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The Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. I — Passage 35

E.B. O'Callaghan (1849) 247 words View original →

[E.B. O'Callaghan (1849)] there maintaining the comissions from Sir Edmond Andross &. Coll. Dongan deryving from the au-thority of the late King James would not accept them there, but keept the fort by virtue of the sd Commission & would not suffer any of them to goe & guard sd Village being the frontier but send of their people there, by which meanes from treachery cowardice and carelesnes that too unfortunate and to be lamented accident lies hapened there, the river being frozen that noe forces could be sent up the winter, the well meaned people, lodged our souldiers who kept guard in the City whereof the french & Indian (in number of 200 men) had advise the Indianes would not goe there & so altered the designe, and that place was by that meanes spared our Indians pursued them kild & took 25 frenchmen who gave us an account of severall troops out in a designe in the Spring with 2500 french besides their Indianes. MR. VAN CORTLANDT TO SR ED. ANDROSS. [ Lond. Doc. VII. ] 19 May, 1690. May it please your Excellency, * * * The French and Indians have againe, since your Excellcy's departure, de-stroyed some people to the Eastward of Boston, have also burned Scheneghtade killed 60 people and tooke 28 young men and boys prisoners : About 1 50 Indians and 50 young men off Albany followed the French overtooke them upon the lake killed some and tooke 15 Frenchmen, which the Indians