Library of the University of Toronto . = Me wv Sa ete SB aba 5 # rs Mets rf eI ee T.' et ae aS a 2 : F he > Ave, 7454 . 1 tr Ps “NORTH AMERICA; CONTAINING Irs Natrurat History, AnD A circumftantial Account of its Plantations and Agriculture in general, WITH THE CIVIL, ECCLESIASTICAL AND COMMERCIAL STATE OF THE COUNTRY, The MANNERS Of the INHABITANTS, and feveral curious and IMPORTANT REMARKS on various Subjects. YBa PE Re KA LM, Profeffor of Oeconomy in the Univerfity of 4040 in Swedith Finland, and Member of the Swedi/h Royal Academy of Sciences. TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH By JOHN’REINHOLD FORSTER, F.A.S. Enriched with a Map, feveral Cuts for the Illuftration of Natural Hiftory, and fome additional Notes. Bee Lartee 1, WARRINGTON:. Printep by WILLIAM EYRES. MDCCLXxX. - By | LV A, 2 7 fy r a oe ayer TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON, One of his Majefty’s Juftices of the - Grand Seffions for the Counties of © ANGLESEY, CaERNARVON, and Manton wir SIR, a performance which will in fome meafure difplay to the Britifh nation, the circumftances of a coun- try which is fo happy as to be under ‘its protection. | Every lover of knowledge, efpe- cially of natural hiftory, muft be fen- fible of your zealous endeavours to _ promote every branch of it. It was my great happinefs to fall within your ‘ notice, and to receive very fubftantial and feafonable favours from your a patronage | Prefume to prefix your name to iv DEDICATION. patronage and recommendations. I fhall ever remain mindful of your generofity and humanity towards me, but muft lament that I have no other means of exprefling my gratitude than by this publick acknowledgment. Accept then, Dear Sir, my ear-_ neft wifhes for your profperity, and think me with the trueft efteem, Your moft obliged, and obedient humble Servant, WARRINGTON, Jury 2sth.1770. - John Reinhold F uifter. ee A Ga. BR HE prefent Volume of Profeffor | Kalm’s ‘Travels through North | America, is originally written in the Swedi/h language, but was immediately after tranflated into the German by the two Murray's, both of whom are Swedes, and one a pupil of Dr. Linneus, and therefore we may be fure that this tran{- lation ERTRPBRG exactly with the origi~, Hake hy: Baron Sten Charles Bielke, Vice prefi- dent of the Court of Jufticein Finland, was the firft who made a propofal to the Royal Academy of Sciences at Stockholm, to fend an able man to the northern parts of Siberia and Iceland, as places which are partly un- der the fame latitude with Sweden, and to make there fuch obfervations and colledti- ons of feeds and plants, as would Improve the Swed ifD ar gardening, manu-. factures, vi Be RY EWE Aw Cae: factures, arts and fciences. Dr. Linnaeus found the propofal juft, but he thought that a journey through North America would be yet of a more extenfive utility, than that through the before-mentioned countries ; for the plants of dmerica were then little known, and not fcientifically defcribed, and by feveral trials, it feemed probable that the greateft part of the North American plants, would bear very well the Swedi/h winters ; and what was more important, a great many American plants promifed to be very ufeful — in hufbandry and phyfic. Tuus far this journey was a mere {cheme; but as Captain Trzewald, a man well known for his abilities in England, gave his Ob/er- vations on the Cultivation of Silk in a feries of Memoirs to the Royal Academy of Sciences, and mentioned therein 'a kind of mulberry tree, which was difcovered by Dr. Linnagus, and which bore the rigours of the Swedi/h climate as well as a fir or pine tree; this circumftance revived the propofal of fuch a journey in the year 1745. Count Tefin, a nobleman of eftablifhed merit both in the “. political and learned world, becoming pre- fident of the Royal Academy, it was unani- moufly agreed upon to fend Profeflor Ka/m to North America. 'The expences were at firft _a great obftacle; but the Royal Academy - 3 wrote Pk) EK PAY Cr E vil wrote to the three univerfities to affift them in this great and ufeful undertaking. obo fent firft her {mall contribution, Lund had nothing to {pare, but Up/a/a made up this deficiency by a liberal contribution. Count Piper was intreated to give a fa- mily exhibition to Mr. Kalm, which he readily promifed, but as the Academy had obtained from the convocation of the uni- verfity of Up/ala and the magiftrates of Stockholm, another exhibition of the family. of Helmsfield for Mr. Kalm, Count Piper refufed to grant his exhibition, as being _ contrary to the ftatutes of the univerfity and without any precedent, that one perfon fhould enjoy two exhibitions. The prefent king of Sweden being then prince royal, fucceffor to the throne, and chancellor of the univerfity, wrote to the convocation, and exprefied his wifhes to have from the trea- fury of the univerfity for fo ufeful a purpofe, about 1000 plates, or about 150]. fterling. The, univerfity complied generoufly with the defire of her chancellor, and gave or- ders that the money fhould be paid to the Royal Academy. The board for promoting manufactures gave 300 plates, or about 45l.. Mr. Kal/m fpent in this journey. his falary, and befides very near 130]. of his own fortune, fo that at his return he found a 4. himfelf vill PERO EX FU AD CH E; himfelf obliged to live upon a very fmall pittance. The reft of the expences the Academy made up from her own fund. We on purpofe have given this detail from Mt. Ka/m’s long preface, to fhew the reader with what public fpirit this journey has been fupported in a country where mo- ney is fo fcarce, and what a patriotic and laudable ardor for the promotion of {ciences in general, and efpecially of natural hiftory and hufbandry animates the univerfities, the public boards, and even the private perfons, in this cold climate, which goes fo far, that they chufe rather to fpend their own _ private fortunes, than to give up fo benefi- cial and ufeful a fcheme. We have the fame inftance in Dr. Haffelgui?, who with a fickly and confumptive conftitution, went to Afa Minor, Egypt and Paleftine, and colle&ed fuch great riches in new plants and animals, that Dr. Linzeus’s fyftem would never have contained fo many fpecies, had he not made ufe of thefe trea- fures, which the queen of Sweden generouf- ly bought by paying the debts of Dr. Haffel- quift, who died in his attempt to promote natural hiftory. The Reverend Mr. Ofbeck in his voyage to C4ima, made an infinite number of ufeful and interefting obfervati- ons at the expence of his whole falary, and publifhed {ee Os Ply AY) Cl Et ix publithed them by the contributions of his parifh. The Reverend Mr. Toreen died by the fatigues of the fame voyage, and left his letters publifhed along with Ofbeck, as a monument of his fine genius, and: fpirit. for promoting natural hiftory. We here look upon the expences as tri- fling, but they are not fo in Sweden, and therefore are certainly the beft monuments to the honour of the nation and the great Linneus, who in refpect to natural hiftory is the primum mobile of that country. Proressor Kalm having obtained leave of his Majefty to be abfent from his potft as profeffor, and having got a pafiport, and recommendations to the feveral Swedz/h mi- nifters at the courts of Loudon, Paris, Ma- drid, and at the Hague, in order to obtain paffports for him in their refpedctive ftates, fet out from Upfala, the 16th. of Odfober 1747, accompanied by Lars Yungfirem, a gardener well fkilled in the knowledge of plants and mechanics, and who had at the {ame time a good hand for dr-wing, whom he took into his fervice. He then fet fail from Gothenburgh, the 11th. of December but a violent hurricane obliged the fhip he was in to take fhelter in the harbour of Grem- fiad in Norway, from which place he made excurfions to Arendal and Chriftianfand. He . went te PRR OR Pr Anon went again to fea February the 8th. 1748, and arrived at London the 17th. of the fame month. He ftaidin England till Auguft 15th. in} which interval of time he made excur- fions to Woodford in Effex, to little Gaddefden in Hertford{bire, where Wiliam Els, a man celebrated for his publications in hufbandry lived, but whofe practical hufbandry Mr. Kalm found not to be equal to the theory - Jaid down in his writings; he likewife faw Ivinghoe in Buckinghamfhire, Eaton and fe- veral other places, and all the curiofities and gardens in and about London: at laft he went on board a fhip, and traverfed the ocean to Philadelphia in Penfylvania, which was formerly called New Sweden, where he arrived September the 26th. The reft of that year he employed in collecting feeds of — trees and plants,-and fending them up to Sweden; and in feveral excurfions in the en- virons of Philadelphia. The winter he pafled among his countrymen at Raccoon in New “ferfey. The next year 1749, Mr, Kalm went through New ‘ferfey and New York along the river Hudjfon to Albany, and from thence, after having croffed the lakes of St. George and Champlain, to Montreal and Quebec, he returned that very year againtt winter to Philadelphia, and {ent a new cargo of feeds, plants and curiofitics to Sweden, o the | PERI BM Fe! AN COVEL xi the year 1750, Mr. Kal/m faw the weftern parts of Penfylvamia and the coaft of New Serfey ; Yung firem ftaid in the former pro- vince all the fummer for the collection of feeds, and Prof. Ka/m in the mean time _ paffed New York and the blue mountains, went to “/bany, then along the river Mo- hawk to the Iroguois nations, where he got acquainted with the Mobawk's, Oneida’s, Tufkarora s, Onandaga’s and Kayugaw’s. He» then viewed and navigated the great lake Ontario, and {aw the celebrated fall at Nrza- gara. In his return from his fummer ex- pedition, he crofied the blue mountains in adifferent place, and in Odfober again reach- ed Philadelphia. In the year 1751, the 13th. of February, he went at Newcaftle on board a fhip for England, and after a paflage fubje@ to many dangers in the moft dreadful hurnicanes, he arrived March the 27th. in the Thames, and two days after in London. He took paffage for Gothenburgh May the sth. and was the 16th. of the fame month at the place of his deftination, and the 13th. of ‘fune he again arrived at Stockbolm, after having been on this truly ufeful expedition three years and eight months. -He afterwards returned again to his place of profeffor at 4060, where in a {mall garden of his own, he cultivates ' many i VR Reo Poa oe many hundreds of American plants, as there is not yet a public botanical garden for the | ufe of the univerfity, and he with great ex- pectation withes to fee what plants will bear the climate, and bear good and ripe feeds fo | far north. He publifhed the account of his journey by intervals, for want of encou- ragement, and fearing the expences of pub- lifhing at orce in a country where few bookfellers are found, and where the author muft very often embrace the bufinefs .of bookfeller, in order to reimburfe himfelf for the expences of his publication. He ublithed in his firft volume obfervations on England, and chiefly on its hufbandry, where he with the moft minute {crupulou{nefs and detail, entered into the very minutiz of this branch of his bufinefs for the benefit of his countrymen, and this fubject he continued at the beginning of the fecond volume. A paflage crofs the ¢t/antic ocean is a new _ thing to Swedes, who are little ufed to it, unlefs they go in the few Eaf India hips of their country. Every thing therefore was new to Mr. Ka/m, and he omitted no circumftance unobferved which are repeated in all the navigators from the earlier times down to our own age. It would be a kind of injuftice to the public, to give all this at large to the reader. All that part deferibing England mee, FE A OL Ri lx England and its curiofities and hufbandry we omitted. The particulars of the pafiage from England to Penfylvania we abridged ; no circumftance interefting to natural hifto- ry or to any other part of literature has been omitted. And from his arrival at Philadelphia, we give the original at large, - except where we omitted fome trifling cir- cumftances, viz. the way of eating oytters, the art of making apple dumplings, and fome more of the fame nature, which ftruck that Swedi/b gentleman with their novelty. Mr. Kalm makes ufe of the Swedi/h mea- fure; its foot is to the Engli/h foot, as 1134 to 1350. For his meteorological obferva- tions, he employed the thermometer of Prof. Celfius generally made ule of in Swe- den, and his was of Cel/jus’s own making ; the interval from the point of freezing to the point of boiling water, is equally divi- ded in this thermometer into 100 parts. In the names of plants, we have chiefly em- ployed after his directions the Linnean names in the laft edition of his Spec. Plan- tarum, and Syftema Nature, Vol. 2. But as his defcriptions of animals, plants, and minerals are very fhort, he promifes to give them at large fome time hence in a Latin work. He excufes the negligence of his ftile, from the time in which he methodi- | fed xix Pi RJ BS FP) Ad Ct ER eee fed his obfervations, which was commonly © at night, after being fatigued with the bu- finefs of the preceding day, when his {pi- rits were almoft exhaufted, and he, incapa- ble of that fprightlinefs which commends fo many curious performances. of that nature. He gives you his obfervations as they oc- curred day after day, which makes him a faithful relater, notwithftanding it takes away all elegance of ftyle, and often oceafions him to make very fudden tranfitions from {ubjects. very foreign to one another. ‘This defect we will endeavour to fupply by a very copious index at the end of the whole work, rather than derange the author’s words, which are the more to be relied on, as be- ing inftantly committed to paper warm from his reflections. Avr laft he arms himfelf with a very noble indifference again{ft the criticifm of feveral people, founded on the great aim he had in view by his performance, which was no lefs than publhe utility. This he looks upon as the true reward of his rei and expences. TuHEsE are the contents of hie long pre- face. We have nothing to add, but that . we intend to go on in this work as foon as poflible, hoping to be fupported and en- ne pug in this undertaking, by a nation which 26) BEY AL CA BS on which is the poffeflor of that great conti- “nent, a great part of which is here accu- x rately and impartially defcribed, efpecially at this time when American affairs attract the attention of the public. WE intend to join for the better illuftra- tion of the work, a map and drawings of American birds and animals which were not in the original. They will be copied from original drawings and real birds and ani- mals from North America, which we have. accefs to, and muft therefore give to this tranflation a fuperiority above “the original and the German tranflation. An encourager of this work propofed it aS an improvement to the tranflation of Kalm’s travels, to add in the margin the paging of the original, as by this means recourfe would be had eafily to the quotati- ons made by Dr. Linnaeus. We would very readily have complied with this de/ide- ratum, had we had the Swedi/h edition of this work at hand, or had the work not been too far advanced at the time we got this kind hint: however this will be remedied by a copious index, which will certainly appear at the end of the whole work. As we have not yet been able to procure a compleat lift of the fubfcribers and encou~ ragers xvi. Po R2SEARPa AD Ci ragers of this undertaking, we choofe rather to poftpone it, than to give an imperfect one: at the fame time we aflure the public, that it fhall certainly appear in one of the fubfequent volumes. We find it neceffary here to mention, that as many articles in Mr. Ka/m’s travels required illuftrations, the publifher has taken the liberty to join here and there fome notes, which are marked at the end with F.. The other notes not thus marked were kindly communicated by the publifher’s friends. LasTLy, we take this opportunity to return our moft fincere thanks in this pub- lic manner to the ladies and gentlemen, who have generoufly in various ways exert- ed themfelves in promoting the publication of thefe ufeful remarks of an impartial, ac- curate and judicious foreigner, on a country which is at prefent fo much the object of public deliberation and private converfation. PETER Pale Tage K (ASL Ms odie bdhk xo <3 Bie abg-obs Auguft the sth. 1748. WITH my fervant Lars Yung fram | (who joined to his abilities as garden- er, a tolerable {kill in mechanics and drawing) went at Gravefend on board the Mary Gally, Captain Law/on, bound for Philadelphia; and though it was fo late as fix o'clock in the afternoon, we weighed anchor and failed a good way down the Thames before we again came to anchor. Auguf the 6th. Very early in the morning we refumed our voyage, and after a few hours failing we came to the mouth of the Dhames, where we turned into the channel and failed along the Kentz/h coat, which confifts of (et and almoft perpen- dicular 2 Auguft 1748. dicular chalk hills, covered at the top with fome foil and a fine verdure, and including {trata of flints, as it frequently is foundin this kind of*chalk-hills in the reft of England. And we were delighted in viewing on them excellent corn fields, covered for the greateft part. with wheat, then ripening. AT fix o’clock at night, we arrived at Deal, a little well known town, fituate at the entrance of a bay expofed to the fouth- ern and eafterly winds. Here commonly the outward bound fhips provide themfelves. with greens, frefh victuals, brandy, and many more articles. This trade, a fifhery, and in the laft war the equipping of priva- teers, has enriched the inhabitants. Auguf the 7th. Wuen the tide was out, I faw numbers of fifhermen reforting to the fandy fhallow places, where they find round fmall eminences caufed by the excrements of the og worms, or fea worms, (Lumbrict marini. Linn.) who live in the holes leading to thefe hillocks, fometimes eighteen inches deep, and they are then dug out with a {mall three tacked iron fork and ufed as baits. , Auguf the 8th. AT three salah we tided down the channel, pafied Dover, and faw plainly the opinion of the celebrated Camden in his Britannia confirmed, here The Channel. be here England had been formerly joined to France and Flanders by an ifthmus. Both fhores form here two oppofite points; and both are formed of the fame chalk hills, which have the fame configuration, fo that a perfon acquainted with the Exgij/b coatts and approaching thofe of Picardy afterwards, without knowing them to be fuch, would certainly take them to be the Eng/i/h ones.* Auguft the 9th—12th. We tided and alternately failed down the channel, and pafled Dungnefs, Fairhght, the Ifle of Wight, Port/mouth, the Peninfula of Portland and Bolthead,+a point behind which Plymouth hes; during all which time we had very little wind. Auguf the 13th. Towarps night we got out of the Exg/b channel into the Bay ‘of Bifcay. , ~ Auguft the 14th. We had contrary wind, and this increafed the rolling of the fhip, for it is generally remarked that the Bay of Bifcay has the ereateft and broadeft waves, which are of equal fize with thofe between America and Europe; they are commonly half an Exgh/b mile in length, and have a height proportionable to it. The Baltic es A 2 and _* The fame opinion has been confirmed by Mr. Baffon in his Hift. Naturelle. tom. 1. art. xix. Vol, 2. p. 419 of the edit, in twelves. F. 4 Auguft 1748. and the German ocean has on the contrary fhort and broken waves. Wuenever an animal is killed on board the fhip, the failors commonly hang fome freth pieces of meat for a while into the fea, and it is faid, it then keeps better. Auguf the 15th. THe fame fwell of the fea (till continued, but the waves began to fmooth, and a foam fwimming on them was faid to forebode in calm weather, a continuance of the fame for fome days. AsouT noon a north eafterly breeze fprung up, and in the afternoon it blew more, and this gave us a fine fpectacle; for the great waves rolled the water in great fests: in one direction, and the north eaft- erly wind curled the furface of thefe waves quite in another. By the beating and dafh- ing of the waves againft one another, with a more than ordinary violence, we could fee that we pafled a current, whofe direction the captain could not determine. Auguf the 16th—2ift. Tue fame fa- vourable breeze continued to our great com- fort and amazement, for the captain ob- ferved that it was very uncommon to meet with an eafterly or north-eafterly wind be- tween Europe and the Azores (which the failors call the Weftern Iflands) for more than two days together; for the more com- mon Sea between Europe and America 5 mon wind is here a wefterly one: but be- yond the Azores they find a great variety of winds, efpecially about this time of the year; nor do the wefterly winds continue long beyond thefe ifles; and to this it is owing, that when navigators have pafled the Azores, they think they have perform- ed one half of the voyage, although in rea- lity it be but one third part. Thefe ifles come feldom in fight; for the navigators keep off them, on account of the dangerous rocks under water furrounding them. Up- on obfervation and comparifon of the jour- nal, we found that we were in forty-three deg. twenty-four min. north lat. and thirty and a half degrees weft long. from London. Augufi the 22d. AxsouT noon the cap- tain aflured us, that in twenty-four hours we fhould have a fouth-weft wind: and upon my enquiring into the reafons of his foretelling this with certainty, he pointed at fome clouds in the fouth-weft, whofe points turned towards north-eaft, and faid they were occafioned by a wind from the oppofite quarter. At this time I was told we were about half way to Penfylvania. Auguft the 23d. “Asour feven o’clock in the morning the expected fouth-weft wind fprung up, and foon accelerated our A 3 courfe Oo Auguft 1748. courfe fo much, that we went at the rate of eight knots an hour. Auguft the 24th. Tue wind fhifted and was in our teeth. We were told by fome of the crew to expect a little ftorm, the higher clouds being very thin and ftriped and fcattered about the fky like parcels of combed wool, or fo many fkains of yarn, which they faid forebode a ftorm. Thefe ftriped clouds ran north-weft and fouth- eaft, in the direction of the wind we then had. ‘Towards night the wind abated and we had a perfect calm, which is a fign of a change of wind. Auguf the 25th. and 26th. A WEST wind fprung up and grew ftronger and ftronger, fo that at laft the waves wafhed our deck. Ayguf the 27th. In the morning we got a better wind, which went through va- rious points of the compafs and brought on a {torm from north-eaft towards night. Our captain told mean obfervation found- ed on long experience, viz. that though the winds changed frequently in the A¢lantic ocean, efpecially in fummer time, the moft | frequent: however was the weftern, and this accounts for the paflage from me- rica to Europe commonly being red tnan Sea between Europe and America. 4 than that from Europe to America. ~Befides this, the winds in the ¢/antic. during fummer are frequently partial, fo. that a ftorm may rage on one part:.of it,, and within a few miles of. the place. little or no ftorm at all may be felt... In winter the winds are more conftant, extenfive and violent; fo that then the fame wind reigns on the greater part of the ocean for a good while, and caufes greater waves than in fummer. — 7 Auguft the 30th. As I had obferved the night before fome ftrong flathes of lighten- ing without any fubfequent clap of thunder, I enquired of our captain, whether he could affign any reafons for it. He told me thefe phenomena were pretty common, and the confequence of a preceding heat in the at- mofphere; but that when lightenings were obferved in winter, prudent navigators were ufed to reef their fails, as they are by this fign certain of an impendent ftorm; and fo likewife in that feafon, a cloud rifing from the north-weft, is an infallible forerunner of a great tempett. | September the 7th. As wehad the firft day of the month contrary wind, on the fecond it fhifted.to the north, was again contrary the third, and. fair the fourth and following days. The fifth we were in forty deg. | A 4 three ee September 1748. three min. ‘north lat. and between fif- ty-three and fifty-four deg. weit long. from London. Besipes the common waves rolling with the wind, we met on,the 4th. and sth. inft. with waves coming from fouth-weft, which the captain gave as a mark of a former ftorm from that quarter in this neighbourhood. September the. 8th. We croffed ree a moderate wind, a fea with the higheft waves we met on the whole paflage, attri- buted by the captain to the divifion between the great ocean and the inner American gulf; and foon after we met with waves greatly inferior to thofe we. obferved before. September the gth. In the afternoon we remarked that in fome places the colour of the fea (which had been hitherto of a deep blue) was changed into a paler hue; fome of thefe {pots were narrow ftripes of twelve or fourteen fathoms breadth, of a pale green colour, which is fuppofed to be caufed by the fand, or as fome fay, by the weeds un- der water. September the 12th. We were Inbesshiod that day, and as we in this fituation ob- ferved a thip, which we fufpetted to bea Spanih privateer, our fear was very great ; but we faw fome days after our arrival at Philadel- Ocean between Europe and America. 9 Philadelphia the fame fhip arrive, and heard that they feeing us had been under the fame apprehenfions with ourfelves. September the 13th. Caprain Law/on, who kept his bed for the greater part of the voyage, on account of an indifpofition, affured us yefterday we were in all appear- ance very near America: but as the mate was of a different opinion, and as the failors could fee no land from the head of the maft, nor find ground by the lead, we fteered on dire&tly towards the land. About three o’clock in the morning the captain gave or-~ ders to heave the lead, and we found but ten fathom: the fecond mate himfelf took the lead and called out ten and fourteen fathoms, but 2a moment after the fhip ftruck on the fand, and this fhock was followed by four other very violent ones. The confternation was incredible; and very juftly might it be fo; for there were above eighty perfons on board, and the fhip had but one‘boat: but happily our thip got off again, after having been turned. At day break, which fol- lowed foon after (for the accident happened half an hour paft four) we faw the conti- nent of America within a Swedi/fh mile be- fore us: the coaft was whitith, low, and higher up covered with firs. We found out, that the fand we ftruck on, lay oppo- fite 10° . The Bay of Delaware. fite Arcadia in Maryland, in thirtyafiiog deg... fifty min. North lat. We coafted the fhores of Maryland all the-day, but not being able to reach cape Hinlopen, where we intended to take a pi- lot onboard, we cruized all. night before the. bay of Delaware.. The darknefs of the night-made us expect.a rain, but we found that only a copious fall of dew enfued, which made our coats quite wet, and the pages.of a book, accidently left. open on the deck, were.in half an hours time. after fun-fetting likewife wet, and we were told by the captain and the failors that both in England and in America a copious dew. was commonly followed by a hot and fultry day. September the 14th. We faw. land on our larboard in the weft, which. appeared to be low, white, fandy, and higher up the country covered with firs. cape Hinlopen is.a head of land running into the fea from the weftern fhore, and has a village on. it. The eaftern fhore belongs here to New er- fey, and. the weftern to Pen/ylvania. The bay of Delaware has many fands, and from four to eleven fathom water. . Tue fine woods of oak, hiccory and firs covering both fhores madea fine, appear- ance, and were partly, employed in fhip- building River Delaware. gt building at Philadelphia; for which purpofe every year fome Enghjbh captains take a - paflage in autumn to this town, and fuper- intend the building of new fhips during winter, with which they go to fea next {pring : and at this time it was more ufual than common, as the French and Spanifh privateers had taken many Engl/b merchan fhips. 5 A LITTLE after noon we reached the mouth of Delaware river, which is’ here about three Exgl/h miles broad, but de- creafes gradually fo much, that it is {carcely a mile broad at Philadelphia. Here wewere delighted in feeingnow and then between the woods fome farm houfes furrounded with corn fields, paftures well- ftocked with cattle, and meadows covered with fine hay; and more than one fenfe was agreeably affected, when the wind brought to’us the fineft effluvia of odorife- rous plants and flowers, or that of the frefh made hay: thefe agreeable fenfations and the fine {cenery of nature on this continent, fo new to us, continued till it grew quite dark. | Here I will return to fea, and give the reader a fhort view of the various occur- rences belonging to Natural-Hiftory, during our crofling the Ocean. Or 12 Ocean between Europe and America. Or fea weeds (Fucus linn.) we faw Au- guft the 16th. and r7th. a kind which had a fimilarity to a bunch of onions tied toge- ther, thefe bunches were of the fize of the fift, and of a white colour. Near the coatt of America within the American gulf, Sep- tember the 11th. we met likewife with fe- veral fea weeds, one fpecies of which was called by the failors rock-weed; another kind looked like a {tring of pearls, and ano- ther was white, about a foot long, narrow, every where equally wide and quite ftrait. From ‘ } Ocean between Europe and America. 17 phinus Phocena, Linn.) firft in the channel and then they continued every where on this. fide the Azores, where they are the only fith navigators meet with; but beyond thefe ifles they are feldom feen, till again in the neighbourhood of America we faw them equally frequent to the very mouth of De- laware river. They always appeared in fhoals, fome of which confifted-of upwards of an hundred individuals ; their fwimming was very fwift, and though they often fwam along fide .of our fhip, being ta- ken as it were with the noife caufed by the fhip cutting the waves, they however foon outwent her, when they were tired with ftaring at her. They are from four to eight feet long, have a bill like in fhape to that of a goofe, a white belly, and leap up into the air frequently four feet high, and from four to eight feet in length; though their {noring indicates the effort which a leap of Porcopefce, given to, this genus by the Italians; and it is re- markable that almoft all the European nations confpired in calling them Sea-hogs, their name being in German Meer Schwein; the Danifh, Swedifb, and Norvegian, Marfuin, from whence the French borrowed their Marfouin. The natives of Iceland call them Suinhual, i, e. a Swwine-whale, and fo like- wife the Slavonian nations have their Swinia Morfkaya. Whe- ther this confent arifes from their rooting the fand at the bot- tom of the fea in queft of Sand-eels and Sea-worms like fwine, or from the vaft quantity of lard furrounding their ‘bodies is uncertain. F. B that 18 Ocean between Europe and America. that nature cofts them. Our failors made many vain attempts to ftrike one of them with. the harp iron from the forecaftle, when they came within reach, but their velocity always eluded their {kill. ANOTHER cetaceous fifh, of the Dolphin kind,* with which we met, is called by the failors Bottle-nofe, it {wims in great fhoals, has a head like a bottle, and is killed by a harpoon, and is fometimes eaten.. Thefe fifh are very large, and fome fully twelve feet long; their fhape, and manner of tumbling and fwimming make them nearly related to Porpeffes. They are to be met with every where in the ocean from the channel to the very neigpeebeneod of. America. One Whale we faw at a diftance, and knew it by the water which it fpouted up. A Dog-fifh of a confiderable fize followed the fhip for a little while, but it was foon out of fight, without our being able to determine to which {pecies it belonged : this * Mr. Kalm is certainly miftaken in reckoning the Bottle- nofe amongtt the Dolphin kind; it has no teeth in its mouth as all the fith of that cla{s have, and therefore belongs to the firft order of the Whales, or thofe that are Sues teeth. See Mr. Pennant’s Britifh Zoology Vol. 3. p. 43. where it is called the beaked Whale, and very sail defcribed;. a drawing is feen in the explanatory table, n. I. _— it would not be improper to call it Balena ampullata, F. Ocean between Europe and America. 19 this was the only cartilaginous fith we faw on the whole paflage. | ’ Or the dony fifh, we faw feveral beyond the Azores, but never one on this fide of thofe ifles, one of them was of a large fize, and we faw it at a diftance; the failors called it an Albecor, and itis Dr. Linneus’s Scomber Thynnus. Tue Dolphin of the Enghjh is the Dorado of the Portugueze, and Dr. Linnaeus calls it Coryphena Hippuris; it is about two feet anda half long, near the head fix inches deep, and three inches broad ; from the head the Do/phin decreafes on all fides towards the tail, where its per- pendicular depth is one inch anda half, and its breadth hardly one inch. The colour of the back near the head is a fine green ona filver ground, but near the tail of a deep blue; the belly is white, and fometimes mixed with a deep yellow, on the fides it has fome round pale brown {pets. It has fix and not feven fins as was imagined ; two of them are on the breaft,. two on the belly, one at the tail extending to the anus, and one along the whole back, which is of a fine blue: when the fith is juft taken the extremities of the moft out- ward rays in the tail were eight inches one from another. Their motion when they io 2 {wam 20 Ocean between Europe and America. fwam behind, or along fide of the fhip was. very flow, and gave a fair opportunity to hit them with the harpoon, though fome are taken with a hook and line, and a bait of: chicken bowels, {mall fith, or pieces of his own fpecies, or the flying fith, which latter are their chief food: and it is by their chafing them, that the flying fith leave their element to find fhelter in one to which they are ftrangers. The Dolphins fome- times leap a fathom out of the water, and love to fwim about cafks and logs of wood, that fometimes drive in the fea. They are eaten with thick butter, when boiled, and fometimes fried, and afford a palatable food, but rather fomewhat dry. In the bellies of the fith of this {pecies which we caught, fe- veral animals were found, viz. an Offracion; alittle fifh with blue eyes, which was yet alive, being juft the moment before fwal- lowed, and meafuring two inches in length ; another little fifh; a curious marine infe@, and a flying fifh, all which not yet being damaged by digeftion, 1 preferved in fpirits. THE Flying Fifb ( Exocoetus volttans, Linn. ) are always feen in great fhoals, fometimes of an hundred or more getting at once out of the water, being purfued by greater fith, and chiefly by Dolphins; they rife about a yard, and even a fathom above the water in Ocean between Europe and Amerita. 21 in their flight, but thislatter height they only are at, when they take their flight from the top of a wave; and fometimes it 1s faid they fall on the deck of fhips.. The greateft diftance they fly, 1s a good mufket- fhot, and this they perform in lefs than half a minute’s time; their motion is fome+ what like that of the yellow-hammer, (Em- beriza Citrinella, Linn.) \t is very remark- able that I found the courfe they took al- ways to be again{ft the wind, and though I was contradicted by the failors, who af- firmed that they went at any direction, I neverthelefs wasconfirmed in my opinion by a careful obfervation during the whole voy- age, according to which they fly conftantly either directly againft the wind, or fome- what in an oblique direction.* We faw likewife the fith called Bonetos, (Scomber Pelamys, Linn.) they were likewife in fhoals, hunting fome fmaller fith, which chafe caufed a noife like to that of a caf- cade, becaufe they were all {wimming clofe in a body; but they always kept out of the reach of our harpoons. | B 3. Or * In Mr. Pennant’s Britifh Zoology vol. 3. p. 282. is the beit account of this fifth to be met with; and in his Britifh Zoology, illufirated by Plates and brief explanations is plate xliv. a good and exa& drawing of the fifh, the upper figure reprefenting it in front, the lower fideways. F. 22 Ocean between Europe and America. Or amphibious animals, or reptiles; we met twice with a Turtle, one of which. was fleeping, the other {wam without taking notice of our fhip; both were of two feet diameter. Birps are pretty frequently feen on the ocean, though Aguatic Birds are more com- mon than Land Birds. Tue Petrel ( Procellaria Palaaiea, Linn. ) was our companion from the channel to the - fhores of America. Flocks of this bird were always about our fhip, chiefly in that part of the fea, which being cut by the fhip, forms a f{mooth furface, where they fre- quently feem to fettle, though always on _the wing. They pick up or examine every thing that falls accidentally, from the fhip, or is thrown over board: little fifth feem to ~ be their chief food ; in day. time they are filent, in the dark clamorous; they are re- puted to forebode a ftorm, for which rea- fon the failors difliking their company, complimented them with the name of - witches; but they are as frequent in fair weather, without a ftorm following their appearance. ‘To me it appeared as if they fiayed fometimes half an hour and longer under the waves, and the failors aflured me they did. They look like fwallows, and like them they fkim fometimes on the water. “THE | Ocean between Europe and America. 