah Paine, and Asa M'Farland, three 
 of the trustees implicated, attended the legislature in June last, 
 and respectfully petitioned for the privilege of being heard on 
 the floor of the house (a privilege seldom denied to parties in 
 interest) in behalf of themselves and the other trustees, but 
 were refused.
 
 278 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 During the same session the said Thompson, Paine and M'Far- 
 land presented to the legislature a remonstrance against the pas- 
 sage of the bill relating to the college, then pending. 
 
 And afterwards, on the 24th day of June, the said Thompson 
 and M'Farland presented to the legislature another remonstrance 
 against the passage of the act now under consideration. 
 
 Both remonstrances were read and laid on the table. 
 
 No facts were proved to the legislature, and no report of facts 
 of any legislative committee was made to show that the state 
 of things at the college rendered any legislative interference 
 necessary. 
 
 The act passed by small majorities in the house of repre- 
 sentatives and the senate. 
 
 The trustees forbear to make any comment on the foregoing 
 facts." 
 
 " The guardians of the college were moved by a profound con- 
 viction of the justice, equity and vital consequence of the ques- 
 tion. Otherwise it might not then, at least, have received the 
 thorough defence of Smith and Mason, Hopkinson and Web- 
 ster, nor the luminous and ample decision of Marshall and Story, 
 a decision which, not over-estimated, I suppose, in the judgment 
 pronounced upon it by Chancellor Kent, has gone far beyond 
 the immediate issue, and, by removing our colleges from the 
 fluctuating influence of party and faction, has helped to make 
 them what they should be high neutral powers in the state, 
 devoted to the establishing and inculcating of principles ; where 
 may shine the lumen siccum, the dry light of wisdom and learn- 
 ing, untinged by the vapors of the cave or the breath of the 
 forum." 
 
 The men who defended the college in the hour of her extreme 
 peril deserve more than a passing notice. The trustees, the 
 president and professors of the college, the lawyers who triumph- 
 antly repelled the assault of foes without and foes within, were 
 all men of mark. Some of them have no peers in the literary 
 and judicial records of our country. The true glory of New 
 Hampshire is in her sons both native and adopted. They have 
 made her history renowned and deserve the grateful remem- 
 brance of succeeding generations. From the gallery of illus- 
 trious names associated with the college controversy I select a 
 few portraits drawn by the hands of masters. At the head of 
 the list stands the youthful president, Francis Brown, who en- 
 tered upon his laborious and perilous duties at the age of thirty. 
 From an eloquent sketch of this distinguished college officer by 
 Rev. Henry Wood, I select the following paragraphs : 
 
 " It was a characteristic of president Brown, that he was always equal to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 279 
 
 any emergency ; no call could be made upon his resources unhonored. At a 
 word, all the sleeping energies of his mind came up in theii glowing beauty 
 and just proportions, awakening the admiration and securing the confidence 
 of timid friends, and overawing the presumption that already exulted in the' 
 overthrow of the college. Reluctantly given up by his people, he had only 
 to touch again the soil of his native state, and move amid the eyes and ears 
 of its citizens, to be admitted as that superior mind which Providence had 
 raised up and kept, like Moses in the desert, for this very crisis. A certain 
 dignity of person, altogether native and inimitable, made every one feel him- 
 self in the presence of original greatness, in honoring which he also honored 
 himself. Such were the conciliation and command belonging to his character, 
 that from the first moment of his reappearance in his own state, the voice of 
 detraction was silent; whoever else was rebuked, he escaped, whom all 
 conspired to honor. 
 
 In the meantime, political exasperation, unappeased by the lapse of time 
 for reflection, marched onward to its object. Notwithstanding the investiga- 
 tion of their committee, the legislature utterly refused to accept their report 
 as the basis of their proceedings. An act was passed, annulling the original 
 charter, giving a new name to the college, increasing the number of the 
 trustees, creating a board of overseers, and placing the institution in all its 
 departments and interests in abject dependence upon any party legislature. 
 The students, almost without exception, still attended the instruction of 
 professors in the old college, even when they were expelled from the college 
 buildings, deprived of libraries, apparatus and recitation-rooms. A penal 
 enactment was judged expedient by this enlightened legislature, imposing a 
 fine of five hundred dollars upon any one who should presume to act as 
 trustee, president, professor, tutor, or any other officer in Dartmouth College ; 
 for every instance of offence, one-half of the penalty to be appropriated for 
 the benefit of the prosecutor, and the other for the encouragement of learn- 
 ing ! Such was the hold of a superior mind upon the attachment and confi- 
 dence of the students, that still they followed their proscribed, exiled presi- 
 dent with the affection of children and the heroism of martyrs. He opened 
 a new chapel, procured other recitation-rooms, morning and evening gathered 
 his pupils around him, in the devotions of a pure and confiding heart com- 
 mended them and himself to God. Through this scene of strife and peril 
 of more than five years' continuance, when the chances against the college 
 were in preponderance, when disgrace in the public estimation, together 
 with a forfeiture of academical honors, was what the students expected as 
 the result of their adherence to the old faculty, so absolute was the power 
 of a great mind and noble heart over them, so effectual was moral influence 
 in the government of more than one hundred young men when college laws 
 were stripped of authority, that never was discipline more thorough, study 
 more ardent, or proficiency more respectable. Three of the presidents and 
 nine of the professors in our colleges, besides a large number of the most 
 resolute, aspiring, useful members of the different professions, are the children 
 nursed and cradled in the storms of that time. The college moved on- 
 ward ; commencements were held ; degrees were conferred ; new students 
 crowded around the president to take the place of the graduated when edicts 
 were fulminated and penalties imposed for every prayer that was offered in 
 the chapel and every act of instruction in the recitation room. 
 
 Never has a cause been litigated in our country more important from the 
 principle to be established, and the interests remotely involved. The exist- 
 ence, not only of this but of all seminaries for education, and of all corpo- 
 rate bodies whatever, was suspended upon the present decision. The per- 
 manence of all the institutions of our country, whether charitable, literary, 
 or religious, and indeed the very character of the nation in its future stages, 
 were connected with this adjudication upon a point of constitutional law. 
 Such was the confidence reposed in the president's judgment, and in his
 
 280 HISTORY OF 
 
 knowledge of the case, that the eminent professional men engaged for the 
 college did not hesitate to receive his advice, and urge his attendance at the 
 courts ; the case would seem almost to have been prepared in his study and 
 drawn out by his own hand. Honorable testimonials have they left of the 
 opinion they entertained of his capacity, by their frequent consultations ; 
 honorable also to themselves, in the evidence that they were not ashamed to 
 acknowledge merit when found in a young man guiding and protecting an 
 unpopular and unpromising cause. Never have higher legal attainments 
 been brought into powerful and splendid exhibition at the bar of our country. 
 On the one side, in behalf of the college, were Jeremiah Smith and Jeremiah 
 Mason, those 'men of renown' in the civil jurisprudence of the state; and 
 Daniel Webster, a son of the college, just entering upon his luminous career 
 of eloquence in the senate and the forum; and Joseph Hopkinson of 
 Philadelphia, who, when he had exerted all that admirable talent for which 
 he is so distinguished in the final trial at Washington, did not refuse this 
 homage to brilliant genius and vigorous intellect, when he said in a letter 
 written to President Brown announcing the happy and final decision : ' I 
 would advise you to inscribe over the door of your institution, FOUNDED 
 BY ELEAZAR WHEELOCK: RE-FOUNDED BY DANIEL WEBSTER.' On the 
 other side were employed John Holmes of Maine, William Pinckney of 
 Baltimore, and that most accomplished scholar, that ornament of our country, 
 that disciple at last of the Savior, of whose talents and honorable conduct 
 in this case even his professional opponents make the most respectable 
 mention, William Wirt, attorney-general of the United States. Whatever 
 research, argument, eloquence, could do for a cause, or against it, was done 
 in the process of this trial. In the superior court of New Hampshire, 
 November, 1817, a decision was given against the pretensions of the trustees. 
 Without delay, and apparently without dejection, on the part of President 
 Brown, the cause was carried up to the supreme court of the United States 
 at Washington, where it was argued in the March following, with the utmost 
 legal learning, and the most fervid eloquence these distinguished advocates 
 could command, and, as it would seem, on the part of some with the serious, 
 religious convictions of duty. The case was deferred by the court for ad- 
 visement till the February term of 1819, when to the entire satisfaction of 
 the patrons of the college, and with the devout thanksgiving of the friends 
 of learning and religion throughout the land, the claims of the trustees were 
 sustained against the fear of all future legislative despotism and party inter- 
 meddling. Others would have exulted ; President Brown was humble. They 
 would have triumphed over a fallen foe ; he, on the contrary, was more cour- 
 teous and conciliating. They would have taken the praise to their able coun- 
 sel and perseverance ; he ascribed the whole to Heaven. There was the 
 same composure of countenance, the same earnest and direct address to 
 duty ; too much occupied by God's goodness to be anything but abased and 
 devout." 
 
 From the address of Prof. S. G. Brown, delivered before the 
 alumni of Dartmouth College in 1855, I select the following 
 sketch of the trustees who managed the affairs of the college 
 during the controversy : 
 
 " If we turn our attention to its board of trustees for the first quarter of 
 the century, \ve shall find quite an uncommon collection of persons of emi- 
 nent intellectual ability. Some united thorough learning in the law with the 
 far-reaching views of statesmen. Some were profound metaphysicians and 
 theologians. There were men well versed in affairs, men of immovable 
 firmness, of unsullied probity, of deep religious convictions. 
 
 There rises first before the memory the somewhat attenuated and angular 
 form of Nathaniel Niles, a schoolmate of the elder Adams, whorrj he loved
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 28 1 
 
 his life long, and mainly, it would seem, because at school John Adams was 
 the terror of the big bad boys, who in his absence would oppress the little ones ; 
 a graduate of Nassau Hall ; a follower of Jefferson in politics, yet practi- 
 cally rather conservative, and of Calvin in theology, yet apparently some- 
 times verging toward his opponents ; an acute metaphysician, a little in- 
 clined to the opposite side; half author, in conjunction with Dr. Burton, of 
 the ' Taste-scheme? so called, yet walking independently, and not precisely 
 agreeing with his sharp-minded friend ; a great reader, keeping up remark- 
 ably with the progress of science, and renewing in his old age his knowledge 
 of Latin; a shrewd judge and an indefatigable opponent. Beside him stood 
 Elijah Paine, with a physical frame ' put together with sinews of brass, his 
 voice clear and audible at the distance of three quarters of a mile,' remark- 
 able for high-toned integrity, clear-minded, honest-hearted and upright, of 
 whom it is said by a most competent judge, " that the supposition of any 
 thing like injustice or oppression where Elijah Paine was present was a 
 palpable absurdity, not to be believed for a moment," appearing sometimes 
 to be severe when he really meant to be only just and true, a little obsti- 
 nate, perhaps, especially if any good or right thing was opposed, and per- 
 fectly inflexible if it was opposed by unfair and improper means. 
 
 Side by side was seen Charles Marsh, a lawyer more thoroughly read than 
 either, on whose " solid, immovable, quieting strength " one might lean and 
 rest, if erring, erring with a right purpose, simple and without pretension, 
 like his relative, Mr. Mason, but when once engaged in any cause, unflagging 
 and unyielding, bringing to bear upon every subject the strength of a pene- 
 trating and tenacious understanding, and resting with perfect confidence and 
 fearlessness upon his own convictions of both right and duty. 
 
 Of the same general character of transparent purpose, of remarkable 
 equanimity, undisturbed by difficulties and serene in. uprightness, was Tim- 
 othy Farrar, whose eye was not dim, nor his natural force abated, though he 
 was drawing toward the farthest verge of the ordinary limit of human life, 
 and who finally, in 1847, was gathered to his grave in peace, at the extreme 
 age of one hundred years. In contrast, yet in harmony, was seen Thomas 
 \V. Thompson like Judge Paine, a graduate and a tutor of Harvard, of 
 courtly ways, refined and cultivated in manners, with deep religious convic- 
 tions, and a supporter of everything good in circumstances where a loose 
 holding to principle would have subjected him to less inconvenience. 
 
 Contemporary with these were Rev. Drs. Payson and McFarland, whose 
 praise was in all the churches, and whose names added dignity and strength 
 to whatever society or institution they were connected with. And if we fol- 
 low down the list, how soon do we come upon the ever honored name of 
 Ezekiel Webster, then in the fullness of uncommon manly beauty and undis- 
 puted intellectual preeminence. 
 
 ' His own fair countenance, his kingly forehead, 
 
 The sense and spirit, and the light divine, 
 At the same moment in his steadfast eye, 
 Were virtue's native crest, the immortal soul's 
 Unconscious meek self-heraldry.' 
 
 After the lapse of fifty years we are astonished at the evi- 
 dence of party feeling which the college controversy elicited. 
 When it passed from the " academic shades" of Hanover and 
 entered the halls of legislation, it became a mere political ques- 
 tion ; and the common and vulgar weapons of party warfare 
 were used by the combatants. Imaginary foes, called by one 
 party bigots, fanatics and aristocrats, and by the other infidels, 
 agrarians and jacobins, were set up and hurled down by politi-
 
 282 HISTORY OF 
 
 cal and literary knights on many a hard-fought field. Time, 
 fame, toil and wealth were lost in the fight ; but posterity de- 
 cides with great unanimity that the decision of the supreme 
 court of the United States has been worth infinitely more to the 
 country than all the sacrifices made by the friends of the college 
 in securing it. 
 
 CONDITION OF THE COLLEGE IN 1874. 
 
 BY PRESIDENT A. D. SMITH. 
 
 Since the decision of this important case, with such occa- 
 sional ebbs and eddies as pertain to all like institutions, but 
 with remarkable steadiness on the whole, the college has gone 
 onward from its small beginnings to its present condition of en- 
 largement and prosperity. The whole number of its alumni, as 
 given in the last " Triennial," is three thousand nine hundred 
 and seven. These have come from all parts of the land ; and, 
 as graduates, have been scattered as widely. While a consider- 
 able number have entered from the cities and large towns, the 
 great majority have come from rural places. The average age 
 of admission has been somewhat above that at many other col- 
 leges ; and to the maturity thus secured has been added, in 
 many cases, the stimulus of self-dependence. From these and 
 other causes, Dartmouth students, as a class, have been charac- 
 terized by a spirit of earnestness, energy, and general manliness, 
 of the happiest omen as to their life-work. Most of them have 
 gone, not into the more lucrative lines of business, but into what 
 may be called the working professions. To the ministry, the 
 college has given more than nine hundred of her sons. Dr. 
 Chapman says, in his " Sketches of the Alumni ": " There have 
 been thirty-one judges of the United States and State supreme 
 courts ; fifteen senators in congress, and sixty-one representa- 
 tives ; two United States cabinet ministers ; four ambassadors 
 to foreign courts ; one postmaster-general ; fourteen governors 
 of states, and one of a territory ; twenty-five presidents of col- 
 leges ; one hundred and four professors of academical, medical, 
 or theological colleges." Perhaps the two professions that have 
 drawn most largely upon the institution have been those of 
 teaching and the law. We recall a single class, that of 1828, 
 one-fourth of whose members have been either college presi- 
 dents or professors. Dr. Chapman states, that at one time 
 there were residing in Boston, Mass., no less than seven sons of 
 the college, "who were justly regarded as ranking among the 
 brightest luminaries of the law. They were Samuel Sumner 
 Wilde, 1789; Daniel Webster, 1801 ; Richard Fletcher, 1806;
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 283 
 
 Joseph Bell, 1807 ; Joel Parker, 1811 ; Rufus Choate, 1819 ; and 
 Charles Bishop Goodrich, 1822." 
 
 As might have been expected from the origin of the institu- 
 tion, it has aimed from the beginning at a high religious tone. 
 Neither its trustees nor its faculty believe in divorcing the moral 
 nature from the intellectual, in the process of education. But a 
 partial and perilous culture is that, they judge, which leaves un- 
 touched the chief spring and crowning glory of our being. Yet 
 the institution is not sectarian, but truly catholic in its spirit. 
 What is commonly called the evangelical faith has, indeed, chief 
 influence in its halls ; yet students of all denominations are not 
 only welcomed there, but have the utmost freedom of opinion 
 and of worship, and their views are treated with all proper del- 
 icacy and respect. Most of the trustees and instructors are of 
 Orthodox-Congregational connection ; but there is in the charter 
 no restriction in this respect, and at least three other denomina- 
 tions are at present represented- in the faculty. There is a weekly 
 biblical exercise of all the classes ; in which, while the funda- 
 mentals of Christianity are inculcated, minor denominational 
 points are avoided. 
 
 While Dartmouth has no pet system of metaphysics, its teach- 
 ings lean, in general, to what may be called the spiritual line of 
 thinking. The college has, in time past, through some of its 
 gifted sons, rendered a service to sound philosophy, which is not, 
 perhaps, generally known. Half a century ago, it will be re- 
 membered, the system of Locke and his school, as well in this 
 country as in Europe, was in the ascendant. It was so, to some 
 extent, at Dartmouth. There were in college, however, about 
 that time, a number of earnest, thoughtful men, fond of meta- 
 physical inquiries, and not altogether content with the cast of 
 opinion most in favor. Among them not to name others were 
 James Marsh, Prof. Joseph Torrey, Dr. Joseph Tracey and Dr. 
 John Wheeler. Dr. Marsh, while an undergraduate, had fallen 
 upon the very course of thought which was so fully carried out in 
 his subsequent teachings and writings. The discussions begun 
 at Dartmouth were transferred to Andover, and thence to other 
 quarters. In 1829, Dr. Marsh gave to the American public 
 Coleridge's " Aids to Reflection," with an able preliminary ssay 
 by himself. An admirable series of articles on " Christian Phi- 
 losophy," advocating the same general views, was subsequently 
 published by Dr. Joseph Tracy. And the other men named 
 above were variously co-workers in the movement a movement 
 which contributed largely to the bringing in of that higher style 
 of philosophy which has since been so prevalent in this country. 
 Dartmouth has aimed, in all her history, at that true conserva- 
 tism which blends felicitously the " old and new." Bound by no
 
 284 HISTORY OF 
 
 inept foreign methods, good enough, it may be, abroad, but out 
 of place here she holds fast to the old idea of the American 
 college. Its end, she judges, is that general and systematic 
 training which should precede the particular and professional ; 
 which makes the man, to be moulded in due time into the cler- 
 gyman, the lawyer, the physician, or whatever else may be pre- 
 ferred. Yet she welcomes whatever real improvements increas- 
 ing light has suggested. She believes in a curriculum, carefully 
 devised, suited to develop, by a common discipline, our common 
 humanity ; not deeming it wise or safe to leave the selection of 
 studies wholly, or mainly, to youthful inexperience or caprice. 
 Yet she holds such a curriculum subject to all possible emenda- 
 tions, and does not hesitate to incorporate with it, to a limited 
 extent, especially in the more advanced stages, the elective prin- 
 ciple, being careful, however, not to interfere with the substantial 
 integrity and wise balance of the programme. She has already 
 a number of options, both as to courses and particular studies. 
 She believes in the ancient classics, but she favors science also. 
 For the last seven years, much more has been expended on the 
 scientific appointments of the institution than on the classical ; 
 and other improvements are contemplated in the same direction. 
 Though she adheres to the old college, as has been said, yet 
 around that she has already grouped though with no ambitious 
 fancy for the name of a university a number of collateral or 
 post-graduate institutions, offering diversified opportunities of 
 general and special culture. The various departments, as they 
 now exist, are as follows : 
 
 1. The old Academic Department, with its four years' curricu- 
 lum, including the privilege of a partial course, and a number of 
 particular options. 
 
 2. The Chandler Scientific Department, with a regular course, 
 chronologically parallel to that of the Academic, and having, 
 with the option of a partial course through all the years, several 
 elective lines of study in the last year. Latin and Greek are 
 omitted, French and German included, and scientific branches 
 are made most prominent. 
 
 3. The Agricultural Department, so called, or the New Hamp- 
 shire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts. This is 
 based on the congressional land-grant. It has a regular three 
 years' course, with an option, after the first year, between an 
 agricultural and mechanical line of study. 
 
 4. The Engineering Department, or the Thayer School of 
 Civil Engineering. This is substantially, though not formally, 
 a post-graduate or professional department, with a two years' 
 course. The requisites for admission are, in some important 
 branches, even more than a college curriculum commonly em-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 285 
 
 braces ; and it is designed to carry the study of civil engineering 
 to the highest point. 
 
 5. The Medical Department, or the old New Hampshire Med- 
 ical College. This was established in 1797, has had a long and 
 prosperous career, and ranks now with the best medical institu- 
 tions in the country. There is connected with it, in addition to 
 the lectures, a good course of private medical instruction. 
 
 6. Moor's Charity-School. This has now no distinct organic 
 existence ; but there is a small fund which is appropriated, un- 
 der the direction of the President of Dartmouth College, to the 
 education of Indian youths, in any department for which they 
 are prepared. 
 
 During the late war, the college, in common with most others 
 in our country, was somewhat depressed ; but it has since been 
 resuming, and even surpassing, its former status. The last cata- 
 logue embraces a faculty of instruction, thirty-five in number, 
 and, in all the different courses of study, four hundred and fifty- 
 seven students, the largest number ever connected with the in- 
 stitution. As an indication of the national relations of the col- 
 lege, it may be remarked that these students come from twenty- 
 three different states and territories, at home and abroad ; and 
 that, of the undergraduates, nearly one-fourth are from places 
 out of New England. Within the last seven years, more than 
 four hundred thousand dollars have been secured for the various 
 departments. But with the restrictions imposed on some of the 
 gifts, with the remaining wants of existing foundations, with the 
 plans of enlargement and improvement in the minds of the 
 trustees and faculty, and with the increased number of students, 
 there is a present need of as much more. Nor is it likely that 
 here, any more than at the other leading institutions of our 
 country, there will cease to be a call for additional funds, so 
 long as 
 
 " The thoughts of men are widened by the process of the suns."
 
 286 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXXVIII. 
 
 THE CAUCUS SYSTEM. 
 
 Archbishop Trench says: "One might suppose that the 
 Anglo-Americans would be able to explain how they got their 
 word "caucus," which plays so prominent a part in their elec- 
 tions, but they cannot." The word "cabal" is equally myste- 
 rious, some giving it a Hebrew origin, others making it up from 
 the initial letters of the names of the five cabinet ministers of 
 Charles II. The word " caucus " was at first a term of reproach. 
 It originated in ante-revolutionary times in Boston. It was ap- 
 plied to a meeting of the lowest classes in the meanest places. 
 An old song thus describes it : 
 
 " That mob of mobs, a caucus to command, 
 Hurl wild dissension round a maddening land." 
 
 It is probably a corruption of the word "calkers" and indicated 
 a calkers' meeting -which was held in a part of Boston "where all 
 the ship business was carried on." Use has made the word 
 respectable and given to the meetings thus named the supreme 
 control of politics. In New Hampshire the highest officers of 
 the state were till about the year 1825 nominated by a legislative 
 assembly. The people became dissatisfied with this species of 
 aristocratic appointments, took the matter into their own hands 
 and made their selections in conventions, whose members were 
 chosen at primary meetings. Strong objections were urged by 
 all parties against this popular method of nomination. A politi- 
 cal writer in 1823 thus defends it : 
 
 " First, as to its being Anti-Republican and Unconstitutional. 
 
 The word Caucus was originally applied to a meeting of certain patriots 
 in the early stages of the Revolution, of whom the virtuous and inflexible 
 JAMES OTIS was one, for the purpose of devising the means and the mode 
 of opposing those measures of the British government which, being per- 
 sisted in, finally produced the struggle which ended in the establishment of 
 our national independence. Its origin therefore is to be sought and found 
 in the very cradle of liberty, where it was nursed with the infant republic of 
 America, and it originated in the necessity of maturing certain important 
 measures, previous to their being laid before the people for their approba- 
 tion. So far therefore from being anti-republican, it was one of the earliest 
 practices that marked the progress of republicanism, to which it is peculiar, 
 being unknown in the vocabulary of any other system of government." 
 
 The Caucus has since that day become omnipotent. Every of- 
 ficer in the state, from hogreeve to governor, is nominated in a 
 caucus, and every voter who refuses to support the nominee of
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 287 
 
 the party is denounced as a "bolter;" which term carries with 
 it so much ignominy, that its imposition is equivalent to political 
 death. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXIX. 
 
 THE TOLERATION ACT. 
 
 The great teacher says : "Ye cannot serve God and Mam- 
 mon." Whether the first settlers at Little Harbor and Northam 
 attempted both does not clearly appear ; but it is manifest that 
 these representatives of the Laconia Company were not exiles 
 for conscience' sake. They did not come into the wilderness to 
 found churches, but to catch fish, work mines, buy furs, fell trees, 
 and till the soil. The woods and the waters yielded tribute to 
 their industry. The religious element was more strongly devel- 
 oped in Hampton and Exeter, but so long as these four towns 
 made their own laws, the state took precedence of the church. 
 The reverse was true of Massachusetts ; and when, in 1641, a 
 political union was effected between these plantations and the 
 colony of Massachusetts, they were exempted from religious 
 tests and allowed an equitable representation in the legislative 
 assembly. During the entire early history of New Hampshire 
 there was greater freedom of individual opinion and a more lib- 
 eral toleration of differences in religion prevailed than in the 
 other New England colonies. Still, that deep-seated conviction 
 which had been the growth and habit of centuries in the old 
 world, that it was the duty of the state to uphold the church, 
 led the people of New Hampshire to sustain divine worship by 
 law, and to build churches and support a Christian ministry by 
 general taxation. The majority of the colonists were Congre- 
 gationalists, and the ministers of that denomination were legally 
 constituted " the standing order " in the state. The towns were 
 empowered by the early legislators, in accordance with the pro- 
 visions of an English law, to raise money for the support of the 
 gospel ; and the people, in town meeting assembled, voted for 
 their spiritual teachers and assessed themselves for their sup- 
 port. The rise of other religious denominations in the state 
 created great dissatisfaction with this law. They were often 
 compelled to aid in the building of churches which they never 
 entered, to pay for preaching which they never heard, and to
 
 288 HISTORV OF 
 
 support a creed which they did not believe. The Bill of Rights 
 declares " that no person of any particular religious sect or de- 
 nomination shall ever be compelled to pay towards the support 
 of a teacher or teachers of another persuasion, sect or denom- 
 ination ; and that no subordination of one sect or denomination 
 shall ever be established by law." This plain provision was 
 evaded by requiring a man who refused to pay his tax for the le- 
 gally appointed clergyman to prove that he belonged to another 
 denomination. This was not always possible to be done. Able 
 counsel opposed the recusant, pleading before prejudiced juries, 
 and possibly before an orthodox court. In such cases, the most 
 eminent lawyers in the state were arrayed against one another. 
 In one instance, Mr. Smith and Mr. Mason argued that a Bap- 
 tist could not be exempted from the clerical tax, because lie 
 could not prove that he had been immersed. Mr. Sullivan and 
 Mr. Bartlett, in reply, maintained that he could not be a Congre- 
 gationalist, because they could not prove that he had been 
 sprinkled. A law that required such irreverent trifling and such 
 transparent quibbling did not deserve the support of honest 
 men. Those who were utterly indifferent to all creeds and 
 " cared for none of these things" were compelled, sometimes by 
 a legal process and distraint of their goods, to contribute to the 
 support of preaching in their respective towns. But one denom- 
 ination of Christians was recognized by law, till near the begin- 
 ning of the present century. Prior to 1807, several denomina- 
 tions, by legislative enactments, secured an independent exist- 
 ence, and from that time were no longer " molested " by the 
 collector of taxes. Soon after the accession of Governor Bell to 
 the gubernatorial chair in 1819, the subject was brought before 
 the legislature. The toleration bill met with strenuous opposi- 
 tion. The advocates of the measure could plead the example 
 of other states in relaxing the bonds of uniformity. Connecti- 
 cut had recently separated church and state with manifest ben- 
 efit both to morality and religion. 
 
 Dr. Lyman Beecher, in his autobiography, speaking of the 
 condition of the " standing order " in that state, says : " The 
 habit of legislation, from the beginning, had been to favor the 
 Congregational order and provide for it. Congregationalism 
 was the established religion. All others were dissenters and 
 complained of favoritism. The ambitious minority early began 
 to make use of the minor sects, on the ground of invidious dis- 
 tinctions, thus making them restive. So the democracy, as it 
 rose, included nearly all minor sects." The good Doctor la- 
 bored first with Herculean energy to uphold this time-honored 
 relation of church and state ; and after it was legally annulled, 
 he worked with equal energy to establish the voluntary system.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 289 
 
 He succeeded, as many other eminent men have done, in refut- 
 ing his own cherished opinions. When the crisis of separation 
 of church and state had passed, he wrote : " It was as dark a day 
 as ever I saw. The odium thrown upon the ministry was incon- 
 ceivable. The injury done to the cause of Christ, as we sup- 
 posed, was irreparable. For several days I suffered what no 
 tongue can tell for the best thing that ever happened to the state 
 of Connecticut. It cut the churches loose from dependence on 
 state support. It threw them wholly on their own resources and 
 on God. They say ministers have lost their influence ; the fact 
 is, they have gained." In another place, he writes : " The effect, 
 when it did come, was just the reverse of the expectation. When 
 the storm burst upon us, indeed, we thought we were dead for a 
 while. Our fears magnified the danger. We were thrown on 
 God and on ourselves, and this created that moral coercion 
 which makes men work. Before, we had been standing on what 
 our fathers had done ; but now we were obliged to develop 'our 
 own energy. The other denominations lost all the advantage 
 they had had before, so that the very thing in which the enemy 
 said, ' Raze it, raze it to the foundations,' laid the corner-stone 
 of our prosperity to all generations." A similar state of feel- 
 ing prevailed among the clergy of New Hampshire. They re- 
 garded the Toleration Act as "a repeal of the Christian reli- 
 gion," or an " abolition of the Bible ;" but when it was once 
 passed, all parties pronounced it a good and wholesome law. Its 
 enforcement was productive of little positive evil and of the 
 highest positive good. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXX. 
 
 DECLINE OF " THE ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS. 
 
 For a few years after the close of the war, political partisans, 
 from sheer exhaustion, ceased from controversy and lay upon 
 their arms, indifferent to the conduct of their adversaries. Their 
 zeal was too feeble to keep up strict party lines, and for each 
 office there was but a single candidate. But such a pacific state 
 could not long continue. Man is naturally pugnacious. He 
 loves to fight with sword or voice. It was the opinion of Thomas 
 Hobbes, the philosopher of Malmesbury, one of the most pro- 
 found thinkers of any age, that war is the natural condition of 
 
 '9
 
 290 HISTORY OF 
 
 our race. If we allow him to limit and define his own theory, 
 we can hardly disprove it. " For war," says he, " consisteth not 
 in battle only, or the act of fighting, but in a tract of time, 
 wherein the will to contend in battle is sufficiently known ; and 
 therefore the notion of time is to be considered in the nature of 
 war, as it is in the nature of weather. For, as the nature of 
 foul weather lieth not in a shower or two of rain, but in an in- 
 clination thereto of many days together, so the nature of war 
 consisteth not in actual fighting, but in the known disposition 
 thereto during all the time there is no assurance to the con- 
 trary." With this explanation and with another gratuitous as- 
 sumption of all the old philosophers, that prior to all political 
 organizations men lived in " a state of nature," where every 
 man was the enemy of every other, we may concede a natural 
 propensity in man to contend either with weapons or words, in 
 all conditions of life. Social quarrels in New Hampshire were 
 carried on with all the bitter animosity which marked the pro- 
 gress of the late war with England. Such were the Dartmouth 
 College controversy and the " Toleration Act." 
 
 During the administration of President Monroe arose that 
 sharp, bitter and " irrepressible conflict " between liberty and 
 slavery which culminated in the late civil war. It lay in the in- 
 clinations of men from the adoption of the federal constitution 
 down to the period of the admission of Missouri. Then con- 
 cealed opinions took voice and utterance, and a war of words 
 commenced which resulted in a war of swords in the Great Re- 
 bellion. During the discussion of the restriction of slavery, 
 while Missouri was asking recognition as a state, some of the 
 members of congress from New Hampshire uttered sentiments 
 as bold and as offensive to southern statesmen as any that have 
 fallen from the pen or tongue of modern reformers. Hon. Da- 
 vid L. Morrill, then in the senate of the United States, took a 
 most decided stand against the extension of slavery, and fear- 
 lessly denounced the whole system as unrighteous, and there- 
 fore destructive of the peace and prosperity of the nation. In 
 closing one of his speeches he said : 
 
 " The extension of slavery will tend to the violation of your laws, and to 
 demoralize society. The people of this country are fond of property. It is 
 impossible to restrain them within legal bounds, when you present to them a 
 pecuniary advantage, even from illicit commerce. You thus indirectly cor- 
 rupt the rising generation and demoralize the community. Extend slavery 
 into the vast territory of Missouri, you heighten the value and offer a new 
 market for slaves ; you encourage their importation, you invite to a violation 
 of your laws, and lay a foundation for a systematic' course of perjury, cor- 
 ruption and guilt. All the public ships in the service of your country are 
 now insufficient to suppress this species of traffic. What could prevent it 
 if the market were increased? Sir, close your market, remove the induce- 
 ment to their introduction, and the nefarious commerce ceases of course.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 291 
 
 Look to your laws of 1794, 1798, 1800, 1804, 1805, 1807, 1818, and 1819, and 
 say, do they not imply one uniform and uninterrupted determination to abol- 
 ish the slave trade ? This single act would stamp hypocrisy on the face of 
 every previous law. 
 
 I will close my remarks with a few lines from the late President Jefferson : 
 ' With the morals of the people, their industry also is destroyed. Can the 
 liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm 
 basis a conviction on the minds of the people that their liberties are the 
 gift of God ; that they are not to be violated but with his wrath ? Indeed, I 
 tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice can- 
 not sleep forever ; that, considering numbers, nature and natural means only, 
 a revolution on the wheel of fortune, an exchange of situation, is among pos- 
 sible events ; that it may become probable by supernatural interference ! 
 The Almighty has no attribute which can take side with us in such a contest. 
 But it is impossible to be temperate and to pursue the subject through the 
 various considerations of policy, of morals, of history, natural and civil. 
 We must be contented to hope they will force their way into every one's 
 mind.' " 
 
 Similar sentiments were uttered by members of the house of 
 representatives. A few sentences from a speech of Hon. Wil- 
 liam Plumer will indicate his opinions on slavery as well as those 
 of his constituents. He said : 
 
 "These, then, are the motives of our conduct: we find slavery unjust in 
 itself ; adverse to all the great branches of national industry ; a source of 
 danger in times of war ; repugnant to the first principles of our republican 
 government; and in all these ways extending its injurious effects to the states 
 where its existence is not even tolerated. We believe that we possess, un- 
 der the constitution, the power necessary to arrest the further progress of 
 this great and acknowledged evil ; and the measure now proposed is the 
 joint result of all these motives, acting upon this belief and guided by our 
 most mature judgments and our best reflections. As such, we present it to 
 the people of Missouri, in the firm persuasion that we shall be found in the 
 end to have consulted their wishes not less than their interests by this meas- 
 ure. For what, sir, is Missouri ? Not the comparatively few inhabitants 
 who now possess the country, but a state, large and powerful, capable of 
 containing, and destined, I trust, to contain, half a million of virtuous and 
 intelligent freemen. It is to their wishes and their interests that I look, and 
 not to the temporary blindness or the lamentable delusions of the present 
 moment. If this restriction is imposed, in twenty years we shall have the 
 people of Missouri thanking us for the measure, as Ohio, Indiana, and Illi- 
 nois now thank the old congress for the ordinance of 1787." 
 
 This subject, at that early day, was debated in every caucus, 
 convention and legislative assembly, and forced its way to every 
 private hearth and dining-room in the state. The people then 
 began to be classed as radicals and conservatives. For a few 
 years all assumed the common name of republicans, and when 
 they could no longer contend about measures they divided on 
 candidates. Sometimes federalists united with republicans in 
 the election of a governor whom only a fraction of the party in 
 power had nominated. In 1823 Hon. Samuel Bell retired from 
 the gubernatorial chair and passed, by a large legislative vote, 
 to the senate of the United States. By the republican members.
 
 292 HISTORY OF 
 
 Hon. Samuel Dinsmoor was nominated as his successor. A 
 portion of the party did not approve this selection and brought 
 forward Hon. Levi Woodbury, who had been a judge of the 
 superior court, and by the concurrent vote of federalists he was 
 elected. He served only one year, and in 1824 there was no 
 choice by the people. The legislature chose Hon. David L. 
 Morrill of Goffstown governor. Mr. Woodbury was his com- 
 petitor, and both were republicans. In 1825 Mr. Woodbury, 
 then residing in Portsmouth, was chosen a member of the house 
 and was made speaker. He soon after passed into the senate 
 of the United States, and during the administration of President 
 Jackson, in 1831, was appointed secretary of the navy, and, in 
 1834, secretary of the treasury. 
 
 Near the close of President Monroe's administration a warm 
 controversy arose about his successor. There were four can- 
 didates in the field, John Q. Adams, Andrew Jackson, William 
 H. Crawford and Henry Clay, each having some peculiar ele- 
 ment of popularity to recommend him. Then arose in New 
 Hampshire the party term " amalgamation," which the most 
 learned could not define and which the most ignorant daily 
 used. It was employed to designate the union of federalists and 
 republicans in favor of the election of John Quincy Adams. 
 There was no choice by the people and Mr. Adams was elected 
 by the house of representatives. This result accorded with the 
 electoral vote of New Hampshire. During his administration 
 arose those strongly marked political parties which have ever 
 since waged an internecine war upon each other, first as demo- 
 crats and republicans, then as democrats and whigs, and finally 
 under the old names of democrats and republicans. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXI. 
 
 LOCAL MATTERS DURING THE ADMINISTRATION OF MONROE 
 AND ADAMS. 
 
 The population of New Hampshire in 1820 was two hundred 
 and forty-four thousand, showing an addition of thirty thousand 
 in ten years. This number indicates a larger increase than the 
 average of the next fifty years. The population of the entire 
 country was about ten millions. New Hampshire gave its elec- 
 toral vote for John Quincy Adams. He was for several years 
 the favorite candidate of the state for the presidency. His fam-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 293 
 
 ily prestige, his New England origin and his devotion to northern 
 interests gave him greater popularity in New England than in 
 other sections of the country. Though he had been a republi- 
 can and had sustained the war, yet soon after his elevation to* 
 the presidency the federalists united with one section of the re- 
 publicans in forming, by "amalgamation," the great "New Eng- 
 land Adams party," whose aim was to give John Quincy Adams 
 a second term as chief magistrate of the nation. 
 
 For several years the legislation of the state was devoted 
 chiefly to the creation of literary, financial and manufacturing 
 corporations. In 1821, an act was passed to establish a literary 
 fund for the purpose of endowing and supporting a college, to 
 be under the direction and control of the state, for instruction 
 in the highest branches of literature and science. An annual 
 tax for this purpose, of one-half of one per cent., was levied 
 upon the capital stock of all the banks in the state. This tax 
 produced at first about five thousand dollars annually ; but in a 
 few years the avails of it amounted by the accumulation of prin- 
 cipal and interest to more than fifty thousand dollars. By the 
 increase of banks in the state the tax alone yielded more than 
 ten thousand dollars annually. In 1827, a bill was introduced 
 to establish a new college in the central portion of the state, 
 which failed to pass. In 1828, the literary fund was distributed 
 among the several towns in the state for the maintenance of 
 common schools according to the apportionment of public taxes 
 existing at the time of such distribution. The annual tax was 
 also devoted to the same laudable purpose ; and since that en- 
 actment legislative hostility to Dartmouth College has ceased. 
 
 The period now under review, from 1820 to 1830, was marked 
 by numerous changes in the social condition of society. Sev- 
 eral important modern reforms originated in this decade. Re-' 
 vivals of religion were a prominent feature of it. " Protracted 
 meetings," held from three to twenty days, in almost every town 
 in the state, greatly advanced the spiritual welfare of the people 
 and gave new power to the churches of Christ. This custom 
 continued for many years, and contributed largely to the union 
 of different sects, who cordially cooperated in sustaining the 
 meetings. 
 
 The temperance reform commenced about the year 1826. Dr. 
 Lyman Beecher was among its earliest advocates. He preached 
 six sermons in Boston upon the nature, occasions, signs, evils 
 and remedy of intemperance. These were published in 1827, 
 widely circulated and made extensively useful in the promotion 
 of total abstinence from intoxicating drinks. All classes in 
 society freely used them. Drunkenness had its victims in the 
 bar, the pulpit and the halls of legislation, as well as humbler
 
 294 HISTORY OF 
 
 positions in life. Judgment began at the house of God, and 
 spread through all classes of society with unparalleled rapidity. 
 In New Hampshire Jonathan Kittredge, Esq., in the early stages 
 *of the reform was instrumental of great good by the delivery 
 and publication of three very eloquent addresses on temperance, 
 which were widely circulated throughout the northern states. 
 His address before the American Temperance Society, in 1829, 
 closes with these prophetic words : " I believe the time is com- 
 ing when not only the drunkard but the drinker will be excluded 
 from the church of God when the gambler, the slave-dealer 
 and the rum-dealer will be classed together. And I care not 
 how soon that time arrives. I would pray for it as devoutly as 
 for the millennium. And when it comes, as come it will, it 
 should be celebrated by the united band of philanthropists, pat- 
 riots and Christians throughout the world, as a great and most 
 glorious jubilee." 
 
 The anti-slavery agitation had its birth about the same time. 
 It was a period of unusual activity in the discussion of morals, 
 politics and religion. On the first day of January, 1831, Wil- 
 liam Lloyd Gairison published the first number of the Liberator. 
 He had for some years advocated the gradual abolition of slav- 
 ery. In the prospectus of that paper he renounces and denoun- 
 ces that doctrine and says : " A similar recantation from my pen 
 was published in the Genius of Universal Emancipation at Balti- 
 more, in 1829." In closing he writes : " I am in earnest I will 
 not equivocate I will not excuse I will not retreat a single 
 inch and I WILL BE HEARD." These declarations then seemed 
 absurd, egotistical and fool-hardy ; but in process of time he 
 made them good. The final adoption of abolition views by all 
 denominations of Christians and their united labors in common 
 for the publication of them, together with the reforms in tem- 
 perance and religion, tended to soften sectarian prejudices and 
 promote Christian union in the work of renovating society. In 
 many pulpits dogmatic theology gave place to philanthropy and 
 creeds were supplanted by works. But controversy did not 
 cease. The field and weapons were changed but the warriors 
 were the same. Sectarianism was merged in reform ; and its 
 advocates and opponents were more bitter and fierce in their 
 deadly strife than different sects had previously been. 
 
 For a season political controversy was calmed by the visit of 
 the nation's guest, Lafayette, at the capital of New Hampshire. 
 The legislature was in session when he arrived. The New 
 Hampshire Patriot of June 27, 1825, has the following account 
 of his reception at Concord : 
 
 "The General, in his usual appropriate and feeling manner, thanked the 
 gentlemen of the committee and the citizens of Concord for the very affec- 
 tionate manner in which they welcomed his entrance into their town.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 295. 
 
 A national salute was fired by the artillery, and the procession was received 
 at the bridge by eight companies of light troops under the command of 
 Brigadier-General BRADBURY BARTLETT. On entering the main street 
 the General was greeted by the shouts of from thirty to forty thousand citi- 
 zens who had collected ; the windows and doors were lined with ladies and 
 children gazing and admiring as he passed along. The procession moved to 
 the north end of Main street, and returned to the residence of the Hon. Mr. 
 Kent, where lodgings had been prepared for him and his suite. Remaining 
 there till 12 o'clock at noon, he was escorted in the same manner to the gate 
 of the state-house yard, when he alighted, and moved, being supported by 
 the Hon. Messrs. Webster and Bowers of the senate, to the capitol, where 
 he was introduced to the legislature in the manner as detailed in their 
 proceedings. 
 
