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Hooton, Elizabeth, at Dover, is put | Italy, Friends in, 21.

in the stocks, and cast into
prison, 267;

at Cambridge, is again imprisoned
and lashed with knotted cords,
268;

at Watertown is whipped with
rods, 268;

at Dedham, is tied to a cart and
lashed, thence carried many
miles into the Wilderness, and
is left there, 268;

goes to Rhode Island, 269;
returning to Cambridge for her
clothes, is apprehended, and
whipped again through three
towns, and sent into the Wil-
derness, 270;

comes back to Boston, is impris-
oned, whipped, and banished
on pain of death or of branding,
211, 271;
imprisoned at Braintree and Sa-
lem, 272;

a relation of some sufferings, 309;
summary of her past experiences,
478.

Howgill, Francis, his answer to John
Norton's book against Quakers,
418;

his prophecy concerning the per-
secutors, 541.

Howland, Arthur, of Marshfield, is
fined and put in prison, 154.
Hussey, John and Rebecca, Persecu-
tion of, 241.

Hutchinson, Anne, Banishment of,
172;

murdered by Indians, 173.

INDIAN War of 1675, a righteous judg-
ment on the Colony.-See Judgment,

etc.

Indians, Kindness of, to Friends, 17,
28.

JENKINS, John, fined, 152.
Jesuits, Law of England'against the,
80.

Judgment of God upon a reviling wo-
man, 111;

upon Priest Wilson, 111;
upon Governor Endicott, as wit-
nessed by his miserable end,
290;

upon Major-General Adderton,
who is dashed headlong from
his horse, 305;

upon John Norton, 306;
upon the Daltons of Hampton,
307;

upon the Colonists at the hands

of Indians, 70, 74, 89, 139, 161,
186, 266, 551, 556, 561;
by visitation of smallpox, 330;
by witchcraft delusion, 330, 533,
539;

by loss of Charter, 563;

for many trespasses and short-
comings, 540, 550.
Judgments of God on the persecutors,
314;

a brief relation thereupon, 321;
referred to by Increase Mather,

202;

George Keith's account of, 328.

KEITH, George, his disputations, and
the change in his religious
belief, 483, 513;

shows that the Ranters' doings

are not to be chargeable on the
Quakers, 494, 497.
King, William, of Salem, put in pris-
on, 99;

whipped in the open street, 112.
Kirby, Richard, of Sandwich, fined,
146;

released from Boston prison, 211.

1

LAWS AND PENALTIES:-

prohibiting ship-masters from
bringing Quakers to Massachu-
setts, 31, 40, 167, 400, 471;
relative to cutting-off ears, 40, 48,

55, 403;

as to whipping, 55, 58, 127, 403;
as to boring tongues through with
a hot iron, 55, 403;

as to putting off the hat, 73.-See
also Hat honour, under "Doc-
trines and Testimonies."
against Quaker's books, 400;
for non-attendance at authorized
meetings, 74, 133;

for holding or attending other
than the authorized meetings,
78, 93, 127, 130, 471;
prohibiting Quakers to return on
pain of death, 79, 80, 83, 94, 412;
anthorizing Quakers to be sold
for satisfaction of fines, 89;
forbidding any one to harbour or
entertain a Quaker, 127, 167,
403;

Leddra, William, whipped and im-
prisoned, 56;

sent to Boston, 55;

imprisoned at Plymouth, 155;
returning to Boston after banish-
ment, is chained to a log, 169,
189;

forbidden to abide in New Haven,
173;

his trial and death-sentence, 191;
takes leave of W. Christison and
E. Wharton, 199;
his execution, 201, 202;
letter of T. Wilkie thereupon, 205;
his letter to Friends in New Eng-
land, written from Boston pris-
on, 380;

his Epistle to Friends, written the
day before he was put to death,
385;

some of his last words, 451.
Leeds, Daniel, almanac maker, 489,
514.