23 Tue Shearwater (Procellaria Puffinus, Linn.) is another fea-bird, which we faw every where on our voyage, from the chan- nel to the American coafts; it has much-the appearance and fize of the dark-grey \Sea- gull, or of a Duck; it has a brown back, and commonly a white ring round its neck, and a peculiar flow way of flying. We plainly faw fome of thefe birds feed on fith. ~ Tue Tropic bird ( Phaéton ethereus, Linn.) has very much the fhape of a gull, but two very long feathers, which it has in its. tail, diftinguith it enough from any other bird ; its flight is often exceedingly high: the firft of this kind we met, was at about for- ty deg. north lat. and forty-nine or fifty deg. weft long. from London. Common Gulls (Larus canus, Linn.) we faw, when we were oppofite the Lana's End, the moft wefterly cape of England, and when according to our reckoning we were oppofite Ireland. Terns (Sterna hirundo, Linn.) though of a fomewhat darker colour than the com- mon ones, we found after the forty-firft eg. of north lat. and forty-feventh deg. weft long. from London, very plentifully, and fometimes in flocks of fome hundreds ; fometimes they fettled, as if tired, on our fhip. Bs WITH- 24 Ocean between Europe and America, WITHIN the American gulph we difcover- ed a fea-bird ata little diftance from the fhip, which the failors calleda Sea-hen. LAND~BIRDS are now and then feen at fea, and fometimes at a good diftance from any land, fo that it is often difficult, to account for their appearance in fo uncom- mon a place. uguji the 18th. we faw a bird which fetled on our fhip, and was per- fectly like the great Titmoufe, ( Parus major Linn: ) upon an attempt to catch it, it got behind the fails, and could never be caught. September the 1ft. We obferved fome Land-birds flying about our fhip, which we took for Sand Martins ( Hirundo riparia Linn.) fometimes they fettled on our fhip, or on the fails; they were of a greyith brown colour on their back, their breaft white, and the tail fomewhat furcated; a heavy flower of rain drove them afterwards away. September the 2d.a Swallow flut- tered about the fhip, and fometimes it fet- tled on the maft; it feemed to be very tired ; feveral times it approached our cabin witidees: as if it was willing to take fhelter there. Thefe cafes happened about forty deg. north lat. and between forty-feven and forty-nine deg. weft long. from London, and alfo about. twenty deg. long. or more Ocean between Europe and America. 25 more than nine hundred and twenty fea miles from any land whatfoever. September the 1oth. within the American gulph:a large bird, which we took for an Ow/, and likewife a little bird fettled on our fails. | September the 12th. a Wood-pecker fettled on our rigging: its back was of a {peckled grey, and it feemed extremely fatigued. And another land-bird of the pafferine clafs, endeavoured to take fhelter and reft on our fhip. Debeciie I entirely take leave of the fea, I will communicate my obfervations on two curious phoenomena. In the channel and in the ocean we faw at night time, /parks of fire, as if flow- ing on the water, efpecially where it was agitated, fometimes one fingle {park {wam for the {pace of more than one minute on the ocean before it vanifhed. The failors obferved them commonly to appear during, and after a ftorm from the north, and that _ often the fea is as if it were full of fire, and that fome fuch fhining {parks would like- wife ftick to the mafts and fails. . SomEeTiIMes this light had not the ap- pearance of {parks, but looked rather like the phofphorefcence of putrid wood. ‘Tue Thames-water which made our pro- _ vifion of frefh water, is reputed to be the © beft 26 Ocean between Europe and America. beft of any. It not only fettled in the oak cafks it is kept in, but becomes in a little time ftinking, when ftopped up; however this naufeous {mell it foon loofes, after being filled into large ftone juggs, and expofed to the open frefh air for two or three hours together. Often the vapours arifing from a cafk which has been kept clofe and ftopped up for a great while take fire, if a candle is held near them when the cafk is opened, and the IA+ames water is thought to have more of this quality than any other; though I was told that this even happened with any other water in the fame circumftances. Now I can refume my narrative, and therefore obferve that we afterwards failed on the river with a fair wind, pretty late at night. In the dawn of the evening we paf- fed by Newca/ftle, a little town on the wett- ern fhore of the river Delaware. It was already fo dark, that we could hardly know it, but by the light which appeared through fome of the windows. The Dufchare faid to have been the firft founders of this place, which is therefore reckoned the moft an- cient in the country, even more ancient than Philadelphia. But its trade can by no means be compared with the Philadelphia trade, though its fituation has more advan- tages in feveral refpects; one of which * that River Delaware. 27 that the river feldom freezes before it, and confequently fhips can come in and go out at any time. But near Philadelphia it is al- moft every winter covered with ice, fo that navigation is interrupted for fome weeks together. But the country about Péz/a- delphia and farther up, being highly culti- vated, and the people bringing all their goods to that place, Newca/ile muft always be inferior to it. | : | I MENTIONED, that the Dutch laid the foundations of this town. This happened at the time, when this country was as yet fabje&t to Sweden. But the Dutch crept in, and intended by degrees to difpoffefs the Swedes, as a people who had taken poffefiion of their property. . They fuc- ceeded in their attempt; for the Swedes _ not being able to bear with this encroach- ment, came to a war, in which the Dutch got the better. But they did not enjoy the fruits of their victory long: for a few years after, the Engl/h came and deprived them. of their acquifition, and have ever fince continued inthe undifturbed poffeffion of the country. Somewhat later at night we caft anchor, the pilot not venturing to carry the fhip up the river in the dark, feveral fands being in the way. September 15th. In the dawn of the morning 28 September 1748. morning we weighed anchor, and continu- ed our voyage up the river. The country was inhabited almoft every where on both fides. The farm-houfes were however pretty far afunder. About eight o’clock in the morning we failed by the | little town of Chefter, on the weftern fide of the river. In this town, our mate, who was born in Philadelphia, fhewed me the places, which the Swedes ftill inhabit. AT laft we arrived in Philadelphia about ten o’Clock in the morning. We had not been more than fix weeks, or (to {peak more accurately) not quite forty one days on our voyage from Grave/fend to this place, including the time we fpent at Dea/, in fupplying ourfelves with the neceflary frefh provifions, &c. our voyage was therefore. reckoned one of the fhorteft. For it is common in winter time to be fourteen, nineteen, or more weeks in coming from Gravefend to Philadelphia. Hardly any body ever had a more pleafant voyage over this great ocean, than we had. Captain Lawfin affirmed this feveral times. Nay he affured us he had never feen fuch calm weather in this ocean, though he had croff- ed it very often. The wind was generally fo favourable that a boat of a middling fize might have failed in perfe&t fafety. The fea Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 29 fea never went over ourcabin, and but once over the deck, and that was only in a {well. The weather indeed was fo clear, that a great number of the Germans on-board flept on the deck. The cabin windows needed not the fhutters. All thefe are circum- ftances which fhow the uncommon good- ~ nefs of the weather. | CapTain Law/on’s civility increafed the pleafure of the voyage. For he fhewed me all the friendfhip, that he could have fhewn to any of his relations. | As foon as we were come to the town, and had caft anchor, many of the inhabi- tants came on board, to enquire for Letters. They took all thofe which they could car- ry, either for themfelves or for their friends. Thofe, which remained, the captain or- dered to be carried on fhore, and to be brought into a coffee-houfe, where. every body could make enquiry for them, and by this means he was rid of the trouble of de- livering them himfelf. I afterwards went on fhore with him. But before he went, he ftrictly charged the fecond mate, to let noone of the German refugees out of the fhip, unlefs he paid for his pafiage, or er body elfe paid for him, or bought. im. Wu i On my leaving London I received letters 7 of 30 September 1748. of recommendation...from Mr. Adrahbam Spalding, Mr. Peter Collinfon, Dr. Mitchel, and others to their friends here. It was eafy for me therefore to get acquaintance. Mr. Benjamin Franklin, to whom Penfylua- nia is indebted for its welfare, and the learn- ed world for many new difcoveries in Elec- tricity, was the firft, who took. notice of me, and introduced me to many of his friends. He gave me all neceffary inftruc- tions, and fhewed me his kindnefs on meny occafions. I went to day accompani¢de iy, Mr. ‘facoh Bengtfon, a member of the Swed/b confiftory and the fculptor Gufavus Heffe- lus, to fee the town and. the fields which lay before it. (The former is brother of _ the rev. Mefirs. Andrew and Samuel Heffe- Jus, both minifters at Chri/izana. in new Sweden, and of the late Dr. ‘fohn Heffelus in the provinces of Neri and Wermeland). My new friend had followed his brother Andrew in 1711 to this country, and had fince lived in it. I found that I was now come into anew world. Whenever I look- ed to the ground, I every where found fuch plants as | had never feen before. When I faw a tree, I was forced to ftop, and. afk thofe who accompanied me, how it.was called. The firft plant which ftruck my eyes Penfyluama, Philadelphia. St eyes was an Andropogon, ora kind of grafs, and grafs is a part of Botany I always de- lighted in. I was feized with terror at the thought of ranging fo many new and un- known parts of natural hiftory:. At firft I only confidered the plants, without ventu- ring-a more accurate examination. AT night I took up my lodging ey a grocer who was a quaker, and I met with very good honeft people in this houfe, fuch as moft people of this profeflion appeared to me, land my Yung frem, the companion of my voyage, had a room, candles, beds, attendance, and three meals a day, if we chofe to have fo many, for twenty fhillings per week in Penfylvania currency. But wood, wafhing and wine, if required, were to be paid for befides. September the 16th. Berore I proceed I muft give a fhort defcription of Phila- delphia, which I fhali frequently mention in the fequel of my travels. I here put down feveral particulars which I marked during my ftay at that place, as a help to my memory. PHILADELPHIA, the capital of Penfylua- nia, a province which makes part of what formerly was called New Sweden is one of the principal towns in North-America; and next to Boffon the greateft. It is fituated Lee almoft 32. September 1748. | almoft-in:the center of the Exgii/h colonies, and its dat. is thirty nine deg. and “fifty min. but its weft long. from London near feventy-five deg, ora To Se PES -/Turs town was: builtin the year. 1683, or as others fay in 1682, by the well known quaker Wilham: Pen, who got this whole province by a grant from Charles the Jecond, king-of England ; after Sweden had given up. its claims to it. “According to Pen’s plan the town was to have boda baile upon apiece of land which is formed by the union of the rivers Delaware and Skulkill, in a quadrangular form, two Engh/> miles long and one broad. The eaftern fide would therefore have been bounded by the Delaware, and the weftern by the Sta/kill. They had actually begun:to build houfes on. both thefe rivers; 9 for eight capital fireets, cach two Engh/b miles long, and fixteen lefler ftreets (or lanes) acrofs them, each one mile in length, were marked out, with a confiderable ‘breadth, and in‘ ftrait lines... The place was at that time ‘almotft an. entire wildernefs covered with ‘thick forefts,.and belonged to three® Swedi/h brothers called Sven’s-Saner (Sons of Sven) who had fettled in it. They with diffieul- ty left the place, the fituation of which was very advantageous. But at daft they were per- Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 34 perfuaded to it by Pen, who gave them a few Englijh miles from that place twice the fpace of country they inhabited. However Pen himfelf and his defcendants after him, have confiderably leffened the ground belonging to them, by repeated menfurations, under pretence that they had taken more than they ought. | Bur the inhabitants could not be got in fufficient number to fill a place of fuch ex- tent, The plan therefore about the river Skulkill was laid afide till more favoura- ble circumstances fhould occur, and the houfes were only built along the De/aware. This river flows along the eaftern fide of the town, is of great advantage to its trade, and gives a fine profpect. The houfes which had already been built upon the Skulkill. were tranfplanted hitherto by de- grees. This town accordingly lies in a very pleafant country, from north to fouth along the river. It meafures fomewhat more than an Englifb mile in length; and its breadth in fome places is half a mile or more. The ground is flat and confifts of fand mixed with a little clay. Experience has fhewn that the air of this place is very healthy. | ‘Tue fireets are regular, fine, and moft of them are fifty foot, Englh/h meafure, broad; | C Arch- 34 September 1748. Arch-fireet meafures fixty fix feet in breadth; and) Market-ftreet or the principal ftreet, where the market is kept, near a hundred. ‘TFhofe which run longitudinally, or from north to fouth are feven, exclufive of a little one, which runs along’ the river," to the fouth of the market, and is called Water-ftreet. The lanes which go ‘acrofs, and were intended to reach from’the De- laware to the Skulkill, are eight innumber. They do not go quite from eaft to weft, but deviate a little from that direction: All the ftreets except two which are neareft'to the river, run in a ftraight line, and make right angles at the interfections. Some are paved, others are not; and it feems lefs neceflary fince the ground is fandy, and therefore foon abforbs the wet. . But in molt of the ftreéts isa pavement of flags, a fathom or'more broad, laid before the houfes, and pofts put on the outfide three or four fathom afunder. Under the roofs are gutters which are carefully connected with pipes, \and\by this means, thofe who walk underthem, ‘when it rains, or when the {now melts, need not fear being We Sena ie the nee nese the roofs. Tue houfes ie a pond appearance, ‘are frequently feveral ‘ftories “high, and built either of bricks or of ftone; but’ the | former Penfylvania,* Philadelphia. 35 former are» more commonly ufed, fince bricks are made before the town, and are well burnt... The {tone which. has. been employed in the; building of other houfes, is a mixture of black or grey glimmer, run- ning, in undulated veins, and of a loofe; and quite {mall grained /meffone, which run {cattered. between the bendings of the other veins, and are of a grey colour, excepting here and: there fome) fingle grains of fand, ofa palerjhue.. The glimmer makes the greateft part of the ftone; but the mixture is) fometimes of another kind, as I fhall re- late hereafter under. the article, eleventh of Odfober., >This fione is. now got in great quantities in the country, is eafily cut, and has the;good quality of not attracting the moifture in. a) wet feafon. Very good lime is burntrevery when hereabouts, for: ma-~ - fonry., «Tue houfes are ciel with fhingles. The wood for this purpofe is taken from the Cupreffussthyoides, Linn. or a tree which Swedes here-call:the white seryrsiien and the Engh/b, the white cedar. . Swamps and Morafies formerly were full of them, but at prefent thefe trees are for the greateft partcut down; and no attempt has as yet been made to:plant.new ones... The wood is elk lights;\rots lefs than any other in PLCS C2 this 36 September 1748. this country, and for that reafon is exceed- ing good for roofs. . For it is not too heavy for the. walls, and will ferve for forty or fifty. years together. But many people already begin to fear, that thefe roofs will in time be looked upon as having been very detrimental-to the city... For being fo very light, moft. people. who have built their houfes of ftone, or bricks, have been led to make their walls extremely thin. But at prefent this kind of wood is almoft en- tirely deftroyed. Whenever therefore in procefs of time thefe roofs decay,. the peo- ple will be obliged to have recourfe to the heavier materials of tiles, or the like; which the walls will not be {trong enough to bear. The roof will therefore require. fupports, | or the people be obliged to pull down the walls. and to build - new ones, or to take other fteps for. fecuring them.,. Several people have already. in late years begun to make roofs of tiles. Amone the publick buildings I will fairl mention: churches, of. which there are fe- veral, for God is ferved in various ways in this country. oie Tue Enghjb Rabi ifbed cingh ftands in the northern part of . the. town,. at fome diftance from the market, and is the fineft of -.all... It thas-.a- sii inconfiderable | fteeple, Penfyluania, Philadelphia. a7 fteeple, in whichis a bell to be rung when it is time to go to church, and on burials. It has likewife a clock which ftrikes the hours. This building which ‘is ‘called Chrift church, was founded towards the end of the laft century, but has lately been re- built and more adorned. It has two mi- nifters who get the greateft part of their falary from England. In the beginning’ of this century, the Swedi/h minifter the Rev. Mr. Rudmann, performed the fundi- © ons of a clergyman to the Engh/b congte- gation for near two years, during the ab- fence of their own clergyman. 2. Tue Swedifh church, which is other- wife called the church of Weekacko, is on the fouthern part of the town, and almoft without it, on the river’s fide, and its fitu- ation is therefore more agreeable than that of any other. I fhall have an oportunity of defcribing it more exactly, when I thall {peak of the Swedes in particular, who live in this place. =~ | ~°3.° Tue German Lutheran church, is on the north-weft fide of the town. On my arrival in America it had a little fteeple, but that being but up by an ignorant archite&t, before the walls of the church were quite dry, they leaned forwards by its weight, and: therefore they were forced | C 3 to 28 September 1748. to pull it down again in the autumn of the year 1750. About that time the congre- gation received a fine organ from Germany. They have only one minifter, who likewife preaches at another Lutheran church in Germantown. We preaches alternately one funday in that church, and another in — this, The firft clergyman which the Lu- therans had. in this town, was the Rev. Mr. Muhlenberg, who laid the foundations of this church in 1743, and» being called to another place afterwards, the. rev. Mr. Brunbolz from Slefwick was his fucceffor, and is yet here. Both thefe gentlemen were fent to this place from Ha// in Saxony, and have been a great advantage to it by their peculiar talent of preaching in an edifying manner. minifter at Weekacko, Mr. Dylander, preached -like- wife tothem. He therefore preached three fermons every funday; the firft'eatly in the morning to the Germans ; the fecond to the Swedes, and the third in ‘the afternoon to the Exglfh, and befides''this he went» all the week into the country: and’ inftruated the Germans who lived feparately ‘there. He therefore frequently preached fixteen fermons Penfylvania, Phyladelpbia. 39 fermons .a week. . And. after his .death, which happened. in November 1741, the Ger- mans firft wrote to. Germany for a-clergyman — for themfelves. This congregation is at pre- fent, very numerous, fo that every, funday the church is very much crowded... It has two galleries, butno veftry. They do not fing the collects, but. read them before the alfatiens Si s cts mm , os 40. Tue old Prefbyterian. church, isnot far from the market, and on. the fouth-fide. of market-fireet. It is of a middling fize, and built in the year 1704, as the infcrip- tion onthe. northern. pediment . fhews. The roof is built almoft hemifpherical, or at leaft forms.a hexagon.. The whole build- ing ftands from north to fouth, . for, the pre{byterians do not regard, as other people do, whether their churches look towards, a certain point of the heavens or not... 5. Tue new Prefbyterian church..was built in the year.1750, by the New-“ights in the north-weftern part of the town... By the name of New-/ights, are underftood the people who have, from different religions, become.profelytes to the well known W bitefield, who inthe years 1739» 1740, and likewife in,.1744 and 17465 travelled through -almoft all the Enghjh. colonies. His. deliyery,:bis, extraordinary zeal, and 7 & 4 other 40 September 1748. other talents fo well adapted to the intelects of his hearers, made him fo popular that he | frequently, efpecially in the two» firft years, got from eight thoufand to twenty © thoufand hearers in the fields. His inten- tion in thefe travels, was to colle& money for an orphans hofpital which had been erected in Georgia. He here frequently collected feventy pounds fterling at one fer= mon; . nay, at two. fermons which «he preached in the year 1740, both on: one funday, at Philadelphia, he got an hundred and fifty pounds. The profelytes of this man, or the above-mentioned zew-/ghts, are at prefent merely a fe& of prefbyterians. For though Whitefield was originally «a clergyman of the Exghj/h church, yet he deviated by little. and» little -from her doctrines; and on arriving in the year-1744 at Boffon in New England, he difputed with the Prefbyterians about their: doétrines, fo much. that he almoft entirely embraced them. For Whitefield was no great difpu- tant, and could therefore eafily be: led by thefe cunning people, .whitherfoever they would have him. This likewife during his latter ttay in America caufed his audience to be lefs numerous than during the firft. The zew-/ights built firt in the year 1741, a great houfe in the weftern part of the town, Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 4t town, to hold divine fervice in. But a di- vifion arifing amongft them after the des parture of Whitefield, and befides on other accounts, the building was fold to the town in the beginning of the year 17:50, and def- tined fora fchool. The #ew-lghrs: then built a church which FI call the new Pre/by~ terian one. ©On its eaftern pediment is the following -infeription, in golden letters’: Templum Prefbyterianum, annuente numine, erectum, Anno Dom. MDCCL. flos27q 6. Tus old German reformed church is built in the weft north-weft part of the town; and looks like the church in the | Ladugoord field near Stockholm. tis not yet finifhed, though for feveral years together, the congregation has kept up divine fervice init. «Thefe Germans attended the German fervice at the Swedi/b church, whilft’ the Swedifh minifter Mr. Dylander lived.—-But as the Lutherans got aclergyman for them- felves oni the death of the laft, thofe of the reformed:chutch made likewife preparations to get one from “Dordrecht; and the firft who was fent to them, was the Rev. Mr: Slaughter, whom I found on my arrival: But in the year 1750, another clergyman of the reformed church arrived from: Hol/and, and by his artful behaviour, fo infinuated himfelf into the favour of the Revi Mr. 3 Slaughter’ s 42 .. September 1748. Slaughter’s congregation, that the, latter loft almoft half his audience. .. The two clergymen then difputed for feveral)fun- days together, about the pulpit, nay, people relate that the new comer: mounted the pulpit on a faturday, and. ftayed’ in it all night. The other being thus excluded, the two parties in the audience, made them- felves the fubje&t both of the laughter:and of the {corn of the whole town, by beating and bruifing each other, and,committing other excefies.. The affair, was inquired into by the magiftrates, and decided|in:fa- - vour of the rev. Mr. syene the — who had been abufed. Tue new reformed church, was. built at a little diftance from the old one)by the party of the clergyman, who had, loft. his caufe. This man: however had ‘influence enough to bring over to his party almoft thé whole audience) of: his antagonift,, at the end of the year 1750, and therefore this new church will foon be ufelefs: 8. 9. THE Quakers have two meetings, one in: the market, and the other in the northern part of the town. \In them are according to the cuftom of this people, nei- ther altars, nor pulpits, nor any other. or- naments ufual in churches; but only. feats and fome fconces, They meet thrice every funday Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 43 fanday 1 in them, and befides that at certain times every week orevery month. «I :thall mention more about them hereafter. 10, ‘Tue Baptits, have their fervice, in ve northern part of the town. sf Tae Roman Catholicks, have j in the Slenbe seal part of the town a great houfe, which is well adorned: within, and has an organ. > y2. Tur Moravian Brethren, have hi- red a great houfe, in the northern part of the town, in which they performed the fervice bothinGermanand in Engh/b; not only twice or three’times every funday, but likewife every night after it was grown dark. But in the winter of the year 1750, they were obliged to drop their evening meetings; fome wanton: young fellows having feveral ‘times difturbed the congregation, by an in- ftrument founding like the note of a cuckoo, for this noife they made in a dark corfier, not only at the end of every ftanza, but likewife at that of every Haws whilft they were finging a hymn. -“Tuoss of the Engli/h eletsetihy the New- lights, the Quakers, and the Germans of the reformed religion, have each of them their burying | places ion one fide’ out of ‘town, and’not near their churches, though the firft of thefe fometimes make an excep- tion. All the others bury their dead in their AA September 1748. their church-yards, ‘and Moravian brethren bury where they can. The Negroes are buried in a particular place out of town. ' T now proceed to mention the other pab- lick buildings in Philadelphia. Tue Town-hall, or the place where the affemblies are held, is fituated in the weftern part of the town, it is a fine large building, having a tower with a bell in the middle, and is the greateft ornament to the town. The deputies of each province meét in it commonly every Odfober, or even more frequently if circumftances require it, ih order to confider of the welfare of the coun- try, and to hold their parliaments or diets in miniature. There they revife the old laws, and make new ones. On one fide of this building ftands the Library, which was firft begun in the year 1742, on a publick fpirited plan, formed and put in execution by the learned Mr. Franklin. For he perfuaded firft the moft fubftantial people in town to pay forty fhillings at the outfet, and afterwards an- nually ten fhillings, all in Penfylvania cur- rency, towards purchafing all kinds of ufeful books. ‘The fubfcribers are entitled to make ufe of the books. Other people are likewife at liberty to borrow them for a certain time, but muft leave a pledge and ik ed Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 45 pay eight-pence a week for a folio volume, fix-pence for a quarto,..and four-pence for all others»of a fmaller fize....As foonias the time, allowed a perfon. for the perufal of the volume, is elapfed, it muft. be-return- ed, or he is fined. :. The.money arifing in this manner. is employed. for the falary of the librarian, and for purchafing new books.. ‘There was already a fine colle¢ti- on of excellent works, moft of them Eug- ijk; many French and Latin, but few in any other language. . The fubfcribers were fo kind to me, as to order the librarian, during my ftay here, to lend me every book, which I fhould want, without requiring any payment of me. The library was open every faturday from four to eight o’clock in the afternoon. Befides the books, feveral mathematical and phyfical inftruments, and a large collection of natural curiofities were to be feen in it. Several little libraries were founded in the town on the fame foot- ing or nearly with this. The Court Houfe ftands in the middle of Market fireet, to the weft of the market, it isa fine building, witha little tower in which there is a bell. Below and round about this building the market is properly kept every week. . Tue building of the Academy, is in the wettern 46 _ September 1748. weftern, part of the town. It was formerly as I have-before mentioned, a meeting-houfe of the followers of Whitefield, but they fold it,in the year 1750,,.and. it was deftined to be the feat of an. univerfity, or to exprefs myfelf in more exact terms, to be,a college, it was therefore fitted up to) this purpofe. The youths are here only taught thofe things which they learh in our. common {chools ; but in time, fuch leGiures are intended to be read _here,. as are ufual in real univerfities. At the clofe of the laft war, a,redoudbt was. erected here, on the fouth fide of the town, near the river, to prevent the French — and Spanifb privateers from landing., But | this was done after a very. {trong debate. For the quakers oppofed all fortifications, as contrary to the tenets, of their, religion, which allow not, chriftians to,.make war either, offenfive or defenfive, but dire them to place their, truft. in. the Almighty alone. Several papers were then handed about for and againit the opinion. ; But),the,enemy’s privateers having taken feveral | veffels be- longing to the. town,/in the. river, many of the quakers, if not all, of, them,-found it reafonable to forward.the building ofthe fortification as much as polities at leaft-by a fupply of money. cs a nae OF all the, natural advantages » of the towns Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 49 town,/its temperate cimate is the moft con- fiderable, the winter not being over fevere, andits duration but fhort, andthe fummernot too hot; the country round about bringing forth thofe fruits in the greateft plenty, which’ are raifed by hufbandry. Their September and Oéfober are like the beginning of the Swedi/h Augufi. And the firft days in their February are frequently as pleafant, as the end’ of Apri] and the beginning of May in Sweden. Even their coldeft days in fome winters have been no feverer, than the days at the end of autumn are in the mid- dlemoft parts of Sweden, and the fouthern ones of Finland. "Pre good and clear water in Philadelphia, is ikewife one of its advantages. For though there are’ no fountains in the town, yet there is a wel/ in every houfe, and feveral in the ftreets, all which afford excellent water for boiling, drinking, wafhing, and other ufes.. The water is commonly met with at the depth of forty feet. The water of the river Delaware is likewife good. But in making the wells, a fault is frequently ‘committed, which in feveral places of the town fpoils the water which is naturally good; Ifhall in the fequel take an oppor- tunity of {peaking further about it. | --°THe* Delaware is exceeding convenient poten f fie v 48, September 1748. for trade..It is one of the greateft rivers in the world: is three Englj/b miles broad at its mouth, two miles at the town of Wi/- mington, and three quarters of a mile at Philadelphia. This city hes within »ninety or an hundred Ezgli/h miles from the fea, or from -the place where the river Delaware difcharges itfelf into the bay of that name. Yet its depth is hardly ever lefs than five or fix fathom. The greateft thips: therefore can fail quite up to the town and anchor in good ground in five fathoms of water, on the fide of the bridge. The water here has no longer a faltith tafte, and therefore all deftructive worms, which have -faftened themfelyes to the {hips in. the feay and have pierced holes into them, either die, or drop off, after the fhip has been here fora while. Tue only difadvantage which trade la- bours under here, is the freezing of the ri- ver almoft every winter for a month or more. For during that time the navigati- on is entirely ftopped. But this does not happen at Bofton, New York, ae other towns which are nearer the feas 00 | Tue tide comes up to Philadelphia, and even goes thirty miles higher, to Trenton. The difference between high and low water is eight feet at Philadelphia.» . Tue cataracts of the ‘Delaware: near Trenton, Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 46 Trenton, and of the Skulkil] at fome diftance from Philadelphia, make thefe rivers ufelefs further up the country, in regard to the conveyance of goods either from or to Pd- lelpbia. Both muft therefore be carried on waggons or carts. It has therefore al- ready been thought of to make thefe two fivers navigable in time, at leaft for large boats and {mall veffels. 2 | | SeverRAL fhips are annually built. of American oak, in the docks which are made in feveral parts of the town and about it, yet they can by no means be put in comparifon with thofe built of European oak, in point of goodnefs and duration. . THE town carries on a great trade, both with the inhabitants of the country, and to other:parts of the world, efpecially to the Weft Indies, South America, and the Antilles ;. to England, Ireland, Portugal, and to: feveral Engl/h colonies in North Americas Yet none but Engli/b thips are allowed to come into this port. _ PHILADELPHIA reaps the greateft profits from its trade to the Wef Indies. For thi- ther the inhabitants fhip almoft every day’ a quantity of flour, butter, flefh and other victuals ytimber, plank and the like. In return they receive either fugar, molaffes, fum, indigo, mahogany, and other goods, sghey F D or 50 September 1748. or ready money... The true mahogany, which grows in famaica, is at prelenn: ae moft, all cut down, .'Tuey fend both Weft India goods, viet Gieavne productions to. England; the lat- ter are all forts of woods, efpecially black walnut, and oak planks for fhips; fhips ready built, iron, hides and tar. Yet this latter is properly bought in New Ferfey, the forefts of which province are confequently more ruined than any others... Ready mo- ney 1s likewife fent over to England, from whence in return they get all forts of goods there manufactured, viz. fine and coarfe cloth, linen, iron ware, and other wrought metals, and Eaft India goods. | For it is to be obferved that England fupplies Pdzladel- pita with almoft all ftuffs and manufactur- ed goods which are wanted here. , A GREAT quantity of linfeed goes annu- ally to Ireland, together with many of the fhips which are built here. | Portugal gets wheat, corn, flour and maize which is not ground. Spam fometimes takes fome corn. But all the money, which is got. in thefe feveral countries, muft immediately be fent to England, in payment for the goods which are got from thence, and yet thofe {ums are not fufficient to pay all the debts. i Burt to fhew more exactly, what. the town and province have imported from England Penfylvania, Philadelphia. st England, in different years, I ‘fhall here infert an extract from the Englj/h cuftom- -houfe books, which I got from the engi~ neer, Lewis Evans, at Philadelphia, and which will fufficiently anfwer the purpofe. This gentleman had defired one ‘of his friends in London to fend him a compleat account of all the goods fhipped from England to ‘Penfylvuania in feveral years. He got this account, and though the goods are not enumerated in it, yet their value in money is calculated. Such extracts from the cuftom-houfe books have been made for every ‘North-American province, in or- der to convince the Engl/h parliament, that thofe provinces have taken greater quantities of the goods in that kingdom, ever fince they have turned their money into bills. | I wave taken the copy from the original. itfelf, and it is to be obferved that it begins with the chriftmas of the year 1722, and ‘ends about the fame time of the year 1747. In the firft column is the value of the foreign goods, the duty for which has al- ready been paid in England. The fecond column fhews the value of the goods ma- nufactured in’ England and exported to Penfyluania:* “And in the laft column thefe two fums’ are added together, but at the bottom each’of the columns is caft up. : D2 Bur 52 September 1748. Bur this table does not include the goods which are annually, {hipped in great quantities to Penfylvanta from. Scotland and Ireland, a- mong which is a great quantity of Tinen. | The Value of the Goods annually thipped from ! feo a England to pS eit es , pe 358 | 15 or | The Sumsofthefe} ios Exel: i/o manufac-| |two preceding co- SSS, “tured Goods. lumns added to- | : S gether,. raped secow | 5409 1.13 T = esas ae 10301 | 12} iii. 44 10243 | oO £4.07;3: p ¥3 12948 | 8 15660 | 10. 11838 | 17 15240 | 14 13187 | oO 19648 | 15 18078 | 4 23456 iPad ee 20320 | 1g QO41 |. 4 10280 | 2 12977 |-¥8 14458) 6} 19220]. 3 14681 | 8 13043 | 8 18103 | 12 8585 ' 14 Xx as — mVIW NI CO Coun NY Be APH HPO KHONAP PO KN HO EN ONE | = = _ Wn fon] ener mS COP DAW O OCW W FOO COP Pp _ Lal -— ha A ED }Total. 