is ship yes label partof codes commanders Capt. Seth Harding operations victories awards USS Confederacy ... 1779 Confederacy was ordered to carry the French Minister and his family back to France . Later John ... list. During the passage on 7 November 1779 Confederacy was completely dismasting dismasted and almost ... Francois in the West Indies in 1781 with military stores and other supplies, Confederacy was forced ... www2.hsp.org collections manuscripts c confederacy0222.htm Frigate Confederacy Papers , including correspondence, bills, receipts and other materials pertaining to the construction of the USS Confederacy , are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania . DEFAULTSORT Confederacy ... more details
Infobox album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Confederacy of Ruined Lives Type studio Artist Eyehategod Cover Eyehategod Confederacy of Ruined Lives.jpg Released September 19, 2000 Recorded Balance Productions br Mandeville br Louisiana br June &ndash July 2000 Genre Sludge metal Length 40 19 Label Century Media Producer Dave Fortman br Eyehategod Last album Southern Discomfort Eyehategod album Southern Discomfort br 2000 This album Confederacy of Ruined Lives br 2000 Next album 10 Years of Abuse and Still Broke br 2001 Album ratings rev1 Allmusic rev1score Rating 3 5 ref cite web url Allmusic class album id r498205 pure url yes title Confederacy of Ruined Lives Eyehategod publisher Allmusic ref Confederacy of Ruined Lives is sludge metal band Eyehategod s fourth album , released on September 19, 2000. As of 2011, it is their latest studio album. The track Jack Ass in the Will of God is a reworking of the title track to Southern Discomfort Eyehategod album Southern Discomfort . Track listing Revelation Revolution 4 18 Blood Money 4 11 Jack Ass in the Will of God 2 47 Self Medication Blues 4 46 The Concussion Machine Process 2 20 Inferior and Full of Anxiety 3 19 .001 6 23 99 Miles of Bad Road 3 48 Last Year She Wanted a Doll House 4 53 Corruption Scheme 3 43 All songs written by Bower LaCaze Patton Nick Williams. All lyrics 1999 Michael D. Williams. Credits Jimmy Bower Electric guitar Guitar small Paranoid Disorientation And Off balance Motor Disturbance small Mike Williams singer Mike Williams Vocalist small Agitated Depression And Idiopathic Psycho Dissociative Phobia small Joe LaCaze Drum kit Drums small Perceptual Distortion And Anxious Neurotic Expansiveness small Danny Nick Bass guitar Bass small Hostile Belligerence And Itropunitive Projection small Brian Patton ... Category 2000 albums Category Albums produced by Dave Fortman 2000s metal album stub de Confederacy of Ruined Lives it Confederacy of Ruined Lives ... more details
Infobox nrhp name First White House of the Confederacy nrhp type nrhp image Erstes konfoederiertes Weisses Haus.jpg caption First White House of the Confederacy location Montgomery, Alabama lat degrees 32 lat minutes 22 lat seconds 34.15 lat direction N long degrees 86 long minutes 17 long seconds 59.71 long direction W coord display inline,title built 1835 architect architecture Italianate architecture Italianate designated added June 25, 1974 area less than one acre governing body State refnum 74000432 ref name nris NRISref version 2010a ref The First White House of the Confederacy was the executive residence of President Jefferson Davis and family while the capital of the Confederate States of America was in Montgomery, Alabama . Completely furnished with original period pieces from the 1850s and 1860s, the 1835 Italianate architecture Italianate style house is open to the public. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1974. ref name nris In February 1861, shortly after selecting Davis as president, the Provisional Confederate Congress , meeting in Montgomery, authorized the leasing of an executive mansion. An offer came from Colonel Edmund S. Harrison of nearby Prattville, Alabama , who had recently purchased a newly renovated house in Montgomery that had previously been owned by a series of prominent citizens of the city. He offered to rent the house fully furnished and staffed for 5,000 per year. The house served as the first White House of the Confederacy from February 1861 until late May 1861, when the Confederate capital moved to Richmond, Virginia . During that time, the White House was the setting for many lavish parties and receptions hosted by Mrs. Davis. References commons category Reflist External links http www.visitingmontgomery.com details.cfm?site id FF7F8023 EBCB 42DE A5A7A2011073E845 Visiting information Montgomery Convention ... of the confederacy.html First White House of the Confederacy Alabama Tourism Department NRHP in Montgomery ... more details