 In the meantime a noble company of more than two hundred heroes of 
 the Revolution had collected and formed rank and file under the direction of 
 that veteran, General BENJAMIN PIERCE of Hillsborough, who had just re- 
 turned from Bunker Hill. These marched into the area of the state-house, 
 where they were introduced to the guest by General PIERCE, who vented his 
 feelings in one of those spontaneous and unpremeditated addresses for 
 which he always had a talent the most happy. Here was a scene more af- 
 fecting and gratifying than ever has probably taken place in our state ; tears 
 of alternate joy and sorrow trickled down the cheeks of the veterans, and 
 few of the spectators remained unmoved. After spending an hour here, the 
 guest retired to the senate chamber where he was introduced to many gentle- 
 men who had not before had an opportunity. During the ceremonies in the 
 representatives' hall, the galleries and all the avenues were crowded with a 
 brilliant collection of ladies, whose eyes sparkled with gratitude and joy at 
 the interesting spectacle. 
 
 The General was especially introduced to the members of the legislature 
 who had been participators in the Revolution among them, Messrs. HUNT- 
 LEY, DURKEE and BLAISDELL. Hon. Mr. BRODHEAD, senator for district 
 No. 2, and chaplain to the legislature, on being a second time presented by 
 the governor, inquired of the general whether he recollected the name as 
 among the soldiers of the revolution. After pondering a moment, the general 
 answered, "Yes, I recollect Captain Brodhead of the Pennsylvania line he 
 was with us at the battle of Brandywine ; he was a brave man." Mr. B. an- 
 swered "I am the son of that man." "I am, says General Lafayette, very 
 glad to see you ; how happy am I that the children of my companions in 
 arms still love me." This Captain Brodhead commanded the first rifle com- 
 pany in Pennsylvania, and was in the service during the whole war; he was 
 wounded and taken prisoner at the battle of Long Island. He died in Penn- 
 sylvania in 1804. With this interview the reverend and amiable man who 
 officiate? in the double capacity of legislator and chaplain was deeply af- 
 fected, and the general cordially reciprocated that feeling which pure patriots 
 alone can appreciate. 
 
 At three p. M. the largest assemblage in our state that ever was at one 
 table and under one roof (from seven hundred to eight hundred) sat down to 
 a sumptuous dinner prepared by Mr. J. P. Gass. In front, and surmounting 
 the others, was the table at which the guest Avas seated; on his right hand 
 the governor and council, and on his left, the marshal of the day, Hon. Sam- 
 uel Bell, Judge Green, the secretary and treasurer of the state. Four tables 
 two hundred feet in extent ran down facing that of the guest ; at the left 
 were seated the surviving heroes of the revolution, Geneial Pierce at the 
 head ; on the right of these the speaker and members of the house of rep- 
 resentatives ; next, the president and senate ; and on the right the Concord 
 committee and other citizens. After the cloth was removed, the following 
 toasts (interspersed with songs) were read by the Hon. Mr. PIERCE of the
 
 296 HISTORY OF 
 
 senate, and reiterated over the cheering glass, amidst the firing of artillery: 
 i. Our Guest The friend of WASHINGTON, the friend of man. 
 General LAFAYETTE rose and expressed his affectionate acknowledg- 
 ments for the so very kind welcome he had received to-day from the people 
 of New Hampshire at this seat of government, particularly for the toast 
 that has just been given, and for the pleasure he felt to be now at this social 
 table with all the representatives of the state in every branch, with his nu- 
 merous beloved revolutionary companions in arms, and other respected citi- 
 zens; to the whole of them he begged to propose the following sentiment: 
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE, its representatives in every branch, and this, seat of 
 government May they forever enjoy all the blessings of civil and religious 
 liberty, which their high-minded ancestors came to seek on a distant land, 
 and which their more immediate fathers have insured on the broader basis 
 of national sovereignty and the rights of man." 
 
 On the fourth of July of the next year, two of the illustrious 
 framers of the constitution of the United States, Thomas Jeffer- 
 son and John Adams, departed this life. The government which 
 they helped to form and which probably never would have ex- 
 isted without their aid, had been in operation fifty years. The 
 day of their death was the anniversary of the national indepen- 
 dence. Jefferson penned the declaration which was made on 
 that day ; and Adams eloquently defended it. They had both 
 been presidents, and leaders of opposing political parties. Both 
 had very warm personal friends and both commanded universal 
 respect. Their departure together on that birth-day of the 
 nation was regarded by many as a divine interposition ; and by 
 all with sentiments of profound sorrow. This was among the 
 most striking events of American history. On the second day 
 of August, 1826, Daniel Webster, New Hampshire's most elo- 
 quent son, delivered a fitting eulogy, in Faneuil Hall, Boston, 
 on these illustrious patriots. It is difficult to decide whether 
 the departed dead or the living orator was more admired on 
 that eventful day. 
 
 In 1826 a company was formed at Hartford, Conn., for the 
 purpose of improving the navigation of the Connecticut river. 
 It was thought that by building dams and locks round the suc- 
 cessive falls the river could be rendered navigable for steamers 
 as far as Lyman, N. H. The company also had in view the con- 
 nection of Canada with the capitals of New Hampshire and 
 Boston by canals extending from Dover to Lake Winnepiseogee, 
 thence to the Connecticut and Lake Memphremagog. A survey 
 was made and the legislatures of New Hampshire and Vermont 
 authorized the company to construct the canals, but the expense 
 was beyond the means and enterprise of that day. What was 
 actually accomplished appears in chronological order in the fol- 
 lowing extract from a brief address by William H. Duncan, Esq., 
 delivered July i, 1859, at the opening of the first free bridge 
 across the Connecticut from Hanover to Norwich : 
 
 " I think of the contrast between this section of the country, as it now is,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 397 
 
 as to its facilities for travel and transportation, and what it was sixty or sev- 
 enty years since, when a charter was obtained for building a toll bridge over 
 the Connecticut, between this place and Norwich. The charter was obtained 
 about 1794. Previous to this time a large part of the heavy trade of this 
 part of the country was carried on with Hartford and New York, by means 
 of boats upon the river, and sloops and schooners upon the Sound. The 
 roads between this place and Boston were so poor that Madam Smith, the 
 wife of Professor Smith, formerly of the college, was obliged to make her 
 bridal tour from Boston to this place on horseback. 
 
 A large part of the capital for building the bridge was furnished by the 
 merchants of Boston, not for the sake of making a profitable investment, but 
 with the intention of diverting the trade of northern Vermont from Hartford 
 and New York to Boston. The Higginsons, the Salisburys, the Phillipses 
 were among the stockholders, names distinguished for mercantile honor and 
 probity, and which have been inherited and worthily worn by many of their 
 descendants. 
 
 The building of this bridge was the first link in that chain of internal im- 
 provement which has done so much towards developing the resources, and 
 which has added so immensely to the comfort and material prosperity of this 
 section of the country. 
 
 The second link in this chain of internal improvement was the construc- 
 tion of the Fourth New Hampshire Turnpike. A charter was obtained in 
 1800 for making a road from a point on the east bank of Connecticut river 
 in Lebanon, nearly opposite White River, to a point in the west bank of the 
 Merrimack river, either in the town of Salisbury or Boscawen, with a branch 
 road from the easterly abutment of the White River Falls bridge, running 
 southeasterly to intersect with the main trunk. This has now become, I be- 
 lieve, a public highway. 
 
 The third link in this chain of improvement was the building of the 
 White River Falls locks and canals, which were chartered in 1807, and com- 
 pleted in 1810, at an expense of nearly forty thousand dollars, an enterprise 
 set on foot and completed by a single individual, Mills Olcott, Esq., of Han- 
 over, then a young man a little more than thirty years of age. President 
 Dwight, in his tour through New England in 1803, speaking of overcoming 
 the difficulties in the navigation of Connecticut river at the White River 
 Falls says, 'at present the amount of business is insufficient to justify the ex- 
 pense necessary for this purpose.' In 1812, speaking of this undertaking, 
 he says, 'my expectations have been anticipated by a period of many years.' 
 I would say of this enterprise, that for nearly forty years it was to its propri- 
 etor a source of almost constant litigation, of excessive annoyance and anxi- 
 ety, and at the same time of the most ample and satisfactory returns." 
 
 "About 1831 or 1832, as nearly as I can learn, an attempt was made to su- 
 persede the clumsy flat-boats then in use on the river. A diminutive steamer, 
 the John Ledyard, commanded by Captain Nutt, a veteran riverman who is 
 still living at White River Junction, came puffing up the river from Spring- 
 field, Mass., and was received, at various places, with speeches and such 
 other demonstrations as were deemed appropriate to the opening of steam- 
 boat navigation on the upper Connecticut. Captain Nutt went up as far as 
 Wells River, near which place he found obstructions which he was unable to 
 surmount. 
 
 Two or three hundred Scotchmen, who lived in the vicinity and were anx- 
 ious to have the steamer go farther, undertook to pull her over the bar with 
 the aid of ropes, but after raising her so far from a horizontal position that 
 an explosion of the boiler became imminent, they were asked to desist by 
 the captain, and it took twenty or thirty of them to pull her back into the 
 deep water. The next season another steamer, the Adam Duncan, was built 
 at Wells River, under the superintendence of Captain Nutt, for the company 
 of which he was the agent. Other steamers had been put upon the river at
 
 298 HISTORY OF 
 
 various points below, the previous season, and the Adam Duncan was de- 
 signed to ply between Wells River and Olcott's Locks, but after a single 
 season of practice in backing off the sand-bars between the two places, was 
 attached for debt, her works were taken out and sold, and the remainder of 
 the hull may still be seen lying close to the shore a few rods above the falls. 
 With the opening of the Passumpsic railroad, however, the days of flat-boats 
 were numbered, and the locks also became useless. One of the mills was 
 presently destroyed by a freshet, a portion of the dam was afterwards swept 
 away, and as the amount of business then done there would not warrant its 
 reconstruction, the remaining mill was taken down about 1862, and since 
 then the water power, said to be equal to that at Lowell, has not been used 
 except to turn the wheel of a small paper-mill on the Vermont side." 
 
 On the twenty-eighth day of August, 1826, occurred the most 
 destructive flood that has been known in New Hampshire. The 
 little mountain streams became raging torrents ; the rivers be- 
 came inland lakes throughout their entire length. Mills, dams, 
 buildings, herds, flocks and crops were swept away. The results 
 might be aptly described in the very words of Ovid, by which he 
 portrays the fabulous flood of Ducalion. The following extract 
 from Whiton's History of New Hampshire shows the ruins pro- 
 duced by the freshet in the northern portion of the state : 
 
 "At Bath, the Ammonoosuc suddenly became turbid and thick with earth, 
 then spread itself over its lower banks and meadows, and soon exhibited 
 one wide, sweeping roll of billows, bearing along the wreck of bridges, 
 buildings, fences, crops, and animals caught by the waves in their pastures. 
 The beds of many mountain streams were excavated to a surprising depth 
 and width; in some places the fury of the flood cut out for the waters new 
 and permanent channels. Torrents of water rushed through the Notch, of 
 the White Mountains, breaking up the very foundations of the turnpike 
 road for a great distance and leaving a shapeless mass of loosened crags, 
 rocks piled on rocks, and yawning chasms. From the sides of the moun- 
 tains, slides or avalanches descended to the lower grounds, bearing down 
 thousands of tons of gravel, rocks and broken trees, and laying bare the 
 solid mountain rock over an extent of hundreds of acres. Late in the pre- 
 ceding day, a party of gentlemen, among whom were Colonel Bartlett and 
 Mr. Moore of Concord, left Crawford's, a house more than four miles from 
 the Notch, on an excursion to the summit of Mount Washington. They ar- 
 rived in the evening at a camp which had been constructed at the foot of the 
 steep ascent of the mountain, where they passed the night. The next 
 .morning being cloudy and rainy, they concluded to remain in camp that day, 
 but the increasing rain having in the afternoon put out their fire, they reluct- 
 antly decided to return. With the utmost difficulty, and not without danger, 
 did they effect their retreat, and arrived at Crawford's in the evening. Had 
 they remained on the mountain another night they must have perishe'd, as 
 the camp was afterward found to have been swept away, and avalanches to 
 have passed on either side at the distance of a few rods. The most affect- 
 ing story of this flood remains to be told. Two miles from the Notch at 
 "the Notch House" lived the family of Samuel Willey, consisting of himself 
 and wife, five children and two hired men. An avalanche in its descent 
 from the mountain came near the house, where it divided itself into two 
 parts, one of which crushed the barn and an adjoining shed. Alarmed at 
 the noise, and 'fearing the destruction of their habitation, the family fled for 
 safety; but in the darkness of the night they fell into the track of the other 
 avalanche and were all buried under masses of earth and rocks. Some of
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 399 
 
 the bodies were found by the scent of dogs, at the distance of fifty rods 
 from the house. The house itself remained uninjured, and had the unfortu- 
 nate inmates remained within, they had been in safety, but an inscrutable 
 Providence otherwise directed. 'It is not in man that walketh to direct his 
 steps.' " 
 
 In 1817 a new county was formed. The second section of the 
 act creating it reveals its location and boundaries. It is as fol- 
 lows : 
 
 " SECT. 2. And be it further enacted, That said county of Sulli- 
 van shall contain all the land and waters included in the follow- 
 ing towns and places, which now constitute a part of the county 
 of Cheshire, to wit : Acworth, Charlestown, Claremont, Cornish, 
 Croydon, Grantham, Goshen, Lempster, Langdon, Newport, 
 Plainfield, Springfield, Unity, Washington and Wendell ; and 
 that said towns be, and they are hereby, disannexed from the 
 county of Cheshire." 
 
 At the June session of the legislature of 1817 an excellent 
 law was passed "for the support and regulation of primary 
 schools." It placed our educational system very nearly upon its 
 present basis. The selectmen of every town are required to 
 assess, annually, upon all the property of its inhabitants " a sum 
 to be computed at the rate of ninety dollars for every one dollar 
 of their proportion for public taxes, for the time being, and so for 
 a greater or less sum," for the sole purpose of supporting one or 
 more English schools within the towns where the taxes are as- 
 sessed. The law also requires the selectmen to appoint in each 
 town a superintending committee, whose powers are almost un- 
 limited with respect to the approval of teachers and the selec- 
 tion of books. The district is also required to choose annually 
 a prudential committee to employ teachers and attend to the lo- 
 cal interests of the school. These judicious provisions for good 
 schools attest the wisdom of the legislators of that generation. 
 
 In political matters, parties had become so blended by "amal- 
 gamation," that Hon. John Bell, a supporter of John Quincy 
 Adams, was elected governor in 1828. He was a member of a 
 distinguished family who have exerted a controlling influence in 
 the state for a century and a half. Their common ancestor was 
 John Bell, born in the county of Antrim, Ireland, in 1678. He 
 received a grant of land from the Londonderry colony, in 1720, 
 where he spent the remainder of his life. His son John inher- 
 ited the homestead and passed his life in the same town. His 
 grandson John resided in Chester, was engaged in merchan- 
 dise and held several important offices in the state, prior to his 
 election as governor. His brother, Samuel Bell, whose official 
 career has been previously noticed, was in public' life for more 
 than a quarter of a century. As representative in the state leg-
 
 300 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 islature, speaker of the house, president of the senate, justice 
 of the superior court, governor of the state, United States sen- 
 ator, and trustee of the college, " he bore his faculties " so hon- 
 orably that the succeeding generation has pretty unanimously 
 agreed to call him a wise, great and good man. He left eight 
 sons, all distinguished for superior endowments and high schol- 
 arship. Samuel Dana Bell, late chief justice of the superior 
 court of New Hampshire, was very eminent as a scholar and 
 jurist. Of the brothers of Judge Bell, four studied medicine, 
 and three became lawyers. They all have acted on the principle 
 of Bacon, that " every man is a debtor to his profession," and 
 have reflected honor upon their chosen vocations. Only one 
 son of Hon. Samuel Bell, Dr. John Bell of Dover, now survives ; 
 and Hon. Charles Henry Bell of Exeter is the only representa- 
 tive of the family of Governor John Bell. He continued in 
 office only one year. 
 
 Parties were at that time constantly changing. In 1829, the 
 opponents of the national administration recovered their power, 
 and General Pierce was again elected governor. In his second 
 message to the legislature, he announced his determination to 
 retire from public life at the close of his official year of service. 
 In 1830, Hon. Matthew Harvey, a friend of General Jackson 
 and a life-long follower of Jefferson, was chosen chief magis- 
 trate by a majority of four thousand, over his opponent Colonel 
 Upham of Portsmouth. The contest was bitter and malignant ; 
 the result proved that the state, for some years to come, was to 
 be decidedly democratic. The census of this year showed the 
 population of New Hampshire to be two hundred and sixty- 
 nine thousand. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXII. 
 
 CHARACTER OF HON. BENJAMIN PIERCE. 
 
 In March, 1827, Hon. Benjamin Pierce of Revolutionary 
 memory, always an ardent republican, was elected governor. It 
 may not be improper here to give a brief account of the offi- 
 cial life of General Pierce. " He was a native of Chelmsford, 
 in the commonwealth of Massachusetts. He entered the ser- 
 vice of his country in the spring of 1775, being then in the 
 seventeenth year of his age ; fought at Bunker's Hill, and con-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 301 
 
 tinued in the service until the peace of 1783. In his military 
 career he participated in all the privations, perils and glory of 
 the struggle which terminated in the independence of these 
 United States. He entered the service a common soldier, and 
 left it a major, by brevet. 
 
 A republican by nature, Gen. Pierce, at the close of the war, 
 was anxious to maintain, in his intercourse with the world, that 
 state of independence he had so successfully aided in establish- 
 ing for his country, and no way then appeared so likely to effect 
 this generous purpose as by engaging in some honest employ- 
 ment in a new settlement. He accordingly abandoned the place 
 of his nativity to the less enterprising and, accompanied by the 
 wife of his youth and his trusty sword (still in his possession), 
 he pitched his tent in the town of Hillsborough, near the spot 
 where he spent the remainder of his life. Hillsborough at that 
 early period was little more than a wilderness, and General 
 Pierce's first efforts were spent in constructing a log house for 
 his own accommodation and in felling with his own hands the 
 green forest and preparing the ground for cultivation. The la- 
 bors of honest industry seldom fail of success, and in few in- 
 stances have they been more prosperous than in the case of 
 General Pierce. From a state little short of absolute depen- 
 dence (the common lot of the Revolutionary soldier), he soon 
 began to thrive, and soon took rank among the most independ- 
 ent and intelligent farmers in the county of Hillsborough. 
 
 When General Sullivan was elected president of the state in 
 1786 he appointed General Pierce his first aid-de-camp, and 
 from this time his promotion in the militia was rapid until he 
 attained the highest grade in the gift of the executive. 
 
 General Pierce's services in the various branches of the state 
 legislature were long and useful. He was ten times elected coun- 
 cilor, and three times appointed sheriff of the county of Hills- 
 borough. This last office he filled with great honor to himself 
 and the most entire satisfaction to the community. 
 
 In his habits General Pierce was frugal and chaste ; in his 
 manners easy and affable ; and in his deportment frank and 
 generous." No person in the state did more for his country, and 
 no contemporary of his had stronger claims upon the gratitude 
 of his fellow-citizens.
 
 302 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXIII. 
 
 POPULATION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE AT DIFFERENT PERIODS. 
 
 During the first twenty years of New Hampshire's history, 
 the settlers were limited to small companies governed by the 
 agents of the proprietor, Captain John Mason, occupying three 
 centres of business, Portsmouth, Dover, and Exeter. Hampton 
 was under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts. Those little com- 
 munities were engaged in farming, lumbering, fishing and hunt- 
 ing, and increased very slowly. They were unable, without aid 
 from the proprietor, to gain a livelihood. They were a constant 
 drain upon the treasury of the company. The settlers were not 
 permanent inhabitants. They often migrated to Massachusetts 
 or returned home. Of course the number varied from year to 
 year, and depended for its increase upon new arrivals. It is 
 thought, by good judges of the fact, that when the union with 
 Massachusetts took place in 1641, the entire population of New 
 Hampshire did not exceed one thousand souls. When, by the 
 authority of the crown, that union was dissolved in 1692, the 
 population is supposed to have been about five thousand. In 
 1730 it was estimated at ten thousand. When the province was 
 divided into counties, in 1771, it probably contained between 
 sixty and seventy thousand inhabitants. The increase was about 
 forty per cent, every ten years. After the Revolutionary war and 
 the establishment of a firm government, in 1790, the state had a 
 population of one hundred and forty-two thousand, and the in- 
 crease for the preceding nineteen years had been at the rate of 
 forty-three per cent, for each decade. This period covered the 
 war of eight years, when twelve thousand four hundred and 
 ninety-seven men had served in the army, and probably nearly 
 one half of these had perished by violence or pestilence. From 
 1790 to 1830, the rate of increase varied from thirty to ten per 
 cent, every ten years. Dr. Belknap estimates the increase so 
 great from 1771 to 1790, when the first census was taken, as to 
 make the population double in nineteen years. This is not es- 
 sentially different from the estimate made above. After the 
 peace of 1763, when the Indians ceased to make systematic ag- 
 gressions upon our frontiers, many new townships were settled 
 and large emigrations were made from other states. Also, after 
 the peace of 1783 a new stimulus was given to emigration; the 
 wilderness was penetrated and subdued, the bounds of civiliza-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 303 
 
 tion were carried into the interior and northern portions of the 
 state, and the population and resources of the state were greatly 
 enlarged. Peace always brings men and wealth in its train. 
 War brings death, disease and desolation. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXIV. 
 
 MONEY. 
 
 The origin of coined money dates at a period "whereto the 
 memory of man runneth not to the contrary." Herodotus, " the 
 Father of History," refers the invention to the Lydians. Plu- 
 tarch says that Theseus caused money to be impressed with the 
 figure of an ox; other authorities ascribe the honor to Phidon, 
 one of the early kings of Argos, B. c. 895. The monarch's 
 seal was probably an earlier invention than coins. Whenever 
 authority was delegated, the king needed some uniform token by 
 which his will could be made known without his personal pres- 
 ence ; hence the signet ring became the certificate of the king's 
 command. When this abridgment of public. business was once 
 adopted the transition from a sealed decree to a sealed bit of 
 metal was easy. Among the discoveries made in the ruins of 
 Babylon are found small tablets of clay, stamped with the royal 
 seal, which are supposed to have served as money. The earliest 
 method of transferring the precious metals was by weight. The 
 earliest standards both of weight and measure must have been 
 very rude, when twenty-four seeds or grains represented a penny, 
 and three kernels of barley taken from the middle of the head 
 made an inch. The Bible refers to the bag and balances of the 
 money lender and to the stamped shekel which bore on one side 
 an image of the golden pot that held the manna, and on the 
 other a bas-relief of Aaron's rod. The Athenians stamped 
 their coins with an owl which was sacred to Minerva. The Greek 
 states near the sea adopted symbols for their money appropriate 
 to their condition, as a crab, a dolphin or a tortoise. Monarchs 
 honored their coins with their own " image and superscription." 
 It is still doubted by archaeologists whether coined money existed 
 in Homer's time. He often refers to trade by barter, as in the 
 following quotation : 
 
 " From Lemnos' isle a numerous fleet had come 
 Freighted with wine " * * * 
 
 * * * * 
 
 " All the other Greeks 
 
 Hastened to purchase, some with brass and some 
 With gleaming iron ; some with hides, 
 Cattle or slaves."
 
 304 HISTORY OF 
 
 In celebrating the games at the funeral of Patroclus, Achilles 
 proposes for prizes a tripod and a slave. 
 
 Among the treasures disinterred by Dr. Schliemann, forty feet 
 beneath the supposed site of ancient Troy, armor, ornaments 
 and vessels of gold and silver were found, but no coins are men- 
 tioned. We are more interested in modern than in ancient 
 money. The Celtic race were sufficiently civilized to use coins. 
 Caesar affirms that the early Britons had no money, but coins 
 have been discovered in the island which the best authorities in 
 numismatics refer to times anterior to the Roman conquest. The 
 Anglo-Saxon kings had rude coins as early as the sixth century. 
 The penny appears in the eighth. The etymology of this word 
 is variously given. Sharon Turner derives it from the Saxon 
 verb puritan, to beat or knock ; others derive it from the Latin 
 pendo, to weigh. Scyllinga, or shilling, denoted at first a quan- 
 tity of bullion, from scylan, to divide, or, possibly, from sceale, a 
 scale, meaning so much silver cut off or weighed ; when coined 
 it yielded five of the larger and twelve of the smaller Saxon 
 pennies. Two hundred and forty pence were equivalent to a 
 pound of silver by weight. In France, England and Scotland a 
 pound of money contained twelve ounces of bullion or two hun- 
 dred and forty pence. In process of time, as monarchs became 
 needy, they divided the pound of bullion into a larger number of 
 pieces, thus falsifying the certificate of value stamped upon the 
 coins, till in the reign of Elizabeth sixty-two shillings or seven 
 hundred and forty-four pence were coined from a pound of 
 bullion. The mint price of silver was then said to be 55. 2d. per 
 ounce. Gold was afterwards made the standard of value, and 
 the mint price of gold was fixed at ^3 175. io)4d. per ounce. 
 The computation by pounds, shillings and pence existed as early 
 as the reign of Ethelbert, the first Christian king of Kent. The 
 payments in Doomsday book, under the conqueror, were made 
 in the same denominations now used in England. The Norman 
 kings coined pence only with the monarch's image on one side 
 and on the other the name of the city where the money was 
 coined, with a cross so deeply impressed upon the metal that 
 the coin could be broken into two parts called half-pence, or into 
 four, called fourthings, or farthings. In the time of Richard I., 
 German money was in special demand, called from its purity 
 easterling money, as the inhabitants of that part of Europe were 
 called Easterlings, or Eastern men, hence the origin of the word 
 sterling. Gold began to be coined in Europe at the beginning 
 of the fourteenth century; in England, by Edward III. Previ-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 305 
 
 ous to that time gold passed by weight. The English guinea, 
 which first appeared in the reign of Charles II., was so named 
 from the region from which the gold was brought. 
 
 The dollar is a coin of different value in different countries. 
 Its name is derived from the German word "thai," a valley. 
 The German thaler, Low German dahlsr, Danish daler and the 
 Italian tallero all come from the name of a Bohemian town called 
 "Joachims-Thai," wherein 1518 the Count Schlick coined silver 
 pieces of an ounce weight. As these coins were held in high re- 
 pute thalers or dollars were coined in other countries of nearly 
 the same worth and weight. Our "cent" is from the Latin centum, 
 one hundredth part of a dollar ; the dime from decem the tenth 
 part, the mill from milk, the thousandth part of a dollar. The 
 British colonies computed their accounts in pounds, shillings and 
 pence, as they were valued in the mother country. The Spanish 
 pillar dollar was worth 45. 6d. sterling ; or 6s. in New England 
 currency. 
 
 Massachusetts coined money as early as 1652. The following 
 account of it is from the pen of Mr. Hawthorne : 
 
 " Captain John Hull was the mint-master of Massachusetts, 
 and coined all the money that was made there. This was a new 
 line of business ; for in the earlier days of the colony, the cur- 
 rent coinage consisted of gold and silver money of England, 
 Portugal and Spain. These coins being scarce the people were 
 often forced to barter their commodities instead of selling them. 
 For instance if a man wanted to buy a coat he perhaps exchang- 
 ed a bear-skin for it. If he wished for a barrel of molasses, he 
 might purchase it with a pile of pine boards. Musket bullets 
 were used instead of farthings. The Indians had a sort of 
 money, which was made of clam-shells, and this strange sort of 
 specie was likewise taken in payment of debts by the English 
 settlers." 
 
 This was called Wampumpeag ; and, by abbreviation, either 
 " wampum " or " peag. " A fathom or belt consisted of three 
 hundred and sixty beads. It was of two kinds, white and black. 
 One fathom of the white was valued at 55. sterling; the black 
 at IDS. It was made a legal tender only for 120!. in Massa- 
 chusetts. The value of coined money may be learned from the 
 price of labor. Mechanics received from i2d. to 2S. per day. 
 Magistrates had 35. 6d. and deputies 23. 6d. per day. A married 
 clergyman was allowed ^30 per annum. 
 
 " Bank bills had never been heard of. There was not money 
 enough of any kind in many parts of the country to pay the 
 salaries of the ministers ; so that they sometimes had to take 
 quintals of fish, bushels of corn or cords of wood, instead 
 of silver or gold. As the people became more numerous and 
 
 20
 
 306 HISTORY OF 
 
 their trade one with another increased, the want of current 
 money was still more sensibly felt. To supply the demand the 
 general court passed a law for establishing a coinage of shil- 
 lings, sixpences and threepences. Captain John Hull was ap- 
 pointed to manufacture this money, and was to have one shil- 
 ling out of every twenty to pay him for the trouble of making 
 them. Hereupon all the old silver in the colony was handed 
 over to Captain John Hull. The battered silver cans and tank- 
 ards, I suppose, and silver buckles, and broken spoons, and sil- 
 ver buttons of worn-out coats, and silver hilts of swords that 
 had figured at court, all such curious old articles were doubtless 
 thrown into the melting-pot together. But by far the greater part 
 of the silver consisted of bullion from the mines of South Amer- 
 ica, which the English buccaneers who were little better than 
 pirates had taken from the Spaniards and brought to Massa- 
 chusetts. All this old and new silver being melted down and 
 coined, the result was an immense amount of splendid sixpences, 
 shillings and threepences. Each had the date,' 1652, on the one 
 side and the figure of a pine-tree on the other. Hence they 
 were called pine-tree shillings. In the course of time their 
 place was supplied by bills of paper parchment which were nom- 
 inally valued at threepence and upward. The value of these 
 bills kept sinking because the real hard money could not be 
 obtained for them. They were a great deal worse than the old 
 Indian currency of clam-shells." 
 
 The first settlers of New Hampshire used but little money as 
 a medium of exchange. They exchanged the products of their 
 industry for the necessaries of life. No bills of credit were 
 used. Gold and silver coins, imported from other countries, were 
 alone considered lawful money. Four shillings and sixpence 
 were equal to a Spanish dollar. The French and Indian wars 
 exhausted the treasury of the state and imposed a heavy debt 
 upon the province. The legislature from time to time secured 
 temporary relief by the issue of bills of credit. These depre- 
 ciated ; but the credit of the state was repeatedly saved by the 
 reimbursement of these war claims by the English government. 
 When they joined the revolutionary party, their bills became less 
 valuable because there was little hope of redemption. In 1720, 
 an ounce of silver was worth 73. 6d.. in currency, in 1725, i6s. ; 
 in 1730, 2os. ; in 1735, 275. 6d. ; in 1740, 285. ; in 1745, 363. ; in 
 1750, 503. ; in 1755, 703.; in 1760, 1203. February 20, 1794, an 
 act was passed abolishing the currency of pounds, shillings and 
 pence, and afterwards accounts were kept in dollars, dimes and 
 cents, or dollars and cents. This act took effect January i, 1795. 
 
 When the congress of the United States, on the tenth of May, 
 1775, began to issue "Continental Money," New Hampshire had
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 307 
 
 a large amount of its own issues in circulation which were rap- 
 idly depreciating. The numerous counterfeits of these bills 
 also contributed to diminish their value. The addition of the 
 United States money, which never commanded the confidence of 
 the people, hastened the decline of our domestic bills. At the 
 commencement of the Revolutionary war, paper money passed 
 at par ; but it gradually declined in value, till in 1781 one hun- 
 dred and twenty dollars were worth only one dollar in silver. It 
 soon became entirely worthless. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXV. 
 
 DISCOVERY AND SETTLEMENT OF THE WHITE MOUNTAIN REGION. 
 
 For a century and a half after the first settlement at Straw- 
 berry Bank and Hilton's Point, the northern portion of the state 
 was the favorite hunting-ground of the Indians. They were ac- 
 quainted with all the streams that run among the hills and the 
 valleys through which they flow. They undoubtedly were fa- 
 miliar with all the gorges and defiles which divide the White 
 Mountains ; and the far-famed Notch was probably threaded by 
 them as they led their weeping captives from the early settle- 
 ments of New Hampshire to Canada. It is not now certainly 
 known when these mountains were first visited by white men. 
 Among the early adventurers who landed at Little Harbor in 
 1623, there is no mention of soldiers by profession. In 1631, 
 Thomas Eyre, one of the patentees, wrote to Ambrose Gibbins, 
 their agent, as follows : " By the bark Warwick, we send you a 
 factor to take care of the trade goods ; also a soldier for discov- 
 ery." "This soldier," says Mr. Potter, "was doubtless Darby 
 Field, an Irishman who, with Captain Neal and Henry Jocelyn, 
 discovered the White Mountains in 1632." This narrative is 
 now discredited. It is supposed by the best authorities, that 
 Dr. Belknap and those who adopted the above statement from 
 the first edition of his history, made a mistake of ten years in 
 the date of the discovery ; and consequently failed to state cor- 
 rectly names and facts connected with it. 
 
 In Winthrop's History of New England, we find the following 
 narrative : 
 
 "One Darby Field, an Irishman, living about Piscataquack, being accom- 
 panied by two Indians, went to the. top of the white hill. He made the
 
 308 HISTORY OF 
 
 journey in eighteen days. His relation, at his return, was, that it was about 
 one hundred miles from Saco, so that after forty miles' travel he did for the 
 most part ascend ; and within twelve miles of the top there was neither tree 
 nor grass, but low savins which they went upon the top of sometimes ; but a 
 continual ascent upon rocks, on a ridge between two valleys rilled with snow, 
 out of which came two branches of the Saco river, which met at the foot of 
 the hill, where was an Indian town of some two hundred people." 
 
 This first ascent was made in June, 1642. Another party, led 
 by Thomas Gorges and Mr. Vines from Maine, ascended the 
 mountains in August of the same year. They also found a large 
 Indian town on the Saco, near the base of the mountains. From 
 this settlement " they went up hill about thirty miles, in woody 
 lands. Then they went about seven or eight miles upon shat- 
 tered rocks, without tree or grass, very steep all the way. At 
 the top is a plain, three or four miles over, all shattered stones, 
 and upon that is another rock or spire about a mile in height, 
 and about an acre of ground at the top. On the top of the 
 plain arise four great rivers," among them the Connecticut. 
 These explorers were dazed by the awful grandeur of the 
 scenery, and their eyes were confused by their imaginations. 
 
 The first printed account of the White Mountains is found in 
 John Josselyn's "New England's Rarities Discovered," published 
 in 1672. The description here given partakes of the errors 
 and exaggerations of the first discoverers. They gave a glow- 
 ing account of the precious stones in these " everlasting hills," 
 and among other things "rich and rare" they found sheets of 
 " Muscovy glass or mica, forty feet long !" To their excited 
 minds, the mountains seemed to cover one hundred leagues in 
 extent. The next account we have of explorations in the moun- 
 tains was in April, 1725. "A ranging company ascended the 
 highest mountain on the northwest part." This is thought to be 
 the first ascent from the west side. Another party, who made a 
 similar tour in March, 1746, were alarmed by repeated explo- 
 sions as of the discharge of muskets. On examination they 
 found that the noises were made by rocks falling from a cliff in 
 the south side of a steep mountain. 
 
 The Notch was discovered in 1771, by Timothy Nash, a pio- 
 neer hunter who had made a home for himself in this inhospi- 
 table region. Climbing a tree on Cherry Mountain, in search of 
 a moose, he discovered, far to the south, this gate of the moun- 
 tains. He at once directed his steps to this narrow defile, and 
 passed through it to Portsmouth. " Here he made known his 
 discovery to Governor Wentworth. The wary governor, to test 
 the practicability of the pass, informed Nash that if he would 
 bring him a horse down through the gorge from Lancaster, he 
 would grant him a tract of land." Nash took with him a kin- 
 dred spirit named Benjamin Sawyer, and by means of ropes
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 309 
 
 they let down the horse over a precipice, then existing at the 
 gate of the Notch, and delivered him in safety to the governor. 
 The tract of land thus earned was named " Nash and Sawyer's 
 Location." "It still has a local habitation and a name." A road 
 was soon after opened by the proprietors of land in " the upper 
 Cohos," through this rugged defile, and settlers began to make 
 their homes in the vicinity of the mountains. Jefferson, White- 
 field, Littleton and Franconia were dotted with houses within a 
 few years after the Notch was made passable. In 1774, a road 
 was constructed through Pinkham Notch, on the east side ftf 
 the mountains, and Shelburne, which then included Gorham, be- 
 gan to be settled. The tenth New Hampshire turnpike was in- 
 corporated in 1803, extending from the west line of Bartlett 
 through the Notch, a distance of twenty miles. The original 
 cost of the road was forty thousand dollars. This turnpike be- 
 came a thoroughfare for all the northern towns of New Hamp- 
 shire and Vermont, for the conveyance of their produce to Port- 
 land. Sometimes, it is said, a hundred sleighs passed the Notch 
 in a single day. 
 
 Scientific parties visited these mountains for the purpose of 
 discovery, in 1784 and in 1804. They published the results of 
 their investigations, containing valuable information respecting 
 the flora and fauna of those regions, and some observations con- 
 cerning the topography, geology and altitudes of the mountains. 
 The following account of the first permanent settlements in the 
 vicinity of the White Mountains is abridged from the first vol- 
 ume of the Geology of New Hampshire, by Professor Charles 
 Hitchcock. 
 
 Eleazar Rosebrook removed from Grafton, Mass., to Lancas- 
 ter in 1772. He finally settled in Monadnock, now Colebrook. 
 He was then more than thirty miles from any white man's cabin, 
 and the only path to his home was by blazed trees. During the 
 Revolutionary war he removed to Guildhall, Vt., to secure pro- 
 tection to his family during his absence in the service of his 
 country. . In 1792, he sold his cultivated farm in Vermont and 
 again sought the wilderness. He came to Nash and Sawyer's 
 Location in the depth of winter. Here he soon built a large 
 two-story house at the base of what is known as " the giant's 
 grave," occupying nearly the same site as the present Fabyan* 
 House. He also erected a saw-mill and grist-mill, with barns, 
 stables and sheds for the accommodation of travelers. He did 
 not long enjoy the fruit of his patient toil. After years of in- 
 tense suffering from a cancer he died in 1817. Mr Rosebrook 
 was one of nature's noblemen, renowned for his heroism in war 
 and for his enterprise in peace. 
 
 Abel Crawford, known as " the patriarch of the mountains,"
 
 310 HISTORY OF 
 
 also came from Guildhall, a few years later, and settled twelve 
 miles farther south, near the site of the present Crawford House. 
 He married the daughter of Mr. Rosebrook. In 1819 he opened 
 a path to Mount Washington, which follows the southwestern 
 ridge from Mount Clinton. Three years later his son, Ethan 
 Allen Crawford, opened a new foot-path along the course of the 
 Ammonoosuc. In 1840 Abel Crawford, at the age of seventy- 
 five, made his first horseback ascent to the top of Mount Wash- 
 i^gton. Dr. O. T. Jackson, the first state geologist, accompanied 
 him. Prior to that date visitors and their guides went up on 
 foot. For sixty years he entertained and escorted travelers in 
 these mountain regions. He died at the advanced age of eighty- 
 five. In the spring months of his last years he longed for the 
 coming of visitors as the young boy longs for the return of the 
 swallow. " He used to sit, in the warm spring days, supported 
 by his daughter, his snow-white hair falling on his shoulders, 
 waiting for the first ripple of that large tide which he had seen 
 increasing in volume for twenty years. Not long after the stages 
 began to carry their summer freight by his door, he passed away." 
 His son, Ethan Allen Crawford, succeeded to the estate of Capt. 
 Rosebrook, but the ample buildings reared by the latter were 
 soon after burned. For many years the Crawfords alone enter- 
 tained strangers at the mountains. All the bridle-paths on the 
 west were opened by them. In 1821 ladies first ascended Mount 
 Washington. The Misses Austin of Portsmouth spent four days 
 in a small stone cabin near the summit, in order to obtain a good 
 prospect. During the first quarter of this century the number 
 of visitors averaged about twelve each year. 
 
 The Crawfords were bold, fearless, athletic men and their 
 strong arms have sustained many a fainting pilgrim in his am- 
 bitious struggle to go up higher. Ethan Allen Crawford, known 
 as " the giant of the mountains," was nearly seven feet in height. 
 He kept a journal of his adventures about the mountains. Many 
 of the wisest and most distinguished men of the country were 
 hospitably entertained under his rude roof. He would come 
 home from a bear hunt to find in his house, perhaps, a member of 
 congress. Daniel Webster once desired his assistance on foot 
 to the top of Mount Washington. Ethan says : " We went up 
 without meeting anything worthy of note, more than was com- 
 mon for me to find ; but to him things appeared interesting, and 
 when we arrived there Mr. Webster spoke as follows : 'Mount 
 Washington, I have come a long distance and have toiled hard 
 to reach your summit, and now you give me a cold reception. 
 I am extremely sorry that I cannot stay to view this grand pros- 
 pect which lies before me ; and nothing prevents but the uncom- 
 fortable atmosphere in which you reside.' " A storm of snow over-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE- 311 
 
 took them in their descent, which almost chilled their life-blood. 
 The statesman was much interested in his guide, for Ethan adds : 
 " The next morning, after paying his bill, he made me a hand- 
 some present of twenty dollars." Though Ethan was an honest 
 and moral man, he was imprisoned for debt, which came upon 
 him by losses through fire and flood. He acted well his part 
 where Providence placed him, and by his labor and sufferings 
 contributed to the safety and happiness of others. 
 
 In 1803 Mr. Davis built a house three miles below the Notch, 
 which was afterwards occupied by Mr. Willey who perished with 
 his family, in 1826, by an avalanche from a mountain since call- 
 ed Mount Willey. These are the most noted of the early set- 
 tlers about the White Mountains. The six or seven visitors who 
 sought these regions in 1803 have now increased to as many 
 thousands. 
 
 NOTE. The altitudes of the highest mountain peaks in New Hampshire are given by Prof. 
 Hitchcock in his Geology of New Hampshire, as follows: Mt. Washington, 6,293 feet; Mt. 
 Adams, 5794 feet ; Mt. Jefferson, 5714 feet; Mt. Clay, 5,553 feet; Mt. Monroe, 5384 feet ; 
 Mt. Madison, 5365 feet; Mt. Franklin, 4904 feet; Mt. Webster, 4,000 feet; White Moun- 
 tain Notch, 1,914 feet ; Moosilattke. 4,811 feet ; Kearsarge, 2,943 feet ; Mt. Cuba, 2,927 feet; 
 Moose Mountain, 2,326 feet; Mt. Chocorua, 3,540 feet; Mt. Cardigan, 3, 156 feet; Red Hill, 
 North Peak, 2,038 feet. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXVI. 
 
 THE RIVERS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 The true source of the Connecticut river has been accurately 
 determined by Mr. J. H. Huntington, Assistant State Geologist. 
 He describes it as follows : "Almost on the very northern bound- 
 ary of New Hampshire, and nearly on the very summit of the 
 dividing ridge that separates the waters of the St. Lawrence 
 from those that flow southward, there is a small lake containing 
 only a few acres, and this is the source of the Connecticut. It 
 has an elevation of two thousand five hundred and fifty-one feet, 
 and is only seventy-eight feet below the summit of Mount Pros-" 
 pect ; and so remote is it from the habitations of men, that it is 
 rarely seen. A place more solitary I know not in northern New 
 Hampshire. The outlet of this lake is a mere rill ; this flows 
 into 'Third Lake,' which has an area of three-fourths of a 
 square mile." This lake discharges its waters, with those of a 
 tributary which it receives five miles below, into " Second Lake." 
 The area of this lake is about one and three-fourths square
 
 3 I2 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 miles. The scenery about it is exceedingly attractive. " Its 
 outlet is on the west side, near its southern limit, and is forty 
 feet in width, and has a depth of eighteen inches. Twenty rods 
 from the lake it has a fall of eighteen feet or more ; then its 
 descent is quite gradual, but forms here and there deep eddies. 
 A mile from the lake it becomes more rapid and rushes down 
 between precipitous walls of rocks, in a series of wild cascades, 
 which continue for half a mile. It receives two tributaries from 
 the west before it flows into Connecticut Lake. This is a sheet of 
 water exceedingly irregular in outline. Its length is four miles, 
 and its greatest width two and three-fourths, and it contains 
 about three square miles. Its general direction is east and west, 
 but near its outlet it turns towards the south. The water at the 
 outlet flows over a rocky barrier, the stream falling abruptly 
 nearly thirty-seven feet. The fall is quite rapid for two miles 
 and a half ; then the flow is more gentle for about four miles. 
 It is nowhere a sluggish stream, until it passes the falls of North- 
 umberland. The fall from Connecticut Lake to Lancaster is 
 seven hundred and eighty-five feet." Were it not for the sever- 
 ity of the climate, the water-shed which supplies the sources of 
 the Connecticut river would furnish homes and subsistence for 
 a large population. 
 