343.789 16 0 969,049 1 6 1,312,838 17 6 Ramee ne cee Ss tT Pe ME ORT SIS IN TI A THE Penfyloania, Philadelphia. 53 - Tur whole extent of the Philadelphia trade may be comprehended from the num- ber of fhips, which annually arrive at and fail from this town. I intend to infert here a table of a few years which I have taken from the gazettes of the town. The fhips coming and going in one year, are to be reckoned from the twenty fifth of March of that year, to the twenty fifth of March of the next. | . ‘ ‘The Year. Ships arrived. Ships failed. 1735 199 212. 1740 307 208. 174! hel ez 309. 1744 229 ain: 1745. - 280 301. 1746 273 293. Burt it is much to be feared that the trade of Philadelphia, and of all the Engl colo- nies, will rather decreafe than encreafe, in cafe no provifion is made to prevent it. I fhall hereafter plainly fhew upon what foundation this decreafe of trade is likely to take place. | THE town not only furnifhes moft of the inhabitants of Penfylvania with the goods which they want, but numbers of D 3 the 54. September 1748. the inhabitants of New ferfey come wuery day-and carry ona great trade. 9) 8 THE town has two great fairs every years one in May, and the other in» November, both on the fixteenth days of thofe two months. But befides thefe fairs, there are every week two market days, viz. Wedne/- day and Saturday. On thofe days the coun- try people in Penfylvania and New Ferfey, bring to town a quantity of victuals, and other productions of the country, and this is a great advantage to the town. It is therefore to be wifhed-that the like regula- tion might be made in our Swedi/h towns. You are fure to meet with every produce of the feafon, which the country affords, on the market-days.. But on other ORP they are in. vain fought for.. Provisions are always to be got Gib here, and for that reafon moft of the inha- bitants never buy more at a time, than what will be fufficient till the next market-day. In fummer there is a market almoft every day; for the victuals do not keep well in the great heat.. There are two places. in the town where thefe markets are kept; but that near the court-houfe is the princi- pal. It begins about four or five o’clock in the morning, and ends about nine o'clock in the forenoon. Tur Penfyluania, Philadelphia. sy Tue town is not enclofed, and has*no sities 10 eae than - oat one for. the Gilpay sess a ‘Tue biovernor: of the whiole province lives here; and though he is nominated by' the heirs of Pen, yet he cannot take that office without being confirmed by the king” ‘of England. - THE quakers of almoft all parts of North= America, have their = affembly here once a year. In the-year 1743, 2 fociaty. for the ad- vancement of the {ciences was erected here. Its objets would have been the curiofities of the three kingdoms of nature, mathe- maticks, phyfick, chemiftry, ceconomy, and manufactures. But the war, which enfued immediately, {topped all defigns of this na- ture, and fince that time, nothing has been done towards eftablifhing any thing of this _ kind. ‘THE declination of the needle was nor obferved on'the thirtieth of Odfober 1750, old ftyle, to be five deg. and forty-five min. weft. It was examined by the new meridian, which was drawn at Philadelphia in the autumn of the fame year, and ex- tended a milein length. By experience it appears, that this declination leffens about a degree in twenty years time. D4 «VRS 56. | September 1748. - THe preate difference in the rifing and fallen of the barometer, is according to the obfervations made for feveral years to= gether by Mr. Fames Logan, found at 28” 59 and 30° 78. | Here are three printers, and every ‘ens two Engijh, and one German ereweipapat is printed. In the year 1732, on the fifth of Septem- ber, old ftyle, a little earthquake was felt here about noon, and at the fame time at Bofton in New England, and at Montreal in Canada, which places are above fixty Swe difh miles afunder. | In the month of November of the year 1737, the well known prince from mount Lebanon, Sheich Sidi came to Philadelphia, on his travels through moft of the Engl American colonies. And in the fame year a fecond earthquake was felt about eleven o'clock at night, on the feventh of Decem- ber. But it did not continue above. half a minute, and yet, it- was felt according to the accounts of the gazettes atthe fame hour in Newea/ile, New York, New London, Bofton, and other towns of New England. . It had. therefore likewife reached feveral miles. Tue count Sinzendorf * atrived here i in ud Head of the Moravian Brethren. F. 3 | the Penfylvanta, Philadelphia. 67 the December of the year 1741, and conti- nued till the next fpring. : His uncommon behaviour perfuaded many: Eugl/bmen of rank, that he was diferdered in his head. _ I wave not been able to find the. exact number of the inhabitants of Philadelphia. In the -year 1746, they were reckoned above ten thoufand, and fince that time. their number jis incredibly encreafed.. Neither can it be-made out from the Bills: of morta- lity, fince they are not kept regularly in all the churches:: I thall, however, mention fome of thofe which appeared either in the gazettes, or in bills printed on purpofe.. . Year: Dead::, Year.;Dead.|-Yeari; Dead. 1730 | 227 |[ 1741 | 345 1/1745" 420 738 {250 1] 1742 | 409 |] 1748] 672 1739 | 35° 1743 | 425 1 1749;) 758 1740 | 290} 1744 | 410 ]} 1750 ev From thefe bills of mariality it life ap- pears, that the difeafes which are the moft fatal, are confumptions, fevers, convulfi- ons, setae) hemorrhagies, and drop- a vee | ‘ Tuer number of thofe that are born can- not be determined, fince in many churches no order is obferved with regard to this af- fair. The quakers, who are the moft | . nume- 58 . « September 1748. numerous in this town, never baptize their children, though they take a pretty exact account of all who are born among them. Ir is likewife impoffible to guefs at the Miephcodt inhabitants from the dead, be- caufe the town gets fuch great fupplies an- nually from other countries. | In the fum- mer of the year 1749, near twelve thoufand - Germans came over to Philadelphia, many of whom ftaid in that town. In the fame year the houfes in PAzlade/pbra were count- ed, and found to be two thoufand and feven- ty fix in number. THE town is now quite filled witla inthe bitants, which in regard to their country, religion and trade, are very different from each other. : You meet with excellent mafters in all trades, and many things are made here full as well as in England. Yet no manufactures, efpecially for making fine cloth are eftablifhed. Perhaps the reafon is, that it can be got with fo little difficul- ty from England, and that the breed of theep which is brought over, degenerates in pro- cefs of time, and affords but a coarfe wool. HERE is great plenty of provifions, and their prices are very moderate, There are no examples of an extraordinary dearth. _.Every one who acknowledges God to be the Creator, preferver and ruler of all things, Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 59 things, and teaches or undertakes nothing againft the ftate, or ‘againit the common peace, is at liberty to fettle, ftay, ‘and ‘car- ry on his trade here, be his religious prin- ciples ever fo ftrange. No one is here mo- lefted on account of the erroneous princi- ples of the doctrine which he follows, if he does not exceed the above-mentioned bounds. And he is fo well fecured by the laws in his perfon and property, and enjoys fuch liberties; that a citizen of Philadelphia may in a manner be faid to live in his houfelike a king. - Ow a careful confideration of what Ihave already faid, it will be eafy to conceive how this citv fhould rife fo fuddenly from no- thing, into fuch grandeur and perfection, without fuppofing any powerful monarch’s contributing to it, either by punifhing the wicked, or by giving great fupplies in mo- ney. And yet its fine appearance, good regulations, agreeable fituation, natural ad- vantages, trade, riches and power, are by no means inferior to thofe of any, even of the moft ancient towns in Europe. It has not been neceflary to force people to come and fettle here ; on the contrary foreigners of different languages, have left their coun- try, houfes, property and relations, and ventured over wide and ftormy feas, in order | to 60 September 1748. to come hither. Other countries, which have been peopled for a long fpace of time, complain of the fmall number of their in- habitants. But Pen/ylvania, which was no better than a defart in the year 1681, and hardly contained five hundred people, now vies with feveral kingdoms in Europe, in number of inhabitants. It has received numbers of people which other countries, to their infinite lofs, have either pices or expelled. ‘A WRETCHED old wooden building, on a hill near the river fomewhat north of the Wickako church, belonging to one of the Sons of Sven, of whom, as before-mention- ed, the ground was bought for building Philadelphia upon, is preferved on purpofe, as a memorial of the poor ftate of that place, before the town was built on it. Its antiquity gives it a kind of fuperiority over all the other buildings in town, though in itfelf the worft of all. This hut was in- habited, whilft as yet ftags, deers, elks, and beavers, at broad day light lived in the future ftreets, church-yards, and market- places of Philadelphia. The noife of a fpin= ning wheel was heard in this houfe, before the manufactures now eftablifhed were thought of, or Philadelphia built. But with all thefe advantages, this houfe is ready to fall Penfyluania, Philadelphia. Gr fall down, and in a. few years to come, it will be as difficult to find the place where. it ftoad, as it was unlikely at the time of its erection, that one of the greateft towns ‘in America, fhould in a fhort time ftand. clofe up to it. September the 7th. Mr. Peter Cock, a merchant of this town, aflured me that he had laft week himfelf been a fpectator of a fnake’s {wallowing a little bird. This bird, which from its cry has the name of Cat bird, ( Mufeicapa Carolinenfis,, Linn.) flew from. one branch of a tree to another, and was making a doleful tune. At the bot- _, tom. of the tree, but ata fathom’s diftance ~~ from the ftem, lay one of the great black fnakes, with its head continually upright, pointing towards the bird, which was al- ways fluttering about, and now and then fettling on the branches. At firft it only kept in the topmoft branches, but by de- grees it came lower down, and even, few upon the ground, and hopped to the place where the fnake lay, which immediately opened its mouth, caught the bird and {wallowed it,; but it had fcarce finithed. its repaft before Mr. Cock came up and killed it. BE was afterwards told that this kind of fnakes was: frequently obferved to purfue little birds in this manner. It is already well ~~, , 4 a | 62 September v748.0 well:known that the rattle {nake does: the fame. | - LWwaALrKkep out to day into ‘the fields ia: order to get more acquainted. with the: plants hereabouts, I found feveral European and even Swedifh plants among them. But. thofe which are’ peculiar to dmericas: are much more numerous Tue Virginian maple grows in olen it on the fhores of the Delaware. The Englib in this country call it either Buttonwood, or Waterbeech, which latter name is moft ufual. The Swedes call it Wattenbok, or Wafook. Itis Linneus’s Platanus cor rept See Cate/by’s Nat. Hitt. of Carolina, vol. p. 56.t. 56. It grows for the greateft ect in low places, but efpecially on the edge of rivers and brooks. But thefe trees are eafily tranfplanted to more dry places, if they be only filled with good foil; and as their leaves are large and their foliage thick, they are planted about the houfes and in gardens, to afford a pleafant fhade in the hot feafon, to the enjoyment of which fome feats were placed under them. Some of the Swedes had boxes, pails, and the like, made of the bark of this tree by _ the native Americans. They fay that thofe people whilft they were yet fettled here, made little dithes of this bark for gathering whort- - Penfylvania, - Philadelphia. 63 whortleberries. The -bark was a line in thicknefs. This tree likewife grows»in marthes, or in fwampy fields, where, ath | and.red, maple commonly grow... They are frequently as tall and, thick, as the beft of our fir trees. The feed ftays on them till {pring, but in the middle of 4pri/ the pods open and fhed the feeds. Query, Whether they are not ripe before that time, and confequently fooner fit for fowing?, This American maple is remarkable for its quick growth, in which it exceeds all other trees. _ There are fuch numbers of them on the low meadows between Philadelphia and the ferry at Gloucefler, on both fides of the road, that in fummer time you go as.it were through a fhady walk. In that part of Philadelphia which is near the Swedish church, fome great trees of this kind ftand on the fhore of theriver. Inthe year 1750, on the 15th. of May I faw the buds ftill on them, and in the year 1749 they began to flower on the eighth of that month. Several trees of this fort are planted at Chel/fea near London, and they now in point of height vie with. the talleft oak. September the 18th. In the morning I went with the Swedi/> painter, Mr. Heffe- us, to the country feat of. Mr. Bartram, which is about four Englij/b. miles to the | " or tOHER 64 September 1748. fouth of Philadelphia, at fome diftance from the high road to Maryland, Virginia, and Carolina. 1 had therefore the firft oppor- tunity Fore: of getting an exact knowledge of the ftate of the country, which was a plain covered with all kinds of trees with deciduous leaves. The ground was fandy, mixed with clay. But the fand feemed to be in greater quantity. In fome parts the wood was cut down, and we faw the ha- bitations of fome country people, whofe corn-fields and plantations were pound their farm-houfes. The wood was full of mul- befry-trees, walnut-trees of feveral kinds, chefnut-trees, faffafras, and the like. Se- veral forts of wild vines clafped their ten- drils round, and climbed up to the fummits of the higheft trees; and in other places they twined round the enclofures, fo thick, that the latter almoft funk down undér | their weight. The Perfmon, or Diofpyros Virginiana, Linn. {p. pl. p. 1510, grew . in the marthy fields, and about fprings. Its little apples looked very well already, but are not fit for eating, before the froft has affeét- ed them, and then they have a very fine tafte. Heffehus gathered fome of them, and defired my fervant to tafte of the fruifs of the land; but this poor credulous fellow, had hardly bit into them, when he felt the qualities Penfyluania, Philadelphia. be qualities they have before the froft has pe- fetrated them. For they contracted his mouth fo that he could hardly fpeak, and had a very difagreeable.tafte. This dif- gufted him fo much that he was with dif- ficulty perfuaded to tafte of it during the whole of our ftay in America, notwithftand- ing it lofes all its acidity and acquires an agreeable flavour in autumn and towards the beginning of winter. For the fellow always imagined, that though he fhould eat them ever fo late in the year, they would ftill retain the fame difagreeable tafte. 3 » To fatisfy the curiofity of thofe, who are willing to know, how the woods look in this country, and whether or no the trees in them are the fame with thofe found in our forefts, I here infert a {mall catalogue of thofe which grow f{pontaneoufly in the woods which are neareft to Philadelphia. But I exclude fuch fhrubs as do not attain any con- fiderable. height. I fhall put that tree firft in order, which is moft plentiful, and fo on with the reft, and therefore trees which I have found but fingle, re near the town, will be laft. - Querews alba, the white oak in good grounds” _ | a 2. Quercus \ 66 September 1748. 2. Quercus rubra, or the black oak... 3. Quercus bifpanica, the Spanifb oak, re variety of the preceding. A. Fuglans alba, hiccory, a kind of ee nut tree, of which three or four varieties. are to. be met with. . Rubus occidentalis, or American a berry fhrub. 6. Acer rubrum, the maple tree with red flowers, in {wamps. 7. Rhus glabra, the {mooth leaved Su- mach, in the woods, on high PAR hs and old corn-fields. 8. Vitis labrufca and Vi ulpinay vines of feveral kinds. g: Sambucus canadenfis, American Elder tree, along the hedges and on glades. Quercus pbellos, the 1wamp oak, in moraffes. 11. Azalea lutea, the American upright honey-fuckle, in the woods in dry places. 12. Crategus Crus gall, the Virginian Azarole, in woods. 13. Vaccinum ------- » in pipaetes ic of whortleberry fhrub. 14. Quercus prinus, the chefnut oak in good ground. 15. Cornus florida, the cornelian cherry, in all kinds of ground. 16. Liriodendron Tulipifera, the ‘tulip tree, in Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 67 in évery kind of foil. 17. Prunus virginiana, the wild cherry tree. | 18. Vaccinium -+-2---, a frutex whor- tleberry; in good ground. 19. Prinos verticillatus, the winterberry tree in fwamps. | 20. Platanus occidentalis, the water-beech. 21. Nyffa aquatica, the tupelo tree; on fields and mountains.* : | 22. Liguidambar ftyracifiua, {weet gum tree, near fprings. , 23. Betula Alnus, alder, a variety of the Swedi/h; it was here but a fhrub. 24. Fagus caftanea, the chefnut tree, on corn-fields, paftures, and in little woods. 25. ‘Fuglans nigra, the black walnut tree, in the fame place with the preceding tree. 26. Rhus radicans, the twining fumach, climbed along the trees. _ 27. Aeer Negundo, the afh-leaved maple, in morafies and {wampy places. 28. Prunus domeftica, the wild plumb tree. 29. Ulmus Americana, the white elm. * Dr. Linnaeus mentions only one fpecies of Nyfz, namely Nyffa aquatica; Mr. Kalm does not mention the name of the {pecies ; but if his is not a different {pecies, it muft at leaft be a variety, fince he fays it grows on hills, whereas the aguatica $tows in the water. F E 2 30. Pru- 68 September 1748. 30. Prunus fpinofa, foe fhrub, in- ‘low: places. 31. Laurus faffafras, the faflafras tree, in a loofe foil mixed with fand. 32. Ribes nigrum, the currant tree, grew ~ in low places and in marfhes. 33. Praxinus excelfor, the afh tree in low places. 34. Smilax laurifolia, the rough bind weed with the bay leaf, in woods and on _ pales or enclofures. | 35. Kalmia latifolia, the American dwarf laurel, on the northern fide of mountains. 36. Morus rubra, the mulberry tree on fields, hills and near the houfes. 37. Rhus vernix, the poifonous Sumach, m wet places. 38. Quercus rubra, the red oak, but a peculiar variety. 1 39. Hamamehs virginica, the witch hazel. 40. Dio/pyros virginiana, the perfimon. 41. Pyrus coronaria, the anchor tree. 42. Funiperus virginiana, the red juniper, in a dry poor foil. 43. Laurus e@fivalis, {pice-wood in a wet foil. 44. Carpinus oftrya,a{pecies of horn beam in a good foil. — 45. Carpinus betulus, a horn beam, in — the fame kind of foil with the former. 46. Fagus Penfylvuania, Philadelphia. 69 » 46. Fagus fylvatica, the beech, likewife _ in good foil. eas Pag. Feslans, ------ , a fpecies of wal- nut tree on hills near rivers,* called by the Swedes Butternufire. a 48. Pinus Americana, Penfylvanian fir tree; en the north fide of mountains, and in vallies. -- , 49. Betula lenta, a f{pecies of birch, on the banks of rivers. 50. Cepbalantus occidentahs, button wood, in wet places. — 51. Pinus teda, the New Ferfey fir tree, on dry fandy heaths. | 52. Cercis canadenfis, the fallad tree, in a good foil. 53- Robinia pfeudacacia, the locuft tree, on the corn-fields. 54. Magnoha glauca, the laurel-leaved tulip tree, in marfhy foil. 55. Liha Americana, the lime tree, in a good foil. 56. Gleditha triacanthos, the honey locuft tree, or three thorned acacia, in the fame foil. 57. Celtis oceidentals, the nettle tree, in the fields. : 58. Annona muricata, the cuftard apple in a fruitful foil. | oN 58. An- Tg Quere. As this the Fuglans baccata of Linneus? F. + This fpecies is not to be met with in Linn, fpec. plant. F. 70 September 1748. We vifited feveral Swedes, who were fettled here, and were at prefent in very good circumftances. One of them was called Andrew Rambo; he had a fine houfe built of ftone, two ftories high, and a great orchard near it, We were every where well received, and ftayed over night with the above-mentioned countryman. . We faw no other marks of autumn,- than that feveral fruits of this feafon were already ripe. For befides this all the trees were yet as green, and the ground {till as,much co- vered with flowers, as in our fummer. Thoufands of frogs croaked all the night long in the marfhes and brooks. | Thelo- cufts and grafshoppers made likewife fuch a great noife, that it was hardly pofflible for one perfon to underftand another... The trees too, were full of all forts of birds, which by the variety of their fine plumage, delighted the eye, while the infinite varie- ty of their tunes were continually re-echoed. Tue orchards, along which we paffed to- day, were only enclofed by hurdles. But they contained all kinds of fine fruit.. We wondered at firft very much when our lead- er leaped over the hedge into the orchards, and gathered fome agreeable fruit for us. But our aftonifhment was ftill greater, when we {aw that the people in the garden were fo Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 71 {o little concerned at it, as not even to look at us. But our companion told us, that the people here were not fo exact in regard to a few fruits, as they are in other countries where the foil is not fo fruitful in them. We afterwards found very frequently. that the country people in Sweden and Finland guarded their turneps more carefully, than - the people here do the moft exquifite fruits. September the 19th. As I walked this morning into the fields, I obferved that a copious dew was fallen; for the grafs was as ‘wet as if it had rained. ‘The leaves of the plants and trees, had contracted fo much moifture, that the drops ran down. I found on this occafion that the dew was not only on the fuperior, but likewife on y. the inferior fide of the leaves. I therefore carefully confidered many leaves both of trees and of other plants; both of thofe which are more above, and of thofe which are nearer to the ground. But I found in all of them, that both fides of the leaves were equally bedewed, except thofe of the Verbafcum Thapfus, or great Mullein, which though their fuperior fide was pretty well covered with the dew, yet their inferior had but a little. | Every countryman, even a common peafant, has commonly an orchard near Ba his 72 September 1948. his houfe, in which all forts of fruit, fach” as peaches, apples, pears, cherries, . and: others, are in plenty. The peaches were now almoft ripe. They are rare in Europe, particularly in Sweden, for in that country hardly any people befides the rich tafte them. But here every countryman had an orchard full of peach trees, which were covered with fuch quantities of fruit, that we could fcarcely walk in the orchard, without treading upon thofe peaches which were fallen off; many of which were always Jeft on the ground, and only part of them was fold in town, and the reft was confu- med by the family and itrangers 5 for every one that paffed by, was at liberty to go in- to the orchard, and to gather as many of them as|he wanted. Nay, this fine fruit was frequently given to the fwine. Tus fruit is however fometimes kept for winter ufe, and for this purpofe they are prepared in the following manner. The fruit is cut into four parts, the ftone thrown away, and the fruit put upon a thread, on which they are expofed to the funfhine in the open air, till they are fuffi- ciently dry. They are then put into a vef- fel for winter. But this manner of drying them is not very good, becaufe the rain of this feafon very saat fpoils and putrifies them, Pe nafy lvanta ’ P hiladelphia z ' 7 3 them, whilft they hang in the open air. For this reafon a different method is fol- lowed by others, which is by far the moft eligible. The peaches are as before cut into four parts, are then either put upon a thread, or laid upon a board, and fo hung up in the air when the fun fhines. Being dried in fome meafure, or having loft their juice by this means, they are put into an oven, out of which the bread has but juft been taken, and are left in it fora while. But they are foon taken out and brought into the frefh air; and after that they are again put into the oven, and this is repeated feveral times till they are as dry as they ought to be. For if they were dried up at once in the oven, they would fhrivel up too much, and lofe part of their flavour. They are then put up and kept for the winter. They are either baked into tarts and pyes, or boiled and prepared as dried apples and pears are in Sweden. Several people here dry and preferve their apples in the fame manner as their peaches. Tue peach trees, have, as I am told, been firft planted here by the Europeans. But at prefent they fucceed very well, and require even lefs care, than our apple and pear trees. - Tue orchards have feldom other fruit i i than 74 September 1748. than apples and peaches. Pear trees are fcarce,in this province, and thofe that had any of them, had planted them in their orchards. They likewife have cher- ry trees in the orchards, but commonly on the fides of them towards the houfe, or along the enclofures. Mulberry trees are planted on fome hillocks near the houfe, and fometimes even in the court yards of the houfe. The black walnut trees, or Fuglans nigra, grow partly on hills, and in fields near the farm-houfes, and partly along the enclofures ; but moft commonly in the forefts. No other trees of this kind, ‘are made ufe of here. The chefnuts are left in the fields; here and there is one in adry field or in a wood. Tue Hibifcus efculentus, or Okra,* is a plant which grows wild in the Weft Indies, but is planted in the gardens here. The fruit, which is a long pod, is cut whilftit is green, and boiled in foups, which there- by become as thick as pulfe. This difh is reckoned a dainty by fome people, and ef- pecially by the negroes. Capsicum annuum, or Guinea pepper is likewife planted in gardens. When the fruit _ .* In Miller’s Garden, Diétionary, it is called Ketmia Ind:- ca folio ficus, frudiu pentagono, recurvo efculento, graciliori, et dongiori. Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 7% fruit is ripe it is almoft entirely red, it is put to a roafted-or boiled piece of meat, a little of it being ftrewed. upon it, or mixed with the broth. Befides this, cucumbers are pickled with it. Or the pods are pounded whilft they are yet tender, and be- ing mixed with falt are preferved in a bot- tle; and this {pice is ftrewed over roafted or boiled meat, or fried fifh, and gives them a very fine tafte. But the fruit by itfelf is as biting as common pepper. : Tus country contains many fpecies of the plant, which Dr. Linnaeus calls Rhus, and the moft common is the Rhus fohis pin- natis ferratis lanceolates retrinque nudis, or the Rhus glaora. The Engijfh call this plant Sumach. But the Swedes here, have no particular name for it, and therefore make ufe of the Engljh name. Its berries or fruits are red. They are made ufe of for dying, and afford a colour like their own. This tree is like a weed in this country, for if a corn-field is left uncultivated for fome few years together, it grows on it in plen- ty, fince the berries are {pread every where by the birds.. And when the ground is to be ploughed the roots ftop the plough very much. The fruit ftays on the fhrub during the whole winter. But the leaves drop very early in autumn, after'they are | —*"" tugned 76 September 1748. turned reddifh, like thofe of our Swedih mountain afh. The branches boiled with the berries afford a black ink like tin@ture. The boys eat the berries, there being no danger of falling fick after the repatt ; ~but they are very four. They feldom grow above three yards high. On cutting the ftem, it appears that it contains nothing but pith. [have cut feveral in this man- ner, and found that fome were ten years old; but that moft of them were above one year old. When the cut is made, a yellow juice comes out between the bark and the wood.' One or two of the moft outward. circles are white, but the inner- moft are of a yellowifh green. Itis eafy to diftinguifh them one from another. They contain a very plentiful pith, the diameter of which is frequently half an inch, and fometimes more.- It is brown, and fo loofe that it is eafily pufhed out by a little ftick, in the fame manner as the pith of the elder tree, rafpberry and blackberry bufhes.' This fumach grows near the enclofures, round the corn-fields, but efpecially on fallow ground. The wood feemed to burn well, and made no great crackling in the fire. September the zoth. In the morning we walked in the fields and woods near the town, ee Penfyloania, Philadelphia. 7 town, partly for gathering feeds, and partly for gathering plants for my herbal, which was our principal occupation ; and in the autumn of this year, we fent part of our collection to Exgland and Sweden. | » A species of Rhus, which was frequent in the marfhes here was called the poi/on | tree by both Engli/b and Swedes. Some of the former gave it the name of -fwamp- fumach, and my country-men gave it the fame name. Dr. Linneus in his botanical works calls it Rous Vernix. Sp. pl. 1. 380. Flora Virgin. 45. An incifion being made into the tree, a whitifh yellow juice, which has a naufeous {mell, comes out between the bark and the wood. This tree is not known for its good qualities, but greatly fo for the effect of its poifon, which though it is noxious to fome people, yet does not in the leaft affeG@ others. And therefore one perfon can handle the tree _. as he pleafes, cut it, peel off its bark, A‘ tub it, or the wood upon his hands, fmell.at it, fpread the juice upon his {kin, and make more experiments, with no inconvenience to himfelf ; another perfon on the contrary dares not meddle with the tree, while its wood is frefh, nor can he venture to touch a hand which has handled it, nor even to expofe himfelf to the fmoak of a fite which Ws made with this wood, without foon ‘feeling 78 _ September 1748. feeling its bad effefis; for the face, the hands, and frequently the whole body fwells exceflively, and is affected with a very accute’ pain. . Sometimes bladders or blifters arife in great plenty, and make the ‘fick perfon look as if he was infected by a leprofy. In fome people the external thin fkin, or cuticle, peels of in a few days, as is the cafe when a perfon has fcalded or burnt any part of his body. Nay, the nature of fome perfons” will not even allow them to approach the place where the tree grows, or to'expofe themfelves to the wind, when it carries the effluvia or exhalations of this tree with it, without letting them feel the inconvenience of the fwelling, which I have juft now defcribed. Their eyes are fometimes fhut up for one, or two and more days together by the {welling. _1 know two brothers, one of whom could without danger handle this tree in what manner he pleafed, where- as the other could not come near it with- out {welling. A perfon fometimes does not know that he has touched this poifonous plant, or that he has been near it, before his face and hands fhews it by their fwel~ ling. I have known old people who were more afraid of this tree than of a viper; and I was acquainted with a perfon who merely by the noxious exhalations of it TN « = Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 79 was {welled-to fuch a degree, that he was as | ftiff as a log of wood, and could only be turned. about in fheets. Qn relating in the winter of the year 1750, the poifonous qualites of the {wamp fumach to my Yung firem, who attended me on. my travels, he only laughed, and looked upon the whole as a fable, in which opinion he was confirmed by: his having is handled. the tree the autumn before, cut many branches of it, which he had carried for a good while in his hand in order to preferve its feeds, and put many into the herbals, and allthis, without feel- ing the Jeaft inconvenience. He would therefore, being a kind of philofopher in his own way, take nothing for granted of which he had no fufficient proofs, efpeci- ally as he had his own experience in the fummer of the year 1749, to fupport the contrary opinion. . But in the next fummer his fyftem of philofophy was overturned. For his hands {welled and he felt a violent pain; and itching in his eyes as foon as he touched the tree, and this inconvenience not only attended him when he meddled with this kind of fumach, but even when he had any thing to do with the Rhus ra- — dicans, ov that {pecies of fumach which climbs along the trees, and is not by far fo a3 poifonous 80 September 1748. anceps asthe former. By this adventure ie was fo convinced of the power’ of the poifon tree, that I could not eafily perfuade him to gather more feeds of it for me. But he not only felt the noxious effects of it in fummer when he was very hot, but even in. winter when both he and the wood were cold. Hence it appears that though a perfon be fecured againft the power of this poifon for fome time, yet that in length of time he may be affected with it as well, | as people of a weaker conftitution. |)” I wave likewife tried experiments of every kind with the poifon tree on°myfelf. I have f{pread its juice upon my hands, cut and broke its branches, peeled off its bark, and rubbed my hands with it, fmelt at it, carried pieces of it in my bare hands, and repeated all this frequently, without feel= _ ing the baneful effects fo commonly annex- ed-to it; but I however once experienced that the poifon of the fumach was not en- ‘tirely without effect upon me. On a hot day in fummer, as I was in fome degree of perfpiration, I cut a branch of the tree, and carried it| in my hand for about half an hour together, and {melt at it now and then. I felt no effects from it, till-in the evening. But next morning I awoke with a violent itching of my eye-lids, ‘and the parts Penfylvania, Philadelphia. - 81 parts thereabouts, and this was fo painful, that I could hardly keep my hands from it. It ceafed after I had wafhed my eyes for a while, with very cold water. But my eye-lids were very ftiff all that day. At night the itching returned, ‘and in the morning as I awoke, I felt it as ill as the morning before, and I ufed the fame reme- dy againft it. However it continued almoft for a whole week together, and my eyes were very red, and my eye-lids were with difficulty moved, during all that time. My pain ceafed entirely afterwards. About the fame time, I had {pread the juice of the tree very thick upon my hand. Three days after they occafioned blifters, which foon went off without affeQing me much. [| have not experienced any thing more of the effects of this plant, nor had I any defire fo todo. However I found that it could not exert its power upon me, when I was not °\ perfpiring. >I wave never heard that the poifon of this Sumach has been mortal ; but the pain ceafes after a few days duration. The na- tives formerly made their flutes of this tree, becaufe it has a great deal of pith. Some people affured me, that a perfon fuffering from its noifome exhalations, would eafily recover by {preading a mixture of the wood, F burnt 82 September 1748. burnt to charcoal, and hog’s lard, upon the {welled parts. Some afferted that they had really tried this remedy. In fome places this tree is rooted out on purpofe, that its poifon may not affect the workmen. . I RECEIVED to day, feveral curiofities belonging to the mineral kingdom, which were collected in the country. The fol- lowing were thofe which were moft worth attention. The firft was a white, and quite tranfparent cryftal.* Many of this kind are found in Pen/fylvania, in feveral kinds of ftone, efpecially in a pale-grey limeftone. The pieces are of the thicknefs and length of the little finger, and commonly as tran- {parent as poffible. But I have likewife got cryftals here, of the length of a foot, and of the thicknefs of a middle-fized man’s leg. They were not fo tranfparent as the former. THE cubic Pyrites of Bifbop Browallius,-+ was of a very regular texture. But its cubes were different in fize, for in fome of the * Nitrum Cryftallus nowt Linn. Syft. nat. 3. p- 84. Cryftallus hexagona pellucida non Colorata. Wallerius : Mihers: logy, p- 100. Cryftallus montana, colourlefs cryftal. For- frer’s Introd. to Mineralogy, p. 13. + Pyrites cryftallinus, Linn. Syft. nat. 3. p. 113. Marcha- fit@e hexaétdrice teffélares. Wallerius’s Mineralogy, p. 211. Marcafita, vel cryftalli pyritacet, Marcafites, Forfter’s Introd.: to Mineralogy, p. 39. Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 8, the cubes, the planes of the fides only amounted to a quarter of an inch, but in the biggeft cubes, they were full two inch- es. Some were excecdingly glittering, fo that it was very eafy to be perceived that they confifted of fulphureous pyrites. But in fome one or two fides only, glittered fo well, and the others were dark-brown. Yet moft of thefe marcafites had this fame colour on all the fides. On breaking them they fhewed the pure pyrites. They are found near Lancafter in this province, and fometimes lie quite above the ground; but commonly they are found at the depth of eight feet or more from the furface of the ground, on digging wells and the like. Mr. Heffehus had feveral pieces of this kind of ftone, which he made ufe of in his work. He firft burnt them, then pounded or ground them to a powder, and at laft rubbed them ftill finer in the ufual way, and this afforded him a fine reddifh- brown colour. : Few dlack pebbles are found in this pro- vince, which on the other hand yields ma- ny kinds of marble, efpecially a white one, with pale-grey bluifh fpots, which is found. in a quarry at the diftance of a few Engli/h miles from Philadelphia, and is very good ee ee for 84 September 1748. for working, though it is not one of the fineft kind of marbles. They make many tombitones and tables, enchafe chimneys and doors, floors of marble flags in the rooms, and the like of this kind of marble. A quantity of this commodity is hippes to different parts of America. Muscovy gilafs,* is found in many pla- ces hereabouts, and fome pieces of it are pretty lar Bes and as fine as thofe which. are brought from Rufia.. I have feen fome of them, which were a foot and more in length. And J have feveral in my collec- tion that are nearly nine inches {quare. The Swedes on their firft arrival here made their windows of this native glafs. - A PALE grey fine limeftone,+ of a com- pact texture, lies in many places hereabouts, and affords a fine lime. Some pieces. of it are fo full of fine tranfparent cryftals, that almoft half of the ftene confifts of nothing elfe. But befides this limeftone, they make lime * Mica membranacea, Linn. Syk. nat. 3. p. 58. Micamembranacea pellucidiffima flexilis alba, Wallerius’s Min. . 120. Ruffian glais, Mufcovy glafs, Mfinglafs, Vitrum ruthenicumy Vitrum Maria. Forfter’s Introd. to Mineralogy, p. 18. + Marmor rude, Linn. Syft. nat. 3. p. 41. Calcareus particulis Seintillantibus. Wall. Min. Calcareus fcintillans, glittering limeftone. F orfters Introd? to Mineral. p. g. Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 85 lime néar the fea-fhore, from oyfter fhells, and bring it to town in winter, which is faid to be worfe for mafonry, but better for white-wafhing, than that which is got from the limeftone. . jet ~ CoAts have not yet been found in Pen- fyloania ; but people pretend to have feen them higher up in the country among the natives. Many péople however agree that they are met with in great quantity more to the north, near Cape Breton.*® Tue ladies make wine from fome of the fruits of the land. They principally take white and red currants for that purpofe, fince the fhrubs of this kind are very plen- tiful in the gardens, and fucceed very well. An old failor who had frequently been in New-foundland, told me that red currants grew wild in that country in great quanti- ty. They likewife make a wine of ftraw- berries, which grow in great plenty in the woods, but are fourer than the Sweai/h ones. The American blackberries, or Rubus occidentalis, are likewife made ufe of for this purpofe, for they grow every where about the fields, almoft as abundantly as ONS ps thiftles * Tus Has been confirnied, fince Cape Breton is in the hands of the Englifh, and it is reported that the ftrata of coals run through the whole ifle, and fome baffet out to day near the fea-fhore, fo that this ifle will afford immenfe trea- fures of coals, when the government will find it convenient, to have them dug for the benefit of the Nation. F. 86 September 1748. thiftles in Sweden, and have a very agreea=’ ble tafte. In Maryland a wine is madeof . the wild grapes, which growin the woods — of that province. Rafpberries and cherries which are planted on purpofe, and taken great care of, likewife afford a very fine wine. . It 1s unneceflary to give an account . of the manner of making the currant wine, for in Sweden this art is in higher perfe@ion than in North America. September the 21ft. ‘THE common ua or Liguftrum vulgare, Linn. grows among the bufhes in thickets and woods. But I cannot determine whether it belongs to the indigenous plants, or to thofe which the Englih have introduced, the fruits of which the birds may have difperfed every where. _ The enclofures and pales are generally made here of wooden planks and pofts.. But a — few good ceconomifts, having already thought of fparing the woods for future times, have begun to plant quick hedges round their fields; and to this purpofe they take the above-mentioned privet, which they plant in a little bank, which is thrown up for it. The foil every where hereabouts is aclay mixed with fand, and of courfe very loofe. The privet hedges however, are only adapted to the tamenefs of the cattle and other animals here; for the hogs | all Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 87 all have a. triangular yoke about © their necks, and the other cattle are not ‘very ‘unruly. But in fuch places where the cat- tle break through the enclofures, hedges of this kind would make but a poor defence. The people who live in the neighbourhood of Philadelphia, are obliged to keep = hogs enclofed. » In the afternoon I rode with Mr. Peter Cock, who was a merchant, born at Kar/- Seren in Sweden, to his country feat, about nine miles from the town, to the north- weit. 7 . Tue country on both fides of the road was covered with a great foreft. The trees were all with annual leaves, and I did not fee a fingle fir'or pine. Moft of the trees were different forts of oak. But we like- wife faw chefnut trees, walnut trees, locuft trees, appletrees, hiccory, blackberry bufh- es, and the like. The ground ceafed to be fo even as it was before, and began to look more like the Exgij/h ground, diverfi- fied with hills and vallies. We found nei- ther mountains nor great ftones, and the wood was fo much thinned, and the ground fo uniformly even, that we could fee a great way between the trees, under which we rode without any inconvenience ; for there - were no bufhes'to ftop us. In fome places F 4 where 88 September 1748. where the foil was thrown up, we faw fome little ftones of that kind of which the houfes here are fo generally built. I. intend to deferibe them in the fequel. nt _ As we went on in the wood, we conti- nually faw at moderate diftances little fields, which had been cleared of the wood. Each of thefe was a farm. Thefe farms were commonly very pretty, and a walk of trees. frequently led from them to the high- road. The houfes were all built of brick, or of the ftone which is here every where to be met with. Every countryman, even though he were the pooreft peafant, had an orchard with apples, peaches, chefnuts, walnuts, cherries, quinces, and fuch fruits, and fometimes we faw the vines climbing along them. The vallies were frequently provided with little brooks’ which contain- ed a cryftal ftream. The corn on the fides of the road, was almoft all mown; and no other grain befides maize and buckwheat was ftanding. The former was to be met with near each farm, in greater or lefler quantities ; it grew very well and to a great length, the ftalks being from fix to ten foot high, and covered with fine green leaves. Buckwheat likewife was not very uncom- mon, and in fome places the people were beginning to reap it. I intend in ‘the fe- | quel Penfylvuania, Germantown. 89 quel to be more particular about the quali- ties and ufe of thefe kinds of corn. _ Arrer aride of fix Engh/b miles, we . came to Germantown; this town has only one ftreet, but is near two Engh/h miles long. It is for the greateft part inhabited by Germans, who from time to time come from their country to North America, and fettle here, becaufe they enjoy fuch privileges, as they are not poflefied of any where elfe. Moft of the inhabitants are tradefmen, and make almoft every thing in fuch quantity and perfeQion, that in a fhort time this province will want very lit- tle from England, its mother country. Moft of the houfes were built of the ftone which is mixed with glimmer, and found every where towards Philadelphia, but is more fearce further on. Several houfes however were made of brick. They were commonly two ftories high, and fometimes higher. The roofs confifted of fhingles of the white cedar wood. Their fhape refem-~ bled that of the roofs in Sweden, but the angles they formed at the top were either obtuie; right angled, or acute, according as the flopes were fteep or eafy. They fomeétimes formed either the half of an octogon, or the half of a dodecagon. _ Manyoof the roofs were made in fuch a | manner, go September 1748. manner, that they could be walked upon; having a baluftrade round them... Many of the upper ftories had balconies before them, from whence the people had a. profpect in- to the ftreet. The windows, even thofe in the third ftory, had fhutters. . Each houfe had a fine garden. The town had three churches, one for the lutherans, .another for the reformed proteftants, and the third for the quakers. The inhabitants were fo numerous, that the ftreet was always. full. The baptifts have likewife a meeting-houtfe. _ September the 22d. After I had been at church, I employed the remainder of the day in converfing with the moft confidera- ble people in town, who had lived here for a long while, and I enquired 4 into the curi- ofities hereabouts. Mr. Cock had a. fine Soria near his country feat; it came from. a fandy: hill, and afforded water enough conftantly to fill, a little brook. Juft above this {pring Mr. Cock had erected a building from thofe above-mentioned glittering {tones, into which were put many, jugs, and other ear- then vefiels full of milk; for it kept very well in cold water during the great heat with which the fummer is*attended here. I AFTERWARDS met with many houfes which were fituated like this on fprings, : and Penfyluania, Germantown. gt meat and milk freth. ~ AtmosT all the enclofures round the corn-fields and meadows hereabouts, were made of planks faftened in a horizontal di-. rection. ‘I only perceived a hedge of privet in one fingle place. The enclofures were not made like ours, for the people here take pofts from four to fix feet in height, and make two or three holes into them, fo that there was a diftance of two feet and above between them. Such a poft does the fame fervice as two, and fometimes three poles are fearce fufficient. The pofts were faftened in the ground, at two or three fa- thoms diftance from each other, and the holes in them kept up the planks, which were nine inches, and fometimes a foot broad, and lay above each other from one poft to the next. Such an enclofure there- fore looked at a diftance like the hurdles in which we enclofe the fheep at night in Sweden. They were really no clofer than hurdles, being only deftined to keep out the greater animals, fuch as cows and horfes. The hogs are kept near the farm- houfes every where about Philadelphia, and therefore this enclofure does not need to be made clofer on ‘their account. Chefnut trees were commonly made ufe of: for this purpofe, and thereforé were deftined to keep the g2 September 1748. purpofe, becaufe this wood keeps longeft againft putrefaction, and an enclofure made of it can ftand for thirty years together. But where no chefnut wood was to be got, the white, and likewife the black oaks were taken for that purpofe. Of all kinds of wood, that of the red cedar holds out the longeft. The greateft quantity of it is bought up here; for near Philadelphia it is not plentiful enowgh, to be made ufe of for enclofures ; however there are many enclo- fures near the town made of this wood. — Tue beft wood for fuel is every body’s opinion is the hiccory, or a fpecies of wal nut; for it heats well; but is not good for enclofures, fince it cannot well withftand putrefaction when it is in the open air. The white and black oaks are next in goodnefs for fuel. The woods with which Philadelphia is farrounded, would lead one to conclude, that fuel muft be cheap there. But it is far from being fo, becaufe the great and high foreft near the town is the property of fome people of quality and for- tune, who do not regard the money which they could make of them. They do not fell fo much as they require for their own ufe, and much lefs would they fell it to others. But they leave the trees for times to come, expecting that,wood will beeome much Penfyluanta, Germantown. 93 much more fcarce. However they fell it to joiners, coach-makers, and other artifts, who pay exorbitantly for it, For a quan- tity of hiccory of eight foot in length, and four in depth, and the pieces. being like- wife four foot long, they paid at prefent eighteen fhillings of Penfy/vanian currency. But the fame quantity of oak only came to twelve fhillings. The people who came at prefent to fell wood in the market were peafants, who lived at.a great diftance from the town. Every body complained that fuel in the fpace of a few years, was rifen in price to many times as much again as. it had been, and to account for this, the fol- lowing reafons were given: the town is encreafed to fuch a degree, as to be four or fix times bigger, and more populous than what fome old people have known it to be, when they were young. Many brick-kilns have been made hereabouts, which require a great quantity of wood. ‘The country is ‘likewife more cultivated than it ufed to be, - and confequently great woods have been cut down for that purpofe; and the farms built in thofe places likewife confume a quantity of wood. Laftly, they melt iron out of the ore, in feveral places about the town, and this work always goes on with- Qut interruption. For thefe reafons it is 1 , concluded Q4 September 1748. concluded in future times PAz/adelphia will be obliged to pay a great price for wood. — Tue wine of blackberries, which has a very fine tafte, is made in the following manner. The juice of the blackberries is prefied out, and put into a veflel; with half a gallon of this juice, an equal quantity of water is well mixed. Three pounds of brown fugar are added to this mixture, which muft then ftand for a while, and after that, it is fitfor ufe. Cherry wine is made in the fame manner, but care muft be taken that when the juice is preffed out, the ftones be not crufhed, for they give the wine a bad tafte. Tuey make brandy from peaches here, after the following method. The fruit is cut afunder, and the ftones are taken out. © The pieces of fruit are then put into a vefiel, where they are left for three weeks or a month, till they are quite putrid. They are then put into the diftilling vefiel, and the brandy is made and afterwards dif- tilled over again. This brandy is not good for people who have a more refined tafte, but it is only for the common kind of | people, fuch as workmen and the like. _Appxes yield a brandy, when prepared’ in the fame manner as the peaches. But for this purpofe thofe. apples are chiefly taken Penfylvania, Germantown. 95 taken which fall from the tree before they are ripe. : Tue American Night-fhade, or Phytolacca decandra, Linn. S. N. grows. abundantly near the farms, on the highroad in hedges and bufhes, and in. feveral places in the fields. .Whenever I came to any of thefe places I was fure of finding this plant in great abundance. Moft of them had red berries, which grew in bunches, and look- ed very tempting, though they were not at all fit for eating. Some of thefe plants were yet in flower. In fome places, fuch as in the hedges, and near the houfes, they fometimes grow two fathom high. - But in the fields were always low; yet I could no where perceive that the cattle had eaten of it. A German of this place who was a confectioner told me, that the dyers gather- ed the roots of this plant and made a fine red dye of them. Here are feveral fpecies of Sguirrels. The ground. Squirrels, or Sciurus ftriatus, Linn. 8. N. are commonly kept in cages, becaufe they are very pretty : but they can- not be entirely tamed. The greater Sguir- rels, or Sciurus cinereus, Linn. S. N. fre- quently do a great deal of mifchief in. the plantations, but. particularly deftroy the maize. For they climb.up the ftalks, cut | the 96 September 1748. the ears in pieces and eat only the loofe and {weet kernel which lies quite in the infide. They fometimes come by hundreds upon a maize-field, and then deftroy. the whole of a countryman in one night. “In Maryland therefore every one is‘obliged an- nually to bring four {quirrelsy and their heads are given to the furveyor,.to prevent deceit. In other provinces every'body that kills {quirrels, received twopence ’a”piete for them from. the public, ondelivering the-heads. Their fleth is eaten and feck- oned a dainty. ©The fkins are fold, *but’a not much efteemed. Squirrels*aré the-chter food of the rattle-fnake and other “{nakes, and-it was a common fancy withmthe=peo- ple:hereabouts, that when the’ rattle’ fitake lay on the groundy: and “fixed its'eyes upon a fquirrel, the latter would \be*as ‘it’ ‘were fafcinated, and that though itewere on'the uppermott branches of a tree,. “yet it would come down by: degrees; till it-Teaped into the {nake’s mouth. » The fnakesthem licks the little animal ‘feveral times; and makes it wet all over with its fpittle; that it may go-downthe throat eafiers’ Itthernfwallows the whole {quirrel at once: “When the fnake has: made fuch»a good» meal, it lies Geis to:reft without any concerns) | THE © segue, Sania ‘Linnaeus i ™ the Penfyluania, Germantown. 97 the memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sci- ences, has defcribed by the name of Urfus cauda elongata, and which he calls Urfus Lotor, in his Syftema Nature, is here call- ed Raccoon. It is found very frequently, and deftroys many chickens. It is hunted by dogs, and when it runs upon a tree to fave itfelf, a man climbs upon the tree af- ter it, and fhakes it down to the ground, _ where the dogs kill it. The fleth is eaten, and is reputed to tafte well. The bone of its male parts is made ufe of for a tobacco- ftopper. The hatters purchafe their fkins, and make hats out of the hair, which are next in goodnefs to beavers. The tail is worn round the neck in winter, and there- fore is likewife valuable. The Raccoon is frequently the food of {nakes. Some Englihmen aflerted that near the river Potomack in Virginia, a great quantity of oyfter fhells were to be met with, and that they themfelves had feen whole moun- tains of them. The place where they are found is faid to be about two Enghi/b miles diftant from the fea-fhore. The proprietor of that ground burns lime out of them. This ftratum of oyfter-thells is two fathom and more deep. Such quantities of fhells have likewife been found in other places, efpecially in New York, on digging in the ost G ground ; 98 | September. 1748. ground ; ; and in‘one place, at ‘theo diftance ‘of ‘fome® Engi miles from 'the fea, ca vat quantity of oyfter-(hells, and of other thells was found: Somme people’ conjectured’ that the ‘natives had formerly lived in'that place, and°had left the fhells” of thée'oyfters which they had confumed, in-fuch: ‘great heaps. But others could not*conceive how it happened that they were thrown’ in fuch“immenfe quantities ‘all into one place: WuUWQnetd@nhs Every one is’ of opinion thatthe Ame-. rican favages were a very goodnaturéd peo- ple; if they were'not attacked! ‘Nobody is fo ftrit in keeping his wordy as a favage. iver anyone of their allies cometo vifitthens, they thew him more ‘kindnefs) ‘and® greater endéavours to ferve him, than he could have expected from his own countrymen. *Mr. Cock ‘gave’ me the’ following rélation; “asa ‘proof of their integrity. About two. years ago, an Enghjb merchant traveHingamonett fie favages, ‘in order’ to’ fell them necéffa- yiés, ‘and to buy other goods; was fecretly ‘kifled, ‘without the murderer's being found out. But about a year after, the favages found out the guilty perfon amongftthem= ‘felves: “They immediately’ tookwhim® up, bound his hands on his back; and thus fent ‘him with a guard to the governor at Phila- delphia, and tent him word, ‘that they could no | Penfylvania, Germantown. 99 no longer. acknowledge this wretch,,(who thad been) fo wicked towards an Engh/bman) as their,countryman, .and. therefore, would have nothing more. to, do, with .him, and that they delivered him jup to the, gover- nor, to, be, punithed. for his villainy. as the Jaws of Fingland direct. . This Indian.,was afterwards hanged at Philadelphia. »\> TuHeir, good, natural, parts are proved. by the following account, which many people have givem:me-as a true one. When they fend their, ambafiadors to the Exgh/b colo- nies, in order to fettle things of confequence with.the governor, they fit. down.on. the ground; as,foon as they come to his audi- ence, and;hear with great attention the go- vernor’s.demands which they. are to.make an/ an{wer,to. . His,demands are fometimes many... Yet, they have only a ftick in their hand, and:make their marks. on it. with a -knife,, without writing any thing elfe. down. But-when-they return-the next day to give in-their refolutions, they, anfwer all. the go- vernor’s, articles-in. the fame order,.in which he.delivered them, without leaving one out, or changing;the order, and give fuch accu- rate anfwers, as if. they bad an account of them,at full length. i in writing. Mr: Steidorn,related.another ftory, which igave me; great pleafure.. He faid he had ert: G2 been 100 September I 748 been at. New York, and Lad found a vene- rable Old American favage amongft’ feveral others inaninn) Thisold man ‘began to talk with \S/dorn as foon'as the liquorwas get= ting ‘the better of his head, and boafted’that he could write and read in Englifh.o \Sleidorn therefore defited ‘leave'to afl! a” ‘queftion, which the old ‘man ‘readily granted: S/emdorn then ‘afked’ him}; “whether “he ‘knew who was firtt circumcifed? and theold man im- mediately an{wered, Father Abraham ;but at the fame ‘time’ afked ‘leave to'propofe:a queftion in his turn, which Sleidorn grant- ed; the old man then faid,) who”'was 'the firt quaker? Siidorn {aid it was uncertain, that fome took one perfon forty and forme another; but the cunning ‘old’ fellow told him, you are miftaken, fir;\° Mordeca? was the firft quaker, for he. would tor take’ off his‘hat to Haman.’ Many. of the* favages, ‘who’are yet heathens; are’ faid' to:‘have fome obfcure notion ‘of the deluge: oBut I am Convinced from my ‘own experience, nee they aré not‘atiall’acquainted with it. ‘Tmet ‘with people here who maintained shat giants had formerly lived’ in-thefe parts, andthe following particulars confirméd them in‘ this opinion.” A’ few’ yearsago’ fome people digging in the ground, met with a grave which contained human bones of an aftonifh- Penfjlvania, Germantown. 101 aftonithing fize. . The) Ti ibja.i is faid. to have Seemanod, feet. long, ‘and the. os, femoris to-have,meafured,as much. .The.teeth are. likiewife.faid) to. have, been of a fize ptopor- tioned’to.the.reft.. But more bones’ of. this kind, have not yet. been found. Perfons {killed in,.anatomy, who have feen thefe bones, have declared-that they were human bones. . One of the teeth has-been fent to Hamburgh, to a perfon who colleéted.natu- ral curiofities.. Among the favages, in the neighbourhood of the place where the bones were,.found,, there is an account. handed down. -through many. generations from fa- thers to-children,, that, in this neighbour- hood,, on-the, banks of a river, there lived a,very.tall, and itrong man, .in. ancient times,; who |carried the, people over the ri- ver on}his' back, and’ waded in the water, though it, was,very deep... Every . body.’ to whom he.did.this fervice gave him fome maize, fome,fkins of animals,., or, the like. In fine,he-got -his livelyhood by this means, and..was as it) were the ferryman of .thofe who, wanted to pafs the river. oo ‘han, foil,-here confitts. for. the greateft -part of fand, which is more or lefs mixed with, clay. Both the-fand and the clay, are of Sresiaavne pale bricks... To judge by micof} G 3 appear- 102 September 1748. appearance ‘the ground was" ‘none’ of the beft; and this conjeture was verified by the inhabitants of the country. © ‘When 2 corn-field has been” obliged to bear’ the fame kind of corn for three! years together, it does not after that produce any thing at all if it be not well manured, or fallowed’ for fome years. Manure is very difficult to"be got, and ‘therefore people rather leave’ the field uncultivated. In that interval-it ‘ts covered with all forts of plants’ and ‘trees ; and the countryman in the’ mean” GY cultivates a piece of ground which has till fhen been fallow, or he chufes apart of the ground which has never been’ ploughed be- fore, and he can in both cafes “ be’ pretty fure of a plentiful crop. This method can here be ufed with great convenience. For the foil is loofe, fo that it can’ eafily be ploughed, and every countryman’ has \¢om- monly a great deal of land for his property. The cattle here are neither houfed’ in win- ter, ‘nor tended ‘in’ the’ fields, and ‘for this reafon they cannot ‘gather : a lofficient et tity of dung. Att the ‘cattle’ ‘has’ bee “originally brought over from. Europe." The’ natives have never had any, and at prefent’ few of them care to get any. But the cattle dege- “ neérates Penfyluania, Germantown. 103 nerates. by.degrees here, and becomes fmvall- er. «For the cows, horfes, fheep, and hogs, are. all ;larger in. England, though. thofe which are brought over are of that breed: ut;.the, firft generation decreafes a little, — and the, third and fourth is of the fame fize with: the cattle already common here. The climate, the, foil, and the food, altogether contribute. their fhare towards producing this: change... _. Lnsis-remarkable that the inhabitants of | the -country,, commonly fooner acquire un- derftanding, but likewife grow fooner old than the. people in Europe. It is nothing uncommon,to fee little children, giving {prightly.and ready anfwers to queftions that are propofed;to them, fo that they feem to have» as, much underftanding as ‘old men. But they do not attain to fuch an age as the Europeans, and it is almoft an unheard of thing, that; a perfon.born in this country, fhould live, to; be eighty or ninety years of age. But.I only-{peak of the Europeans that fettled. here. For the favages, or. firft inhabitants, frequently attained a great age, though, at prefent fuch examples are un-_ common,; which is chiefly attributed to the greatufe of brandy, which the favages have learnt, ‘of. the, Europeans. Thofe who are horn in Europe attain a greater age here, | 4. than 104 September 1748. than thofeswho-are born here, of European parentsioIn: thedaft war, it-plainlyappear-. ed that thefe: new: americans: were: by. far- lefé hardy thanothe Europeans: in: expeditis. ons; fieges, and.long fea voyages, and died. innuimbers. It as very dificult for:them: to ufe themfelves'to arclimate different:from’ theiriown. ‘The women ceafe bearing chils: dren fooner thamin Europe.io Thepdeldom, or never have children,: after they:are:forty. or forty-five years-old, .and:fome deave:off : in the thirtieth, year’ of theiroage omlrenquis red into the-caufes of this, but'no one:could: give. me a good one. Some faid itewas\ows: ing: to the affluence: inowhich thespeople live,here. Some afcribed it: tos:theomcon<: ftancy and changeablenefsnof the weather, and believed that theresyhardly was acoun- . try.on earth in which: the weatherschanges: fo often:in a day, as:it-does thereo:: For if it were ever fo hot, one could not be cer-. tain .whether ‘ino twenty-four, hours: there would not be a piercing colds! iNays fome- times, the weather: wei chaageien or fix times a day. Logo meswisds om rbsent Tue trees in this: nea haverthe bola qualities as its inhabitants... -For the Ahips which are built: of repeal wood, varevby “ nm means equal in..point of ftrengthy :to. thofe which are: built: in: Hurope. a This as — what Penfyluama, Germantown. 105 what nobody attempts to contradict.) When a fhip: which is built here, “has ferved°eight ortwelve years it is worth little; and if one isito be met with, which has; been in ufe longer and is yet ferviceable, itis reck-- oned’ very iaftonifhing. It ‘is difficult to find outithe caufes from whence ‘this’ hap> pens. eSome lay>the fault to the badnefs ofithe wood : others condemn’ the method: of) building» the» thips; »which is: ‘toomake them of*trees' whichare yet green, and have had noetime tosdry. > [believe ‘both caufes are:joined: orFor I found oak, which at the utmoftshad been cut down about twelve’ years, jand was covered by a hard bark: But upon’ taking off ‘this bark, the>wood! belowsat was almoft:entirely rotten, and like flour, fo that I could rub it into pow der between my: fingers. How’ much long=' er will not-our a pec oak wrveind before it moulders Povo = rv » Ar night we ereturned 4 to Philadelp bia. September the 23dz0 There are no Hares’ inthis country,: but fome animals, ‘which’ are a medium between our Hares and Rab bets; and make a/great devaftation whenever they get into fields of cabbage and turneps! 'Manyopeople have not been able*to find out why the! North American plants*which are ‘carried toxBurope and planted there, for’ the - 106 | September 1748. the:greateft. part. flower) fo late, anddo not get/\ripey fruit, before the, froft overtakes | them)},although it, appears from -feveral:ae- counts of travels, that the: winters)in; Pen- Sylvania, and, more; fo, \thofesin New York, New) Enugland,,and Canada, are full.as fevere as. our Sewvedi/h winters, and therefore/are much; feverer than -thofe,,which are. felt ini; England. ; Several anen) of )judgment charged me for this reafon to examine.and enquire into this phcenomenony with all poffible:care.. But I thall inftead-of an an= fwer, rather give a few remarks whichol made: upon the climate and; upon thejplants of North America, and leave my readersyat i to draw the -conclufions,themfelves., Apois true, that the winters.in Pen- ‘bamnai and much more thofe in the more northern provinces;.are frequently as fevere as our. S wedi/b > winters,. and: much: colder than the, Engli/h ones, or thofeof the fouth- ern ‘parts of, Europes Ford found,at Phila- delpbia;, which-is above twentyydeg. more foutherly than feveral)provinces.in Sweden, that the thermometer. of, profeflor Celpus, fell twenty-four deg.. below ‘the: freezing point in |.winter..--Yet) L, wasaffured. that the winters I {pent here, were-none.of the coldeft, but only common: ones,; which: I could likewife conclude from the Delaware's not Penfylvania, ppeabepbia. 167 not being’ | frozen trong” enough ‘to ‘bear‘a carriage cat “Philadelphia during’ my ‘flay; though>this - ‘often’ happens. °On confider- ing the:breadth of ‘the river which Phave already’ mentioned ‘im’ my defcription “of Philadelphia, and the» difference ‘between high and!low water; ‘which is eight Baghjh feet ;-it will pretty plainly appear that‘a very intenfe froft is required to: cover. ‘elie Delaware with fuch thick ice. Jeg) Buriitislikewife true, that ahisinaib the winters°are fevere here, yet they are commonly: of no long duration, ‘and I'can juftly fay; that they do not continue’ above two months and fometimes even lefs, at. P4z- ladelphia's and it is fomething very uncom- mon when’they continue for three months together, in fo’much ‘that it'is put into the gazettes. /' Nearer'the pole the winters are fomewhat' longer; and inthe quite northern parts'they areas long as the Swedi/b win- ters. Theedaily meteorological obfervations which I have’ made during’my ftay in Ame- rica, and! which Pintend to ‘annex ‘at. the end of each volume of this work, will give ic ah in this: matter. 3) 0Tue ‘heat in fummer is eubéfibie and withoutiintermiffion. Town I have'feen the thermometer rifeoto nearly the fame i, at 4oboin Finland. But the differ- ence 108 September 1748. ence. is,,that when the thermometer of ipro= feffor. Celfius, rofe tothirty,, deg.,above the freezing point once.in.two or, three fummers at Agbho,, the fame thermometer, did not. only for three. months together ftand,at the fame. degree, but.even fometimes rofe, higher not only.in, Penfylyania, but. likewile) in New York, Albany,.and.a great, part of. Cas nada. , During the fummers which {pent at Philadelphia, the thermometer, has;,two or,three times. rifen to thirty-fix, deg. above the freezing point. It may therefore with great certainty be faid,. that) in, Penfylwania the greateft part of April, the whole, May; and all the. following. months, till. ,O@oder, are like our, Swedi/b months of. fume) and uly. ...So,.exceftiye, and, continued,a. heat mutt. certainly, have very great.effects,: Lhere again, refer, to,.my; meteorological. obferyati- ons, Jt, muft likewife.be.afcribed,.to. the effects. of this heat.that the common melons, the . water, melons,..and the. pampions of different. forts are .fown: in.the,fields) with+ out any bells. or the like ;put, over, them, and yet are ripe as early aS. Fulys farther, that cherries, are Tipe ,at) Philadelphia, about, the 25th. of May, and that. in,|Penfy/vania, the wheat. is frequently reaped in. the are af UME. § yeh) " 4,.THE whole of Soh tendhesy: ‘and ed if not Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 109 not the whole of Oétober, are the fineft nionths in® ‘Penfyloania, ‘for’ the’ preceding atlés are too” ‘hot: '~ But thefe™ ‘reprefent our uly: and half of Auguft. “The greatett part ofthe plants aré ‘in flower in September, and*many donot begin to open their flow- ers’ before*the latter end’ of this month. °“I make Ho! doubt thatthe Zoodnels of the feafon} whichis’ enlivened by a clear fky, anda tolerably hot fun-fhine; greatly con- tributes’ towards this laft effort of Flora. Yet though ‘thefe plants come out fo late, they are’ “quite ripe ‘before the middle of Ofober> But'I am not able to account for theif comiing°up fo Jate in autumn, and I rather afk, why do riot the Centaurea Facea, the Géntiana, Amarella and Centaurium of Einnéusy and the’ common ‘golden rod, or Solidago Virgaurea flower before the end of fummer? “or why° do the common noble liverwort, or? Anemone “Hepatica,. the wild vidlets'/ Viole martia, Linn.) the mezereon (Daphne Mexeréum, Linn.) and othet plants thew: theirfloweérs fo early in fpring? It/has pleafed°the Almighty Creator to give to them this “difpofition: | The weather at Philadelphia during thefe months, is fhewn by my mc eteorological tables. Ihave taken the greateft’ care in my obfervations, and have always avoided achat the thermo~ Hel DAR potent, Seber 119 September 1748. . meter into any. place, where the fun, _— thine, upon it, or, where,he had, before ‘heats ed. the. wall by his beams; .for in .thofe. ALES my obfervations, would certainly, not have been exaét.,, «Lhe weather during our Sep- tember and Odober is too well,.known, to want.an explanation.* ih w bsysoeree ., However, there are fome {pontaneous plants. in, Penfylvania, which do, notievery year bring their feeds; to maturity, before. the cold begins. To. thefe belong fome. {pecies of Gentiana, of Affers,, and others,,;.But.in thefe; too the wifdom, of the Creator has . wifely ordered every thing in, its turna.For almoft all, the plants which have. abe quali- nial, or cana as, though shew. have no: feed ta propagate themfelves,. can revive, by. fhoot- ing new. branches jand ftalks: from. the fame root, every. year, , But perhaps..a/.natural caufe, may. be given to, account, for. the late growth, of thefe plants, Before the ,Euro- peans, came into this country, it was inhabir- ed. by) favage nations, ,who, practifed . agri~ culture. but letls or mot, at. all, and, chiefly her eee | 46 ~qtived 393 SETH * Tue Bnglif ble white is ‘perhaps. not tb weal, acquaint. ed with the weather of the Swedi/S autumn, may form an idea of it, by having recourfe to the Calendarium Flore, or the botanical and ceconomical almanack of Sweden, in Dr. Linneus’s Amon. Academ, and in Mr, Srilling fleet’s Swedi ifo tracts, tranflated from the iia Acad. 2d. edition. F. Penfyluania, Philadelphia. tib. lived upon hunting and fithing. The woods. therefore ‘have never beén’ meddled’ with, yeoai that fometimes a’ fmall ‘part was de- fttoyed by fire. ‘The aécounts which we have of the firft landing of ‘the Europeans heré,” thew that they found the country all over covered with thick forefts.* From hence it follows, that excepting the higher trees, and the plants which grow in the Water or near the thore, the reft muft for the great- eft part ‘have been obliged to grow perhaps fora thoufand years: together, in’a fhade; either below or between the trees, and they therefore naturally’ belong to thofe which are only peculiar to woody and fhady places. ‘The trees in’ this country drop their leaves in ‘fuch’ quantities in autumn, that «the ./ . ground is covered with them to the depth / of four or five inches. ‘Thefe leaves Tie a good while in the next fummer before they moulder, and this muft'-of courfe hinder thé’ growth “of the plants which are under the trees, ‘at the fame time depriving them of the few rays of the fun which can come down to them through the thick leaves at the top of the trees. Thefe caufes joined together make fuch plants flower much latte “than. thE would otherwife do... May SOND AAT tSAR . ats 1¢t w Se a i abe ILI. 246. 