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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 15   View pdf image (33K)
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LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT. 15

with which they were on reflection wholly dissatisfied, they
began to apprehend their annihilation as a people, and
listened the more readily to the inflammatory suggestions of the
enemies of the Colony. A War, in consequence, ensued in
1642, which lasted some years, and, without having produced
any thing in the nature of a conquest, was ended by the
submission of the Indians, and a promise of future amity. A
peace being thus concluded, Laws were made to prevent the
renewal of causes of dispute. Acquisitions of Land, whether
by purchase or gift, from the Indians without the consent
of the Proprietary, were, both as infringing his right and
committing the safety of the Colony, deemed illegal and
void: It was made felony, and punishable by death, to sell
or transport any friendly Indian, and at the same time
declared highly penal to furnish those people with arms or
ammunition. These, with other measures of a moderate and
prudent cast, rendered the peace now concluded more permanent
than from the temper of the Indians and the continued ill
offices of Lord Baltimore's opponents and enemies might have
been expected.

    In a (f) work treating expressly of original titles to Land it
has been thought not amiss to explain, so far as the
preceding recital has done it, the manner in which an individual
obtaining from his Sovereign an exclusive licence, with his
own means, to lead out and plant a Colony in a region of
which that Sovereign had no possession, proceeded to avail
himself of the privilege or grant, and to reconcile or subject
to his views the people occupying and claiming by natural
right the Country so bestowed: but it is not intended to
pursue the history of the various disputes, wars, conventions,
and other transactions that arose between the Indians and the
Proprietary Government concerning the more extended
acquisitions which the latter from time to time found
necessary to it's purposes, further than may relate to certain
remnants of particular tribes who have to the present day
continued to hold and occupy Lands on the Eastern Shore,
under the guarantee and protection of the Government of
Maryland. I must observe however that all accounts agree in
ascribing to Lord Baltimore and his agents a conduct
remarkably discreet, firm, and candid, in their dealings with the
aborigines. In particular, an history, already referred to,
of the American settlements, written in 1671, after speaking
of the acquisition of St. Mary's continues " and it hath been

    (f) I shall have frequent occasion to refer to the present undertaking
by some kind of appellation: it is necessary therefore to state, once for
all, that I do not by any means mean to claim for it the character usually
attached to the term here employed. The book is properly speaking a
compilation. The other name is used only as the most convenient.





 
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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 15   View pdf image (33K)
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