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Edmund Andros

Sir Edmund Andros (6 December 1637 – 24 February 1714[1]) was an English colonial administrator in British America. He was the governor of the Dominion of New England during most of its three-year existence. At other times, Andros served as governor of the provinces of New York, East and West Jersey, Virginia, and Maryland.

Edmund Andros
19th century portrait by Frederick Stone Batcheller
4th Colonial Governor of New York
In office
9 February 1674 – 18 April 1683
MonarchCharles II
Preceded byAnthony Colve
Succeeded byThomas Dongan
Bailiff of Guernsey
In office
1674–1713
Preceded byAmias Andros
Succeeded byJean de Sausmarez
Governor of the Dominion of New England
(Governor-in-chief of New England)
In office
20 December 1686 – 18 April 1689
Preceded byJoseph Dudley
Succeeded bynone (dominion dissolved) (partly Simon Bradstreet as Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
Colonial Governor of Virginia
In office
September 1692 – May 1698
Preceded byLord Effingham
Succeeded byFrancis Nicholson
3rd and 5th Royal Governor of Maryland
In office
September 1693 – May 1694
Preceded bySir Thomas Lawrence
Succeeded byNicholas Greenberry
In office
1694–1694
Preceded byNicholas Greenberry
Succeeded bySir Thomas Lawrence
Personal details
Born6 December 1637
London, England
Died24 February 1714(1714-02-24) (aged 76)
London, England, Great Britain
Resting placeSt Anne's Church, Soho, London, England
Signature

Before his service in North America, he served as Bailiff of Guernsey. His tenure in New England was authoritarian and turbulent, as his views were decidedly pro-Anglican, a negative quality in a region home to many Puritans. His actions in New England resulted in his overthrow during the 1689 Boston revolt. He became governor of Virginia three years later.

Andros was considered to have been a more effective governor in New York and Virginia, although he became the enemy of prominent figures in both colonies, many of whom worked to remove him from office. Despite these enmities, he managed to negotiate several treaties of the Covenant Chain with the Iroquois, establishing a long-lived peace involving the colonies and other tribes that interacted with that confederacy. His actions and governance generally followed the instructions he was given upon appointment to office, and he received approbation from the monarchs and governments that appointed him.

Andros was recalled to England from Virginia in 1698, and resumed the title of Bailiff of Guernsey. Although he no longer resided entirely on Guernsey, he was appointed lieutenant governor of the island, and served in this position for four years. Andros died in 1714.

Early life

Andros was born in London on 6 December 1637. Amice Andros, his father, was Bailiff of Guernsey and a staunch supporter of Charles I. His mother was Elizabeth Stone, whose sister was a courtier to the king's sister, Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia.[2] Although it has been claimed that Andros was present at the surrender in 1651 of Guernsey's Castle Cornet, the last royalist stronghold to surrender in the English Civil War,[3] there is no firm evidence to support this. It is possible that he fled Guernsey with his mother in 1645.[4] In 1656, he was apprenticed to his uncle, Sir Robert Stone, captain of a cavalry company. Andros then served in two winter campaigns in Denmark, including the relief of Copenhagen in 1659. As a result of these experiences he gained fluency in French, Swedish, and Dutch.[5]

He remained a firm supporter of the Stuarts while they were in exile. Charles II, after his restoration to the throne, specifically commended the Andros family for its support.[6]

Andros served as a courtier to Elizabeth of Bohemia from 1660 until her death in 1662.[7] During the 1660s he served in the English army against the Dutch. He was next commissioned a major in the regiment of Sir Tobias Bridge, which was sent to Barbados in 1666. He returned to England two years later, carrying despatches and letters.[8]

In 1671, he married Mary Craven, the daughter of Thomas Craven of Burnsall in the West Riding of Yorkshire (now North Yorkshire), the son of a cousin to the Earl of Craven, one of the queen's closest advisors,[9][10] and a friend who served as his patron for many years.[5] In 1672 he was commissioned major.[11]

Governor of New York

After his father died in 1674, Andros acquired Sausmarez Manor and was named to succeed him as Bailiff of Guernsey.[12][13] He was also appointed by the James, Duke of York to be the first proprietary governor of the Province of New York. The province's territory included the former territories of New Netherland, ceded to England by the Treaty of Westminster, including all of present-day New Jersey, the Dutch holdings on the Hudson River from New Amsterdam (renamed New York City) to Albany, as well as Long Island, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket.

In 1664 Charles II had granted James all of this territory, as well as all of the land in present-day Maine between the Kennebec and St. Croix Rivers, but with the intervening Dutch retaking of the territory, Charles issued a new patent to James.[14] Andros arrived in New York harbor in late October, and negotiated the handover of the Dutch territories with local representatives and Dutch Governor Anthony Colve, which took place on 10 November 1674. Andros agreed to confirm the existing property holdings and to allow the Dutch inhabitants of the territory to maintain their Protestant religion.[15]

Connecticut boundary dispute

Andros was also involved in boundary disputes with the neighboring Connecticut Colony. Dutch claims had originally extended as far east as the Connecticut River, but these claims had been ceded in the 1650 Treaty of Hartford, and reduced to a boundary line 20 miles (32 km) east of the Hudson in 1664. York's territorial claim did not acknowledge these, and Andros announced to Connecticut authorities his intentions to reclaim that territory (which included Connecticut capital, Hartford) in early 1675. Connecticut leaders pointed out the later revisions to Connecticut's boundaries, but Andros pressed his claim, arguing that those revisions had been superseded by York's grant.[16] Andros used the outbreak of King Philip's War in July 1675 as an excuse to go by ship to Connecticut with a small military force to establish the duke's claim.[17] When he arrived at Saybrook at the mouth of the river on 8 July he found the fort there occupied by Connecticut militia, who were flying the English flag.[18] Andros came ashore, had a brief conversation with the fort commander, read his commission, and returned to New York City.[19] This was the full extent of Andros' attempt to claim the territory, but it would be remembered in Connecticut when later attempts were made to assert New York authority.[20]

King Philip's War

Following his Connecticut expedition, Andros traveled into Iroquois country to establish relations there.[21] He was well received, and agreed to continue the Dutch practice of supplying firearms to the Iroquois. This action successfully blunted French diplomatic successes with the Iroquois. It also led to charges in New England that Andros provided arms to Indians allied to King Philip (as the Wampanoag leader Metacom was known to the English); in fact, Andros provided gunpowder to Rhode Island that was used in the Great Swamp Fight against the Narragansetts in December 1675, and specifically outlawed the sale of munitions to tribes known to be allied to Philip.[22] The charges poisoned the atmosphere between Andros and Massachusetts leaders, even though Andros' conduct met with approval in London.[23]

 
A caricature of King Philip was drawn by Paul Revere.

In the meeting with the Iroquois Andros was given the name "Corlaer", a name historically used by the Iroquois to refer to the Dutch governor in New Netherland and continued when the English took over the colony and renamed it New York (in the same way the French governor was dubbed "Onontio").[24] One other consequence was the establishment at Albany of a colonial department for Indian affairs, with Robert Livingston as its first head.[25]

Philip was known to be in the Berkshires in western Massachusetts that winter, and New Englanders accused Andros of sheltering him. Historian John Fiske suggests that Philip's purpose was not to draw the Iroquois into the conflict, but instead to draw the Mahicans into the conflict with a view toward attacking Albany. An offer by Andros to send New York troops into Massachusetts to attack Philip was rebuffed, based on the idea that it was covert ploy to again assert authority to the Connecticut River. Instead, Mohawks from the Albany area did battle with Philip, driving him eastward.[26] When Connecticut authorities later appealed to Andros for assistance, Andros replied that it was "strange" that they would do so, considering their previous behavior, and refused to help.[27]

In July 1676 Andros established a haven for the Mahicans and other Indian war refugees at Schaghticoke.[28] Although the conflict came to an end in southern New England in 1676, there continued to be friction between the Abenakis of northern New England and New England settlers. These prompted Andros to send a force to the duke's territory in Maine, where they established a fort at Pemaquid (present-day Bristol). Andros annoyed Massachusetts fishermen by restricting their use of the duke's land for drying fish.[29]

In November 1677 Andros departed for England,[30] where he would spend the next year. During this visit he was knighted as a reward for his performance as governor,[31] and he sat in on meetings of the Lords of Trade in which agents for Massachusetts Bay defended its charter, and gave detailed accounts of the state of his colony.[32]

Southern border disputes

The southernmost territories of the duke, roughly encompassing northern Delaware, were desired by Charles Calvert, Baron Baltimore, who sought to extend the reach of his proprietary Province of Maryland into the area. At the same time Calvert was seeking an end to a frontier war with the Iroquois to the north, having persuaded the intervening Susquehannocks to move to the Potomac River, well within Maryland territory. Furthermore, the Lenape, who dominated Delaware Bay, were unhappy with seizures of their lands by Virginia and Maryland settlers, and war between these groups had been imminent in 1673 when the Dutch retook New York.[citation needed]

When Andros came to New York, he moved to stabilize the situation. He befriended the Lenape sachems (chiefs), convincing them to act as mediators between the English and other tribes.[33] Peace appeared to be imminent when Bacon's Rebellion broke out in Virginia, resulting in an attack on the Susquehannock fort on the Potomac. The surviving Susquehannocks sneaked out of the fort one night, some of them making their way east toward Delaware Bay. In June 1676 Andros offered, in exchange for their moving into his jurisdiction, to protect them from their enemies among the Virginian and Maryland settlers. He also extended an offer given by the Mohawk for the Susquehannocks to settle among them.[34] These offers were well received, but Maryland authorities were unable to convince their Indian allies to make the peace offered by Andros, and organized them to march toward the Delaware, which would also fulfil the goal of strengthening the Maryland claim to the area.[35] Andros responded by urging the Susquehannocks to retreat into New York, where they would be beyond Maryland's reach, and delivering a strongly worded threat to Maryland, that it would either have to acknowledge his sovereignty over the Susquehannocks, or they would have to peaceably take them back. He also offered his services as a mediator, pointing out that the absence of the Susquehannocks now left Maryland settlements open to direct attack by the Iroquois.[36]

In a council held at the Lenape village of Shackamaxon (site of present-day Philadelphia) in February and March 1677, all of the major parties met, but no final agreements were reached, and Andros ordered the Susquehannocks remaining with the Lenape to disperse to other parts of New York in April.[37] Maryland sent Henry Coursey to New York to engage Andros and eventually the Iroquois in peace talks, while at the same time they sent surveyors to lay out plots on land also claimed by New York on Delaware Bay. Coursey was instructed to offer Andros what was in essence a £100 bribe that an Indian peace might be reached in exchange for that land. Andros refused the bribe, and Coursey ended up being compelled to negotiate further through Andros and the Mohawk in Albany.[38] The peace agreed in negotiations that followed in Albany in the summer of 1677 is considered one of the foundations of the set of alliances and treaties called the Covenant Chain.[39]

Although Andros was unable to prevent Baltimore from granting some land on the Delaware, he did successfully blunt the Maryland leader's attempt to control an even greater portion of land.[40] The duke eventually deeded those lands to William Penn, and they became part of the state of Delaware.[41]

Control of the Jerseys

 
Sir George Carteret, proprietor of East Jersey.