112 _ Sepiember 1748. it. not therefore be faid, that. io.fo many centuries thefe plants had at laft. contracted a habit of coming up very. late, and. that, it vv would now require.a.great {pace of time. to _ make them lofe this habit,. and. ule thet quicken their growth. Baw tt September the 24th. We. employed His whole day in gathering the feeds of of plants of all kinds, and in Boating fearce, vb gay into the herbal., September the 2 sth. Me. He 75 fhe cade me a prefent of .a little piece of petrified wood, which was found in the ground here. Tt was four inches long, one inch broad, and three lines thick. . It might plainly, he feen that it had formerly been, wood, in, the places: where it had, been, lithed, all the longitudinal. fibres were, catty dillnn guithable, fo that it might. have ion taken for a “piece of oak which was cut Amooth, My. Piece was part of a ftill. greater piece, It was here thought to be petrified hiccory, I afterwards got more of it from other peo- ple. Mr. Lewis Evans told me that on the boundaries. of Virginia,..a. great petrified block, of hiccory had. been. found in. the ground; with the bark on it, gabich, ma? likewife petrified. . ~Mry fobn. Se od is an "Englifbman, a who lives in the Apaay about four miles, = 7 ~ from Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 114 from eaige of nat He has acquired a great knowles natural philofophy and hifto- fy, and'feems to be born with a peculiar genius for thefe {ciencés.. In his youth he had nv opportunity of going to fchool. But y his own diligence and indefatigable ap- he g ‘ot, without inftruction, fo far in Latin, as to underftand all Latin books, and even thofe which were filled with bo- tanical terms. He has in feveral fuccellive ars made frequent excurfions into differ- ent diftant parts of North America, with an | intention er gathering all forts of plants which are {carceand little known. Thofe which he found he has planted in his own _ botanical ‘garden, and likewife fent over their ‘feeds or frefh roots to England. We owe to him the knowledge of many. fcarce plants, which he firft found, and which were nevér known before. He has fhewn at judgment, and an attention which lets nothing efcape unnoticed. Yet with all thefe great qualities, he is to be blamed for his negligence; for he did not care to write ( 1 hisnumerousand ufeful obfervas - tions! His friends at London once obliged him to fend them a (hort account of one of his travels, and they were very ready, with a good intention, though not with fuffici- ent judgment, to ine ‘this account a ; u a) om September 1748. But this book,:did Mr: Bartram-more harm than. good ; for as’he‘is rather: backward in writing: down what! he knows, !this»publis cation? was found to’contain but few new obfervations. It would not however ‘be doing jultice to Mr. Bartram’s. merit; if it were to be judged of by this performance. He has not filled it with a thoufandth part of the'great knowledge, which he has ac» quired in natural philofophy ‘anduhiftory, efpecially in regard to North America.) havé often been at. a lofs to: think of) the fources, from whence he got many thing's which came to his’ knowledge: of hkewife owe him many things, for he poffeffed that great quality of communicating every thing — he‘ knew. T fhall therefore in® the fequel, frequently mention this gentleman. «For I fhould never forgive myfelf, if I>-were to omit the name of the firft inventor, and claint that as my own invention, med it fearnt' from another perfony» s Many Mu/fcle fhells, ‘or Mytili: Danii: ‘ are:to’be met: with on the north=-weft fide of the town in the clay-pits, which wereat prefent filled with water'from a little brook ‘in the: neighbourhood. Thefe mufcles’ feem to have been wafhed ‘into that place by the ‘tide, when the water in theibrook was high. For thefe clay- dos are not oldj* but °>were i lately Penfylvania, Philadelphia. it lately madew Poor boys f{ometimes go out of town; «wade in the; water; and. gather gteat quantities of thefe: thells,, which they fell, very eafily,, they »:being reckoned .a daintyovwor ipigow a eNOS VIsia » Tap Virginian Azarole) withoa red fruit; or Linneus’s CrategusGrus gall, is aApe- cies of hawthorn, and they-plant it in hedg- es; for want,of that hawthorn, which is commonly ufed:forthis purpofe in Europe. Its. berries.are red, and..of the fame fize, fhape, and tafte with: thofe of our haw+ thorn. Yet this. tree. does not feem,,to make a good hedge, for.its leaves’ were, al- ready fallen,, whilft other trees ftill preferv- ed, theirs. . Its {pines are very long:and fharp «their length, being two-.or three inches. Thefe {pines) are applied to, fome dnconfiderable ufe.., Each. berry contains two ftones.,;; 51 ior Mr Bartram. aflured me, that, the North American..oak, cannot refit; pu- — - trefaGtion for near fuch afpace of time, as the | Europeans -For. this reafon, the, boats (which carry all forts of goods down:from the upper! parts. of the country) upon-the aiver Hudjon,- which is one of the greateft an thefe, parts, are) made of two kinds of wood, That: part which muft always be ounder water, is made of black oak; but Wdods. H 2 the 116 September 1748. the upper. part, which is now above and now under water,, and i is therefore more CX pofed to, putrefaction,.. is, made of red cedar or, funiperus Virginiana,, which is reckoned the moft hardy, wood in. the country... The bottom is made of black oak,’ beeaufe. ie wood is very tough. For the river being full of ftones, and the boats frequently run- ning againft them, the black oak gives way, and therefore does. not) eafily crack, But the cedar would not do. for this pur- pofe ; becaufe it is hard and. brittle. he oak likewife is not fo. much attacked by putrefaction, when it is always) i mae water. r In. autumn,’ I could always. ‘get. good pears here ; but.every, body. acknowledged, that this fruit would not. fener well i in the country. ALL my obfervations and remarks | on the ualities of the Rattle-/nake,: are inferted in ae Memoirs of the Swedi/h Academy of Sciences, for the year 1752, p. 316, and for the. year 1753» Pp» 54> dad uhitherd Ls re~ fer the reader.* ©: ‘BEARS are very numerous ‘nia up in the country, and do» much mifchtef. Mr. Bartram told me, that waite a bear catches : | acow, ¢ Vide Medical, &c. cafes and experiments, ‘iii from the Swedifh, London 1758, p, 282, P. ; Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 117 a'cow, he kills her in ‘the following man- ner: ‘he’ bites a hole into the hide, and blows with ‘all his power into it, till the ani- mal fwélls exceffively and dies ;' for the air expands ‘greatly between the flefh and the hide:*°" An old Swede called Nils Gu/- tave’s fon, who was ninety-one years of age, faid, that in his youth, the bears had been very frequent hereabouts, but that they had feldom attacked the cattle: that whenever a bear was killed, its flefh was prepared like pork, and that it had a very good tafté. And the flefh of bears is ftill prepared like ham, on the river Morris. The environs of Philadelphia, and even the whole province of Pen/y/vania in general contain very few bears, they having been extirpated by degrees. In Virginia they kill them in feveral different ways. Their fleth is eaten by both rich and poor, fince it is reckoned equal in goodnefs to pork, In as 3 fome ~® Tus has all the appearance of a vulgar error: neither does the fucceeding account of the American bears: being car- nivorous, agree with the obfervations of the moft judicious tiavel bed tae deny the fa&. P. | Bur however itymight be eafible to reconcile both opi- nions.. For Ezrope has two or three kinds of bears, one {pe- cies of which is carnivorous, the other lives only on vegeta- bles: the large brown fpecies, with its fmall variety, are ' reputed to be carnivorous, the black fpecies is merely phy- tivorous, In cafe therefore both fpecies are found in North America, it would be very eafy to account for their being both Carnivorous and not. F, i18 September 1748. fome parts of this province, where no. hogs can be kept on account of ‘the great num- bers of bears, the people are ufed’ to catch” and kill them, and to ufe them inftead’ of — hogs. The American bears however, are 7 faid to be lefs fierce and dan gerousy than the European ones. September the 26th. Tur broad ata or Plantago : major, grows on the” ‘high- roads, foot paths, meadows, andi in gardens in great plenty. Mr. Bartram had found this plant in many places on his travels, but he did not know whether it was an original American plant, or whether the Europeans had brought it over. This doubt had its rife from the favages’ (who always had an extenfive knowledge ‘of the plants of the country) pretending that this plant never grew here before the arrival of the Europeans. .They therefore give it a name which fignifies, the Engli/bman’s foot, for they fay that where a European had walked, there this plant grew in his foot fteps. THE Chenopodium album, or Goo/e efoot with finuated leaves, grows in plenty 1 in the gar- dens. But it is more fearce near the houfes, in the ftreets, on dunghills and corn-fields. This feems to fhew, that it is not a native of America, but has been brought over amongft other feeds, from Europe....In the fame Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 1 0) fain. mapner it is thought that the Tan/ey (Tanacetum vulgare, Linn.) which grows | here and there 1 in the hedges, on the roads, and nearhoufes, was produced from European feedsut) THE common Seminar, with blue flowers, or verbena officinalis, was fhewn to me by Mr. Bartram, not far from his houfe in a little plain near Philadelphia. It was the only. Place: where he had found it in, dme- rica... And for this reafon I fuppofe it was | sean fown here apenat other European — ‘ar . " 3. Bartram was at this time building a. Ponat in, Philadelphia, and had funk a cellar, to a, confiderable depth, the foil of which was. thrown out. I here obferved the following ftrata. The upper loofe foil was only half a foot deep, and of a dark brown colour. Under it was a ftratum of clay fo. much. blended with fand, that it was in greater quantity than the clay itfelf; and this ftratum was eight feet deep.. Thefe. were both brick coloured. The next ftra- tum confifted of little pebbles mixed with a coarfe fand. The ftones confifted either of a clear, or of a dark Quartz ;* they were H 4 : quite ‘g Duarte Bh inns Linn. Syft. nat. 3. p. 65. ena Solidum pellucidum, Wallerii Mi iner.) 91. The 12@ September 1748. quite f{mooth and roundifh on, the. outfide,. and Jay. in a ftratum which was a foot deep. Then the brick-coloured clay mixed with fand appeared again. But the depth of this firatum could not be determined. Query, could the river formerly have: reached to this place and formed thefe ftrata?) ©: Mr.. Bartram. has not» only frequently found oyfter-fhells in. the ground, but like- wife, met: with fuch hells: and) {nails, as undoubtedly belong to the fea, atithe dif= tance'of a hundred and more Engl/h miles from the fhore. -He has, even :found theny on the ridge of, mountains. whith feparate the Engljh plantations from the habitations of the. favages... Thefe mountaims which the Ezgli/h. call, the, .d/ue,mountams, arevot confiderable height, and‘ extendsin: one continued chain fromy, north too fouth, or from Canada.to Carolina. Yetoinofome: places they have gapsy. which are‘asit were: broke through, \to.\ afford: a) :paflage: for the great. rivers, which -roll, eaidins into the lower country. . < 99119192 to Tue Cafla Ghana ida) ini ‘on ‘the roads through the woods, and, fometimes. The common Quartz, Forfer’s Mineralogys p.16.0% And Quartzum coloratums, Linn, Syf. nats 3% FeO G02220 Quartzum folidum opacuu coloratum,. Vien sie? Laie Lhe impure Quartz, Fork. Min. p..16.., >, Penfylvuania, Philadelphia. r2t on uncultivated fields, efpecially when bs'grew’'in them. “Its leaves are like thofe of the Senfitive plant, or Mimofaz, and have dikewife the quality of contraGing ama in common cab the ig en of the latter)’ © THe Crows in she bositry are Little dif ferent from ‘our common crows in Sweden, Their ‘fize bis'the fame ‘with that of our crows, and they are as black as jet in every part of their. body.’ I faw them flying to’ day “in great numbers together. Their voice’ is\inot ‘quite like that of our crows, but:has rather’ more of the cry of the rook, or Linneus's Corvus frugilegus. 7 oIMp. Bartram related, that on his sans neysto thenorthern Engii/h colonies, he had difcovered great holes. in the mountains on’ the banks of rivers, which according to his’ defcription;) muft exactly have been fuch giants pots,* as areto be met with in Sweden, and: which I have defcribed in a particular differtation ‘readin the Royal Sweai/h Aca~ demy of Sciences. Mr. Bartram has like- wife addreffed: fome letters to the Royal Society ‘iat! London wpon this fubject.' For fome: * In Sweden, and\in the north ‘of Germany, the round hile in rivers, with aftonéy or rocky bed, which the whirling of the water has tnade, are called giants pots; thefe holes are likewife mentioned in Mr.(Gfafkys new obfervations on Italy, Vol. 1. P- $. F. 122 September 1748.. fome people pretended, that thefe holes were. made, by, the: favages, that they. might in time of. war hide their corn and other valu- able effects in them. . But he wrote againft. this /opinion,) and accounted for the origin: of thefe cavities in the following manners When, the. ice fettles, many pebbles ftick in. it.) In {pring when the fnow melts, the water in, the rivers fwells: fo, high that it reaches.above the place where. thefe holes. are now found in the mountains. .. The ice. therefore will of courfe float as. high. And, then. it often happens, that the pebbles. which. were contained in it; ever fince — autumn when it firft fettled on, the banks. of. the river, fall out of the ice upon the rocky bank, and are from thencecarried into a cleft or.crack, by the water. Thefe pebbles are; then continually turned about by the water, which comes in upon them, and by this means they gradually, form the hole... Ghe water at the fame jtime polithes the ftone by its circular motion round. it, and helps to make the hole or cavity round... It is certain that by. this turning; and tofling, the ftone is at laft unfit, for, this purpofe ; but the river throws commonly every {pring other ftones inftead of it into the cavity, and they are turned round in the fame man- ner. By this whirling both the ‘mountain | and Penfyluania, Philaelpbia. 124 afd the {tone afford either a fine or a coarfe fand, which i Ts wafhed away bye ‘the! water when in’ pring, © or at’ ibaa ‘times | ‘it ae He 2 Ry As ene opinion (ef Mr. Ripon about the origin of thefe cavities. The Royal Society of Sciences at London, has given a favourable reception to, and ap = ‘oved of them.* The remarks which *T’ madé in the fummer of the year 1743, during my ftay at Lanad’s-Ort, in my’ coun~ try, will prove that I was at that time of the fame opinion, in regard to thefe holes. I have fince further explained this opinion ina letter to the Royal Academy of Scien- ces 5 and this ‘letter is {till preferved in the Ac cademy’s Memoirs, ‘which have’ not yet been publifhed. But’ there i is great reafon to doubt, whether all cavities of this kind in mountains, have the fame origin. Here are different fpecies of Mulberry wp which grow wild in the: forefts of north and fouth ‘America. In thefe parts the red mulberry trees are more plentiful than any ‘other. However Mr. Bartram affured me ‘that he had likewife feen rhe wine ” How! far this bye priotagan of the Royal Society, ought to be credited, is to be underftood from the advertifements ublifhed at the head of each new volume of the Philofophi- Cal Tranfactions. F. E24 September 1748. white mulberry trees growing wild, but that they were more fcarce. TF afeed him and féveral other people of this country ; why they did not fet up filk manufactures, having fuch a quantity of mulberries, which fucceed fo eafily > For it has been obfery- ed that when the berries fall upon the ground where it is’ not compact but loofe, they foon put out feveral fine delicate thoots. But they replied that it would not be worth while to erect any filk manufactures: here, | becaufe labour is fo dear. For aman gets _ from eighteen pence to three fhillings and upwards, for one day’ s work, and the women are paid in proportion. They were there- fore of opinion that the cultivation of all forts of corn, of hemp, and of flax, would be of greater advantage, and that at the - fame time it did not require near. fo much care as the feeding of filk worms. By the — trials of a governor in Conneéficuf, which — is a more northern province than New York, it is evident however, that filk worms fuc- ceed very well here, and that this kind of mulberry trees is very good for them. The governor brought up a great quantity of fille worms in his court yard; and they fucceed- ed fo well, and {pun fo much filk, as to afford him a fufficient quantity for” cloath- ing himfelf and all his family. SEVERAL Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 125 Severar forts of Vines likewife grow wild hereabouts. Whenever I made a lit- ( -excurfion out. of town, I faw. them in numerous . plac es. climbing up. trees and hedges. “They clafp around them, - and co= ver. them fometimes entirely, and even hang down on the fides. This has the fame appearance at a diftance, as the tendrils of hops punting, along trees. 1 enquired. of Mr. Bartram why they did not plant vine- yards, or prefs wine from the grapes of the wild vine, But they anfwered, that the - fame objection lay againtt it, which lies againft the erection of a filk manufaCture, that the neceflary hands were too {carce, and it therefore was more rational to make iculture. their chief employment. But : true reafon undoubtedly is, that the wine which is preffed out of moft of the North American wild, grapes is four and fharp, and has not near fuch an agreeable tafte, as that which is made from European grapes, THE, Yai Wake robin, or Arum Vir- Ere ows in wet places. Mr, Bar- me, that the favages boiled the be pskgel the Jerries of this flower, and peisbo it as a great dainty. When the berries are raw, 2 ADEE have a harth, _pungent pt r26 September r 748. tafte,, which ay lofe in Brest meafure up on boiling.: | | i chet tebe \ Tuk Sarothra fe PCL th gtOws abun- dantly in the fields and. under. “the, buthes, in'a dry fandy ground) near. Philadelphia, It looks extremely: like our whortleberry bufhes when they firft begin to green, and when the points of the leaves are yet red; Mr. Bartram has fent this plant .to.Dr. Dillenius, but that gentleman did not know where he fhould range it. It is reckoned a very good traumatic, and this, quality Mr. Bartram himfelf experienced)s), for. being thrown and kicked by a vicioushorfe; in fuch a manner as to have both his thighs greatly hurt, he boiled the Sarothra and applied it to his wounds... It not only immediately appeafed his pain, which before. had .beén very violent, but he likewife by, its. Batt ance recovered in.a fhort time, Havine read in Mr. Miller’s Botancdal Diitionary, that Mr. Peter Coliinfon hada particular Larch tree from America in his garden, I afked Mr. Bartram whether he was acquainted with it, he anfwered, that he had fent it himfelf ‘to Mr. Gollinfon, that it only grew in the eaftern parts of New Ferfe -y, and that. he had met with it in no other Engljb plantation. It differs from the other {pecies of Larch trees, its cones Penfylvania,. Philadelphia. 127 cones being much lefs.| I afterwards, faw this tree in great plenty in Canada. sic -oMr.-Bartram was of opinion, that the | apple tree was brought into: America by the Europeans; and that it never! was there be- fore: their arrival» But she looked upon peaches-as: an original American fruit;: and as growing wild in the greateft partiof America: Others again were of opinion, that they ‘were firft brought over «by: the Europeans: But all the Prench in Canada agreed, thation the banks of) the, river Mififippe and in the, country thereabouts peaches were found growing wild in great quantity.*)— | i Tetyere: oo September the 27th. Tue tree whichthe Buch/h here call Perfimon, is the Dzo/pyros Virginiana»of Linneus.: It grows» for the greateft part in wet places, round the water pits... I have already mentioned ‘that the fruits of this tree: are extremely bitter and fharp\ before they are quite ripe, and that being eaten in that ftate they quite contract y t * Ss OA" oo ; 7 { j ; 0 * Dhomas Herriot, fervant to Sir Walter Raleigh, who was em toyed by him to examine into the produétions of North America, makes no mention of the peach among the other fruits he deferibes, and M. du Pratz, who has given. a ‘very good account of Loui/iana and the Mififippi, fays, that the na- tives got their peaches from the Englifo colony of Carolina; ‘before the French fettled there: P. | } G01: wel se A he AG 128 September 1748. contract ones mouth, and have a very difa= greeable tafte. Butas foon as they are ripe, which does not happen till they have been quite foftened by the froft, they are a very agreeable fruit. They are here eaten raw, and feldom any other way. But ina great book, which contains a defcription of Vir- ginia, you meet with different ways of preparing the Perfmon, under the article of that name. Mr. Bartram, related that they were commonly put upon the table amongft the fweet-meats, and that fome people made a tolerably good wine of them. — Some of thefe Perfimon fruits were dropped on the ground in his garden, and were al~ moft quite ripe, having been expofed to a great degree of the heat of the fun. We picked up a few and tafted them, and I muft own that thofe who praifed this fruit — as an agreeable one, have but done it juftice. It really deferves a place among the moft’ palatable fruit of this country, when the froft has thoroughly conquered its acri- mony. Tue Verbafcum Thapfus, or great white Mullen, gtows in great quantity on roads, in hedges, on dry fields, and high mea- dows of a ground mixed with fand. The Swedes here call it the tobacco of the favages, — but owned, that they did not kaow “ae t Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 129 ther orvno*the Indians really ufed. this plant: sinftead: of tobacco. The Swedes are‘ufed® to»tie the leaves round their feet and arms, when they have the ague. Some of them»prepated a tea fromthe leaves, for the dyfentery. A Swede likewife told me, call Gaaniias of the roots was injeéted into the wounds of the cattle which are-full of worms; which killed thefe wegeriany and made them fall-out:* © September: the 28th. Tue weriteihe ewhich are furrounded: ins dota and were at -prefent mown, have:a fine lively verdure. ‘On the contrary: when they lie-on hills, or in open fields, or infome elevated fituation, efpecially fo that the fun may be able to act upon them without» any obftacles, their grafs looks brown and dry. Several people from Virginia told me, that on account of the great heat and drought, the meadows and paftures almoft always had a brown:co- jour;-and looked» as if they were burnt. The inhabitants of thofe parts do not there- fore enjoy the o Sgebe which a European an ple grows in great quantities near alk the villages, Its height..i8 different aceording tothe foil it isin. « For in .ay rich: foil at ots ' i] th op oo grows: half an inch of mould was produced. But he obferves in the fame time, that this obfervation was not at all exact ; for as. the common mould feldom exceeds a foot, it muft from j thence. follow, that fince the déluge no more than, 2400 years” were elapfed, though the fcripture chro ology reckons up- wards Of 4000 years fince that. event: Beats this, he re- marks, that mould always becomes more dry and compréffed, where.it is out of the reach of rain and fnow; and where it, is expofed to rain, it is Lies de ones laces, and therefore increafes and decreafes according to the dstidas oF its local fituation, Moreover, renstapienasis known profper_ the bef, where mould is found. As the furface of our globe has been covered with vegetables fince the deluge, they muft have had a mould to grow in ever fince that time; confe- quently itis highly probable, that there yy) been a monld covering the furface of our globe, ever fince the firft . origin, I fhouwld be led by fome other confiderations, to doubt of the infallibility of this rule for the, inereafe of mould. In Ruffia, on this fide the river Volga, are high and exténfive plains, which have been uncultivated ever fince the deluge, for we know from hiftory, that the Scythzans, Sarma- trans, Huus, Chazars, and Mogols, were. fucceffively the inafters of thefe vaft countries, and were altogether nomadic nations, who lived without agriculture; ae country has been without wood fince time immemorial, nor could there even {pring up any wood whatfoever, fince its rambling pof- feflors every {pring fet fire to the old dry grafs, in order to make room for the new grafs, which in the latter end of May, I found come’ up very near, to my waift. And thefe yaft, de- fart plains, I faw every where covered with at leaft two. feet thould; nay, in fome places it amounted to four feet; this would pive according to the former rule of half.an inch per cénitaty, 4800 years, in the fir inflance, and in the fecond, g666 years, and thérefore fhews that this tule. for, cal ulatin the ihcreafe of mould, is very précarious. ° The ores ! analy fis Penfyluania, “fourney to Wilmington. 153 grows eight or ten feet high, but in a hard and! poor ground, it will feldom come up. tofix inches: This Datura, together with the \Phytolacca, or American Night/hade, growhere in thofe places near the gardens, houfes, atialyfis of plants, fhews that they confit of water, earth, acid, alkali, oil, and an inflammable principle, independent of the laft fubftance, and called by a late German chemift the tauftic: thefe fubftances muft enter yearly the new plants, and make their fubftance, and are as it were regenerated in thefe new plants, after being fet at liberty from the’ ructure of the laft year’s plants by putrefaction, or by fre. Mould chemically examined, has the fame analogous parts. Acid _ and cauftic are plentifully contained in the common air, and may alfo eafily be reftored to the mould, and thus circulate through a new fyftem of plants. Water comes likewife from rain and fnow, out of our atmofphere: alkaline and oily particles, or a kind of /oaf, are the only things wanting, which when’ added with the former to any fubtle earth, wall make a good mould; and thefe are produced by putrefaction — or firé, from vegetable and animal fubftances, and are the great promoters of vegetation. | pee eth ied Bur the great queftion is, from whence thefe various fabftances neceffary for vegetation originally came? To. believe they are produced from putrified vegetables is begging the queftion, and making a circulus vitio/us in the argument. Tiere is therefore no evafion; they were 2artaiily roalicel” By the great Creator of the uni- verfe, and endowed with fuch qualities; as make them vest of producing in various mixtures new bodies ; and. when they are introduced by moifture, into the firft ftamina | of a plant, ora feed, they expand thefe ftamina, and conftitute — a new ee of affording food to the animal creati- on. Itis evident, Mr. Ka/m hinted at the above-mentioned opinion of the increafe of mould, and this gave me an oppor- tunity of confirming his argument, and of ftating fairly the great queftion o iach agriculture, the moft neceflary branch of human arts depends. F. cou he gelligesy 154. Odtober 1748. houfes, and roads, which in Sweden are co= vered }with: nettles and goofe-foot,) which ~ European plants are very {carce in America. But the Datura and Phytolacca are the worft weeds here, nobody: knowing «any partion; lar ufe. of them. TuURNEP-FIELDS are fometimes to be. feen. In the middle of the highroad I per- ceived a dead black fnake, which was four feet fix inches long, and an inch:and a half in .thicknefs. It anere to. thas au leland ice: cede sy ieb iee - Late at night a great: Esa appeared round the moon. The people faid that it prognofticated either a ftorm, or rain, or both together. The fmaller the ring 1s, or the nearer it comes to the moon, the foon- er this weather fets in. But this time neither of thefe changes happened, and the halo had foretold a coldnefs in the air, I saw to-day the Chermes of the alder (Chermes Alni) in great abundance on the branches of that tree, which for that reafon looks quite white, and at a diftance. ap- pears as it were covered with mould. Oéfober the 4th. I continued my jour- ney early in the morning, and the country ftill had the fame appearance as I went on. It was a continual: chain of pretty high hills, with an eafy afcent on all fides, and of vallies Penfylvuania, Sfourney to Wilmington. 155 yvallies between them. The foil confiftted of a brick coloured ‘mould, mixed with clay, andia few pebbles, I rode fometimes through woods of feveral forts of trees, and fometimesamidft little fields, which had been cleared of the wood, and which at prefent were corn-fields, meadows, and paftures. The farm-houfes ftood fingle, fometimes near the roads, and fometimes at a little diftance from them, fo that the {pace between the road and the houfes was taken up with lit- tle fields and meadows. Some of the houfes’ were built of ftone, two {ftories high, and covered with fhingles of the white:cedar. But moft of the houfes’ were wooden, iand: the crevices ftopped up with clay, inftead of mofs, which we make ufe of for that purpofe. No valves were'to be met with inthe chimneys, and the people even did not know what I meant by them. The ovens were commonly built up at fome diftance from the houfes, and were either under a roof, or without any covering againft:the weather. |The fields bore part- ly buck-wheat, -which was not yet cut, partly maize, and partly wheat, which was but lately fown.; but fometimes they lay fallow. The vines climbed to the top of feveral trees, and hung down again on both fides. Other trees again were furrounded: bythe ivy (Hedera quinguefoha) which 3 with 156 Odfober 1748. with the fame flexibility afcended to a gteat height. The Sizlax laurifolia always join- ed with the ivy, and together with it twift- ed itfelf round the trees. ‘The leaves of the ivy were at this time commonly red difh, but thofe of the vine were {till quite green. The trees which were furrounded with them, looked at a diftance like thofe which are covered with hops in our coun- try, (and on feeing them from afar off, one might expect to find wild. hops climbing upon the trees.) Walnut and chefnut trees were common near enclofures, in woods, and on hills, and at prefent were loaded with their fruit. The perfimon was like- wife plentiful near the roads, and in the woods. It had a great quantity of fruit, but they were not yet fit for eating, fide the froft had not foftened them. At fome diftance from Wilmington, I patted a bridge over a little river, which falls north into the Delaware. The rider pays here two- pence toll for himfelf and his horfe. TowARps noon I arrived at Wilmington. WILMINGTON Is a ‘little © town, about thirty Engi/> miles fouth-wett from Phila- delbbia. Jt was founded in the year 1733- Part of it ftands upon the erounds belong- ing to the Swedid church, “which anhually — receives certain rents, out of, which’ ‘shiby a Penfyluania, Wilmington. 157 y the : ninifter’s falary, and employ. the for o ther. ufes.. The. houfes are built a pe look very pretty; yet they are not built clofe together, t but large open place sate left between them. The quakers havea. meeting- -houfe i in this town., The Swedife ehurch, which I intend te mention in in the fequel, is half a mile out of town oh wats. _ The parfonage is under . the tine roof with the church. A little river called Chri/tina-Aill pafles by the town, and from thence falls into the Delaware. By following its banks one goes three miles before one teaches the De/eware. The river is faid to be fufficien tly deep, fo that the greateft vefiel may come quite uptothetown: ‘for at its mouth or jundture with the De/z- ‘ware, it is fhalloweft, and yet its depth even there when the water is loweft, is from two fathoms to. two and a half... But as you go higher its depth encreafes tothree, three le half, and: even four fathoms. The elargeft thips therefore may fafely, and with their fult cargaes, come to, and from the town with thetide. 1] From Wilmington, you have a fine profpect - Ad @ great part of the river Delg- ware, and the fhips failing on it. On both fides ae the river Chriffina-hill, almoft from the | place, where the redoubt is built to its : the Delaware, are low mea~« ich afford a great quantity of Bay 158 Odtober.1748:. to the inhabitants.. The town carries ona _ confiderable trade, and would have been more enlarged, if Philadelphia and New- caftle, which are both towns of 4 more anci- ent date, were not fo near on’ both fides of its Tue Redoubt upon’ the river Chriftina- kill, was ereéted this fummer, when it was known that the French and Spani/h priva- teers intended to fail up the river, and to at= - tempt alanding. It ftands, according tothe accounts of the late Rev. Mr. Tranberg, on the fame fpot, where the Swedes had’ built theirs. It is remarkable, » that on working in the ground this fummer, ‘to make this redoubt, an old Swedi/h filver coin of Queen Céhriffina, not quite fo big asa. fhilling was found at the depth of a yard, among fome other things. The Rev. Mr. Tranberg afterwards prefented me with it. On one fide were the arms of the houfe of Wafa with the infcription: CHRISTINA. D. G. DE. RE. SVE. that is, Chraftina, by the grace of God, eleéted Queen of Sweden; and near this the year of our Lord 1633. On ~ the reverfe were thefe words: MONETA: NOVA REGNI SVEC. or, 4 new coin of the kingdom of Sweden. At the fame time a— number of old iron tools, fuch as “axes, fhovels, and the like, -were difcovered.’ The redoubt,. that is now erected, Kacy O Penfyhuania, Wilmington. 159 of bulwarks of planks, with a rampart on the outfide. Near it is the: powder maga- zine, in a vault built. of bricks. At the erection of, this little fortification it was re- markable, that the quakers, whofe tenets reject even) defenfive war, were as bufy as the other. people in building it. For the fear of being every moment fuddenly.at- tacked by privateers, conquered all other thoughts... Many of them {fcrupled to put their own hands tothe work ;_ but forward- edit by fupplies of money, and by getting ready every thing, which was necefiary. | _ Odfober the 5th. Ir. was my defign: to crofs the De/aware, and to get into New Ferfey with a view to get acquainted with the country; but as there was no ferry here to bring my horfe over, I fet out on my return. to Philadelphia. I partly went along the high road, and partly deviated on one,or the other fide of it, in order to take more exact obfervations of the country, and of its natural hiftory. 3 * Tue maize, was fown in feveral places. In fome its ftalks were cut fomewhat below the ear, dried. and put up in narrow high ftacks, in.ordet to keep them as.a food for the cattle in winter. The lower part of the ftalk had likewife leaves, but as they commonly dry of themfelves, the people do not like to feed 160 . OGfober 1748. feed the cattle with them, all their flavour | being loft. But the upper ones are cut, — whilft they are yet green. — TuE vallies between the hills commonly contain brooks: but they are not very broad, and require no bridges, fo that carriages and - horfe can eafily pafs through them; for the water is feldom above fix inches deep. THE leaves of moft trees were yet quite green, fuch as thofe of oaks, chefnut trees, black walnut trees, hiccory, tulip trees, and faflafras. The two latter fpecies are — found in plenty on the fides of the little woods, on hills, on the fallow fields, near hedges, and on the road. The perfimon likewife had {till its leaves; however fome trees. of this kind had dropt them. The leaves of the American bramble were at pre- fent almoft entirely red, though fome of thefe bufhes yet retained a lively green in the leaves. The Cornelian cherry likewile had already a mixture of brown and pale leaves. The leaves of the red maple heen” alfo red. I coNTINUED my journey to Cicbeflers ; a borough upon the De/aware, where tra- vellers pafs the river in a ferry. They build here every year a number of {mall fhips for fale, From an iron work which | -» hes Penfylvania, Return from Wilmington. 161 lies higher in the country, they carry iron bars to this place, and fhip them. | Canozs are boats made of one piece of wood, and are much in ufe with the farm- ers, and other people upon the Delaware, and fome little rivers. For that purpofe a very thick trunk of a tree is hollowed out 3 the red juniper or red cedar tree, the white cedar, the chefnut tree, the white oak, and the tulip tree are commonly made ufe of for this purpofe. The canoes made of red and white cedar are reckoned the beft, be- caufe they fwim very light upon the water, and laft twenty years together. But of thefe, the red cedar canoes are moft prefe- -table. Thofe made of chefnut trees will likewife laft for a good while.