 The streams that feed the Connecticut are thus enumerated by 
 Mr. Huntington : " In New Hampshire, below Connecticut Lake, 
 the river receives three large tributaries, Perry's stream, which 
 rises near Third Lake and has a rapid descent, including two 
 falls three and five miles from its confluence ; Indian stream, 
 which rises on the boundary and has a very rapid descent for 
 five or six miles, when it is a very quiet stream until it flows into 
 the Connecticut, about eleven miles from the lake ; and Hall's 
 stream, which rises, also, on the boundary, and is the dividing 
 line between New Hampshire and the Province of Quebec. Be- 
 sides these there are several smaller streams. The principal trib- 
 utaries from the east are Cedar stream in Pittsburg, Labrador 
 brook and Dead Water stream in Clarksville, Bishop brook in 
 Stewartstown, the Mohawk in Colebrook, Sim's stream and Ly- 
 man brook in Columbia, Bog brook in Stratford, the Upper Am- 
 monoosuc in Northumberland, Israel's river in Lancaster and 
 John's river in Dal ton." 
 
 South of Dalton the other tributaries of the Connecticut are 
 Lower Ammonoosuc at Bath, Oliverian brook at Haverhill, 
 Eastman's brook at Piermont, Mascoma river at Lebanon, Sugar 
 river at Claremont, Cold river at Walpole, Partridge brook at 
 Westmoreland and Ashuelot river at Hinsdale. It also receives, 
 from Vermont, Nulhegan river at Brunswick, Passumpsic river 
 at Earner, Wells river at Newbury, Wait's river at Bradford,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 313 
 
 Pompanoosuc at Norwich, White river at White River Junction, 
 Quechee river at Hartland, Black river at Springfield, William's 
 river at Rockingham and West river at Brattleboro. 
 
 The western bank of the Connecticut at low water mark is 
 the boundary line between New Hampshire and Vermont through 
 the entire length of the latter state. The length of the Con- 
 necticut as it bounds New Hampshire is two hundred and eleven 
 miles. It drains about three-tenths of the entire state and about 
 four-tenths of Vermont, making an area of 6,800 square miles 
 in both states. 
 
 One of the oldest explorers of the Connecticut, farther south, 
 was John Ledyard, an eccentric individual who entered Dart- 
 mouth College in 1772, and after a brief stay of four months 
 became a wanderer. One. of his exploits is thus described by 
 President Sparks : 
 
 " On the margin of Connecticut river, which runs near the college, stood 
 many majestic forest trees, nourished by a rich soil. One of these Ledyard 
 contrived to cut down. He then set himself at work to fashion its trunk 
 into a canoe, and in this labor he was assisted by some of his fellow-students. 
 As the canoe was fifty feet long and three wide, and was to be dug out and 
 constructed by these unskillful workmen, the task was not a trifling one, nor 
 such as could be speedily executed. Operations were carried on with spirit, 
 however, till Ledyard wounded himself with an axe and was disabled for 
 several clays. When he recovered he applied himself anew to his work; 
 the canoe was finished, launched into the stream, and by the further aid of 
 his companions equipped and prepared for the voyage. His wishes were 
 now at their consummation, and bidding adieu to these haunts of the Muses, 
 where he had gained a dubious fame, he set off alone to explore a river with 
 the navigation of which he had not the slightest acquaintance. The distance 
 to Hartford was not less than one hundred and forty miles, much of the way 
 was through a wilderness, and in several places there were dangerous falls 
 and rapids. 
 
 With a bear-skin for his covering and his canoe well stocked with provis- 
 ions, he yielded himself to the current and floated leisurely down the stream, 
 seldom using his paddle, and stopping only in the night for sleep. He told 
 Mr. Jefferson in Paris, fourteen years afterward, that he took only two books 
 with him, a Greek Testament and Ovid, one of which he was deeply engaged 
 in reading when his canoe reached Bellows Falls, where he was suddenly 
 aroused by the noise of the waters rushing among the rocks in the narrow 
 passage. The danger was imminent, as no boat could go down that fall 
 without being instantly dashed in pieces. With difficulty he gained the shore 
 in time to escape such a catastrophe, and through the kind assistance of the 
 people in the neighborhood, who were astonished at the novelty of such a 
 voyage down the Connecticut, his canoe was drawn by oxen around the fall 
 and committed again to the water below. ' He reached Hartford in safety, 
 and astonished his friends not more by the suddenness of his return than by 
 the strange mode of navigation by which he accomplished it." 
 
 Rivers are historical. The first towns and cities are built 
 upon their banks ; the first explorations of the interior follow 
 their currents. Rivers, therefore, reflect the character of the 
 people as they mirror in their waters the surrounding scenery.
 
 314 HISTORY OF 
 
 The history of the United States is associated with the Missis- 
 sippi, the Ohio and James rivers. The banks of the Connecti- 
 cut and Merrimack are eloquent of the pioneers of New Eng- 
 land. These rivers, with their rich intervals, attracted to them 
 the first dwellers in the wilderness ; and in subsequent years 
 their clear waters were often dyed with their blood. Says Elihu 
 Burritt, speaking of the Connecticut : " Its scenery in itself is 
 as picturesque and pleasing as any American river can show. If 
 it is not so bold and grand as that of the Hudson, its pictures of 
 beauty are hung in a softer light and longer gallery, with no 
 blank or barren spaces between them. For 
 
 nearly a hundred miles of its winding course the Connecticut 
 hems the opposite shores of Vermont and New Hampshire with 
 a broad seam of silver, which each state wears as a fringe of 
 light to its green and graceful border." 
 
 The Merrimack river is formed by the confluence of the Pem- 
 igewasset and Winnipiseogee rivers, at Franklin. The source 
 of the Pemigewasset is Profile Lake, in the Franconia moun- 
 tains. The Franconia Notch is a defile of about five miles in 
 length and half a mile in width, between Lafayette and Mount 
 Cannon. It contains, probably, as many objects of interest to 
 travelers as any other mountain pass in the world. The most 
 attractive object in this natural museum of curiosities is the 
 "Great Stone Face" or "Old Man of the Mountain," which like 
 a lone sentinel keeps perpetual watch and ward over the "un- 
 sunned treasures" which nature has buried beneath the rocky 
 ramparts that surround him. Here the hand of God sculptured 
 this antetype of the human countenance, ages before he created 
 man of the dust of the earth and breathed into him the breath 
 of life. Oh ! if the stony lips of this changeless form could be 
 made vocal, its history would be worth more to the world than 
 all the discoveries that " proud science " has made, or all the 
 theories that " old philosophy " has invented. Fifteen hundred 
 feet below those jutting rocks that form the profile of " the Old 
 Man of the Mountain," nestles a beautiful and picturesque little 
 lake, which is the source of the Pemigewasset river, which 
 plunges over rocky precipices and hurries through smiling mead- 
 ows, descending more than sixteen hundred feet, till it joins the 
 Winnipiseogee river at Franklin ; and then under the new name 
 of Merrimack, rolls quietly on to turn the wheels and spindles 
 of Manchester, Lawrence and Lowell, and thus give employ- 
 ment and bread to thousands of operatives. This river drains 
 nearly four tenths of the whole area of New Hampshire. It 
 passes through the central portion of the state ; and in relation 
 to agriculture and manufactures, is perhaps the most important 
 river of New Hampshire. It leaves the state at the southeast
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 315 
 
 corner of Hudson, and, bending to the northeast, flows into the 
 Atlantic, in a channel three miles south of the southern boundary 
 of Rockingham County. Its entire length is about one hundred 
 and fifty-four miles. The following streams flow into it : Baker's 
 river at Plymouth ; Newfound river at Bristol ; Smith's river at 
 Bristol ; Webster Lake brook at Franklin ; Contoocook, the larg- 
 est tributary in New Hampshire, at Fisherville* ; Piscataquog at 
 Manchester ; Souhegan at Merrimack ; Nashua river at Nashua ; 
 East Branch at Woodstock ; Mad river at Campton ; Beebe 
 river at Campton ; Squam river at Ashland ; Wmnipiseogee river 
 at Franklin ; Soucook river at Pembroke ; Suncook river at 
 Allenstown ; Brown's brook at Hooksett ; Cohas brook at Man- 
 chester ; Beaver brook at Dracut, Mass. ; Spiggot river at Law- 
 rence, Mass. ; and Powwow river at Amesbury.f 
 
 The Merrimack is one of the most remarkable rivers of New 
 Hampshire, both for its beautiful scenery and its abundant water 
 power. " It is said to contain double the available power of all 
 the rivers of France. It turns more spindles, in addition to a 
 vast amount of other machinery, than any other river on the face 
 of the globe." Still the greater portion of its waters is un- 
 employed. 
 
 The Salmon Falls river and the Cocheco unite at Dover to 
 form the Piscataqua. The Salmon Falls river and the Piscata- 
 qua, throughout their entire course, form a portion of the east- 
 ern boundary of the state. The Piscataqua is a short river, 
 
 * NOTE. On the i/th of June, 1874, a monument was erected, with due ceremonies, on 
 Duston Island, at the mouth of Contoocook river, Concord, N. H., to the memory of Han- 
 nah Duston, whose wonderful exploits are described as follows : 
 
 "On the isth of March, 1697, the Indians made a descent on the town of Haverhiil, Mass., 
 killed twenty-seven of the inhabitants, burned nine dwellings, and took Mrs. Hannah Duston, 
 her babe only six days old, her nurse, Mary Neff, and eight or nine other prisoners, and car- 
 ried them all into New Hampshire, excepting the infant, who was killed by having its head 
 dashed against a tree. After fifteen days of fearful suffering, especially on the part of Mrs. 
 Duston, who was taken from child-bed, the Indians and part of their captives arrived at the 
 Island at the junction of the Contoocook and Merrimack rivers. Mrs. Duston, Mary Neff, 
 and an English boy named Samuel Leonardson, who had been captured at Worcester, were 
 assigned to the care of two Indian men and three women, who had seven children, mostly 
 half-grown Indians, with them. Mrs. Duston and her nurse were told by their convoy that 
 they would have to run the gauntlet through their village when they arrived there, and that 
 they must be deprived of most of their clothing. Mrs. Duston, aware of the horrible tortures 
 this threat included, formed the design of exterminating her captors, old and young, and 
 managed to prevail on her nurse and the boy to assist her in their destruction. A little before 
 daylight, on the soth of March, finding the Indians asleep around their fire, Mrs. Duston 
 and her associates armed themselves with their tomahawks, and despatched ten of the twelve. 
 One woman, who had been believed to be killed made her escape, and one of the Indian 
 youths Mrs. Duston and her associates designedly left unharmed. They then scalped the 
 dead, took one of the tomahawks and a gun belonging to the Indians, crossed the river in a 
 canoe and made their escape. After enduring great hardships from want oi food, and run- 
 ning much risk from meeting with Indians, the fugitives arrived a_t Boston with their scalps 
 and their booty on the 2ist day of April. The general court was in session at the time, and 
 voted Mrs. Duston fifty pounds in sterling money, and a similar sum to be divided between 
 her nurse and the boy Leonardson. Presents were sent them from many quarters ; among 
 other givers was the governor of Maryland. Forty years afterward, in appreciation of the 
 act of Mrs. Duston, the colonial legislature voted certain valuable lands to her descendants, 
 in testimony of their appreciation of her wonderful bravery." 
 
 t Many facis in the chapters descriptive of rivers, climate and scenery have been compiled 
 with the author's consent, from Prof. Hitchcock's Geology of New Hampshire.
 
 316 HISTORY OF 
 
 which, with its tributaries, drains only about one eleventh of the 
 state ; but it is deemed of priceless value to the state on account 
 of the excellent harbor, safe, broad and deep, which is formed 
 by its banks as it enters the Atlantic Ocean. The tide flows to 
 Dover and South Berwick. Between the towns of Durham, 
 Greenland and Newington, there is an immense tidal basin which 
 receives the waters of several rivers. The area of this estuary, 
 including Great and Little Bays, is about nine square miles. 
 Bellamy river at Dover, Oyster river at Durham, Lamprey river 
 at Newmarket, and Exeter river at South Newmarket, flow into 
 Great Bay, and thus indirectly increase the current of the Piscat- 
 aqua and prevent the harbor from freezing in the winter. The 
 Cocheco and Salmon Falls rivers rise near the southern extrem- 
 ity of Lake Winnipiseogee ; and the ponds that feed them have 
 nearly the same altitude as that lake, which is five hundred feet 
 above the sea. 
 
 The lakes and ponds which everywhere dot the surface of the 
 state form one of the most interesting features of its landscapes. 
 In these natural basins, during the rainy season, are treasured 
 the waters that, in periods of drought, give verdure and freshness 
 to the farmers' meadows and furnish the power that drives the 
 machinery of the manufacturers. 
 
 The land upon the Piscataqua and its tributaries is excellent 
 for tillage and highly productive. It is more level and less 
 stony, and consequently more easily cultivated than other por- 
 tions of the state. New Hampshire has only nineteen miles of 
 sea-board, yet its long reaches of beautiful beach are unsurpassed 
 by any state in the Union. Boar's Head, which overlooks the 
 Atlantic at Hampton, and Rye Beach have a national reputa- 
 tion. Large and commodious hotels have been built in the vi- 
 cinity of both, and numerous visitors from the cold north and 
 the sunny south throng them and all the farm-houses for miles 
 around them, for the purpose of sea bathing and beach drives, 
 during the summer months. The mountains and the ocean fur- 
 nish centres of undying interest to those who visit the Granite 
 State, and yield a liberal revenue to those who live beneath the 
 shadows of the " everlasting hills " or upon the borders of " the 
 great and wide sea." 
 
 The Magalloway river is the outlet of a small lake of the 
 same name in northern New Hampshire, near Crown Monu- 
 ment, which marks the point where Maine and New Hampshire 
 meet the Dominion of Canada. The lake has an area of about 
 three hundred acres. It is situated more than two thousand feet 
 above the ocean, amid dense forests and under the shadow of 
 high hills, and exhibits in its solitude the gloom and grandeur 
 of primeval nature. The river, soon after its rise, enters the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 317 
 
 state of Maine. It reenters New Hampshire in the Dartmouth 
 College grant. It flows about one mile and then crosses the 
 line into Maine and returns to the state in Wentworth's Loca- 
 tion, and flows into the Androscoggin about a mile and one half 
 from Umbagog lake. The entire length of the Magalloway and 
 the Androscoggin in New Hampshire is eighty-six miles. 
 
 The tributaries of the Androscoggin in New Hampshire are 
 Swift Diamond river, entering from the College grant, Clear 
 Stream at Errol, Moose river at Gorham, Peabody river at Gor- 
 ham and Chickwalnipy river from the east side at Milan. 
 
 The streams which drain the eastern slope of the White 
 Mountain range and those whose waters flow through the Notch 
 from the west side find their way to the Atlantic through two of 
 the largest rivers of Maine. The Saco rises a few miles above 
 the Notch, and, by a winding course of thirty-four miles, leaves 
 the state at East Conway. Along its banks are found some of 
 the most marvelous of nature's works. Travelers tell us that 
 no land presents more attractive scenery. The eye of the be- 
 holder is never satisfied with seeing. 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXVII. 
 
 CLIMATE AND SCENERY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 New Hampshire lies between the Province of Quebec on the 
 north and the state of Massachusetts on the south. On the 
 east lies the state of Maine ; on the southeast it is bounded by 
 the Atlantic ocean and the county of Essex ; on the west and 
 northwest by Vermont and partially by the Province of Quebec. 
 Its shape is that of a scalene triangle, almost a right-angled 
 triangle. The western boundary measures one hundred and 
 ninety miles ; the eastern one hundred and eighty. The greatest 
 width of the state, from Chesterfield to the eastern point of Rye, 
 is ninety-three miles. It lies between 7o37 / and 7237 / of lon- 
 gitude, west from Greenwich; and between 424o' and 45i8' 
 23" of north latitude. Its area, according to the measurement 
 of Prof. Hitchcock, is nine thousand, three hundred and thirty- 
 six square miles. A considerable portion of the state is so rough 
 and mountainous as to be unfit for profitable tillage. Those 
 regions are very sparsely populated. 
 
 The annual amount of rain and melted snow varies from
 
 318 HISTORY OF 
 
 thirty-five to forty-six inches. The largest fall of rain is in the 
 central portions of the state; the smallest on the sea-board. 
 The temperature varies in different localities, from 100 of Fah- 
 renheit in summer, above zero, to 50 below in winter. Notwith- 
 standing these extremes of heat and cold, New Hampshire is 
 justly considered a healthy section of the country. Statistics 
 show that its climate is eminently favorable to longevity. Dur- 
 ing one century, from 1732 to 1832, more than one hundred per- 
 sons lived to be more than one hundred years of age. 
 
 The lakes of New Hampshire constitute one of the most at- 
 tractive features of the scenery. These are fed from the "streams 
 which run among the hills." During the periods of " the early 
 and latter rains " they are swollen to mountain torrents, which 
 often bring ruin and desolation to the meadows upon their banks ; 
 but they discharge their surplus waters into these peaceful lakes 
 which become so many " basins of reserved power " for the pro- 
 pelling of machinery. 
 
 Among the largest of these beautiful sheets of water we may 
 mention : 
 
 1. The Ossipee Lake. It is renowned as the headquarters 
 of the Indians in 1720. It is situated in Ossipee and Efrmgham 
 and has an area of seven hundred acres. It contains no islands 
 and its clear blue waters form a perfect mirror for the attractive 
 scenery upon its borders. 
 
 2. Squam Lake, occupying a part of Holderness, Sandwich, 
 Moultonborough and Centre Harbor, is about six miles in length 
 and three in breadth, covering about seven thousand acres. It 
 is described as " a splendid sheet of water, indented by points, 
 arched with coves and studded with a succession of romantic 
 islands." 
 
 3. Sunapee Lake is situated upon the borders of New Lon- 
 don, Newbury and Sunapee. It is about nine miles in length, 
 and varies from half a mile to one and a half miles in width. 
 This lake occupies a very elevated position, being eight hundred 
 and twenty feet above the sea. Its extreme elevation prevented, 
 in 1816, the use of its waters for a canal uniting the Merrimack 
 and Connecticut rivers. 
 
 4. The most celebrated of all our lakes is the Winnipiseo- 
 gee, now frequently spelled Winnipesaukee. The orthography 
 of this word has at least forty variations. This lake charms all 
 travelers. It has no peer; not even Lake George surpasses it. 
 Its scenery is wild and romantic ; its waters are pure and deep ; 
 its fertile islands equal in number the days of the year ; its fish, 
 various and numerous, furnish rich repasts at the tables of the 
 commodious hotels upon its borders ; and the steamers and boats 
 that ply upon its bosom give to the lovers of pleasure ample
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 319 
 
 opportunity for sailing, rowing and steaming. It lies in the 
 counties of Belknap and Carroll, and is surrounded by the pleas- 
 ant towns of Moultonborough, Tuftonborough, Wolfeborough, 
 Centre Harbor, Meredith, Gilford and Alton. It is about twenty- 
 five miles in length and varies in width from one to ten miles. 
 It is four hundred and seventy-two feet above the sea. 
 
 The transition from scenery to climate is easy and natural. 
 Climate affects all human relations, whether of body, mind or 
 estate. It determines the rank of nations in the scale of civili- 
 zation. It regulates the standard of physical strength, intellect- 
 ual power and moral worth. There is not a nerve, tissue or fibre 
 of the human frame that is not modified by cold and heat. The 
 body is the fit tabernacle of the indwelling spirit ; and to a great 
 extent determines for time and eternity the character of its 
 tenant. Extremes both of heat and cold are unfavorable to the 
 highest development of the human race. Hence the best speci- 
 mens of our race have always been found in the temperate zones. 
 Here the necessity of procuring food, clothing and shelter has 
 stimulated the physical and intellectual powers to their highest 
 activity and proved to be, literally, the mother of inventions. 
 The climate of New Hampshire is rigorous and severe. 
 
 "Rough, cold and bleak, our little state 
 Is hard of soil, of limits strait; 
 Her yellow sands are sands alone, 
 Her only mines are ice and stone. 
 From autumn frost to April rain 
 Too long her winter woods complain ; 
 From budding flower to falling leaf 
 Her summer time is all too brief." 
 
 For more than one half of the year we are compelled to war 
 with the elements and contend, day and night, with wind and 
 storm, frost and snow. During the other half of the year, we 
 are employed in making provision against this elemental strife. 
 It is well for us that it is so. The people of the Granite State 
 owe their health, vigor and longevity to their ungenial climate 
 and rugged soil. Both have compelled them to labor to subdue 
 nature and repel the cold. Labor is the weapon of honor. It 
 is the ordination of Heaven, and no people becomes great, good 
 or wise without it. Liberty lives where the snow falls. Man is 
 enfranchised only in the temperate zones. Between the tropics, 
 where nature supplies men's wants spontaneously, great men 
 and great nations have been few. Where the chief wants of our 
 nature, food, clothing and shelter, are scarcely needed beyond 
 what the earth itself liberally supplies, there is no stimulus to 
 industry. Artificial wants have no existence. Men are rendered 
 effeminate, indolent and sensuous by the climate. Despotism is 
 the normal state of the government, slavery that of the governed. 
 In such a climate, men cannot be educated to freedom. They
 
 320 HISTORY OF 
 
 have neither the energy nor the industry necessary to achieve 
 and defend their liberty. The tropical man, therefore, in his 
 native home, is not destined to be the teacher, law-giver, gover- 
 nor or even the equal of the pale-faces of snowy climes. The 
 warm regions have their inconveniences ; the cold have their 
 compensations. When we consider our long winters, our drift- 
 ing snows, our early frosts and our stubborn soil, we are apt to 
 complain of New Hampshire as a place of residence and repeat 
 the stale proverb about its being " a good state to emigrate 
 from." It is a good state in which to have a home and to be- 
 come virtuous and happy. Its scenery is unsurpassed by any 
 country on the globe. Men visit foreign lands to be excited, 
 elevated and enraptured with the grand, gloomy and majestic 
 aspects of nature. They throng the retired vales of Switzerland, 
 and gaze, reverently, upon the glittering pinnacles of the Alps ; 
 and for once in their lives worship that God of whom Moses 
 said, " Before the mountains were brought forth, or even thou 
 hadst formed the earth and world, even from everlasting to ever- 
 lasting, thou art God." Even Byron, the poet of passion, the 
 profane scoffer, felt the emotions of reverence beneath the 
 frowning battlements of Mont Blanc; and, in poetic rapture, 
 exclaimed : 
 
 " Above me are the Alps, 
 
 The palaces of nature, whose vast walls 
 
 Have pinnacled in clouds their snowy scalps 
 
 And throned Eternity in icy halls 
 
 Of cold sublimity, where forms and falls 
 
 The avalanche the thunderbolt of snow ! 
 
 All that expands the spirit yet appals 
 
 Gathers round these summits, as to show 
 
 How earth may pierce to Heaven, yet leave vain man below." 
 
 Coleridge, in that magnificent poem entitled " Sunrise in the 
 Vale of Chamouni," has this apostrophe to the same mountain : 
 
 " Oh, dread and silent mount ! I gazed upon thee 
 Till thou still present to the bodily sense 
 Didst vanish from my thought : entranced in prayer 
 I worshiped the Invisible alone." 
 
 New Hampshire is called the Switzerland of America, and is 
 admitted by travelers to present scenes of attractive beauty and 
 awful sublimity which compare favorably with any of which Eu- 
 rope can boast. Fashions in travel change as often as those of 
 dress. Men are ever wandering in search of pleasure which is 
 never found in perfection except at home. Multitudes who live 
 in sight of Mount Washington never visit it. Multitudes who 
 breathe the stifled air of cities delight to climb its rugged sides, 
 pierce the clouds that encircle them, and enjoy the sunshine that 
 lingers and plays upon its summit. The lime is not very remote 
 when the tide of European travel, like the " course of empire," 
 westward shall take its way, and the valleys and pinnacles of
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 321 
 
 our own familiar mountains will echo with strange tongues and 
 become populous with visitors from the old world. Why not ? 
 The railroad, even now, can lift the traveler to the top of 
 Mount Washington, and the great valleys that lead to the moun- 
 tains present unparalleled attractions to the lovers of the pic- 
 turesque and the most sublime of geological records to the sci- 
 entific explorer. Why, then, may we not expect the lovers of 
 pleasure and the explorers of nature from populous Europe to 
 throng our thoroughfares which lead up to the Notch, the Flume, 
 the Franconia valley and the Old Man of the Mountain, around 
 whose venerable head great white clouds 
 
 " Are wandering, in thick flocks, among the mountains, 
 Shepherded by the slow, unwilling wind" ? 
 
 Nay, more, why may we not expect, when the real seclusion is 
 broken from the oriental world, to see among us the cautious 
 Japanese, the philosophic Brahmin, the contemplative Chinaman 
 and the imaginative Persian, traveling for pleasure or profit 
 under the shadows of our granite hills or on the banks of our 
 silver streams ? This may all be " in the prime'of summer time " 
 in some coming year, when 
 
 " Spring's warm look has unfettered the fountains." 
 
 There are four great avenues to the two highest ranges of 
 New Hampshire mountains. These are through the valleys of 
 great rivers, the Saco, the Merrimack, the Androscoggin and the 
 Connecticut. Two of these are all our own. The tributaries of 
 the Merrimack and the Connecticut are chiefly within our state. 
 
 Man is enfranchised only in the temperate zones. All cli- 
 mates have their inconveniences and compensations. Rich soils 
 and sunny climes produce gross bodies and sluggish brains. 
 Nature is lovely, and 
 
 " All but the spirit of man is divine." 
 
 Necessity is the mother of inventions and of inventors too. 
 
 " Souls are ripened in our northern skies." 
 
 Mr. Reavis, in his pamphlet upon St. Louis, says : 
 
 " It is a noteworthy observation of Dr. Draper, in his work on the Civil 
 War in America, that, within a zone a few degrees wide, having for its axis 
 the January isothermal line of forty-one degrees, all great men in Europe 
 and Asia have appeared. He might have added, with equal truth, that 
 within the same zone have existed all those great cities which have exerted 
 a powerful influence upon the world's history, as centres of civilization and 
 intellectual progress. The same inexorable law of climate, which makes 
 greatness in the individual unattainable in a temperature hotter or colder 
 than a certain golden mean, affects in like manner, with even more certainty, 
 the development of those concentrations of intellect of man which we find 
 in great cities. If the temperature is too cold, the sluggish torpor of the 
 intellectual and physical nature precludes the highest development ; if the 
 
 21
 
 322 HISTORY OF 
 
 temperature is too hot, the fiery fickleness of nature, which warm climates 
 produce in the individual, is typical of the swift and tropical growth, and 
 sudden and severe decay and decline, of cities exposed to the same all power- 
 ful influence. Beyond that zone of moderate temperature, the human life re- 
 sembles more closely that of the animal, as it is forced to combat with ex- 
 tremes of cold, or to submit to extremes of heat ; but within that zone th? 
 highest intellectual activity and culture are displayed." 
 
 New Hampshire, lying and being within those charmed circles 
 that begirt the globe and enclose its nobles, has furnished abun- 
 dant proof of the theory above quoted ; and what was said of 
 Zion anciently may be applied to her, with all reverence : " This 
 and that man was born in her, and the Highest shall establish 
 her." Let us thank God and take courage, that we have so few 
 temptations and so many inducements to virtue. Truly, " the 
 lines have fallen to us in pleasant places." 
 
 " Why turn we to our mountain homes 
 
 With more than filial feeling ? 
 'Tis here that Freedom's altars burn 
 
 And Freedom's sons are kneeling." 
 
 Our little state has been a fountain from which there has been 
 a ceaseless flow of able men who. have largely influenced the 
 destinies and developed the resources of other states. Fifty 
 years ago New Hampshire was so rich in intellect that she could 
 have furnished, from her citizens, a president, vice-president, 
 cabinet and supreme court, equal in fitness to any holding those 
 high positions since the formation of the government. In this 
 connection we may cite the names of Langdon, Sullivan, Stark, 
 Thornton, McClary, the Websters, Woodburys, Pierces, Bart- 
 letts, Smith, Richardson, the Livermores, Gilchrist, the Ather- 
 tons, Cass, Fessenden, the Bells of both Hillsborough and 
 Grafton counties, Plumer, Whipple, Lord, Cilley, Miller, McNeil, 
 Mason, Hill, the Dinsmoors, the Uphams, Hubbard, Chase, 
 Parker, Clifford, Perley, Fletcher, Greeley, Dix, Grimes, Hale, 
 Healey, Wilson, John Wentworth and others, as some of the 
 representative men of the state.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 323 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXVIII. 
 
 THE ISLES OF SHOALS. 
 
 The Isles of Shoals as a part of New Hampshire deserve 
 something more than a passing notice. Their discovery ante- 
 dates that of the Piscataqua. " These islands bore some of the 
 first footprints of New England Christianity and civilization. 
 They were, for a long time, the abode of intelligence, refinement 
 and virtue, but were afterwards abandoned to a state of semi- 
 barbarism." In 1614 John Smith took note of their existence, 
 and in 1623 Christopher Leavitt landed on one of them. In 
 1645 three brothers, Robert, John and Richard Cutts, emigrated 
 from Wales, and on their passage landed at the Isles of Shoals, 
 and being pleased with their attractions commenced a settlement 
 there. Other persons from England and Wales soon joined 
 them and formed a prosperous colony. In 1650 Rev. John 
 Brock became their minister. He is mentioned by Cotton 
 Mather as one of the excellent of the earth in knowledge and 
 devotion. From that date to the present time the place has been 
 filled with men "good, bad and indifferent," till Christianity has 
 nearly lapsed into heathenism. In 1661, the islands having be- 
 come quite famous as places of resort, were incorporated into a 
 township called Appledore. " Hog Island then contained about 
 forty families," who afterwards, through fear of the Indians, 
 passed over to Star Island. William Pepperell, the father of Sir 
 William Pepperell, so distinguished in the annals of Maine, lived 
 and traded there for twenty years. From this period to the time 
 of the Revolution the population of the Shoals varied from 
 three to six hundred, and the settlement grew and prospered. 
 They had all the symbols of a well regulated Christian commu- 
 nity, the church, school-house, court-house and a fort. Their 
 chief occupation was fishing. At the commencement of the war 
 with England they, frorh their exposed condition, were entirely 
 at the mercy of the enemy, hence the best portion of the popu- 
 lation migrated to the neighboring seaports. Capt. White, who 
 was murdered by Crowninshield in 1830, was one of those exiles 
 from his rocky home in the ocean. The people who remained 
 were ignorant, degraded and worthless. "They burned the 
 meeting-house and gave themselves up to quarreling, profanity 
 and drunkenness till they became almost barbarians." Since
 
 324 HISTORY OF 
 
 that time the little education and religion found in the settle- 
 ment have been imparted by visitors and missionaries under the 
 greatest disadvantages. Mrs. Celia Thaxter, in her work entitled 
 " Among the Isles of Shoals," has given us the best description 
 of these " low, piratical reefs " which has ever been written. It 
 has the fidelity of true history with the marvels of the wildest 
 romance. Nine miles from Portsmouth, twenty-one from Cape 
 Ann in Massachusetts, and sixteen from Cape Neddick in 
 Maine, these perilous ledges, like huge sea monsters, lift their 
 backs above the water. There are six in number if the tide is 
 iow, but if it is high there are eight, and would be nine but that 
 a break-water connects two of them. Appledore, for many years 
 called " Hog Island," from its resemblance to a hog's back 
 rising from the surface of the ocean, is the largest and most 
 regular in shape. It has an area of four hundred acres, divided 
 by a valley, in which the hotel is situated, into two nearly equal 
 parts. The following entry occurs in the records of Massachu- 
 setts, dated May 22, 1661 : 
 
 " For the better settling of order in the Isle of Shoales, it is ordered by 
 this Court, that henceforward the whole islands appertaining thereunto, 
 which doe lie partly in the County of York and the other part in the juris- 
 diction of Dover and Portsmouth, shall be reputed and hereby allowed to be 
 a township called Appledore, and shall have equal power to regulate their 
 town affairs as other townes of this jurisdiction have." 
 
 Next, almost within a stone's throw, is Haley's Island, named 
 Smutty-Nose by the sailors. At low tide, Cedar and Malaga are 
 both connected with it, the latter by a break-water. Here storm 
 and darkness have wrecked many a ship. The area of these 
 three islands comprises about one hundred acres. Star Island 
 contains one hundred and fifty acres. Toward its northern ex- 
 tremity lies the famous town of Gosport, famous in early times 
 for its culture and commerce, now famous as a resort for sum- 
 mer visitors. 
 
 " Not quite a mile," says Mrs. Thaxter. " southwest from Star, 
 White Island lifts a light-house for a warning. This is the most 
 picturesque of the group, and forms, with Seavey's Island, at 
 low water, a double island with an area of some twenty acres. 
 Most westerly lies Londoner's, an irregular rock with a bit of 
 beach, upon which all the shells about the cluster seem to be 
 thrown. Two miles northeast from Appledore, Duck Island 
 thrusts out its lurking ledges on all sides beneath the water, one 
 of them running half a mile to the northwest. This is the most 
 dangerous of all the islands." It is the home of those timid 
 sea-fowl that shun the haunts of men. " Shag and Mingo rocks, 
 where during or after storms the sea breaks with magnificent 
 effect, lie isolated by a narrow channel from the main granite
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 325 
 
 fragment. A very round rock west of Londoner's, perversely 
 called 'Square,' and Anderson's Rock off the southeast end of 
 Smutty-Nose complete the catalogue." Appledore, Smutty-Nose 
 and Duck islands belong to Maine, the rest to New Hampshire. 
 Till within a few years the inhabitants have been left very much 
 to themselves, and have been as little disturbed by state officials 
 as the gulls and loons that share their dreary homes. The fol- 
 lowing sketch of Hon. Thomas B. Laighton is taken from the 
 Newark Journal : 
 
 " In the year 1839, the Hon. Thomas B. Laighton, formerly editor of the 
 New Hampshire Gazette, at Portsmouth, and a politician and literary man 
 of some note, was keeping the White Island Light-House at this watering 
 place, where he engaged to some extent in the business of fishing. One 
 day the thought struck him that this might be made a delightful summer re- 
 sort for a large class of people, who, while they wanted the invigorating sea 
 breezes, did not care either to take them diluted or modified by the land tem- 
 perature and influences, or to undergo a long and tedious voyage for this 
 purpose. Mr. Laighton, himself an invalid, had experienced great relief 
 from his sea residence, and at once reasoned himself into the belief that the 
 Isles of Shoals was the best place on the coast for a successful summer 
 boarding-house, and acting upon this idea he succeeded in purchasing for the 
 sum of twenty-five thousand dollars the islands known by the not poetic 
 titles of ' Hog ' and ' Smutty.' The first he named ' Appledore,' which is 
 simply a pile of granite rocks, thrown up in some obscure age of the world, 
 without form or comeliness. Here Mr. Laighton built a moderately sized 
 house, nine miles out from the New Hampshire coast, and waited his 
 chances. There was no doubt of his being ' at sea,' near one of the rough- 
 est, bleakest and most exposed coast lines upon the continent ; but a man 
 who for several years had tended White Island Light could not be fright- 
 ened or moved from his property by any exhibitions or freaks of old ocean. 
 One thing was certain : these islands were anchored fast to the unseen cen- 
 tre of the globe, wherever that might be, or else they must have disappeared 
 thousands of years gone by. But who could tell their story or sing their dole- 
 ful or terrible requiem? What by-gone races of human beings had landed 
 upon these outposts in the dim past ? What vessels had been stranded and 
 wrecked upon these treacherous shoals, dashing in a moment high-wrought 
 hopes, glorious visions, ambitious views ? But no matter. Tom Laighton, 
 when he left Portsmouth and its mixed politics, was said to be not a little 
 disgusted with the world, and his vision teemed with ideas of an independ- 
 ent government of his own, over which he might exercise supreme sway. To 
 be sure, Hog Island was under the nominal territorial jurisdiction of Maine, 
 but that state had never taken great pride in its dependency. Curiously 
 enough, the state of New Hampshire owned an adjoining island which is 
 called Star, which has been a little fishing settlement during the entire his- 
 tory of our colonial and federal governments. It is a village of twenty or 
 thirty old houses, with a church as the central building. The town has an 
 old incorporation by the name of Gosport, and it yearly sends a representa- 
 tive to the legislature, whenever a man is to be found who can afford to 
 spend the time and the money. Star island is now chiefly owned by a cor- 
 poration whose business it is to entertain strangers. The success of the 
 Appledore House as a resort for invalids cannot fail to lead to the profitable 
 occupation, at an early day, of all the habitable islands of this group. The 
 business of the Appledore House is increasing rapidly. The house is capa- 
 ble of accommodating about three hundred boarders, and this year they have
 
 326 HISTORY OF 
 
 had two thousand applications for board. The first families come in May, 
 and some prolong the season into October. On a high point of Appledoi e 
 rest the remains of Thomas B. Laighton, surmounted by a single granite 
 slab, with a modest inscription. He was one of the many peculiar charac- 
 ters which the Granite State has produced. His name will live as long as 
 Appledore shall last, as the reclaimer to civilization and usefulness of one 
 of the waste places of creation." 
 
 NOTE. The records of Gosport, in the last century, show a peculiar disregard of orthog- 
 raphy. Notice the following : "On March ye 25, 1771. then their was a mealing called and 
 it was giirned until the 23d day of Apirel." Among the "offorsers" of "Gospored" were 
 ' seelekt meen," " counstable," " tiJon meen," " coulears of fish " and "sealers of whood." 
 
 CHAPTER LXXXIX. 
 
 THE INFLUENCE OF DISTINGUISHED FAMILIES IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Previous to the Revolutionary war, New Hampshire was gov- 
 erned and controlled by a few influential families. There was 
 no aristocracy of birth, but that of wealth was substituted for 
 it. Only the rich could acquire a liberal education, and when 
 learning and wealth were united they usually secured patronage 
 and offices. When such men were once elevated to places of 
 power, the people gave them their homage and made them per- 
 manent leaders. The history of the state cannot be thoroughly 
 learned without some special account of these leading families. 
 They gave laws to society, regulated politics, originated and ex- 
 ecuted laws, sometimes for the benefit of the people and some- 
 times for their own aggrandizement. They built princely man- 
 sions, rode in coaches, and in their dress, equipage and enter- 
 tainments exhibited something of the dignity and exclusiveness 
 of the old nobility of England. 
 
 In the annals of Portsmouth, the only seaport, and for many 
 years the chief town in the state, the representatives of certain 
 leading families appear on almost every page. Prominent among 
 the early settlers was the Cutt family. Three brothers, John, 
 Robert and Richard, came from Wales as early as 1646. They 
 were all men of mark and enterprise. In 1679, when New 
 Hampshire was made a royal province, John Cutt was appointed 
 the first president. The names of Pickering, Sherburne, At- 
 kinson, Wentworth, Livermore, Sparhawk, Vaughan, Sheafe and 
 Langdon occur very frequently in the historical records of the 
 last century. Capt. Tobias Langdon, the ancestor of the Lang-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 327 
 
 don family, came from England in 1687. John Langdon, born 
 in 1740, was, perhaps, the most illustrious of his descendants. 
 His history for the last half of his official life is thus recited by 
 Mr. Brewster :* 
 
 " John Langdon was a judge of the court of common pleas in 
 1776 ; but resigned the next year. In 1778, he was agent under 
 congress for building ships of war ; and was continental agent 
 for supplying materials for the America seventy-four. In 1779, 
 he was president of the New Hampshire convention for regulating 
 the currency; and from 1777 to 1782, was speaker of the New 
 Hampshire house of representatives. In 1780 he was a com- 
 missioner to raise men and procure provisions for the army, and 
 June 30, 1783, was again elected delegate to congress. In 1784- 
 '85 he was a member of the New Hampshire senate, and in the 
 latter year president of the state. In 1788 he was delegate to 
 the convention which adopted the constitution of the United 
 States. In March, 1788, he was elected representative in the 
 New Hampshire legislature and speaker of the house, but took 
 the office of governor, to which he was simultaneously chosen. 
 In November, 1788, he was elected a member of the senate of 
 the United States, became the first presiding officer of that body, 
 and was reflected senator in 1 794. Later in life he was nomi- 
 nated for vice-president, but declined on account of age. From 
 1 80 1 to 1805 he was a representative in the New Hampshire 
 legislature; in 1804 and 1805 was speaker. From 1805 to 1808 
 and in 1810 and 1811 he was governor. The degree of LL. D. 
 was conferred on him by Dartmouth College in 1805. Very few 
 men of any age or nation have been more trusted, honored and 
 revered than John Langdon." 
 
 * Many of the facts relating to distinguished families of Portsmouth have been taken from 
 Mr. C. W. Brewster's " Rambles about Portsmouth," one of the best books ever published 
 in New Hampshire.
 
 328 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XC. 
 
 THE LIVERMORE FAMILY. 
 
 There is a house still standing in Portsmouth which was built 
 nearly a century and a half ago, by Matthew Livermore, the first 
 citizen of that name known to New Hampshire history. The 
 street on which it stands is called Livermore street. Matthew 
 Livermore, born in Watertown, Mass., 1703, came to Portsmouth 
 in 1724, and for seven years taught the grammar school in that 
 place. He afterwards studied law and held several responsible 
 offices under the king. 
 
 Samuel Livermore, a relative of Matthew, was one of the 
 most illustrious jurists and statesmen of New Hampshire during 
 the eighteenth century. He was a descendant of John Liver- 
 more, who was a citizen of Watertown as early as 1642. A 
 branch of the family settled in Waltham, where Samuel Liver- 
 more was born in 1732. He was graduated at Princeton in 
 1752. He began the practice of law in Portsmouth in 1758, 
 where he was, for several years, judge advocate of the admi- 
 ralty court, and in 1769 was made the king's attorney-general 
 for New Hampshire. In 1765 he commenced the settlement of 
 Holderness / was one of the original grantees, and at one time 
 owned nearly one half of the township. Here he fixed his res- 
 idence permanently, and so great was his influence, from his 
 learning, wealth and dignity, that he lived a kind of social dic- 
 tator in the new town. When the dispute arose in relation to 
 the " New Hampshire Grants " in Vermont, which, like Poland, 
 was parceled out and claimed by three sovereign states, Mr. 
 Livermore was appointed commissioner for the state of New 
 Hampshire in congress. To secure his admission he was chosen 
 delegate to congress. He took his seat in 1780 and remained, 
 by reelection, till 1782, when he was appointed chief justice of 
 the state. In 1784 he and Messrs. Josiah Bartlett and John 
 Sullivan were appointed a committee to revise the statutes of 
 the state and report new bills necessary to be enacted. While 
 holding the office of judge he was again elected to congress in 
 1785. He was also an active member in the convention which 
 met in 1788 to consider the new constitution of the United 
 States. New Hampshire was the ninth state which adopted it, 
 and thus gave vitality to this organic law. Judge Livermore's 
 influence promoted, if it did not absolutely secure, this result
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 329 
 
 He was immediately elected a member of the first congress, and 
 having resigned his office as judge, Hon. Josiah Bartlett became 
 his successor. Mr. Livermore served two sessions in congress. 
 In 1791 he was called to preside over the convention called to 
 revise the constitution of the state. In 1 793 he was elected to 
 the United States senate, the successor of Paine Wingate. He 
 served in that responsible position six years and was reflected, 
 but resigned his seat in 1801. He had then been in public life 
 more than thirty years. He retired to his home in Holderness, 
 where he died in 1803, in the seventy-second year of his age. 
 Two of his sons were distinguished in public life. Edward St. 
 Loe was judge of the supreme court of New Hampshire from 
 1797 to 1799, and was a member of congress from Massachu- 
 setts from 1807 to 1811. He died in 1832, aged 80. Arthur 
 Livermore was, for more than half a century, a prominent jurist 
 and legislator in New Hampshire. He was judge of the su- 
 preme court from 1799 to 1816 ; judge of the court of common 
 pleas from 1825 to 1833, and representative in congress from 
 1817 to 1821 and from 1823 to 1825. As a judge he was re- 
 spected by the bar and reverenced by the people. As a public 
 speaker he was logical, forcible and judicial, sometimes witty, 
 caustic and severe. 
 
 CHAPTER XCI. 
 
 THE PICKERING FAMILY. 
 