Governance of the Jerseys also created problems for Andros. James had awarded the territory west of the Hudson River to proprietors John Berkeley and George Carteret, and Berkeley had then deeded the western portion (which became known as West Jersey) to a partnership of Quakers.[42] Berkeley had not transferred his proprietary rights to this group, and the exact nature of the rights James had given both Berkeley and Carteret was disputed, in part because James believed that the second patent granted to him in 1674 overrode the earlier grants he had made to Berkeley and Carteret.[43]

This resulted in conflict when Andros attempted to extend his government over East Jersey, the territory governed on behalf of Carteret by the latter's cousin Philip.[44] Possibly based on orders given to him during his visit to England, Andros began to assert New York authority over East Jersey after George Carteret's death in 1680.[45] Despite a friendly personal relationship between Andros and Governor Carteret, the issue of governance eventually prompted Andros to have Carteret arrested. In a dispute centering on the collection of customs duties in ports on the Jersey side of the Hudson, Andros in 1680 sent a company of soldiers to Philip Carteret's home in Elizabethtown. According to Carteret's account of the incident, he was beaten by the troops, who jailed him in New York.[46]

In a trial over which Andros presided, Carteret was acquitted by a jury on all charges.[47] Carteret returned to New Jersey, but injuries he sustained in the arrest affected his health, and he died in 1682.[48] In the aftermath of the incident the Duke of York surrendered his claims to East Jersey to the Carterets.[49] Andros acquired in 1683, from the widow of Carteret, for £200, the Patent to the Lordship of Alderney.[12]

A less contentious standoff also occurred when settlers sent by William Penn sought to establish what is now Burlington, New Jersey. Andros insisted they had no right to settle there without the duke's permission, but agreed to allow their settlement after they agreed to receive commissions falling under the authority of the New York gubernatorial administration. This situation was permanently resolved in 1680 when York renounced in favor of Penn his remaining claims to West Jersey.[50]

Recall and analysis

The political opponents of Andros in the colony brought a number of charges against him to the Duke of York. Among them were accusations of favoritism toward Dutch businessmen, and engaging in business for private gain rather than that of the duke. Statements were also made to the duke that claimed that his revenues were lower than they should have been; this, in addition to the other complaints, led the duke to order Andros back to England to explain the situation. Andros left the province in January 1681, charging Anthony Brockholls with the administration of the New York government. Expecting a short visit to England, his wife remained in New York.[51]

During his time in New York he was thought to have demonstrated good administrative abilities, but his manner was considered imperious by his opponents among the colonists, and he made numerous enemies during his tenure as governor.[52]

Dominion of New England

In 1686 he was appointed governor of the Dominion of New England. He arrived in Boston on 20 December 1686, and immediately assumed the reins of power.[53] His commission called for governance by himself, with a council. The initial composition of the council included representatives from each of the colonies the dominion absorbed, but because of the inconvenience of travel and the fact that travel costs were not reimbursed, the council's quorums were dominated by representatives from Massachusetts and Plymouth.[54] The Lords of Trade had insisted that he govern without an assembly, something he expressed concern over while his commission was being drafted.[55] In a brief work, Sir Edmund Andros, historian Henry Ferguson attested[56] to the fact that the deliberation of certain policies by an assembly of legislators may have proven inefficient.

The Dominion initially consisted of the territories of the Massachusetts Bay Colony (including present-day Maine), Plymouth Colony, Rhode Island, Connecticut and New Hampshire, and was extended to include New York, and East and West Jersey in 1688.[57] Andros' wife, who had joined him in Boston, died there in 1688 not long after her arrival.[58]

Church of England

Shortly after his arrival, Andros asked each of the Puritan churches in Boston if its meetinghouse could be used for services of the Church of England.[53] When he was rebuffed, he demanded and was given keys to Samuel Willard's Third Church in 1687.[59] Services were held there under the auspices of Rev. Robert Ratcliff until 1688, when King's Chapel was built.[60] These actions highlighted him as pro-Anglican in the eyes of local Puritans,[61] who would later accuse him of involvement in a "horrid Popish plot."[62]

Revenue laws

His council engaged in a lengthy process to harmonize dominion and English laws. This work consumed such a great amount of time that Andros in March 1687 issued a proclamation stating that pre-existing laws would remain in effect until they were revised. Since Massachusetts had no pre-existing tax laws, a scheme of taxation was created that would apply to the entire dominion. Developed by a committee of landowners, the first proposal derived its revenues from import duties, principally alcohol. After much debate, a different proposal was abruptly proposed and adopted, essentially reviving previous Massachusetts tax laws. These laws had been unpopular with farmers who felt the taxes on livestock were too high. To bring in immediate revenue, Andros also received approval to increase the import duties on alcohol.[63]

The first attempts to enforce the revenue laws were met with stiff resistance from a number of Massachusetts communities. Several towns refused to choose commissioners to assess the town population and estates, and officials from a number of them were consequently arrested and brought to Boston. Some were fined and released, while others were imprisoned until they promised to perform their duties. The leaders of Ipswich, who had been most vocal in their opposition to the law, were tried and convicted of misdemeanor offenses.[64]

The other provinces did not resist the imposition of the new law, even though, at least in Rhode Island, the rates were higher than they had been under the previous colonial administration. Plymouth's relatively poor landowners were hard hit because of the high rates on livestock, and funds derived from whaling, once sources of profit for the individual towns, were now directed to the dominion government.[65]

Town meeting laws

One consequence of the tax protest was that Andros sought to restrict town meetings, since these were where that protest had begun. He therefore introduced a law that limited meetings to a single annual meeting, solely for the purpose of electing officials, and explicitly banning meetings at other times for any reason. This loss of local power was widely hated. Many protests were made that the town meeting and tax laws were violations of the Magna Carta, which guaranteed taxation by representatives of the people. It was noted that those who made these complaints had, during the colonial charter, excluded large numbers of voters through the requirement of church membership, and then taxed them.[66]

Land title reform

Andros had been instructed to bring colonial land title practices more in line with those in England, and introduce quit-rents as a means of raising colonial revenues.[67] Titles previously issued in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine under the colonial administration often suffered from defects of form (for example, lacking an imprint of the colonial seal), and most of them did not include a quit-rent payment.[68] Land grants in colonial Connecticut and Rhode Island had been made before either colony had a charter, and there were conflicting claims in a number of areas.[69]

The manner in which Andros approached the issue was necessarily divisive, since it threatened any landowner whose title was in any way dubious. Some landowners went through the confirmation process, but many refused, since they did not want to face the possibility of losing their land, and they viewed the process as a thinly veiled land grab.[70] The Puritans of Plymouth and Massachusetts, some of whom had extensive landholdings, were among the latter.[71] Since all of the existing land titles in Massachusetts had been granted under the now-vacated colonial charter, Andros essentially declared them to be void, and required landowners to recertify their ownership, paying fees to the dominion and becoming subject to the charging of a quit-rent.

Andros attempted to compel the certification of ownership by issuing writs of intrusion,[72][73] but large landowners who owned many parcels contested these individually, rather than recertifying all of their lands.[74]

Connecticut charter

Since Andros' commission included Connecticut, he asked Connecticut Governor Robert Treat to surrender the colonial charter not long after his arrival in Boston. Unlike Rhode Island, whose officials readily acceded to the dominion, Connecticut officials formally acknowledged Andros' authority, but did little to assist him. They continued to run their government according to the charter, holding quarterly meetings of the legislature and electing colony-wide officials, while Treat and Andros negotiated over the surrender of the charter.[citation needed]

In October 1687 Andros finally decided to travel to Connecticut to personally see to the matter. Accompanied by an honour guard, he arrived in Hartford on 31 October, and met that evening with the colonial leadership. According to legend, during this meeting the charter was laid out on the table for all to see. The lights in the room unexpectedly went out, and when relit, the charter had disappeared. The charter was said to have been hidden in a nearby oak tree (referred to afterward as the Charter Oak) so that a search of nearby buildings would not locate the document.[citation needed]

Whatever the truth of the account, Connecticut records show that its government formally surrendered its seals and ceased operation that day. Andros then traveled throughout the colony, making judicial and other appointments, before returning to Boston.[75][full citation needed] On 29 December 1687, the dominion council formally extended its laws over Connecticut, completing the assimilation of the New England colonies.[76][full citation needed]

Inclusion of New York and the Jerseys

On 7 May 1688, the provinces of New York, East Jersey, and West Jersey were added to the Dominion. Because they were remote from Boston, where Andros had his seat, New York and the Jerseys were run by Lieutenant Governor Francis Nicholson from New York City. Nicholson, an army captain and protégé of colonial secretary William Blathwayt, came to Boston in early 1687 as part of Andros' honor guard, and had been promoted to his council.[77]