Infobox former country native name Alte Eidgenossenschaft conventional long name Old Swiss Confederacy ... Swiss Confederacy in the 18th century image flag Early Swiss cross.svg flag Flag of Switzerland flag ... 10077 Vorort ref History of Switzerland The Old Swiss Confederacy German language Modern German lang ... a Foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy nucleus in what is now Central Switzerland , the confederacy growth of the Old Swiss Confederacy expanded to include the cities of Z rich and Berne by the mid ... to thirteen by 1513 Dreizehn Orte . The confederacy pledged Swiss neutrality neutrality in 1515 ... the Swabian War of 1499, the confederacy was a de facto independent state throughout the early modern ... diet or Tagsatzung was often paralyzed by hostilities between the two factions. The Swiss Confederacy ... , allegory of the Confederacy 1584 . The specification Old was introduced in retrospect, after the end .... Contemporarily, the confederacy was simply known as Eidgenossenschaft Eydtgnoschafft or oath ... in the Pfaffenbrief of 1370. The territories of the confederacy came to be referred to collectively ... Switzerland beginning in the mid 16th century. From that time, the Confederacy came to be seen as a single ... of the Old Swiss Confederacy 1291 1797 Foundation main Foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy see Medieval history of Switzerland The nucleus of the Old Swiss Confederacy was an alliance between .... Traditionally, the foundation of the Confederacy is marked by the R tlischwur , dated to 1307 ... been popularly considered the founding document of the confederacy. ref name schwabe Schwabe & Co ... Growth of the federation main Growth of the Old Swiss Confederacy This initial pact was gradually augmented ... members of the confederacy. ref name schwabe From 1353 to 1481, this federation of eight Cantons ... by 1515 lead to the conquest of the Ticino . None of these territories became members of the confederacy .... These allies, called the Zugewandte Orte , became closely associated to the confederacy, but were ... more details
File United Daughters of the Confederacy logo.png thumb Emblem of the United Daughters of the Confederacy The United Daughters of the Confederacy UDC is a women s heritage association dedicated to honoring the memory of those who served in the military and died in service to the Confederate States of America CSA . UDC began as the National Association of the Daughters of the Confederacy , organized in 1894 by Caroline Meriwether Goodlett and Anna Davenport Raines . It was related to older heritage associations such as the Daughters of the Confederacy in Missouri and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Confederate ... United Daughters of the Confederacy Home Page Bot generated title ref Headquarters Infobox nrhp name United Daughters of the Confederacy Memorial Building nrhp type image UDCHeadquarters.JPG caption ..., is located in Richmond, Virginia . The United Daughters of Confederacy collects and preserves book ... in the twentieth century. ref name Janney http encyclopediavirginia.org United Daughters of the Confederacy Caroline E. Janney, United Daughters of the Confederacy , Encyclopedia Virginia , 2010, accessed ... of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia as undoubtedly neo Confederate . He said that the UDC and their male ... , Virginia Division, United Daughters of the Confederacy ref McPherson responded that he did not mean ... n6153480 Daughter of late Sen. Strom Thurmond to join Confederacy group , Jet , 19 Jul 2004, accessed ... reading Cox, Karen L. Dixie s Daughters The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture . Gainesville University Press of Florida, 2003. Foster, Gaines M. Ghosts of the Confederacy ... Memory Eternal The United Daughters of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia, 1897 1920, in Edward ... of the Confederacy , Official website http encyclopediavirginia.org United Daughters of the Confederacy United Daughters of the Confederacy in Encyclopedia Virginia Category 1894 establishments Category ... Category Fraternal service organizations Category Historical societies ca United Daughters of Confederacy ... more details