 John Pickering, the ancestor of all the families of that name 
 in New Hampshire, came from England among the first colonists 
 of Massachusetts. He removed to Strawberry Bank as early as 
 1636. He was a man of great worth and possessed remarkable 
 business qualities, though he could not write his name. The 
 early settlers entrusted to him matters of great importance. He 
 was one of the company who gave fifty acres of glebe land for 
 the ministry. He built his house on a site now lying on " Mill 
 Street." His sons, John and Thomas, became leading men in 
 the colony. In 1665, the town granted to John Pickering, senior, 
 a tract of land on Great Bay. Thomas, the second son, who is 
 the ancestor of all who bear the name of Pickering in Ports- 
 mouth and towns adjacent, also took a farm of five hundred 
 acres from the same grant on Great Bay, within the present
 
 33<> HISTORY OF 
 
 town of Newington, which after the lapse of two centuries still 
 remains in the hands of his descendants. It has been transmit- 
 ted in regular succession ; and no deed has ever been made of 
 some portions of the estate since the first grant to John Picker- 
 ing in 1665. In 1658, the town granted to John Pickering the 
 south mill privilege, on condition of his keeping in repair a path 
 for foot passengers, over the dam, on going to meeting. The 
 mill was built ; and the son and grandson of the grantee man- 
 aged it in succession. 
 
 Captain Thomas Pickering, son of the third John, was hewn 
 to pieces by the Indians, in 1746, in the vicinity of Casco, Maine, 
 where he was on duty. He was helpless from rheumatism, and 
 thus became an easy prey to the savages. The six daughters of 
 this martyr to his country were all married and had children. 
 Five of them lived to the average age of ninety-one years. 
 
 John Pickering, 2d, who inherited "Pickering's Neck" and 
 the mill, discharged with credit the duties of farmer, miller, law- 
 yer, captain, and legislator. In the first assembly called by 
 President Cutt, he was a representative of Portsmouth. There 
 were six of this family who bore the name of John. They all 
 had a military reputation. It was Captain John Pickering, zd, 
 whom Dr. Belknap styles, " a rough and adventurous man and a 
 lawyer," who compelled Richard Chamberlain, the clerk of the 
 superior court and secretary of the province under Andros, to 
 surrender the records and files of papers in his possession. They 
 were for a time concealed ; but Governor Usher constrained the 
 captain, by threats of imprisonment, to give them up. Captain 
 Pickering was a member of the assembly most of the time from 
 1697 to 1709. For several years he was speaker of the house; 
 and was appointed attorney for the state in the great land case 
 of Allen against Waldron, in 1707. In 1671, he was the con- 
 tractor with the town for building a strong wooden cage, stock 
 and pillory near the meeting-house for the confinement of evil- 
 doers, especially of "such as sleepe, or take tobacco on the 
 Lord's day, out of meeting in the time of the publique exercise." 
 In our day the offenders would be more numerous than the of- 
 ficials ; and the " cage " would be more spacious than the church. 
 During the same year Rev. Mr. Moody, who had preached 
 twenty-three years without settlement, was ordained. Captain 
 Pickering, as usual, was master of ceremonies. He, in true dem- 
 ocratic spirit, practised upon the motto of his mill, " first come, 
 first served," reserved no seats for the minister and his friends. 
 For this contempt of the magnates, he was censured by an ec- 
 clesiastical court. " Like many other men" (and, we may safely 
 add, women), " Captain John Pickering liked to have his own 
 way ; unlike many others, he generally enjoyed the power."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 33! 
 
 His brother, Captain Thomas Pickering, was a man of mag- 
 nificent physique. A press-gang once attempted to seize him 
 when alone in the outskirts of the town and put him on board 
 an English man-of-war. When the officer of the gang replied 
 to his earnest plea to be left to care for his family, " No excuse, 
 sir ; march /" the captain laid him upon the ground in a trice, 
 and raising his axe as if to chop off his head, the terrified sub- 
 alterns begged his life and promised a speedy retreat. There is 
 a tradition that this same athlete carried upon his back eleven 
 and one-half bushels of corn up the steps of a mill ! 
 
 The biographies of all the eminent men who have borne the 
 name of Pickering would fill a volume. I can only mention one 
 or two more. Hon. John Pickering, a lineal descendant of 
 Thomas, was a man of eminent ability. He was a member of 
 the convention that framed the constitution, filled the office of 
 governor when Langdon resigned,, and was chief justice of the 
 supreme court for five years. He was born at Newington in 
 1738, and was graduated at Cambridge in 1761. To Captain 
 Thomas Pickering Mr. Brewster assigns the chief honor in the 
 capture of Fort William and Mary in 1774, contrary to the re- 
 ceived tradition, which gives the credit of that achievement to 
 Sullivan and Langdon. 
 
 CHAPTER XCII. 
 
 THE WEARE FAMILY. 
 
 The progenitor of this distinguished family was Nathaniel 
 Weare, one of the early proprietors of Newbury, Mass. His 
 name was spelled in the records of that town in seven different 
 ways. There was very little agreement among the scribes and 
 clerks of that day in spelling proper names ; indeed, there was 
 no fixed standard of use for the orthography of common terms. 
 The name of Shakespeare, in his day, was as variously written 
 as that of Weare. He did not always spell it in the same way 
 himself, and editors still differ with regard to its proper orthog- 
 raphy. Mr. Weare's son Nathaniel, who was born in England, 
 settled in Hampton. He was a surveyor ; and in that capacity 
 was employed, in 1669, to establish the south line of the town of 
 Hampton. Mr. Weare also officiated as an attorney in the man- 
 agement of law-suits. During the oppressive prosecutions in-
 
 332 HISTORY OF 
 
 stituted by Mason against the first settlers of New Hampshire, 
 Mr. Weare was sent, as their agent, to England to ask the pro- 
 tection of the king against the unjust proceedings of the pro- 
 prietor. More than two hundred citizens of Portsmouth, Dover, 
 Exeter and Hampton signed the petition. Doubtless all the 
 owners of real estate were interested in it. He also carried with 
 him charges in eight district courts, against the tyrannical gov- 
 ernor, Cranfield, who had conspired with Mason to rob the settlers 
 of their lands. He presented his allegations before the lords 
 of trade, and advocated them with so much eloquence that they 
 reported to the king against the governor, and he prudently 
 resigned his office. Thus unarmed justice triumphed over armed 
 oppression. This act of moral heroism finds a parallel later in 
 American history, in Samuel Adams, when he appeared as the 
 representative of the people before Hutchinson, another royal 
 governor, to demand the removal of the British troops from Bos- 
 ton. The petty tyrant refused at first to listen to the request ; 
 but at a second interview he became alarmed, wavered, prevari- 
 cated and finally consented. The aged patriot stretched out 
 his unarmed hand over the governor and exclaimed : " It is 
 at your peril if you do not remove the troops. The meeting is 
 composed of three thousand people. They have become very 
 impatient. A thousand men have already come from the neigh- 
 borhood ; and the country is in general motion. Night is ap- 
 proaching ; an immediate answer is expected." The answer came 
 immediately. The troops were removed ; and the people were 
 the victors. In after years, Adams said : "As I gazed intently into 
 the eye of the tyrant, I observed his knees tremble ; I saw his 
 face grow pale and I enjoyed the sight." The vulgar heroism of 
 the red battle-field pales before the glory of such moral daring, 
 
 "As a dim candle dies at noon." 
 
 Mr. Weare went to England a second time to defend the rights 
 of the farmers against the claims of Mason ; and though unsuc- 
 cessful in his mission, his labors were warmly commended by 
 his clients. In 1685 he was elected to represent the town of 
 Hampton in the assembly. During the continued controversies 
 so persistently carried on by the proprietor and the people, for 
 many years, Mr. Weare always acted an important part. In 
 1694 he was appointed chief justice of the supreme court, which 
 office he held two years. He was for many years a councilor and 
 a justice of the peace. He was also an active member of the 
 church at Hampton, the oldest in the state. He died at Hamp- 
 ton. His death is thus recorded : " Nathaniel Weare, Esq., 
 for some years one of the members of the council of N. H., 
 died the i3th of May, 1718, in the eighty-seventh year of his
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 333 
 
 age." He left two sons, Peter and Nathaniel, both eminent 
 in church and state. Peter was a member of the council, which 
 then corresponded to our senate ; and, for four years, a justice of 
 the superior court. Nathaniel held for eight years a seat upon 
 the same bench. This fact shows the estimation in which he was 
 held by rulers and people. He was the father of Meshech 
 Weare, so long and so honorably known as judge, president and 
 governor of the state. No name in our history has come down 
 to us with a more unsullied reputation than his. 
 
 Meshech Weare was one of the great and good men of the 
 last century. His name is associated with the most important 
 transactions in New Hampshire through the whole of the Rev- 
 olutionary war and the period of the formation of the general 
 and state governments. He was born at Hampton Falls, then 
 a parish of Hampton, June 16, 1713. He was one of the younger 
 sons of the family and, on account of his high scholarship and 
 good deportment, he was selected for a liberal education. He 
 was graduated at Harvard, in 1735, with a high rank as a scholar. 
 He prepared for the ministry and, for a time preached as a 
 licentiate to the great acceptance of those who heard ; but his 
 fellow-citizens required his services as a civilian, and he deemed 
 himself justified in relinquishing the pulpit. He was early em- 
 ployed in town duties, as selectman, justice .of the peace and 
 representative. He was also, under the royal government, a col- 
 onel of the militia. He was speaker of the assembly in 1752. 
 At the beginning of "the old French war" in 1754, he was one 
 of the commissioners to the convention at Albany, to negotiate 
 a treaty with the "Six Nations." At the commencement of the 
 Revolution he was an active leader of the friends of liberty. In 
 resisting the tyrannical claims of England, he was prepared to go 
 to the extreme limits. He was a leading member of the state 
 convention which met to form a new government, and was at 
 once made the executive head of the state with the title of presi- 
 dent. In 1776 he was made chief justice of the superior court 
 of New Hampshire. He held this office till 1782, six and one- 
 half years. When the new constitution of the state went into 
 operation, in 1784, Mr. Weare was chosen the first president ; 
 but resigned the office before the close of the year on account 
 of ill health. He died January 15, 1786, aged seventy-three, 
 having been in the public service forty-five years. His official 
 life and character scarcely find a parallel in human history.
 
 334 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XCIII. 
 
 THE BARTLETT FAMILY. 
 
 The earliest known ancestor of this family in this country was 
 John Bartlett, who with four other citizens of the same name, 
 removed from Beverly to Newbury, Mass., in 1635. The exact 
 date of their arrival in America is not known. It is probable 
 that they were among the earliest immigrants. Robert Bartlett 
 landed at Plymouth in 1623. All who bear this name in New 
 England are supposed to have had a common origin. The New 
 Hampshire family descended from John Bartlett. President 
 Josiah Bartlett, from his public services, is better known than 
 his ancestors, though the family have always been distinguished 
 for superior endowments and executive energy. Joseph Bart- 
 lett, the nephew of Josiah, studied medicine with his distin- 
 guished relative at Kingston, N. H., and immediately after his 
 marriage, at the age of twenty-two, removed to Salisbury, N. H. 
 He was the first physician of that town. He had a very exten- 
 sive practice in that and the adjacent towns, and won the confi- 
 dence and respect of all who knew him. He was also much 
 employed in business transactions, as he held the pen of " a 
 ready writer." He died September 20, A. D. 1800, aged forty- 
 nine, leaving a family of seven sons and two daughters. Two 
 of the sons were physicians ; two were lawyers and two were 
 merchants. They were all distinguished in their several call- 
 ings, all honored and trusted citizens. At one session of the 
 New Hampshire legislature four of these brothers met as repre- 
 sentatives from their respective towns : Ichabod from Ports- 
 mouth, James from Dover, Samuel from Salisbury and Daniel 
 from Grafton. Samuel Colcord Bartlett was a merchant in Salis- 
 bury, successful in business, commanding the universal respect 
 of all who knew him. His sons have all proved themselves 
 worthy of their distinguished ancestry. Among them are Rev. 
 Joseph Bartlett of Buxton, Maine, Prof. Samuel C. Bartlett of 
 Chicago, Illinois, and the late Judge William Bartlett of Con- 
 cord. The merchant, Samuel C. Bartlett, assisted his younger 
 brother Ichabod to obtain an education.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 335 
 
 CHAPTER XCIV. 
 
 THE WEBSTER FAMILY. 
 
 Inquiries are often made respecting the father, brothers and 
 sisters of the late Daniel Webster, and it is not probable that 
 the time will ever come in our state or in the United States when 
 that interest will wholly cease. It may be proper, therefore, to 
 incorporate these facts in the history of New Hampshire, where 
 all who choose can refer to them. Judge Nesmith, a few years 
 since, published a full and accurate account of Mr. Webster's 
 family. From this sketch I make the following extracts : 
 
 " In the political canvass in our state which closed with the 
 March election, 1858, it was publicly stated by some of the speak- 
 ers that Judge Webster, the father of Hon. Daniel Webster, could 
 neither read nor write. Now, in the course of the last summer, 
 we spent some time in investigating the history of Judge Web- 
 ster. We have sufficient evidence, in Franklin and Salisbury, 
 to satisfy the most skeptical that he could not only read and 
 write, spell and cipher, but he knew how to lend the means to 
 found a state. Daniel Webster, in his autobiography, and in his 
 letter to Mr. Blatchford of New York, gives us a brief but too 
 modest an outline of the life of his father. At the risk of being 
 tedious we propose to show some of the acts or works that gave 
 him his deserved influence and fame in this region. 
 
 Ebenezer Webster was born in Kingston in 1739. He resided 
 many years with Major Ebenezer Stevens, an influential citizen 
 of that town, and one of the first proprietors of Salisbury. 
 Salisbury was granted in 1749, and first named Stevenstown, in 
 honor of Major Stevens. It was incorporated as Salisbury in 
 1767. Judge Webster settled in Stevenstown as early as 1761. * 
 Previous to this time he had served as a soldier in the French 
 war, and once afterward. He was married to Mehitable Smith, 
 his first wife, January 8, 1761. His first two children, Olle, a 
 daughter, and Ebenezer, his son, died while young. His third 
 child was Susannah, born October, 1766 ; married John Colby, 
 who recently died in Franklin. He had also, by his first wife, 
 two sons David, who died some years since at Stanstead ; also 
 Joseph, who died in Salisbury. His first wife died March 28, 
 1774. Judge Webster again married Abigail Eastman, October 
 
 * When Judge Webster first settled in Stevenstown, he was called Ebenezer Webster, Jr. 
 In 1694. Kingston was granted to James Prescott and Ebenezer Webster and others, of Hamp- 
 ton. He descended from this ancestor.
 
 336 HISTORY OF 
 
 12, 1774. By his last wife he had five children : viz., Mehitable ; 
 Abigail ( who married William Hadduck ) ; Ezekiel, born March 
 ii, 1780; Daniel, born January 18, 1782, and Sarah, born May 
 
 13, 1784. Judge Webster died in April, 1806, in the house now 
 converted into the New Hampshire Orphans' Home, and with 
 his last wife and many of his children now lies buried in the 
 grave-yard originally taken from the Elms farm. For the first 
 seven years of his life, after he settled on the farm lately occu- 
 pied by John Taylor in Franklin, he lived in a log cabin, located 
 in the orchard west of the highway, and near Punch brook. 
 Then he was able to erect a house of one story, of about the 
 same figure and size as that now occupied by William Cross, near 
 said premises. It was in this house that Daniel Webster was 
 born. In 1784 Judge Webster removed to the tavern house, 
 near his interval farm, and occupied that until 1800, when he 
 exchanged his tavern house with William Hadduck for that 
 where he died. 
 
 In 1761, Captain- John Webster, Eliphalet Gale and Judge 
 Webster erected the first saw-mill in Stevenstown, on Punch 
 brook, on his homestead, near his cabin. 
 
 In June, 1764, Matthew Pettengill, Stephen Call and Ebenezer 
 Webster were the sole highway surveyors of Stevenstown. In 
 1765, the proprietors voted to give Ebenezer Webster and Ben- 
 jamin Sanborn two hundred acres of common land, in considera- 
 tion that they furnish a privilege for a grist-mill, erect a mill and 
 keep it in repair for fifteen years, for the purpose of grinding the 
 town's corn. 
 
 In 1768 Judge Webster was first chosen moderator of a town- 
 meeting in Salisbury, and he was elected forty-three times after- 
 ward, at different town-meetings in Salisbury, serving in March, 
 1803, for the last time. 
 
 In 1769 he was first elected selectman, and held that office 
 for the years 1770, '72, '74, '76, '80, '85, '86, and '88 ; resigning 
 it, however, in September, 1776, and performing a six months' 
 service in the army. 
 
 In 1771, 1772 and 1773, he was elected and served in the of- 
 fice of town clerk. In 1778 and 1780 he was elected represent- 
 ative of the classed towns of Salisbury and Boscawen ; also, for 
 Salisbury, in 1790 and '91. He was elected senator for the years 
 1785, '86, '88 and '90; Hillsborough county electing two sen- 
 ators at this time, and Matthew Thornton, and Robert Wallace 
 of Henniker, serving as colleagues, each for two of said years. 
 He was in the senate in 1786, at Exeter, when the insurgents 
 surrounded the house. His proclamation to them was ' I com- 
 mand you to disperse.' 
 
 In March, 1778, the town chose Captain Ebenezer Webster
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 337 
 
 and Captain Matthew Pettengill as delegates to a convention 
 to be held at Concord, Wednesday, June 10, 'for the sole pur- 
 pose of forming a permanent plan of government for the future 
 well being of the good people of this state.' 
 
 In 1788, January 16, Colonel Webster was elected delegate to 
 the convention at Exeter, for the purpose of considering the pro- 
 posed United States constitution. A committee was also chosen 
 by the town to examine said constitution, and advise with said 
 delegate. This committee was composed of Joseph Bean, Esq., 
 Jonathan Fifield, Esq., Jonathan Cram, Captain Wilder, Deacon 
 John Collins, Edward Eastman, John C. Gale, Captain Robert 
 Smith, Leonard Judkins, Deacon Jacob True, Lieutenant Bean, 
 Lieutenant Severance and John Smith. At the first meeting of 
 the convention, in February, Colonel Webster opposed the con- 
 stitution, under instructions from his town. 
 
 A majority of the convention were found to be opposed to the 
 adoption of the constitution. The convention adjourned to Con- 
 cord, to meet in the succeeding month of June. In the mean 
 time Webster conferred with his constituents, advised with the 
 committee on the subject, asked the privilege of supporting the 
 constitution, and he was instructed to vote as he might think 
 proper. His speech, made on this occasion, has been printed. 
 It did great credit to the head and heart of the author : 
 
 " Mr. President : I have listened to the arguments for and against the 
 constitution. I am convinced such a government as that constitution will 
 establish, if adopted a government acting directly on the people of the 
 states is necessary for the common defence and the general welfare. It is 
 the only government which will enable us to pay off the national debt. The 
 debt which we owe for the Revolution, and which we arc bound in honor 
 fully and fairly to discharge. Besides, I have followed the lead of Washing- 
 ton through seven years of war, and I have never been misled. His name 
 is subscribed to this constitution. He will not mislead us now. I shall 
 vote for its adoption." 
 
 The constitution was finally adopted in the convention by the 
 vote of fifty-seven yeas and forty-seven nays. Colonel Webster 
 gave his support to the constitution. He was one of the electors 
 for president when WASHINGTON was first chosen to that office. 
 
 In the spring of 1791, Colonel Webster was appointed Judge 
 of the court of common pleas for the county of Hillsborough. 
 This office he held at the time of his decease, in 1806. He was 
 one of the magistrates, or justices of the peace for Hillsborough 
 county, for more than thirty-five years prior to his decease." 
 
 The sons of Judge Webster Daniel and Ezekiel, are noticed 
 among the distinguished members of the New Hampshire Bar, 
 in a subsequent chapter. 
 
 22
 
 338 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XCV. 
 
 THE BAR OF NEW HAMPSHIRE BETWEEN A. D. l8oo AND 1830. 
 
 New Hampshire has produced an unusual number of distin- 
 guished men, especially in the legal profession. If we take the 
 year 1815 as a stand-point and look backward and forward for 
 about fifteen years, we shall find more eminent lawyers and ora- 
 tors in our little state than in any other in the Union. Some of 
 the men living in that period have never been surpassed, in any 
 age or nation. The central figure in that group of advocates is 
 Jeremiah Mason. By the unanimous consent of the present 
 generation of Americans, he had no peer as a lawyer. He was 
 a truly magnificent man in mind and body. His noble physique 
 corresponded to the indwelling soul ; it was grand, lofty and im- 
 posing. No man who saw him once ever forgot him. Most men 
 after seeing him, like the honest Shaker who was sent to consult 
 him, could talk of nothing else but his "extraordinary size." 
 But those who heard him were still more profoundly impressed. 
 His intellectual and professional portrait has been drawn by the 
 hand of a master. Mr. Webster says: "The characteristics of 
 Mr. Mason's mind, as I think, were real greatness, strength and 
 sagacity. He was great through strong sense and sound judg- 
 ment, great by comprehensive views of things, great by high and 
 elevated purposes. Perhaps sometimes he was too cautious and 
 refined, and his distinctions became too minute; but his dis- 
 crimination arose from a force of intellect, and quick-seeing, far- 
 reaching sagacity, everywhere discerning his object and pursu- 
 ing it steadily. Whether it was popular or professional, he 
 grasped a point and held it with a strong hand. He was some- 
 times sarcastic, but not frequently ; not frothy or petulant, but 
 cool and vitriolic. Unfortunate for him on whom his sarcasm 
 fell ! His conversation was as remarkable as his efforts at the 
 bar. It was original, fresh and suggestive ; never dull or indif- 
 ferent. As a professional man, Mr. Mason's great ability lay in 
 the department of the common law. In this part of jurispru- 
 dence he was profoundly learned. In his addresses, both to 
 courts and juries, he affected to despise all eloquence, and cer- 
 tainly disdained all ornament ; but his efforts, whether addressed 
 to one tribunal or the other, were marked by a degree of clear- 
 ness, distinctness and force not easy to be equaled." Mr. Web- 
 ster lived in the same town, practiced in the same courts with
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 339 
 
 Mr. Mason and was generally pitted against him as an antag- 
 onist. In this relation they helped rather than harmed one 
 another. They grew strong, vigilant and wise by their mutual 
 conflicts ; for in such intellectual warfare, as Burke remarks, 
 " our antagonist is our helper." Their associates were all men 
 of mark. There were practicing at the same bar with these lead- 
 ing lawyers, Mr. West, Mr. Gordon, Edward St. Loe Livermore, 
 Peleg Sprague, William K. Atkinson, George Sullivan, Ichabod 
 Bartlett, Thomas W. Thompson, Jeremiah Smith, William Plumer, 
 Arthur Livermore, Samuel Bell, Levi Woodbury, Charles H. 
 Atherton, Joseph Bell, George B. Upham, Richard Fletcher and 
 many other eminent jurists. 
 
 CHAPTER XCVI. 
 
 JEREMIAH SMITH. 
 
 Jeremiah Smith, better known to all as " Judge Smith," was 
 partly educated at Cambridge, but was graduated at Rutger's 
 college, New Jersey. The next few years were spent in study- 
 ing law and teaching, and in 1786 he was admitted to the bar 
 by the court held at Amherst, Hillsborough county. Unlike 
 many of his profession, he combined the characters of attorney 
 and peace-maker, always preventing a law-suit when possible. It 
 was thought by many of the most considerate men in Peter- 
 borough (his native town where he was then residing), that he 
 should be paid $500 each year for saving in this way so much 
 time and money. By his unswerving justice, laborious prepara- 
 tion of his cases and hearty contempt for the " paltry shifts of 
 legal cunning," he did much to bring about a better administra- 
 tion of justice in the courts of New Hampshire. In his own 
 town he was deeply interested in everything that would better 
 its condition. Through his influence, new school-houses were 
 built, better teachers were procured, a small social library was 
 established and the young men, roused by reading, gained habits 
 of earnest thought and keen discussion. In addition to his 
 practice, which was always good, he filled various public offices 
 in his tow'n and state, and in 1790 was chosen a member of con- 
 gress, and served in that capacity with great honor to himself 
 until 1787, when he was appointed United States attorney for 
 the district of New Hampshire. In 1800 he was appointed
 
 340 HISTORY OF 
 
 judge of probate for the county of Rockingham, and during this 
 year he prepared a full and elaborate treatise on that branch of 
 the law. In 1801 he was made a judge in the United States 
 circuit court ; but this office, which, he used to say, was the only 
 one he ever greatly desired, was taken from him by an act of 
 congress repealing the judiciary law. After this he was twice 
 the chief justice of New Hampshire, its governor for one year 
 besides distinguishing himself in contests at the bar withMasoii, 
 Webster and Sullivan. 
 
 The names of Smith and Mason are most frequently men 
 tioned together by those who remember those times. Neither of 
 them laid claim to the graces of oratory. " When they met it 
 was the stern encounter of massive intellectual strength." Both 
 were men of humor and loved a joke. Mr. Mason once told 
 Mr. Smith that, having been recently looking over the criminal 
 calendar of the English courts, he was surprised to find there so 
 many persons bearing his name, and asked how it happened. 
 " Oh," said he, "when they got into difficulty they took the re- 
 spectable name of Smith, but it generally turned out that their 
 real name was Mason." They worked together in the famous 
 Dartmouth College case. 
 
 In 1820, having reached his sixty-first year, Judge Smith with- 
 drew from active life. His old age was happy, serene and use- 
 ful. Wit, wisdom and worth were all his to an unusual degree. 
 In private life he was delightful. Overflowing with fun and 
 kindness, he charmed the young and old alike. 
 
 CHAPTER XCVII. 
 
 EZEKIEL WEBSTER. 
 
 Ezekiel Webster was a native of Salisbury. He was born 
 March u, 1780. The first nineteen years of his life were spent 
 on his father's farm. By constant labor beneath a rigorous cli- 
 mate and upon a comparatively sterile soil, he acquired that full 
 muscular development and majestic figure which in later years 
 gave to him extraordinary manly beauty. His brother Daniel, 
 being less robust in constitution, was early destined. by his father 
 to professional life. During a college vacation when the brothers 
 were at home together, they made the education of Ezekiel the 
 theme of their constant deliberations. One night they passed
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 341 
 
 in sleepless conference. They hardly dared broach the subject 
 to their father, who regarded his elder son as the support of his 
 declining years. Finally Daniel ventured to open the subject to 
 his father. He referred the matter to their mother. A family 
 council was called. The mother was a strong-minded, sagacious 
 woman. She at once admitted the reasonableness of the re- 
 quest and gave her decision, in these words : " I have lived long 
 in the world and have been happy in my children. If Daniel 
 and Ezekiel will promise to take care of me in my old age, I 
 will consent to the sale of all our property at once, that they 
 may enjoy with us the benefit of what remains after our debts 
 are paid." This was a moment of intense interest to all the 
 family. Parents and children mingled their tears together at the 
 thought even of a temporary separation. The die was cast. 
 After spending about fifteen months in preparation, Ezekiel 
 Webster entered Dartmouth College in the spring of 1801. He 
 ranked among the first of his class in scholarship. He suc- 
 ceeded, with great economy and some deprivation of necessary 
 comforts, by the aid of teaching and the slight contributions to 
 his support from his father and brother, in completing his educa- 
 tion. Mr. Webster, after devoting three years to the study of 
 law. entered upon the practice of his profession, at Boscawen, in 
 September, 1807. His legal knowledge and 'moral worth soon 
 secured for him an extensive business. As a lawyer he had few 
 equals. He was a wise counselor and able advocate. In de- 
 bate he was dignified and courteous. His weapons were sound 
 arguments clothed in simple but elegant language. His eloquence 
 was earnest and effective. For many years he was a member of 
 one or the other branch of the state legislature. He died sud- 
 denly, of heart disease, on the tenth of April, 1829. He was 
 speaking, standing erect, on a plain floor before a full house, 
 with all eyes fastened upon him. He closed one branch of his 
 argument, uttered the last sentence and the last word of that 
 sentence with perfect tone and emphasis ; and then in an instant 
 fell backward without bending a joint, and seemed to be dead 
 before he reached the floor. Though life was not absolutely ex- 
 tinct, he neither breathed nor spoke again.
 
 342 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER XCVIII. 
 
 DANIEL WEBSTER. 
 
 In describing the leaders of the bar of New Hampshire, it 
 would be as absurd to pass over Daniel Webster in silence as it 
 would to enact the play of Hamlet and leave out the Prince of 
 Denmark himself ; yet he has been so often eulogized that it 
 seems a work of supererogation to recite even his excellences to 
 the men of this generation. No orator in the world's history 
 was ever more widely known and honored by his contemporaries. 
 His fame was co-extensive with human civilization. European 
 statesmen who took a lively interest in American politics re- 
 garded him as the authoritative expounder of our constitution. 
 He so ably developed the true nature of our government on the 
 floor of the United States Senate that he was everywhere styled 
 the " Defender of the Constitution." In his reply to Colonel 
 Hayne he first taught the people what the UNION really meant, 
 and furnished the arguments by which inferior orators defended 
 it when it was assailed by rebel statesmen. When Mr. Webster 
 died nations were his mourners, and " the world felt lonely " 
 without him. His character and his oratory received unstinted 
 praise from the press and the pulpit. Not even Washington 
 himself was a more general theme of eulogy. Daniel Webster 
 was born in Salisbury, January 18, 1782. He once said in a 
 public speech : "It did not happen to me to be born in a log 
 cabin ; but my elder brothers and sisters were born in a log 
 cabin, reared amid the snow-drifts of New Hampshire at a period 
 so early that when the smoke first rose from its rude chimney 
 and curled over the frozen hills, there was no similar evidence 
 of a white man's habitation between it and the settlements on 
 the rivers of Canada." His early advantages for education were 
 limited. A few weeks' study each winter in the district school 
 made up the sum of his early intellectual culture. In his fif- 
 teenth year he spent nine months at Exeter Academy. Most of 
 his preparation for college was made under the tuition of Rev. 
 Dr. Wood of Boscawen, who received for board and tuition only 
 one dollar per week. He entered Dartmouth College in 1797, 
 where he passed four years in assiduous study. His moral 
 character and devotion to duty have received the highest com- 
 mendation from teachers and classmates. As a writer and 
 speaker he had no equal. He studied law in Boston with Hon.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 343 
 
 Christopher Gore and was admitted at the Suffolk bar in 1805. 
 He then opened an office at Boscawen that he might be near his 
 father and assist him in his declining years. Two years after 
 the death of his father, he relinquished his office to his brother, 
 and the next year removed to Portsmouth, where he gained his 
 chief reputation as a lawyer. His practice was abundant but not 
 lucrative, for clients in those days were not rich. He was chosen 
 by the federal party in 1812 to represent the state in congress. 
 He took his seat at the first session of the thirteenth congress, 
 which was an extra session called in May, 1813. From this 
 date to the day of his death, in October, 1852, he had little rest 
 from public official duties. No one man in American history 
 has so deeply impressed his opinions and character upon the in- 
 stitutions of the country. He was distinguished in every de- 
 partment of labor in which he engaged ; at the bar, in congress, 
 in the senate, and in the cabinet. It may be doubted whether, 
 in any of the spheres which he so ably filled, our country has 
 produced a greater man. 
 
 CHAPTER XCIX. 
 
 ICHABOD BARTLETT. 
 
 " The subject of this notice graduated at Dartmouth College 
 in 1806, where he was a classmate of Hon. George Grennel of 
 Massachusetts. In the same year he delivered the oration in 
 his native town on the Fourth of July, which was published. 
 Having studied law with Moses Eastman and Parker Noyes, he 
 was admitted to the bar in 1812, and commenced practice in 
 Durham. He removed to Portsmouth, where he rapidly attained 
 an honorable rank in his profession, of which he was subse- 
 quently the acknowledged head. The New Hampshire Bar was 
 at this time distinguished for ability, and it was among such com- 
 petitors as Webster, Jeremiah Mason, Jeremiah Smith, Bell, 
 Fletcher, Sullivan and Woodbury, that Mr. Bartlett won his legal 
 honors. He was appointed clerk of the state senate in 1817 
 and in 1818, in which office he was succeeded by the late Isaac 
 Hill. He was also appointed county solicitor for Rockingham 
 in 1819. Elected to the legislature of the state in 1819, he sig- 
 nalized his entry upon the political arena by his famous speech 
 in favor of the Toleration act, in July of that year. This law, for'
 
 344 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 the first time, placed all religious denominations in the state upon 
 equal grounds, taking away the legal establishment of a single 
 sect, and making all dependent upon voluntary contributions for 
 their support. He served three years in succession, and in 1821 
 was made speaker. He was elected afterwards in 1830, 1832, 
 and again in 1851 and 1852. 
 
 In 1823 he was elected to congress, and took his seat in De- 
 cember of that year as a member of the eighteenth congress. 
 He made his appearance at a time of unusual excitement, when 
 Mr. Webster had introduced, and Mr. Clay was supporting with 
 his characteristic impetuosity, the famous resolution in favor of 
 the Greeks. Mr. Bartlett, considering it his duty " to stem the 
 current of popular excitement," opposed the resolution. Mr. 
 Clay, in replying, alluded to " the young gentleman from New- 
 Hampshire," and offered some advice to him on the sub- 
 ject in debate. Mr. Bartlett's retort on this occasion is remem- 
 bered as one of the most effective off-hand speeches ever made 
 in congress. It is certain that while it contributed materially to 
 advance his reputation it secured for him subsequent considera- 
 tion and respect from his great antagonist. 
 
 Mr. Bartlett was twice reflected, and continued in the house 
 until 1829. He was distinguished as a bold and spirited debater, 
 and several of his speeches are preserved which fully sustain his 
 reputation as an orator. Those on the " Suppression of Piracy" 
 in 1825, on the "Amendment of the Constitution" in 1826, on 
 "Internal Improvement" in 1827, and on " Retrenchment " in 
 1828, were widely circulated in the newspapers of the day, and 
 were perhaps favorable specimens of his power. 
 
 When the democratic party in New Hampshire split on the 
 rock of Jacksonism, he took his stand with Plumer, the Bells, 
 Jacob B. Moore and others against the Jackson party under Isaac 
 Hill, who subsequently triumphed and ruled the state. He was 
 the candidate of the anti-Jackson party for governor in 1831 and 
 again in 1832, when he was defeated by Samuel Dinsmoor. 
 
 In 1850 Mr. Bartlett was chosen a member of the state con- 
 vention for the revision of the Constitution, of which he was 
 temporary chairman, being succeeded by Frank Pierce as pres- 
 ident of the convention. In this convention, as in the state leg- 
 islature, upon his frequent reelections, although in the minority 
 upon all political questions, his genius and ability were such as 
 to elicit the admiration of his opponents, and his influence will 
 be felt and his name long remembered as one of the most emi- 
 nent in the history of his native state. It was, however, on the 
 fields of his first triumphs at the bar that he achieved his 
 greatest distinction, in the maturity of his powers. ' Master of 
 all the graces of action, speech and thought, yet strong in argu-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 345 
 
 merit,' his success was brilliant and continuous, and he re- 
 tained his position to the end of his career. 
 
 They do not seem to have been her greatest men whom New 
 Hampshire has most delighted to honor, but she may still point 
 with motherly pride to the list of those who have honored her, 
 in spite of her neglect. Among these, many names will occur 
 to those who are at all familiar with her history, but none more 
 worthy than that of Ichabod Bartlett." 
 
 He died at Portsmouth, where he spent most of his life, Octo- 
 ber 19, 1853, aged 67. 
 
 NOTE. The author of the above eulogy I cannot now identify. 
 
 CHAPTER C. 
 
 LEVI WOODBURY. 
 
 Mr. Woodbury was one of the most distinguished of the sons 
 of New Hampshire. He was graduated at Dartmouth College 
 in the class of 1809. He was a student of superior scholarship 
 and untiring industry. At the early age of twenty-six he was 
 appointed to the bench of the superior court of New Hampshire. 
 He had been an ardent supporter of the war of 1812, and of 
 course incurred the displeasure of a very powerful party who 
 opposed it. His judicial opinions were therefore watched and 
 criticised by vigilant and hostile partisans, but his services as 
 judge were generally approved by friends and foes, and his legal 
 decisions were held in high esteem. 
 
 In 1823 he was elected governor of the state. This office he 
 held only one year. In 1825, being chosen to represent the 
 town of Portsmouth in the state legislature, he was made speaker 
 of the house. During the session he was elected a senator of 
 the United States congress, and consequently resigned the chair 
 of speaker. At the expiration of his senatorial term he was ap- 
 pointed by Gen. Jackson, successively, secretary of the navy and 
 of the treasury. He discharged the duties of all his high offices 
 with such skill, prudence and dignity as reflected honor upon 
 his native state. " During the intervals," says Mr. Barstow, 
 " between the sessions of congress, he continued to practice at 
 the bar, and moved, not without honor to himself, amid that 
 bright constellation of lawyers for which New Hampshire was at 
 this period celebrated throughout the United States. Webster,
 
 346 HISTORY OF 
 
 unanswerable in argument ; Smith, Bell and Fletcher, all famous 
 for legal acuteness; Sullivan, unequaled in the music of his 
 voice and the charms of his persuasive address ; Bartlett, master 
 of all the graces of action, speech and thought, yet strong in 
 argument ; these were the associates and competitors of Mr. 
 Woodbury. Disciplined in such a school, he became strong 
 among the strong men by whom he was surrounded, and, by his 
 characteristic industry, zeal and habits of systematic arrange- 
 ment, made himself felt as a man of distinguished ability at 
 the bar and in all the various high public stations which he 
 occupied." 
 
 CHAPTER CI. 
 
 COMMON SCHOOL INSTRUCTION IN THE STATE. 
 BY PROF. H. E. PARKER. 
 
 Little can be said with regard to anything which may have 
 been done to promote education in the earliest period of our 
 provincial history, from the time of the settlement of New Hamp- 
 shire in 1623 to the time of its union with Massachusetts in 1641. 
 From the similarity and contiguity of many of the settlers of the 
 new colonies, however, it is not unreasonable to infer that they 
 were as much alike in regard to matters of education as they 
 were in other respects. We know that one of the earliest legis- 
 lative acts of Massachusetts was to order that the selectmen of 
 every town "have a vigilant eye over their brethren and neighbors, 
 to see, first, that none of them shall suffer so much barbarisme 
 in any of theire familyes, as not to indeavor to teach, by them- 
 selves or others, theire children and apprentices, so much learn- 
 ing as may inable them perfectly to read the English tongue and 
 knowledge of the capitall lawes." Free schools were established 
 in Boston in 1635. There is recorded on their town records of 
 that year a request to Mr. Philemon Purmont to become an in- 
 structor of their children. The next year a sum was raised for 
 the support also of Mr. Daniel Maud as a free-school master. 
 The former, two years later, removed to Exeter, and the latter, in 
 1642, became the minister of Dover. It is likely these two men 
 would either find or make things at Exeter or Dover much the 
 same in regard to education as they had been in the place 
 they left.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 347 
 
 During the thirty-nine years of the union of the two provinces 
 the laws were all, of course, the same ; and these, in regard to 
 education, we find re-adopted by New Hampshire when she again 
 became a separate province. The first law establishing town 
 schools was enacted in 1647. ^ mav ^> e interesting in these 
 days, when some are seeking to remove the reading of the Bible 
 from our common schools, to repeat the preamble of this law, as 
 indicating the views and feelings of those who gave us our sys- 
 tem of free schools : " It being one chiefe project of that old 
 deluder, Sathan, to keep men from the knowledge of the Scrip- 
 tures, as, in former times, keeping them in an unknowne tongue, 
 so in these latter times by perswading them from the use of 
 tongues, so that at least the true sence and meaning of the orig- 
 inall might bee clouded with false glosses of saint seeming 
 deceivers ; and that learning may not bee buried in the grave of 
 our forefathers in church and commonwealth, the Lord assisting 
 our indeavors : it is therefore ordered etc." 
 
 The following from the town records of Hampton during this 
 period gives us some information in regard to our early New 
 Hampshire schools, and the way in which the schoolmaster was 
 then supported ; it is a record of an agreement, on the 2d of 
 April, 1649, by John Legat, "to teach the children of, or belong- 
 ing, to our town, both male and female, (which are capable of 
 learning,) to write and read and cast accounts (if it be desired), 
 and diligently and carefully as he is able thus to teach and in- 
 struct them, and so diligently to follow such employment at all 
 such time & times this yeare insuinge as the wether shall be 
 fitting for the youth to come together to our place to bee in- 
 structed ; & also to teach & instruct them once in a week or 
 more in some orthodox catechise provided for them by their 
 parents or masters. And in consideration hereof we have agreed 
 to pay or cause to be payd unto the said John Legat 20, corne 
 & cattle & butter, att price current, as payments are made of 
 such goods in this towne, and this to be paid by us quarterly, 
 paying ^5 every quarter of the yeare after he has begun to keep 
 school." 
 
 It would seem that New Hampshire from the first has recog- 
 nized her duty to give the means of a common education to all 
 the children and youth within her borders. During the period 
 of her connection with the Massachusetts colony, from 1641 to 
 1680, she seems to have been in full accord with the latter in 
 earnest efforts to promote general education. When she again 
 became a separate province we find, among her early enactments, 
 one in 1693 requiring the selectmen in the respective towns to 
 raise moneys by assessment on the inhabitants for the building 
 and repairing of school-houses and for providing a schoolmaster
 
 348 HISTORY OF 
 
 for each town of the province, under penalty of ten pounds in 
 case of failure. In 1719 every town of fifty householders or up- 
 wards was required to provide a schoolmaster to teach children 
 to read and write, and every town of one hundred householders 
 was required to have a grammar school kept by " some discreet 
 person, of good conversation, well instructed in the tongues." 
 The penalty in case of towns' failing to comply with the law was 
 twenty pounds, to be paid towards the support of schools within 
 the province where there may be the most need. Two years later 
 a law was passed enacting that " if any town or parish is destitute 
 of a grammar school for the space of one month, the selectmen 
 shall forfeit and pay out of their own estates the sum of twenty 
 pounds to be applied towards defraying the charges of the prov- 
 ince". Grand jurors were especially required to present all 
 violations of the laws in regard to the providing for schools. 
 Besides the assessment of taxes for the maintenance of schools 
 in the incorporation of towns, grants of land were usually made 
 for school purposes. 
 
 At the Revolution, when New Hampshire became an indepen- 
 dent state, there was included in the constitution then adopted a 
 provision making it the duty of the legislators and magistrates, 
 in all future periods of the government of the state, to cherish 
 the interest of literature and the sciences, and all seminaries 
 and public schools. This still remains a constitutional requisi- 
 tion of New Hampshire. In 1789 the assessment of taxes for 
 school purposes on the inhabitants of each town was required to 
 be at the rate of five pounds for every twenty shillings of their 
 proportion. Two years later the sum was increased to seven and 
 a half pounds on every twenty shillings. 
 
 In 1805 the district system was established, towns being em- 
 powered to divide into school districts and raise and appropriate 
 moneys for school purposes. The effect of this system at the 
 time was greatly to further the cause of education. By multi- 
 plying the centres of care and control with respect to schools it 
 widened an acquaintance with all matters pertaining to public 
 schools and deepened the interest in them. In bringing so 
 closely home to every man the care and maintenance of the com- 
 mon school, the influence of the district system in educational 
 affairs was very much what the influence of the town organiza- 
 tion was upon the citizen in civil affairs : great benefits arising 
 in either case from the interest and acquaintance with the mat- 
 ters pertaining to them being made so individual and universal. 
 For seventy years this system has answered well the purposes of 
 its establishment. Not until of late years, as the centres of our 
 population have changed, has it been felt that it could be super- 
 seded by something better.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 349 
 
 In 1807 the assessment for school purposes was increased to 
 seventy dollars on each dollar of the proportion for public taxes, 
 and the law was repealed requiring the shire and half-shire towns 
 to maintain a grammar school for instruction in Latin and Greek ; 
 this instruction being left mainly to the select schools and 
 academies. 
 
 In 1808 the system of appointing superintending school com- 
 mittees was established,^ the law requiring them to visit and in- 
 spect schools at such times as should be most expedient and in a 
 manner conducive to the progress of literature, morality and 
 religion. 
 
 In 1818 the school tax was raised to ninety dollars for every 
 one dollar of the proportion. 
 
