Browsing named entities in George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 3, 15th edition.. You can also browse the collection for Wm Johnson or search for Wm Johnson in all documents.

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r the grave of the departed; and if the Indian from the prairies would speak of griefs Edwin James. and hardships, it is the thorns of the prickly pear that Sir Wm Johnson, in Phil. Trans. penetrate his moccasons. Especially the style of the son Six Nations was adorned with noble metaphors, and glowed with allegory. If we sems designating relation, but those also Chap. XXII.} which express a quality. The noun and the adjective are, with the pronoun, blended into one word. The Sir Wm Johnson. power of combination, common to every original language, is possessed in an unlimited degree; and, as a new object is presented to an Indian, he will inquireChap. XXII.} age: the same superstition long lingered in the citiesand palaces of Europe; and, in the century after the Huron missions began, the English moralist Johnson was carried, in his infancy, to the British monarch, to be cured of scrofula by the great medicine of her touch. Little reverence was attached to time or place
, in the excited season of English stockjobbing and English anticipations, the suggestion was revived. When Carolina became, by purchase, a royal 1728 province, Johnson, its governor, was directed to mark Purry's Description of S Carelina, 1731. out townships as far south as the Alatamaha; and, in 1731, a site was chosen for a cof Indian traders. Oldmixon, i. 537. The good success of Oglethorpe made the colony increase rapidly by volunteer emigrants. His under taking will succeed, said Johnson, the governor of Kurze Nachricht von Georgia, in Urlsperger, i. 177. South Carolina; for he nobly devotes all his powers to serve the poor, and rescue them from y which was willing to shun giving offence, And own the Spaniard did a waggish thing, Who cropped our ears, and sent them to the king; and the early genius of Johnson, in more energetic strains, indignant at the supporters of Walpole, as men who explained away the rights of their country, and openly pleaded for pirates, vindica
J. James I., his relations with Virginia, I. 120, 136, 145, 156, 187, 193. Grants a charter for New England, 272. His character, 291. James II. sends rebels to Virginia, II. 250. Becomes a proprietary, 313. Grants New Jersey, 315. Patron of the slave trade, 317. Arbitrary, 320. Favors William Penn, 364. His character, 407. His colonial policy, 408. Taxes colonial commerce, 410, 411, 413, 415. His career as king, 441. His flight, 446. Jamestown founded,. 125. Burned, I. 228. Jeffries, II. 250, 413. Jenkins, III. 436. Jesuits on the Kennebec, I. 27. On the Penobscot, 28. Order founded, III. 120. Extend French dominion, 121. Among the Hurons, 123 At Montreal, 127. Among the Mohawks, 133. On the Kennebec, 136. Their heroism, 141. Among the Onondagas, 143. Mission to the west, 149. On the Mississippi, 157. Law against, 193. Jogues, Father, III. 133. His martyrdom, 137. Johnson, Arabella, I. 357. Joliet, III. 155.