Use dmy dates date April 2012 List of battles fought by the Old Swiss Confederacy , 1315 1799. The Battle of Morgarten of 1315 is famous as the first military success of the Confederacy, but it was an ambush on an army on the march rather than an open field battle. The Battle of Laupen of 1339 is an early battle which can be seen as indicating the trend of the domniance of infantry over heavy cavalry ... defeats notably at Battle of Marignano Marignano 1515 , the Confederacy stopped its aggressive expansion ... operation and mostly a collapse due to centrifugal forces within the Confederacy. Early Confederacy 1315 1351 see Growth of the Old Swiss Confederacy class wikitable Date Battle Site Notes valign ... 1477 see Growth of the Old Swiss Confederacy Burgundian Wars class wikitable Date Battle Site Notes ... 1403 1495 Transalpine campaigns of the Old Swiss Confederacy War with Milan valign top 1422, 30 June ... in Italy, the Confederacy pledged Swiss neutrality neutrality and did not engage in further warfare beyond its borders. For the remaining duration of the Old Swiss Confederacy 1540 1798, armed conflicts were internal, either between factions within the confederacy, or peasant uprisings . Also listed are conflicts between associates of the Confederacy Three Leagues , Geneva with neighouring powers even if the Confederacy itself was not involved. class wikitable Date Battle Site Notes valign top ... collapse of the Old Confederacy, the clashes of April and May last pockets of resistance ... in the Valais was not a Battle of the Old Swiss Confederacy in the narrow sense, as Valais was not a member Old Confederacy. The Valais formed the separate Rhodanic Republic in 1802 and joined the restored Swiss Confederacy only in 1815. class wikitable Date Battle Site Notes valign top 1798, 2 ... of the Old Swiss Confederacy List of battles 601 1400 List of battles 1401 1800 Category Battles involving Switzerland Category Old Swiss Confederacy Battles Category Lists of battles Swiss Confederacy ... more details
States North American Confederacy The Probability Broach includes a timeline for the History of the United ... Confederacy in 1893. From that point, the individuals listed here are considered Presidents of the NAC ... Confederacy is much more advanced in science and technology and much wealthier than our Earth, implying ... External links http northamericanconfederacy.wikidot.com North American Confederacy Wiki Category ... more details
The Atlanta Southern Confederacy was a strongly Democratic Party United States Democratic Southern United States Southern newspaper during the American Civil War . The first issue was February 15, 1859, by Dr. James P. Hambleton. Historian Franklin Garrett explains its quick impact in that Hambleton was a Fire eater and his editorials were highly intemperate in tone. But he joined the Confederate States Army Confederate Army in May 1861 and sold the paper to C.R. Hanleiter and George W. Adair , who merged it with their Gate City Guardian , keeping the new name. By the time the paper stopped publication in 1864 , Hanleiter had been replaced by J. Henley Smith. References http www.uttyler.edu vbetts southern confederacy.htm Large archive of articles http www.gpb.org GeorgiaStories topicsNewspaperDate.jsp?sub id 047&studstatus 1&educstatus 1 Archive of articles and advertisements External links http dlg.galileo.usg.edu atlnewspapers Atlanta Historic Newspapers Archive Digital Library of Georgia Category Defunct newspapers of Georgia U.S. state Category History of Atlanta, Georgia Category Georgia U.S. state in the American Civil War atlanta stub ... more details