During the summer of 1688, Andros traveled first to New York, and then to the Jerseys, to establish his commission. Dominion governance of the Jerseys was complicated by the fact that the proprietors, whose charters had been revoked, had retained their property, and petitioned Andros for what were traditional manorial rights.[78] The dominion period in the Jerseys was relatively uneventful, due to their distance from the power centers, and the unexpected end of the dominion in 1689.[79]

Indian diplomacy

In 1687 the governor of New France, the Marquis de Denonville, launched an attack against Seneca villages in what is now western New York. His objective was to disrupt trade between the English at Albany and the Iroquois confederation, to which the Seneca belonged, and to break the Covenant Chain, a peace Andros had negotiated in 1677 while he was governor of New York.[80] New York Governor Thomas Dongan appealed for help, and King James ordered Andros to render assistance. James also entered into negotiations with Louis XIV of France, which resulted in an easing of tensions on the northwestern frontier.[81] On New England's northeastern frontier, however, the Abenaki harbored grievances against New England settlers, and began an offensive in early 1688. Andros made an expedition into Maine early in the year, in which he raided a number of Indian settlements. He also raided the trading outpost and home of Jean-Vincent d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin on Penobscot Bay. His careful preservation of the Catholic Castin's chapel would be a source of later accusations of "popery" against Andros.[82]

 
"Andros a Prisoner in Boston" as depicted in "Pioneers in the Settlement of America" Vol. 1, by William A. Crafts (1876)

When Andros took over the administration of New York in August 1688, he met with the Iroquois at Albany to renew to covenant. In this meeting he annoyed the Iroquois by referring to them as "children" (implying subservience to the English), rather than "brethren" (implying equality).[83] He returned to Boston amid further attacks on the New England frontier by Abenaki parties, who admitted that they were doing so in part because of French encouragement.[citation needed]

During Andros's presence in New York, the situation in Maine had deteriorated again, as well, with groups of colonists raiding Indian villages and taking prisoners. These actions were taken in accordance with a directive issued by dominion councillors remaining in Boston, who ordered that frontier militia commanders were to take into custody any Abenaki suspected of participating in the raids.[84] This directive sparked a problem in Maine, when twenty Abenaki, including women and children, were taken into custody by colonial militia. The local authorities were faced with the dilemma of housing the captives, shipping them first to Falmouth and then to Boston, angering other natives in the area, who seized English hostages to ensure the safe return of the captives.[84] Andros castigated the Mainers for their unwarranted acts and ordered the Indians released and returned to Maine. A brief skirmish during the process of exchanging captives resulted in the deaths of four English hostages, and sparked discontent in Maine.[84] Faced with this discord, Andros returned to Maine with a significant force, and began the construction of additional fortifications to protect the settlers.[85] Andros spent the winter in Maine, and returned to Boston in March upon hearing rumors of revolution in England and discontent in Boston.[86]

Revolt

On 18 April 1689, soon after news reached Boston of the overthrow of James II of England, the colonists of Boston rose up against his rule. A well-organized "mob" descended on the city, arresting dominion officials and Anglicans. Andros had his quarters in Fort Mary, a garrison house on the south side of the city, where a number of officials took refuge.[87] The old Massachusetts colonial leadership, restored due to the rebellion and headed by ex-governor Simon Bradstreet, then summoned Governor Andros to surrender, for his own safety because of the mob which they claimed "whereof we were wholly ignorant".[88] He refused, and instead tried to escape to the Rose, the only Royal Navy ship near Boston at the time. However, the boat sent from the Rose was intercepted by militia, and Andros was forced back into Fort Mary.[89] Negotiations ensued, and Andros agreed to leave the fort to meet with the rebel council. Promised safe conduct, he was marched under guard to the townhouse where the council had assembled. There he was told that "they must & would have the Government in their own hands", and that he was under arrest.[90] Daniel Fisher grabbed him by the collar[91] and took him to the home of dominion official John Usher and held under close watch.[90][92]

 
Former Massachusetts Governor Simon Bradstreet

After Fort Mary fell into rebel hands on the 19th, Andros was moved there from Usher's house. He was confined there with Joseph Dudley and other dominion officials until 7 June, when he was transferred to Castle Island. It is during this period of captivity that he is said to have attempted an escape dressed in women's clothing. The story, although it circulated widely, was disputed by the Anglican minister Robert Ratcliff, who claimed that story and others had "not the least foundation of Truth", and that they were "falsehoods, and lies" propagated to "render the Governour odious to his people."[93] He did make a successful escape from Castle Island on 2 August, after his servant plied the sentries with drink. He managed to flee to Rhode Island, but was quickly recaptured and thereafter kept in virtual solitary confinement.[94] He and others were held for 10 months before being sent to England for trial.[95] The Massachusetts agents in London refused to sign the charges made against him, so the court summarily dismissed them, and freed him.[96] When Andros was questioned about the various accusations that had been levelled against him, he pointed out that all of his actions had been taken to bring colonial laws into conformance with English law, or they were specifically taken in pursuit of his commission and instructions.[97]

While Andros was in captivity, the New York government of Lieutenant Governor Francis Nicholson was simultaneously deposed by a military faction led by Jacob Leisler, in an event that came to be known as Leisler's Rebellion.[98] Leisler would govern New York until 1691, when he was captured and executed by a force led by newly appointed provincial governor Henry Sloughter.[99] Andros was eventually allowed to depart for England; by that point, the Dominion of New England had effectively ceased to exist, with the colonies in the dominion having reverted to their previous forms of governance.[100] Massachusetts and its surrounding territories were reorganized into the Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1691.[101]

Governor of Virginia

Andros was well received at court upon his return to England. The new king, William III, recalled that Andros had visited his court in the Netherlands, and expressed approval of Andros' service.[102] In search of employment, Andros offered his services as a spy, offering the idea of going to Paris, ostensibly to meet with the exiled James, but to actually attempt to acquire French military plans. This plan was rejected.[103] While in England he married for the second time, to Elizabeth Crisp Clapham, in July 1691.[104] She was the widow of Christopher Clapham, who was connected by that marriage to his first wife's family.[105]

Andros' next opportunity for employment came with the resignation in February 1692 of Lord Effingham as governor of the Province of Virginia. Although Francis Nicholson, formerly dominion lieutenant governor, was then serving as lieutenant governor or Virginia and sought the superior position, William awarded the governorship to Andros,[106] and awarded Nicholson yet another lieutenant governorship, this time that of Maryland.[107] This was destined to make Andros' tenure more difficult, because his relationship with Nicholson had deteriorated for other reasons. The exact reasons for this enmity are unclear: one contemporary wrote that Nicholson "especially [resented] Sir Edmund Andros, against whom he has a particular pique on account of some earlier dealings".[107]

Andros arrived in Virginia on 13 September 1692, and began his duties a week later. Nicholson graciously received him, and not long after sailed for England.[108] Andros settled at Middle Plantation (the future site of Williamsburg), where he would live until 1695. He worked to organize the provincial records, the maintenance of which had suffered since Bacon's Rebellion, and promoted the enforcement of laws designed to prevent slave rebellions.

He encouraged the diversification of Virginia's economy, which was then almost entirely dependent on tobacco. The export-oriented economy was also being badly hurt by the ongoing Nine Years' War, because of which merchant ships were required to travel in convoys. For several years Virginia did not receive any military escorts, so their products were not going to market in Europe. Andros encouraged the introduction of new crops like cotton and flax, and the manufacture of fabric.

Virginia was the first colonial posting in which Andros had to work with a local assembly. His relationship with the House of Burgesses was generally cordial, but he encountered some resistance, especially to measures related to the war and colonial defenses. He hired armed vessels to patrol the colony's waters and contributed financially to New York's colonial defenses, which formed a bulwark against the possibility of French and Indian incursions into Virginia. In 1696 Andros was ordered by the king to send troops to New York, for which the burgesses reluctantly appropriated £1,000. Andros' management of colonial defense and Indian relations were successful: Virginia, unlike New York and New England, was not attacked during the war.[citation needed]

During his tenure, Andros made an enemy of James Blair, a prominent Anglican minister. Blair was working to establish a new college for educating Anglican ministers, and he believed that Andros was not supportive of the idea. However, Blair and Nicholson worked closely together on this idea, with Nicholson often coming from Maryland for meetings on the subject.[109] The two men were united in their dislike of Andros, and their activities helped to cause Andros' resignation.[107] The College of William and Mary was founded in 1693.[109] Despite Blair's claims that Andros was unsupportive, Andros donated the cost of the bricks to construct the college's chapel from his own funds, and convinced the House of Burgesses to approve funding of £100 per year for the college.[110]

Blair's complaints, many of them vague and inaccurate, made their way to London, where proceedings into Andros' conduct began at the Board of Trade and the ecclesiastical courts of the Church of England in 1697.[111] Andros had lost most of his support on the Board of Trade when a Whig faction came to power, and his advocates were unable to sway the board in favor of him. Anglican bishops staunchly supported Blair and Nicholson. In March 1698 Andros, complaining of fatigue and illness, asked to be recalled.[112]

Later years

Andros' recall was announced in London in May 1698; he was replaced by Nicholson. He returned to England, and resumed his post as bailiff of Guernsey. He divided his time between Guernsey and London, where he had a house in Denmark Hill.[113] His second wife died in 1703, and he married for the third time in 1707, to Elizabeth Fitzherbert.[114] In 1704 Queen Anne named him Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey, a post he held until 1708. He died in London on 24 February 1714 and was buried at St Anne's Church, Soho.[citation needed] His wife died in 1717 and was buried nearby.[115] The church was destroyed during the Second World War, and there is no longer any trace of their graves.[116] He had no issue by any of his wives.[115]

Legacy

The historian Michael Kammen states that Andros failed in all of his roles in the colonies:

...in part because he was neither ruthless enough to cow his provincial subjects into submission nor ingratiating enough to win himself a broad base of local support. In part because he came to New England at a critical moment without prior experience in the peculiar religious and political development of that area. And in part, finally, because he was continually caught in a cross fire between imperious assumptions of the Crown and unfamiliar imperatives of colonial life.[117]

Andros remains a notorious figure in New England, especially in Connecticut, which officially excludes him from its list of colonial governors,[118] but his portrait hangs in the Hall of Governors in the State Museum across from the State Capitol in Hartford. Although he was disliked in the colonies,[52] he was recognized in England as an effective administrator by implementing the policies that he had been ordered to carry out and advancing the crown's agenda. The biographer Mary Lou Lustig notes that he was "an accomplished statesman, a brave soldier, a polished courtier, and a devoted servant," but his style was often "autocratic, arbitrary, and dictatorial", he lacked tact, and he had difficulty reaching compromises.[52]

Similarly, Andros was featured as an antagonist in the 1879 novel Captain Nelson, described as a "romance of colonial days."[119]

Andros appears in several episodes of The Witch of Blackbird Pond in which his conflict with the Connecticut colonists forms the background to the protagonist's more personal problems. It is believed that Andros Island in the Bahamas was named for him. Early proprietors of the Bahamas included members of his first wife's family, the Cravens.[120]

Notes

  1. ^ "Sir Edmund Andros". Encyclopedia Britannica. 20 July 1998. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  2. ^ Whitmore, p. vi
  3. ^ Ferguson, p. 117
  4. ^ Lustig, p. 26
  5. ^ a b Lustig, p. 29
  6. ^ Whitmore, p. ix
  7. ^ Ferguson, p. 119
  8. ^ Ferguson, p. 152
  9. ^ Ferguson, p. 120
  10. ^ Whitmore, p. xi
  11. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  12. ^ a b Strappini, Richard (2004). St Martin, Guernsey, Channel Islands, a parish history from 1204. p. 4.
  13. ^ Whitmore, p. xiii
  14. ^ Brodhead, pp. 261–262, 265
  15. ^ Brodhead, pp. 270–271
  16. ^ Brodhead, p. 280
  17. ^ Brodhead, p. 284
  18. ^ Fiske, p. 48
  19. ^ Fiske, p. 49
  20. ^ Fiske, p. 218
  21. ^ Fiske, pp. 53–55
  22. ^ Fiske, pp. 57–58
  23. ^ Brodhead, p. 291
  24. ^ Fiske, p. 56
  25. ^ Brodhead, p. 287
  26. ^ Fiske, pp. 58–60
  27. ^ Brodhead, p. 292
  28. ^ Brodhead, p. 295
  29. ^ Fiske, pp. 60–61
  30. ^ Brodhead, p. 312
  31. ^ Fiske, p. 61
  32. ^ Brodhead, p. 316
  33. ^ Jennings, p. 141
  34. ^ Jennings, p. 149
  35. ^ Jennings, pp. 150–151
  36. ^ Jennings, pp. 152–153
  37. ^ Jennings, pp. 155–156
  38. ^ Jennings, pp. 157–158
  39. ^ Jennings, pp. 158–162
  40. ^ Lustig, pp. 93–97
  41. ^ Scarf, pp. 257–259, 395
  42. ^ Brodhead, p. 266
  43. ^ Brodhead, pp. 267–269
  44. ^ Fiske, p. 93
  45. ^ Lustig, p. 109
  46. ^ Fiske, pp. 94–95
  47. ^ Brodhead, p. 334
  48. ^ Fleming, p. 13
  49. ^ Fiske, p. 97
  50. ^ Fiske, pp. 142–147
  51. ^ Brodhead, pp. 343–345
  52. ^ a b c Lustig, p. 16
  53. ^ a b Lustig, p. 141
  54. ^ Sosin, p. 72
  55. ^ Sosin, p. 70
  56. ^ Ferguson, Henry (1892). Sir Edmund Andros. Westchester County Historical Society. p. 1683. Edmund Andros.
  57. ^ Barnes, pp. 32–39
  58. ^ Lustig, p. 160
  59. ^ Lustig, p. 164
  60. ^ Lustig, p. 165
  61. ^ Ferguson, p. 141
  62. ^ Price, Benjamin Lewis (1999). Nursing fathers : American colonists' conception of English Protestant kingship; 1688–1776. Lanham [u.a.]: Lexington Books. p. 69. ISBN 0-7391-0051-3.
  63. ^ Barnes, pp. 84-85
  64. ^ Lovejoy, p. 184
  65. ^ King, H. Roger (1994). Cape Cod and Plymouth Colony in the Seventeenth Century. Lanham: University Press of America. p. 263. ISBN 9780819191861. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  66. ^ Barnes, p. 97
  67. ^ Barnes, p. 176
  68. ^ Barnes, p. 182
  69. ^ Barnes, p. 187
  70. ^ Barnes, p. 189
  71. ^ Barnes, pp. 189–193
  72. ^ A writ of intrusion could be issued to prevent unauthorized persons from entering land reverted from a deceased tenant-for-life to its owner.
  73. ^ Roscoe, Henry (1825). A Treatise on the Law of Actions Relating to Real Property. London: Joseph Butterworth and Son. p. 95. writ of intrusion.
  74. ^ Barnes, pp. 199–201
  75. ^ Palfrey, pp. 545–546
  76. ^ Palfrey, p. 548
  77. ^ Dunn, p. 64
  78. ^ Lovejoy, p. 211
  79. ^ Lovejoy, pp. 212–213
  80. ^ Lustig, p. 171
  81. ^ Lustig, p. 173
  82. ^ Lustig, p. 174
  83. ^ Lustig, p. 176
  84. ^ a b c Norton, Mary Beth (2003). In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692 (1st Vintage Books ed.). New York: Vintage Books. p. 95. ISBN 0-375-70690-9.
  85. ^ Lustig, pp. 177–179
  86. ^ Lovejoy, pp. 219, 239
  87. ^ Lustig, pp. 191–192
  88. ^ Lustig, p. 193
  89. ^ Webb, p. 191
  90. ^ a b Webb, p. 192
  91. ^ Hanson, Robert Brand (1976). Dedham, Massachusetts, 1635-1890. Dedham Historical Society.
  92. ^ Lustig, pp. 145, 197
  93. ^ Lustig, pp. 200–201
  94. ^ Lustig, p. 201
  95. ^ Lustig, p. 202
  96. ^ Kimball, pp. 53–55
  97. ^ Lustig, p. 219
  98. ^ Lovejoy, pp. 255–256
  99. ^ Lovejoy, pp. 326–357
  100. ^ Evans, p. 432
  101. ^ Evans, pp. 431–449
  102. ^ Lustig, pp. 214–218
  103. ^ Lustig, p. 225
  104. ^ Lustig, pp. 225–226
  105. ^ Whitmore, p. xxxv
  106. ^ Lustig, p. 226
  107. ^ a b c Lustig, p. 242
  108. ^ Lustig, p. 228
  109. ^ a b Lustig, p. 249
  110. ^ Lustig, p. 252
  111. ^ Lustig, pp. 259–264
  112. ^ Lustig, p. 264
  113. ^ Lustig, pp. 267–268
  114. ^ Johnson, Richard (2008). "Andros, Sir Edmund". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/534. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  115. ^ a b Whitmore, p. xxxvi
  116. ^ Lustig, p. 268
  117. ^ Michael Kammen, "Andros, Edmund" in John A. Garraty, ed., Encyclopedia of American Biography (1974) pp 35-36.
  118. ^ . Connecticut State Library. Archived from the original on 6 May 2015. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  119. ^ Drake, Samuel Adams (1879). Captain Nelson: A Romance of Colonial Days. New York: Harper and Brothers. p. 58. Retrieved 23 May 2015. edmund andros grumbled about taxes.
  120. ^ Stark, p. 131

References

  • Adams, James Truslow (1922). The Founding of New England. Atlantic Monthly Press; full text online. ISBN 9780844615103.
  • Barnes, Viola Florence (1960) [1923]. The Dominion of New England: A Study in British Colonial Policy. New York: Frederick Ungar. ISBN 978-0-8044-1065-6. OCLC 395292.
  • Brodhead, James (1871). History of the State of New York. New York: Harper & Brothers. OCLC 1383698.
  • Dunn, Randy (2007). "Patronage and Governance in Francis Nicholson's Empire". English Atlantics Revisited. Montreal: McGill-Queens Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-3219-9. OCLC 429487739.
  • Ferguson, Henry (1894). Essays in American History: Sir Edmund Andros. New York: J. Pott. p. 111. OCLC 3916490.
  • Fiske, John (1899). The Dutch and Quaker Colonies in America. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin. OCLC 423775.
  • Fleming, Thomas (1984). New Jersey: A History. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-30180-9. OCLC 10557902.
  • Hall, Michael Garibaldi (1960). Edward Randolph and the American Colonies. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
  • Jennings, Francis (1990). The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire: The Covenant Chain Confederation of Indian Tribes with English Colonies from its Beginnings to the Lancaster Treaty of 1744. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-01719-9. OCLC 9066383.
  • Kimball, Everett (1911). The Public Life of Joseph Dudley. New York: Longmans, Green. OCLC 1876620.
  • Lovejoy, David (1987). The Glorious Revolution in America. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 978-0-8195-6177-0. OCLC 14212813.
  • Lustig, Mary Lou (2002). The Imperial Executive in America: Sir Edmund Andros, 1637–1714. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-3936-8. OCLC 470360764.
  • Miller, Guy Howard (May 1968). "Rebellion in Zion: The Overthrow of the Dominion of New England". Historian. 30 (3): 439–459. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1968.tb00328.x. JSTOR 24441216.
  • Moore, Jacob Bailey (1851). Lives of the Governors of New Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay. Boston: C. D. Strong. p. 403. OCLC 11362972.
  • Scharf, John Thomas (1879). History of Maryland. Baltimore, MD: J. B. Piet. p. 258. OCLC 4663774.
  • Sosin, Jack (1982). English America and the Revolution of 1688: Royal Administration and the Structure of Provincial Government. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-4131-2. OCLC 239750259.
  • Stark, James Henry (1891). Stark's History and Guide to the Bahama Islands. Boston, MA: self-published. OCLC 1550866.
  • Steele, Ian K (1989). "Origins of Boston's Revolutionary Declaration of 18 April 1689". New England Quarterly. 62 (1): 75–81. doi:10.2307/366211. JSTOR 366211.
  • Webb, Stephen Saunders (1998). Lord Churchill's Coup: The Anglo-American Empire and the Glorious Revolution Reconsidered. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-0558-4. OCLC 39756272.