Leveret, Governor, his treatment of
Margaret Brewster, 473.

as to taking the oath, 125, 127, Leveridge, Priest, denies revelation,

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penalties for refusing the oath, Liddal, John, returning from Virgin-

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Lutherans did not molest Friends, | NAKEDNESS, Spiritual, a testimony
17.

against, 476.

Lynn, Spread of Quakerism in, 524. Needham, Ann, in default of pay-

MARSTON, William, of Hampton, fined
for relieving the Southwicks, and
on other accounts, 74.
Mather, Cotton, expresses regret that
Friends were ever persecuted,
262;

his confession of God's just judg-
ment because of wickedness,
331;

his Church History of New Eng-
land answered, by John Whit-
ing, in "Truth and Innocency
Defended against Falsehood
and Envy," 389;

his toleration and persecution

contradictions, 517.
Mather, Increase, his reference to
judgments upon the Colonists,
202;

answered by George Keith, rela-
tive to God's judgments upon
the persecutors, 328, 493.

Maule, Thomas, of Salem, his book
on the Indian troubles, 512;
on the New England persecu-
tions, 565;

ment of fines, is whipped, 244.
New England's treatment of Quakers
compared with their treatment by
Europeans and Indians, 17, 484.
Newhouse, Thomas, put in prison
at Manhattan, and banished,
276;
apprehended at Salem, and whip-
ped through three towns, 280;
whipped for testifying against
cruelty, 280;

imprisoned at Dover, 281;

a relation of more sufferings,
312.

New Netherlands, persecution in, 163,
274;

sympathizers with Friends fined,
167.

New Quakers, a ranting and dancing
sect not owned by Friends, 498.
Newland, John, fined, 154.
Newland, William, fined and banish-
ed, 124;

fined for refusing to swear, and

imprisoned, 125;

William and Henry, of Duxbury,
disfranchised, 151.

imprisoned, whipped, and goods Nicholson, Joseph and wife, banish-

spoiled, 565.

Michelson, Marshal-General, levies
on Quakers' goods to pay fees, 14.
Millard, Jane, returning from Vir-

ginia, is imprisoned at Long
Island, and sent away by vessel,
275;

apprehended at Salem, and whip-

ped through three towns, 279;
imprisoned at Dover, 281.
Millet, Thomas, Disputes of, with
Friends, 252.

Munster, Quakers charged with imi-
tating the Anarchists of, 9, 30, 418.

ed on pain of death, 169;
apprehended, and made to wit-
ness the execution of M. Dyer,
169;
forbidden to stay at Plymouth,

they go to Rhode Island, 171;
not allowed to abide at Hartford,
174.

Joseph, on returning from Vir-
ginia, is imprisoned at Long
Island, and sent away by ves-
sel, 275;

apprehended at Salem, and whip-
ped through three towns, 279;

Nicholson, Joseph, ordered to be | Pembleton, Bryan, seeks to turn con-

whipped at the Piscataqua, but
the constable refuses, 281.
Nicholson family, Cruelties to the, 258.
Norton, Humphrey, whipped, 58;

-

repeated other whippings, 62;
banished from Plymouth, 125;
put in stocks and whipped, 137;
put in prison at New Haven,
fined, whipped, and his hand
branded, 156, 403.

John, Priest, assists the General
Court in the work of perse-
cution, 13;

against William Brend, 57;
against the Salem prisoners, 73;
with other priests, petitions the
magistrates to banish Quakers
"upon pain of death," 83;
sent to England, to defend the

Provincial authorities, 216;
brings back a Declaration of lib-

erty of conscience, 217;

his book against Friends, "The
Heart of New England Rent,"
417, 473;

his sudden death, 307, 321.

OLIVER, Captain, pays Friends' prison

fees to the Marshal, 14;
orders drums to beat, that the
last words of Wm. Robinson
and his friends be not heard,
101;

threatens E. Wharton, 200;
the Lord's blasting hand upon
him, 322.