History of Switzerland The growth of the Old Swiss Confederacy began as an alliance between the communities of the valleys in the Central Alps to facilitate the management of common interests such as free trade and to ensure the peace along the important trade routes through the mountains. In the late Middle Ages , this region belonged to the Holy Roman Empire , and because of its strategic importance the House of Hohenstaufen Hohenstaufen emperors had granted it reichsfrei status in the early 13th century. As reichsfrei regions, the Cantons of Switzerland cantons or regions of Canton of Uri Uri , Canton of Schwyz Schwyz , and Unterwalden were under the direct authority of the emperor without ... of the Swiss Eidgenossenschaft , as the confederation confederacy was called, were joined in the early ... alliance contracts of the Old Swiss Confederacy Territorial development Image Teufelsbr cke01.jpg ... in the Battle of G llheim . Timeline of the Old Swiss Confederacy The nucleus Image Bundesbrief.jpg ... Confederacy . It is possible that it was written a few decades later than the given date of 1291, which ... for the foundation of the Swiss Confederacy in Swiss historiography of the 16th century Aegidius Tschudi ... of the foundational period of the Confederacy was at its peak, and the default view ... Swiss Confederacy from 1291 to the sixteenth century In the Valais , the conflict between the Roman ... became an associate Zugewandter Ort of the confederacy by entering an alliance with six of the eight ... became a protectorate of the confederacy on August 17, 1451. ref cite encyclopedia title St Gall ... a protectorate of the confederacy in 1464. Duke Sigismund of Austria got involved in a power struggle ... of the confederacy and the occupation of the valley of the Adda river Veltlin , Bormio , and Chiavenna ... history switzerland.geschichte schweiz.ch old swiss confederacy 1291.html The Old Swiss Confederation ... in many other languages . DEFAULTSORT Growth Of The Old Swiss Confederacy Category Old Swiss Confederacy ... more details
File Karte Ennetbirgische Vogteien.png thumb transalpine territories of the Swiss Confederacy, 1403&ndash 1798 File Reislaeufer Luzerner Schilling.jpg thumb Swiss mercenaries cross the Alp after quitting the Battle of Pavia of 1512 Lucerne Chronicle , 1513 The transalpine campaigns of the Old Swiss Confederacy , known as Ennetbirgische Feldz ge transmontane campaigns in Swiss historiography , were military expeditions which resulted in the conquest of territories south of the Alps , corresponding more or less to the modern canton of Ticino , on the part of the Old Swiss Confederacy . These territories were known as ennetbirgische Vogteien or transmontane Vogt Switzerland bailiwicks . The Leventina was the first transalpine possession of the Swiss cantons of Uri and Obwalden , acquired in 1403. Other territories were acquired in 1418 and 1419. A first setback came with the Battle of Arbedo in 1422, where the Swiss were defeated by the Duchy of Milan , and in a treaty of 1426, the border of the duchy was moved back to the Gotthard Pass . Renewed campaigns took place in 1439, 1441 and 1447, until in 1449 the Swiss were beaten again by troops of the Golden Ambrosian Republic in the Battle of Castione . ref cite web url http www.hls dhs dss.ch textes i I41543.php title Castione, battaglia di last Maffioli first Alessandra date 2003 09 09 publisher www.hls dhs dss.ch language Italian ... Wars in 1494. Bellinzona was finally occupied by Uri in 1500, and officially granted to the confederacy ... for the Swiss Confederacy and the allied Three Leagues which secured their possessions of Locarno ... back to Milan. These ennetbirgische Vogteien were governed partly by the entire confederacy, partly ... lost from the Confederacy three years later and are now comuni of Lombardy and Piedmont Val Travaglia Travaglia Val Cuvia Cuvio Ossola Eschental See also Battles of the Old Swiss Confederacy Italian ... 1484 1494 1912 . Category Wars involving Switzerland Category Old Swiss Confederacy Category 15th ... more details