Primary sources

  • Hall, Michael G. et al. eds. The Glorious Revolution in America: Documents on the Colonial Crisis of 1689 (1964) excerpt
  • Whitmore, William Henry, ed. (1868). The Andros Tracts: Being a Collection of Pamphlets and Official Papers Issued During the Period Between the Overthrow of the Andros Government and the Establishment of the Second Charter of Massachusetts (1868–1874). Boston: The Prince Society. OCLC 1842576.

External links

Government offices
Preceded byas Governor of New Netherland Proprietary Governor of the Province of New York
11 February 1674 – 18 April 1683
Succeeded by
Preceded byas President of the Council of New England Governor of the Dominion of New England
20 December 1686 – 18 April 1689
Dominion dissolved
Preceded by Colonial Governor of Virginia
1692–1698
Succeeded by
Preceded by Proprietary Governor of Maryland
1693
Succeeded by
Preceded by Proprietary Governor of Maryland
1694
Succeeded by

edmund, andros, december, 1637, february, 1714, english, colonial, administrator, british, america, governor, dominion, england, during, most, three, year, existence, other, times, andros, served, governor, provinces, york, east, west, jersey, virginia, maryla. Sir Edmund Andros 6 December 1637 24 February 1714 1 was an English colonial administrator in British America He was the governor of the Dominion of New England during most of its three year existence At other times Andros served as governor of the provinces of New York East and West Jersey Virginia and Maryland SirEdmund Andros19th century portrait by Frederick Stone Batcheller4th Colonial Governor of New YorkIn office 9 February 1674 18 April 1683MonarchCharles IIPreceded byAnthony ColveSucceeded byThomas DonganBailiff of GuernseyIn office 1674 1713Preceded byAmias AndrosSucceeded byJean de SausmarezGovernor of the Dominion of New England Governor in chief of New England In office 20 December 1686 18 April 1689Preceded byJoseph DudleySucceeded bynone dominion dissolved partly Simon Bradstreet as Governor of the Massachusetts Bay ColonyColonial Governor of VirginiaIn office September 1692 May 1698Preceded byLord EffinghamSucceeded byFrancis Nicholson3rd and 5th Royal Governor of MarylandIn office September 1693 May 1694Preceded bySir Thomas LawrenceSucceeded byNicholas GreenberryIn office 1694 1694Preceded byNicholas GreenberrySucceeded bySir Thomas LawrencePersonal detailsBorn6 December 1637London EnglandDied24 February 1714 1714 02 24 aged 76 London England Great BritainResting placeSt Anne s Church Soho London EnglandSignatureBefore his service in North America he served as Bailiff of Guernsey His tenure in New England was authoritarian and turbulent as his views were decidedly pro Anglican a negative quality in a region home to many Puritans His actions in New England resulted in his overthrow during the 1689 Boston revolt He became governor of Virginia three years later Andros was considered to have been a more effective governor in New York and Virginia although he became the enemy of prominent figures in both colonies many of whom worked to remove him from office Despite these enmities he managed to negotiate several treaties of the Covenant Chain with the Iroquois establishing a long lived peace involving the colonies and other tribes that interacted with that confederacy His actions and governance generally followed the instructions he was given upon appointment to office and he received approbation from the monarchs and governments that appointed him Andros was recalled to England from Virginia in 1698 and resumed the title of Bailiff of Guernsey Although he no longer resided entirely on Guernsey he was appointed lieutenant governor of the island and served in this position for four years Andros died in 1714 Contents 1 Early life 2 Governor of New York 2 1 Connecticut boundary dispute 2 2 King Philip s War 2 3 Southern border disputes 2 4 Control of the Jerseys 2 5 Recall and analysis 3 Dominion of New England 3 1 Church of England 3 2 Revenue laws 3 3 Town meeting laws 3 4 Land title reform 3 5 Connecticut charter 3 6 Inclusion of New York and the Jerseys 3 7 Indian diplomacy 3 8 Revolt 4 Governor of Virginia 5 Later years 6 Legacy 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksEarly life EditAndros was born in London on 6 December 1637 Amice Andros his father was Bailiff of Guernsey and a staunch supporter of Charles I His mother was Elizabeth Stone whose sister was a courtier to the king s sister Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia 2 Although it has been claimed that Andros was present at the surrender in 1651 of Guernsey s Castle Cornet the last royalist stronghold to surrender in the English Civil War 3 there is no firm evidence to support this It is possible that he fled Guernsey with his mother in 1645 4 In 1656 he was apprenticed to his uncle Sir Robert Stone captain of a cavalry company Andros then served in two winter campaigns in Denmark including the relief of Copenhagen in 1659 As a result of these experiences he gained fluency in French Swedish and Dutch 5 He remained a firm supporter of the Stuarts while they were in exile Charles II after his restoration to the throne specifically commended the Andros family for its support 6 Elizabeth of Bohemia sister of Charles I of England and aunt of Charles II Andros served as a courtier to Elizabeth of Bohemia from 1660 until her death in 1662 7 During the 1660s he served in the English army against the Dutch He was next commissioned a major in the regiment of Sir Tobias Bridge which was sent to Barbados in 1666 He returned to England two years later carrying despatches and letters 8 In 1671 he married Mary Craven the daughter of Thomas Craven of Burnsall in the West Riding of Yorkshire now North Yorkshire the son of a cousin to the Earl of Craven one of the queen s closest advisors 9 10 and a friend who served as his patron for many years 5 In 1672 he was commissioned major 11 Governor of New York EditAfter his father died in 1674 Andros acquired Sausmarez Manor and was named to succeed him as Bailiff of Guernsey 12 13 He was also appointed by the James Duke of York to be the first proprietary governor of the Province of New York The province s territory included the former territories of New Netherland ceded to England by the Treaty of Westminster including all of present day New Jersey the Dutch holdings on the Hudson River from New Amsterdam renamed New York City to Albany as well as Long Island Martha s Vineyard and Nantucket In 1664 Charles II had granted James all of this territory as well as all of the land in present day Maine between the Kennebec and St Croix Rivers but with the intervening Dutch retaking of the territory Charles issued a new patent to James 14 Andros arrived in New York harbor in late October and negotiated the handover of the Dutch territories with local representatives and Dutch Governor Anthony Colve which took place on 10 November 1674 Andros agreed to confirm the existing property holdings and to allow the Dutch inhabitants of the territory to maintain their Protestant religion 15 Connecticut boundary dispute Edit Andros was also involved in boundary disputes with the neighboring Connecticut Colony Dutch claims had originally extended as far east as the Connecticut River but these claims had been ceded in the 1650 Treaty of Hartford and reduced to a boundary line 20 miles 32 km east of the Hudson in 1664 York s territorial claim did not acknowledge these and Andros announced to Connecticut authorities his intentions to reclaim that territory which included Connecticut capital Hartford in early 1675 Connecticut leaders pointed out the later revisions to Connecticut s boundaries but Andros pressed his claim arguing that those revisions had been superseded by York s grant 16 Andros used the outbreak of King Philip s War in July 1675 as an excuse to go by ship to Connecticut with a small military force to establish the duke s claim 17 When he arrived at Saybrook at the mouth of the river on 8 July he found the fort there occupied by Connecticut militia who were flying the English flag 18 Andros came ashore had a brief conversation with the fort commander read his commission and returned to New York City 19 This was the full extent of Andros attempt to claim the territory but it would be remembered in Connecticut when later attempts were made to assert New York authority 20 King Philip s War Edit Following his Connecticut expedition Andros traveled into Iroquois country to establish relations there 21 He was well received and agreed to continue the Dutch practice of supplying firearms to the Iroquois This action successfully blunted French diplomatic successes with the Iroquois It also led to charges in New England that Andros provided arms to Indians allied to King Philip as the Wampanoag leader Metacom was known to the English in fact Andros provided gunpowder to Rhode Island that was used in the Great Swamp Fight against the Narragansetts in December 1675 and specifically outlawed the sale of munitions to tribes known to be allied to Philip 22 The charges poisoned the atmosphere between Andros and Massachusetts leaders even though Andros conduct met with approval in London 23 A caricature of King Philip was drawn by Paul Revere In the meeting with the Iroquois Andros was given the name Corlaer a name historically used by the Iroquois to refer to the Dutch governor in New Netherland and continued when the English took over the colony and renamed it New York in the same way the French governor was dubbed Onontio 24 One other consequence was the establishment at Albany of a colonial department for Indian affairs with Robert Livingston as its first head 25 Philip was known to be in the Berkshires in western Massachusetts that winter and New Englanders accused Andros of sheltering him Historian John Fiske suggests that Philip s purpose was not to draw the Iroquois into the conflict but instead to draw the Mahicans into the conflict with a view toward attacking Albany An offer by Andros to send New York troops into Massachusetts to attack Philip was rebuffed based on the idea that it was covert ploy to again assert authority to the Connecticut River Instead Mohawks from the Albany area did battle with Philip driving him eastward 26 When Connecticut authorities later appealed to Andros for assistance Andros replied that it was strange that they would do so considering their previous behavior and refused to help 27 In July 1676 Andros established a haven for the Mahicans and other Indian war refugees at Schaghticoke 28 Although the conflict came to an end in southern New England in 1676 there continued to be friction between the Abenakis of northern New England and New England settlers These prompted Andros to send a force to the duke s territory in Maine where they established a fort at Pemaquid present day Bristol Andros annoyed Massachusetts fishermen by restricting their use of the duke s land for drying fish 29 In November 1677 Andros departed for England 30 where he would spend the next year During this visit he was knighted as a reward for his performance as governor 31 and he sat in on meetings of the Lords of Trade in which agents for Massachusetts Bay defended its charter and gave detailed accounts of the state of his colony 32 Southern border disputes Edit The southernmost territories of the duke roughly encompassing northern Delaware were desired by Charles Calvert Baron Baltimore who sought to extend the reach of his proprietary Province of Maryland into the area At the same time Calvert was seeking an end to a frontier war with the Iroquois to the north having persuaded the intervening Susquehannocks to move to the Potomac River well within Maryland territory