SALEM, People of, effect of the perse- | Small, John, of Salem, his oxen seized, cutions upon the, 48;
245.
they set up quiet meetings, 48; continued persecutions, 61, 249,
279;
meetings broken up, 74;
many imprisoned at Boston, 168. Salt, William, at Morlaix, France, 21. Salter, William, the jailer, his vin- dictive behaviour to Quaker pris- oners, 226. Sandwich people become Quakers, 130;
some put in stocks for pitying Friends, 137;
cruel treatment of, by Marshal Barlow, 145.
Scott, Catharine, of Providence, ex- pressing pity for Friends, is imprisoned and whipped, 79; Mary, visiting C. Holder in pris- on, is herself committed, 98; Patience, a little girl, coming from
Providence is imprisoned, 95. Shafflin, Michael, a sympathizer, 242. Shapleigh, Major, and wife, of Dover, convinced, 229;
meetings in their house, 252. Shattock, Samuel, of Salem, befriend-
ing C. Holder, is sent to jail, 46; whipped and banished, 46; sent again to Boston, 55; appeal to Court from jail, 63; fined and whipped, 69; banished for refusing hat honour, 73;
for attending meeting, 86; lays the matter of Friends' suf- ferings before Council and Par- liament, 215;
again fined at Salem, 246; William, imprisoned and whip- ped, 49, 404. Small, John, of Salem, taken to Bos- ton, 51;
Small-pox, Visitations of the, 329, 550. Smith, Margaret, of Salem, impris- oned, 99;
whipped in the open street, 112; released from Boston prison, 211; her letter (in which Mary Trask united), to Governor Endicott, 297.
John, of Salem, released, 211; he and his wife again impris- oned, 220;
his letter to Governor Endicott, relative to the latter's cruelty to J. Smith's wife, 291. Richard, of Long Island, his de- tention and banishment, 15. Southwick, Lawrence and Cassandra, of Salem, entertain C. Holder and J. Copeland, 47; imprisoned and sent to Boston, 47;
whipped and fined, 49; sent again to Boston, 55; appeal to Court from jail, 63; banished for attending meeting, 78, 83;
they die on Shelter Island, within three days of each other, 86. Josiah, persecution of, 49; taken to Boston, 51, 55;
appeal to the Court from jail, 63; banished for attending meeting, 78, 83;
passes to England by Barbadoes, 86;
sufferings of Friends made pub- lic, 222;
returning to Boston, is impris- oned, 222;
refusing to remove the hat, he is sentenced to be tied to a cart, and whipped on the bare back through three towns, 223;
Southwick, Josiah, returns at once to | TERRIBLE things by the Red Sea, from Boston, 224. C. Mather's History, 539. Daniel, and Provided, ordered to Thatcher, Thomas, his mis-statements be sold to pay fines, 89; answered, 420. ship-master refuses to take them
Thirstone, Thomas, arrives at Bos- ton, 9;
to Barbadoes, 92.
Provided, coming to Boston, is inprisoned, 99;
imprisoned, and shipped away, 37; barbarously used in New Eng- land, treated kindly by the In- dians, 28.
Tilton, John and Mary, of Graves- end, entertain Friends, and are im- prisoned, 274.
Tompkins, Mary, arrives from Eng- land, 227;
disputes with a priest, 228; visits convinced ones about Do- ver, 229;
sentenced to be tied to a cart, and whipped through eleven towns, 230;
returning to Dover, is dragged
through snow and over rough fields, face downward, 235; put in the stocks at Hampton, 236;
evilly treated, 247, 252, 259; goes to Flushing, Long Island, 273;
imprisoned and banished, 276; in Virginia, whipped with a knot-
ted nine-corded whip, 287; returning to Boston, is ordered to be whipped through three towns, 288, 301;
the same sentence repeated, 303, 477.
Trask, Mary, of Salem, imprisoned,
99;
whipped in the open street, 112; released from Boston prison, 211; her letter (in which Margaret Smith united) to Governor En- dicott, 297.
whipped in the open street, 112; put in the stocks, 244.
Spicer, Michael, and son Samuel, suf- fer at the hands of the Dutch, 274. Stanley, Martha, banished on pain of death, 169.
