the Rev. Benjamin Blackman, 3. 155; Methodists in, 3. 165; derivation and meaning of, 4. 116, 117, 192; manufactures in, 4.27; called Acosisco, 4. 103; a truck-house established at, 4. 157, 158; Du Monts at, 5. 329; subscription raised to support a clergyman, 6. 180; the Rev. Richard Gibson at, 6. 180, 201; an Episcopal church established at, 6. 180; the Rev. Robert Jordan officiated at, 6. 182; Elder Jesse Lee preached at, 7. 227; home of Roger Spencer, 9.6; mentioned, 1. 64n, 106, 337, 372, 387, 396, 545, 546, 547, 548; 2. 35a, 138, 139, 146, 149, 152, 186, 232; 3. 17, 25, 27, 29n, 40, 47, 76, 104, 120, 121, 136, 137, 151, 189, 208, 212, 215, 344, 373, 430, 433, 434; 4. 69, 71, 243, 258n, 267; 5. xixn, 198, 220; 6. 260, 358; 7. 111, 219; 8. 396, 413, 414, 420; 9. 67; History of, see Folsom, George. academy, incorporated, 8. 174; grant to, 8. 174; opened, 8. 174; preceptors, 8. 174-175; endowed, 8. 175; name changed, 8.175; funds of, 8. 175. bay, 3.229. falls, 3. 121, 128; 5. 283. Indians, engaged in the war with the English, 1. 215; commanded by.Squando, 1. 215; dreaded by the Massachusetts Indians, 3. 99; moved to Canada, 3. 99; merged into the St. Francis tribe, 1. 99; at peace with the English, 1. 103. pond, 9. 212. river, land on granted to Oldham and Vines, 1. 43; land on granted to Lewis and Bonighton, 1. 44; 3. 17; people near to assist Mass., I. 102; the jurisdiction of Mass., extended to, 1. 102; the English interfered with the fishing at, 1. 287; called the Chonacoet, 1. 288; a roadway for the Indians, 1. 333; Capt. Leverett at, 2.81-82, 83; Indian name of, 2. 81n; settlement commenced on, 2. 81n; described, 4. 191; part of Roxcroft's crew left at, 5. 163; fort at deserted, 5. 395; Champlain at, 7. 260; the head waters of, discovered, 9. 217; mentioned, 2. 73, 138, 140, 142; 3.9, 103, 132; 4. 14, 22, 96, 110, 275n, 276n, 281, 289n, 290n; 5. 156n, 283; 6. 179, 210, 213, 235, 241, 250, 252; 7.99; 9. 82, 209,212, 213, 217, 300, 309, 366. valley, 9. 209, 212. Sacoe, see Saco. Sacrifice rock, 4. 272. Safford, James, 4. 397. an early settler of Bakerstown, 2. 113. Sagadahoc, Robert Morgan lived at, 1. 167; number of fighting men at, 1. 228; Silvanus Davis councilor for, 1. 309; 9. 8; under the command of Capt. Edward Tyng 1. 316; described, 1. 551; part of the colonists returned to, 2. 29a; the Indians retreat from, 2.197; the colonists at may have kept a journal, 3. 283; Pownall at, 4. 78; Col. Dongan governor of, 4. 224; commissioners sent to, 4. 224; Popham built a fort at, 5. 156n; a French ship wrecked at, 5. 172; to be supported by the mines, 5. 173; Gilbert wintered at, 5. 178; the fishermen at immoral, 5. 232; the territory of, 5. 242; 6. 17-18; 7. 203; taxed, 5. 249; a garrison at, 5. 277; soldiers from at Worcester, 5. 277n; definition of, 5. 350; reason for the withdrawal of the garrison, 5. 395; settled, 6. 18; attempted separation from Mass., 6. 18; attacked by the Indians, 7. 57; a name of remote antiquity, 7. 295; a province of Pemaquid, 7. 295, 298, 311; commercial treasures of, 7. 295-296; a colony landed at, 7. 298; meetings of the Indians awakened suspicion, 7. 301; the first calamity of, 7. 303; the Virginia built at, 7.303, 312; the colonists returned to England, 7. 304, 312; deserted, 7. 304, 305, 307, 316; cause of their return, 7. 304; the formalities of the Church of England kept at, 7. 304; French and English traditions concerning, 7. 305– 306; Pere Biard at, 7. 305, 305n; the first state paper penned at, 7. 306; the latitude of, 7. 308, 309; the earliest English summary of, 7. 309; languished but not abandoned, 7. 310; the first English possession in America, 7. 310; not related to Pemaquid, 7. 313; the French heard of the evacuation of, 7. 314; Plaistnier embarked to capture, 7. 314, 316-317; the desertion of offended Popham, 7. 