Furthermore the Lenape who dominated Delaware Bay were unhappy with seizures of their lands by Virginia and Maryland settlers and war between these groups had been imminent in 1673 when the Dutch retook New York citation needed When Andros came to New York he moved to stabilize the situation He befriended the Lenape sachems chiefs convincing them to act as mediators between the English and other tribes 33 Peace appeared to be imminent when Bacon s Rebellion broke out in Virginia resulting in an attack on the Susquehannock fort on the Potomac The surviving Susquehannocks sneaked out of the fort one night some of them making their way east toward Delaware Bay In June 1676 Andros offered in exchange for their moving into his jurisdiction to protect them from their enemies among the Virginian and Maryland settlers He also extended an offer given by the Mohawk for the Susquehannocks to settle among them 34 These offers were well received but Maryland authorities were unable to convince their Indian allies to make the peace offered by Andros and organized them to march toward the Delaware which would also fulfil the goal of strengthening the Maryland claim to the area 35 Andros responded by urging the Susquehannocks to retreat into New York where they would be beyond Maryland s reach and delivering a strongly worded threat to Maryland that it would either have to acknowledge his sovereignty over the Susquehannocks or they would have to peaceably take them back He also offered his services as a mediator pointing out that the absence of the Susquehannocks now left Maryland settlements open to direct attack by the Iroquois 36 In a council held at the Lenape village of Shackamaxon site of present day Philadelphia in February and March 1677 all of the major parties met but no final agreements were reached and Andros ordered the Susquehannocks remaining with the Lenape to disperse to other parts of New York in April 37 Maryland sent Henry Coursey to New York to engage Andros and eventually the Iroquois in peace talks while at the same time they sent surveyors to lay out plots on land also claimed by New York on Delaware Bay Coursey was instructed to offer Andros what was in essence a 100 bribe that an Indian peace might be reached in exchange for that land Andros refused the bribe and Coursey ended up being compelled to negotiate further through Andros and the Mohawk in Albany 38 The peace agreed in negotiations that followed in Albany in the summer of 1677 is considered one of the foundations of the set of alliances and treaties called the Covenant Chain 39 Although Andros was unable to prevent Baltimore from granting some land on the Delaware he did successfully blunt the Maryland leader s attempt to control an even greater portion of land 40 The duke eventually deeded those lands to William Penn and they became part of the state of Delaware 41 Control of the Jerseys Edit Sir George Carteret proprietor of East Jersey Governance of the Jerseys also created problems for Andros James had awarded the territory west of the Hudson River to proprietors John Berkeley and George Carteret and Berkeley had then deeded the western portion which became known as West Jersey to a partnership of Quakers 42 Berkeley had not transferred his proprietary rights to this group and the exact nature of the rights James had given both Berkeley and Carteret was disputed in part because James believed that the second patent granted to him in 1674 overrode the earlier grants he had made to Berkeley and Carteret 43 This resulted in conflict when Andros attempted to extend his government over East Jersey the territory governed on behalf of Carteret by the latter s cousin Philip 44 Possibly based on orders given to him during his visit to England Andros began to assert New York authority over East Jersey after George Carteret s death in 1680 45 Despite a friendly personal relationship between Andros and Governor Carteret the issue of governance eventually prompted Andros to have Carteret arrested In a dispute centering on the collection of customs duties in ports on the Jersey side of the Hudson Andros in 1680 sent a company of soldiers to Philip Carteret s home in Elizabethtown According to Carteret s account of the incident he was beaten by the troops who jailed him in New York 46 In a trial over which Andros presided Carteret was acquitted by a jury on all charges 47 Carteret returned to New Jersey but injuries he sustained in the arrest affected his health and he died in 1682 48 In the aftermath of the incident the Duke of York surrendered his claims to East Jersey to the Carterets 49 Andros acquired in 1683 from the widow of Carteret for 200 the Patent to the Lordship of Alderney 12 A less contentious standoff also occurred when settlers sent by William Penn sought to establish what is now Burlington New Jersey Andros insisted they had no right to settle there without the duke s permission but agreed to allow their settlement after they agreed to receive commissions falling under the authority of the New York gubernatorial administration This situation was permanently resolved in 1680 when York renounced in favor of Penn his remaining claims to West Jersey 50 Recall and analysis Edit The political opponents of Andros in the colony brought a number of charges against him to the Duke of York Among them were accusations of favoritism toward Dutch businessmen and engaging in business for private gain rather than that of the duke Statements were also made to the duke that claimed that his revenues were lower than they should have been this in addition to the other complaints led the duke to order Andros back to England to explain the situation Andros left the province in January 1681 charging Anthony Brockholls with the administration of the New York government Expecting a short visit to England his wife remained in New York 51 During his time in New York he was thought to have demonstrated good administrative abilities but his manner was considered imperious by his opponents among the colonists and he made numerous enemies during his tenure as governor 52 Dominion of New England EditIn 1686 he was appointed governor of the Dominion of New England He arrived in Boston on 20 December 1686 and immediately assumed the reins of power 53 His commission called for governance by himself with a council The initial composition of the council included representatives from each of the colonies the dominion absorbed but because of the inconvenience of travel and the fact that travel costs were not reimbursed the council s quorums were dominated by representatives from Massachusetts and Plymouth 54 The Lords of Trade had insisted that he govern without an assembly something he expressed concern over while his commission was being drafted 55 In a brief work Sir Edmund Andros historian Henry Ferguson attested 56 to the fact that the deliberation of certain policies by an assembly of legislators may have proven inefficient The Dominion initially consisted of the territories of the Massachusetts Bay Colony including present day Maine Plymouth Colony Rhode Island Connecticut and New Hampshire and was extended to include New York and East and West Jersey in 1688 57 Andros wife who had joined him in Boston died there in 1688 not long after her arrival 58 Church of England Edit Shortly after his arrival Andros asked each of the Puritan churches in Boston if its meetinghouse could be used for services of the Church of England 53 When he was rebuffed he demanded and was given keys to Samuel Willard s Third Church in 1687 59 Services were held there under the auspices of Rev Robert Ratcliff until 1688 when King s Chapel was built 60 These actions highlighted him as pro Anglican in the eyes of local Puritans 61 who would later accuse him of involvement in a horrid Popish plot 62 Revenue laws Edit His council engaged in a lengthy process to harmonize dominion and English laws This work consumed such a great amount of time that Andros in March 1687 issued a proclamation stating that pre existing laws would remain in effect until they were revised Since Massachusetts had no pre existing tax laws a scheme of taxation was created that would apply to the entire dominion Developed by a committee of landowners the first proposal derived its revenues from import duties principally alcohol After much debate a different proposal was abruptly proposed and adopted essentially reviving previous Massachusetts tax laws These laws had been unpopular with farmers who felt the taxes on livestock were too high To bring in immediate revenue Andros also received approval to increase the import duties on alcohol 63 The first attempts to enforce the revenue laws were met with stiff resistance from a number of Massachusetts communities Several towns refused to choose commissioners to assess the town population and estates and officials from a number of them were consequently arrested and brought to Boston Some were fined and released while others were imprisoned until they promised to perform their duties The leaders of Ipswich who had been most vocal in their opposition to the law were tried and convicted of misdemeanor offenses 64 The other provinces did not resist the imposition of the new law even though at least in Rhode Island the rates were higher than they had been under the previous colonial administration Plymouth s relatively poor landowners were hard hit because of the high rates on livestock and funds derived from whaling once sources of profit for the individual towns were now directed to the dominion government 65 Town meeting laws Edit One consequence of the tax protest was that Andros sought to restrict town meetings since these were where that protest had begun He therefore introduced a law that limited meetings to a single annual meeting solely for the purpose of electing officials and explicitly banning meetings at other times for any reason This loss of local power was widely hated Many protests were made that the town meeting and tax laws were violations of the Magna Carta which guaranteed taxation by representatives of the people It was noted that those who made these complaints had during the colonial charter excluded large numbers of voters through the requirement of church membership and then taxed them 66 Land title reform Edit Andros had been instructed to bring colonial land title practices more in line with those in England and introduce quit rents as a means of raising colonial revenues 67 Titles previously issued in Massachusetts New Hampshire and Maine under the colonial administration often suffered from defects of form for example lacking an imprint of the colonial seal and most of them did not include a quit rent payment 68 Land grants in colonial Connecticut and Rhode Island had been made before either colony had a charter and there were conflicting claims in a number of areas 69 The manner in which Andros approached the issue was necessarily divisive since it threatened any landowner whose title was in any way dubious Some landowners went through the confirmation process but many refused since they did not want to face the possibility of losing their land and they viewed the process as a thinly veiled land grab 70 The Puritans of Plymouth and Massachusetts some of whom had extensive landholdings were among the latter 71 Since all of the existing land titles in Massachusetts had been granted under the now vacated colonial charter Andros essentially declared them to be void and required landowners to recertify their ownership paying fees to the dominion and becoming subject to the charging of a quit rent Andros attempted to compel the certification of ownership by issuing writs of intrusion 72 73 but large landowners who owned many parcels