 In 1827 a bill wns introduced into the legislature so excellent 
 and comprehensive in its provisions, that its passage by a veiy 
 iarge majority and becoming a law marks an era in the history 
 of common schools in the state. The spirit of the bill may be 
 understood by its enjoining " presidents, professors and tutors 
 of colleges, preceptors and teachers of academies, and all other 
 instructors of youth, to take diligent care and use their best en- 
 deavors to impress on the minds of children and youth commit- 
 ted to their care and instruction, the principles of piety and jus- 
 tice, and a sacred regard to truth, love of their country, human- 
 ity and benevolence, sobriety, industry and frugality." 
 
 In 1829 the Literary Fund, raised by an annual tax of half of 
 one per cent, on the capital stock of the banks of the state, and 
 originally designed, at the time of its establishment in 1821, for 
 the "endowment or support of a college for instruction in the 
 higher branches of science and literature," was by law distribu- 
 ted among the several towns according to their apportionment of 
 the public taxes, " to be applied to the support and maintenance 
 of common free schools, or to other purposes of education." 
 
 In 1833 an act of the legislature made it the duty of select- 
 men to furnish, on application, to needy children the requisite 
 school books ; a duty by subsequent legislation now devolving 
 upon superintending school committees. 
 
 The following resolutions, passed by the legislature of 1834, 
 indicate views and feelings entertained with regard to public 
 instruction : 
 
 " Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court 
 convened: That the instruction of our youth and the general diffusion of 
 knowledge afford the surest means of perpetuating our free institutions and 
 of securing the stability and happiness of this great republic ; and that we 
 recommend to the several towns throughout this state to cherish with guar- 
 dian care our primary schools, and to make such liberal provisons as shall 
 afford the greatest facilities to the attainment of knowledge in early life. 
 
 And be it resolved, that we view our high schools, academies and semina-
 
 350 HISTORY OF 
 
 ries of learning as powerful allies in promotion of the cause of common ed- 
 ucation ; and that, while we view it desirable that a greater proportion of 
 our youth should be nurtured in these nurseries of science, we do hereby 
 recommend to all such institutions to adopt, as far as possible, the "manual 
 labor" or "self-supporting" system, uniting bodily vigor and mental improve- 
 ment, thereby extending to the poor as well as the rich, the united advan- 
 tages of physical and intellectual cultivation." 
 
 At the winter session, of 1840-41, the amount of school 
 money was increased to one hundred dollars on each dollar of 
 the apportionment ; and at the same session an act was also 
 passed allowing the grading of schools where the pupils num- 
 bered fifty or more. Three acts of importance in their relation 
 to the subject of education were passed in 1846 : one relating 
 to the support of teachers' institutes ; another, of stringent pro- 
 visions, made more effective by further legislation in 1848, secur- 
 ing public instruction for children employed as factory opera- 
 tives; and a third act establishing the office of state commis- 
 sioner for common schools. The establishment of this office 
 marks another era in the history of common-school education 
 in the state. Professor Charles B. Hadduck of Dartmouth Col- 
 lege was the first commissioner appointed under the act, whose 
 name, efforts and influence as associated with it were of great 
 value. His successor, the Rev. Richard S. Rust of the North- 
 field Institute, also filled the position with honor and success. 
 
 This office, though abrogated four years after its first estab- 
 lishment, has, under different names, virtually continued for 
 more than a quarter of a century since. The salutariness and 
 inclispensableness of a suitable head and supervisor of our sys- 
 tem of public instruction is likely to be permanently felt and 
 acknowledged. 
 
 At the summer session of the legislature in 1848 an act was 
 passed giving District No. 3 in Somersworth the power to act 
 independently in the matter of grading and managing its schools, 
 with particular reference to the establishment and support of a 
 high school. This act, made of general application in its pro- 
 visions at the winter session of the same year and further supple- 
 mented two years later by increased powers in regard to raising 
 moneys for a high school, has proved of much importance and 
 value. At the same winter session of 1848 the annual assess- 
 ment of school money was raised to one hundred and twenty 
 dollars on the apportionment. 
 
 In 1850 the act establishing a state school commissioner was 
 repealed, and a new act passed for the appointing of county 
 school commissioners and organizing a board of education for 
 the state comprised of said county commissioners. This act 
 continued in force for seventeen years, when it was superseded 
 by an act establishing a board of education to consist of the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 351 
 
 governor and his council and a superintendent of public instruc- 
 tion, appointed by them, who should be the secretary of the 
 board, have in charge the management of the county teachers ' 
 institutes, and also, under the general direction of the board, 
 have a wide and minute supervision of all matters relating to 
 the interests of the common and high schools of the state. 
 
 In the winter session of 1852 and 1853 the assessment of 
 school money was raised to one hundred and thirty-five dollars 
 on each dollar of the apportionment, and at the next session to 
 one hundred and fifty, the following year to one hundred and 
 seventy-five, the next year to two hundred, twelve years later to 
 two hundred and fifty; while the year previous an act was passed 
 to increase the literary fund by a tax on the deposits in sav- 
 ings banks by non-residents, and in the year following an act 
 was passed to set apart the proceeds of the sale of state public 
 lands as a school fund. In 1870 the assessment of school money 
 was made three hundred and fifty dollars on the apportionment. 
 In 1859 an act was passed establishing a board of education for 
 the Union School District of Concord, elected by the district, 
 and which by subsequent legislation was made available to any 
 similar districts adopting it ; an act of much value in giving 
 efficiency and character to the supervision of graded and high 
 schools. 
 
 In accordance with a legislative act of 1870, a State Normal 
 School was established, and after several generous offers to se- 
 cure its location from the villages of Fisherville, Mont Vernon, 
 Walpole and Plymouth, it was finally located in the latter place, 
 and put in successful operation in March, 1871. 
 
 In 1870, also, an act was passed allowing towns to locate 
 schools independently of the old district system, designed to 
 supersede the latter, which, from a variety of causes, has in 
 some places become unsuited to the changed position and wants 
 of our population. 
 
 The state is now expending annually considerably more than 
 four hundred thousand dollars in support of some three thou- 
 sand schools attended by over seventy thousand children. The 
 money thus expended is furnished by the state school tax, the 
 literary fund, the tax on railroad stock in towns allowed to be 
 expended for schools, the interest in some places of local funds, 
 and in a very large number of districts by additional private 
 subscription. 
 
 The school legislation of New Hampshire has always been 
 simple and never excessive, but still fostering and progressive. 
 The subject of education has been the one theme in regard to 
 which there has been little fluctuation and no diminution or di- 
 vision of interest from the earliest period in the history of our
 
 352 HISTORY OF 
 
 state. Besides our college, with its several departments, aca- 
 demic, medical, scientific and agricultural, which for more than 
 a century has steadily advanced in character and influence, 
 an honor to the state and a blessing as wide as has been the 
 scattering of its alumni over the land and over the world, we 
 have also had in progress at different times three or four theo- 
 logical schools, two of which, the Gilmanton Theological Sem- 
 inary and the Methodist Biblical Institute, were eminently use- 
 ful. Our academies are unsurpassed in character and in number 
 unrivaled as compared with our population, while our public 
 schools have never fallen into neglect unless some exception be 
 made in times like those of the French and Indian wars when 
 society was in confusion, or during the War for Independence, 
 when the inhabitants became greatly impoverished, while bur- 
 dens and taxes were greatly increased. Fostered by the state, 
 cherished by the educated and intelligent, and among these emi- 
 nently the clergy, prized and upheld by all classes, our public 
 schools have steadily advanced in the amount and character of 
 the instruction given in them, in the adaptation of their grades 
 to different ages and acquirements, in the architecture of school 
 edifices and in the furnishing of the school room ; while, at the 
 same time, greater pains have been taken to deepen the interest 
 of the community in them, as well as aid teachers in their qual- 
 ifications by teachers' associations, teachers' institutes, public 
 lectures, and finally by the establishment of our State Normal 
 School. 
 
 CHAPTER CII. 
 
 THE ACADEMICAL INSTITUTIONS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 BY PROF. H. E. PARKER. 
 
 In common with the other settlers of New England, the people 
 of New Hampshire from the first placed a high estimate upon edu- 
 cation. Knowing that in a free state, where the people govern, 
 it is indispensable that they be virtuous and intelligent, the devel- 
 oping of such a population has never been lost sight of. Hence 
 the laws have carefully looked after the instruction of the young, 
 that not a child might grow up in ignorance either of its moral 
 duties or of those branches of knowledge which should fit it for 
 successful citizenship. There has also been a desire not only to
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 353 
 
 secure universal instruction in common and rudimentary branches, 
 but to encourage a higher education and furnish facilities for all 
 who wished to gain it ; indeed, to stimulate as many as possible 
 to seek for it. The first law in regard to common schools en- 
 acted in the state after the Revolution required not only the rais- 
 ing of moneys in every town " to be expended for the sole pur- 
 pose of keeping an English grammar school or schools, for 
 teaching reading, writing .and arithmetic, but in each shire or 
 half-shire town the school kept shall be a grammar school for 
 the purpose of teaching the Latin and Greek languages, as well 
 as the aforesaid branches." Although, sixteen years later, this 
 last provision was repealed, yet the spirit which originally led to 
 its enactment led subsequently to the founding of academies in 
 various parts of the state. The means requisite for the erection 
 of suitable buildings for these institutions and often for partial 
 endowment were the result, frequently, of the munificence of 
 some single individual, sometimes of a few, and again by the 
 contributions generally of the citizens of a place. 
 
 These academies have gradually dotted over the surface of 
 the state. In many a place they stand side by side with the 
 village church, the chief architectural ornaments of the town ; 
 and as the Sabbath bell front the latter has convened within the 
 sanctuary walls the Sabbath worshipers from brook-side and 
 hill-side far and near, so the academy bell on the week day has 
 just as widely from the same firesides gathered the youth for 
 secular instruction, the latter, however, daily introduced by morn- 
 ing religious services, and often concluded by similar evening 
 devotions. These academies have aimed to give superior ad- 
 vantages of education. They have instructed the youth of both 
 sexes in the common and higher branches of a good English 
 education, they have fitted young men for college, and prepared 
 teachers for our common schools. The influence of these in- 
 stitutions has been very great and excellent, contributing so 
 largely, as they have, towards elevating the standard of intelli- 
 gence and of character among the young people of the state. 
 
 The first academy established in New Hampshire was that of 
 Phillips Academy at Exeter, chartered by the state two years be- 
 fore the Revolutionary war, and opened for students the same 
 year with the close of that struggle. Its founder, John Phillips, 
 LL. D., a graduate of distinction from Harvard University, be- 
 sides large gifts to the colleges of Dartmouth and Princeton, 
 and also to the academy of the same name at Andover, Mass., 
 gave to the academy at Exeter over sixty-five thousand dollars, 
 a noble endowment for such an institution at that day. This 
 academy in its long, career of unvarying distinction and success 
 as a classical school, and now for some time devoting itself solely 
 
 23
 
 354 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 to fitting young men for college, has been without a superior in 
 our country in the sphere it has sought to fill. It has furnished 
 its advantages to some four thousand students, towards one half 
 of whom have entered college, and among these have been some 
 who have won positions among the most eminent of the land, in 
 scholarship, literature and statesmanship, in the pulpit, at the bar 
 and on the bench. 
 
 Five years later the academy of New Ipswich was chartered, 
 " for the purpose," in the words of the charter, "of promoting 
 piety and virtue, and for the education of youth in the English, 
 Latin and Greek languages, in writing, arithmetic, music and the 
 art of speaking, practical geometry, logic, geography, and such 
 other of the liberal arts and sciences or languages as opportunity 
 may hereafter permit." Such language, as well as the preamble 
 of the charter " whereas the education of youth has ever been 
 considered by the wise and good as an object of the highest 
 consequence to the safety and happiness of a people, as at an 
 early period of life the mind easily receives and retains impres- 
 sions, and is most susceptible of the rudiments of useful knowl- 
 edge," together with the concluding provision of the charter 
 exempting all the properties of the academy from taxation and 
 its students from a poll tax, a favorgranted by the state to other 
 similar institutions, indicate the spirit with which such charters 
 were given. This institution, whose name was changed subse- 
 quently to Appleton Academy, honored in its list of instructors 
 and graduates, still maintains its high position. 
 
 Five other academies were chartered by the state prior to the 
 close of the last century, at Atkinson, Amherst, Chesterfield, 
 Haverhill and Gilmanton, the first and last of which, aided by 
 endowments, have continued in useful operation to the present 
 time. Since 1800 some fifty additional academies have been 
 established, some of which have risen to a position of promi- 
 nence and distinction. 
 
 The history of Kimball Union Academy at Meriden has been 
 of no ordinary interest. The conception of it originated with a 
 young clergyman in a neighboring town, who had enjoyed the 
 advantages of foreign travel and, having been greatly impressed 
 with the character of the English classical schools, was led to 
 the desire of seeing a similar institution established in his neigh- 
 borhood, that should not only maintain a high standard of in- 
 struction but assist young men to the gospel ministry. The 
 ' idea was adopted by other clergymen, and at an ecclesiastical 
 convention comprised of two neighboring ministerial associa- 
 tions, one from Vermont and the other from New Hampshire, it 
 was decided to go forward and found the contemplated institu- 
 tion. At a subsequent meeting of this convention it was de-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 355 
 
 cided to call an ecclesiastical council to inaugurate the matter. 
 This council was convened at Windsor, Vt., and was comprised 
 of delegates from the General Associations of Connecticut, Mas- 
 sachusetts and New Hampshire, and from the General Con- 
 vention of Vermont. Among these delegates were President 
 Dwight of Yale College, .Prof essors Porter, Woods and Stuart 
 of Andover Theological Seminary, and three of the professors 
 of Dartmouth College. The convention, having been opened 
 with religious services and a discourse by President Dwight, pro- 
 ceeded with care and deliberation to prepare a constitution for 
 the contemplated academy, the provisions of which were in the 
 main, two years later, included in the charter given by the legis- 
 lature of New Hampshire in 1813. The academy was located 
 at Meriden in this state as a result of a donation at that time of 
 six thousand dollars by the Hon. Daniel Kimball of Meriden, 
 who also at his decease left by bequest to the institution the 
 principal part cf his estate. The academy very appropriately 
 took the name of its earliest principal donor. Commencing 
 operations in 1815, for a quarter of a century its advantages 
 were enjoyed by young men only, but in 1840 the institution 
 was opened to the admission of young ladies as students also. 
 Founded upon a basis of very high educational and religious 
 aims, prosperous from the first, with an attendance of late years 
 averaging between two and three hundred annually, it has as- 
 sumed a front rank among the best similar institutions of the 
 land, and its influence has been vast and good. 
 
 Pinkerton Academy at Derry, incorporated a year later than 
 Kimball Union Academy at Meriden, went into operation the 
 same year with the latter and has similarly had an honorable, 
 useful career maintained to the present time. It also derived its 
 name from its two earliest generous donors, the brothers Major 
 John Pinkerton and Deacon James Pinkerton of Derry. 
 
 Several of the prominent academies of the state have been 
 especially fostered by distinctive religious denominations. Such 
 is the "New Hampton Literary Institution," especially sustained 
 by the Freewill Baptist denomination, whose site and buildings 
 were originally and mainly obtained through the munificence of 
 a liberal resident of that town, Rufus G. Lewis, Esq. Such is the 
 very flourishing "New London Literary and Scientific Institu- 
 tion," generously cherished by the Baptists and without a rival 
 among the schools patronized by that denomination. Such is 
 the " New Hampshire Conference Seminary and Female Col- 
 lege" at Tilton, an honor to the Methodist denomination. Such 
 also is "St. Paul's School" for boys, the attractive Episcopal in- 
 stitution at Millville, Concord, incorporated by the legislature 
 in 1850, and greatly indebted for its foundation to the generos-
 
 356 HISTORY OF 
 
 ity of Dr. George C. Shattuck of Boston. This has now for 
 years justly been a favorite school with Episcopalians, beyond, 
 perhaps, any other which they support. 
 
 Most honorable mention is also merited for such institutions 
 as Francestown Academy, established in 1818 ; Blanchard Acad- 
 emy, Pembroke, incorporated the sarnie year ; Hopkinton Acad- 
 emy, incorporated in 1827 ; Boscawen Academy, incorporated in 
 1828 ; Nashua Literary Institution, incorporated in 1841 ; and 
 Penacook Academy at Fisherville, incorporated in 1866. Others 
 might justly be added to this list. All these academical institu- 
 tions, with perhaps two exceptions, are open to students of both 
 sexes, while the state has some similar institutions of a high 
 character devoted entirely to the instruction of young ladies. 
 Such is the "Adams Female School " at Derry, of very honora- 
 ble history in its teachers and graduates. Such is the large, 
 flourishing, and beautifully situated institution at West Lebanon, 
 "Tilden Young Ladies' Seminary," incorporated in 1869, and 
 bearing the name of the gentleman through whose liberal gifts 
 its buildings were erected. Such is the Robinson Female Sem- 
 inary at Exeter, bearing the name of the gentleman through 
 whose munificent bequest, larger than any other literary insti- 
 tution in the state ever received at its foundation, it was estab- 
 lished. Such also was the young ladies' seminary maintained 
 and taught by Miss Catherine Fisk of Keene, which for a quar- 
 ter of a century was of the highest reputation. 
 
 These numerous academical institutions of the state, estab- 
 lished with high religious as well as educational aims, and ever 
 conducted in accordance with the spirit and purpose of their 
 foundation, many of them occupying sites so remarkable in their 
 commanding prospect and beauties of surrounding scenery as to 
 be an education in themselves, these academical institutions, 
 now largely supplemented and worthily rivaled by the high 
 schools established in all the cities and large towns of our state, 
 together with the normal school more recently established, are 
 the pride and almost chief honor of New Hampshire.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 357 
 
 CHAPTER CHI. 
 
 AGRICULTURE. 
 
 Agriculture is the oldest of all arts, the parent of all civiliza- 
 tion and the support of all true progress. The Creator ordained 
 it as the chief occupation of man. He placed the first human 
 pair in the garden " to dress it and to keep it." If they had 
 been content with their "lot," material and spiritual, and had 
 kept their first ^estate," real and moral, horticulture would have 
 been the principal employment of their descendants. But a 
 restless love of change and an unfortunate emigration from his 
 primitive home have rendered our great progenitor in these par- 
 ticulars the federal representative of his race ; specially o the 
 universal " Yankee nation." A stale jest, falsely imputed to a 
 son of the Granite State who never uttered it, has passed into a 
 proverb, that " New Hampshire is a good state to emigrate from." 
 It may be true that other states are benefited by such emi- 
 gration, for 
 
 " Men are the growth pur rugged soil supplies 
 And souls are ripened in these Northern skies."* 
 
 But it is my purpose to demonstrate, "here and now," that New 
 Hampshire is a good state to live in ; and, paradoxical as it may 
 seem, for those very reasons which are so often urged to induce 
 men to leave it. The climate, scenery, fertility and salubrity of 
 our state will bear a favorable comparison with those of other 
 countries ; for every region of the globe has its discomforts and 
 deprivations. There is no Eden since the first compulsory emi- 
 gration, and the compensations which a kind Providence has set 
 over against the natural defects of our native state render it one 
 of the best homes for the farmer in the world. 
 
 New Hampshire needs no apologies ; she asks no favors. 
 True she has some rough and rocky acres which it is hard to 
 own and harder to till ; but she also has sheltered vales, sunny 
 hills and rich plains that amply reward the labors of the hus- 
 bandman. The sun nowhere on earth looks down on more at- 
 tractive landscapes than the valleys of our numerous rivers pre- 
 sent, either when nature has put on her summer glories or when 
 the fields wave with the golden harvests. Look at the crops 
 that honest industry secures. In the monthly report of the 
 
 Thoughts are sometimes repeated, because the author wished to make each chapter a com- 
 plete dissertation.
 
 358 HISTORY OF 
 
 
 
 United States Department of Agriculture for January, 1869, 
 New Hampshire leads all the states in her average crop of Ind- 
 ian corn. It is set down at forty bushels and eight-tenths per 
 acre, at an average price of one dollar and forty-three cents per 
 bushel. Vermont stands next, averaging thirty-eight and one-half 
 bushels to the acre. We have often been assured that the soil of 
 our new states was inexhaustible ; that all that was needed from 
 the farmer was " to tickle the soil with the plow, and it would 
 laugh with a harvest." Yet Illinois, the richest state in agricul- 
 tural products in the Union, produces less maize and wheat to the 
 acre than New Hampshire, and the average price of both those 
 staples is less than one-half what it is in the Granite State. 
 
 California has turned from mining to agriculture, a very wise 
 change. She is fast becoming the best wheat-raising state in 
 the Union. Minnesota and Kansas stand on'a par with her, 
 yielding, on an average, fifteen bushels to the acre, but Vermont 
 reports sixteen and stands at the head of the list. Some of the 
 Western states fall as low as five, six and eight bushels of wheat 
 to the acre. The richest soil badly cultivated soon runs out. 
 Good crops require hard labor, and in a few years, if the ele- 
 ments that are taken from the surface in annual crops are not 
 restored, the best land will become exhausted. 
 
 Barrenness is the fruit of slovenly culture everywhere. " Old 
 Virginy never tires " says the negro song, but her soil was worn 
 out before the war. It was said to be the tobacco crop that 
 ruined it. Now it seems, when Yankee industry holds the plow, 
 and Yankee prudence enriches the decayed acres, that the very 
 desert begins to bud and blossom as the rose. Virginia calls 
 for the sons of New Hampshire to regenerate that ruined state. 
 But New Hampshire needs her own sons at home. Why leave 
 our schools, churches and cultivated society here to dwell in a 
 mixed population, hateful and hating one another, and cultivate 
 a soil exhausted by bad husbandry and desolated by war, and 
 work harder and earn less than you would on the old home- 
 steads ? If you go to a new state you must create all your good 
 institutions anew. It will require the labor of a life-time to se- 
 cure as many comforts as you turn your back upon at home. 
 
 In 1859, before the war, corn was not worth harvesting in 
 some of the Western states. It commanded only ten cents per 
 bushel, and one bushel of corn made two gallons of whiskey ! 
 What a paradise was the West then to those ardent advocates of 
 the largest liberty in domestic trade, and who now complain 
 that heavy duties are a severer restraint on self-indulgence than 
 the Maine law and the Gospel united. 
 
 The war elevated a great many things besides brave men ; it 
 increased the estimation of a great many worthless things be-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 359 
 
 sides political demagogues. It enriched the West, by raising 
 the price of corn, for a few years, from ten cents to one dollar 
 and twenty-five cents per bushel ; and the price of whiskey from 
 thirteen cents to four or five dollars per gallon. But a reaction 
 has come ; and values have fallen. " Thus, the whirligig of time 
 brings in his revenges." Surely the world does move ; and 
 multitudes of our New England farmers move West, with the 
 delusive hope of bettering their condition. Imagine a colony 
 of men and women reared under the shadow of our lofty moun- 
 tains, dropped down in the midst of an almost limitless prairie, 
 in whose horizon the sun rises and sets, as in the ocean ; with 
 not a mound, hill, stone or tree to give variety to the landscape. 
 After gazing upon this monotonous picture for a few years, how 
 ardently does the most unbelieving sceptic pray for faith to re- 
 move one of our New Hampshire mountains into this dead sea 
 of verdure ! On his return to his native land, how does his 
 heart leap with joy at the bare sight of a New England land- 
 scape ! Surely, "variety is the spice of life." 
 
 New Hampshire is a good state to stay in, because men live 
 long and grow old in it. Its bracing air promotes longevity. Dr. 
 Belknap, in his history of the first settlers of New Hampshire 
 says : " In that part of America which it falls to my lot to de- 
 scribe, an uncleared and uncultivated soil is so far from being 
 an object of dread that there are no people more vigorous and 
 robust than those who labor on new plantations ; nor, in fact, 
 have any people better appetites for food. A very large propor- 
 tion of the people of New Hampshire live to old age ; and many 
 of them die of no acute disease, but by the gradual decay of 
 nature. The death of adult persons between twenty and fifty 
 years of age is very rare compared with European countries." 
 " When no epidemic prevails not more than one in seventy of 
 the people of New Hampshire die annually." It must be re- 
 membered that this was written before the advent of Venetian 
 blinds, damask curtains, double windows, India rubber strips, 
 air-tight stoves and woolen carpets. Houses were heated by 
 open fires which changed the air every hour. Men were accus- 
 tomed to the healthy stimulus of pure air, bright sun-light and 
 moderate fires within doors ; and without furs, flannels or over- 
 shoes they became inured in their daily toils to the effects of 
 pinching frosts and driving snows, so that they were not debilita- 
 ted at home by excessive heat nor chilled abroad by excessive cold. 
 
 Fifty years ago farmers in New Hampshire raised the food for 
 their families, and the wool and flax to clothe them, from their 
 own soil. They had little money ; their trade was chiefly by 
 barter, exchanging wheat, maize and oats, for salt, iron and mo- 
 lasses. After the introduction of manufactures, and,
 
 360 HISTORY OF 
 
 the rural population, like the rivers, gravitated toward the cities ; 
 or, like the clouds, was dispersed over the boundless West. The 
 agriculture of the state has suffered greatly from this depletion ; 
 but better days are coming. We argue thus because all the best 
 lands this side the Rocky mountains are already occupied by 
 actual settlers or owned by railroads and speculators. We are 
 also assured by the United States surveyors, that there is a broad 
 belt of land beyond the one hundredth meridian of longitude, 
 twelve hundred miles in length, extending from Texas to the 
 British Possessions, and varying in breadth from three to six 
 hundred miles, which is unfit for cultivation. General Hazen 
 affirms that not one acre in a hundred of that vast territory can 
 ever be successfully tilled. The average rainfall of only ten 
 inches per annum sets the seal of perpetual desolation upon 
 this great desert. Irrigation, as in Utah, cannot remedy its bar- 
 renness, because the adjacent mountains do not furnish a supply 
 of water. If Sahara, with its sands, were in the same place, it 
 would not prove a more effectual barrier to emigration and agri- 
 culture. We may therefore anticipate, before the advent of 
 another generation, a refluent tide of emigrants to the old home- 
 steads of New Hampshire. The war of Western farmers upon 
 the railroads confirms this opinion. If three fourths of the 
 value of corn in the Eastern markets are consumed in freight, 
 the producers will prefer to raise the crops, even at an increased 
 expense, in the regions where they are consumed. Good farms 
 and comfortable dwellings, now unoccupied, await the returning 
 prodigals ; for the seventy-eight thousand farmers of 1840 have 
 diminished to forty-six thousand five hundred and seventy-three 
 in 1870, though nearly twenty-four thousand were added to the 
 population during the same period. 
 
 New England has been justly styled the "brain" of the coun- 
 try. The enterprise that has formed states, churches, schools 
 and colleges in the West, the energy that has transformed deserts 
 into cultivated fields, reared cities and bound the continent to- 
 gether by iron rails, originated among the bleak hills of the 
 northeastern portion of the continent. 
 
 New Hampshire has contributed its full share both of brawn 
 and brain to these magnificent results. Though her staff of la- 
 borers has been diminished by the repeated conscriptions of new 
 states, yet, during the thirty years preceding the Rebellion the 
 wealth of the state was doubled. Every man had a competency 
 and pauperism was almost unknown. Notwithstanding the heavy 
 burdens which the war has imposed upon the productive in- 
 dustry of the state, the people are still prosperous and happy. 
 Nearly two thousand years ago Roman agriculture had declined. 
 Augustus felt the insecurity of his throne without a thrifty rural
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 361 
 
 population to support it. He stimulated agriculture by legal 
 enactment, and invited Virgil to sing its pleasures and its prof- 
 its. The poet wrote his Georgics and kindled new enthusiasm 
 among all the wealthy farmers. His closing words are appro- 
 priate to us : 
 
 "Oh happy if he knew his happy state, 
 The man who, free from business and debate, 
 Receives his easy food from Nature's hand 
 And just returns of cultivated land." 
 
 More than forty years ago DeTocqueville visited this country. 
 He scanned our institutions with the eye of a philosopher. His 
 report was more candid and commendatory than that of any 
 other foreigner who has written concerning us. He was hope- 
 ful of the United States chiefly because of the general distribu- 
 tion of real estate among the inhabitants. " Every man," says 
 he "has a stake in the hedge." Almost every voter is a land- 
 owner. This is peculiarly true with reference to New Hamp- 
 shire, in which there are probably more owners of real estate 
 than in the whole of England. There the estates of earls or 
 dukes are larger than our counties. The nobles own the soil ; 
 the peasants till it. When the country is in peril the millions 
 have little patriotism ; for they have little to lose and nothing to 
 gain. Shelley in his ode to the men of England says : 
 
 "The seeds ye sow another reaps ; 
 The wealth ye find another keeps ; 
 The robes ye weave another wears; 
 The arms ye forge another bears." 
 
 With us the land-owners are the sovereigns. They love their 
 homes, whether on the hill or in the vale, and are ever ready at 
 their country's call to defend them. The patriot loves his home, 
 however "cribbed, cabined and confined" he may find his quar- 
 ters, for 
 
 "The smoke ascends 
 
 To Heaven as lightly from the cottage hearth 
 As from the haughty palace." 
 
 Our safety and prosperity depend upon this devotion to our 
 native soil. With contentment and industry, our farms will sup- 
 ply every reasonable want. An improved agriculture will en- 
 large our manufactures and commerce. "A threefold cord is 
 not easily broken." But if we intend to live in New Hampshire 
 and board at the West, we may at some unexpected crisis find 
 our supplies cut off. A single short crop in the new states 
 would bring gaunt famine to our doors. A combination of spec- 
 ulators may, at any time, raise the price of fiouP beyond the 
 means of the poor. The railroad kings can, at their pleasure, 
 produce the same result, by exorbitant freights. But the New 
 Hampshire farmer who raises the wheat and corn that supply 
 his table, who feeds his own domestic animals, "drives his own
 
 362 HISTORY OF 
 
 team afield," rides in his own carriage, reads his own books, 
 supports his own church and school, and represents his own 
 town, is independent of them all. No rich broker can lock up 
 his gold ; no speculator can withhold his supplies ; no railroad 
 king can dole out his rations ; no aristocratic millionaire can 
 take his children's bread and cast it to dogs; no scheming 
 politician can command his vote. He is every inch a man, "in 
 body, mind and estate." Let us thank God that we have "a 
 goodly heritage," where, with honest toil and contented minds, 
 we may be healthful, hopeful, happy and prosperous. Truly 
 New Hampshire is a good state to live in. 
 
 CHAPTER CIV. 
 
 THE COMMERCE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 The first settlers of New Hampshire came to trade, mine, fish 
 and plant ; but commerce took precedence of agriculture. Ships 
 were essential to the existence of the first settlers. Their pro- 
 visions were imported in them ; the products of their industry 
 and trade were exported in them. For the first hundred years 
 of the existence of the state, many large fortunes were acquired 
 by merchandise. The provincial governors and the early aris- 
 tocracy were merchants. Portsmouth, the chief maritime town 
 in the state, was for nearly a century the seat of government 
 and the centre of influence. From 1775 to 1807, the legislature 
 was itinerant, meeting at Portsmouth, Exeter, Concord and Hop- 
 kinton, as it was deemed most convenient to the members. One 
 session was held in each of the following towns Dover, Amherst, 
 Charlestown and Hanover. Since 1807, Concord has by general 
 consent been regarded as the seat of government. Portsmouth, 
 being the chief political and commercial town in the state, gave 
 tone to society and direction to legislation. The earliest exports 
 from the state consisted of fish, lumber, turpentine, peltry, sas- 
 safras, provisions and live stock. From the beginning of the 
 present century to 1807, the annual imports of Portsmouth 
 amounted to .^bout $800,000 ; its exports during the same time 
 averaged nearly $700,000 per annum. The encroachments of 
 France and England upon American commerce and the embargo 
 and non-intercourse acts of our own country nearly ruined the 
 trade of Portsmouth. Besides a small coasting business, the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 363 
 
 West Indies and Great Britain engrossed most of the commerce 
 of New Hampshire. 
 
 Ship-building also occupied a large number of men dwelling 
 on the banks of the Piscataqua ; but the din of war drowned 
 the " hum of business " and mechanics left the dock for the 
 deck and manned rather than built ships. Portsmouth has never 
 recovered her commercial prosperity. Her imports, in 1821, 
 amounted to $333,986; in 1834, $117,932; in 1840, $115,678; 
 in 1850, $19,998; in 1860, $16,920, which was scarcely more 
 than one fiftieth of its imports in 1807. Her exports have been 
 far less than her imports. Mr. Brewster in his " Rambles about 
 Portsmouth," says : 
 
 "At the present day we do not see the busy wharves, the fleets 
 of West Indiamen, the great piles of bags of coffee, and the 
 acres of hogsheads of molasses which we used to see ; nor do 
 we see Water street crowded with sailors, and the piles of lum- 
 ber and cases of fish going on board the West Indiamen for 
 uses in the tropics. But if that day is gone by, we have other 
 occupations, and the old town seems as bright and handsome 
 as ever." 
 
 The following description of the commerce of Portsmouth at 
 the present day, is from the pen of a distinguished gentleman of 
 that city, to whom I am indebted for other valuable suggestions : 
 
 " I find from the custom-house books, that the direct duties 
 from imports into this port were for 1869, $15,133.06; 1870, 
 $27,498.50; 1871, $46,635.71 ; 1872, $12,721.60; 1873, $7,754.- 
 47 ; 1874, $5,671.95. In the two latter years almost all of this 
 was from coal ; a cargo of iron is a rara avis indeed, and one 
 cargo of salt yearly would be a full average. The fishery is the 
 only maritime business which can be said to flourish here, unless 
 the very large amounts of coal from Pennsylvania for distribu- 
 tion by rail to the interior can be called such." 
 
 Following is a statement of duties received at the port of 
 Portsmouth, from 1840 to 1870, inclusive, from the records of 
 the Custom House : 
 
 1840. . 
 
 53,056 
 
 1846. 
 
 9,986 
 
 1851. 
 
 I9,i97 
 
 1856. 
 
 10,378 
 
 1861. 
 
 5,326 
 
 1866. 
 
 5>4i5 
 
 1841. . 
 
 40,702 
 
 1847. 
 
 8,749 
 
 1852. 
 
 25,23 
 
 1857- 
 
 8,216 
 
 1862. 
 
 10,626 
 
 1867. 
 
 8,361 
 
 1842.. 
 
 22,931 
 
 1848- 
 
 16,563 
 
 1853- 
 
 10,842 
 
 1858. 
 
 4,640 
 
 1863. 
 
 4,805 
 
 1868. 
 
 12,464 
 
 1843.. 
 
 '5,757 
 
 1849. 
 
 26,862 
 
 1854' 
 
 13,027 
 
 1859. 
 
 5,651 
 
 1864. 
 
 5,365 
 
 1869. 
 
 12,498 
 
 1844. . 
 
 16,932 
 
 1850. 
 
 15,198 
 
 1855. 
 
 12,426 
 
 1860. 
 
 3,i32 
 
 1865. 
 
 3,187 
 
 1870. 
 
 27,498 
 
 1845.. 
 
 8,373 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 NOTE. Dr. Dwight, in his Travels, gives the following schedule of duties on imported goods 
 from 1801 to 1810: 1801, $165,614; 1802, $154,087; 1804, $210,410; 1806, #222,596; 1808, 
 $61,231; 1810, $61,464.
 
 364 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER CV. 
 
 THE PRESS. 
 
 In the ancient republics, the actor and orator enlightened the 
 citizens on all matters pertaining to politics and morals. Libra- 
 ries were few and small. Among private citizens only the wealthy 
 and learned owned manuscripts. Hence Dr. Johnson, in his 
 dogmatic style, said to Sir Adam Ferguson, "Sir, the boasted 
 Athenians were barbarians. The masses of every people must 
 be barbarians where there is no printing." In more recent 
 times, Wendell Phillips describes the power of the press in still 
 more exaggerated language. He says : 
 
 " It is a momentous truth that the millions have no literature, no school, 
 and almost no pulpiti but the press. Not one in ten reads books; but every 
 one of us, except the very few helpless poor, poisons himself every day with 
 a newspaper. It is parent, school, college, pulpit, theatre, example, coun- 
 selor, all in one. Every drop of our blood is colored by it. Let me make 
 the newspapers, and I care not who makes the religion or the laws." 
 
 Prior to the Revolutionary war, less than a score of news- 
 papers were published in the United States. They had been in 
 existence only two centuries in England, and had not then be- 
 come the fourth estate in the realm. The press was still under 
 censorship, and papers were suppressed and their publishers im- 
 prisoned for criticising public men and measures. During the 
 reign of George IV., Leigh Hunt was imprisoned a year for 
 printing something derogatory to the character of "the first gen- 
 tleman in Europe," as that heartless libertine was styled by his 
 admirers. In 1776, the entire issues of the newspaper presses 
 in America would not probably equal the circulation of some of 
 our city dailies. The papers of that day contained little original 
 matter. An editor was not necessarily a writer of leaders, giv- 
 ing tone and direction to public opinion, but a mere compiler of 
 readable articles from books, or the editor and critic of commu- 
 nications furnished by contributors. The movements of Euro- 
 pean monarchs and generals were chronicled with scrupulous 
 fidelity. The great tides of public opinion abroad were sup- 
 posed to determine the slight ripples that washed the American 
 shores. The speeches of English and French orators were often 
 reprinted in full. 
 
 As early as 1756 Daniel Fowle established a weekly paper 
 in Portsmouth, called the New Hampshire Gazette. It is said
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 365 
 
 that he had suffered imprisonment in Massachusetts for his fear- 
 less criticism of the official acts of the colonial government. 
 Those Puritan magnates did not allow their decrees to be ques- 
 tioned. The Gazette was a small sheet filled with the latest 
 news from England, with a few local paragraphs. Colonial top- 
 ics were sometimes introduced ; and during the Indian wars, the 
 sufferings of the frontier towns were faithfully chronicled. At the 
 present day we look with wonder upon the frequent advertise- 
 ments of fugitive slaves. It seems that the colored man was less 
 contented under Puritan than under Southern masters. Slavery 
 was abolished in New Hampshire in 1784; then apprentices be- 
 came estrays. Mr. Fowle printed the Gazette for thirty years. 
 Its circulation, while he owned it, never exceeded five hundred 
 copies. This first child of the American press* in our state, this 
 first heir of Mr. Fowle's invention, still exists in the form of a 
 double sheet, rich in materials and widely circulated. 
 
 After the close of the Revolutionary war papers were pub- 
 lished in several of the leading towns of the state, but they 
 soon failed for want of patronage. The people were too illiterate 
 to prize good reading and too poor to purchase it. In 1790, 
 George Hough issued the Concord Herald. It was a small 
 sheet containing a few well selected articles and some local news. 
 It lacked editorial ability and never became a power in the state. 
 After the beginning of the nineteenth century, when the people 
 had become more intelligent and prosperous, the political press 
 assumed greater importance and exerted a broader influence. In 
 1809, Isaac Hill purchased the New Hampshire Patriot, which 
 had been published for six months by William Hoitt. Mr. Hill 
 introduced a new era in journalism. He was bold and defiant, 
 a man of decided opinions, advocating them with uncommon 
 ability and rather provoking than shunning opposition. He 
 became the champion of the democratic party and the uncom- 
 promising foe of the federalists. During the second war with 
 England party spirit became almost ferocious and party feuds 
 irreconcilable. Since that day the utterances of the press have 
 been more pointed, personal and incisive. The men of to-day 
 are not satisfied with calm, dignified essays, such as in the last 
 century appeared over the names of Junius, Brutus and Cato in 
 New Hampshire papers. A competent critic thus characterizes 
 the productions of the two periods : 
 
 "Turning over the old files of the Portsmouth Gazette, Keene Sentinel and 
 
 *The first press in Cambridge was set up in 1638. The first thing printed was the Free- 
 man's Oath; the second an almanac, and in 1640 the Bay Psalm Cook. The first press in 
 Pennsylvania was established in 1656, four years after Penn's arrival. Presses appeared in 
 the following order: in New York, 1693; at New London, Conn., 1709; at Newport, R. I., 
 1714; at Annapolis, Delaware, 1726; at Charleston, S. C., in 1730; at Newbern, N. C., 1757; 
 at Savannah, Ga., 1762 ; in Maine in 1730. At the time of the Revolution there were about 
 forty presses in the United States.
 
 366 HISTORY OF 
 
 Amhcrst Cabinet, you look in vain for the fierce invective, stinging person- 
 ality, the tart reply and the dexterous argument of more recent journalism. 
 Yet the press of sixty years ago was the product and reflection of its own 
 times. It gave way to the hardier and more versatile journals as untutored 
 labor yields to scientific skill. It left an unblemished name. It had hurt no 
 man's feelings; it had injured no man's reputation. Like the good Athenian 
 it might claim for its epitaph, that no citizen had worn mourning on its ac- 
 count. Pleasant be its memory ! " 
 
 About fifty public journals are now published in New Hamp- 
 shire. The wide-spread demand for information has called in 
 the aid of science and invention to facilitate the art of printing. 
 The presses used a century ago would now be a burden to the 
 owner. The Columbian press, invented by George Clymer of 
 Philadelphia, in 1818, was in its day an exceedingly valuable aid 
 to printers. More recently the powerful cylinder presses con- 
 structed by Richard M. Hoe of New York enable publishers to 
 multiply books and papers as fast as the reading public demand 
 them. " By the cylinder press, worked by steam, in connection 
 with the stereotype process, as many as forty thousand impres- 
 sions of a newspaper can be taken in an hour." 
 
 CHAPTER CVI. 
 
 BANKS. 
 
 Political economists find it a very difficult portion of their 
 work to define such terms as Wealth, Value, Currency, Money, 
 Credit and Capital. Whole volumes have been written on these 
 words alone. Adam Smith's definition of wealth, as "the pro- 
 duce of land and labor," is now repudiated ; for land itself is 
 wealth. In the city of London, an acre of land varies in value 
 from fifty thousand to ten millions of dollars, exclusive of build- 
 ings. In the midland counties of England an oak, the natural 
 growth of the soil, is sometimes worth three hundred dollars 
 upon the stump. More recent authors, therefore, return to the 
 oldest definition of wealth on record, as given by Aristotle. He 
 says : "And we call wealth everything whose value is measured 
 by money." The criterion of wealth is exchangeability. Any- 
 thing material or immaterial has value which can be bought and 
 sold. Coined money alone has a permanent value, because it is 
 exchangeable among all persons, at all times and in all places 
 in the same country. "Gold and silver," says Burke, "represent 
 the lasting conventional credit of mankind." Credit, in the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 367 
 
 form of debts due from individuals or corporations, has a com- 
 mercial value, owing to the confidence or belief which business 
 men entertain that the instruments of credit, notes and bills, 
 may be exchanged for money or commodities. Paper money 
 rests on the same basis ; with loss of confidence comes depreci- 
 ation. "Credit," says Mr. Webster, is to money what money is 
 to commodities ;" consequently credit is capital. Mr. Macleod 
 says : "A banker is a trader who buys money, or money and 
 debts, by creating other debts ;" and " banks are shops" where 
 bankers do their business. 
 
 It has been the prevailing belief for centuries, that the word 
 bank is derived from the Italian banco, a bench or table, because 
 the Italian money dealers kept their money piled on benches or 
 tables in the sight of customers ; and that a bankrupt was one 
 whose bench w'as broken ("banco rotto") and the owner expelled 
 from the fraternity. A very different etymology is now current. 
 Muratori says that the Italian banca or banco is of Gothic origin. 
 It comes from "banck," a heap or mound. This was metaphori- 
 cally applied to a common fund formed by the contributions of a 
 company. A bank, then, is literally "a pile of money." The 
 Venetians called the forced loan made by the government to pay 
 the public debt in 1171, a "Banco" or "Monte." The latter 
 word is from the Latin "mons" a mountain. Writers in the 
 1 7th century use the "mons" for bank, as "Mons Negotionis," a 
 bank of trade. The first bankers in Venice were two Jews, who 
 obtained leave of the senate to deal in securities and A. D. 1400. 
 The Bank of Venice dates only from 1587. 
 
 Mr. Macleod in his "Theory and Practice of Banking," says : 
 "The business which is technically called banking seems to have 
 been invented by the Romans. It is true that there were abund- 
 ance of money dealers at Athens and other places, but their 
 business seems, as far as we can discover, to have been more 
 analogous to that of those persons we call money scriveners and 
 bill-discounters than of those whom we call bankers." "The in- 
 vention of bank notes is due to the Chinese, A. D. 807." The 
 same author says that "banking, in the modern sense of that 
 word, had no existence in England before the year 1640." Prior 
 to that date, goldsmiths bought and sold promissory notes and 
 bills of exchange on their own credit, doing business sometimes 
 many fold greater than the value of their assets or capital. 
 
