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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 14   View pdf image (33K)
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14 LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT.

whence they shortly after sailed up the Chesapeak Bay and
the River Patowmack. Having reviewed the Country, and
given names to several places they selected for their first
seat a town of the Indians called (e) YAO-COMOCO, of which,
with the circumjacent land, the Governor or Leader,
Calvert, made a free and fair purchase of the natives with
articles suited to their state of life, and brought from
England for that purpose. The prudence and justice which
dictated this policy in preference to the forcible intrusion which
had marked the commencement of the first Southern
plantation, appear to have governed the subsequent proceedings
also of the Proprietary and his Officers for extending their
limits of possession, and to have produced an entire good
understanding and friendly intercourse with the natives,
until the jealousy of the latter was excited by the suggestions
of an individual interested in defeating Lord Baltimore's
views, and their enmity at length confirmed by the many
efforts employed by the same person and his abettors for
that purpose. These dispositions received also considerable
increase from the spontaneous reasoning of the Indians upon
what they observed: When we speak of justice and fair
dealing in the first steps for obtaining in a Country already
claimed and inhabited a footing designed to be extended far
beyond the probable contemplation of the actual possessors, it
must be in a limited and comparative way: Lord Baltimore's
emigrants arrived in America at the season of the year and
at the particular spot the most favourable for obtaining an
immediate and peaceable establishment: If the natives were
to give up lands which were prepared, and had served them,
for tillage, it was requisite, that this should be at a season
proper for commencing their agricultural operations in other
parts. This consideration, with which the arrival of the
English at the approach of Spring, had so happy a coincidence,
doubtless facilitated the treaty and purchase that ensued: but
it is also understood that the tribe with which Mr. Calvert
negotiated had resolved to remove higher up and into a
more populous part of the Country in order to avoid, or to
be better situated for defence against, a more powerful nation
with which they were then at War, and that many of them
had actually gone thither. When, therefore, these Indians,
after ceding only a certain District which they could spare,
saw the number of strangers, their demand for more Land, and
their power to obtain it by force, rapidly encreasing;¾When
individuals unauthorised by the colonial Government found
means occasionally to procure from the natives donations of
their Lands for considerations extremely inadequate, and

    (e) Called by the English Saint Mary's;¾erected some years after into
a City, and the Seat of Government until the year 1694.





 
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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 14   View pdf image (33K)
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