315; the owners of at Pemaquid, 7. 316-317; population of, 8. 185; 9.8; home of Silvanus Davis, 9. 34; mentioned, 1. 366, 551; 3. 346, 408, 410; 4. 71; 5. 35, 37, 77, 106, 163, 295; 7. 96, 131, 317, 318; 9. 18; Account of the Early Settlement of, by John McKeen, 3. 311-324. bay, supposed site of Popham's colony, 2. 200-201; mentioned, 8. 22, 25. beach, 7. 299. Sagadahoc-continued. county, 4. 45; 8. 184. river, number of inhabitants east Sagamore, inferior to sachem, 2. 18a. creek, 1. 64n. Sagham, an Indian title, 7. 339. Saguaarum, 3. 412, 416, 419, 422, 426. Sailor's Leap, the, 1. 523. Papers cited, 1. 34, 35, 37, 40, 41, St. Andrews, 8. 7, 8. Ann's church, 7. 413-414. Castine, Anslem de, confused with Castine family, 6. 107, 113; 7. 41. Castine, Joseph, probably a grandson of Baron Vincent, 6. 113; letter of, 6. 113; his bark stolen, 7. 86; letter of, 7. 86-88; called a brother of Anslem, 7. 86. Castine, Matilda de, 7. 70, 71n, 75. Castine, the Messers, immoral, 7. 6; Lauverjait complained of, 7. 8991; disappeared from history, 7. 92. Castine, Therese, married Pombomcou, 7. 70, 71n, 75. Castine, Jean Vincent, Baron de, erected a fort at Bagaduce point, 1. 39-40; 5. 385, 385n; a bitter opponent of the English, 1. 287; 6. 111; lived on the Penobscot, 1. 287; 7. 45, 45n, 46; married an In- the Indians to take up arms, 3. against the English, 7. 58, 59; Croix, occupied by the French, 1. I. 27. St. Croix river-continued. 251, 252, 254, 255, 261, 265; 8.6, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20, 21, 22, 47, 61, 66, 72, 74, 100, 104, 106, 184, 186, 318, 330, 349; 9. 112, 224. Croys see St. Croix. David's, 9. 187. Denicourt, 9. 104. des Matelots, 1. 523. Domingo, 2. 247; 9. 13. Egan, 1. 448, 449. Estienne, Gen. Charles Amador, 7. 33. Estienne, Marie de, 7. 71n. Francis, the home of Vincent Bigot, François, 1. 470, 511; 3. 439, 440. François Indians, joined Arnold's expedition, 1. 507; expedition against, 4. 278n; joined by the Assagunticooks and Norridgewocks, 6. 235; why so named, 6. 238; signed the treaty at Deerfield, 6. 241; their village destroyed, 6. 241; condition of, 6. 243; mentioned, 1. 510; 3. 99, 383, 386, 387, 390; 4. 123, 124, 147, 153, 158, 161, 177; 9.294. Georges, a truckhouse established at, 4. 157; destroyed, 4. 223; now Thomaston, 7. 325; population of, 8. 185; men ordered to act as scouts at, 8. 214n; mentioned, 4. 170; 5. 367n, 370n; 6. 315; 7. 91n, 169, 304; 8. 111a, 244n. George's channel, 8. 129. George's island, so named by Popham's colonists, 3. 296, 298; 5. 348; Seymore preached at, 3. 298; 6. 176; discovered by Weymouth, 5. 311; 6. 318, 297; called Monhegan, 5. 311; cross set up by Weymouth found, 5. 348, 349; fort at, 5.360; Weymouth took his captives at, 6. 305; named by Weymouth, 6. 318, 396, 397; Popham came to anchor at, 6. 297; mentioned, 1. 202; 3. 294n; 5. 346; 6. 291, 295, 299, 356. George's Island harbor, visited by Weymouth, 5. 310-311; not visited by Weymouth, 5. 338; the same as Pentecost harbor, 6. 296, 298, 306; mentioned, 5. 312. George's river, house at, 3. 383, 384, 392; the trading-house not to be moved, 3. 388; source of, 4. 109; the Indian name of, 4. 110; claimed as a boundary of Acadia, 6. 3n; claimed as a boundary of Waldo's grant, 6. 20; fine mill sites on, 6. 21; the Scotch-Irish settled on, 6. 21, 322; the only one that answers to Rosier's account, 6. 293; compared to the one mentioned by Rosier, 6. 299, 300, 304, 305; tides in, 6. 300, 304; drawn to life, 6. 303; visited by Weymouth, 6. 303, 304, 306, 308, 316, 317, 318; named by Weymouth, 6. 318; mentioned, 3. 390, 391, 393, 398, 433, 434, 436, 437; 5. 29, 326; 6. 23, 212, 234, 241, 291, 311, 317; 7. 325, 327; 8. 266, 349. Gothard, 7. 42. Helena, Dunbar governor of, 6. 20; 8. 298. Henri, 1. 448, 517n. James, Court of, 8. 