1676 Quotes
1676: The End of American Independence
by
Stephen Saunders Webb32 ratings, 3.62 average rating, 6 reviews
1676 Quotes
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“The growth and improvement of New York was a wonderful example of the vast and irrevocable benefits reaped by the English empire during the four years when England was at peace and her rivals were at war. Yet in every other English colony, from the Carolinas northward, the immeasurable disasters of the great Algonquin wars set colonial development back by more than thirty years. New York alone was spared. New York alone had Andros.”
― 1676: The End of American Independence
― 1676: The End of American Independence
“The royalists paroled from the Channel Islands who chose Virginia, Philip Ludwell and Francis Lovelace among them, became Sir William Berkeley's courtiers. They never lost the habit, so appropriate to exiles, of pledging loyalty to the king but looking out for themselves.”
― 1676: The End of American Independence
― 1676: The End of American Independence
“Arms are the profession of exiles. (311)”
― 1676: The End of American Independence
― 1676: The End of American Independence
“The church of England could never become the church of England's Empire. . . The sovereign and his heir [Charles II and James], by policy if not by conviction, were religious tolerationists even more in the empire than in England. In the colonies, the royal brothers were free from the predominance of the church, and they wielded overseas an authority far less fettered than it was in England. The duke and the king therefore ordered their viceroys to tolerate all religions privately practiced and peaceably conducted. Under the later Stuarts, "Greater Britain" became truly tolerant. Great Britain did not. (p193)”
― 1676: The End of American Independence
― 1676: The End of American Independence
