| Alvin Gardner Weeks - 1919 - 302 стор.
...Gorges writes of them that when they landed at Plymouth, England, he seized them and, further, that they were all of one nation but of several parts and several families, and concludes, "This accident must be acknowledged the means, under God, of putting on foot and giving... | |
| 1919 - 862 стор.
...himself says of the kidnapping of the Indians, — "This accident must be acknowledged to be the means of God of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations."" Two years later the Popham colony was sent out and Skitwarroes, with them, returned to his native shores.... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1921 - 502 стор.
...his day both a participant in Ralegh's Guiana Expedition and a Cavalier in the Great Civil War — "must be acknowledged the means, under God, of putting on foot and giving life to our plantation." (Ever since the sojourn in England — some eleven years later — of poor Pokahontas,... | |
| Arlita Dodge Parker - 1925 - 290 стор.
...interested in Waymouth and his captives, three of whom he took into his family. These captives, he says, "must be acknowledged the means under God of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations." The captives told Gorges of the "goodly rivers" and the "stately harbors" of America, of the different... | |
| Harrie Badger Coe - 1928 - 642 стор.
...imperfectly understood), were, according to Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the future Lord Proprietor of Maine, "the means under God of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations." In 1606 charters were granted to two companies, one called the London Company, and the other the Plymouth... | |
| 1892 - 970 стор.
...from a voyage to America ; " which accident," says. Sir Ferdinande Gorges, " must be acknowledged as the means under God of putting on foot and giving life to our plantations." Among the most active and influential men in putting this movement on foot were Sir... | |
| George Folsom - 1830 - 364 стор.
...river Penobscot, from whence he carried to England five of the natives, "three of whom," says Gorges, "I seized upon ; they were all of one nation, but...putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations." He retained these Indians in his family three years, and obtained from them much information respecting... | |
| Mary Ann Radzinowicz - 1984 - 300 стор.
...(reprinted in James P. Baxter, Sir Ferdinando Gorges and His Province of Maine, 3 vols. Boston, 1890): They were all of one nation, but of several parts...on foot, and giving life to all our Plantations.' Probably both Heriot and Smith interviewed the two Algonkians in London; certainly the desire to settle... | |
| Charles L. Cutler - 2000 - 312 стор.
...English. After examining his guests, Gorges wrote that Waymouth "brought five of the Natives . . . ; they were all of one nation, but of several parts...God of putting on foot and giving life to all our Plantations."3 Several of the Indians would in fact serve as guides for later expeditions. Backing... | |
| Alden T. Vaughan - 1995 - 516 стор.
...brought five of the natives, three of whose names were Manida, Skettawarroes, and Tasquantum, whom I seized upon. They were all of one nation, but of...God of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations.14 The two Indians not kept by Gorges were placed in the custody of Sir John Popham, Lord... | |
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