Image ACQTC thunderclan icon.png frame right Thunderer The Algonquian Confederacy of the Quinnipiac Tribal Council ACQTC is an alliance dedicated to the history and culture of the Quinnipiac , the aboriginal peoples of the North American region now known as Connecticut . ACQTC, Inc. incorporated under the laws of the State of Connecticut as a 501 c 3 tax exempt non profit non stock corporation in 1989 , after a decade of organizing the Quinnipiac people. The United States Internal Revenue Service , on 18 January 2001, under its Tribal Government Organization Section, has determined that ACQTC is additionally a http www.law.cornell.edu uscode html uscode26 usc sec 26 00000509 000 .html 509 a 2 entity. ref http acqtc.com Organization NPOStatus ACQTC website Nonprofit Status page , which shows a scanned copy of the letter of incorporation from the State of Connecticut and the IRS 509 a 2 ruling letter also see Profile, membership and goals of Algonquin Confederacy by Iron Thunderhorse, Branford Review , 17 January 2002, article available from the Branford Review website http www.zwire.com site index.cfm?newsid 3014599&BRD 1632&PAG 461&dept id 8229&rfi 8 here retrieved 2007 07 23 http www.melissadata.com lookups np.asp?ein 061301617 this MelissaDATA.com non profit organization entry retrieved 2007 07 24 The most recent Form 990s as received by and scanned by the Internal Revenue Service for ACQTC are available at the National Center for Charitable Statistics http nccs.urban.org website . Search for Algonquian Confederacy in the Form 990 Images database. ref Iron Thunderhorse is the Grand ... Grand Council Fire Confederacy to honor, protect, and revitalize our language, religion, and traditions ... Confederacy AC operates as the Grand Council of confederated allies i.e. other tribal groups of the Algonquian ... in the Branford Review The AC Algonquian Confederacy is our Grand Council comparative to the U.S. Senate .... ref Profile, membership and goals of Algonquin Confederacy by Iron Thunderhorse, Branford ... more details
Confederacy of Silence A True Tale of the New Old South is a book by Richard Rubin. It is about Rubin s experience as a recent University of Pennsylvania graduate and work as a reporter in Mississippi . ref name memphis flyer cite news last Gill first Leonard title The Education Of Richard Rubin url http www.memphisflyer.com memphis the education of richard rubin Content?oid 1109342 accessdate 6 March 2011 newspaper Memphis Flyer date 19 July 2002 ref Interviews by Rubin about Confederacy of Silence http www.northcountrypublicradio.org news story 13538 readers writers richard rubin em confederacy of silence a true tale of the new old south em North Country Public Radio . May 13, 2009 http www.wbgo.org journal?date 12 27 2002 Andrew Meyer. WBGO Radio . December 27, 2002 http www.npr.org templates story story.php?storyId 1150285 The Tavis Smiley Show . National Public Radio. September 19, 2002 http thedianerehmshow.org shows 2002 08 01 richard rubin confederacy silence atria The Diane Rehm Show . National Public Radio. August 1, 2002 http www.memphisflyer.com memphis the education of richard rubin Content?oid 1109342 The Education of Richard Rubin . The Memphis Flyer. July 19, 2002 http www.wnyc.org shows lopate 2002 jul 02 The Leonard Lopate Show . WNYC Radio. July 2, 2002 http www.theatlantic.com past docs unbound interviews int2002 07 31.htm Deep in the Heard Of Dixie . The Atlantic Monthly. July 31, 2002 References See Wikipedia Footnotes on how to create references using ref ref tags which will then appear here automatically Reflist External links http www.RichardRubinWriter.com Categories Category Articles created via the Article Wizard Category American non fiction books ... more details
Infobox military conflict image File Night Attack of Indians.jpg 250px caption conflict Raid on Salmon Falls partof King William s War date March 27, 1690 place Salmon Falls present day Berwick, Maine result French and Wabanaki Confederacy victory combatant2 Flag icon England Kingdom of England English colonists combatant1 New France br Abenaki commander2 commander1 Joseph Fran ois Hertel de la Fresni re strength2 unknown strength1 unknown casualties2 34 killed, 54 captured casualties1 unknown Campaignbox King William s War The Raid on Salmon Falls March 27, 1690 involved Joseph Fran ois Hertel de la Fresni re leading his troops as well as the Wabanaki Confederacy Mi kmaq people Mi kmaq and Maliseet from Meductic Indian Village Fort Meductic Fort Meductic in New Brunswick to capture and destroy an English settlement of Salmon Falls present day Berwick, Maine during King William s War . The village was destroyed, and most of its residents were killed or taken prisoner for transport back to Canada, New France Canada . They killed thirty four men and carried away captive fifty four persons, mostly women and children, and plundered and burnt the houses and mills. Militia mustered from Portsmouth, New Hampshire Portsmouth and gave chase, but were driven off in a skirmish later that day. Hertel then continued on to Battle of Fort Loyal raid present day Portland, Maine . References Kingsford, William. http books.google.com books?id TRUwAAAAYAAJ&dq salmon 20falls 201690&pg PA337 v onepage&q salmon 20falls 201690&f false The History of Canada coord missing Maine Category King William s War Salmon Falls Category Conflicts in 1690 Salmon Falls Category Pre state history of Maine Category 1690 in North America Category Military raids Salmon Falls US battle stub nn Raidet mot Salmon Falls ... more details