 Mr. Hamilton, in report on the expediency of establishing a 
 national bank, gives the American theory of banking as fol- 
 lows : "The following are among the principal advantages of a 
 bank : First, the augmentation of the active or productive capi- 
 tal of a country. * * * It is a well-established fact 
 that banks in good credit can circulate a far greater sum than
 
 368 HISTORY OF 
 
 the actual quantum of their capital in gold and silver. * * 
 This faculty is produced in various ways : ist, A great portion 
 of the notes which are issued and pass current as cash are in- 
 definitely suspended in circulation from the confidence which 
 each holder has that he can at any moment turn them into gold 
 and silver. 2d, Every loan which a bank makes is, in its first 
 shape, a credit given to the borrower on its books, the amount of 
 which it stands ready to pay, either in its own notes, or gold, or 
 silver, at his option. But in a great number of cases no actual 
 payment is made in either. * * * The same circumstances 
 illustrate the truth of the position, that it is one of the proper- 
 ties of banks to increase the active capital of a country. * * * 
 This additional employment given to money, and the faculty of 
 a bank to lend and circulate a greater sum than the amount in 
 coin, are, to all the purposes of trade and industry, an absolute 
 increase of capital. Purchases and undertakings in general can 
 be carried on by any given sum of bank paper as effectually as 
 by an equal sum of gold and silver, and thus, by contributing to 
 enlarge the mass of industrious and commercial enterprises, 
 banks become nurseries of national wealth, a consequence as -sat- 
 isfactorily verified by experience as it is clearly deducible in 
 theory." 
 
 The first bank in New Hampshire was established at Ports- 
 mouth, in 1792, when the population of the state was estimated 
 at one hundred and fifty-three thousand, four hundred and 
 twenty-six. Its capital was one hundred and sixty thousand dol- 
 lars. This sum was deemed adequate to the pecuniary demands 
 of that age. 
 
 In 1863, with double the population of 1792, New Hampshire 
 had fifty-two banks with an aggregate capital of $4,678,700 ; 
 .loans amounting to $8,742,668 and a circulation in bills of $4,- 
 192,434. The fictitious value of the bank credit of that day 
 was nearly three times as great as the entire capital of all the 
 banks. The business transactions in 1863, must have been a 
 hundred fold greater than in 1792, with one half as many people. 
 
 In 1874 there were forty-three national banks in New Hamp- 
 shire, with an aggregate capital of $5,315,000, with sixty-eight 
 "savings banks," holding from 96,938 depositors, $30,214,585. 
 These deposits alone, apart from the national banks, represent a 
 business capital twenty times as large as the entire loans and 
 bills of the banks fifty years ago. 
 
 What is the office of a Bank ? 
 
 The above question was proposed to Hon. George B. Chandler, 
 Cashier of the Amoskeag National Bank of Manchester ; and 
 he returned the following answer : 
 
 "A bank is the agent through which balances in trade or com-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 369 
 
 merce are adjusted between one individual and another, one 
 community and another or one country and another. In the 
 early periods of the world, trade or commerce was carried on 
 only upon the exchange or barter plan, one tribe or community 
 parting with their superabundance, to receive their needs from 
 the superabundance of a neighboring tribe or community, and 
 any balance due was usually paid by giving from the flocks or 
 herds of the fields. As people multiplied upon the face of the 
 earth, this mode of conducting trade became too cumbersome ; 
 so, after the discovery of the precious metals and stones and 
 placing a value upon them, instead of paying a given number of 
 sheep or oxen, a certain amount of gold, silver or precious 
 stones was used ; therefore the merchant was required to have 
 grains or pieces of gold or silver about him, which, by the aid 
 of balances or scales he paid to his creditor in satisfaction of 
 demands against him. 
 
 The population and commerce of the world were so limited, 
 that down to the time of Christ but little advance had been 
 made upon this mode of effecting exchanges or paying balances, 
 except that an impress had been put upon pieces of gold and 
 silver, and a value other than by weight had been fixed upon 
 each piece, so that instead of giving a certain weight, people 
 could compute and pay a given sum or value' in the same way it 
 can be done to-day. In a preceding page you state that ' banks 
 in the modern sense did not exist in England until 1640.' Up to 
 about that time business had principally been done by transport- 
 ing vast sums of gold and silver from one community or coun- 
 try to another, and that people were considered most wealthy 
 to whom gold was constantly being carried. But with the es- 
 tablishment of the bank, a change was wrought in the manner 
 of doing business, which has been constantly developing until 
 the banking system of to-day stands forth a representative of 
 wealth, enterprise, prosperity and success, and, is it too much to 
 say, of the happiness of the people. 
 
 ' What is the office of the bank ' of to-day ? 
 
 i st. To concentrate capital in sufficient amounts to give the 
 public confidence in its issues of paper, whether in the form of 
 circulating notes or drafts of exchange. Under the existing 
 national bank system, the community receives, and justly too 
 (as each bank note has a deposit of government bonds behind it), 
 the national bank note as the representative in value of the 
 amount expressed upon its face. That the drafts of exchange 
 issued by any well managed bank are good beyond a reasonable 
 doubt is also true, as the entire capital of a bank must be lost 
 before a loss can occur upon a bill of exchange drawn by it. 
 In these days and in this country very few people realize the 
 
 24
 
 370 HISTORY OF 
 
 amount of business transacted balances paid by means of 
 these 'Bank Drafts' or 'Bills of Exchange.' 
 
 2d. By having a concentrated capital it thereby guarantees to 
 the business public in the midst of which it is located a safe 
 place of deposit for their ready funds, and furnishes an agency 
 whereon it may draw its checks and thus, again, do business - 
 through another form of paper the depositor's check upon his 
 bank. 
 
 3d. By having a capital and deposit it is enabled to assist 
 those who may at times wish to become borrowers, and, in cities 
 where a bank has a prosperous and well-managed business with 
 large deposits, it is not unusual to find one-half or two-thirds of 
 its deposits represented by 'notes' or 'bills receivable' and still 
 the bank has no trouble (except in times of panic) in paying 
 all demands made by depositors. 
 
 Perhaps an illustration of the practical workings of a bank 
 may serve to show that the great motive powers which enable 
 this age to stand in bold relief above and in advance of all oth- 
 ers are but few, and while the printing-press, railroad, steam- 
 ship telegraph and postal system are constantly elevating, enlarg- 
 ing, educating and encouraging our people, the 'banks' hold no 
 second rank or questioned position as public benefactors. 
 
 See how the merchant of to-day transacts his business so far 
 as his money is concerned. He is constantly exchanging his 
 goods for paper representatives of value bank notes . Before 
 the close of bank hours each day he gathers up his paper money, 
 deposits it in the bank (every merchant has a bank account), 
 thus transferring his paper representatives of value into a credit 
 upon the books of the bank. His great solicitude is to be able 
 always to have a good credit in his bank. When bills fall due 
 he pays them very easily by simply filling a check upon his bank 
 for the amount of any demand against him, signing it, and 
 among honorable dealers this evidence of a value in the bank 
 is accepted as readily as are the strongest bank checks made by 
 the largest dealers. 
 
 To-day in all large mercantile houses the total receipts of 
 money pass into the hands of one person, ' the cashier, ' and are 
 by him deposited in the bank to be drawn therefrom upon checks 
 as above indicated. The practice prevails of merchants in the 
 country paying the jobber in the large cities by sending his per- 
 sonal check and requesting and receiving a receipted bill by 
 return mail. 
 
 Another illustration, showing the part the bank performs in the 
 business of to-day : A is a merchant in Manchester, B is a mil- 
 ler in St. Louis ; No. i is a bank in St. Louis, No. 2 is a bank in 
 Manchester, No. 3 is a bank in New York. A finds he wants a
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 371 
 
 lot of XX flour at once. He accordingly on his way home at 
 night sends B a telegraphic despatch for the same. Next morn- 
 ing upon going to the mill in St. Louis, B finds the telegraphic 
 order. Understanding the immediate necessity he soon has the 
 flour on the way to the railway station for shipment. Within 
 two hours it is loaded into a car and a receipt given ( ' Bill of 
 Lading ' ) stating that one hundred barrels of XX flour had been 
 received to be shipped to A of Manchester, N. H. Upon re- 
 ceipt of this bill of lading B returns to his office, makes a draft 
 upon A at Manchester, attaches the bill of freight and with these 
 documents repairs to his bank and requests draft to be forwarded 
 without delay for collection. No. i, the bank, credits miller B 
 with the draft, saving only a small charge for expense of collec- 
 tion, and during the day prepares his letter to No. 2, enclosing 
 the draft with the request that it be collected and proceeds re- 
 mitted to No. 3 in New York for credit of No. i. Night find 
 both flour and draft on their way to Manchester, where draft will 
 arrive in about thirty-six hours. No. 2 bank in Manchester, 
 upon receiving it, at once sends messenger to A, who, knowing 
 that the receipt accompanying the draft will hold the flour and 
 save him from its loss, at once proceeds to draw his check against 
 his bank deposit for amount, which No. 2 bank at once accepts, 
 draws its own bill of exchange and remits to No. 3 in New York, 
 as requested, for the credit of No. i in St. Louis. All this may 
 be accomplished within about five days. The miller transfers his 
 value from flour in his mill to a credit in his bank. The mer- 
 chant transfers his bank balance into flour which he knows will 
 reach him within a few days. The St. Louis bank becomes in- 
 debted to the miller by the amount of his credit, but then again 
 it has a credit in New York of a like amount, while the bank in 
 Manchester pays its depositor, the merchant, by a transfer of 
 the value of the flour from its correspondent in New York to 
 No. 3, the correspondent of the St. Louis bank No. i. All this 
 adjustment of balances is made without the moving of a dollar 
 in value, only as it is done through the medium of ' paper ex- 
 change.' The farmer exchanges his products, which have an in- 
 trinsic value, for the paper representative bank notes with 
 which he procures his needed supplies, makes for himself a credit 
 in the bank, or exchanges again for lands, buildings, or other 
 forms of value. 
 
 The man of leisure desiring to pass some time in a foreign 
 country does not go loaded down with gold, but instead makes 
 his deposit in some bank doing a foreign exchange business, 
 receiving a letter of credit nothing in fact but a paper repres- 
 entative of his credit in the bank and with this he is enabled to 
 draw in almost any of the large cities of Europe such sums of
 
 372 HISTORY OF 
 
 gold as he may need from time to time to defray expenses and is 
 not necessarily obliged to have gold to the extent of one hun- 
 dred dollars about his person. This is but another form of trans- 
 fer whereby the bank or banker in London, Paris or Berlin is 
 enabled to make aa advance upon a credit known to exist in a 
 bank in America. We fail to comprehend how the present vol- 
 ume of business of the country could possibly be transacted, 
 except through the agency of the bank with the aid of its paper 
 currency and exchange ; hence, as before remarked, we look upon 
 the bank as one of the great promoters of the business and in- 
 dustries of the people, and therefore among the most useful 
 institutions of the day." 
 
 CHAPTER CVII. 
 
 MANUFACTURES, ANCIENT AND MODERN. 
 
 The genius of invention traveled a long way in descending 
 from the summit of the pyramid of Cheops to the railroad that 
 has been built at its base, upon the banks of the Nile. Looking 
 backward along the track of by-gone ages, the distance is quite 
 as great from the dome of St. Peters to the Egyptian obelisk 
 that stands in the square before the church. When Augustus 
 brought that monolith to Rome, it was then very old ; it is older 
 now, and the events that have taken place under its shadow 
 would constitute the larger portion of the world's history. The 
 pyramid and the obelisk are monuments of power and oppres- 
 sion ; the church and the railroad are symbols of progress and 
 emancipation. It deserves notice that all the great works of 
 antiquity were reared for show and not for use. They exalted 
 the few and degraded the many. The creations of genius were 
 all of the same character. " The ancient philosophers," says 
 Macaulay, " did not neglect natural science ; but they did not cul- 
 tivate it for the purpose of increasing the power and ameliorating 
 the condition of man. The taint of barrenness has spread from 
 ethical to physical speculations. Seneca wrote largely on nat- 
 ural philosophy and magnified the importance of that study. 
 But why ? Not because it tended to assuage suffering, to multi- 
 ply the conveniences of life, to extend the empire of man over 
 the material world ; but solely because it tended to raise the 
 mind above low cares, to separate it from the body, to exercise
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 373 
 
 its subtlety in the solution of very obscure questions. Thus nat- 
 ural philosophy was considered in the light merely of a mental 
 exercise. It was made subsidiary to the art of disputation ; and 
 it consequently proved altogether barren of useful discoveries." 
 
 This taste, pervading the minds and hearts of the philosophers 
 of antiquity, promoted logic at the expense of physics ; and caus- 
 ed the fine arts to take precedence of the useful. Comfort, in 
 its modern sense, had no name to represent it in the classic 
 tongues ; and was not admitted into modern lexicons till the in- 
 ductive method of Bacon made utility the object of true science. 
 To us, the narrow, unlighted, unventilated dormitories of the 
 Greeks and Romans would be almost as repulsive as the cells 
 of a prison or the "cribbed, cabined and confined" sleeping 
 rooms of a Saratoga hotel. Their flowing dresses of undyed 
 wool, except the purple robes of nobles and monarchs, would 
 now be positively intolerable to business men. The Roman toga, 
 the characteristic dress of the world's conquerors, was the very 
 symbol of idleness. Says DeQuincey, " Just figure to yourself 
 the picture of a hard-working man with horny hands, like our 
 hedgers, ditchers, weavers and porters, setting to work on the 
 high road in that vast sweeping robe, filling with a strong gale 
 like the mainsail of a frigate." In fact slaves and common la- 
 borers were not allowed to wear that badge of rank ; they wore 
 the tunic, made like a farmer's long frock, and this was their 
 only dress. The wealthy Romans were often carried by slaves 
 in a lectica or litter resembling the oriental palanquin. They 
 rode in carriages without springs, ate without knives and forks 
 and lived in houses without glass or chimneys. 
 
 The choicest works of art in Rome to-day have been taken 
 from the tombs of the Etruscans, whose origin is still an unsolved 
 enigma. Some of the most interesting remains of this wonder- 
 ful people have been disinterred by Lucien Bonaparte, brother 
 of Napoleon the Great. About the year 1812, he purchased of 
 the Pope the principality of Canino, from which he received his 
 title of Prince of Canino. He proceeded to explore his newly 
 acquired possessions and was very successful in his researches. 
 " Some of the most superb vases in the world were excavated by 
 him, besides gold and jeweled ornaments of the most exquisite 
 workmanship, and bronze images, mirrors and utensils of great 
 variety and beauty." These were sold to private collectors for 
 various European museums. It is said that the Princess of 
 Canino has appeared at the fetes of ambassadors in Rome, with 
 a parure of Etruscan jewelry which was the envy of every belle 
 and excelled the chefs d'ceuvres of Paris and Vienna, making the 
 wearer literally the cynosure of all eyes. 
 
 To what strange mutations is even the kingdom of the dead'
 
 374 HISTORY OF 
 
 subject ! The princesses of Etruria were consigned to their last 
 resting places, more than three thousand years ago, with all the 
 pomp and ceremony of regal woe. The state from its guarded 
 coffers, or private affection from its hoarded treasures, conse- 
 crated the most precious ornaments to the memory of the de- 
 ceased. These were laid away in rock hewn sepulchres or in 
 tombs built as if for eternity, of enduring masonry ; and their 
 doors were closed against all the agencies which the violence or 
 avarice of those times might employ. They remained hermeti- 
 cally sealed for thousands of years, amid all the changes of states 
 and kingdoms. Hostile armies marched over them. Peaceful 
 peasants gathered successive harvests from the soil that was 
 heaped upon them. No wild beast has found a cleft in the rock 
 as a place of entrance. Not even a mole or a cricket had dis- 
 turbed the repose of the royal sleepers. At length avarice, keen- 
 scented avarice, like the bending willow in the hand of the ma- 
 gician, seeking for living springs beneath the earth, inclines wist- 
 fully toward the buried treasure which affection or pride in former 
 years devoted to departed greatness. Rude laborers ply the 
 spade and the pick to the yielding mound, till the iron clinks 
 upon the ponderous roof. Violence wrests the heavy door from 
 its hinges and the robbers enter and despoil the dead of their 
 ornaments. Modern princes lavish their money upon these 
 antique works of art, and modern princesses rejoice to wear the 
 decorations which have hung for centuries about the corpses of 
 ladies of ancient regal lines whose names and genealogies have 
 perished. 
 
 The Romans were not remarkable for their originality in any 
 thing. The fine arts flourished among them by robbery; the 
 useful arts by necessity ; jurisprudence by experience ; literature 
 by imitation ; religion by persecution. Inventions and discover- 
 ies were rare ; they were constant borrowers. They plundered 
 the nations of the whole known world to adorn their ill-sited 
 city. Their hoarded treasures, intellectual and material, which 
 the Northern barbarians appropriated in the fifth century, re- 
 mained unimproved for a thousand years. Even to this day 
 in Southern Europe, the rude implements of husbandry and 
 manufactures, used by the Romans in the days of Cato and 
 Columella, are still in vogue. While modern institutions were 
 slowly taking shape, the human mind rested and the world 
 stood still ! 
 
 In the middle ages the dialectics and metaphysics of Aristotle 
 became mere logomachy, and words and forms instead of thought 
 and reason occupied learned men. The mariner's compass was 
 known but not used. The thermometer, barometer and telescope 
 were not yet invented. Ship-building was a rude art and the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 375 
 
 geography of the sea was unwritten. Those great mechanical 
 agencies which have augmented the power of man a thousand 
 fold all belong to a later period. In the fourteenth and fifteenth 
 centuries, the principal arts in use were those of the armorer 
 and jeweler, the bead-maker and the costumer. The tourna- 
 ment and hunting claimed the chief attention of knights ; needle 
 work and conf ectionaries occupied the ladies ; while the wretched 
 peasants retired to their smoky, unglazed hovels to munch their 
 crusts of barley bread or gulp their homely pottage and retire to 
 sleep on mud floors with a log for a pillow and a bed of coarse 
 straw for a resting place. Human life was held very cheap, for 
 seventy thousand thieves were hung in the reign of Henry VIII. 
 
 Tradition says that the Romans introduced the manufacture 
 of woolen goods into England. The only mechanism employed 
 in Europe for weaving, for nearly eighteen hundred years of our 
 era, was the distaff, the spinning-wheel and the hand loom. 
 The Oriental world has not yet passed the Rubicon of modern 
 invention. The steam engine, the spinning-jenny and the power 
 loom have been the true moving powers of modern fleets and 
 armies, and the chief support of agriculture. These inventions 
 enable a boy or girl of fifteen years of age to do the work of 
 ten hand spinners and weavers. The first steam engine con- 
 structed for a cotton-mill was made by Mr. Watt in 1785. It 
 was used in Papplewick in Nottinghamshire. Four years later, 
 the use of the same power was first employed in Manchester. 
 Now there are fifty thousand boilers doing the work of a million 
 of men in that city. Dr. Cartwright's power loom was invented in 
 1787, but not used till 1801. How vast the progress of manufac- 
 tures in this century, during the life-time of men now living ! 
 
 Cotton was first mentioned in English history in 1641. Till 
 1773 no pure cotton goods were made. Prior to this date the 
 warp was linen and the weft cotton. The invention of the spin- 
 ning-jenny is ascribed to James Hargreaves, an illiterate but in- 
 genious mechanic, in 1767. Sir Richard Arkwright took out a 
 patent for spinning with rollers in 1769, involving the principles 
 of his predecessor, with improvements. That patent was after- 
 wards set aside. The subsequent improvements in the use of 
 steam, by Watt, and the invention of the cotton-gin, by Whitney, 
 in 1793, have multiplied cotton goods a thousand fold. In 
 1784, an American vessel with other lading brought eight bales 
 of cotton into Liverpool, which were seized by the custom-house 
 officer of that city as contraband, under the pretence that Ameri- 
 can soil nowhere produced cotton. As late as 1791 only two 
 million pounds were produced in the United States. In 1857 
 one million bales were imported into Liverpool from the United 
 States.
 
 376 HISTORY OF 
 
 Until the year 1825 English laws forbade inventors and 
 skilled mechanics to leave the realm. If they emigrated they 
 were constrained to go by stealth and to carry nothing but their 
 hands and brains to aid them in setting up manufactories in this 
 country. Since that date the laws have been somewhat relaxed 
 respecting inventors and their works. The first colonies in 
 America were forbidden to engage in manufactures. They 
 could not make a wool hat or a hob-nail. Ship-building was 
 allowed; and in 1741, New England had about one thousand 
 sail engaged in fishing and trading, all of home construction. 
 New Hampshire took a leading part in these transactions. The 
 province abounded in valuable timbers, the white and red oak, 
 the white and red pine, chestnut and other forest trees, which 
 were wrought into masts, spars and keels for exportation. The 
 largest vessels of war were built at Portsmouth as late as 1782. 
 In 1791, twenty ships were built on the Piscataqua; and of two 
 hundred and seventy-seven vessels which sailed out of Ports- 
 mouth harbor in that year, nearly seven eighths were of Amer- 
 ican workmanship. 
 
 The first saw-mill propelled by water in New England was 
 built by Portsmouth men in 1635, at Newichewannock, now Ber- 
 wick. The first corn-mills were driven by wind ; later in the 
 history of the colonies, by water. In the year 1800, Exeter 
 alone had ten corn-mills within its limits. New Ipswich has the 
 honor of erecting the first cotton-mill in New Hampshire, near 
 the beginning of this century. About the same date, four other 
 towns in the state erected cotton factories. In 1826 four hund- 
 red distinct buildings for the manufacture of cotton had been 
 built in the United States, averaging seven hundred spindles 
 each ; of these fifty belonged to New Hampshire, with about half 
 that number of woolen factories. From that day to the present, 
 the capital invested in the manufacture of cotton and woolen 
 goods exceeds that of any other species of industry in the state ; 
 and their products constitute more than one-half of the entire 
 income of the state from manufactures. The total of all prod- 
 ucts made by hands, tools and machinery in the state, is esti- 
 mated at $71,038,249. Of this sum $39,834,000 are from cotton 
 and woolen fabrics.* 
 
 The value of farm products, including betterments, is esti- 
 mated at less than twenty-three millions of dollars, which is 
 about one third part of the income from all the manufactures in 
 the state, though the number of laborers in each department is 
 nearly equal. Manufactures and mining employ forty-six thou- 
 sand five hundred and fifty-three persons ; agriculture, forty-six 
 thousand five hundred and seventy-three. About seventeen thou- 
 
 *These figures are taken from A. J. Fogg's Gazetteer of New Hampshire.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 377 
 
 sand are operatives in cotton and woolen mills. With about one 
 third the number of workmen and one-half as much capital as 
 the farmers, the factories yield nearly double the income of the 
 land. The value of farm products to each person employed is 
 about five hundred dollars ; the value of factory products to each 
 operative exceeds twenty-three hundred dollars ; but the risks of 
 the manufacturer are incomparably greater than those of the 
 farmer. 
 
 At the beginning of this century itinerant mechanics were 
 found in every town, who visited private families and made a 
 temporary home with them while their services were needed. 
 The carding, spinning and weaving were done in each home by 
 those whom king Alfred called the "spindle side of the house." 
 It was a good old Saxon custom to clothe the family in domes- 
 tic fabrics. During the first third of this century, the citizens of 
 New Hampshire were mostly farmers and mechanics with small 
 means, little ready money and very few artificial wants. They 
 were industrious, economical and contented; and it may be 
 doubted whether the population of to-day, with increased wealth 
 and wants, living at three times the expense of their fathers, 
 have at the same time secured greater rational enjoyments. 
 "Godliness with contentment is great gain." The possession of 
 these graces made our fathers rich in good works. Increase of 
 wealth has not brought improved morals. 
 
 The highest crime known to the law has been committed 
 twelve times in our state. The first execution for murder oc- 
 curred in 1739,* more than a century after the first settlements 
 were made. The most numerous crimes that now come before 
 our courts relate to the violations of the rights of property and 
 the marriage tie. When money was scarce and banks were few, 
 when private men loaned and honest men hired capital for in- 
 crease of business, the appropriation of the property of others 
 by theft, fraud or defalcation was rare. But since the surplus 
 funds of the people in national and savings banks have risen 
 from a few thousands to forty millions of dollars, the crimes 
 against property have greatly increased. When the population 
 of the country was chiefly found in the rural districts, the mar- 
 riage covenant was entered into for life and usually kept invio- 
 late. A divorce was as rare as a comet. Now, nearly one tenth 
 of all the marriages solemnized are broken by crime and sun- 
 dered by divorce. The simplicity and purity of country life have 
 been exchanged for the luxury and laxity of city life. The rail- 
 roads have made city and country almost identical in opinions, 
 fashions and morals. The markets and the expenses of living, 
 
 * It is now thought that Sarah Simpson and Penelope Kenny were innocent of the crime 
 laid to their charge.
 
 378 HISTORY OF 
 
 except in rents, have been equalized. Manufactories have con- 
 verted barren plains or rustic hamlets into populous cities. Fifty 
 years ago, the sandy plain where Manchester now stands could 
 hardly support half a dozen families. Now thirty thousand peo- 
 ple live, thrive and grow rich on the same soil. A local market 
 taxes the industry of surrounding towns to meet its demands. 
 Travelers by thousands now daily enter or leave the city, where, 
 in the days of the old stages, only a score rode in the public 
 coach. Society has been revolutionized by railroads and fac- 
 tories. The centres of population and business have been 
 changed. While the expenses of living have greatly increased, 
 the price of labor has been equally enhanced; so that now 
 money is more plenty in every man's pocket, and the state is 
 rapidly advancing in wealth and influence. 
 
 NOTE. The towns in New Hampshire where the principal cotton factories exist are : 
 Chesterfield, Claremont, Concord, Dover, Exeter, Hampton Falls, Holderness, Hooksett, 
 Hudson, Jaffrey, Laconia, Manchester, Mason, Milford, Nashua, Nelson, New Ipswich, 
 Newmarket, Pembroke, Peterborough, Pittsfield, Portsmouth, Salmon Falls, East Roches- 
 ter, Great Fails, Upper Gilmanton and North Weare. Woolen factories have been built in 
 Acworth, Ashuelotj Barnstead, Barrington, Bradford, Bristol, Campton, Claremontj Cor- 
 nish, Dover, Dublin, Emngham, Enfield, Epping, Fisherville, Franldin, Gilford, Gilsum, 
 Grafton, Henniker, Hillsborough, Hinsdale, Harrisville, Holderness, Hopkinton, Keene, 
 Laconia, Lake Village, Littleton, London, Manchester, Marlborough, Milford, Milton, New 
 Hampton, Newport, Northfield, Pelliam, Peterborough, Rochester, Salem. Sanbornton 
 Bridge, Somersworth, Stewartstown, Swanzey, Troy, Washington, Walpole, North Weare, 
 Wilmot, Wiltou, Windham and Wolfeborough. 
 
 CHAPTER CVIII. 
 
 RAILROADS. 
 WRITTEN BY HON. J. W. PATTERSON. 
 
 A general desire prevailed at the close of the Revolutionary 
 war to open and develop the rich territory stretching between 
 the Alleghanies and the Mississippi. But the experience of all 
 time proved that this vast domain could not be peopled until 
 some cheap outlet to the sea could be made for its prospective 
 products. At that time the only artificial channels of com- 
 merce, other than common roads, were canals. Hence, in obe- 
 dience to this wide-spread impulse to move westward, the Erie, 
 the Pennsylvania, the Chesapeake and Ohio, and the James river 
 and Kanawha canals were projected. The only one of these 
 ever completed is the Erie, and this was purely a state work. 
 Congress was applied to for an appropriation of eight million
 
 NKW HAMPSHIRE. 379 
 
 dollars, but the complications of the government with England 
 and the prospects of a war prevented its being made. The 
 canal was begun in 1817, and opened to Oswego in 1828. The 
 results were immediate, and have been grand beyond the antici- 
 pation of the most enthusiastic. At the opening of the canal 
 to Buffalo, in 1826, DeWitt Clinton, speaking in honor of the 
 event, yielded to his fancy, and prophesied that in fifty years 
 Buffalo, then an Indian trading town, and Chicago, a frontier 
 post, might each contain a population of a hundred thousand. 
 The prevision of Clinton even could not foresee the four hun- 
 dred thousand people who now throng Chicago, and the teem- 
 ing millions who have poured through the channels of trade into 
 the great valley to develop its resources and supply the markets 
 of the world. 
 
 At the end of the fiscal year 1866, this canal had paid into 
 the treasury of the state every dollar of its original cost, with a 
 surplus of $41,397,651. The entire value of the merchandise 
 transported on the Erie and Champlain canals the latter being 
 constructed in part from the earnings of the Erie up to 1872 
 amounted to $6,065,069,698. 
 
 The earlier development of the western and northwestern 
 states was largely due to this magnificent work, for it was the 
 only avenue for the transport of products to the sea-board until 
 about the year 1850. I think it impossible for us to over-esti- 
 mate the material and other results of this improvement. We 
 are apt to forget, when our eyes are filled with the claptraps of 
 the caucus, and our ears with the deceitful voices of the hustings, 
 how much we owe to the far-sighted statesmanship of the early 
 days of the republic. The ordinance of the i4th of July, 1787, 
 which provided that the "navigable waters leading into the Mis- 
 sissippi and the St. Lawrence, and the carrying places between 
 the same shall be common highways and forever free," will yet 
 be thought worthy to be engraved in enduring marble upon the 
 proudest of our temples of industry. 
 
 But the commerce between the interior and the Atlantic states 
 soon increased beyond the capabilities of these early channels 
 of trade. The rapid development of the unparalleled resources 
 of the West, for the last twenty years, has been due mainly to 
 the railways which private capital, reinforced by government aid, 
 has thrown forward into the unsettled public domain. 
 
 As early as 1630 railed tramways or railroads were introduced 
 as an improvement upon the best highways. These at first con- 
 sisted of a wooden trackway, laid upon an ordinary road to fa- 
 cilitate the transport of heavy laden wheeled vehicles, and were 
 used for the most part between the English mines and the 
 depots from which their products were shipped. Wooden rails
 
 380 HISTORY OF 
 
 having been in use for one hundred and fifty years, it occurred 
 to some one to lessen their friction by plating them with iron. 
 These tram-plates or flat rails, made at first of cast but later of 
 malleable iron, with a flange at one time on the inside and at 
 another on the outside, were in use till 1789, when the edge-rail 
 was substituted by Jessop and the flange transferred to the wheel. 
 
 The idea of employing the railroad for general purposes of 
 traffic was first suggested about this time. Watt, while studying 
 the properties and application of steam, had suggested the pos- 
 sibility of constructing steam carriages, and in 1782 Oliver 
 Evans of Philadelphia patented a steam wagon, the drawings 
 and specifications of which were sent to England. In 1784 
 Watt patented a non-condensing locomotive carriage. In 1802 
 Richard Trevithick patented a high-pressure locomotive engine, 
 but in attempting to use engines of the character first invented, 
 it was found that their wheels would slip round without advan- 
 cing. An effort was made to remedy this by a rack into which 
 worked a toothed wheel attached to the engine, somewhat like 
 the contrivance now used on the roads up the Rigi and Mount 
 Washington. The friction was too great and the plan was 
 abandoned. Improvements were made however by Robert Steph- 
 enson and others, and in 1822 the first locomotive engine was 
 substituted for horse power. 
 
 The first legislative act authorizing a public railroad was made 
 by parliament in 1801. It granted to a corporation in Surry 
 the right to build a tram-road nine miles long, but the first rail- 
 road coach used for the transportation of passengers was on the 
 road between Stockton and Darlington in 1825. This was worked 
 by horse power. The following year a French engineer, M. 
 Seguin, succeeded in substituting, to a limited extent, locomotive 
 for horse power. At this time the theory was that trains would 
 have to be moved by means of stationary engines placed at in- 
 tervals along the track, which would move the cars from station 
 to station by means of ropes. A deputation of the Liverpool 
 and Manchester company, as late as 1828, reported in favor of 
 stationary engines as a tractive power on their double track, then 
 approaching completion. But George Stephenson prevailed on 
 them to try his prize locomotive, " The Rocket," which on its 
 first trip attained a speed of twenty-nine miles an hour. From 
 this success Mr. Stephenson has been styled the " Father of the 
 Locomotive System." One of his engines, the "Robert Fulton," 
 was imported into the United States in 1831. 
 
 The first railway act in the United States was passed by the 
 legislature of Pennsylvania, March 31, 1823. This authorized 
 the construction of a road from Philadelphia to Columbia, but 
 was repealed because the grantees failed to execute the plan. A
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 381 
 
 second act was passed in the same state in 1826, incorporating 
 the Columbia, Lancaster and Philadelphia Railroad. This road 
 was completed at the expense of the commonwealth in 1834. It 
 was eighty-one and a half miles in length, and a magnificent 
 enterprise for that day, reflecting great honor upon the statesmen 
 who assumed the responsibility of its construction. 
 
 The first railroad actually built in the United States was in 
 Quincy, Mass., in 1826, to carry granite from the quarry to the 
 tide-waters of the Neponset river. It was only three miles long, 
 but, in coming years, the fact of its construction at that time 
 will add to the renown of the birthplace of the Quincys, the 
 Adamses and John Hancock. Two years later, on the fourth of 
 July, 1828, Charles Carroll of Carrolton, then over ninety years 
 of age, and the only survivor of the signers of the Declaration 
 of Independence, commenced the Baltimore and Ohio railroad 
 by laying a corner-stone amid suitable and imposing ceremonies. 
 On that occasion he said : " I consider this among the most 
 important acts of my life, second only to my signing the Declar- 
 ation of Independence, if even second to that." 
 
 When we reflect upon the changes which forty years of rail- 
 road transportation have wrought upon our country and the 
 world, it is not too much to say, that 
 
 "The sunset of life gave him mystical lore, 
 And coming events cast their shadows before." 
 
 The same year the South Carolina or Charleston and Ham- 
 burg Railroad was constructed, the first road in the world " built 
 expressly for locomotive power, for general freight and passen- 
 ger business." The first locomotive constructed in the United 
 States was built for this road at the West Point foundry in 1830. 
 Since then the decennial increase of railroad mileage in the 
 United States has been constant and rapid. There were in 1827, 
 3 miles open; 1831, 131 miles; 1841,3,877 miles; 1851, 11,027 
 miles; 1861, 31,769 miles; 1871, 62,647 miles; 1874, 71,500 
 miles. Of this increase New Hampshire has enjoyed its full 
 proportion. 
 
 The relief of the Granite State, as seen from the old stage- 
 coach creeping slowly up its hillsides or descending swiftly into 
 its valleys, would seem to exclude railroads from its surface. 
 But as we hear the pant and tramp of the iron steeds and wit- 
 ness the flight of their ponderous cars through the towns and 
 villages of our rugged state, our incredulity is humbled, and we 
 are ready to believe that "Every valley shall be exalted, and 
 every mountain shall be made low ; and the crooked shall be 
 made straight and the rough places plain." 
 
 A thousand miles of railroad now bring the facilities of travel 
 and of trade to almost every hamlet and farm within the bor-
 
 382 HISTORY OF 
 
 ders of a territory over which it was thought, at a time within 
 the memory of many now living, to be both impossible and im- 
 politic to stretch this net-work of internal commerce. Thirty-two 
 different roads, owned and managed by as many corporate com- 
 panies, have been constructed and equipped at a cost of more 
 than thirty millions of dollars. The original stockholders of 
 these roads have in some instances incurred heavy losses from 
 their construction, but the state, and especially those living along 
 their line, have gained from them profits and advantages that, on 
 the whole, more than compensate for all losses. 
 
 Time saved to industry is money made, for it increases pro- 
 duction and retrenches expense. A journey from the interior of 
 our state to Boston in the olden time consumed three days. 
 Now that city may be reached from our northern boundary in a 
 single day, and from the middle and southern portions in a few 
 hours. Thus markets have been opened and equalized, and all 
 brought daily to our doors. The merchant and the laborer of 
 the city may now dwell in the fresh and healthful country, and 
 more than save, in rents and living, his cost of travel. Frequent 
 exchanges have multiplied wants, industries and profits, and 
 added to the general comfort and welfare of society. 
 
 The influence of railroads is realized when we consider how 
 they have changed the centres of population and given to the 
 cities and villages along their lines a political and pecuniary 
 power above the country towns. Wealth, like water, gravitates 
 to the falls, and helps to create the busy hum of spindles, looms 
 and hammers, the symbols of public prosperity ; but if the fall 
 lies beyond the reach of the railroad, its power is left to waste 
 itself in noise and run to the sea unutilized. 
 
 These advantages are not limited, however, to an increase of 
 material prosperity. New methods of transit exert an intellect- 
 ual and moral influence upon the minds and hearts of men, and 
 modify social life. They multiply public meetings and conven- 
 tions, and facilitate and extend the intercourse of society, 
 
 "And catch the manners living as they rise." 
 
 Thought travels upon the rail, and art, science and literature 
 are diffused. The products of the teeming brain are carried to 
 the remotest hamlet. The best thinkers and orators speak to 
 the country as often as to the city. Information is disseminated 
 and mental activity stimulated. This diffusion of intelligence 
 tends to level society and destroy individual prominence and 
 intellectual dictatorship. 
 
 But this increase of railroads has been universal. The re- 
 turns of 1872 showed that Great Britain had fifteen thousand 
 eight hundred and fourteen miles of railways, while on the con- 
 tinent of Europe they spread like an arterial system, sending the 
 life-blood of business into every part.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 383 
 
 To us of this day, the adoption of steam as an agent of loco- 
 motion seems one of the most natural, as it was one of the most 
 pregnant, steps in a progressive civilization; yet, like all improve- 
 ments, it entered into life through great struggles and the sense- 
 less opposition of a chronic conservatism. In our own state, the 
 " right of way " to railroads was resisted by men of influence 
 with argument, ridicule, political power, and every other force at 
 their command, until the spirit of the age forced them aside and 
 gave control to more enlightened leaders. They predicted ruin 
 to industry and the depopulation of the state as the inevitable 
 result, and solemnly warned the people against the threatened 
 violation of constitutional prerogatives and popular rights. But 
 the inevitable came in spite of the oracles, and we pity their 
 blindness. 
 
 Prof. E. D. Sanborn gave, a few years since, an instructive and 
 eloquent account of the opposition made to the introduction of 
 railways into England, which I take the liberty to quote : 
 
 " The first surveyors of the railroad from Liverpool to Manchester were 
 mobbed by the owners of the soil, their instruments were broken and they 
 were driven off by violence. The men who proposed the road were hated 
 by the land-owners as much as if they had designed to convert their fields 
 into camps for a standing army. Some years later, when a bill to incorpo- 
 rate that road was before parliament, the engineer, Mr. George Stephenson, 
 was examined by acute lawyers before the committee of parliament as if he 
 had been a spy of France plotting an invasion of the country. In the lower 
 house, Sir Isaac Coffin denounced the project as a most flagrant imposition. 
 He would not consent to see the widow's premises invaded. He asked in 
 the most dignified, senatorial manner : ' How would any person like to have 
 a railroad under his parlor window ? What, I should like to know,' said he, 
 1 is to be done with all those who have advanced money in making and re- 
 pairing turnpikes? What With those who may still wish to travel in their 
 own or hired carriages, after the fashion of their forefathers ? What is to 
 become of coach-makers, harness-makers, and coachmen, inn-keepers, horse- 
 breeders and horse-dealers ? Is the house aware of the smoke and noise, 
 the hiss and the whirl, which locomotive engines, passing at a rate of eight 
 or ten miles an hour, occasion ? Neither the cattle plowing in the fields nor 
 grazing in the meadows could behold them without dismay ! Iron would rise in 
 price one hundred per cent., or, more probably, be exhausted altogether ! It 
 would be the greatest nuisance, the most complete disturbance of quiet and 
 comfort, in all parts of the kingdom, that the ingenuity of man could invent!' 
 Such were the groans of conservatism. But the bill was obtained at an ex- 
 pense of $135,000, and within one year after the road was built land all along 
 the line was selling at almost fabulous prices ; and the cattle plowed and feel 
 in quiet I The road was opened in 1830. The transit which used to be 
 made in coaches in four hours was made by rail in half an hour, and the 
 travel was tripled the first year. The annual saving to the public in money, 
 to say nothing of time, was $1,250,000 a year. Lords Derby and Sefton, who 
 succeeded in forcing the road from their lands, afterwards patronized a rival 
 road on condition it should pass through their estates. Interest enlightens 
 the blind." 
 
 The influence of this modern method of transportation upon 
 the business and character of mankind is incalculable. There
 
 384 HISTORY OF 
 
 is no pursuit of life so obscure and no locality so secluded as to 
 be exempt from its power. There is no person so high and none 
 so low as not to be affected by it. It determines largely the 
 material prosperity and civil power of nations, and affects, di- 
 rectly or indirectly, their relations and character. 
 
 On an old-time carriage road wheat could be carried three 
 hundred and maize a hundred and sixty-five miles only to market 
 and pay the cost of production. The interior regions of con- 
 tinents could not, therefore, previous to the introduction of rail- 
 ways, unless reached by navigable rivers or canals, furnish to or 
 draw supplies from, maritime commerce ; could not reach the 
 markets of the world so as to become, to any extent, either con- 
 sumers or producers in the industrial economy of nations. Car- 
 avans or camel trains could furnish only the slightest relief to 
 the evils of non-intercourse. Countries so located were left, 
 for the most part, unpeopled, or held by rude nomadic tribes, 
 while the great historic nations, to whom mankind is indebted 
 for civilization and human progress, dwelt upon the sea-board 
 or the navigable rivers. 
 
 It is impossible to determine to what extent the increased fa- 
 cility, rapidity and cheapness of travel and transportation, intro- 
 duced by railroads, have increased the wealth and population of 
 the world. An able English writer has said that "the first steam 
 engine doubled the world's wealth ; " and when we consider how 
 large a portion of the earth has thus been laid open to settle- 
 ment and productive industry, when we reflect upon the vast ad- 
 ditions it has made to the world's products, and the rapidity and 
 extension which it has given to the work of exchange, we shall 
 hardly be disposed to pronounce the statement extravagant. 
 Railroads have not simply added to the articles of commerce 
 and consumption by opening new fields to enterprise, but also 
 by bringing about a universal division of labor, and so increas- 
 ing the rapidity and perfection of productive work. In addition 
 to this they stimulate production by removing the limitations 
 upon its markets. No man now works for his neighborhood, 
 but all for mankind. Steam-ships and steam-cars take the grains 
 of our fields and the fabrics of our factories to the most distant 
 nations, and bring back for our consumption the fruits of every 
 clime and handicraft of the world. Thus the wealth and the 
 comfort of mankind are enhanced by the universal exchange 
 introduced by our modern methods of transit. All this has an 
 unparalleled application to our own country. 
 
 "It is assumed," says Commissioner Wells, "that a line of 
 railway gives access to fifteen square miles of country on each 
 side of it, or thirty square miles altogether. Then the thirteen 
 thousand miles of railway?, which it is estimated have been con-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 385 
 
 structed during the five years from 1865 to 1870, will have 
 opened up three hundred and ninety thousand miles of what, 
 for the purposes of general production, may be considered new 
 territory, a tract of country larger than the whole area of France, 
 and nearly three and a half times larger than the whole of Great 
 Britain." If the results of five years of railway construction 
 have been so great, how vast they must have been during the 
 past forty years, and how immeasurable the promise held out by 
 the future. And we must remember that all this grand domain 
 thus opened to settlement and development is as richly stored 
 with the resources of national wealth, is as capable of sustain- 
 ing an industrious and thronging population, as France or Great 
 Britain. The results of thus bringing the interior into commer- 
 cial relations with the sea-board have more than realized the 
 expectations of the projectors of these enterprises. 
 
