leading to that state of things in which it became expedient
for the original owners of the soil to receive new titles to small
portions of their territory from those who had so recently
been, themselves, either purchasers or intruders, they cannot
fail to become, shortly, an object of enquiry in something like
a regular history of the state. I shall, therefore, not attempt
to trace those circumstances, but shall only observe that after
various contentions and accomodations, resulting generally in
new disadvantages to the natives, and the gradual decrease
of their numbers within, or adjoining to the English
settlements, the indian inhabitants on the Choptank and
Nanticoke rivers on the eastern shore became desirous of being
secured in the possession of lands by grant from the
proprietary; that, in consequence, a grant was made to the
Choptank indians in the year 1669, and one to the Nanticoke indians
in the year 1704, in respect to which grants a variety of
provisions and modifications took place by subsequent acts of
assembly, the most important of which I shall here examine,
confining myself altogether to what has been done by law;
for, as to the incidents and proceedings of an intermediate
and preparatory nature, they are entirely too numerous to
admit of any recital within the limits of this work.
In respect to the grant to the Choptank indians, I cannot
give a better account of it than by transcribing the reverend
Mr. Bacon's note on the law making that grant. The title
only is given in his edition, being " an act for the
" continuation of peace with, and protection of, our neighbors and
" confederates, Indians on Choptank river," and the
following is extracted from his remarks.
" This act, on account of the fidelity of the Choptank
" indians in delivering up some murderers, &c. settles upon
" them, and their heirs forever, all that land on the south side
" of Choptank river, bounded westerly by the freehold now
" in possession of William Dorrington, and easterly with
" secretary Sewall's creek, for breadth;¾and, for length,
" three miles into the woods: to be held of his lordship
" under the yearly rent of six beaver skins; and is confirmed
" among the perpetual laws by 1676 ch. 2."
By an (a) act of 1704, ch. 58, the bounds of a certain tract
of land were ascertained, to the use of the Nanticoke indians
in Dorchester county, so long as they should occupy and live
upon the same. This act after stating it, in the preamble, to
be " most just" that the indians, the ancient inhabitants of
the province, should have a convenient dwelling place, &c.
(a) These lands had been originally ascertained and bonded by an act
of 1698, ch. 15, which falling under the general repeal of 1704, ch. 77,
was in a manner reenacted by this act, it being the same in all respects
except the enacting style which as this was passed during the suspension
of the proprietary's government was necessarily different.
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