 | Thomas Nelson Page - 1909
...accident," says Sir Ferdinando Gorges, later President of the Plymouth Company, "must be acknowledged as the means, under God, of putting on foot, and giving life to our Plantations." Weymouth was arrested afterward under suspicion of setting forth to betray the Virginia... | |
 | Herbert Milton Sylvester - 1910
...all of one nation, but of several parts, and several families. This accident [italics the author's] must be acknowledged the means, under God, of putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations." History does not record that at that time the English had any plantations in North America. Shortly... | |
 | Herbert Milton Sylvester - 1910
...jurisdiction. Three of these savages were Nahanada, Skittwarroes, and Tisquantum. Gorges says, "These I seized upon. They were all of one nation, but of...several parts, and several families. This accident [italics the author's] must be acknowledged the means, under God, of putting on foot and giving life... | |
 | Herbert Edgar Holmes - 1912 - 251 lehte
...disinterested efforts in their behalf, yet we feel inclined to skeptically smile when Gorges writes', — "this accident must be acknowledged the means under...putting on foot and giving life to all our plantations." Rosier writes that one morning an Indian of superior rank appeared, coming from the eastward and with... | |
 | 1917 - 364 lehte
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 | 1918
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 | Alvin Gardner Weeks - 1919 - 270 lehte
...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
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