79. James' day, day of the fairs at Gorgeana, 2. 59a. Jean de Beauvais, rue de, 7. 248. John the Baptist, Labrador dis- John's church, Dresden, 8. 210n. John's gate, Quebec, 1. 518, 521, 525, 526. John's river, the Indians of, 3. 357, 416, 422; called Lashtock, 4. 105; fort built on, 5. 365n; 7. 340; garrison at, 9. 87; mentioned, 1, 302; 4.96; 5. 290n; 6. 236, 240; 7. 250, 256; 8. 4, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 22, 23, 26, 27, 29, 30, 37, 39, 41, 42, 47, 66, 82, 101, 102, 104, 220, 350; 9. 99, 100, 110. Johns, Canada, report of a battle at, 1. 476; in the hands of the Americans, 1. 484, 528; part of set on fire, 1. 485; troops sent from to Quebec, 1. 488; mentioned, 1. 482, 499; 4. 114; 5. 289, 290; 7. 63. Johns Indians, same as the Passamaquodies, 5. 371; held a conference at Bangor, 7. 7; mentioned, 4. 169, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175; 9. 294. Johns, N. B., 8. 11, 102, 128, 129, 370. Mark's church, Bristol, 5. 153. Mary's church, Church point, 8. 143; at Woolnoth, 2. 240; 9. 56, 57n, 58. Mary's river, 6. 350. Roch, 1. 520, 523. Savior, name of the settlement at Mount Desert, 1. 27; 5. 178; 8. 324; settled by Jesuits, I. 431; captured by Argal, 1. 431; 5. 178; property at destroyed, 1.431; people carried away, 1. 431; a cross of possession set up by the English, 5. 179. Sainte Famille, parish of the, 7. 71n; Salem, formerly Naumkeag, 1. 41; Endicott arrived at, 1. 41; Burdett made a freeman at, 1. 89; Richard Ingersoll went to, 1. 113, 311; Joseph Phippen died in, 1. 113; John Higginson lived in, 1. 117; Francis Neal died in, 1. 128n, 200n; home of Wilkins, 1. 195; home of David Phippen, 1. 200n; people of Falmouth moved to, 1. 217; home of Bartholomew Gedney, 1. 242n, 246; 2. 173; home of Thomas Mason, 1. 246; home of Ephraim Marston, 1. 246n; Mary Wilkins lived at, 1. 261; the Rev. George Burroughs preached in, 1. 262; called Danvers, 1. 262; 4. 232; the Rev. George Burroughs tried at, 1. 263, 317; the John arrived at, 1. 277n; French Protestants arrived at, i. 277n; home of Capt. Willard, 1. 297; home of George Cloice, 1. 308; home of Timothy Lindall, 1. 311; home of James Ross jr., 1. 314; home of John Skilling, 1. 314, home of Thomas Walter, 1. 317; Enoch Lincoln practised law in, 1. 409, 411; Benedict Arnold at, 1. 502; meeting of the Narragansett grantees at, 2. 144; former home of Robert Gutch, 2. 205; home of John Stratton, 3. 12; a sloop to be sent to from New York, 5. 9; William Bowditch collector for the port of, 5.260; Cadillac's account of, 6. 287; Thomas Burgess arrived at, 7. 429; the first of the Shepleys at, 8. 412; mentioned, 1. 64n, 150n, 157, 246n; 2. 144, 179, 209; 3. 156, 163, 190; 4. 303; 5. xxxiii, li, lii, 10, 23, 182; 6. 36; 7. 88, 205, 210; 8. 279; 9. 65; Annals of, see Felt, George B. presbytery, 6. 35, 36. records, cited, 1. 195n, 217n. street, Boston, 2. 231; 9. 24, 64, 65, 69. witchcraft, 1. 190n, 308, 317. Salibury, 70a. Salisbury, a notorious robber, 2. in the garrison at England, 6. 358; 7. 141n. 5. 31, 32. chase, 3. 317; caught at Ansol, 4. 367; disappeared from the Damariscotta, 8. 299; mentioned, 1. 459; 3. 316, 329, 333. falls, sawmill at, 1. 268; settlement at destroyed, 1. 279; Indians attacked, 7. 59; 9. 27; men ordered to act as scouts at, 8. 214n; mentioned, 2. 139, 140; 4. 244, 275n. Salopshire, 3. 318n. Salter, Sampson, 9. 337. Salter's hall, 9. 57. Salterne, Robert, in Pring's expedition, 5. 153; sent out by Bristol merchants, 7. 309n; to follow the track of Gosnold, 7. 309n. William, 5. 151. Salton, Thomas, signed the petition of 1672. 5. 240. Saltonstall family, 4. 75; 5. lix. Nathaniel, agent for Meshec Farley, Richard, signed the treaty of 1713, Saltpetre, manufactured by R. South- Sam, Capt., signed the treaty of 1713, 48a, 50a; visited Levett, 2. 87n; |