Stevenson, Marmaduke, from York- shire, arrives at Boston, and is put in prison, 7, 95;
is ordered to depart on pain of death, 97;
coming back to Boston, is im- prisoned, 99;
his paper upon his mission, after
being sentenced to death, 108; testimony of Daniel Gould con-
cerning him and others, 314; his "Call from Death to Life," written from Boston jail, 360; his letter to the Lord's people, 374;
his execution, 103;
some of his last words, 450. Stubbs, John, in the Palatinate, in Germany and Italy with S. Fisher, 19, 20, 22.
Stuyvesant, Governor, persecutes Friends, but afterward expresses regret, 274.
Sufferings of the People of God call- ed Quakers, A Short Summary of the, 318.
Summary of Sufferings, by John Whiting, 468.
Susquehanna Indians, Friends well treated by the, 28. Sweden, Friends in, 17.
Turks, Friends in the lands of the, Waugh, Dorothy, whipping of, 51,
23.
Turner, Michael, fined, 154.
Upshall, Nicholas, provides for visit- ing Friends, 13;
warns the persecutors to take heed, 36;
imprisoned and banished, 36, 401; driven from Plymouth to Rhode. Island, 37;
commiserated by Indians, 37; returning after three years is put in prison, 96;
prevented from fencing in the place where the bodies of W. Robinson and M. Stevenson were cast, 204;
again imprisoned, his death, 220. Verrin, Philip, of Salem, witnesses the execution of W. Robinson and M. Stevenson, 203; is whipped, 246. Walden, Richard, Magistrate of Do- ver, 230.
Walton, George, his wife and daugh- ter convinced of the Truth, 308. Wardel, Eliakim, of Hampton, for expressing sympathy, is put in the stocks, 231;
fined for harbouring W. Chris- tison, 238;
fined again, his meadow taken, 239;
bound to a tree and lashed, 241. Lydia, testifies at Newbury con- cerning the blind and perse- cuting spirits, 239;
tied to a post and lashed, 240; remarks on the singularity of her testimony by J. Whiting, 476. Waugh, Dorothy, arrives at Boston,
9;
imprisoned and shipped away, 37;
406;
imprisoned and banished, 52; put in prison at New Amsterdam and banished, 168; imprisoned at Hartford, clothes sold to pay fees, and sent away, 173.
Weatherhead, Mary, arrives at Bos- ton, 9;
imprisoned and shipped away, 37;
coming to New Haven, is sent away, 157;
put in prison at New Amsterdam and banished, 168.
Webb, John, a persecutor, drowned, 322. Wharton, Edward, of Salem, fined, 92;
lashed, and again fined, 112; his pity for William Leddra, 190, 193;
again brought into Court, 195; remanded to prison, 196; taunted for not putting off the hat, 196, 198;
is banished upon pain of death,
Wharton, Edward, goes with Friends | Wilson, Deborah, is sentenced to be
whipped, her mother and sister being tied to the cart, 244; remarks on thé singularity of her testimony, by J. Whiting, 476. George, is imprisoned for pro- phesying, 219;
to Long Island, is imprisoned, and then sent away by vessel, 273;
at Dover, he is put in the stocks, and sentenced to be whipped through three towns, 276; whipped at Salem for rebuking
Hathorn for his cruelty, 280; again imprisoned at Dover, 281; at Boston, refusing hat-honour, he is whipped through the town, 285;
released from Boston prison, 211; returning, is tied to a cart and whipped through three towns, 221.
Priest, his blood-thirstiness and cruelty, 102.
at Boston, visiting Mary Tom- kins in her sickness, is bound to a great gun and whipped unmercifully, 288; the above punishment repeated, Winthrop, Governor, of Connecticut, 304.
Wing, Daniel, of Sandwich, fined for not removing the hat, 127, 151. Winslow, Josiah, Major, his cruelty to the Sandwich people, 153.
Whiting, John, his answer to Cotton
Mather's "Truth and Inno- cency Defended against False- hood and Envy," 389; his remarks on the singularity of L. Wardel's testimony, 476; his remarks on the singularity of D. Wilson's testimony, 476. Wiggins, Thomas, Magistrate of Do- ver, his cruelty to E. Wharton, 276;
his death, 322.
Wilkie, Thomas, a stranger, his letter upon Wm. Leddra's execution, 204.
Willet, Captain, of Plymouth, stirs up the Dutch Governor against Quakers, 164, 167.
1
Williams, Roger, and Friends, 435. Wilson, Deborah, testifies at Salem against the stripping and whip- ping of women, 244;
begs that Quakers be not put to death, 120;
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