 No statistics furnished by government or by private parties 
 enable us to measure accurately the value of our internal com- 
 merce, but a few facts will assure us of its colossal magnitude. 
 The annual commerce of the cities on the Ohio river alone is 
 placed by careful estimates at $1,600,000,000. That upon the 
 lakes we can infer from the fact that, during an entire season of 
 navigation, an average of one vessel every ten minutes passed 
 Fort Gratiot light-house, night and day. In 1872 ten Western 
 states produced 1,028,987,000 bushels of grain, of which 815,- 
 955,574 bushels were consumed within those states, and 213,- 
 021,426 bushels were shipped to home and foreign markets. 
 The gross receipts of our railroads for the same year reached 
 the stupendous sum of $473,241,055, and the value of the com- 
 modities moved by them is estimated at $10,000,000,000, and 
 we must not forget that every cargo of produce shipped from 
 the West purchases a return cargo of domestic or foreign man- 
 ufactures from the East. Our annual foreign trade, which keeps 
 pace with the means of interior transportation, amounts to about 
 $1,202,328,233. This sum seems large, and yet our domestic 
 commerce exceeds it manifold, and the amount paid for trans- 
 portation is more than double the revenues of the government. 
 Our governmental policy of aiding to build railroads into the 
 territories rests upon such facts, and looks to the creation of 
 new states, which may add to the population, resources, revenues, 
 strength and greatness of the country. 
 
 Now it is obvious that the growth and prosperity of the West 
 and, as the coastwise populations draw their food from the inte- 
 rior and must find there a market for the surplus of their com- 
 mercial and manufacturing industry, the sea-board states as well, 
 will be determined largely by the COST of transportation. The 
 impression has at length become general, that the railroad 
 
 25
 
 386 HISTORY OF 
 
 power is inflicting great hardship upon other industries and the 
 traveling public by its tariff of rates, and the call for reform 
 is loud and imperative. The farmers of New England, even, 
 living a hundred miles inland, claim that they find little induce- 
 ment to send their wood and other products to market at the 
 established rates, while manufacturing towns, like Lawrence, 
 Manchester and Dover, find it difficult to compete with Fall 
 River and other towns on the sea-board. 
 
 But the West has suffered most severely. A congressional ex- 
 amination of this subject has reached the conclusion that grain 
 can be transported from Chicago to New York at 10 cents a bushel. 
 But the average freight on three hundred and fifty millions of 
 bushels of grain sent from the valley of the Mississippi to the 
 Atlantic slope in 1873 was fifty cents per bushel. Taking the 
 average cost of a train per mile on all the roads of Massachu- 
 setts as a standard, the cost of moving a train of thirty cars of 
 ten tons each from the Mississippi river to New York, by an air 
 line, should have been $1,260 or twelve and eight-tenths cents 
 per bushel. Assuming that, as we fairly may, as the necessary 
 cost per bushel for transportation, and adding twelve and eight- 
 tenths cents more, or fifty per cent, of the gross receipts, for inter- 
 est and dividends on the cost of the road, we shall make a saving 
 of $85,000,000, on this item alone, to carry to the profits of ag- 
 riculture. As a further illustration, we will suppose thirty in- 
 stead of fifty cents per bushel had been paid for the transporta- 
 tion of the 213,000,000 bushels of grain moved to the sea-board 
 in 1872. This is five cents more than is allowed by careful es- 
 timates for both cost and profit, and yet it would have lifted a 
 tax of $42,000,000 from the industries of the country. In ad- 
 dition to this, it is believed the producers would have thrown 
 into the market double the amount of grain but for the high 
 transportation charges, which amount in many instances to a 
 prohibition upon production. 
 
 The change thus indicated, says the report of a congressional 
 committee, would enhance the value of the improved lands in 
 eight western states to the extent of $1,100,000,000. To this 
 must be added the increased value of farms, cotton plantations 
 and unimproved lands in other states, and the stimulus and profit 
 imparted to factories, foundries and workshops in every section 
 of the republic. 
 
 But we have indicated only a fraction of the work done upon 
 the railways. We have no means of ascertaining the total 
 amount of freight moved annually upon our 71,500 miles of road ; 
 we do know, however, that Pennsylvania carries yearly on her 
 5,369 miles of road, 23,145,000 passengers and 55,000 tons of 
 freight and that the seven great trunk lines stretching westward
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 387 
 
 moved, in 1872, 36,000,000 tons of freight, two thirds of which 
 consisted of minerals and miscellaneous matter, and one third, 
 or twelve millions, of cereals. Four millions only, of the twelve, 
 reached tide-water. The remaining eight was local freight and 
 consumed before reaching Atlantic markets. We have no data 
 upon which to calculate our loss from this system of repression, 
 but it must be gigantic. The best authorities judge that with 
 proper facilities and low rates the west could at present ship 
 thirty million instead of twelve million bushels of cereals and 
 vastly increase it in the future. Such an increase would bring 
 about a corresponding advance in all the productions and ex- 
 changes of the country. This limitation upon our productive 
 power is tantalizing, in view of the open markets and the growing 
 competition abroad. 
 
 Our cotton exports have fallen off nearly fifty per cent., while 
 those of other countries have increased nearly three hundred per 
 cent. The United States shipped into Great Britain during the 
 five years between 1860 and 1865, 127,047,126 bushels of wheat 
 and Russia only 47,376,809 ; but during the five years from 1868 
 to 1873 we shipped 116,462,380 bushels and Russia 117,967,022 ; 
 showing that the imports of wheat from the United States had 
 fallen off 10,584,746, while those from Russia had increased 
 70,590,213 bushels. This has resulted from decreasing the cost 
 of transportation from the wheat fields of the Don and the Volga 
 to the ports of England. 
 
 If we are able sufficiently to reduce the cost of transportation 
 we can easily command the produce markets of the world, and 
 so secure our full share of the carrying trade. Canada is anxious 
 to put her canals and rivers in condition and to furnish steam- 
 ships to freight our produce to foreign markets, knowing if she 
 has the carrying trade of the West, England, and not New Eng- 
 land, will supply the interior markets with manufactures.' 
 
 A blight from oppressive rates must fall upon the prosperity 
 of every pursuit. Our commerce, both interoceanic and foreign, 
 not less than agriculture and manufactures, must feel the paral- 
 ysis. Merchandise which would naturally pass across our 
 country, in transit between Asia and Europe, will be driven over 
 the isthmus or around the cape, and foreign trade will be crip- 
 pled by a limitation of supplies. 
 
 But the hardship of excessive rates falls as heavily upon pas- 
 sengers as upon freight. The average first-class fare per mile 
 in twelve countries on the continent of Europe is three and 
 six one hundredths cents. With us, on twelve leading roads, 
 it is four and three one hundredths, or nearly one third more. 
 The aggregate amount of an excess of one cent a mile upon all 
 the annual railroad travel of the country cannot be exactly
 
 388 HISTORY OF 
 
 determined. But we know that in Pennsylvania there are 5369 
 miles of railway and that they carry 23,145,000 passengers. 
 Now suppose that each person travels on the average one sixtieth 
 the whole distance, or eighty-nine miles ; this excess of one cent 
 a mile would amount to $20,599,050 for that state alone. If we 
 assume that the travel in all the states and territories is only five 
 times as great as in Pennsylvania, we shall have $102,995,250 
 passing yearly into the possession of the great railroad corpora- 
 tions, which should remain with the traveling public to lighten its 
 burdens and prosper its industries. 
 
 The West complains that its values do not advance and its 
 prosperity is retarded. The East, that her markets are being 
 closed and her manufactures driven westward. If we lay a tariff 
 upon any article which, added to the cost of production and im- 
 portation, raises the price of the foreign product above what we 
 can produce and sell the same for at home, we exclude the foreign 
 product and destroy a branch of commerce. So, too, whenever 
 the tariff of freighting any product of the interior, added to the 
 cost of production, exceeds what the article can be bought for 
 in the sea-board cities, the production of that article must cease 
 to be a branch of general industry, and the populousness, the 
 wealth, the power and prosperity of the country are destroyed 
 or suppressed, to the extent of its possible production of that 
 article. It is evident that the cost of transportation may be so 
 high as entirely to prevent the development of the richest terri- 
 tory, and that the growth of wealth and power in any state will 
 be measured by the profits upon its surplus products in the 
 markets of exportation. 
 
 In determining the merits of this controversy it should be 
 borne in mind that the present condition of the country has re- 
 sulted in part from an over-investment of capital in railroad en- 
 terprises. Over $500,000,000 were so expended at the West 
 during the five years just preceding the present popular move- 
 ment. The legitimate business of the country has not demanded 
 and cannot pay even a fair return upon the amounts disbursed 
 in building and operating many of the roads with which this 
 mania of the few past years has covered the country. 
 
 An additional cause of the present discontent, at the West es- 
 pecially, is to be found in an overstocking of the market with 
 breadstuffs. The construction of roads into the rich and fertile 
 wastes of the interior has brought such an amount of territory 
 under cultivation, and has so stimulated production on lands 
 already improved, that the supply has become greater than the 
 demand. This has so thrown down the price of grain as to 
 render it difficult, and in some cases quite impossible for the 
 farmers of the interior to pay the reasonable cost of transoorta-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 389 
 
 tion. They forget that a railroad can make corn-growing profit- 
 able, even at high prices, only sixteen hundred and fifty miles 
 from the sea-board, and so transfer to the railroad the misfortune 
 due to their own location and the low price of bread. If the 
 country will stop building railroads for a time, the evils now felt 
 will be greatly mitigated. 
 
 The distance to, and the loss of time in reaching, the sea- 
 board, are drawbacks upon the prosperity of the interior, which 
 can never be wholly overcome, though compensated by greater 
 productiveness. There are two ways by which this disadvantage 
 may be measurably surmounted. One is by the building up of 
 home, markets, and the other by the reduction of the cost of 
 transportation. The latter, as all know, has become a subject 
 of general interest, and its consideration has developed some 
 questions not easy to solve. Experience has shown, what seems 
 to need no proof, that the activity and success of every indus- 
 try, the increase of population, the creation of wealth, the mul- 
 tiplication of states and the growth of national power, are de- 
 pendent upon the facilities and expense of the intercourse of 
 the people and the interchange of their products. 
 
 If this is so, it must be conceded, as a rule both of political 
 economy and political philosophy, that the carrying business of 
 every people should be reduced to the lowest rates consistent 
 with a fair return upon the necessary investments in the construc- 
 tion and use of the artificial channels of travel and of trade. 
 Neither justice nor policy will allow rates which will pay a divi- 
 dend on fictitious capital, nor even real capital improperly or 
 unnecessarily invested in such works. Such rates are an insu- 
 perable obstacle to the material prosperity and political devel- 
 opment of the country. 
 
 The failure of government, either state or national, to provide 
 adequate means of water communication to meet the increasing 
 demands of trade led to the building of railroads by private 
 companies, and forced the commerce of the country to accept 
 this more expensive method of transportation. 
 
 The necessities of trade have easily secured to these compa- 
 nies a monopoly, and rendered them to some extent oblivious to 
 their responsibilities to the public. The abuses charged upon 
 the management of railroads are numerous and very grave, but 
 the most common complaint is of discriminate and extortionate 
 charges. It is alleged that the causes of these hardships im- 
 posed upon the public are : 
 
 1. Unjust inequality of rates. 
 
 2. Construction rings. 
 
 3. The consolidation of companies for the destruction of free 
 competition.
 
 390 HISTORY OF 
 
 4. Extravagance and corruption in railway management, to 
 enrich favorites and defraud the public. 
 
 5. The introduction of subordinate agencies, such as car- 
 companies, fast freight lines and the like. 
 
 6. Stock watering, a process by which the capital stock of 
 roads is increased without any outlay by the parties receiving it 
 or placing it upon the market. 
 
 7. The capitalizing of surplus earnings accumulated by ex- 
 orbitant charges. 
 
 It cannot be denied successfully, I think, that the public has 
 been wronged and the business of the country checked and 
 hampered in all the ways here enumerated ; yet such charges, 
 made without limitations and exceptions, scandalize the grandest 
 improvement which modern science and enterprise have achieved 
 and throw an unjust discredit upon a class of men to whom 
 society is under the greatest obligations. 
 
 The first complaint is of unjust discriminations of rates. 
 When such discriminations are made to favor certain localities, 
 as against others, and give them the monopoly of production ; 
 when they are made to determine the location of towns and cities 
 on lands previously granted to or purchased by the road, or in- 
 dividuals connected with it; when they are made to favor the 
 speculations of favorites, or to advance real estate, they are a 
 usurpation and an outrage. Nevertheless rates must be graded 
 according to the character of freights and the distances to which 
 they are to be transported. They must also differ somewhat to 
 correspond to the varying necessary cost of building and run- 
 ning the roads. 
 
 The next complaint is against construction rings. Now a ring 
 is simply a company, and if an association is to be cursed by an 
 epithet, the church itself is not safe. It may be blasted as an 
 apostolic or Christian ring. The fact is, it is every way as just 
 and proper that a company should construct a railroad as for an 
 individual, and in the case of large contracts it is much better 
 if not an absolute necessity. It is no worse for a company to 
 make money than for an individual, and the hope of profit is 
 the proper motive of great enterprises. It cannot be shown 
 that it is wrong even for the stockholders of a road to organize 
 themselves into a construction company to build their own road 
 and to avail themselves of the profits of such construction, not 
 even when the profits come from government grants and sub- 
 sidies, any more than it is wrong for a farmer to do his own 
 work and avail himself of the profits of his industry. It has 
 been decided by the district court of the United States, that 
 government grants to railroads are gifts outright, not trust funds 
 to be held, expended and accounted for to the government by 
 the directors of such roads.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 391 
 
 If now Congress, through ignorance or corruption, has made 
 unnecessarily large grants, the fault is at its door, not at that of 
 the stockholders or the construction company ; and he who lays 
 the charge of corruption upon a company, because it does not or 
 has not voluntarily returned the bounty which the government 
 proffered to the enterprise of the country as an inducement to 
 enter upon and consummate those great national highways which 
 will return a thousand fold for all its outlays, demands a refine- 
 ment of virtue in these men found in no other calling in life. 
 But when such a ring, for the sake of private gain, so runs up 
 the cost of a road as to depress the value of its stock and bonds 
 and entail exorbitant rates upon its use, it does an unpardonable 
 wrong to the outside stock- and bond-holders and to the general 
 public. 
 
 The third charge strikes at the consolidation of companies. 
 When the consolidation consists simply in the combination of 
 separate adjacent lines into one through' line, it is in the inter- 
 est of the business public, as it tends to increase the efficiency 
 of the road and decrease its rates. Such a union harmonizes 
 conflicting policies and interests, and substitutes the profits of a 
 single company and the expense of a single set of officers, for 
 the profits of separate companies and the expense of many 
 distinct boards of management. 
 
 In 1852 seventeen different companies operated the line be- 
 tween New York and Chicago. They have since been reduced 
 to two, the New York Central and Lake Shore lines, and the 
 union has largely reduced the cost, and added immensely to the 
 facilities, of transportation. These advantages, it is true, must 
 be offset in a measure by the centralization of power which may 
 be abused. But when competing roads consolidate solely to 
 destroy competition and increase power, the union is an unmixed 
 evil and portends both fraud and danger. The prevalence of 
 this kind of combination in Great Britain led a distinguished 
 Englishman to affirm, in 1872, that it was a "question whether the 
 state should govern the railroads, or the railroads the state." 
 This has ceased to be a question in some of the states of our 
 Union. 
 
 Extravagance and corruption in the management of railways 
 is the fourth count in this bill of indictment. That some of our 
 roads are conducted with wisdom and prudence we know, and 
 all can claim the right to be judged innocent till proved guilty, 
 yet the developments of the last ten years justify us in suspect- 
 ing that the legitimate incomes of many roads are largely and 
 systematically diverted for the uses and to swell the emoluments 
 of individual officers, or to secure political or legislative suc- 
 cesses in the interest of the road. All such corruption funds
 
 39 2 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 are a tax upon the industries of the country, and drawn at last 
 without law from the pockets of the people. 
 
 As for car-companies, fast freight lines and other such imme- 
 diate agencies, while a convenience and a luxury, it must be said 
 they are often, perhaps generally, employed as a device to di- 
 vert the profits of the stockholders to other parties or to saddle 
 a needless tax upon the patrons of the road. 
 
 But the most stupendous wrong inflicted upon society by rail- 
 road mismanagement is what is called stock-watering and the 
 capitalization of surplus revenues. They are twin monsters of 
 business depravity, an unmixed and unmitigated evil. The first 
 is positive robbery without the dignity of courage or the plea of 
 poverty, and the capitalization of surplus revenues is little bet- 
 ter ; and yet there are honored citizens in many communities 
 whose virtuous souls are shocked at the slightest peccadillos, 
 who complacently acquiesce, if they do not participate, in both. 
 
 By the process of capitalizing surplus earnings, the net profits, 
 after deducting large dividends on all investments and paying 
 the interest on the indebtedness of the road, are, if not stolen, 
 expended in building new and in buying up depreciated branch 
 lines for the benefit of speculators, or in making permanent im- 
 provements. The amounts thus expended are charged up to 
 capital account, and additional stock issued therefor. This policy 
 throws upon all productive industries and capital a geometrical 
 system of taxation. It first overtaxes, to secure the surplus 
 profit ; and when this is capitalized, it entails increased charges 
 on all future transactions to make up a dividend on this fraudu- 
 lently augmented capital stock. Considering the relation of 
 railroads to the industries and the productive capital of the 
 country, it is contended that all which the public welfare will al- 
 low is a reasonable return upon the money actually and properly 
 invested in the roads, and that any surplus expended in improve- 
 ments should inure to the benefit of general business. 
 
 It would be a long, difficult and perhaps impossible task, to 
 determine from railroad accounts how much of their nominal 
 capital is represented by stock acquired without investment. 
 Careful estimates based upon what is thought to be reliable data 
 give the following results in respect to three of the great roads 
 of the country : 
 
 Name of line. 
 
 Present capital in 
 stock and bonds. 
 
 Probable actu- 
 al cost. 
 
 Excess of capita, 
 over actual cost. 
 
 Erie line from New York to Dunkirk, 459 
 
 
 
 
 New York Central line to Chicago, gSo 
 
 
 
 115,188,137 
 
 Pennsylvania line from Philadelphia to 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Total 
 
 $376,285,511 
 
 $182,000,000 
 
 $195,285,511
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 393 
 
 Thus on these three roads alone $195,285,511, or a sum ex- 
 ceeding by $i3,285*,5ii their entire cost, represents stock for 
 which not a dollar was ever invested, and the business over these 
 roads must contribute $19,000,000 annually to pay a dividend 
 of ten per cent, upon this illegitimate stock of honest capitalists. 
 This is the way great fortunes are amassed by men who are 
 scandalized by the beggary and theft of poverty, and daily thank 
 God that they are not " as other men are, extortioners, unjust, 
 adulterers, or even as this publican." Much of their original 
 capital and its annual income are sponged, by the laws of what 
 is called legitimate business, out of the producers and consumers 
 who are compelled to patronize the roads, and God only knows 
 how many industries perish by the loss of their profits, or how 
 many hungry souls die for the want of bread thus filched from 
 their mouths. But what matters it ? The rich man will endow 
 an asylum or build a church in his will, and be eulogized at his 
 burial, and the poor will 
 
 "go and kiss dead Caesar's wounds, 
 
 And dip their napkins in his sacred blood ; 
 Yea, beg a hair of him for memory, 
 And, dying, mention it within their wills, 
 Bequeathing it as a rich legacy 
 Unto their issue." 
 
 But these are only three out of thirteen hundred railways. If 
 two thousand three hundred and twenty-nine miles of road can 
 roll so heavy a weight upon the enterprise of the country, what 
 power to paralyze may be exercised by seventy thousand one- 
 half the railroad mileage of the world. 
 
 It may be true, as is claimed, that the present tariff of rates 
 pays no more than a fair income upon the nominal stock of the 
 railways of the country as a whole, but that reply does not satisfy 
 the gravamen of the complaint, which is that the public is being 
 taxed to pay an income upon capital never invested. Undoubt- 
 edly a careful examination would show that the present rates on 
 some roads are not exorbitant, but it is believed they are excep- 
 tions. There are doubtless roads on which the receipts do not 
 pay an income upon the original investment, but they were un- 
 wisely located and should never have been built. If a man 
 buys a ledge for a plumbago mine, he cannot justly call upon 
 the public to pay him an income upon his foolish investment, 
 neither can a railroad company which builds into a barren waste 
 where the development of business is impossible. 
 
 We are not now discussing the exceptions, but the general 
 question, and are anxious to learn how the acknowledged diffi- 
 culty is to be overcome, and relief afforded to the great indus- 
 tries of the land. In considering the remedies, we have a right 
 to assume that competition between railroads owned and directed
 
 394 HISTORY OF 
 
 by private companies will never bring relief, for experience in 
 France, Prussia, Belgium, Great Britain and the United States 
 has demonstrated that in the end it always leads to combina- 
 tions which aggravate the evil. 
 
 There seems to be no alternative left but governmental inter- 
 ference. But here we are met by the positive denial in presi- 
 dential vetos and the opinions of high legal authorities, of the 
 constitutional right of such interference. But these denials are 
 contested by counter arguments and legal opinions of equal 
 force and weight, and the judicial and political opinion of the 
 country I think is gradually acquiescing in the view that the 
 power to regulate commerce between the states given to con- 
 gress by the constitution includes the right to regulate the traf- 
 fic upon the great net-work of railroads over which by far the 
 greater part of our commerce passes. The right of congress to 
 fix rates and fares and to build railroads has never come di- 
 rectly before the supreme court, but decisions on other ques- 
 tions, given by Justices Miller and Story and Chief-Justice Mar- 
 shall, seem to cover the ground. 
 
 ''For myself," says Justice Miller, "I must say that I have no 
 doubt of the right of congress to prescribe all needful and 
 proper regulations for the conduct of this immense traffic over 
 any railroad which has voluntarily become a part of one of those 
 lines of inter-state communication, or to authorize the creation 
 of such roads when the purposes of inter-state transportations 
 of persons and property justify and require it." 
 
 This language covers only such roads as lie partly in different 
 states, and implies that those which lie wholly within a state are 
 to be left to the jurisdiction of state authority. By far the larger 
 part of our roads are of the former class, and their rates will be 
 likely to determine the rates of state roads. 
 
 In discussing the power of government to intervene by direct 
 legislation, there is a line of argument which seems to be 
 strangely overlooked. The right of eminent domain, contraven- 
 ing the right of private property, can only be secured to govern- 
 ment on the claim that personal interests must be subordinated 
 to the welfare of society. Now no railroad could be built if the 
 government, state or national, did not confer upon the company 
 the power to condemn by commission and take private property 
 on just compensation. But the government, it is conceded, has 
 and can exercise this right only where the private property con- 
 demned is taken for public use, and of course it cannot delegate 
 the power to a company except upon the same condition. Hence 
 the government is obligated to protect the public in every case 
 against the misuse or abuse of such power. This it can do only 
 by regulating the management of the roads. They are common
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 395 
 
 carriers and cannot be allowed to take advantage of public 
 necessities to amass a fortune at the expense of other interests. 
 
 Leaving the discussion of this difficult question here, let us con- 
 sider a few of the methods by which it is proposed to remove 
 the hardships which rest so heavily upon our interior commerce. 
 
 1. It is proposed that the government shall purchase and run 
 the roads in the interest of the public. 
 
 2. That congress shall regulate the conduct and policy of the 
 roads by direct legislation. 
 
 3. That congress shall indirectly regulate charges and manage- 
 ment by one or more roads to be controlled or owned by the 
 government, and by the improvement of natural or the con- 
 struction of artificial water-ways. 
 
 These three constitute the chief remedies proposed. We 
 have space only to discuss them briefly in order. 
 
 The first proposition is, that the government shall purchase 
 and run the roads. If now we concede the power of govern- 
 ment to do this, there still remains the question of policy. It 
 has been done successfully by some of the arbitrary govern- 
 ments of Europe. Where this plan prevails, the roads, when built 
 by the state, are located with reference to the wants of each sec- 
 tion and the whole community, looking both to its foreign and 
 domestic interests, and constitute an integral system. They are 
 thoroughly constructed at a reasonable outlay, and so conducted 
 as to pay a fair return only upon the original cost. Under this 
 system, the management of the railways partakes of the gen- 
 eral character of the administration of government, and, as a 
 rule, in our time will be efficient and favor the development of 
 business and the accommodation of the public. But this pater- 
 nal system governs too much, and tends to dwarf rather than 
 to develop popular enterprise and business capacity. The genius 
 of our government simply protects society, while individual en- 
 terprise regulates affairs and develops resources. The govern- 
 ment that is called to interfere too far with the industries of the 
 citizen, in time may destroy his liberties. But we need not de- 
 lay on this branch of the subject, for it will be impossible, for a 
 long time to come, for the government to purchase the railroads 
 of the country. It has been estimated that the 15000 miles of 
 English railways would cost the government $250,000,000. It 
 is idle, therefore, to entertain the proposition that our government 
 shall purchase our 70,000 miles of road at their nominal value, 
 after their stock has been so watered as to leave upon the market 
 to-day, according to a leading journal, $500,000,000 bonds that 
 pay no interest. Such a remedy would bankrupt our govern- 
 ment and open the way to official peculations and frauds which 
 would rival those of Turkey.
 
 396 HISTORY OF 
 
 The second proposition is to regulate the management and 
 policy of the roads by direct legislation. Unquestionably the 
 states have and should exercise the power, by immediate legisla- 
 tion, to prevent stock inflations and the participation, directly 
 or indirectly, by officers of railways, in the profits of fast freight 
 lines and palace cars operated upon their roads. The evil is 
 gigantic, and should be crushed by superior authority. Con- 
 gress might and should require each company to publish at every 
 depot, and in local papers, their distances, rates, fares, classifi- 
 cations, drawbacks and special tariffs, and forbid any variation 
 from these under heavy penalties. They might require that 
 companies should furnish proper facilities for the accommoda- 
 tion of the public, and make an annual detailed and reliable re- 
 port to the interior department of all their transactions. Con- 
 gress might prohibit the consolidation or combination, by lease 
 or otherwise, of parallel or competing roads. But when we re- 
 quire of congress to remedy the essential difficulty, by regulat- 
 ing the tariff of rates and fares on thirteen hundred railroads, 
 aggregating a net-work of seventy -two thousand miles, and em- 
 bracing an infinite variety of grades, curves, climates, cost of 
 construction and running, quantity and character of business 
 and the like, we throw upon the national legislature a task so 
 herculean and difficult as to be impossible. To do such a work 
 justly and fairly would require an amount of information which 
 it will be difficult to secure and in respect to circumstances which 
 are constantly varying. 
 
 In addition to this, we have the opinions of such men as Judge 
 Curtis and Mr. Evarts, that they who hold railroad stock which 
 they have honestly purchased in an open market, even though it 
 represents watered stock, have vested rights which will prohibit 
 either the national or a state legislature from intermeddling. To 
 lower rates or fares, or otherwise interfere in a way to decrease 
 the value of their capital so invested, would be, it is claimed, 
 taking private property for public uses without just compensa- 
 tion in violation of the constitution. We also have a decision 
 of Chief-Justice Lawrence of Illinois, that the acts of that state 
 imposing a tariff of specific charges upon railroad companies 
 were in violation of vested rights, and therefore unconstitutional. 
 I am aware that we have, in answer to this, a dictum of the vox 
 populi, equivalent in the judgment of some to the vox Dei, and 
 therefore in the nature of a higher law, emanating from a pop- 
 ular convention, that " the doctrine of vested rights belongs to 
 a past age and despotic rule, and has no legitimate place in the 
 jurisprudence of a free people." But our poor lawyers and 
 judges as a class have received so little of the subtle afflatus of 
 this modern illumination that they cannot appreciate the force
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 397 
 
 and authority of this revelation of the caucus, and seem strangely 
 disposed to cling to old constitutions and precedents. 
 
 The second proposition, therefore, is beset with insuperable 
 difficulties. We now come to the third. 
 
 The principle of this is competition directed and controlled 
 by congress. This is substantially the recommendation of the 
 special senate committee appointed to examine and report upon 
 this subject. It is proposed : 
 
 ist, That one or more extended roads shall be built or guar- 
 anteed by government, under a well guarded charter, and placed 
 under national control. 
 
 2d, That one or more double track freight railways, owned 
 or controlled by government, shall be thoroughly and honestly 
 constructed and operated at a low rate of speed. 
 
 3d, That water-ways suitable for transportation, both natural 
 and artificial, shall be furnished either by the aid or under the 
 guarantee and control of government. These, it is believed, so 
 built and controlled and operated, at low rates, in competition 
 with private roads, and without the possibility of combination, 
 will regulate our entire system of inter-state traffic and travel. 
 
 This plan, it will readily be admitted, has merits, but that it 
 would realize the expectations of its projectors, if carried into 
 execution, I very much doubt. It is easy to see that it would be 
 as real an interference, though not as direct, with the property 
 rights of the present holders of railroad stock, as a regulation 
 of rates and fares by national legislation. But a more serious 
 objection to it is, that it seems to be an impossible remedy. 
 
 Who is to build and operate railroads and water-ways under 
 such restrictions ? Not individuals, certainly, for private capital 
 does not so invest. If done at all, it must be done by congress ; 
 and congress will not dare do it, for the last phase of popular 
 sentiment is that railways shall be built by private capital and 
 run without charge. The people demand that there shall be no 
 more subsidies for public improvements, and so we must wait 
 till the tide turns before this fond dream of the senate commit- 
 tee can be realized. If it could be carried out at the expense 
 of New England, I should expect to see it voted at the next 
 session of congress, but as it cannot, we must conclude that we 
 have not yet found our panacea. 
 
 My expectation is that time, which has solved so many dark 
 problems, will solve this. Neither railroad competition nor 
 hasty legislation and caucus resolutions, demanded by unin- 
 formed and inconsiderate people, will ever fairly adjust railroad 
 tariffs to the incomes of other investments, but the competition 
 of this with other industries, and the public demand for a fair 
 division of profits looking to the development of national re- 
 sources and the general welfare, may so adjust them.
 
 398 HISTORY OF 
 
 No system of corporate wrong, however cunningly and com- 
 pactly planned, can permanently resist the organized force of 
 public opinion when brought to bear wisely and consistently 
 against it. It will crumble and give way like our strongest ma- 
 terial structures under the pressure of a power of nature. Mass- 
 ive foundations, which have resisted the assaults of ages, have at 
 last been sundered and overthrown by the silent growth of a 
 sapling. So corporate power, however buttressed by wealth and 
 legislation, must in the end yield to the demands of public jus- 
 tice. The general sense of right is a resistless force, for it is 
 the intervention of the divine will in human affairs. There is a 
 political danger which seems never to be regarded in the con- 
 sideration of this question, but which may yet so force itself 
 upon the public mind, as to make it a prevailing element in its 
 final settlement. 
 
 In one of the able papers of The Federalist, Hamilton says : 
 "It will always be far more easy for the state government to en- 
 croach upon national authorities, than for the national govern- 
 ment to encroach upon the state authorities." The same thought 
 is reiterated by Madison in a later number of that work. 
 
 Organized as the government was, the tendency was unques- 
 tionably in that direction, and would have continued so if peace 
 had remained unbroken. But all powers, political as well as 
 physical, grow by exercise, and the framers of the constitution 
 did not and could not anticipate the terrible activity into which 
 the latent and reserved powers of the government would be 
 called. They did not and could not foresee that the progress of 
 science and invention in less than a century would largely de- 
 stroy the force of their reasoning. 
 
 Our net-work of electric nerves and the broad system of iron 
 arteries, along which pours the life-blood of business, demand a 
 central heart. They have brought the extremes of the country 
 into immediate and hourly communication, and have reversed 
 the drift of powers and prerogatives from the state governments 
 to the national. Will not the unifying and placing at the dicta- 
 tion of government all railroads which control so large a part of 
 the business and capital of the country, which stretch into every 
 district of the land and command the largest abilities, impart a 
 dangerous energy to this centripetal tendency of political power? 
 There are evils on all sides of the circle around which we re- 
 volve, and they demand the grave and earnest study of every 
 man who has the well-being of his country at heart.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 399 
 
 CHAPTER CIX. 
 
 GEOLOGY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Governor Woodbury has the credit of recommending, for the 
 first time in the United States, a geological survey, with a view 
 to the promotion of agriculture by chemical analysis of the vari- 
 ous soils in the state. He based this proposal on two clauses 
 in the constitution of New Hampshire, which are as follows : 
 " It shall be the duty of legislators and magistrates, at all future 
 periods of this government, to cherish the interests of literature 
 and the sciences." It also inculcates " the promotion of agri- 
 culture, the arts, sciences, commerce, trades, manufactures and 
 the natural history of the country." This recommendation was 
 made in his gubernatorial message, in 1823. He was in advance 
 of the men of his time. Fifteen years later Governor Hill re- 
 newed the proposal for a survey. It was not then adopted ; but 
 during the administration of Governor Page, in 1839, a law was 
 passed authorizing a geological survey of the state. Dr. Charles 
 T. Jackson of Boston was appointed surveyor, and his first re- 
 port was made in 1841. He spent three years in the work, and 
 a large quarto volume, published by the state, contained the 
 results of his labors. 
 
 In 1868, the legislature provided for a new survey ; and Prof. 
 Charles H. Hitchcock was appointed surveyor. His first report 
 was made in 1869. In 1874, the first volume of his elaborate 
 work, entitled "The Geology of New Hampshire," was pub- 
 lished, being a royal octavo of six hundred and sixty-seven pages. 
 This volume contains the natural history of the state, including 
 its geological structure, rocks, minerals, soil, climate, together 
 with the flora, fauna, and insects found within its borders. The 
 report will be completed in three volumes quarto. Two theories 
 respecting the geological formation of the state have heretofore 
 been advanced and defended by different scientists. Prof. Hitch- 
 cock proposes a third, which he thus explains : 
 
 " In general the new views refer the great mass of our rocks 
 to the older groups, corresponding to the 'primary.' A few 
 slates and limestones are of Silurian age, as proved by their 
 contained fossils. The granites seem to have been poured out 
 in a fluid condition, and to have occupied depressions on the sur- 
 face. We have also divided the crystalline rocks more minutely 
 than has been done elsewhere, and for the want of names have 
 been obliged to invent new ones from localities within the state.
 
 400 
 
 HISTORY OF 
 
 The strata seem to belong to the Laurentian, Atlantic, Labra- 
 dorian and Huronian systems of the Eozoic series, and to the 
 Cambrian and Silurian of the Paleozoic. The Eozoic series is 
 well represented ; and as the state must have been largely out of 
 water during all the later periods of geological time, no intima- 
 tion is given of what transpired after the time of its elevation. 
 
 It is very difficult to identify one set of crystalline rocks with 
 another. Evidence derived from mineral structure must always 
 be inferior in value to that afforded by fossils. Superposition 
 when very plain lies at the foundation of the structure of the 
 paleontological column, but may be deceptive in the absence of 
 relics of life. The basis of our theory of the stratigraphical 
 structure rests upon superposition, or, in the case of inversion, to 
 a study of the topographical arrangement of what seem to be 
 continuous formations, often so considered on account of their 
 mineral composition. 
 
 Those who are unwilling to accept our theory, which has been 
 derived entirely from a study of the rocks in the field, must show 
 its falsity by means of facts acquired by the same pains-taking 
 method. The following scheme may represent the stratigraphical 
 column of New Hampshire, commencing at the bottom : 
 
 Laurentian. \ Porphyritic gneiss. 
 
 Atlantic. 
 
 Labrador or 
 Pemigevjasset. 
 
 Huronian. 
 
 Cambrian. 
 
 Silurian. 
 
 Alluvium. 
 
 Bethlehem group, 
 Lake Winnipiseogee gneiss, 
 Montalban or White Mountain series, 
 Franconia breccia. 
 
 Conway granite, 
 Albany granite, 
 Chocorua granite, 
 Ossipyte, 
 
 Compact feldspars, 
 Exeter syenites. 
 
 Lisbon group, 
 1 Lyman group, 
 Auriferous conglomerate. 
 
 Rockingham schists, 
 
 Calciferous mica schist, 
 
 Coos group, 
 
 Clay slates, 
 
 Mt. Mote conglomerate. 
 
 ( Helderberg limestones, slates, 
 ( conglomerates, etc. 
 
 ( Glacial drift, 
 } Champlain clays, 
 ( Terrace period."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 401 
 
 A few of the more important of these groups of rocks call for 
 a passing notice in this brief article. 
 The Atlantic system is thus described : 
 
 1. "Our researches in New Hampshire lead us to revive an 
 ancient designation for the crystalline rocks along the Atlantic 
 sea-board in distinction from the Laurentian or Adirondack 
 group. The rocks of this system extend continuously from 
 Maine to Alabama, though nearly concealed by the superficial 
 formations between New York and Philadelphia. Our theory in 
 regard to their age is that they are posterior in time to the Lau- 
 rentian, but anterior to the Cambrian and later formations. 
 There is a difference in their mineral character, and certain gen- 
 eral considerations lead to the belief that the eastern border of 
 the continent was built up after that which has for the past fif- 
 teen years been distinctively known as the Laurentian. I can 
 classify them as follows in New Hampshire. It remains to be 
 proved by investigation in other states, whether any similar 
 classification can be followed elsewhere. I cannot confidently 
 give the formations in their proper order in time, without further 
 study, i. Bethlehem group, n. Manchester or Lake Winni- 
 piseogee range, in. Montalban or White Mountain series, iv. 
 Franconia breccia." 
 
 2. "Montalban or the White Mountain series. The latter 
 term was employed originally to designate territorially the cen- 
 tral gneissic and granitic region of the state, including what is 
 now referred to the Laurentian and Atlantic divisions. The 
 rock is often characterized by the presence of the mineral an- 
 dalusite. Any one who has observed the rocks upon Mt. Wash- 
 ington along the traveled routes from Ammonoosuc to the Half- 
 Way house on the carriage road, may recall crystalline bunches 
 like small, woody, weather-worn chips scattered through the 
 ledges. This mineral is called andalusite, and occurs abundantly 
 in the White Mountains, though not universally. The rock con- 
 taining it forms the main mass of the Mt. Washington range 
 from Gorham to Hart's Location, ending with Mt. Webster." 
 
 3. "The New Hampshire granites, which are best known as 
 building materials, belong to this formation. They are quarried 
 in Concord, Fitzwilliam, Milford, Farmington, Hooksett, Pelham, 
 Salem, Marlborough, Troy, Sunapee and elsewhere. The fa- 
 miliar name of " Granite State " is very appropriate, as our re- 
 sources in granite are rich, unlimited and widespread. It is 
 probably found in greater or smaller amount in every town un- 
 derlaid by the White Mountain series. Besides these there are 
 other extensive granites of the Labrador series, and limited 
 patches of indigenous and eruptive masses in the Merrimack 
 and Coos groups." 
 
 26
 
 402 HISTORY OF 
 
 4. The gold-bearing rocks belonging to the Huronian System. 
 " The existence of gold along Connecticut river was first inti- 
 mated in the Geology of Vermont, by the finding of specimens 
 at Springfield, Vt., and the comparison of the rocks with those 
 of the auriferous district further west. In the Geology of Maine 
 it was also spoken of as one of the metals characterizing the 
 schist group extending from Bellows Falls to New Brunswick. 
 The earliest discovery of gold in any part of it seems to have 
 been made by Mr. Hanshet in Plainfield, N. H., in 1854. About 
 the same time Moses Durkee washed gold out of alluvium in 
 Lebanon and Hanover. 
 
 The first discovery of gold in Lyman was made by Professor 
 Henry Wurtz of New York, in 1864. It was found in galena. 
 The next year J. Henry Allen and Charles Knapp, independ- 
 ently of each other, discovered gold in the rock in Lisbon. This 
 led to the organization of a mining company. In 1866 a better 
 vein was found in Lyman, in the clay slate, and an association 
 known as the Dodge Gold Mining Company formed to work it. 
 The two companies erected each a mill of ten stamps, and be- 
 fore June i, 1869, had sold not less than $16,000 worth of gold. 
 The vein is whitish quartz, often glassy, characterized by masses 
 of pyrites, ankerite, galena and slate scattered through it. Span- 
 gles of gold are common in the gangue. An examination of 
 the rock and imbedded minerals showed that there was an aver- 
 age of $18.90 of gold to the ton, and that most of it was con- 
 tained in the clear quartz, the accompanying minerals being 
 nearly destitute of it. The mineral character of this vein agrees 
 with tha.t of the auriferous sheets in Vermont and Canada. 
 The gold is very nearly pure, containing only half of one per 
 cent, of silver." 
 
 Dr. Jackson mentions in his report the following metals and 
 minerals found within the limits of the state : "Talc, limestone, 
 talc and soapstone, iron, lead, zinc, tin, copper, pyrites, silver, 
 gold, titanium, titanic iron, plumbago, beryl, mica, manganese, 
 arsenic and molybdena." 
 
 The report of Professor Hitchcock contains the following re- 
 marks upon the Relations of Geology to Agriculture : "The mat- 
 ter of all soils capable of sustaining vegetation exists in two 
 forms, inorganic and organic. The first contains twelve chem- 
 ical elements, viz., oxygen, sulphur, phosphorus, carbon, silicon, 
 and the metals potassium, sodium, calcium, aluminum, magne- 
 sium, iron and manganese. In the organic part the elements 
 are four, oxygen, hydrogen, carbon and nitrogen. The inorganic 
 elements are derived from the rocks ; the organic elements from 
 decaying animal and vegetable matter, so that it is of the earthy 
 constituents we must speak. They do not indeed occur in their
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 403 
 
 simple state, but as water, sulphates, phosphates, carbonic acid, 
 silicates of potassa, soda, lime, magnesia, alumnia, iron, etc. 
 The average amount of silicates or sand in soil is eighty in one 
 hundred parts. Since the rocks differ considerably in composi- 
 tion, we should expect a corresponding difference in the soils 
 derived from them. Such is the fact to a great extent, where 
 the soil is simply the result of the disintegration of the rock 
 beneath it. It is sufficiently so in many districts to form char- 
 acteristic soils. Thus, over quartz rocks and some sandstones, 
 we find a very sandy and barren soil, though it is said that in 
 nearly all soils enough silicates of lime and magnesia are pres- 
 ent to answer the purposes of vegetation ; but the alkalies and 
 phosphates may be absent. When the rock is limestone, the 
 soil is sometimes quite barren for the want of other ingredients, 
 and also in consequence of the difficulty of decomposition. 
 Clay, also, may form a soil too tenacious and cold. The sand- 
 stones that contain marly beds, and some of the tertiary rocks 
 of analogous character, form excellent soils. So does clay slate 
 and especially calciferous mica schist. The amount of potash 
 and soda in gneiss and granite often makes a rich soil from 
 these rocks, and the trap rocks form a fertile though scanty soil. 
 * There are beds of limestone for agricultural purposes 
 in Plainfield, Lyme, Orford, Haverhill, Lisbon, Lyman, Little- 
 ton and elsewhere. The slaty soils of the Connecticut valley 
 are superior to those along the coast. ******* 
 The greater portion of the state is underlaid by gneiss. This 
 is practically the same as granite ; so that the words granite and 
 gneiss convey the same meaning so far as mineral composition 
 is concerned. The gneiss is apt to produce better soils than 
 the granite. The soluble element present is usually potash, from 
 ten to twelve per cent. This is certainly a very valuable sub- 
 stance to be added to the soil, and nature is crumbling down the 
 granites continually. This is done by the action of the atmos- 
 phere." The sun, air and rain are constantly wearing away 
 "the everlasting hills" and filling up the plains and valleys with 
 the debris.
 
 404 HISTORY OF 
 
 CHAPTER CX. 
 