Bay present day Portland, Maine result French and WabanakiConfederacy victory combatant2 flag ... forces and the WabanakiConfederacy of Acadia 200 Mi kmaq people Mi kmaq ref Bruce Bourque. Ethnicity ... de Beaubassin led a series of attacks with the WabanakiConfederacy of Acadia against New England settlements ... attack on the little town of Wells and took possession of it. Canadian bio The WabanakiConfederacy ... Beaubassin led 500 Abenakis. A party of the Confederacy came from Norridgewock, which was under ...,, p. 42 ref The following spring of 1704, after the Raid on Deerfield in February, the Wabanaki again attacked Wells, and York. ref Williamson, p. 45 ref In 1712, the Wabanaki conducted another ... , the Wabanaki killed 11 and took 24 captive. Saco was raided again in 1704 and 1705. ref History ... October 200 Wabanaki went north of Falmouth to Black Point and killed or captured 19 settlers in the fields .... The Wabanaki then burned the fort. ref Williamson, p. 44 ref Casco During this time, Falmouth ... . The Wabanaki did the most damage to Spurwink and Purpooduck Cape Elizabeth, Maine Cape Elizabeth , in Falmouth. In Spurwink, principally inhabited by the Messrs. Jordans and their families, the Wabanaki ... families settled at Spring Point. The Wabanaki killed twenty five family members and carried away eight ... on the eastern coast. On August 10, 1703, under the leadership of Moxus, Wanongonet and Escumbuit , the Wabanaki ... two or three men. The Wabanaki ambushed March and and shot one of his attendants. A garrison of 10 men under Sargeant Hook rescued March and the others. The Wabanaki killed two of March s companions, Phippenny and Kent, in the altercation. The Wabanaki withdrew and skulked around the peninsula for a week, setting fire to the houses. The rest of the Wabanaki battalions, bringing the total to 500 ... chased the Wabanaki back to Pigwacket. March killed 6 and captured 6. These were the first New England ... Sampson a group of Wabanaki went south of Falmouth to York and Berwick. At York, they killed ... more details
Abigail Hobbs was a girl of about 17 years old when she was arrested for witchcraft on April 18, 1692 along with Giles Corey , Mary Warren , and Bridget Bishop . Prior to living in Danvers, Massachusetts Salem Village now Danvers, Massachusetts , she and her family had lived in Casco, Maine , the frontier of the Massachusetts Bay Colony , during a time when there were many attacks by the Wabanaki Confederacy Wabanaki Indigenous peoples of the Americas Native Americans . ref Mary Beth Norton , In the Devil s Snare , Knopf New York 2002 ref Her stepmother, Deliverance Hobbs , and her father William Hobbs, were also both charged with witchcraft. During her multiple examinations by local magistrates between April and June 1692, ref Paul S. Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum, Salem Witchcraft Papers henceforth SWP DaCapo Press, 1977, pp. 405 409, pp. 410 412, & p.413 ref Abigail confessed and accused others of witchcraft, including John Proctor . At her trial in September, she pled guilty to both indictments against her, one for afflicting Mercy Lewis ref Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum, SWP p. 414 ref and another for covenanting with the Devil. ref SWP pp. 414 415. ref List of colonial governors of Massachusetts Governor William Phips granted Hobbs a reprieve in January 1693, after Chief Magistrate William Stoughton Massachusetts William Stoughton had signed the warrant for her execution. ref Letter No. 2 William Phips to Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham , February 21, 1693 , SWP p. 865 ref In 1710, her father, William Hobbs, petitioned the General Court to compensate him for 40 expenses that the family s imprisonment cost him but said he was willing to accept 10, which the court granted him in 1712. Abigail Hobbs was among those named in the Act for Reversal of Attainder by the Massachusetts General Court Massachusetts Great and General Court , October 17, 1711. Notes and references references salem DEFAULTSORT Hobbs, Abigail Category People of the Salem witch trials S ... more details