contested these individually rather than recertifying all of their lands 74 Connecticut charter Edit Since Andros commission included Connecticut he asked Connecticut Governor Robert Treat to surrender the colonial charter not long after his arrival in Boston Unlike Rhode Island whose officials readily acceded to the dominion Connecticut officials formally acknowledged Andros authority but did little to assist him They continued to run their government according to the charter holding quarterly meetings of the legislature and electing colony wide officials while Treat and Andros negotiated over the surrender of the charter citation needed In October 1687 Andros finally decided to travel to Connecticut to personally see to the matter Accompanied by an honour guard he arrived in Hartford on 31 October and met that evening with the colonial leadership According to legend during this meeting the charter was laid out on the table for all to see The lights in the room unexpectedly went out and when relit the charter had disappeared The charter was said to have been hidden in a nearby oak tree referred to afterward as the Charter Oak so that a search of nearby buildings would not locate the document citation needed Francis Nicholson Whatever the truth of the account Connecticut records show that its government formally surrendered its seals and ceased operation that day Andros then traveled throughout the colony making judicial and other appointments before returning to Boston 75 full citation needed On 29 December 1687 the dominion council formally extended its laws over Connecticut completing the assimilation of the New England colonies 76 full citation needed Inclusion of New York and the Jerseys Edit On 7 May 1688 the provinces of New York East Jersey and West Jersey were added to the Dominion Because they were remote from Boston where Andros had his seat New York and the Jerseys were run by Lieutenant Governor Francis Nicholson from New York City Nicholson an army captain and protege of colonial secretary William Blathwayt came to Boston in early 1687 as part of Andros honor guard and had been promoted to his council 77 During the summer of 1688 Andros traveled first to New York and then to the Jerseys to establish his commission Dominion governance of the Jerseys was complicated by the fact that the proprietors whose charters had been revoked had retained their property and petitioned Andros for what were traditional manorial rights 78 The dominion period in the Jerseys was relatively uneventful due to their distance from the power centers and the unexpected end of the dominion in 1689 79 Indian diplomacy Edit In 1687 the governor of New France the Marquis de Denonville launched an attack against Seneca villages in what is now western New York His objective was to disrupt trade between the English at Albany and the Iroquois confederation to which the Seneca belonged and to break the Covenant Chain a peace Andros had negotiated in 1677 while he was governor of New York 80 New York Governor Thomas Dongan appealed for help and King James ordered Andros to render assistance James also entered into negotiations with Louis XIV of France which resulted in an easing of tensions on the northwestern frontier 81 On New England s northeastern frontier however the Abenaki harbored grievances against New England settlers and began an offensive in early 1688 Andros made an expedition into Maine early in the year in which he raided a number of Indian settlements He also raided the trading outpost and home of Jean Vincent d Abbadie de Saint Castin on Penobscot Bay His careful preservation of the Catholic Castin s chapel would be a source of later accusations of popery against Andros 82 Andros a Prisoner in Boston as depicted in Pioneers in the Settlement of America Vol 1 by William A Crafts 1876 When Andros took over the administration of New York in August 1688 he met with the Iroquois at Albany to renew to covenant In this meeting he annoyed the Iroquois by referring to them as children implying subservience to the English rather than brethren implying equality 83 He returned to Boston amid further attacks on the New England frontier by Abenaki parties who admitted that they were doing so in part because of French encouragement citation needed During Andros s presence in New York the situation in Maine had deteriorated again as well with groups of colonists raiding Indian villages and taking prisoners These actions were taken in accordance with a directive issued by dominion councillors remaining in Boston who ordered that frontier militia commanders were to take into custody any Abenaki suspected of participating in the raids 84 This directive sparked a problem in Maine when twenty Abenaki including women and children were taken into custody by colonial militia The local authorities were faced with the dilemma of housing the captives shipping them first to Falmouth and then to Boston angering other natives in the area who seized English hostages to ensure the safe return of the captives 84 Andros castigated the Mainers for their unwarranted acts and ordered the Indians released and returned to Maine A brief skirmish during the process of exchanging captives resulted in the deaths of four English hostages and sparked discontent in Maine 84 Faced with this discord Andros returned to Maine with a significant force and began the construction of additional fortifications to protect the settlers 85 Andros spent the winter in Maine and returned to Boston in March upon hearing rumors of revolution in England and discontent in Boston 86 Revolt Edit Main article 1689 Boston revolt On 18 April 1689 soon after news reached Boston of the overthrow of James II of England the colonists of Boston rose up against his rule A well organized mob descended on the city arresting dominion officials and Anglicans Andros had his quarters in Fort Mary a garrison house on the south side of the city where a number of officials took refuge 87 The old Massachusetts colonial leadership restored due to the rebellion and headed by ex governor Simon Bradstreet then summoned Governor Andros to surrender for his own safety because of the mob which they claimed whereof we were wholly ignorant 88 He refused and instead tried to escape to the Rose the only Royal Navy ship near Boston at the time However the boat sent from the Rose was intercepted by militia and Andros was forced back into Fort Mary 89 Negotiations ensued and Andros agreed to leave the fort to meet with the rebel council Promised safe conduct he was marched under guard to the townhouse where the council had assembled There he was told that they must amp would have the Government in their own hands and that he was under arrest 90 Daniel Fisher grabbed him by the collar 91 and took him to the home of dominion official John Usher and held under close watch 90 92 Former Massachusetts Governor Simon Bradstreet After Fort Mary fell into rebel hands on the 19th Andros was moved there from Usher s house He was confined there with Joseph Dudley and other dominion officials until 7 June when he was transferred to Castle Island It is during this period of captivity that he is said to have attempted an escape dressed in women s clothing The story although it circulated widely was disputed by the Anglican minister Robert Ratcliff who claimed that story and others had not the least foundation of Truth and that they were falsehoods and lies propagated to render the Governour odious to his people 93 He did make a successful escape from Castle Island on 2 August after his servant plied the sentries with drink He managed to flee to Rhode Island but was quickly recaptured and thereafter kept in virtual solitary confinement 94 He and others were held for 10 months before being sent to England for trial 95 The Massachusetts agents in London refused to sign the charges made against him so the court summarily dismissed them and freed him 96 When Andros was questioned about the various accusations that had been levelled against him he pointed out that all of his actions had been taken to bring colonial laws into conformance with English law or they were specifically taken in pursuit of his commission and instructions 97 While Andros was in captivity the New York government of Lieutenant Governor Francis Nicholson was simultaneously deposed by a military faction led by Jacob Leisler in an event that came to be known as Leisler s Rebellion 98 Leisler would govern New York until 1691 when he was captured and executed by a force led by newly appointed provincial governor Henry Sloughter 99 Andros was eventually allowed to depart for England by that point the Dominion of New England had effectively ceased to exist with the colonies in the dominion having reverted to their previous forms of governance 100 Massachusetts and its surrounding territories were reorganized into the Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1691 101 Governor of Virginia EditAndros was well received at court upon his return to England The new king William III recalled that Andros had visited his court in the Netherlands and expressed approval of Andros service 102 In search of employment Andros offered his services as a spy offering the idea of going to Paris ostensibly to meet with the exiled James but to actually attempt to acquire French military plans This plan was rejected 103 While in England he married for the second time to Elizabeth Crisp Clapham in July 1691 104 She was the widow of Christopher Clapham who was connected by that marriage to his first wife s family 105 Andros next opportunity for employment came with the resignation in February 1692 of Lord Effingham as governor of the Province of Virginia Although Francis Nicholson formerly dominion lieutenant governor was then serving as lieutenant governor or Virginia and sought the superior position William awarded the governorship to Andros 106 and awarded Nicholson yet another lieutenant governorship this time that of Maryland 107 This was destined to make Andros tenure more difficult because his relationship with Nicholson had deteriorated for other reasons The exact reasons for this enmity are unclear one contemporary wrote that Nicholson especially resented Sir Edmund Andros against whom he has a particular pique on account of some earlier dealings 107 Andros arrived in Virginia on 13 September 1692 and began his duties a week later Nicholson graciously received him and not long after sailed for England 108 Andros settled at Middle Plantation the future site of Williamsburg where he would live until 1695 He worked to organize the provincial records the maintenance of which had suffered since Bacon s Rebellion and promoted the enforcement of laws designed to prevent slave rebellions He encouraged the diversification of Virginia s economy which was then almost entirely dependent on tobacco The export oriented economy was also being badly hurt by the ongoing Nine Years War because of which merchant ships were required to travel in convoys For several years Virginia did not receive any military escorts so their products were not going to market in Europe Andros encouraged the introduction of new crops like cotton and flax and the manufacture of fabric Virginia was the first colonial posting in which Andros had to work with a local assembly His relationship with the House of Burgesses was generally cordial but he encountered some resistance especially to measures related to the war and colonial defenses He hired armed vessels to patrol the colony s waters and contributed financially to New York s colonial defenses which formed a bulwark against the possibility of French and Indian incursions into Virginia In 1696 Andros was ordered by the king to send