‘ But thofe of white oak are hardly ferviceable above fix years, and alfo {wim deep, becaufe they are fo heavy. The Liguidambar tree, ot Liquidambar flyracifiua, Linn. is big enough but unfit for making canoes, becaufe it imbibes the water. The canoes which ate made of the tulip tree, fcarce laft fo long as thofe of white oak. The fize of the ‘canoes is different, according to the purpofes they are deftined for. They can carry fix perfons, who however, muft -by no means be unruly, but fit at the bot- tom of the canoe in the quieteft manner L poffible, 162 — Odtober 1748. pofiible, left the boat overfet. The Swedes in Penfylvania and New ‘Ferfey near the rivers, have no other boats to go to Pdila- delphia in, which they commonly do twice a week on the market days, though they be feveral miles diftant from the town, and meet fometimes with fevere ftorms; yet misfortunes from the overfetting, &c. of thefe canoes are feldom heard of, though they might well be expected on account of the {mall fize of this kind of boats. How- | ever a great deal of attention and care is neceflary in managing the canoes, when the wind is fomewhat violent ; for they are narrow, round below, have no keel, and therefore may eafily be overfet. Accord- ingly when the wind is more brifk than ordinary, the people make for the land. THE common garden crefles grow in fe- veral places on the roads about Chichefler, and undoubtedly come from the feeds, which were by chance carried out of the many gardens about that town. Tue American brambles are here in great plenty. When a field is left uncultivated, they are the firft plants that appear on it; and I frequently obferved them in fuch fields as are annually ploughed, and have corn fown on them. For when thefe buth- €s are once rooted, they are not \eafily ex- tirpated. Penfylvania, Return from W. ilmington, 163 | tirpated. Such a bufh runs out tendrils fometimes four fathoms off its root, and then throws a new root, fo that on pulling it up, you meet with roots on both ends. On fome old grounds, which had long been uncultivated, there were fo many buthes of | this kind, that it was very troublefome and dangerous walking in them. A wine is made of the berries, as I have already men- tioned. The berries are likewife eaten when they are ripe, and tafte well. No other ufe is made of them. Oober the 6th. Tue Chenopodium an~ thelminticum is very plentiful on the road, and on the banks of the river, but chiefly in dry places ina loofe fandy foil. The Englifh who are fettled.here, call it Worm- , , feed and Ferufalem Oak. It has a difagree- * ° able fcent. In Penfylvania and New *er- fey its feeds are given to children, againft the worms, and for that purpofe they are excellent. The plant itfelf is {fpontaneous in both provinces. Tue environs of Chichefer, contain many gardens, which are full of apple trees, finking under the weight of innumera- ble apples. Moft of them are winter fruit, and therefore were yet quite four. Each farm has a garden, and fo has each houfe of the better fort. The extent of thefe gardens is , L2 likewife 164 October 1748. likewife not inconfiderable, and thereforé affords the poffeffor all the year long, great fupplies in his houfe-keeping, both for eat- ing and drinking. ‘I frequently was fur- prized at the prudence of the inhabitants of this country. As foon as one has bought a piece of ground, which is neither built up- on nor fown, his firft care is to get young apple trees, and to make a garden. He next proceeds to build his houfe, and laftly prepares the uncultivated ground to receive corn. For it is well known that the trees require many years before they arrive to perfection, and this makes it neceflary to plant them firft. I now perceived near the farms, mills, wheels, and other inftru- ments which are made ufe of in crufhing the apples, in order to prepare cyder from them afterwards. From Chichefer 1 went on towards Phi- ladelphia. The oaks were the moft plenti- ful trees in the wood. But there were fe- veral {pecies of them, all different from the European ones. The {wine now went about — in great herds in the oak woods, where they fed upon the acorns which fell in great abundance from the trees. Each hog had a wooden triangular yoke about its neck, by which it was hindered from penetrating through the holes in the enclofuress” es Or a Penfyluania, Return from Wilmington. 165 for this reafon, the enclofures are made very flender, and eafy to put up, and do not require much wood. No other enclo- fures are in ufe, but thofe which are fo like fheep hurdles. A number of {quirrels were in the oak woods, partly running on the ground, and partly leaping from one branch to another; and at this time they chiefly fed upon acorns. I s—tpom faw beach trees; but I found them quite the fame with the European ones. Their wood is reckoned very good for making joiner’s planes of. I po not remember feeing any other than the dlack Ants, or Formica nigra in Penfyl- vania. They are as black as a coal, and of two forts, fome very little, like the leaft of our ants, and others of the fize of our com- mon reddifh ants. I have not yet obferved any hills of theirs, but only feen fome run- ning about fingly. In other parts of Ame- rica, I have likewife found other fpecies of ants, as I intend to remark in the fequel. ._ cS 172 Odtober 1748. this neighbourhood, fome fingle red Ants, (Formica rubra) crept about, and their antenne or feel-horns were as long as their bodies. Towarps night we returned to Phila- delphia. Oéfober the 8th. Tur thore of Penfyl- vania has a great quantity of the. fineft oyfters. About, this time the people began to bring them to Philadelphia for fale. They come from that part of the fhore, which is near the mouth of the river Dela- ware. They are reckoned as good as the New York oyfters, of which I fhall make more particular mention afterwards. How- ever I thought that this latter fort of oyfters was generally larger, fatter and more pa- latable. Itis remarkable that they com- monly became palatable at the time when , the agues had left off their fury. Some men went with whole carts full of oyfters, ery-. ing them about the ftreets ; this is unufual here when any thing elfe is to be fold, but in London it is very common. ‘The oyfter fhells are thrown away, though formerly a lime was burnt from them, which has been found unneceflary, there being ftones for burning of lime in this neighbourhood, and the lime of oyfter fhells not being as good as this other lime. The people fhew- ed Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 173 ed me fome houfes in this town which were built of ftone, and to the mafon work of which the lime of oyfter fhells had been employed. The walls of thefe houfes were always fo wet two or three days before a rain, that great drops of water could plain- ly be perceived on them; and thus they were as good as Hygrometers.* Several people who had lived in this kind of houfes complained of thefe inconveniences. | Odober the goth. Perase are not much cultivated in Pen/ylvania at prefent, though formerly, according to the accounts of fome old, Swedes, every farmer had a little field with peafe. In New ‘ferfey and the fouthern parts of New York, peafe are like- wife not fo much cultivated as they ufed to be. But in the northern parts of New York, or about Albany, and in all the parts of Canada which are inhabited by the French, the people fow great quantities, and have a plentiful crop. In the former colonies, a little defpicable infeét has obli- ged the people to give up fo ufeful a part of agriculture. This little infect was formerly WER little * As the fhells of oyfters are a marine animal produétion, and their cavities are full of particles of fea-water, the moif- ture of it flies off, leaving behind its falt; when the thells are burnt, and the lime is flacked, the falt mixes with the dime: and though the mortar of fuch a lime grows ever fo dry, the particles of falt immediately attract the moifture of the air, and caufe that dampnefs complained of here. F. 174 _ OGfober 1748. little known, but a few years ago it multi- plied exceflively. It couples in fummer, about the time when the peafe are in blof- fom, and then depofites an egg into almoft every one of the little peafe. When the peafe are ripe, their outward appearance does not difcover the worm, which, how-- ever, is found within, when it is cut. This worm. lies in the pea, if it is not ftir- red during all the winter, and part of the {pring, and in that {pace of time confumes the greateft part of the infide of the pea: In {pring therefore little more than the mere thin outward {kin is left. This worm at laft changes into an infect, of the coleop- tera clafs, andin that ftate creeps through a hole of its own making in the hufk, and flies off, in order to look for new fields of peafe, in which it may couple with its cogeneric infects, and provide food fuf- ficient for its pofterity. TuHIs noxious infe& has fpread from Penfylvania to the north. . For the country of New York, where it is common at pre- fent, has not been plagued with it above twelve or fifteen years ago; and before that time the people fowed peafe every year ' without any inconvenience, and had excel- lent crops. But by degrees thefe little enemies came in fuch numbers, that the inhabitants aa Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 175 inhabitants were forced to leave off fowing of peafe. The people complained of this in feveral places. The country people about Albany have yet the pleafure to fee their fields of peafe not infected by thefe beetles, but are always afraid of their ap- proach; as it has been obferved they come every year nearer to that province. | I Know not whether this infe@ would live in Europe, and I fhould think our Swedifb winters muft kill the worm, even if it be ever fo deeply inclofed in the pea; notwithftanding it is often as cold in New York {where this infect is {o abundant) as in our country, yet it continues to multiply here every year, and proceeds always farther to the north. 1 was very near bringing fome of thefe vermin into Europe, without know- ing of it. Atmy departure from America, I took fome {weet peas with me in-a paper, and they were at that time quite frefh and green. But on opening the paper after my arrival at Stockholm, on Auguft the rf. 1751; I found all the peas hollow, and the head of an infect peeping out of each. Some of thefe infects even crept out, in or- der to try the weather of this new climate ; but I made hafte, to fhut the paper again, in order to prevent the {preading of this ‘wedi ds aa - Noxious B ‘wo 176 .OGaber. ‘allied noxious-,infect.*.. Lars. hel i 2 ts suswmneres & frig perceived, 't t! vipers ie L: at ak iedvexplecqees tT 2 oe damage},which, ny, dear country would. have fuffered, if. only. two. or three of thefe,noxious infects.:had) efcapedome The pofterity of many familiesy andeventhe inhabitants of whole: provincesy::wouldist had. fufficient: ‘reafon «to, detefts mesdsvthe caufe of fo great.a; calamity! »Ieafterwands fent, fame.of them, though: well feduredy ito count, Tefin, and to:Dr. Linnaeus, stogethér with,an:account, of their. rata = ties}; Dr.) Linneus has: ag ya wferu defcription of them in an Academical Di fertation,!;which has. been drawn his. prefidency, and, treats,of theydamage made, by ,infects.}) ,j He theresgalls this inns feGthe Bruchus of) Nor tha Amerecaust a 8 pS? E ia i J8HNIS F10 ney ors inocwas a dint a Fi e's 760 ij sobed dea te) lave “rope Hua, Mica Fey vattt pearing “iboe Nature, that the boa countries of Europe are al- ready infefted with it; Scopo/z mentions it among his Infe@a Carni alice B 3. and G ong his Parifian, Inf bly 2D. 2 asi ae! 12s ah Veit x £ 2 it sig fine “es ii aor vs Sones b Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 9 ‘was very peculiar that every pea in the paper was eaten without exception. _ Wuen the inhabitants of Penfylvania fow peafe procured from abroad, they are not commonly attacked by thefe infects for the firft year; but in the next they take poffeffion of the pea. It is greatly to be withed that none of the fhips which annu» ally depart from New York or Penfylvania, may bring them into the European coun+ tries: From hence the power of a fingle defpicable infect will plainly appear; as alfo, that the ftudy of the ceconomy and of the qualities of infects, is not to be looked upon as a mere paftime and ufele{s employ - ment.* — | Tue Rhus radicans is a fhrub or tree which grows abundantly in this country; and has incommon with the ivy, called He- dera arborea, the quality of not growing without the fupport either of a tree, a wall, or a hedge. I have feen it climb- ing to the very top of high trees in the this M - woods, this bird has been profcribed by the legiflature of Pexflva- nia, New Ferfey, and New England as a maize-thief, they feel the imprudence of extirpating this bird; for a atm of worms which formerly were eaten by thefe birds Jeftroy their meadows at prefent. F. -_* TF the fe weré fteeped before they are fown, in a lie water and fome diflolved arfenic, the pupa or aurelia f the infec’ would be killed. F. 178 Odtober 1748. woods, and \its branches fhoot, out every where, little roots, .' which, faftem upon thes tree and as, it- were. enter) lintol sit. When, the ftem as cut) it emits vanpale brown fap. of -a difagreeable {cent.|, This fap:is fo fharp that the letters and charac- ters, made.upon:linnen with it,) cannot be got Out-again, but grow blacker the, more, the .cloath is wafhed... Boys «commonly marked their names.on their linnen with this-juice.. If you write»withait/on papers the Jetters never go out, but, grow, blackér. from time to time. mots Tats. {pecies. of .Sumach has thefame noxious qualities as the poifonous-fumach, or. Potfon-tree, which Ihave aboveldefcribed, being poifonous to fome peoples. though not.to. every oné. \ Therefore; albthat has been: faid of ‘the. peities tree is. hikewife ap= plicable to this; excepting that, the formes. has 'the ftronger poifon.., HoweverI have’ feen, people who have been as:much fwelled, from, the. noxious exhalations of the latter, as they could. have, been from’ thole. of, the; former. .. I likewife, know, that of two fil. ters, the, one could, manage the tree without, being affected: by, its, venom,,.though, thé other immediately felt it as'foonsas the,ex- halations . of the, tree, came, near, her,, or when. ever fhecame Es ae oy too\near the * Penfylvania, Germantown. 179 tree, and even when fhe ftood in the way ofthe wind, ‘ which blew directly from this’ fhrub.' But upon me'this {pecies of famach’ hasunever exherted ‘its ‘power, ‘though F made above» a hundred: experiments ‘upon owith the’ greateft : ftems, and« ithe nee {quirted into'my eye, -withowt pees melanysharm. On another: perfon's: hand*which Ivhad covered very thick with! it, ‘theifkin afew hours after “became! ag’ hard:as a piece of tanned leather, and peeled’ off-im the*following. wien as if little {eales’ fell fromit. amid aout - Obtober the rothy. ‘awidhe morning’ I ac- co ied Mii :Oack: tohis’'country’ feat;: which ie about nine miles from nee 10! to’ the north)». by gig Lad THover sda wendld 2 Pesfploniite : afford many oaks, and more fpecies of them than are found ‘further “north; yet’ they do ‘not! build foimatiy thips in this province as they doin the! onortheriv°ones, and ‘efpecially'in New England. «But ‘experience has taught the’ people that the fame’ ‘kind of trees’ is more’ durable: ‘the further it’ grows tothe iiorth;ivand? that this advantage decreafes the! morecit/grows in warm. elimates.® ” Ft is likewifé plaincthat. the trees in the fouth’ grow \morevevery “year; ‘and form ‘thiéker teigleroainas thofe in the®orth. ‘The! for’ M 2 mer E80 vs Qeteder BRAS oo memhave likewife much. greater tubesfor theicireulation of the, fap. than the latter. Asidfor. this, reafon: they..do, not, build:fc many thips, ini ‘Renfylianiay as » they, do inh New. England, ..though..more.than.in Virginia and: Maryland; but Caroline builds: very few,)and its merchants) get all their fhips: from - New | England.>, Thole which: are here made of the beft-oak, -hard- ly...are,-ferviceable, above, ten,) jor, at moft twelve years';,for ;then they, are,fo-rotten, © that no body. ventures 'to.go.te,feajim themy Many\ captains: of;, hips . come, oyer from England to North+ America, inorder toy get ships built. -.But-moftof them.¢hoofe New England, that being the eaniorenrs province ;,.and..if} they ‘even}¢x = in > fhips, which are; bound for Philadel, n frequently. on-their,arrival fet tn iti | fitvania for New, England. : The .Span iords in the Weft Indies. are. Sauk sto -build.their fhips of, a. peculiar, fort, of; /eedar,. owhich holds.out againft putrefaGion.and, wets but it, is not to be met, with, on..theccontinent in}. ithe Engh/bi provinces. Here, are. above nine different! i of oak, but not, one. of ./ them is;comparable, to the fingle {pecies we ‘. have |in| Sweden, with regard.to, its .good- nefs;,;And-therefore.\a fhip,.of , Huropear oak. cofts a great deal, ‘more Abpasenpinade | of American oak. | Many Penfyluania, Germantown. 181 (OMANY people who chiefly employed thénifelves in® gardening, “had found inva fuceeifion’6f years, thatthe red: Beer} which grew But of the feed which was got from New *York\ became very. {weet andHad‘a very fine fafte ; bue that it every yearclot part*of’its eoodnels, if it was’ cultivated frém! feeds**which ‘were ‘pot here. ‘Phe pedple were therefore obliged to get as many feeds of red beet every'year from New York; as were wanted ‘ih ‘their gardens.) Tt has like Wife! beer? enerally ‘ obferved; ‘that ‘thé plafits Which" are “produced ‘from > Engi feéds'aré always “much better and more*a- gteeable? that thofe'which‘come from feeds of this ‘country. S39 n19d Jsd3 “way 7 In’ the"parden of Mr. Cock was a raddifh which was*if the ‘loofe ‘foil, grown ‘big a8to BE Leven ‘inches ‘in’ diameter!) “very body that faw it, owned i¢was uncommon to'fee them Gf fuch @fizedss oS odd ‘THAT fpecies df? Convelvulus which ‘is commitily “éalled “Butatas, has ‘here> the Hathe 6f Bermudian potatoes. The common people} "and the gentry’ without ‘dittination antedthéi in their’ gacdens: > 'This'is BPR Lon em “teh en NOr Ores done in’ the ‘fame manner as with the corit mon"pétatéés>" Some people made little hit. locks} inté°which they put thefe potatoes’; ‘bit Others Only planted themvin Aaecbeds. ¥82 ~~ Oétaber 1748. “Fhe foil muit be a mixture of fand andearth, and neither too rich, nor too poor.) When “they'are going to plant'them, they cut them, ‘asthe commion potatoes, taking care how- Vever' that a bud or'two be left’: ‘upon each “piece” which ‘is intended to be planted. ‘Their colour is commonly paekandth cit, and yellow’ within: They are bigger thanthe ‘common fort, and have a fweet) and? ‘agreeable tafte, which I cannot®find’in'the ‘other potatoes, “in. artichokes! or! in any — other - Toot, and they almoftumelt inthe omouth. “Tt is not’ long finee theyhave been ‘planted’ here.0°' Phey ‘are « -dreffed in’ the ‘fain’ Davatiner’ as ‘commom' potatoés, ‘and “eaten either along with them, or by them- felvés:: ‘ They grow very faftvanid very!well heres but the greatett diffieulty(confifts in “keeping them over winter, fortheyewill bear neither cold, nor? a great ‘heat; ‘nor wet. | ‘They ‘muft thetefore be kept daring winter ina box with fand ina ‘warm roomf!'In \Penfyluania where\ they ‘have nto! valves i in ‘their'chimnies, they are put‘in fach’ a box with ‘fand, at © fome diftance from the’ Gite, | and there they are fecured both againtt froft and againft over great heat. It will'not “anfwer the purpofe to put them into: dry fand in a cellar, as is commonly, done with the common fort ‘of potatoes, For the | peur @ Penfylvania, Germantown. 183 moifture which is always in cellars, pene- trates. the fand, and. mnakess them. putre+ bys Te would probably, be be» very »-eafy, to keep -them-- in, Sweden:.in. warm. rooms, during the cold feafon. But the difficulty lies ‘wholly in bringing them over to Swe- den. 1, carried a confiderable number jof them: with. me on. leaving America, ijand took all poflible care in, preferving,them. -But.we-had-a-very violent ftorm at fea,..by which the thip.was fo greatly damaged, that -the,water,.got, in every: where, and wetted eur cloaths,, beds. and. other moveables,fo much, that we could, wring the water, out -of.thems,;Jt is, therefore no wonder. that my Bermuda. potatoes were rotten; . but.-as ‘they, are now), cultivated. .in Portugal, and Spain, nay,evenin Exgland, it will be.eafy to bring, them) into Sweden... The drink which, the Spaniards prepare from thefe po- tatoes in , their, American patie fons is,;not ufualin Penfyvania.*® _ Mr. Cock, had a, paper, mill, on a little elie ,and. all the coarfer forts, of paper.are amanufaG@ured, in it. It is,now annually rented, for . fifty pounds cso ia SENOYer st 2 caesad ua YEE ~OIons 3 -M ato ttt rhe oe sok yilaore < " * Mr. Miller br deferibes th his, ees in om eandentes s Didi. na toe “under the article o Convolvulus, {peciés the t7th. and 184 SS OF TAB Po Vo iuOeper the vith] » lorave: alteadyimen- tioned }sthat every -couhtrymam hass é¢ ots lefler nuniber of! apple’ trees planted rolindohis! farmm-houte, from whence’h gtedPquantities of fruit, :party of which she fells, part he makes cyder of) and) pattohe uesiinchisiowm “family foripyesytattss and the likeig “However ‘here expe an equab quantity of ‘di chevcestipewet tates was told, that this year hadonotby far afe forded: fuchi a great uantity of'applesias the preveding 5: thecaufe’ of which» theytold ime, was the: spontindal and ‘great drought §n°the*month ‘of May, ~whichhadthurtial. aheblofloms of the apple trees;:andvmade them wither. The heat had been fo igreat ‘ds todry'u vall the: plants,’ andsthegrafs in ano fields, oi has abish edsormods og: si7 toate: Polytrichum' commune, as fpecies oof mots). grew. plentifullycon“wetiand ‘low qmeadows between the ! woods (bridbin feve- ‘yal places iquite coveredthem,)\assour moff- -esicoverthe meadows’ in ‘Sweden. dole was likewife. very! iplenitifwhon ‘hillscnia. olde io (AGRICULTURE wasn lavvery bad ftate : hereabouts)’ ‘When»a 'perfon shad ibought:a ‘piece’ oft Jand, which | perhaps: had never tise ploughed fince>'the: creation,s‘hevcut down part of the wood; ‘toreoupithe roots, Premed the! ground, fowed: corn suit Penfylvania, Germantown. 185 andthe! firt time: got a plentiful) crops, But the famedand being ‘tilled for -feveral |. years comes ata ae being. manuredjit atlat muft-ofcourfe lofe its fertility. Its:pofleflor therefore leaves it fallow, and’ proceeds: to another part of his ground, which; he tréats in therfame manner. Thus he.goés:omfill he has:changed.a great part of his pofféffions into corn+fields, and: by: that means depri- ' wes the yground of sits; fertility. He: then séturnstocthe-firftfield, which now) is pret tyorwebki recovered); this: hes again ritidlss va Jongoas itewill afford: him;a good crop, but when dt& fértilitysis exhauftedj ; he deavesrit pis 1: mam proceeds. tondbRotéte chs ibeforel’nesd bsdtssrl od T © cisdiiw msds ai Ir being! lameiaeae here, | to: dex the: cat- tle go about the fields and in théswoods ‘both: day! and night;»the people cannot icol- de&t much dung for manure. Butby leaving the land>fallow for, feveral: years ‘together, a Great quantity: of weeds {pring up init, and eget fich ftrength, that cit» requires; a, confi- derable time) to -extirpate'them.>)|,\From shencesit dikewife; comes,: that the with weeds« «>The igreat tichnefs ofthe foil, which)-the firtt European icolonits found: here, and which had ineverjbeem ploughed before, hasogiven gs this negleé& of agriculture,!, which is bins till 186 Odfober 1748. fill obferved -by many of the initabinases: But) they do: mot confider, othat iwhennthe earth is: quite exhaufted,.a great {pacesof time;svand. aniinfinite deal ,of - ‘lsboursras ‘neceflary: to bring! uty again, into » good, or- der; efpecially in thefe countries ihaae are aimoft en fusion vforofcorehed The rae i the conn ebablalat combifiedilesin thin mould, :greatlyy mixed) withs:aschriek ' coloured)clay; anda quantity:of fimall- par- ticles of glimmer. |This latter! came: from » the ftones:owhich are here: almofbiievery where-to:be met with at the'depth:of a:foot or thereabouts.) Thefe little: pieces» \of glimmer made re grand: {parkdes: salon _ thenfanl fhonesuponsitsidrbak anit oniup Mc -cAuMosT> all the Iheaiiciudiatecaliianies were built either of ftone:or bricks; butiithofe of {tone were moresnumerous. .) German- town, which is about two: Englifh umiles long, had no other houfes,) and: theycoun- try houfes thereabouts, wereoalli: vbuilt».of ftone. But there are-feveral varieties;-of that .ftone which is commonly:made ufe-of in building. Sometimes: it: confifted> of//a » black or grey glimmer, running in undulated veins, the {paces between ;their bendings ws didiods an nian a bpeere ponies oa s09iG: © ow cathgeained Penfyluana, Germantown. 187 grained: limeftone, which was eafily friable. ‘Some tranfparent particles of quartz were ‘feattered in the mafs, ‘of which ;the glims mer/made the -greateft parts: Itowasovery »be cut, ‘and with-proper tools could deiaity be: fhaped into any form !»Some- ‘times however the pieces: confifted of ia blackj: fmall-grained» glimmer,’ ay white fmall-grained fandftone, and fome iparticlés of quartz, and the feveral:con{tituent parts were well mixed together; and fometimes the) ftone: had *broad: ftripes of | the) white limeftones without any addition’ of) glim- ‘mer; but moft:commonly they were much blended together;and of avgrey colour. Sometimes: this {tone was found to confit of quite fine and black pieces of glimmer, cand aigrey,» loofe and ‘very {mall-grained dimeftone. ° This was: likewifeo 0h voi tobe-cut, being looles0 ool THESE: varieties of: ria dois are.com- . monly°found clofe: together. They were ‘everys(where* tobe: met: with, at: a: little ‘idepth;: but notin equal quantity and good- nefs's\ andvnot always eafy to be broken. ‘Whenstherefore a perfon: intended to build ‘a houfe,) he: enquired where the beft ftone ‘could be met ‘with iIt is to be found on corn=fieldsand meadows, at a depth which wa from two to fix feet. The pieces were 188 ORD 1798. were diffétent: ayto fize: “Some were cixht or ten Feet long, two’ broad, and’ one’ thick! Sotnetiite they were fill bigger, bul HEL gay ely tHiich TEL. Siero Gy lay in’ ta one’ above ‘lanéther, the t icknefs’ of ach’ ftratiny’ bein ig about” ‘a’ foot.”'> The length and: mis ” were ‘different; ‘but’ commonly fach as T have before! mfentioned : They thaf? combionly’ dig three ‘or four feet” ‘before they Fedch” the? fitft “frat prey is, thas Lb arash ‘ih ake ast t which’ is’ UniverfaPhere, ‘and afi S id and clay, ‘though ‘the ‘former i Orsdte! len- tiful.° "He toofe’ ‘pieces of glimmer’ which fhine! 16 Jiu’ in an feem to” ~ to it~ | oe that'cafndt always’ be ndoHe ae Lie ing frequently rough on all fides, P. ny a ly cut fmooth ‘with tools; finde. it i ate and not. very difficult’ to” ‘be’ ‘broke foes’ however aré “‘uilequal ae ini and”: therefore: ‘by “p utting Shae pe ether they cannot be ‘kept’ a ies 'as bricks. It fometimes reli ip BehP yat pieces ‘break off ‘when they” are “cut, , nd eave: ean o 4 the wie Alora were, aan wer aa ey, were joined. with.mortar, bene a the wall is. made {mooth, tn € Mortar | and. whitewathed. ;, has. en obferved that, this kind. . itone e attracts the, moifture in. a.rainy or wet ca ae ydn Philadelp 4a, and, its), environs, d. feyeral houfes. buile -of i Binge of to Ca] nw 4 idee pale RS commonly. «Ae in te ey NB “4 Mrs Cock’ 5 fegroes Had scale me thepfki of A badger. (Ur/us. Meles) which > ki lled ; ra. few. days ago, and which. | me'that, the... American. badger. is ag with the Annes one. df, us here | round Hog... [ARDS night I ‘TpEUSNED. to. ‘Philadel a ‘Oétober 190 - Oétober'1748. \ OGfober the rath In “the: morning went t0 the ‘river \SAuikilly partly to gather feeds, partly to colleét plants for the herb- aly and to make all forts of sobfervations: The Skull isa narrow river,’ which falls into ithe Delaware, about | four*miles from Philadelphia to the fouths but narrow as. is, it:rifes on thes weft fide ‘of thofe © mountains, commonly called the pr tains; and’ runs two. hundred Engl fh miles, and perhaps more. “' It isa great’ difadvan- tage to this country, that there are >feveral cataracts in this) river as’ low» ass Philade/s phiay. for which reafon there ‘can be Woonas vigation on it. To day» I» made ‘fome’de- feriptions:and remarks on’ fuch plants as the cattle liked, or fuch as they never touched. ‘I opserven feveral little fabterraneous’ walks ‘in the fields, running’ under ‘ground in various directions): the: wiewen,: of which was ‘big enough for a mole: the earth, which formed as it: were a vault above it, and lay elevated like a little bank,owas near two inches high, fall ‘as: broad as.a man’s hand; and about two inches thick. Ta un® cultivated fields “I frequently: faw thefe fubterraneous walks, whichdifcovered thems felves\by the ground thrown up above them, which when trod upon gave way, and made it inconvenient ‘to walk in ‘the: field. Fe * | ne Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 191 . Turse walks are inhabited-by a,kind)of nole;* which I intend too deferibe more accurately in another ‘work, »Theirfoodis commonly roots: I have obferved: the: fol- lities in one which was caught It-had -greater ftiffnefs. and. ftrength inoits legs; than I ever obferved in other. sanimals in-proportion to ‘their. fize. | Whenever it intended to dig, it held its legs. obliquely; like oars,\. I ‘laid my. handkerchief: before it, and it, began to ftir in it with: the f{nouts and. taking away the handkerchief to fee fpace. of -a minute, it» had) madeit. full. of » holes; -atid it lookedias if it had been piere= éediverysinuchyby an awl, I was:obliged to put fome books on the cover of the box ia which: T.kept-this animal, or elfeit was flung, off immediately... It was very irafoi- ble;; ‘and would «bite: igreat holes ianto:any thing» that was\ put >. Tue Raccoon’ which we’ / Seeéedesip call . Siupp,.can in time’ be made fo'tame as to run about the ftreets like a domeftic animal ; but it is impoffible'to make it leave off its habit of ftealing. In the dark it’ ‘creeps to the-poultry, and kills in onenight a*whole ftock.: Sugar and other fweet things muft be carefully hidden from it, forif the chefts and boxes are not always locked up, it gets into them, eats the fugar, ‘and licks up the treacle with its paws: the ladies — ave Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 209 have every; day fome complaint again it, aiid for.this.reafon many people rather for- bear the-diverfion which.this. tel -like ant- mal affords. Tue grey and Spins ‘Squirrels até fo tamed by the boys, that they fit on their. fhoul- ders, ‘and-follow them every where. Tue Lurkey Cocks and Hens run about in the woods. of this-c¢ountry, and differ in nothing from our tame ones, except -in their fuperior fize, and redder, though more palatable flefh. When. their! eggs are. found in the. wood, and put-under. tame Turkey hens, the young ones become tame; how- ever when they grow up, it fometimes happens that they fly away; their wings are therefore commonly clipped, ¢efpecially when.young... But the tamed turkeys are commionly much more irafcible, than thofe which. are’ naturally tame. The Indians likewife employ themfelves in taming them and keeping them near their huts. Witp-Geefe-have likewife been tamed in the: following manner. When the -wild pee eefe firft come hither in fpring, and ftop a ttle while.(for they do not breed in Pen Sykoania) ‘the. péople try to fhooct them in the wing, which however is generally mere Cita rips are then row to the placé- where 9 @ giothé ~ ~ w ° i 210 October 1748. \ the wild goofe fell, catch it, and keep it for fome time at home, by this means many of them have been made fo tame, that when they were let out in the morning, they re- turned in the evening, but to be more fure of them, their wings are commonly clipped. I have feen wild geefe of this kind, which the owner affured me, that he had kept for more than twelve years; but though . he . kept eight of them, yet he never had the pleafure to fee them copulate with pees ones, or lay eggs. PARTRIDGES, which are "haps in abun- dance, may likewife be fo far. tamed, as to run about all day with the pouletr ys and to come along.with them to be fed when they are called. In the fame manner I have feen wild Pigeons,» which were ,.made_ fo tame as to fly out and return again. In fome winters there are immenfe quantities of wild pigeons in Penfylvania. | Oéfober the 24th. Or all the rare. birds of North America, the Humming bird is the moft admirable, or at leaft moft worthy of peculiar attention... Several reafons induce me to, believe that few. parts of the world can ‘produce its equal. Dr., Laneus calls it Trochilus Colubris. The Swedes and {ome Englifbmen call it. the. King’ s bird, but the | name of Humming bird is more~common. Catefby Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 211 Gately. in his Natural Hiftory of Carolina, Vol. 1. page 65, tab. 65. has drawn it, in ‘its me, fize, with its proper colours, and. added a defcription of u.*1, In fize it is not much bigger than a large humble bee, and i is therefore the leaft of all birds, or it is much, if there is a leffer {pecies in the world.’ Its plumage is moft beautifully coloured, moft of its feathers being green, fome grey, and others forming a fhining ‘red ting ‘round its neck; the tail glows with fine feathers, changife from green into a brafs.colour. Thefe birds come here in {pring about the time when it be- gins to grow very warm, and make their nefts in fummer, but towards autumn they retreat again into the more fouthern coun- tries of America. They fubfift barely upon the nectar, or fweet juice of flowers contained. in that part, which botanifts call the nec- tarium, and which they fuck up with their long bills. Of all the flowers, they like thofe moft, which have a long tube, and O 2 have * Tue fame is to be met with in Edwards’s Natural Hif- tory of Birds, page 38. tab, 38. F. + ‘THER is a much leffer {pecies of humming-bird, by Linnaeus called Trochilus minimus, being the leaft bird known ; ; Sir Hans Sloane’s living one, weighed only twenty grains, and Mr. Edwards’s dry one forty-five. It is drawn in Ed- wards’s birds, t. 150, in its natural fize, together with its ego. F. 212 Ober 1748. have obferved that they have fluttered chiefs ly about the Impatiens Noli tangere, and. the Mondrda with crimfon flowers., An inha- bitant of the country is fure to have anum- ber of thefe beautiful and agreeable little birds before his window all, the fummer long, if he takes care to plant a bed with © all forts of fine flowers under them. | It is indéed a diverting {pectacle to fee thefe lit- tle active creatures flying about the flowers like bees, and fucking. their- juices. with their long and narrow bills. ‘The flowers of the above-mentioned Monarda grow ver+ ticillated, that is, at different diftances they furround the ftalk, as the flowers of out mint (Mentha) baftard hemp, (Galeopfis ) mother-wort (Leonurus) and dead nettle {Lanium). \t is therefore diverting to fee them putting their bills into every flower in the circle. As foon as they have fucked - the juice of one flower, they flutter to the hext. One that has not feen them would hardly believe in how fhort a {pace of time they have had their tongues in all the flow- ers of a plant, which when large and with along tube, the little bird by. putting its head into them, looks as if it crept with ot its body into them. 'Durine their fucking the juice out of the flowers they never fettle on. it, but flutter Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 213 flutter continually like bees, bend their feet backwards, and move. their wings fo guick, that they are hardly vifible. During this fluttering they make a humming like bees, or like that which is occafioned by the turning of a little wheel. After they have thus, without refting, fluttered for a while, they fly to a neighbouring tree or poft, and refume their vigour again. They then return to their humming and fucking. They are not very thy, and I in company with feveral other people, have not been full two yards from the place where they fluttered about and fucked the flowers ;. and though we fpoke and movéd, yet they were no ways difturbed; but on going towards them, they would fly off with the fwiftnefs of an arrow.. When feveral of them were on the fame bed, there was always a vio- lent combat between them, in meeting each other at the fame flower (for envy was likewife predominant amongft thefe little creatures) and they attacked with fuch im- petuofity, that it would feem as if the ftrongeft would pierce its antagonift through and through, with its long bill. During the fight, they feem to ftand in the air, keeping themfelves up, by the incredibly fwift motion of their wings. When the windows towards the garden are open, they O 3 purfue Q14 October 1748. purfue each other into the rooms,’ fight a little, and flutter away again. Sometimes they come to a flower which is withering, and: has no more juice in it ;’ they thenin a fit of anger pluck it off, and throw it on the ground, that it may not miflead them for the future. If a garden contains a great number of thefe little birds, they are feen © to pluck off the flowers in fuch quantities, that the ground is quite covered with them, and it feems as if this praccrsind from. a motion of envy. CoMMONLY you hear no ‘thee fouliid than: their humming, but when they fly againft each other in’ the air, they make a chirping noife like a {parrow or chicken. I have fometimes walked with feveral .other people in fimall gardens, and. thefe birds - have on all fides fluttered about us, with- out appearing very fhy. They are to {mall that one would eafily miftake them for great humming-bees or butterflies, and their flight refembles that of the former, and. is incre- dibly fwift. They have never been ob- ferved to feed on infects or fruit; the nec- tar of flowers, feems therefore to be their only food. Several people have caught fome humming birds‘on account of their fingular beauty, and have put them into cages, where they died for want of a proper food. However Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 215 However Mr. Bartram has kept a couple of them for feveral weeks together, by feed- ing them with water ‘in’ which’ fugar had _ been diflolved, and I am of opinion that it would not be difficult to keep them . win- ter in a hot-houfe. © “Tue humming bird always builds its be in the middle of a branch of a tree, and it is fo final, that it cannot be feen from the ground, but ‘he ‘who intends to fee it muft get. up to’ the branch. For this reafon it is looked upon as a great rarity if a nett is accidentally found,’ efpecially as the trees in fammier have fo thick a foliage. The neft is likewife the leaft ofall; that which is in my poffeffion is quite round, and confifts in the infide of a brownith and quite foft down, which’ feeéms to have béen collected from the leaves of the great mullein or Verbafeum T; hapfus, ‘which are often found covered with a foft wool of this colour, and the plant is plentifal here. The outfide of the net has a’ coating of green mofs, fuch as is com- mon’on old pales or enclofures and on trees; the inner diameter of the neft is hardly a ‘geometrical inch at the top, and its depth half ‘an inch. It is however known that the humming birds make. their nefts likewife of flax, hemp, mofs, hair and other fuch foft O4 materials ; 216 | Oober 1748. materials ; they are faid to lay ve Sas each of the fize of a pea. Odiober the 25th. I employed. this. day and the next in packing up all the feeds gathered this autumn, for I had an opper- tunity of fending them to England by the fhips which failed about this time, From England they were forwarded to Scoedens Ogfober the 27th, In the morning f fet out on a little journey to New York; in com- pany with Mr. Peter Cock, with a-view to fee the country, and to enquire, intg the fafeft road, which I could take in going to Canada, through the defart or un+ inhabited country between it and theRingift provinces. THar part where we travelled at prdfent was pretty well inhabited on both fides of the road, by Englifbmen, Germans and other Europeans. Plains and hills of different di- menfions were feen alternately, mountains and ftones, I never faw, excepting afew pebbles. Near almoft every farm was a great orchard with peach and apple trees, fome of which were yet loaded with fruit. Tue enclofures were in fome parts low énough, for the cattle to leap over them with eafe sto prevent this the hogs» had a triangular wooden yoke: this cuftom was ad if BAYS already ‘obferved, common over | all Penfylvania, New F rankfurt. 