declared war against the rest of the WabanakiConfederacy the Penobscot and Kennebec tribes. ref ... which finished in June 1745, the Wabanaki retaliated by attacking the New England border. ref ... Wabanaki attacked North Yarmouth and killed a man. At Flying point they killed three members of a family ... Williamson, p. 241 ref One Sept 5 tribes of the Confederacy attacked Thomston St. Georges for the third ... the Wabanaki Campaign in the spring of 1746. ref Williamson, p. 242 ref Notes Reflist 2 References http ... more details
for the U.S. federal judge John Skylstead Rhoades, Sr. John Rhoades was a fur trader from New England , who was part of Jurriaen Aernoutsz s short lived Dutch Acadie conquest of Acadia in 1674. A resident of Massachusetts , Rhoades met with Aernoutsz shortly after the latter s arrival in New York City , and used his familiarity with the region to convince Aernoutsz to attack Acadia. He took the Netherlands Dutch oath of allegiance, and served as the navigator and pilot on Aernoutsz s expedition. On August 10, 1674, Aernoutsz, Rhoades and the crew of the Flying Horse captured Fort Pentagouet in two hours. They then sailed up the Bay of Fundy , pillaging several French posts along the coast and ending at Jemseg, New Brunswick Fort Jemseg , which they also captured. Aernoutsz claimed Acadia as the Dutch territory of New Holland, burying bottles at both Pentagouet and Jemseg to assert his claim, and remained in Acadia for about a month. He then left Rhoades in charge of New Holland while he returned to Cura ao in search of settlers. However, Rhoades began seizing New England vessels coming to trade with the Wabanaki Confederacy . As a result, the government of Massachusetts apprehended the party and tried them as pirate s, during which time the French regained control of the territory without any military opposition. Rhoades was condemned to death, but he was eventually released on condition that he leave Massachusetts. He was later granted a trading license by the Dutch West India Company during Cornelius Van Steenwyk s brief attempt to regain control of Acadia in 1676, but was again arrested for trespassing on the territory of James II of England James, Duke of York . He was taken back to New York City, but was released after a brief imprisonment. References DictCanbio ID 554 Governors of Acadia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Rhoades, John ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Rho ... more details
1688 1725, 488 ref New France and the WabanakiConfederacy were able to thwart New England expansion ..., which had in 1686 been united in the Dominion of New England . New England and the Iroquois Confederacy fought New France and the WabanakiConfederacy. The Iroquois dominated the economically important ... created the WabanakiConfederacy to form a political and military alliance with New France to stop ... Scotia community Chedabouctou . In response, Castin and the WabanakiConfederacy engaged in the Northeast ... day Portland, Maine . The tribes of the WabanakiConfederacy killed 21 of his men, but Church s defense ... Fort Pejpescot present day Brunswick, Maine , which had been taken by the WabanakiConfederacy ... of the WabanakiConfederacy attacked Church at Cape Elizabeth, Maine Cape Elizabeth on Purpooduc Point ... In 1696, New France and the tribes of the WabanakiConfederacy , led by St. Castine and Pierre Le Moyne ... of the Confederacy killed two families. In June 1689, several hundred Abenaki and Pennacook ... parties into Acadia which included most of Maine against the Acadians and members of the WabanakiConfederacy . On the first expedition into Acadia, on September 21, 1689, Church and 250 troops ... more details