troops to New York for which the burgesses reluctantly appropriated 1 000 Andros management of colonial defense and Indian relations were successful Virginia unlike New York and New England was not attacked during the war citation needed During his tenure Andros made an enemy of James Blair a prominent Anglican minister Blair was working to establish a new college for educating Anglican ministers and he believed that Andros was not supportive of the idea However Blair and Nicholson worked closely together on this idea with Nicholson often coming from Maryland for meetings on the subject 109 The two men were united in their dislike of Andros and their activities helped to cause Andros resignation 107 The College of William and Mary was founded in 1693 109 Despite Blair s claims that Andros was unsupportive Andros donated the cost of the bricks to construct the college s chapel from his own funds and convinced the House of Burgesses to approve funding of 100 per year for the college 110 Blair s complaints many of them vague and inaccurate made their way to London where proceedings into Andros conduct began at the Board of Trade and the ecclesiastical courts of the Church of England in 1697 111 Andros had lost most of his support on the Board of Trade when a Whig faction came to power and his advocates were unable to sway the board in favor of him Anglican bishops staunchly supported Blair and Nicholson In March 1698 Andros complaining of fatigue and illness asked to be recalled 112 Later years EditAndros recall was announced in London in May 1698 he was replaced by Nicholson He returned to England and resumed his post as bailiff of Guernsey He divided his time between Guernsey and London where he had a house in Denmark Hill 113 His second wife died in 1703 and he married for the third time in 1707 to Elizabeth Fitzherbert 114 In 1704 Queen Anne named him Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey a post he held until 1708 He died in London on 24 February 1714 and was buried at St Anne s Church Soho citation needed His wife died in 1717 and was buried nearby 115 The church was destroyed during the Second World War and there is no longer any trace of their graves 116 He had no issue by any of his wives 115 Legacy EditThe historian Michael Kammen states that Andros failed in all of his roles in the colonies in part because he was neither ruthless enough to cow his provincial subjects into submission nor ingratiating enough to win himself a broad base of local support In part because he came to New England at a critical moment without prior experience in the peculiar religious and political development of that area And in part finally because he was continually caught in a cross fire between imperious assumptions of the Crown and unfamiliar imperatives of colonial life 117 Andros remains a notorious figure in New England especially in Connecticut which officially excludes him from its list of colonial governors 118 but his portrait hangs in the Hall of Governors in the State Museum across from the State Capitol in Hartford Although he was disliked in the colonies 52 he was recognized in England as an effective administrator by implementing the policies that he had been ordered to carry out and advancing the crown s agenda The biographer Mary Lou Lustig notes that he was an accomplished statesman a brave soldier a polished courtier and a devoted servant but his style was often autocratic arbitrary and dictatorial he lacked tact and he had difficulty reaching compromises 52 Similarly Andros was featured as an antagonist in the 1879 novel Captain Nelson described as a romance of colonial days 119 Andros appears in several episodes of The Witch of Blackbird Pond in which his conflict with the Connecticut colonists forms the background to the protagonist s more personal problems It is believed that Andros Island in the Bahamas was named for him Early proprietors of the Bahamas included members of his first wife s family the Cravens 120 Notes Edit Sir Edmund Andros Encyclopedia Britannica 20 July 1998 Retrieved 22 February 2023 Whitmore p vi Ferguson p 117 Lustig p 26 a b Lustig p 29 Whitmore p ix Ferguson p 119 Ferguson p 152 Ferguson p 120 Whitmore p xi Chisholm 1911 a b Strappini Richard 2004 St Martin Guernsey Channel Islands a parish history from 1204 p 4 Whitmore p xiii Brodhead pp 261 262 265 Brodhead pp 270 271 Brodhead p 280 Brodhead p 284 Fiske p 48 Fiske p 49 Fiske p 218 Fiske pp 53 55 Fiske pp 57 58 Brodhead p 291 Fiske p 56 Brodhead p 287 Fiske pp 58 60 Brodhead p 292 Brodhead p 295 Fiske pp 60 61 Brodhead p 312 Fiske p 61 Brodhead p 316 Jennings p 141 Jennings p 149 Jennings pp 150 151 Jennings pp 152 153 Jennings pp 155 156 Jennings pp 157 158 Jennings pp 158 162 Lustig pp 93 97 Scarf pp 257 259 395 Brodhead p 266 Brodhead pp 267 269 Fiske p 93 Lustig p 109 Fiske pp 94 95 Brodhead p 334 Fleming p 13 Fiske p 97 Fiske pp 142 147 Brodhead pp 343 345 a b c Lustig p 16 a b Lustig p 141 Sosin p 72 Sosin p 70 Ferguson Henry 1892 Sir Edmund Andros Westchester County Historical Society p 1683 Edmund Andros Barnes pp 32 39 Lustig p 160 Lustig p 164 Lustig p 165 Ferguson p 141 Price Benjamin Lewis 1999 Nursing fathers American colonists conception of English Protestant kingship 1688 1776 Lanham u a Lexington Books p 69 ISBN 0 7391 0051 3 Barnes pp 84 85 Lovejoy p 184 King H Roger 1994 Cape Cod and Plymouth Colony in the Seventeenth Century Lanham University Press of America p 263 ISBN 9780819191861 Retrieved 23 May 2015 Barnes p 97 Barnes p 176 Barnes p 182 Barnes p 187 Barnes p 189 Barnes pp 189 193 A writ of intrusion could be issued to prevent unauthorized persons from entering land reverted from a deceased tenant for life to its owner Roscoe Henry 1825 A Treatise on the Law of Actions Relating to Real Property London Joseph Butterworth and Son p 95 writ of intrusion Barnes pp 199 201 Palfrey pp 545 546 Palfrey p 548 Dunn p 64 Lovejoy p 211 Lovejoy pp 212 213 Lustig p 171 Lustig p 173 Lustig p 174 Lustig p 176 a b c Norton Mary Beth 2003 In the Devil s Snare The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692 1st Vintage Books ed New York Vintage Books p 95 ISBN 0 375 70690 9 Lustig pp 177 179 Lovejoy pp 219 239 Lustig pp 191 192 Lustig p 193 Webb p 191 a b Webb p 192 Hanson Robert Brand 1976 Dedham Massachusetts 1635 1890 Dedham Historical Society Lustig pp 145 197 Lustig pp 200 201 Lustig p 201 Lustig p 202 Kimball pp 53 55 Lustig p 219 Lovejoy pp 255 256 Lovejoy pp 326 357 Evans p 432 Evans pp 431 449 Lustig pp 214 218 Lustig p 225 Lustig pp 225 226 Whitmore p xxxv Lustig p 226 a b c Lustig p 242 Lustig p 228 a b Lustig p 249 Lustig p 252 Lustig pp 259 264 Lustig p 264 Lustig pp 267 268 Johnson Richard 2008 Andros Sir Edmund Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 534 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Whitmore p xxxvi Lustig p 268 Michael Kammen Andros Edmund in John A Garraty ed Encyclopedia of American Biography 1974 pp 35 36 Roster of Governors Connecticut State Library Archived from the original on 6 May 2015 Retrieved 23 May 2015 Drake Samuel Adams 1879 Captain Nelson A Romance of Colonial Days New York Harper and Brothers p 58 Retrieved 23 May 2015 edmund andros grumbled about taxes Stark p 131References EditAdams James Truslow 1922 The Founding of New England Atlantic Monthly Press full text online ISBN 9780844615103 Barnes Viola Florence 1960 1923 The Dominion of New England A Study in British Colonial Policy New York Frederick Ungar ISBN 978 0 8044 1065 6 OCLC 395292 Brodhead James 1871 History of the State of New York New York Harper amp Brothers OCLC 1383698 Dunn Randy 2007 Patronage and Governance in Francis Nicholson s Empire English Atlantics Revisited Montreal McGill Queens Press ISBN 978 0 7735 3219 9 OCLC 429487739 Ferguson Henry 1894 Essays in American History Sir Edmund Andros New York J Pott p 111 OCLC 3916490 Fiske John 1899 The Dutch and Quaker Colonies in America Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 423775 Fleming Thomas 1984 New Jersey A History New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 30180 9 OCLC 10557902 Hall Michael Garibaldi 1960 Edward Randolph and the American Colonies Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press Jennings Francis 1990 The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire The Covenant Chain Confederation of Indian Tribes with English Colonies from its Beginnings to the Lancaster Treaty of 1744 New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 01719 9 OCLC 9066383 Kimball Everett 1911 The Public Life of Joseph Dudley New York Longmans Green OCLC 1876620 Lovejoy David 1987 The Glorious Revolution in America Middletown CT Wesleyan University Press ISBN 978 0 8195 6177 0 OCLC 14212813 Lustig Mary Lou 2002 The Imperial Executive in America Sir Edmund Andros 1637 1714 Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3936 8 OCLC 470360764 Miller Guy Howard May 1968 Rebellion in Zion The Overthrow of the Dominion of New England Historian 30 3 439 459 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 1968 tb00328 x JSTOR 24441216 Moore Jacob Bailey 1851 Lives of the Governors of New Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Boston C D Strong p 403 OCLC 11362972 Scharf John Thomas 1879 History of Maryland Baltimore MD J B Piet p 258 OCLC 4663774 Sosin Jack 1982 English America and the Revolution of 1688 Royal Administration and the Structure of Provincial Government Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 4131 2 OCLC 239750259 Stark James Henry 1891 Stark s History and Guide to the Bahama Islands Boston MA self published OCLC 1550866 Steele Ian K 1989 Origins of Boston s Revolutionary Declaration of 18 April 1689 New England Quarterly 62 1 75 81 doi 10 2307 366211 JSTOR 366211 Webb Stephen Saunders 1998 Lord Churchill s Coup The Anglo American Empire and the Glorious Revolution Reconsidered Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 0558 4 OCLC 39756272 Primary sources Edit Hall Michael G et al eds The Glorious Revolution in America Documents on the Colonial Crisis of 1689 1964 excerpt Whitmore William Henry ed 1868 The Andros Tracts Being a Collection of Pamphlets and Official Papers Issued During the Period Between the Overthrow of the Andros Government and the Establishment of the Second Charter of Massachusetts 1868 1874 Boston The Prince Society OCLC 1842576 External links EditChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Andros Sir Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 1 Texts on Wikisource Low Sidney James Mark 1885 Andros Edmund Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 Andros Edmund Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Andros Edmund Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Andros Sir Edmund The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Andros Edmund The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Government officesPreceded byAnthony Colveas Governor of New Netherland Proprietary Governor of the Province of New York11 February 1674 18 April 1683 Succeeded byAnthony Brockholls acting Preceded byJoseph Dudleyas President of the Council of New England Governor of the Dominion of New England20 December 1686 18 April 1689 Dominion dissolvedPreceded byBaron Howard of Effingham Colonial Governor of Virginia1692 1698 Succeeded byFrancis NicholsonPreceded bySir Thomas Lawrence Proprietary Governor of Maryland1693 Succeeded byNicholas GreenberryPreceded byNicholas Greenberry Proprietary Governor of Maryland1694 Succeeded bySir Thomas Lawrence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Andros amp oldid 1141252015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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