217 all the Enghjb plantations. ..To the horfes neck was faftened a piece of wood, which at the lower end had a tooth or hook, fatt- ening in the enclofure, and ftopping the horfe, juft when it lifted its fore feet-to leap over; but I know not whether this be a good invention with regard to horfes.., They were likewife kept in bounds by a piece of wood, one end of which, was faftened to one of the fore feet, .and the other.to one ofthe hind feet, and it forced them to walk pretty flowly, .as at the fame. time it made _ it impofiible for them to leap over.the en- clofures. To me it appeared.that the horfes were fubje& to all forts. of dangerous acci-+ dents from this piece of wood. | > Near. New Frankfurt, we rode over a little ftone. bridge, and fomewhat further, eight or, nine Engh/bh miles from Phiadel- phia we pafied over another, which .was likewife of ftone.,. There. are not yet any mileftones, put.up in the country, and the inhabitants only compute the diftances ‘by guefs. -\We were afterwards brought over a rivet in a ferry, where we paid three- pence aperfon, for ourfelves and our horfes, _ AT one. of the places where we ftopt,te have our horfes fed, the people-had.a Mocking-bird\ in a cage; and itis here yeckonedithe beft finging bird, though its plumage a8 OoBer “1748. plumage be very fimple, and not fhowy at all. At this time of the year it does not fing. ‘ Linneus calls it Turdus polyglottos, and Cate/by in his Natural Hiftory of Caro- lina, Vol. 1. p. 27. tab. 27, has likewife defcribed and drawn this bird. ‘The ‘peo- ple faidthat it built its nefts in the buthes and trees, but is fo fhy, that if any body come and look at its eggs, it leaves the neft, ‘never to come to it again. Its. young ones require great care in: being bred up. If they are taken from their mother and put into a cage, fhe feeds them for three or four days; but feeing no hopes ‘of fetting them at liberty, fhe flies away. It then often happens, that the young ones die foon after, doubtlefs becaufe they cannot accuftom themfelves to eat what the people give them. But it is generally imagined, that the laft time the mother feeds them, fhe finds means to poifon them, in order, the fooner to deliver them from’ flavery and wretchednefs. Thefe birds ftay all fummer in the colonies, but ‘retire in autumn to the fouth, and: ftay away’ all winter. They have got the name of Mock- ing-birds, on account of their fkill in imi- tating the note of almoft every bird ‘they hear. The fong peculiar to them is 'excel- lent, and varied -by an infinite change of notes Penfylvania, New Briftol. 219 notes and melody ; feveral people are there- fore of opinion, that they are the beft fing- ing birds in the world. - So much is certain, that few birds come up to them; this is what makes them precious: the Swedes call it by the fame name as the Enghjb. ABoUT noon we came to New Briffol, a {mall town in Penfylvania, on the banks of the Delaware, about fifteen Engh/b from Philadelphia. Moft of the houfes are built of ftone, and ftand afunder. The inhabi- tants carry on.a fmall trade, though moft of them get their goods from Philadelphia. ‘On the other fide of the river, almoft di- rectly oppofite to New Brifiol, lies the town of Burlington, in which the governor of New Ferfey refides. _ We had now country feats on both re vi of the roads. Now we came into a lane enclofed with pales on both fides, including pretty great corn-fields. |Next followed a wood, and we perceived for the {pace of four Englifh miles nothing but woods, and a very poor foil, on which the Lupinus perennis grew plentifully and fucceeded well. I was overjoyed to fee a plant come on fo well-in thefe poor dry places, and even began to meditate, how to improve this difcovery in a foil like that which it inhabited. ButI afterwards had the mortification to find that sy the 220 Odteber 1748. the horfes and cows eat almoft all the other plants, but left the. lupine, which was however very green, looked very freth, and was extremely foft to the touch. Perhaps means may be found out of making this plant palatable to the cattle. In the even- ing we arrived at Trenton, after having pre- vioufly pafled the Delaware in a ferry. _ Oélober the 28th, TRENTON is a long narrow town, fituate at fome diftance from the river Delaware, on a fandy plain; it belongs to New ‘ferfey, and they reckon it thirty miles from PdAzladelpbia. It has two fmall churches, one for the people be- longing to the church of England, the other for the prefbyterians. The houfes are partly built of ftone, though moft of them are. made of wood or planks, commonly two ftories high, together with a cellar be- low the building, and a kitchen under ground, clofe to the cellar. ‘The houfes {tand at a moderate diftance from one ano- ther. They are commonly built fo, that the {treet pafles along one fide of the houf- es, while gardens of different dimenfions bound the other fide; in each garden is a draw-well; the place is reckoned very heal- thy. Our landlord told us, that twenty-two years ago, when he firit fettled here, there was hardly more than one houfe ; but from that timé New Ferfey, Trenton. 22% tine Trenton has encreafed fo much, that there are at prefent near a hundred howfes. The honfes were within divided into feveral rooms by their partitions of boards. The inhabitants of the place carried on a fmall trade with the goods which they got from Philadelphia, but their chief gain confifted in the arrival of the numerous travellers Between that city and New York; for they are commonly brought by the Trenton Yachts from Philadelphia to Trenton, ot from thence to Philadelphia. But from Trenton further to New Brunfwick, the tra- vellers go in the waggons which fet out évery day for that place. Several of the in- habitants however likewife fubfift on the earriage for all forts of goods, which are every day fent in great quantities, either from. Philadelphia to New York, or from thence to the former place; for betweénh Philadelphia ‘and Trenton all goods go by water, but between Trenton and New Brun/- qick they ate all carried by land, and both thefe conveniences belong to people of this fown. | | i For the yachts which go between this place and the capital of Pen/fylvania, they ufually pay a fhilling and fix-pence of Pen- Sylvania currency per fae and every one _pays belides for his baggage. Every paf- ; fenger 222 _. Offober 1748. fenger muft provide meat and drink for himfelf, or pay fome fettled fare: between Trenton and New Brunfwick a perfon pays two fhillings and fixpence, and the >aggage is likewife paid for feparately. | WE continued our journey in the morn- ing ; the country through which: we paffed was for the greatett part level, though fometimes there were fome long hills, fome parts were covered with trees, but far the greater part of the country was without woods ; on the other hand I never faw any place in America, the towns excepted, fo well peopled. An old man, who lived in this neighbourhood and accompanied us for fome part of the road; however affured me, that he could well remember the time, | when between Trenton and New Brunfwick there were not above three farms, and he reckoned it was about fifty and fome odd years ago. During the greater part of the day we had very extenfive corn-fields on both fides of the road, and commonly towards the fouth the country had a great declivity. Near almoft every farm was a {pacious or- chard full of peaches and apple trees, and in fome of them the fruit was. fallen from the trees in fuch quantities, as to cover near- ly the whole furface. Part of it they left to rot, fince they could not take it all in and New Ferfey, Trenton. 223 and confume it. Wherever we pafied by we were always welcome, to go into the fine orchards, and gather our hats and pock- ets full of the choiceft fruit, without the poffeffor’s s fo much as looking after it. Cherry trees were planted near the farms, on the roads, é&c. , i THE barns* hada peculiar kind of con- firuGtion hereabouts, which I will give a concife defcription of. The whole build- ing was very great, fo as almoft to equal.a fmall church; the roof was pretty high, covered with wooden {fhingles, declining on both fides, but not fteep : the walls which {upport it, were not much. higher than a full grown man; but on the other hand the breadth of the building was the more confiderable : in the middle was the threfhing floor, and aboveit, or in the loft or garret they put the corn which was not yet threfhed, the ftraw, or any thing elfe, according to the feafon : on one fide were {tables for the horfes, and on the other for the cows. And the fmall cattle had like- wife their particular ftables or ftyes; on both ends of the buildings were great gates, y fo * THE author feems to comprehend more by ke word, than what it commonly includes, for he defcribes it as a building, which contains both aban and fables. F. . i 224. October 1748. fo that one could come in with a cart and horfes through one of them, and go out at the other: here was therefore undet one roof the threfhing floor, the barn, the fta- bles, the hay loft, the coach houfe, é&c. This kind of buildings is chiefly made ufe of by the Dutch and Germans; for it is to be obferved that the country between Tren- ton and New York, is inhabited by few Enghfhmen, but inftead of them by Germans or Dutch,* the latter of which efpecially are numerous. Berore I proceed, I find it néceflary to remark one thing with regard to the Indi- ans, or old Americans. For this account may perhaps meet with readers, who, like many people of my acquaintance, may be of opinion that all North America, was al- moft wholly inhabited by favage or heathen nations, and they may be aftonifhed, that I do not mention them more frequently in my account. Others may perhaps imagine, that when I mention in my journal, that the country is much cultivated, that in fe- veral places, houfes of ftone or wood aré built, round which-are corn-fields, gardens, and * Tus kind of building is frequent i in the Aovth of Ger inainy, Holland, and Pruffia, and therefore it is no wonder that it is employed by people who, were ufed to fhenrin their own country. F. New Ferfey, Trenton. 225 and orchards, that I am fpeaking of the property of the Indians ; to undeceive them, T here give the following explication. The ‘country efpecially all along the coafts, in the Ezghjb colonies, is inhabited by Euro- peans, who in fome places are already fo numerous, that few parts of Europe are more populous. The Indians have fold the country to the Europeans, and have retired further up: in moft parts you may travel twenty Swedi/h miles, or about a hundred and twenty Engli/h miles, from the fea fhore, before you reach the firft habitations of th Indians. And it is very poflible for a perfon to have been at Philadelphia and other towns on the fea fhore for half a year together, without fo much as feeing an In- dian. \ intend in the fequel to give a more circumftantial account of them, their reli- gion, manners, oeconomy, and other par- ticulars relating to them: at prefent I re- turn to the fequel of my journal. ~ AxsouT nine Englifh miles from Trenton, the ground began to change its colour ; hitherto it confifted of a confiderable quan- tity of -hazel coloured clay, but at prefent the earth was a reddifh brown, fo that it fometimes had a purple colour, and fome- times looked like logwood. This colour came from a red limeftone which approach- r ed te a ee & 226 _ Odtober 1748. ed very near to that whichis on the moun- tain Kznnekulle in Weft Gothland, and makes a particular. ftratum in the rock. The American red limeftome therefore feems to be merely a variety of that Ifaw in Sweden, it lay in {trata of two or three fingers thick- nefs; but was divifible into many thinner plates or fhivers, whofe furface was feldom flat and {mooth, but commonly rough: the {trata themfelves were frequently cut off by horizontal cracks. When thefe {tones were expofed to the air, they by degrees fhivered and withered into pieces, and at laft turn- edinto duft. The people of this neighhour- hood did not know how to make any ufe of it; the foil above is fometimes rich and fometimes poor: in fuch places where the people had lately dug new wells, I perceiv- ed, that moft of the rubbifh which was thrown. up confifted of fuch a fpecies of {tone. This reddifh brown earth we always faw till near New Brunfwick, where it is particularly plentiful. The banks of the river, fhewed in many places nothing but ftrata of Limeffone, which did not run ho- rizontally, but dipped very much. : AxsoutT ten o'clock in the morning we came to Prince-town, which is fituated in a plain. Moft of the houfes are built of wood, and are not contiguous, fo that there , are New ferfey, Prince-town. 247 are gardens and paftures between them. As thefe parts were fooner inhabited by Euro- peans than Penfylvania, the woods were likewife more cut away, and the country more cultivated, fo that one might have imagined himfelf to be in Europe. WE now thought of continuing our jour~ ney, but as it began to rain very heavily, and continued fo during the whole day and part of the night, we were forced to fay till next morning. Odfeber the 29th. THis morning we proceeded on our journey. The country was pretty well peopled; however there were yet great woods in many places: they all confifted of deciduous trees: and I did not perceive a fingle tree of the fir kind, till I came to New Brun/wick. The ground was level, and did not feem to be every where of the richeft kind. In fome places it had hillocks, lofing themfelves almoft imperceptibly in the plains, which were commonly crofied by a rivulet. Almoft near every farm-houfe were great orchards. The houfes were commonly built of timber, and at fome diftance by themfelves ftood the ovens for baking, confifting commonly of clay. _ Ow a hill covered with trees, and called Rockhill, ¥_ faw feveral pieces of ftone or Pez rock, 228 Odfober 1748. rock, fo big, that they would have requi- red three men to roll them down. But befides thefe there were few great ftones in the country; for moft of thofe which we faw, could eafily be lifted up by a fingle man. In another place we perceived a number of little round pebbles, but we id not meet with either mountains or rocks. | ABOUT noon we arrived at New Bran fwick, a pretty little town in the province of New ‘Ferfey, in a valley on the weft fide of the river Rareton; on account of its low fituation, it cannot be feen (coming from Penfylvania) before you get to the top of the hill, which is quite clofe up to it: the town extends north and fouth along the tiver. The German inhabitants have two churches one of ftone and the other of wood. The Exgh/hb church is likewile of the latter kind, but the prefbyterians were build- ing one of ftone: the town houfe makes dikewife a pretty good appearance. Some of the other houfes are built of bricks, but moft of them are made either wholly of wood, or of bricks and wood; the wooden houfes are not made of ftrong timber, but merely of boards or planks, which are within joined by laths: fuch houfes as confift of both wood and bricks, have only the wall towards the ftreet of bricks, all the other fides being merely of planks. This peculiar New “ferfey, New Brunfwick. 229 peculiar kind of oftentation would eafily lead a traveller, who paffes through the town in hafte, to believe that moft of the houfes are built of bricks. The houfes were covered with fhingles; before each door there was an elevation, to which you afcend by fome fteps from the {treet ; it refembled a {mall balcony, and had fome benches on both fides, on which the people fat in the evening, in order to enjoy the frefh air, and to have the pleafure of view- ing thofe who pafled by. The town has only one ftreet lengthways, and at its nor- thern extremity there is a ftreet acrofs; both of thefe are of a confiderable length. Tue river Rareton paffes hard by the town, and is deep enough for great yachts to come up; its breadth near the town is within the reach of a common gun fhot; the tide comes up feveral miles beyond the town, the yachts. were placed lengthways along the bridge; the river has very high and pretty fteep banks on both fides, but near the town there are no fuch banks, it being fituated in a low valley. One of the fireets i is almoft entirely inhabited by Dutch- ‘men, who came hither from Albany, and for that reafon they call it Albany ftreet. Thefe Dutch people only keep company among themfelves, and feldom or never go a- mongft the other inhabitants, living asit were eo eS quite 2.30 October 1 748. quite feparate from them. New Brunfwick belongs to New ‘Fer/ey; however the greateft part, or rather all its trade is to New York, which is about forty Englifh miles diftant 5 to that place they fend corn, flour in great quantities, bread, feveral other ne- ceffaries, a great quantity of linfeed, boards timber, wooden veffels, and all forts of carpenters work. Several {mall yachts are. - every day going backwards and forwards between thefe two towns. The inhabitants likewife get a confiderable profit from the travellers, who every hour pafs through, on the high road. THE feep banks confift of the red lime- ftone, which I have before defcribed. It is here plainly vifible that the ftrata are not horizontal, but confiderably dipping, e pe cially towards the fouth. The weather and the air has in a great meafure diflolved the ftone here: I enquired, whether it could not be made ufe of, but was affured, that in building houfes it was entirely ufe- lefs; for, though it is hard and peftma- nent under ground, yet on being dug out, and expofed for fome time to the aif, it - firft crumbles into greater, then into le pieces, and at laft is converted into duit" An inhabitant of this town, however tried to build a houfe with this fort of ftone, but its New ‘ferfey, New Brunfwick. 23% its outfides being expofed to the air, foon began to change fo much, that the owner was obliged to put boards all over the wall, to preferve it from falling to pieces. The . people however pretend that this ftone is a very good manure, if it is {catter- ed upon the corn-fields in its rubbifh ftate, for it is faid to ftifle the weeds : it is there- fore made ufe of both on the fields and in gardens.* TowArDs the evening we continued our journey, and were ferried over the river Rareton, together with our horfes. In a very dry fummer, and when the tide has ebbed, it is by no means dangerous to ride through this river. On the oppofite fhore the red juniper tree was pretty abundant. The country through which we now pafi- ed was pretty well inhabited, but in moft places full of {mall pebbles. HOt We faw Guinea Hens in many places where we pafled by. They fometimes run about the fields, at a good diftance from the farm-houfes. ' AsouT eight Englith miles from New Brunfwick, the road divided. We took that on the left, for that on the right leads P 4 to :™ PROBABLY it is a ftone marle; a blue and reddifh {pe- cies of this kind is ufed with good fuccefs, in the county of Bamff in Scotland. 232 Ogtober 1748, to Amboy, the chief fea-town in New Fer- Jey... The country now made a charming appearance ; fome parts being high, others forming vallies, and all of them well culti- vated. From the hills you had a profpec& of houfes, farms, gardens, corn-fields, fo- tefts, lakes, iflands, roads, and paftures. In moft of the places where we travelled this day the colour of the ground was reddifh. I make no doubt, but. there were ftrata of the before-mentioned red limeftone under it. Sometimes the ground tooked very like a cinnabar ore. | Woop-BRIDGE is a {mall village in a plain, confifting of a few houfes: we ftop- ped here to reft our horfes a little. The houfes were moft of them built of boards ; the walls had a covering of fhingles on the outfide ; thefe fhingles were round at one end, and all of a length in each row: fome of the houfes had an Italian roof, but the greateft part had roofs with pediments ; moft of them were covered with fhingles. In moft places we met with wells and buckets to draw up the water. ma ELIZABETH-TOWN Is a {mall town, about twenty. Englifh miles diftant from New Brunfwick: we arrived there immediately after fun fetting. Its houfes are moft {cattered, but well built, and generally. of New Ferfey, Elizabeth-town. 233 of boards, with a roof of fhingles, and walls covered with the fame. ‘There were likewife fome ftone buildings. A little ri- vulet paffes through the town from weft to eait; it is almoft reduced to nothing when the water ebbs away, but with the full tide they can bring up fmall yachts. Here were two fine churches, each of which made a much better appearance than any one in Philadelphia. ‘That belonging to the people of the church of England was built of bricks, had a fteeple with bells, and a baluftrade round it, from which there was a profpect of the country. The meeting houfe of the prefbyterians was built of wood, but had both a fteeple and bells, and was, like the other houfes covered with fhingles. The town houfe made likewife a good appearance, and had a fpire with a bell. The banks of the river were red, from the reddifh limeftone; both in and about the town were many gardens and orchards, and it might truly be faid that Elizabeth-town was fituated in a garden; the ground hereabouts being even and well cultivated. | Tue geefe, in fome of the places by which we paffed this day and the next, carried three or four little fticks, of the length of a foot about their necks; they i were 234 Osober 1 748. were faftened croffways, to prevent them from creeping through half broken enclo- fures. They look extremely awkward, and it is very diverting to fee them in this attire. | Ar night we took up our lodgings at Elizabeth-town Point, an inn about two Engh/b miles diftant from the town, and the laft houfe on this road belonging to New ‘ferfey. ‘The man who had taken the leafe of it, together with that of the ferry near it, told us that he paid a hundred and ten pounds of Pen/ylvania CuRteaCY to the owner. Odtober the 30th. WE were ready to proceed on our journey at fun-rifing. Near the inn where we had paffed the night, we were to crofs a river, and we were brought over, together with our horfes, in a wretch- ed half rotten ferry. This river came a confiderable way out of the country, and -fmall veffels could eafily fail up it. This was a great advantage to the inhabitants of the neighbouring country, giving them an opportunity of fending their goods to New York with great eafe; and they even made ufe of it for trading to the Weft Indies. The country was low on both fides of the river, and confifted of meadows. But there was no other hay to be got, than fuch as com- monly New York, Staten Ifland. 235 monly grows in fwampy grounds ; for as the tide comes up in this river, thefe low plains were fometimes overflowed when the water was high. The people hereabouts are faid to be troubled in fummer with im- menfe fwarms of gnats or mufquetoes, which fting them and their cattle. This was afcribed to the low fwampy meadows, on which thefe infects depofite their eggs, which are afterwards hatched by the heat. As foon as we had got over theriver, we were upon Staten Ifland, which is quite furrounded with falt water. This is the beginning of the province of New York. Moft of the people fettled here were Dutch- men, or fuch as came hither whilft the Dutch were yet in pofleffion of this place. But at prefent they were fcattered among the Exgh/b and other European inhabitants, and {poke Engl/h for the greateft part. The profpec& of the country here is ex- tremely pleafing, as it is not fo much in- tercepted by woods, but offers more cul- tivated fields to view. Hills and vallies ftill continued, as ufual, to change alternately. Tue farms were near each other. Mott of the houfes were wooden ; however fome were built of ftone. Near every farm-houfe was an orchard with apple trees: the fruit was already for the greateft part gathered. Here, 2.36 Oétober 1748. Here, and on the whole journey before, I obferved a prefs for cyder at every farm- houfe, made in different manners, by which the people had already preffed the juice out of the apples, or were juft bufied with that work. Some people made ufe of a wheel made of thick oak planks, which turned upon a wooden axis by means of a horfe drawing it, much in the fame manner as the people do with woad;* except that here the wheel runs upon planks, Cherry trees ftood along the enclofures round corn- fields. THE corn-fields were excellently Gitnated, and either fown with wheat or rye. They had no ditches on their fides, but (as is -ufual in England) only furrows, drawn at greater or lefler diftances from each other. In one place we obferved a water mill, | fo fituated, that when the tide flowed, ‘/ the water ran into a pond: but when it ebbed, the floodgate was drawn up, and the mill driven by the water, flowing out of the pond. AxsouT eight o’clock in the morning we arrived at aie place where we were to crofs _ the * Dr. Linneus, in his Travels through Wefrogothia, has given a drawing of the machine by which woad is prepared, on the 128th. page. New York. 239 the water, in order tocome to the town of New York. We left our horfes here and went on board the yacht: we were to go eight Engl/b miles by fea; however we landed about eleven o'clock in the morning at New York. We fawa kind of wild ducks in immenfe quantities upon the water : the people called them Blue bills, and they feemed to be the fame with our Puntail ducks, or Linngus’s Anas acuta: but they were very fhy. On the fhore of the conti- nent we faw fome very fine floping corn- fields, which at prefent looked quite green, the corn being already come up. We faw many boats in which the fifhermen were bufy catching oyfters: to this purpofe they make ufe of a kind of rakes with long iron teeth bent inwards; thefe they ufed either fingly or two tied together in fuch a man- ner, that the teeth were turned towards each other. Odtober the 31ft. Asour New York they find innumerable quantities of excel- lent oyfters, and there are few places which have oyfters of fuch an exquifite tafte, and of fo great a fize: they are pemied and fent to the Weft Indies and other places ; which is done in the following manner. As foon as the oyfters are caught, their fhells are opened, and the fifth wafhed clean ; fome 238 Ogiober 1748. fome water is then poured into a pot, the oyfters are put into it, and they muft boil for a while; the pot is then taken off from the fire again, the oyfters taken out and put | upon a difh, till they are fomewhat dry: then you take fome mace, allfpice, black pepper, and as much vinegar as you think is {uficient to give a fourith tafte. All this is mixed with half the liquor in which the oyfters were boiled, and put over the fire again. While you boil it great care is to be taken in {cumming off the thick feum ; at laft the whole pickle is poured into a glafs or earthen veffel, the oyfters are put to it, and the vefiel is well ftopped to keep out the air. In this manner, oyfters will keep for years together, and may be fent to the moft diftant parts of the world. Tue merchants here buy up great quan- tities of oyfters about this time, pickle them in the above-mentioned manner, and fend them to the Weft Indies: by which they fre- quently make a confiderable profit: for, the oyfters, which coft them five fhillings of their currency, they commonly {ell for a piftole, or about fix times as much as they gave for them; and fometimes they get even more: the oyfters which are thus pickled have a very fine flavour. The fol- lowing is another way of preferving a ; they New York. 239 they are taken out of the fhells, fried with butter, put into a glafs or earthen veffel with the melted butter over them, fo that they are quite covered with it, and no air can get tothem. Oyfters prepared in this manner have likewife an agreeable tafte, and are exported to the We/? Indies and other arts. | ; OysTers are here reckoned very whole- fome, fome people aflured us, that they had not felt the leaft inconvenience, .after eating a confiderable quantity of them. It is likewife a common rule here that oyfters are beft in thofe months which have an +r in their name, fuch as September, OGober, &c; but that they are not fo good in other months ; however there are poor people, who live all the year long upon nothing but oyfters with bread. | Tue fea near New York, affords annu- ally the greateft quantity of oyfters. They are found chiefly in a muddy ground, where they lie in the flime, and are not fo fre- _quent in a fandy bottom: a rockey and a {tony bottom is feldom found here. The oyfter fhells are gathered in great heaps, and burnt into a lime, which by fome people is made ufe of in building houfes, but is not reckoned fo good as that made of limeftone. On our journey to New York, we faw 240 Oétober 1748. | faw high heaps of oyfter fhells near the farm-houfes, upon the fea fhore; and about | New York, we obferved the people had car- ried them upon the fields which were fown with wheat. However they were entire, and not crufhed. Tue Indians who inhabited the coaft be- fore the arrival of the Europeans, have made oyfters and other fhell fith their chief food; and at prefent whenever they come to a falt water where oyfters are to be got, they are very active in catching them, and fell them in great quantities to other Indu us — who live higher up the country: for this reafon you fee immenfe numbers of oyfter and mufcle fhells piled up near fuch places, | where you are certain that the Indians for- merly built their huts. This circumftance ought to make us cautious in maintaining that in all places on the fea fhore, or higher up in the country, where fuch heaps of thells are to be met with, that the latter have lain there ever fince the time that thofe places were overflowed by the fea. LogsTers are likewife plentyfully caught hereabouts, pickled much in the fame way as oyfters, and fent to feveral places. I was told of a very remarkable circumftance a- bout thefe lobfters, and I have afterwards frequently heard it mentioned. The ae : O ~ New York. 241 of New York had already European inhabi- tants for aconfiderable time, yet no lobfters were to be met with on that coaft; and though the people fifhed ever fo often, they could never find any figns of lobfters being in this part of the fea: they were there- fore continually brought in great wellboats from New England, where they are plen- tiful; but it happened that one of thefe wellboats broke in pieces near Hellgate, about ten Englifh miles from New York, and all the lobfters in it: got off. Since that time they have fo multiplied in this part of the fea, that they are now caught in the greateft abundance. » November the 1ft. “A KIND of cold fe- ver, which the Ezg/j/h in this country call Fever and Ague, is very common in feveral parts of the Ezgljh colonies. There are however other parts, where the people have never felt it. I will in the fequel defcribe the fymptoms of this difeafe at large. Several of the moft confiderable in- habitants of this town, affured me that this difeafe was not near fo common in New York, as it is in Penfylvania, where ten were feized by it, to one in the former province ; therefore they were of opinion, that this difeafe was occafioned by the va- Boiss arifing from f{tagnant frefh water, from marthes, 242 November 1748. marfhes, and from rivers ;; for which reafon thofe provinces fituated on, the fea fhore, could not be fo much affefted by it.. How- ever the carelefnefs with. which people eat quantities of melons, water melons, peach- es, and other juicy fruit in fummer,. was reckoned to contribute much _ towards the progrefs of this fever; and repeated exam= ples confirmed, the truth of this opinion, The jefuit’s bark was reckoned sa good re- medy againft it. It has however often been found to have operated contrary to expecta- tion, though I am ignorant whether it was adulterated, or whether fome miftake had been committed in the manner of taking ifs Mr. Davis van Horne, a merchant,. told‘me that he cured himfelf and feveral other people of this fever, by the leaves of the common Garden Sage, or Salvia officinalis. of Linneus. The leaves are crufhed or pound- ed in a mortar, and the juice is prefled out of them; this is continued till they get a fpoonful of the liquid, which is mixed with lemon juice. This draught is taken about the time that the cold fit comes on;. and after taking it three or four times, the fever does not come again. Tue bark of the white oak was reckoned the beft remedy which had as yet been found againft the dyfentery. It is reduced .to a. powder, New York. — 243 powder, and then taken: fome people af- fured me that in cafes where nothing would help, this remedy had given a certain and fpeedy relief. The people in this place likewife make ufe of this bark (as is ufually done in the Exglj/h colonies) to dye wool a brown colour, which jooks like that of bohea tea, and does not fade by being expofed to the fun. Among the nume- rous fhells which are found on the fea fhore, there are fome which by the Engh/h here are called Clams, and which bear fome refemblance to the humanear. ‘They have a confiderable thicknefs, and are chiefly white, excepting the pointed end, which both without and within has a blue colour, between purple and violet. They are met with in vaft numbers on the fea fhore of New York, Long Ifland, and other places. The fhells contain a large animal, which is eat- en both by the Indians and Europeans fettled here. A CONSIDERABLE commerce is carried on in this article, with fuch Indians as live further up the country. When thefe peco- ple inhabited the coaft, they were able to catch their own clams, which at that time made a great part of their food; but at prefent this is the bufinefs of the Dutch and Eingh/h, who live in Long Ifland and other Q2 maritime 24-4 November 1748. maritime provinces. As foon as the fhells are caught, the fith is taken out of them, drawn upon a wire, and hung up in the open air, in order to dry by the heat’of the fun. When this is done, the fith is put into proper vefiels, and carried to Albany upon the river Hudj/on; there the Indians buy them, and reckon them one of their beft difhes. Befides the Europeans, many of the native Indians come annually down to the fea fhore, in order to catch clams, proceeding with them afterwards in the manner I have juft defcribed. ~ Tue fhells of thefe clams are ufed by the Indians as money, and make what they © call their wampum; they likewife ferve their women for an ornament, when they intend to appear in full drefs. Thefe wam- pums are properly made of the purple parts of the fhells, which the Indians value more than the white parts. A traveller, who goes to trade with the Indians, and is well ftocked with them, may become a confide- rable gainers; but if he take gold coin, or bullion, he will undoubtedly be a lofer; for the Indians who live farther up the country, put little or no value upon thefe metals which we reckon fo precious, as I have frequently obferved in the courfe of my travels. The Indians formerly pede their New York. 245 their own wampums, though not without a deal of trouble: but at prefent the Euro- peans employ themfelves that way; e{peci- ally the inhabitants of /bany, who get a confiderable profit by it. In the fequel I intend to relate the manner of making the wampum. November the 2d. Besrpes the different fects of chriftians, there are many Jews {et- tled in New York, who poflefs great privi- leges. They have a fynagogue and houfes, and great country feats of their own pro- perty, and are allowed to keep fhops in town. They have likewife feveral fhips, which they freight and fend out with their own goods. In fine they enjoy all the pri- vileges common to the other inhabitants of this town and province. DurRING my refidence at New York, this time and in the two next years, I was fre- quently in company with Jews. I was in-. formed among other things, that thefe peo- ple never boiled any meat for themfelves ‘on faturday, but that they always did it the day before ; and that in winter they kept a fire during the whole faturday. They com- monly eat no pork; yet I have been told by feveral men of credit, that many of them (efpecially among the young Jews) when travelling, did not not make the leaft diffi- 3 culty 246 November 1748. culty about eating this, or any other meat that was put before them ; even though they were in company with chriftians. I was in their fynagogue laft evening for the firft time, and this day at noon I vifited it again, and each time I was put into a particular feat which was fet apart for ftrangers or chrifti- ans. A young Raddi read the divine fervice, which was partly in Hebrew, and partly in the Rabinical diale&. Both men and wo- men were drefled entirely in the Enghjb — fathion ; the former had all of them their hats on, and did not once take them off during fervice. The galleries, I obferved, were appropriated to the ladies, while the men fat below, During prayers the men fpread a white cloth over their heads ; which perhaps is to reprefent fack cloth. But I obferved that the wealthier fortof people had a much richer cloth than the poorer ones. Many of the men had Hebrew books, in which they fang and read alternately. The Rabbi ftood in the middle of the fynagogue, and read with his face turned towards the eaft; he {poke however fo faft, as to make. it almoft impoffible for any one to under- ftand what he faid.