 THE FLORA AND FAUNA OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 An article on the distribution of plants in New Hampshire, 
 prepared by William T. Flint, appears in Professor Hitchcock's 
 Geology of the state. From that paper many of the following 
 facts are gleaned. There are twenty-seven orders which consti- 
 tute the flora of New Hampshire. The white pine has been the 
 best known and most valued of our timbers, ever since the offi- 
 cers of king George provoked the displeasure of the early set- 
 tlers, by carving their "broad arrows" on the ^tallest mast trees 1 
 in valleys of the rivers. These trees in some localities grew to 
 an immense height. In the biography of the elder Wheelock, 
 trees were said to be found on the Dartmouth plain two hundred 
 feet high ; in one instance, by actual measurement, a tree was 
 found two hundred and seventy feet long. The pitch and red 
 pines are more limited in their range. The pitch pine is found 
 on the sandy plains .and drift knolls of the river valleys. It is 
 most abundant in the southeastern and central portions of the 
 state. In the White Mountain regions the balsam fir and black 
 spruce grow together in about equal quantities. The hemlock is 
 found in almost every section of the state. The first growth 
 equaled the white pines in diameter and height. Most of these 
 evergreens have been felled and sawed into boards during the 
 last forty years. The arbor vitae grows in the swamps in the 
 northern part of the state. The hackmatacks, spruces and firs 
 form the most attractive features of our mountain scenery in the 
 winter. Every variety of the maple is found in nearly all towns 
 in the state. The beech and sugar maple make up the larger 
 part of the " hard wood " forests ; and in later years these have 
 fallen by the woodman's axe, to feed our engines and stoves. 
 So great has been the destruction of our forest trees, that Penn- 
 sylvania coal is carried as far north as Hanover, for fuel. Birch, 
 of which there are four species, and the poplar are scattered 
 broadcast over the state. These trees, formerly considered quite 
 worthless, have now become exceedingly valuable for manufac- 
 turing purposes. The entire family of ashes and oaks, of which 
 there are six species, are extensively used in the making of fur f 
 niture and the finishing of houses. The same is true of the 
 butternut and chestnut. These native woods are by many pre- 
 ferred to the imported. The elm is a majestic tree for shade
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 405 
 
 and beauty. It is also used at the present day for timber, es- 
 pecially in the manufacture of carts and carriages. Shrubby 
 plants have greatly multiplied since the forests have been cut 
 down. They spring up spontaneously about every walk and 
 hedge, and in the uncultivated pastures. Many of them yield a 
 large revenue in berries to the busy hands that pick them. Mr. 
 Flint enumerates, in his catalogue of plants in New Hampshire, 
 more than twelve hundred varieties. 
 
 Of the common animals which constitute the fauna of our 
 state, it is not necessary here to write. Their names are too 
 familiar to need repetition. The fox, wild-cat, bear and wolf 
 have become quite rare and are usually confined to the moun- 
 tainous regions. The beaver, deer, moose, otter and martin 
 have, with few exceptions, disappeared. After the learned Buf- 
 fon wrote his natural history, Mr. Jefferson made some criticisms 
 upon the work and pointed out some errors in it, in his " Notes 
 on Virginia." When these gentlemen met in Paris, Buffon gave 
 to Jefferson a copy of his work, saying : " When Mr. Jefferson 
 shall have read this, he will be perfectly satisfied that I am 
 right." Mr. Jefferson was determined to prove to him that the 
 American deer was not the red deer of Europe ; nor the moose 
 the reindeer of Lapland. He therefore procured the horns of 
 a Virginia deer and the skeleton and stuffed skin of a New 
 Hampshire moose. He wrote to General Sullivan to procure 
 the latter. He was obliged to raise a company of twenty men 
 to capture a moose near the White Mountains. The expense of 
 the foray, the bill of the taxidermist and the freight to Paris 
 were forty guineas, which Mr. Jefferson cheerfully paid to gain a 
 scientific victory over the learned Frenchman. 
 
 CHAPTER CXI. 
 
 UNDECIDED QUESTIONS IN NEW ENGLAND HISTORY. 
 
 " Here," said a student to Casaubon, as they entered the old 
 hall of the Sorbonne, " is a building in which men have disputed 
 for more than four hundred years." "And," asked Casaubon, 
 " what has been settled ? " There is a sad meaning in the ques- 
 tion of the aged professor. There are many important questions 
 in American history, relating both to facts and opinions, which 
 are constantly debated but never decided, Some of these con-
 
 406 HISTORY OF 
 
 cern the reputation of the early settlers of New Hampshire. In 
 studying the records of our state, a question meets us at the very 
 opening of our investigations : Were our fathers justifiable in 
 their treatment of the Indians ? Most censors and critics of the 
 past unhesitatingly answer, " No ! " Moralists and historians 
 frequently give the same reply. It is proper to remark, in the 
 first place, that we must judge of men of former ages by the 
 light they enjoyed, and the circumstances in which they were 
 placed. They differ from us in several particulars. They were 
 strangers and pilgrims among savages, and in a wilderness. 
 They were in the minority ; consequently their perils and their 
 fears wexe greater. They had never been taught the equality of 
 all races, nor the necessity of treating all men as equals. They 
 believed that men should be estimated according to their moral 
 worth and intellectual power. The Indians, whom modern phil- 
 anthropists think they ought to have treated with greater kind- 
 ness, were suspicious, treacherous, revengeful, and implacable. 
 They sought occasions of assault ; they had no responsible gov- 
 ernments which could enforce obedience to treaties. Their chiefs 
 ruled by their personal influence and bravery. The tribes were 
 numerous, and the promises of one chief had no influence over 
 others. The subjects of these sagamores were ignorant, and 
 could not appreciate arguments ; they were passionate, and would 
 not wait for a legal investigation of wrongs ; they were revenge- 
 ful, and set no limit to the degree of penalty inflicted, or the 
 number involved in it. The crime of a single white man was 
 avenged upon the race wherever found. The Indians had no 
 social qualities ; they were filthy in person, repulsive in habits, 
 unprincipled in morals, and, in a word, very disagreeable neigh- 
 bors. They made war, like beasts of prey, by stealth, in the 
 night and from places of concealment. They avoided the open 
 field and the light of day. They lay in ambush, near your path 
 or about your dwelling, till they could murder you alone and un- 
 armed. Under the garb of friendship, their spies entered your 
 house ; and, while enjoying your hospitality, opened at mid- 
 night your doors to their associates. So they destroyed men, 
 families, hamlets and towns. When the house of the aged 
 Waldron of Dover was thus entered, and those grim savages 
 hacked that venerable man in pieces with their hatchets, that 
 single councilor was worth more to the world than all the sav- 
 ages then roaming the wilds of New Hampshire. When his 
 eagle eye was quenched in death, more virtue, intelligence and 
 magnanimity passed from earth than all the surviving savages 
 of the continent possessed. After the lapse of more than two 
 centuries, with an entire change of the relative condition of the 
 Whites and Indians, we do not to-day treat the natives of the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 407 
 
 country so kindly as did the early settlers of New Hampshire. 
 Still, the sins of " the living present " are passed over in silence 
 by the indignant philanthropist, while the faults of " the buried 
 past " are greatly exaggerated. It is safe to war upon the dead. 
 They offer no resistance. Juvenal chose, for satire, those whose 
 ashes reposed in the Flaminian way ; so the cowardly Falstaff 
 fleshed his sword in the body of the dead Percy. 
 
 There are other charges which still more deeply affect the 
 reputation of our ancestors in New Hampshire. They shared 
 in the intolerance and superstitions of the age. They joined in 
 persecuting Quakers and in prosecuting witches. Many authors 
 condemn them, for both these facts, unheard and undefended ; 
 others attempt to vindicate their conduct in both cases. The 
 present brief narrative allows of no detailed account of that sad 
 portion of our history, nor of any elaborate vindication of the 
 actors in it. A brief quotation from a lecture of one of the 
 ablest jurists who ever sat on the bench of the supreme court of 
 New Hampshire may suffice. With regard to the banishment 
 of Quakers and other sects hostile to the government of the 
 colony he says : " The right of the colonial government to ex- 
 clude persons actually settled in the colony existed from the 
 power to make laws, constitute courts and magistrates, and 
 punish offences. Banishment was a recognized mode of pun- 
 ishment, and this was their common penalty for grave of- 
 fences against their religious policy. It was peculiarly adapted 
 to a commonwealth which was to be governed on religious prin- 
 ciples, and to suppress the promulgation of religious doctrines 
 inimical to its welfare. The Puritans desired to remove the dis- 
 turbers of their peace ; and many, if not most of these, were 
 religious controversialists." Every question, in those days, took 
 a religious turn ; hence the policy of the age was religious, and 
 the religion of the people was political. Danger to the state 
 might grow out of fanaticism as well as from treason ; and the 
 safety of the state required the suppression of both these ele- 
 ments of ruin. Dr. Palfrey, the learned and candid historian of 
 the Puritans, writes : " No householder has a more unqualified 
 title to declare who shall have the shelter of his roof, than had 
 the governor and company of Massachusetts Bay to decide who 
 should be sojourners or visitors within their precincts. Their 
 danger was real, though the experiment proved it to be far less 
 than was at first supposed. The provocations which were offered 
 were exceedingly offensive. It is hard to say what should have 
 been done with disturbers so unmanageable." Our fathers were, 
 undoubtedly, chargeable with intolerance. Are we better than 
 they ? Is not our toleration of all sects, in religion, rather the 
 result of indifference than charity ? In politics, we are not a
 
 408 HISTORY OF 
 
 whit behind the most bigoted of our ancestors in disarming op- 
 ponents ; it is true we do not peril their liberty or lives, but we 
 destroy their reputation, which, to many, is still dearer. The 
 persecution of witches was the delusion of the age. All classes 
 shared in the folly and the crime. " In England, the law against 
 witchcraft was enforced with as little doubt of its existence and 
 of its being a proper object of criminal cognizance, as prevailed 
 in Massachusetts ; and the executions there were much more 
 numerous." The wisdom of our day does not punish, but pro- 
 motes, " spiritual manifestations " quite as puerile and absurd as 
 those that were once suppressed by law. 
 
 The people of New Hampshire and Maine have a personal 
 interest in the character of the early proprietors and settlers of 
 these states. The question is still debated, whether Mason and 
 Gorges, the early owners of Maine and New Hampshire, ought 
 to be classed among mercenary adventurers or the founders of 
 States. Captain John Mason received such title to the territory 
 of the Granite State as kings and corporations could bestow. 
 He planted colonies upon the soil and gave name to the state. 
 He persevered where most men would have failed ; he hoped 
 where others would have despaired ; he made magnificent plans 
 for himself, but they came to nought. He expended a large es- 
 tate upon his plantations in the wilderness, and received no re- 
 turns. When he died he bequeathed to his heirs nothing but a 
 legacy of quarrels and lawsuits which lasted for nearly a cen- 
 tury. His whole life may be illustrated by the troubled sleep of 
 the hungry man, who "dreameth, and behold he eateth ; but he 
 waketh and his soul is empty." He was a martyr to "a great 
 idea." 
 
 In the distribution of New England territory by the English 
 king, Maine fell to the share of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who 
 received, with the title to the soil, unlimited authority to found 
 a state or kingdom, as his ambition might dictate. Now it cer- 
 tainly concerns the people of Maine to know the character of 
 their proprietor, and the settlers he introduced. Bancroft says 
 of him : "The nature of Gorges was generous, and his piety sin- 
 cere. He sought pleasure in doing good ; fame, by advancing 
 Christianity among the heathen ; a durable monument, by erect- 
 ing houses, villages and towns." There is, at this moment, a 
 warm discussion maintained by the Maine Historical Society and 
 some literary gentlemen out of the state, respecting this man and 
 the first colony he planted. The friends of Gorges adopt the 
 views of Bancroft and defend him and his followers. His op- 
 ponents affirm that he was a mere adventurer, a follower of 
 
 " Mammon, the least erected spirit that fell 
 From Heaven;" 
 
 and that the company which he hired to make the first settle-
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 409 
 
 ment in Maine, at Popham, in 1607, were convicts and felons; 
 and that this colony was a precursor of Botany Bay. Mr. Wil- 
 liam Willis, in a work entitled, "Voyages to the East Coast of 
 America in the XVI. Century," says : "Another serious cause of 
 failure should not be omitted ; and that was the employment, in 
 the various expeditions, of vagabonds and convicted felons, of 
 whom the English nation was but too glad to be rid, in voyages 
 of unusual danger." While Mr. Willis admits that criminals 
 were employed as sailors, he denies that Popham was settled 
 by such men ; because Gorges designed to found a state, not a 
 colony of convicts, and he knew his own interests too well to 
 choose idle vagabonds for the founders of a new colony. A 
 writer in the Historical Magazine for May, 1869, says in reply : 
 "Popham's sole idea was to get riches by convict labor ; and 
 Gorges' plan was to rid England of dangerous riffraff." He 
 quotes Lloyd, a biographer of Popham, who says of the chief 
 justice : "Not only did he punish malefactors but provide for 
 them. He first [in 1707, at Sagadahoc] set up the discovery of 
 New England to maintain and employ those who could not live 
 honestly ; who would rather hang than work." Lord Bacon, 
 also, called them " the scum of people, wicked and condemned 
 men." Fuller speaks of men who "leapt thither from the gal- 
 lows," "spit out of the mouth of England." In fact, the same 
 charges have, at times, been made of every colony on this con- 
 tinent. Perhaps it is well to heed the advice of Juvenal to the 
 Romans, in tracing genealogies : 
 
 But the Popham colony came to nought. All the magnificent 
 schemes of Gorges failed. He was the victim of "great expec- 
 tations." At the hour of his decease, after forty years of labor 
 and the expenditure of more than twenty thousand pounds, he 
 grasped " a barren sceptre," 
 
 "No sou of his succeeding." 
 
 Success, with most men, is proof of virtue ; but failure is dem- 
 onstration, "strong as proofs of Holy Writ," of corruption. 
 Had Mason and Gorges succeeded in their plans, the hundred 
 voices of fame would have blazoned their deeds down 
 
 "To the last syllable of recorded time."
 
 4o HISTORY or 
 
 CHAPTER CXII. 
 
 PROPER NAMES IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
 
 Coleridge remarks " that the history of a word is often worth 
 more than the history of a campaign." This is specially true 
 of proper names. England, alone, has about thirty thousand 
 surnames. They originated about the time of the conquest, 
 A. D., 1066. Originally, men had but one name. When heathen 
 nations became Christians, they received new names, usually of 
 Hebrew origin. Of course many families had the same name, 
 and they could be distinguished only by sobriquets or nick- 
 names. When these new converts became citfzens, owned land 
 and held offices, it became necessary to distinguish them by such 
 appellations as would be recognized in law. Hence surnames 
 were invented. These were so called because " they were, at 
 first, written, not in a direct line after the Christian name, but 
 above it, between the lines," and, hence they were called in 
 Latin supra nomina; in Italian, supra nome; in French, surnoms 
 over-names. The "sur" is the French preposition, meaning 
 " over," not the English sir, which is formed from the Latin 
 " senior," which in the Romance tongues became senhor, seign- 
 eur and sieur, and in English, passed into sire and sir. The 
 Latin word for mistress, "domina," with the prefix "mea," my, 
 has undergone a more remarkable transformation ; mea domina 
 has passed into "madame," "madam," "marm," "mum," and 
 "m" as in the response of the maid-of-all-work, "yes 'm," which 
 means, etymologically, "yes, my lady." The names of places of 
 Saxon origin are often compounded of two or more roots. An 
 old proverb says : 
 
 " In ford, in ham, in ley and ton 
 The most of English surnames run." 
 
 As the names of men and of their residences are often identical, 
 this distich applies to local as well as surnames. Mr. Lower 
 adds to these familiar terminations, the following : 
 
 " Ing, Hurst and Wood, Wick, Sted and Field, 
 Full many English surnames yield ; 
 With Thorpe and Bourne, Cote, Caster, Oke, 
 Combe, Bury, Don and Stowe and Stoke, 
 With Ey and Port, Shaw, Worth and Wade 
 Hill. Gate, Well, Stone, are many made. 
 Cliff, Marsh, and Mouth and Down and Sand, 
 And Beck and Sea with numbere stand." 
 
 Ford, from the Saxon faran, English fare, to go or pass,
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 411 
 
 means a place where a stream is so shallow as to be passable. 
 Ham is the Saxon for home. Ley, lea, leigh, or legh, is a 
 pasture or field. Ey, ig or ea, either denotes an island or a 
 place near to the water. Ton, tune or town, denotes an en- 
 closure. England is dotted with inclosures. The old Germans, 
 says Tacitus, delighted in separate abodes. Ton or town origi- 
 nally meant a twig, the first element of a hedge ; hence tun, 
 ton or town was a place surrounded by a hedge. Hurst is a 
 wood or grove ; wick, a village, castle or fort ; stow, a perma- 
 nent residence or mansion ; sted, a fixed abode ; combe, a val- 
 ley ; cot, a cottage ; thorpe, a village ; worth, a farm or estate ; 
 burg, bury or borough, a hill or stronghold. Thorpe is of Dan- 
 ish origin. It occurs as prefix and suffix in more than three 
 hundred local English names. It is nearly equivalent to ham. 
 The termination "ing" has a variety of meanings, in the Gothic 
 dialects, ist, It means a son or descendant ; as in the Saxon, 
 Byrning is the son of Byrn ; in the Swedish, Skiolding is the 
 son of Skiold. 2d, It means action when affixed to a verb, as 
 in burning, feeding, etc. 3d, It means a field or country and is 
 found in Icelandic and German proper names, as Lotharingen, 
 the country of Lothar. Bee and burne are Saxon words mean- 
 ing brook or stream ; they often appear in names of places as 
 Beckford, Beckley, Beckwith, Burnham. 
 
 The Celts or Kelts were the earliest inhabitants of Great Brit- 
 ain ; of course, they have left many names of places and of men 
 in the English language. An old couplet runs thus : 
 
 " By tre, ros, pol, Ian, caer and pen, 
 You know the most of Cornish men." 
 
 We may add, also, that by these monosyllables, used as pre- 
 fixes or suffixes, you may detect many Celtic names of places. 
 These words mean in English, a town, a heath, a pool, a church, 
 a rock, and a head or promontory. Our local and surnames are 
 borrowed from all the successive races that have peopled Great 
 Britain, the Celts, Romans, Saxons, Danes and Normans. These 
 names were originally significant of natural features in places or 
 of something peculiar in form, color, figure, residence or occu- 
 pation in men. With us, they have lost their original meanings 
 and are, for the most part, positive misnomers, etymologically 
 considered. 
 
 NAMES OF TOWNS. 
 
 Acworth is composed of ac or aec, an oak, and worth, land 
 or estate, and is equivalent to oak-land. 
 
 Alton. The first element is uncertain. It is probably the 
 Gothic root alt, old. Alton, therefore, is "old-town."
 
 412 HISTORY OF 
 
 Alexandria is the name of an ancient town built by Alexan- 
 der, which word in the Greek means "an aider of men." 
 
 Alstead. The first root is uncertain, It may be formed from 
 the Saxon aid, old and sted, a fixed abode or home, meaning old 
 home ; as Alford is oldford. 
 
 Allenstown. Allen is from Alan, or Ulfwin, "wolf of victory," 
 the name of a chief ; and town is the Saxon ton, an enclosure. 
 
 Amherst is possibly composed of ham, home, and hurst or 
 herst, a grove, a town in the forest. Some derive the first root 
 from Hamo, a sheriff of Kent. 
 
 Antrim, so named from a county in Ireland, whence the ances- 
 tors of many of its inhabitants had emigrated in 1719 and in 
 subsequent years. 
 
 Andover. An, andr, endr, in fhe names of towns, are sup- 
 posed to be abbreviations of Andred or Andrew ; as An-caster, 
 Anston. And-efer now Andover, or Andred's place near a stream. 
 Atkinson. Atkins is derived by Camden from At, an abbre- 
 viation of Arthur, and kins, a child, allied to the German kind, 
 a child, meaning the son of Arthur ; as Wilkins is the son of 
 Will and Simkins the son of Sim. Atkinson is the son of At- 
 kins or the grandson of Arthur, which in the Celtic means a 
 strong man, a hero. Colonel Theodore Atkinson of Portsmouth 
 owned a large portion of this town when it was chartered, and 
 gave his own name to it. 
 
 Barnstead. Barn is supposed to be a compound of two Saxon 
 words, bere, barley, and ern, a place ; Barnstead would seem 
 to mean "Barley-place-home." Barton is barley town ; and Ber- 
 wick is barley village. 
 
 Barrington. Baring means the children of Bera, a Saxon no- 
 ble ; Barrington, the town of the children of Bera, in Cam- 
 bridgeshire, England. 
 
 Bartlett is a diminutive of Bartholomew, which in Hebrew 
 means "the son that suspends the waters." 
 
 Bath from the Saxon baeth or bad, a bathing-place, given to a 
 town in Somerset, famed for its hot baths. 
 
 Bedford is said to be derived from beado and ford, meaning 
 battle-ford or slaughter-ford. Bosworth gives bedican, to bedike, 
 and ford, a fortified passage. 
 
 Bennington is supposed to mean the town of the children of 
 Binna. Ben may be an abbreviation of Benjamm. The town of 
 Bennington in Vermont, and that of the same name in New 
 Hampshire, were named in honor of Gov. Benning Wentworth. 
 
 Bethlehem is Hebrew, and means "house of bread." The 
 priory of St. Mary of Bethlehem was converted by Henry VIII. 
 into a hospital and was shortened into Bedlam. 
 
 Boscawen is a name of Cornish origin and signifies "a house 
 surrounded by elder trees."
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 413 
 
 Bow is so named from the curve in the river Merrimack. 
 
 Bradford means broad ford. There is a town of that name 
 on the Avon, which is Celtic for river. 
 
 Brentwood is burnt wood, a town in England, in the county of 
 Essex, which means East Saxons. 
 
 Bridgewater needs no interpretation. 
 
 Bristol is Welsh in origin, from bris, broken, and tol, a chasm ; 
 a city built near the cleft mountain, where the Avon runs to 
 the sea. 
 
 Brookfield reveals its own origin. 
 
 Brookline is equally intelligible. 
 
 Cambridge is the bridge on the Cain. This is a Celtic word 
 adopted by the Saxons, and means crooked. Chaucer cele- 
 brated this crooked, sluggish, creeping river, now so renowned 
 for the city and university upon its banks, when only a solitary 
 mill was turned by its waters. 
 
 " At Trompington, not far from Canta brigge 
 There goth a brook, and over it a brigge, 
 Upon the which brook, there stood a melle ; 
 Now this is very sothe that I you tell." 
 
 Campton is Camp-town. 
 
 Canaan is borrowed from the Bible and means merchant or 
 trader. 
 
 Candia is the modern name of Crete, in the Mediterranean, 
 which was named, by the ancients, Greta or chalk, from the abun- 
 dance of that earth found there ; and Candia may be allied to 
 the Latin verb candeo, to shine or glisten. 
 
 Canterbury is the name given by the Saxons to the capital of 
 Cainte or Kent; and they spelled it Cant-wara-byrig, which 
 means the stronghold of the people of Kent. 
 
 Carroll is named in honor of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, 
 one of the Revolutionary patriots. 
 
 Centre Harbor speaks for itself. 
 
 Charlestown, originally called Number Four, was heroically 
 defended by Captain Phineas Stevens and thirty brave associ- 
 ates, for three days, in April, 1747, against four hundred French 
 and Indians under the command of Mons. Debeline. Captain 
 Stevens, for his gallant conduct, was presented with an elegant 
 sword, by Sir Charles Knowles, and in honor of the baronet the 
 town was afterwards called Charlestown. 
 
 Chester, in all English names of places, means camp, from 
 the Latin castra. It indicated a Roman encampment. Chester- 
 field is the site of a camp. 
 
 Field is from the Saxon, fyllan, to fell, and indicates a plain 
 from which the trees have been felled. 
 
 Chichester is a town in Sussex or South Saxon, and signifies
 
 414 HISTORY OF 
 
 the camp of Cissa, one of the Saxon chiefs. It was at first 
 written " Cissaceaster," or city of Cissa, son of Ella. 
 
 Claremont is probably of French origin ; clair and mont, noble 
 mountain. 
 
 Colebrook. The first root of this word is of uncertain origin. 
 Coin, in English names, is from the Latin colonia, and desig- 
 nates a Roman colony. Six towns in England are named Colne. 
 Lincoln terminates with the same word. The Saxon word cal 
 means also cole. 
 
 Columbia is derived from Columbus. 
 
 Concord. " In regard to this name," says Dr. Bouton, " the 
 uniform tradition is, that it was designed to express the entire 
 unanimity in purpose and action which had characterized the in- 
 habitants of Rumford during the period of their controversy 
 with the proprietors of Bow, and, indeed, from the first settle- 
 ment of Penacook." 
 
 Conway is of Celtic origin, from con, head or chief, and wy, 
 a river. 
 
 Cornish is also a Celtic word, from Cornwall. This word is 
 variously interpreted to mean the horn or promontory of the 
 Gaels ; or, " the altars of the Gael." 
 
 Dalton is dale town. 
 
 Danbury is the stronghold of the Danes. 
 
 Danville is the village of the Danes. 
 
 Deerfield is the pasture of the deer. 
 
 Deering is the field of the deer ; as Derby is the home of the 
 deer. This name was given to the town by Governor John Went- 
 worth of Portsmouth, in honor of his wife, Frances Deering 
 Wentworth. 
 
 Deny, like Druid, is supposed to be derived from the Celtic 
 deru, an oak. 
 
 Dorchester, in old English, "Doreceaster^from the Celtic dwr, 
 water, and the Latin castra, a camp. 
 
 Dover from the Celtic dwr or dwfwr, water, and means the 
 town upon the water in Kent. The Romans called the place 
 Dubrae. 
 
 Dublin is of Irish origin. Dubh, in Celtic, is black ; lyn or 
 linne is a pool or lake ; Dublin is black pool. Durham is deer 
 home. 
 
 Dummer, from the Danish dommer, a judge or arbiter, the 
 name of a man. 
 
 Dunbarton, first called Starkstown, was named from a town 
 and castle in Scotland, near which Stark's ancestors lived. 
 Dun is Celtic and means a fort. Isaac Taylor interprets Dun- 
 barton as " the fort of the Britons." 
 
 Eaton is water town.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 415 
 
 Kingston, is king's town. 
 
 Effingham is the home of the children of Effa or Uffa, a fa- 
 mous king of the East Angles, A. D. 575. 
 
 Enfield is the end of the open country. Field is a place where 
 the trees have been "felled." 
 
 Epping is of uncertain origin. It may be from the Saxon 
 aeps an aspen, and ing, a meadow. 
 
 Epsom is fey some derived from Ebba, meaning Ebba's home ; 
 by others from aeps, an aspen, meaning the home of the aspens. 
 
 Ellsworth. Ella was a Saxon king who reigned in Sussex or 
 South-Saxons. Ellsworth is Ella's estate. 
 
 The Gaelic and Erse word for water is uisge, of which whis- 
 key is a corruption, derived from uisge-boy (or usquebaugh), 
 meaning yellow water ; or,* if the second root be bagh, " water 
 of life." The root uisge appears in Wisk, Esk, Usk, and Exe, 
 names of rivers. 
 
 Exeter, formerly written, Exancester, means the camp upon 
 the river Exe. 
 
 Farm-ing-ton. The town of the meadow farm. The Saxon 
 verb feormian meant to supply with food, because tenants, an- 
 ciently, paid their rent in produce and stock ; hence, the word 
 feorm or farm. 
 
 Fitzwilliam is the son of William, originally the name of a 
 man. Fitz is from the Latin films. 
 
 Francestown reveals its own origin. It was named for Fran- 
 ces, the wife of the last Governor Wentworth. 
 
 Franconia, the home of the Franks, a name given, in the east, 
 to the inhabitants of western Europe. The word Franks dates 
 from the crusades in which the inhabitants of France, the land 
 of the Franks, were leaders. 
 
 Franklin, anciently, " a superior freeholder " in England. 
 
 Freedom tells its own origin. 
 
 Gilford. Gill is a valley ; and Gilford is the ford in the 
 valley. Gill is also the name of a man ; and 
 
 Gilsum is probably Gill's home, and 
 
 Gilmanton is the town of the man of the valley. Some ety- 
 mologists derive Gilman from Gaul or Gael, making the family 
 of French extraction. 
 
 Goffstown. GofT is Celtic for smith. 
 
 Gorham. Gor is Celtic for a place of worship, as in Ban- 
 gor ; it is applied to the choir of a church, hence, Gor-ham is 
 church-home. 
 
 Grafton. Graf is connected with grave, to cut or ditch ; as 
 Gravesend is the end of the ditch or moat ; and Grafton is a 
 moated or fortified town. Some authors derive it from the Gothic 
 graf, an earl or count.
 
 41 6 HISTORY OF 
 
 Grantham. Grant is simply grand or great, and as a surname 
 was translated by the Latin magnus. Grant-ham is great or 
 grand home, or the home of Mr. Grant. 
 
 Groton. Gro, in Celtic, is sand ; if from this root, Grotou 
 would mean sand-town. It may be the French gros or great. 
 
 Greenfield and Greenland need no explanation. 
 
 Hampton is home town. 
 
 Hampstead is homestead. 
 
 Hancock. Han sometimes means high, allied to the Saxon 
 hean or heah ; and cock means a hill ; Hancock, a high hill ; or 
 as the name of a man it may be from Hans, John, and cock, lit- 
 tle, meaning little John. 
 
 Hanover first appears in German history, in the twelfth cen- 
 tury. The river Leine flows through* Hanover to the Aller. It is 
 thought that the name was first given to a ford over this river 
 meaning hand-over, or have over. " Hab or han ober." 
 
 Haverhill. Haver is sometimes thought to be a modification 
 of the Celtic gafr, a goat ; if so, Haverhill would mean goat hill ; 
 others derive it from the Dutch haver, meaning oats. 
 
 Hawke was named from Admiral Hawke ; a name derived 
 from heraldry, the hawk being a symbol of courage. The town 
 is now called Danville, or Dane village. 
 
 Hebron is a Hebrew name and means alliance, society or 
 friendship. 
 
 Hill speaks for itself. 
 
 Hillsborough is the stronghold upon the hill, or the city of 
 Mr. Hill. 
 
 Hinsdale is named in honor of Colonel Hinsdale, one of the 
 earliest settlers of that town. It meant, originally, Hind's dale. 
 The Saxon hine meant a domestic, a peasant, or boor. The 
 last word appears in neighbor or nigh-boor. 
 
 Holderness is said to be composed of hole-Deira-ness. In 
 this word, ness is the Saxon naes, nose, and Deira is the name 
 of one of the Saxon kingdoms ; hence Holderness is the nose or 
 promontory of the low-lying kingdom, Deira. Others interpret 
 differently. 
 
 Hollis may have some relation to the holly tree, or it may, like 
 Harris, Harry's son, be a patronymic. 
 
 Hooksett. Saet, in Saxon words, means dwellers or inhabi- 
 tants ; if hook is also Saxon, Hooksett would mean the dwellers 
 at the bend or bow in the river. Hock also means high. Hock- 
 cliff is high cliff. 
 
 Hopkinton. Hob is an abbreviation of Robert ; and kin or 
 kins means children ; Hobkins or Hopkins denotes the sons 
 of Robert ; and Hopkinton is the town of the children of Robert.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 417 
 
 Hudson is the son of Hod or Roger; or it may be borrowed 
 from the famous navigator, Henry Hudson. 
 Jackson is the son of Jack or John. 
 
 Jaffrey, or Jeffrey, is probably corrupted from Geoffrey or God- 
 frey, from the German Gott and fried, God's peace. 
 Jefferson is the son of Jeffers or Jeffrey. 
 Keen or Kean is the name of a man and means bold, daring 
 or bright. The town is said to have been named in honor of 
 Sir Benjamin Keene, who at the date of the grant was minister 
 from England to Spain. 
 
 Kensington, the town of the children of the tribe. Cyn, in 
 Saxon, means tribe, race or kin. King is supposed to be from 
 this root. It was written cyning, or cyng. 
 Kingston is the town of the king. 
 
 Lancaster. Lon or Lune was the name of the English river 
 where there was a Roman station; hence, Lancaster is the 
 camp upon the Lune. Lune is an abbreviation of the Roman 
 Alauna and that is composed of the Celtic words all, white, 
 and avon or afon, water. 
 
 Landaff. Llan is Celtic, meaning an enclosure, church-yard 
 and church. Landaff is, therefore, "the Church of David." 
 
 Langdon. Don or dun means both hill and water; hence, 
 from the second definition, the name of the river Don. Lang 
 means long ; Langdon is long hill or town. Dun is also a hill- 
 fortress. 
 
 Lebanon is a Bible name and means white. Mount Leb- 
 anon, therefore, is identical in meaning with Mont Blanc. 
 Lee, legh, and leigh all mean pasture, field or commons. 
 Lempster is probably an abbreviation of Leominster from the 
 Celtic lleian, a nun, and minster, a monastery ; in this word, 
 a nunnery. 
 
 Lincoln is the old Roman Lindum colonia, the colony of Lyn- 
 dum. Lyn means a lake or pool, and dun a hill or town. 
 
 Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, transferred to a New Hamp- 
 shire town ; anciently called Olisippo or Ulysippo, from Ulysses, 
 the fabled founder. The true origin is uncertain. 
 Littleton is little town, a misnomer. 
 
 London is said to be formed from lyn, a pool, and dun or don 
 a hill. Taylor says it means " a fortified hill." 
 
 Londonderry " speaks to us of the settlement of the desolated 
 city of Derry by the London guilds." Don, as a Celtic affix, 
 means hill, and deru means an oak. 
 
 London is said to be from law and don, both meaning hill. It 
 is of Scotch origin. The etymology is doubtful. 
 
 Lyman is of uncertain origin. It may be from lye, a pasture, 
 and man, meaning the man at the pasture.
 
 418 HISTORY OF 
 
 Lyme from lim, lime or mud. 
 
 Lyndeborough, the town of the linden tree. 
 
 Manchester, called by the old Britons Maen-cei'nion, the rock 
 of gems ; by the Romans, Mancunium ; by the Saxons, Mancestre. 
 Man is also Celtic for district. 
 
 Marlow. Mere is a pool or lake ; low, a hill ; the hill by 
 the lake. 
 
 Marlborough, the fortified town upon the marl. 
 
 Mason, a man's name indicating his trade. 
 
 Meredith, a name of Celtic origin, and denotes the roar of 
 the sea. 
 
 Merrimack, an Indian word meaning swift-water-place. 
 
 Middletown and Milton mean middle-town. 
 
 Milan is borrowed from the Italians. 
 
 Milford is the ford at the mill. 
 
 Monroe, Celtic Monadh Roe or Mont Roe, from the mountain 
 on the river Roe, in Ireland. The root rea, rhe, or rhin means 
 rapid or flowing. 
 
 Mont Vernon. Vernon is a Norman name. 
 
 Moultonborough. The first root of Moulton is of uncertain 
 origin. 
 
 Nashua, an Indian word, meaning pebbly bottom. 
 
 Nashville. Naes is a promontory ; ville is French for a town ; 
 if these words make Nashville, it means the town upon the 
 promontory. 
 
 Nelson is the son of Nel, originally the name of a man. 
 
 New Boston. Boston is variously derived from Bosa, a bishop 
 of E. Angila, A. D. 669, or from St. Botolph. 
 
 Newbury is new town, usually a fortified town. 
 
 New Ipswich. Ipswich in England is variously interpreted ; 
 i, from Eba a Saxon queen, and wic orwich, meaning Eba's 
 home ; 2, from Gippin, the winding river and wich, meaning the 
 placo of the crooked river. 
 
 New London, Newmarket, Newport, Newton and Northwood 
 reveal their own etymology. 
 
 Northumberland is, in England, land north of the Humber. 
 "The Humber was a Cimbric river ; and Northumberland was 
 called of old, North Cumriland, where the Cymri were driven 
 from the plains before they settled in Wales." 
 
 Nottingham is the home of the descendants of Mr. Nott. 
 
 Mr. Edmunds, in his history of names of places, says : "The 
 word Snottingham, now disguised as Nottingham, means the home 
 of the children of the excavations, or of the cave dwellers." 
 
 When Nottingham included Northwood, the lumbermen dis- 
 tinguished their timber lands by peculiar names. There was a 
 place called by the Indians "Gebeag, a place for eels ;" by the
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 419 
 
 lumbermen "Gebeag Woods." The dense forests to the north- 
 west of Gebeag were called North Woods, hence the name of 
 the town, Northwood. 
 
 Orford. Orr or Ore is a river in Scotland ; "or," in Welch, 
 signifies a boundary or border ; Qrford is the ford by the bound- 
 ary, or the ford of the river Ore. 
 
 Ossipee is an Indian word, which Mr. Potter describes as 
 "the river of pines." 
 
 Pelham, either from peele, a tower, or from pool. It may mean 
 tower home, or pool home. 
 
 Pembroke. Pern or pen means, in Celtic, a hill ; Pembroke 
 may mean hill-brook. 
 
 Piermont is probably of French origin, meaning stone-mount. 
 
 Pinkham is the home of the pink. 
 
 Pittsfield and Pittsburg are derived from Pitt the earl of 
 Chatham. The name may have originated from a foundling ex- 
 posed in a pit. 
 
 Plaistow. The first root is doubtful. Plega, Saxon, means 
 a battle ; stow, a place, mansion or town ; perhaps Plaistow 
 means battle-place. One author defines Play-sted and Play- 
 stow, " a place for sports." 
 
 Plymouth, the mouth of the Plym, a. river in Devonshire, 
 England, so named from plwm, lead, from the color of its 
 waters. "Plymouth was so named by the Pilgrims, in remem- 
 brance of the last English land on which their eyes rested as 
 they passed down the Channel." 
 
 Portsmouth, the mouth of the port. 
 
 Randolph signifies fair help ; the same as Randulph, from 
 ran, fair, and ulph, help. 
 
 Raymond, from rein, pure, and mund, mouth, one of vir- 
 tuous speech. 
 
 Richmond is from ric, rich, and mund, mouth, meaning alo- 
 quent. 
 
 Rochester, the camp of the Saxon chief, Hrof. It may be 
 formed from roche, French for rock. 
 
 Roxbury is the town of rocks. The Roman name of Roch- 
 ester, in England, was Durobriviae. 
 
 Rollinsford. Roland, Rollin and Rodland mean counsel foi 
 the land. Rollinsford is the ford of the counselor for the land. 
 
 Rumney or Romney is Roman island or station by the water. 
 
 Rye is a bank or shore. This town has an appropriate name. 
 The same is true of Rye in England. 
 
 Salem is a Hebrew word meaning peace. 
 
 Salisbury, from the Latin "salus" health. The town of health 
 or safety. 
 
 Sanbornton is the town of the Sanborns, Sanborn is prob
 
 420 HISTORY OF 
 
 ably composed of the words sand and bourne, a boundary, indi- 
 cating that the progenitor of that family lived near a sand hill. 
 Some authors make the original name Samborne, indicating a 
 different origin of the first syllable. 
 
 Sandown is probably sand hill. Down or dune means a grassy 
 hill. Hence the name given to the Southdown sheep. 
 
 Sandwich is sand village. 
 
 Seabrook needs no definition. 
 
 Shelburne may be formed from shel or shal, from the Saxon 
 sceol, shallow, and burn or bourn, a brook. 
 
 Somersworth. The Saxon word somer, summer, became the 
 name of a man, like winter and spring, and worth indicated 
 his estate, as worship or worthship was originally the homage 
 due to wealth. 
 
 Stark is named for General Stark. The word applied as a 
 surname means strong. 
 
 Stewartstown is the town of Mr. Stewart, who owed his name 
 originally to his occupation. 
 
 Stoddard is said to be a corruption of standard. The name 
 was given to the standard-bearer of William the Conqueror, and 
 was written "De La Standard." 
 
 Strafford is street-ford. 
 
 Stratham is street home. 
 
 Sullivan, from the Celtic suil, eye, and ban, fair, meaning the 
 fair-eyed. 
 
 Surry from Suth-rice, south kingdom 
 
 Sutton is south town, a name of thirty-one places in England. 
 
 Sunapee is an Indian name. 
 
 Swanzey is probably swan's island. 
 
 Tamworth is the estate by the Teme. Tarn is Celtic for river, 
 hence the name Teme or Thames. 
 
 Temple speaks for itself. It is of Latin origin. 
 
 Thornton is the town of thorns. 
 
 Troy is borrowed from the classics. There is a Celtic Troy 
 from tre and wy, the town by the river Wye. 
 
 Tuftonborough. Tuf is Danish for branch ; Tufton became 
 an English surname and borough, was the stronghold of the 
 family. 
 
 Unity. The town was called Unity from the happy settlement 
 of the conflicting claims of Hampstead and Kingston to the 
 same tract of land under different grants. 
 
 Wakefield is from the Saxon waeg way, and field, meaning 
 the field by the wayside. It may possibly mean watch-field. 
 
 Walpole is of doubtful origin, perhaps from wall and pol or 
 pool. The town was named in honor of Sir Robert Walpole, 
 Prime Minister of George I.
 
 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 421 
 
 Warner is of uncertain origin. It may be a contraction of 
 Warrener, the keeper of a warren. 
 
 Warren, a preserve for rabbits. One tradition says that Ben- 
 ning Wentworth gave this name to one of his grants in honor of 
 Admiral Warren of "Louisburg notoriety." 
 
 Washington means the town of the meadow creek ; waes is 
 Saxon for water ; one meaning of ing is meadow, and "ton" 
 is town or enclosure. It was the home of the Washingtons in 
 England. 
 
 Weare is an enclosed place on a river. 
 
 Wentworth may be the estate on the river Went in Northum- 
 berland, or the estate of Wanta, a Saxon chief. 
 
 Westmoreland is West-moor-land. The town was named in 
 honor of Lord Westmoreland, a friend of Gov. B. Wentworth. 
 
 Whitefield proclaims its own origin. 
 
 Wilmot may be a corruption of the French name Guilemot, 
 derived from Guillaume, William, which is Guild-helm or golden 
 helmet. 
 
 Wilton from a town in Wiltshire, England. 
 
 Winchester. Gwent or Went is the Celtic name of a city of 
 Hampshire. Gwent means bright or lofty, an elevated tract of 
 country ; gwint means wind. If this word enters into Winches- 
 ter, it would mean a windy place. As Gwent was the British 
 name of a district, it would mean Gwent-camp. The town was 
 named in honor of Lord Winchester. 
 
 Windham is wind-home. One author makes it a contraction 
 Winmund-ham, the home of Winmund. 
 
 Wolfeborough is the stronghold of Mr. Wolf, who borrows his 
 name from a beast of prey. The town was probably named iu 
 honor of General Wolfe. 
 
 Woodstock is wood-stem. Stoc in Saxon is the main part of 
 the tree. Stoke is a prefix to sixty-five towns in England, and 
 the suffix to many more. 
 
 Isles of Shoals. "They are supposed to have been so called," 
 says Mrs. Thaxter, "not because the rugged reefs run out beneath 
 the water in all directions, ready to wreck and destroy, but be- 
 cause of the 'shoaling' or 'schooling' of fish about them, which, 
 in the mackerel and herring seasons, is very remarkable." 
 
 NAMES OF COUNTIES. 
 
 New Hampshire was divided, in 1771, into five counties. 
 Gov. Wentworth gave the names of his distinguished friends in 
 England to these counties. Each of those names was originally 
 significant of some peculiarities in the home, the person or oc- 
 cupation of the progenitor of the family.
 
 422 HISTORY OF 
 
 Rockingham means the home of the descendants of Mr. 
 Rock. This last word became the name of some man from his 
 residence near a rock. 
 
 Strafford is street-ford first, the designation of a place, then 
 of the occupant of it. 
 
 Hillsborough is the stronghold of Mr. Hill, whose name indi- 
 cates his abode. 
 
 Cheshire is cheese division a name given to a territory long 
 ago celebrated for its cheese. 
 
 Grafton is the moated town which gave name to the Duke, 
 Latin, Dux, or leader who had his residence in it, or it may 
 mean earl-town. 
 
 Belknap is named from the historian of New Hampshire. 
 His name seems to be compounded of bel, beautiful, and 
 knap, hill. 
 
 Carroll, like the town, borrows its name from Charles Carroll 
 of Carroilton. It is an Irish name of uncertain origin. One of 
 the poets mentioned by Ossian is Carril. 
 
 Sullivan is named in honor of General Sullivan. 
 
 Coos is of Indian origin, and means crooked, which appro- 
 priately describes the channel of the Connecticut, in the north. 
 It was originally a part of Grafton county, and was incorporated 
 in 1805. 
 
 Mr. Potter in his history of Manchester gives the following 
 definition of the most important Indian names in New Hamp- 
 shire. Nashua means "the river with a pebbly bottom." Souhe- 
 gan means "worn-out lands." Penacook means "the crooked 
 place." Namoskeak, now written Amoskeag, means "the fish- 
 ing place." Winnepesauky, now spelled Winnipiseogee, means 
 "the beautiful water of the high place." Pequawkett means 
 "the crooked place." Ossipee means "pine river." Swamscott 
 means "the beautiful water place." Winnecowet "the beautiful 
 pine place." Piscataquog means "great deer place." Contoo- 
 cook means "crow place.'' Suncook means "wildcat place." 
 Pemigewasset means "crooked mountain pine place." 
 
 All Indian etymologies, except those given by the aborigines 
 themselves, are quite doubtful.
 
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