of the other members of the WabanakiConfederacy . There are no living members of the Penobscot nation ... mode of transportation for all nations of the WabanakiConfederacy. The shape of the canoe varies ... locations of areas occupied by members of the WabanakiConfederacy from north to south gallery ... the Wabanaki Federation and the Mohawk Indians. This catastrophic population depletion may have ... round in Wabanaki territory. ref name wmm At this time, there were probably about 10,000 Penobscots ... national park online book on wabanaki history http www.bigorrin.org archive65.htm Bangor Daily ... more details
Links in the Chain of Friendship between the U.S. and the WabanakiConfederacy. Pp.  9 11. The Medal British Museum, 1985 A Wabanaki Renaissance? Political Movement among Micmacs and Maliseets. in Dutch ... and South America, he is primarily known for his ethnographic and historic research on Wabanaki ... Wabanaki Indians on the Eve of the European Invasion. Pp.  165 211. American Beginnings ... Turmoil on the Wabanaki Frontier, 1524 1678. Pp.  97 119. Maine The Pine Tree State from Prehistory ... Confederacy Diplomacy until Dummer s Treaty 1727 http www.wabanaki.com Harald Prins.htm A Handful ... of Latin America . ed. Dwight R. Heath, 2001 The Crooked Path of Dummer s Treaty Anglo Wabanaki Diplomacy .... by B. Engelbrecht, 2007 Asticou s Island Domain Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500 2000 ... basketmakers in Maine http www.folkstreams.net film,94 Wabanaki A New Dawn by David Westphall and Dennis ... more details
the conflict. The Campaign Throughout 1723 Father Rale and the WabanakiConfederacy of Acadia orchestrated ... and had not involved any member of the Wabanaki tribes. None had been consulted about the expansion .... University of Toronto Press. 2004. p. 96. ref In response to Wabanaki hostilities toward the expansion .... 2003. p. 49 ref The Confederacy waited until spring and then began another campaign against the Northeast ... more details
. The Wabanaki regarded the Treaty of Portsmouth as the reaffirmation of the Treaty of 1699 at Mare ... King, since he did not own it. The British made efforts to win over the Wabanaki by using superior goods and ceremonial presents for the fur trade. They also tried to have the Wabanaki expel French soldiers ... to regain the settlements of Saco, Scarborough, and Falmouth, and a new chance to exploit the Wabanaki ... more details
Infobox military conflict image File BaronDeStCastin1881byWill H Lowe Wilson Museum Archives.jpg 250px caption Jean Vincent d Abbadie de Saint Castin Baron de St Castin conflict Battle of Fort Loyal partof King William s War date May 20 21, 1690 place Falmouth neck site of present day Portland, Maine result French and Wabanaki Confederacy victory combatant2 Flag icon England Kingdom of England English colonists combatant1 New France br Wabanaki Confederacy commander2 Captain Sylvanus Davis commander1 Joseph Fran ois Hertel de la Fresni re , Jean Vincent d Abbadie de Saint Castin Baron de St Castin strength2 unknown strength1 400 500 troops and natives casualties2 200 killed casualties1 unknown Campaignbox King William s War The Battle of Fort Loyal May 20, 1690 involved Joseph Fran ois Hertel de la Fresni re and Jean Vincent d Abbadie de Saint Castin Baron de St Castin leading troops as well as the Wabanaki Confederacy Mi kmaq people Mi kmaq and Maliseet from Meductic Indian Village Fort Meductic Fort Meductic in New Brunswick to capture and destroy an English settlement on the Falmouth neck site of present day Portland, Maine , then part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony . The commander of the fort was Captain Sylvanus Davis. ref Captain Sylvanus Davis was of Sheepscot in 1659 and was wounded at Arrowsick at the time Captain Lake was killed. He removed to Falmouth in 1680 and had command of the fort there in the next Indian war. He was captured and carried to Canada, May 20, 1690, and after his return in 1691 entered the Council by the Charter of William and Mary. He wrote an account of the conduct of the war which is in III Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., Vol. I, page 101. He lived in Hull during the latter part of his life and died in 1704. Savage. ref After two days of siege, the settlement s fort, called Fort Loyal sometimes spelled Loyall , surrendered. The community s buildings were burned, including the wooden stockade fort, and its people were either killed or taken ... more details