PALATINATE, Friends in the, 18.
Pearson, Peter, imprisoned at Ply-
mouth, 155;

released from Boston prison, 211.
Pembleton, Bryan, on Piscataqua
river, orders Friends whipped,
but the constable refuses, 281;

vinced ones aside, 308.

Perry, Edward, of Sandwich, fined,
143.

Perrot, John, and John Love, before
the Inquisition at Leghorn,

21.

John, and the Duke of Venice,
22;

proceeding to Rome, is impris-

oned, 22.

Phelps, Hannah, imprisoned, 99.
Nicholas, of Salem, is fined, im-

prisoned, and whipped, 65, 405;
fined, and whipped again, 69;
threatened for refusing hat hon-
our, 73;

banished to England, 86;
goes to England with S. Shat-
tock, 221;

sufferings of Friends made pub-
lic, 222;

his return and death, 222.
Plymouth, Meetings of Friends for-
bidden at, 127, 130;

letter from a magistrate of, to his
friend in England, as to the
persecutions, 128.

Portugal, Ann Gargil in, 27.
Preston, George, arrives from Eng-
land, 227;

disputes with Priest Rayner, 228;
his dispute with a priest of York,
Maine, 247;

with a priest on Long Island,
308.

Prince, Governor, of Plymouth, de-
clares the Quakers a people to
be destroyed, 139;
account of his plundering, 248.
Mary, arrives at Boston, 9;
is imprisoned and shipped away,
37;

in Venice, with Mary Fisher,
22.

Prophecies and warnings of Francis | Rawson, Edward, Secretary, his dec-

Howgill, Edward Burrough, George
Fox, and others, concerning the
persecutors, 541.

Puritans, who were persecutors, be-
come spiritually darkened, 263.

QUAKERS to be proceeded against ac-
cording to the law against
Jesuits, 80;

why they came into New Eng-
land, 115;

put out of prison, made fast to
the tail of a cart, and whipped
through Boston, 211;

laration, that "we desire their
lives absent, rather than their
deaths' present," 114;

his zeal to secure Wharton's ban-
ishment, 199;

opposes Edward Wharton, 283.
Rayner, Priest, disputes with Friends,
228.

Reap, William, goes with Friends to

Long Island, is imprisoned, and
banished, 273.

Rhode Island, Quaker traders from,
not allowed in Plymouth, 134;
general meeting set up, 214.

driven through three towns into Robinson, George, a youth of Lon-
the Wilderness, 220;

in prison, a trouble to their per-
secutors, who do not know how
to dispose of them, 263;
sufferings, a short summary of,
as represented to King and Par-
liament, 318;

their first appearance, 420, 438;
false reports as to the occasion of

their persecution, 456;

turned persecutors, an untruth-

ful charge by Cotton Mather,
484, 519.

Quakerism of George Fox not re-
fined by the Friends who followed
him, 481.

Quaking of the body under religious
fervour not peculiar to Friends,
421, 492.

RANTERS of New England, no Quak-
ers, 493;

in old England greatly opposed
by Friends, 499.

Rawson, Edward, Secretary, a chief
instigator of cruelty against
Friends, 58;

publishes an order to sell the
Southwicks, 89;

don, at Ramleh and Jerusalem, 25.
Robinson, William, of London, ar-

rives and is imprisoned, 7, 95;
is ordered to depart on pain of
death, 97;

coming back to Boston, is im-
prisoned, 99;

sentenced to death by Endicott,

100;

his execution, 103;

some of his last words, 450;
his paper to the Court before he
was sentenced to death, 105;
testimony of Daniel Gould, 314;
his salutation of love to his fel-
low prisoners; 357;

his letter to the Lord's people,
358;

and Marmaduke Stevenson, their
letters of warning and condem-
nation, from Boston jail to the
Rulers, Priests, and People in
New England, 338.
Rouse, John, whipped, 58;

repeated other whippings, 62;
suffers the loss of right ear, 76;
whipped at Plymouth, 137;
denied passage through New Ha-
ven, 173.

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