* NEw * As there are no Jews in Sweden, Prof. Kalm was an ut- ter ftranger to their manners and religious ¢uftoms, and therefore relates them as a kind of novelty. F. New York. 247 . New York, the capital of a province of the fame name is fituated under forty deg. and forty min. north lat. and forty feven deg. and four min. of weftern long. from London; and is about ninety feven Exglifh miles diftant from Philadelphia. ‘The fitu- ation of it is extremely advantageous for trade: for the town ftands upon a point which is formed by two bays; into one of which the river Hud/on difcharges itfelf, not far from the town; New Yor is there- fore on three fides furrounded with water : the ground it is built on, is level in fome parts, and hilly in others: the place is generally reckoned very wholefome. THE town was firft founded bythe Dutch: this, it is faid, was done in the year 1623, when they were yet mafters of the country : they calledit New Am/ferdam, and the coun- try itfelf New Holland. The Engh/b, towards the end of the year 1664, taking poffeffion of it under the conduct of Des Cartes, and keeping it by the virtue of the next treaty of peace, gave the name of New York to both the town, and the province belong- ing to it: in fize it comes neareft to Bo/fon and Philadelphia. But with regard to its fine buildings, its opulence, and extenfive commerce, it difputes the preference with Q4 them : 248 November 1748. them: at prefent it is about halfiel as big again as Gothenburgh in Sweden. Tue ftreets do not run fo ftraight as thofe of Philadelphia, and have fometimes confi- derable bendings: however they are very fpacious and well built, and moft of them are paved, except in high places, where it has been found ufelefs. In the chief ftreets there are trees planted, which in fummer give them a fine appearance, and during the exceffive heat at that time, afford a cooling fhade: I found it extremely pleafant to walk in the town, for it feemed quite Jike a garden: the trees which are planted. for this purpofe are chiefly of two kinds. The Water beech, or Linnauss Platanus occidentals, are the moft numerous, and give an agreeable fhade in fummer, by their great and numerous leaves. The Locuft tree, or Linneus’s Robinia Pfeud-Acacia is likewife frequent: its fine leaves, and the odoriferous {cent which exhales from its flowers, make it very proper for being planted in the ftreets near the houfes, and in gardens. There are likewife lime trees and elms, in thefe walks, but they are not by far fo frequent as the others : one feldom met with trees of the fame fort next to each other, they being in general planted alter- nately. Besipes New York. — 249 _Besipes numbers of birds of all kinds which make thefe trees their abode, there are likewife a kind of frogs which frequent them in great numbers in fummer, they are Dr. Linneus’s Rana arborea, and efpecially the American variety of this animal. They are very clamorous in the evening and in the nights (efpecially when the days had _ been hot, and a rain was expected) and in a manner drown the finging of the birds. They frequently make fuch a noife, that it is dificult for a perfon to make himfelf heard. Most of the houfes are built of bricks ; and are generally ftrong and neat, and feveral ftories high. Some had, according to old architecture, turned the gable-end towards the ftreets; but the new houfes were alter- ed in this refpect. Many of the houfes had a balcony onthe roof, on which the people ufed to fit in the evenings in the fum- mer feafon; and from thence they had a pleafant view of a great part of the town, and likewife of part of the adjacent water and of the oppofite fhore. The roofs are commonly covered with tiles or fhingles : the latter of which are made of the white firtree, or Pinus Strobus (Linn. {p. plant. page 1419.) which grows higher up in the country. The inhabitants are of opinion that 250 November 1748. that a roof made of thefe fhingles’ is as durable as one made in Pen/y/vania of the | White Cedar, or Cupreffus thyoides ( Linn. {pec. plant. page 1422.) The walls were whitewafhed within, and I did not any where fee hangings, with which the people in this country feem in general to be but little acquainted. The walls were quite covered with all forts of drawings and pic- tures in {mall frames. On each fide of the chimnies they had ufually a fort of alcove ; and the wall under the windows was wain- {coted, and had benches placed near it. ‘The alcoves, and all the wood work were painted with a bluifh grey colour. THERE are feveral churches in the town, which deferve fome attention. 1. The Engh/bh Church, built in the year 1695, at © the weft end of the town, confifts of ftone, and has a fteeple with a bell. 2. The. new Dutch Church, which is likewife built of ftone, is pretty large, and is provided with a fteeple; it alfo has a clock, which is the only one in the town. This church ftands almoft due from north to fouth. No particular point of the compafs has here been in general attended to in erec- ting facred buildings. Some churches, ftand as is ufual from eaft to weft, others from fouth to north, and others in different pofitions. New York. 255 pofitions. In this Dutch church, there is neither altar, veftry, choir, fconces, nor paintings. Some trees are planted round it, which make it look as if it was built in a wood. 3. The ld Dutch church, which is alfo built of ftone. It is not fo large as the new one. It was painted in the infide, though without any images, and adorned with a {mall organ, of which governor Burnet made them a prefent. The men for the moft part fit in the gallery, and the women below. 4. The Prefbyterian Church, which is pretty large, and was built but lately. It is of ftone, and has a fteeple and a bellinit. 5. Lhe German Lutheran Church. 6. The German Reformed Church. 7. The French Church, for proteftant refugees. 8. The Quaker’s Meeting houfe. 9. To thefe may be added the Yew7zh Synagogue, which I mentioned before. Towarps the fea, on the extremity of the promontory is a pretty good fortrefs, called Fort George, which entirely com- mands the port, and can defend the town, at leaft from a fudden attack on the fea fide. Befides that, it is likewife fecured on the north or towards the fhore, by a palli- fade, which however (as for a confiderable time the people have had nothing to fear from 252 November y 748. from an enemy) is in many places in a very bad ftate of defence. THERE is no good water to be met with in the town itfelf, but ata little diftance | there is a large {pring of good water, which the inhabitants take for their tea, and for the ufes of thekitchen. Thofehowever, who are lefs delicate in this point, make ufe of the water from the wells in town, though it be very bad. This want of good water lies heavy upon the horfes of the ftrangers that come to this place; for they do not like to drink the water from the wells in the town. | THE port is a good one: fhips of the -greateft burthen can lie in it, quite clofe up to the bridge: butits wateris very falt, as the fea continually comes in upon it; and therefore is never frozen, except in extra- ordinary cold weather. This is of great advantage to the city and its commerce ; for many fhips either come in or go out of the port at any time of the year, unlefs the winds be contrary; 4 convenience, which as I have before obferved, is wanting at Philadelphia. It is fecured from all violent hurricanes from the fouth-eaft by Long Iland which is fituated juft before the town: therefore only the ftorms from the fouthweit are dangerous to the fhips which ride at anchor New York. 253 anchor here, becaufe the port is open only on that fide. The entrance however has its faults: one of them is, that no men of war can pafs through it; for though the water is pretty deep, yet it is not fufficient- ly fo for great fhips. Sometimes even mer- chant fhips of a large fize have by the roll- ing of the waves and by finking down be- tween them, flightly touched the bottom, though without any bad confequences. Befides this, the canal is narrow; and for this reafon many fhips have been loft here, becaufe they may be eafily caft upon a fand, if the fhip is not well piloted. Some old people, who had conftantly been upon this canal, affured me, that it was neither deeper, nor fhallower at prefent, than in their youth. THE common difference between high and low water at New York, amounts to about fix feet, Exg/j/h meafure. But at a certain time in every month, when the tide flows more than commonly, the difference in the height of the water is feven feet. _ New Yorx probably carries on a more \, extenfive commerce, than any town in the Lingh/e North American provinces ; at leaft it may be faid to equal them: Bo/ffon and Philadelphia however come very near up to it. The trade of New York extends to ane many 254. November 1748. many places, and it is faid they fend more fhips from thence to London, than they do from Philadelphia. ‘They export to that capital all the various forts of {kins which they buy of the Indians, fugar, logwood, and other dying woods, rum, mahogany, and many other goods which are the pro- duce of the Weft Indies; together with all the {fpecie which they get in the courfe of trade. Every year they build feveral thips here, which are fent to London, and there fold ; and of late years they have fhipped a quantity of iron to England. In return for thefe, they import from London ftufts and every other article of Exglj/b growth or manufacture, together with all forts of foreign goods. England, and efpecial- ly London, profits immenfely by its trade with the American colonies; for not only New York, but likewife all the other En- glib towns on the continent, import fo many articles from England, that all their fpecie, together with the goods which they get in other countries, muft altogether go to O/d England, in order to pay the amount, to which they are however infufficient. From hence it appears how much a well regulated colony contributes to the increafe and welfare of its mother country. New York fends many fhips to the We? Indies New-York. > ” Jndies, with flour, corn, bifcuit, timber, tuns, boards, flefh, fifh, butter, and other provifions; together with fome of the few fruits that grow here. Many fhips go to Bofton in New England, with corn and flour, and take in.exchange, flefh, butter, timber, different forts of fifh, and other articles, which they carry further to the Weft Indies. They now and then take rum from thence, which is diftilled there in “great quantities, and fell it here with a obliged to fend for foreign feed ; and hence = _confiderable advantage. Sometimes they fend yachts with goods from New York to — Philadelphia, and at other times yachts are fent from Philadelphia to New York ; which is only done, as appears from the gazettes, becaufe certain articles are cheaper at one place than at the other. They fend fhips to Ireland every year, laden with all kinds of Weft India goods; but efpecially with linfeed, which is reaped in this province. I have been aflured, that in fome years no lefs than ten fhips have been fent to Ireland, laden with nothing but linfeed; becaufe it is faid. the flax in Jre/and does not afford good feed. But probably the true reafon is this: the people of Jre/and, in order to have the better flax, make ufe of the plant before the feed is ripe, and therefore are if 256 November 1748. it becomes one of the chief articles in trade. At this time a bufhel of linfeed is fold for eight fhillings of New York currency, or exactly a piece of eight. Tue goods which are fhipped to the Weft Indies, are fometimes paid for with ready money, and fometimes with We India goods, which are either firft brought to New York, or immediately fent to Eng- land or Holland. fa thip does not chufe to take in Weft India goods in its return to New York, or if no body will freight it, it often goes to Newca/ftle in England to take in coals for ballaft, which when brought home fell for a pretty good price. In many parts of the town coals are made ufe of, both for kitch- en fires, and in rooms, becaufe they are reckoned cheaper than wood, which at prefent cofts thirty fhillings of New York currency per fathom; of which meafure I have before made mention. New York has likewife fome intercourfe with South Caro- lina; to which it fends corn, flour, fugar, rum, and other goods, and takes rice in re- turn, which is almoft the only COMMITS exported from South Carohna. Tue goods with which the province of New York trades are not very numerous. They chiefly export the fkins of animals, which New York. | 259 which are bought of the Indians about O/wego ; great quantities of boards, coming for the moft part from Albany ; timber and ready made lumber, from that part of the country which lies about the river Hud/on; and laftly wheat, flour, barley, oats and other kinds of corn, which are brought from New ‘ferfey and the cultivated parts of this province. I have feen yachts from Wew Brunfwick, laden with wheat which lay loofe on board, and with flour packed up into tuns; and alfo with great quanti- ties of linfeed. New York likewife exports fome flefth and other provifions out of its - own province, but they are very few; nor is the quantity of peafe which the people about /bany bring much greater. Iron however may be had more plentifully, as it is found in feveral parts of this province, and is of aconfiderable goodnefs; but all the other products of this country are of lit- tle account. Most of the wine, which is drank here and in the other colonies is brought from the Ifle of Madeira and is very ftrong and fiery. No manufactures of note have as yet been eftablifhed here; at prefent they get all manufaGtured goods, fuch as woollen R and wer 258 November 1748. and linen cloth, &c. from England, and efpecially from London. Tue river Hudfon is very convenient for the commerce of this city; as it is naviga- ble for near a hundred and fifty Enghj/h miles up the country, and falls into the bay not far from the town, on its weftern fide. During eight months of the year this river is full of yachts, and other great- er and leffer veffels, either going to New York or returning from thence, laden ei- ther with inland or foreign goods. I cannot make a juft eftimate of the fhips that annually come to this town or fail from it. But I have found by the Pen- fylvania gazettes that from the firft of De- cember in 1729, to the fifth of December in the next year, 211 fhips entered the port of New York, and 222 cleared it; and fince that time there has been a great increafe of trade here. . THE country people come to market in /> New York, twice a week much in the fame manner, as they do at Philadelphia; with this difference, that the markets are here kept in feveral places. Tue governor of the province of New York, refides here, and has a palace in the fort. Among thofe who have been entruft- ed with this poft, Wiliam Burnet deferves to New York. 259 to be had in perpetual remembrance. He was one of the fons of Dr. Lomas Burnet (fo celebrated on account of his learning) and feemed to have inherited the know- ledge of his father. But his great affiduity in promoting the welfare of this province, is what makes the principal merit of his character. The people of New York there- fore {till reckon him the beft governor they ever had, and think that they cannot praife his fervices too much. The many aftro- nomical obfervations which he made in thefe parts; are inferted in feveral Englhjb works. In the year 1727, at the acceffion of king George the II. tothe throne of Great Britain, he was appointed gover- nor of New England. In confequence of this he left New York, and went to Bo/fon, where he died univerfally lamented, on the ath. of September 1729. An affembly of deputies from all the particular diftricts of the province of New York, is held at New York once or twice every year. It may be looked upon asa parliament of dyet in miniature. Every thing relating to the good of the province is here debated. The governor calls the aflembly, and diffolves it at pleafure: this is a power which he ought only to make ufe of, either when no farther debates are R2 neceflary, 260 - November 1748. neceflary, or when the members are not fo unanimous in the fervice of their king and country as is their duty: it frequently however happens, that, led afide by ca- price or by interefted views, he exerts it to the prejudice of the province. The colony has fometimes had a governor, whofe quar- rels with the inhabitants, have induced their reprefentatives, or the members of the affembly, through a {pirit of revenge, to oppofe indifferently every thing he pro- pofed, whether it was beneficial to the | country or not. In fuch cafes the govern- or has made ufe of his power; diffolving the affembly, and calling another foon af- ter, which however he again diffolved upon the leaft mark of their ill humour. By this means he fo much tired them, by the many ~ expences which they were forced to bear in fo fhort a time, that they were at laft glad to unite with him, in his endeavours for the good of the province. But there have likewife been governors who have called affemblies and diffolved thenr foon after, merely becaufe the reprefentatives did not act according to their whims, or would not give their aflent to propofals which were perhaps dangerous or hurtful to the com- mon welfare. Tue king appoints the governor accord- ing a a8 ing to his royal pleafure; but the inhabi- tants of the province make up his excel- -lency’s falary. Therefore a man entrufted with this place has greater or lefler reve- nues, according as he knows how to gain the confidence of the inhabitants. There are examples of governors in this, and other provinces of North America, who by their diffenfions with the inhabitants of their refpective governments, have loft their whole falary, his Majefty having no power to make them pay it. If a governor had no other refource in thefe circumftances, he would be obliged either to refign his office, or to be content with an income too {mall for his dignity; or elfe to conform himfelf in every thing to the inclinations of the in- habitants: but there are feveral ftated pro- fits, which in fome meafure make up for this. 1. No one is allowed to keep a pub- lic houfe without the governor’s leave ; which is only to be obtained by the pay- ment of a certain fee, according to the cir- cumftances of the perfon. Some governors therefore, when the inhabitants refufed to pay them a falary, have hit upon the expe- dient of doubling the number of inns in their province. 2. Few people who intend to be married, unlefs they be very poor, will have their banns publifhed from the R 3 pulpit; 262 November 1748. pulpit; but inftead of this they get licences from the governor, which impower any mi- nifter to marry them. Now for fuch a li- cence the governor receives about half a guinea, and this collected throughout the whole province, amounts to a confiderable fum. 3. The governor figns all pafiports, and efpecially of fuch as goto fea; and this gives him another means of fupplying his expences. There are feveral other advan- tages allowed to him, but as they are very trifling, I fhall omit them. At the above aflembly the old laws are reviewed and amended, and new ones are made: and the regulation and circulation of coin, together with all other affairs of that kind are there determined. For it is to be obferved that each Exgh/h colony in North America is independent of the other, and that each has its proper laws and coin, and may be looked upon in feveral lights, as a ftate by itfelf. From hence it hap- pens, that in time of war, things go on very flowly and irregularly here: for not only the fenfe of one province 1s fometimes directly oppofite to that of another; but frequently the views of the governor, and thofe of the affembly of the fame province, are quite different : fo that it is eafy to fee, that, while the people are quarrelling ajeve the * New York. 263 the beft and cheapeft manner of carrying on. the war, an enemy has it in his power to take one place after another. It has commonly happened that whilft fome pro- vinces have been fuffering from their ene- mies, the neighbouring ones were quiet and inactive, and as if it did not in the leatt concern them. They have frequently ta- ken up two or three years in confidering whether they fhould give affiftance to an opprefied fifter colony, and fometimes they have exprefly declared themielves againtt it. There are inftances of provinces who were not only neuter in thefe circumftances, but who even carried on a great trade with the power which at that very time was attack- ing and laying wafte fome other provinces. Tue French in Canada, who are but an inconfiderable body, in comparifon with the Exgh/h in America, have by this pofition of affairs been able to obtain great Advan- tages in times of war; for if we judge from the number and power of the Exglij/h, it would feem very eafy for them to get the better of the French in America.* R 4 Ir * Tuts has really happened by a greater union and exer- tion of power from the colonies and the mother country; fo that Canada has been conquered and its poffeffion has been confirmed to Great Britain in the laft peace. F. 264. November 1748. Ir is however of great advantage to the crown of Exgland, that the North Ameri- can colonies are near a country, under the government of the French, like Canada, There is reafon to believe that the king never was earneft in his. attempts to expel the French from their poffeffions there ; though it might have been done with little — | difficulty. For the Engij/h colonies in this part of the world have encreafed fo much in their number of inhabitants, and in their riches, that they almoft vie with O/d England. Now in order to keep up the “=~ authority and trade of their mother country, and to anfwer feveral other pupofes, they are forbid to eftablifh new manufactures, which would turn to the difadvantage of the Briti/h commerce: they are not allowed to dig for any gold or filver, unlefs they fend them to Exg/and immediately: they have not the liberty of trading to any parts that do not belong to the Britz/b dominions, excepting fome fettled places, and foreign traders are not allowed to fend their fhips to them. Thefe and fome other reftrictions, occafion the inhabitants of the Exgli/h colo- nies to grow lefs tender for their mother country. This coldnefs is kept up by the many foreigners fuch as Germans, Dutch and French fettled here, and living ag . the New York. 265 the Engh/b, who commonly have no par- ticular attachment:to O/d England; add to this likewife that many people can never be contented with their poffleffions, though they be ever fo great, and will always be _ defirous of getting more, and of enjoying the pleafure which arifes from changing ; and their over great liberty, and their luxury often lead them to licentioufnefs. I nave been told by. Englhj/hmen, and not only by fuch as were born in America, but even by fuch as came from Europe, that the Exgi/b colonies in North- America, in the {pace of thirty or fifty years, would be able to form a ftate by themfelves, en- tirely independent on O/d England. But as the whole country which lies along the fea fhore, !is unguarded, and on the land fide is harraffed by the French, in times of war thefe dangerous neighbours are fuffici- ent to prevent the connection of the colo- nies with their mother country from being quite broken off. The Engi/h government has therefore fufficient reafon to confider the French in North-America, as the beft means of keeping the colonies in their due fubmiffion. But, I am almoft gone too far from my purpofe; I will therefore finith my obfervations on New York. _ Tue declination of the magnetic needle, | in 266 November 1748. in this town was obferved by Philip Wells, the chief engineer of the province of New York, in the year 1686, to be eight deg. and forty-five min. to the weftward. But in 1723, it was only feven deg. and twenty min. according to the obfervations of go- vernor Burnet. From hence we may conclude that in thirty-eight years the magnet approaches about one deg. and twenty five min. nearer to the true north; or, which is the fame thing, about two min. annually. Mr. Alexander, a man of great knowledge in aftronomy and in mathematics, affured me from feveral obfervations, that in the year 1750, on the eighteenth of September the deviation was to be reckoned fix deg. and twenty two min. THERE are two printers in the town, and | every week fome Englhj/b gazettes are pub- lifhed, which contain news from all parts ~ of the world. THE winter is much more fevere here, than in Penfylvania ; it being nearly as cold as in fome of the provinces of Sweden: its continuance however is much fhorter than with us: their {pring is very early and their autumn very late, and the heat in fummer is exceffive. For this reafon, the melons fown in the fields are ripe at the aes. Qr New York. | 267 of Auguft ; whereas we can hardly bring them fo foon to maturity under glaffes and on hot beds. The cold of the winter, 1 cannot juftly determine, as the meteorolo- gical obfervations which were communicat- ed to me, were all calculated after ther- mometers, which were fo placed in the houfes, that the air could not freely come at them. The fnow lies for fome months to- gether upon the ground; and fledges aremade ufe of here as in Sweden, but they are rather ‘too bulky. The river Hud/on is about an Englifh mile and a half broad at its mouth: the difference between the higheft flood and the loweft ebb is between fix and feven feet, and the water is very brackifh: yet the ice ftands in it not only one but even feveral months: it has fometimes a thick- nefs of more than two feet. Tue inhabitants are fometimes greatly troubled with Mu/quitoes. They either follow the hay which is made near the town, in the low meadows which are quite penetrated with falt water; or they accom- pany the cattle at night when it is brought home. I have myfelf experienced, and have obferved in others, how much thefe little animalcules can disfigure a perfon’s face dur- ing a fingle night; for the fkin is fometimes 3 | | fo 268 November 1748. fo covered over with little blifters from théir {tings, that people are afhamed to appear in public. ‘The water melons which are culti- vated near the town grow very large: they are extremely delicious, and are better than in other parts of North America; though they are planted in the open fields and never ina hot-bed. I faw a water melon at Governor Clinton’s in September 1750, which weighed forty feven Englith pounds, and at a merchant’s in town another of forty two pounds weight: however they were reckoned the biggeft ever feen in this coun- try. sis the year 1710, five kings, or Sachems of the Iroguois went from hence to England, in order to engage Queen Anne to make an alliance with them againft the French. Their names, drefs, reception at court, {peeches to the Queen, opinion of England and of the European manners, and feveral other particulars about them are fufficiently — known from other writings; it would there- fore be here unneceflary to enlarge about them. The kings or Sachems of the Indi- ans, have commonly no greater authority over their fubjets than conftables in a meet- ing of the inhabitants of a parifh, and hard- ly fo much. On my travels through the country of thefe Indians, 1 had never any occafion New York. 269 occafion to go and wait upon the Sachems ; for they always came into my habitation without being afked: thefe vifits they com- monly paid in order to get a glafs or two of brandy, which they value above any thing they know. . One of the five Sachems mentioned above, died in England; the others returned fafe. nthe Tue. firft colonifts in New York were Dutchmen: when the town and its territo- ries were taken by the Engij/h, and left them by the next peace in exchange for Surinam, the old inhabitants were allowed either to remain at New York, and to enjoy all the priviledges and immunities which they were poflefied of before, or to leave the place with all their goods: moft of them chofe the former; and therefore the inha- bitants both of the town and of the pro- vince belonging to it, are yet for the great- eft part Dutchmen; who ftill, efpecially the old people, fpeak their mother tongue. Tuey begin however by degrees to change their manners and opinions; chiefly indeed in the town and in its neighbourhood: for moft of the young people now fpeak prin- —cipally Engh/b, and go only to the Enghjh church ; and would even take it amifs, if they were called Dutchmen and not Enghi/b- men. THOUGH 270 November 1748. TuoucuH the province of New York hag been inhabited by Europeans, much longer than Pen/y/vania, yet it is not by far fo po- pulous as that colony. This cannot be af- cribed to any particular difcouragement a- rifing from the nature of the foil; for that is pretty good: but I was told of a very different reafon, which I will mention here. In the reign of Queen Anne about the year 1709, many Germans came hither, who got a tract of land from the government on which they might fettle. After they had lived there for fome time, and had built houfes and churches, and made corn-fields and meadows, their liberties and privileges were infringed, and under feveral pretences they were repeatedly deprivedof parts of their land. This at laft rouzed the Germans ; they returned violence for violence, and beat thofe who thus robbed them of their poffeffions. But thefe proceedings were looked upon in a very bad light by the government: the moft active people among the Germans be- ing taken up, they were very roughly treated, and punifhed with the utmoft rigour of the law. This however fo far exafperated the reft, that the greater part of them left their houfes and fields, and went to fettle in Pen- fylvania : there they were exceedingly well received, gota confiderable tract of seo and _ pees eo, New York. 271% and were indulged in great privileges which were given them forever. The Germans not fatisfied with being themfelves removed from New York, wrote to their relations and friends and advifed them, if ever they intended to come to America, not to goto. New York, where the government had fhewn itfelf fo unequitable. This advice had fuch influence, that the Germans, who afterwards went in great numbers to North America, conftantly avoided New York and always went to Pen/fy/vania. It fometimes happened that they were forced to goon board fuch fhips as were bound to New York; but they were fcarce got on fhore, when they haftened on to Pen/ylvania in fight of all the inhabitants of New York. Bur the want of people in this province may likewife be accounted for in a different manner. As the Dutch, who firft culti- vated this country, obtained the liberty of ftaying here by the treaty with England, and of enjoying all their privileges and ad- vantages without the leaft limitation, each of them took a very large piece of ground for himfelf, and many of the more power- ful heads of families made themfelves the pofieflors and mafters of a country of as great an extent as would be fufficient to form a middling and even a great parifh. Moft of 272 November 1748. : /- of them being very rich, their envy of, the — | Engh/h \ed them not to fell them any land, — | but at an exceflive rate; a practice which /is ftill punctually obferved among their — | defcendants. The Engijh thereforeas well as people of different mations, have little — encouragement to fettle here. On the other hand they have fufficient opportunity inthe — other provinces, to purchafe land ata more — moderate price, and with.more fecurity to themfelves. It is not then to be wondered, that fo many parts of New York are full uncultivated, and have entirely the appear- ance of defarts. This inftance may teach us how much a {mall miftake in a govern- ment will injure population. November the 3d. ABoUT noon we fet out from New York on our return, and continuing our journey, we arrived at Pdi- ladelphia on the fifth of November. In the neighbourhood of this capital (of Penfylvania) the people had a month ago made theit cyder, which they were obliged to do, becaufe their apples were fo ripe as — to drop from the trees. But on our journey through New York we obferved the people ftill employed in preffing out the cyder. This isa plain proof that in Penfylvania the apples are fooner ripe than in New | York; but whether this be owing to the nature is? abe hits ifs " % \ si hve 4 ® yrol tae seis" AMERICAN POLE-CAT., | — .. Penfylvania, Philadelphia. OUERE gy < nature of the foil, ora yvreater heat of the fummer in Philadelphia, or to fome other caufe I know not. However there is not the leaft advantage in making cyder fo early: for long experience had taught the hufband-~ men that it is worfe for being made’ early in the year; the great heat in the begin- ning of autumn being faid to hinder the fer- mentation of the j juice. THERE is a certain ‘quadruped which is pretty common not only in Pen/y/vania, but likewife in other provinces both of “South and North America, and goés by the name of Polecat among the Engh/b. In New York they penerally call it Skunk. The Swedes here by way of nickname called it Fy/katta, on account of the horrid ftench it fometimes cavfes as I {hall prefent- ly fhow. The French in Canada, for the fame reafon call it Béte puante or ftinking animal, and Enfant du diable or child of the devil. Some of them likewife call it Pekan: Catefby in bis Natural Hiftory of Carolina, has defcribed it in Vol. 2. p. 62. by the name of Putorius Americanus firtatus and drawn it plate 62. Dr. Linnaeus calls it Prverra Putorus. * This animal, which is S very * Or this animal and of the above-mentioned Racoon is a reprefentation given plate 2. both from original drawings 3 the German and the Swedifh edition of Prof. Kalm’s work: being both without this plate. F.. 274. November 1748. very fimilar to the Marten, is of about the fame fize and commonly black: on the back it has a longitudinal white ftripe and two others on each fide, parallel to the former. Sometimes but very feldom, fome are feen which are quite white. On our return to Philadelphia we {aw one of thefe animals not far from town ‘near a farmer’s houfe, killed by dogs. And afterwards I had dur- ing my ftay in thefe parts feveral oppor- tunities of feeing it and of hearing its qua- lities. It keeps its young ones in holes in the ground and in hollow trees; for it — does not confine itfelf to the ground, but climbs up trees with the greateft agility: it is a great enemy to birds; for it breaks their eggs and devours their young ones; and if it can get into a hen rooft it foon def- troys all its inhabitants. | Tus animal has a particular quality by which it is principally known; when it is purfued by men or dogs it runs at firft as faft as it can, or climbs upona tree; but if it is fo befet by its purfuers, as to have no other way of making its efcape, it {quirts its urine upon them. This according to fome it does by wetting its tail with the urine whence by a fudden motion it {catters it abroad ; but others believe, that it could fend its urine equally far without the help | of its tail; I find the former of thefe accounts | fO; | Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 275 © to be the moft likely. For, fome credible people aflured me, that they have had their faces wetted with it allover; though they ftood above eighteen feet off from the ani- mal. The urine has fo horrid a {tench that nothing can equal it: it is fomething like that of the Crane/bill or Linneus’s Geranium robertianum,. but infinitely ftronger. Ifyou come near a polecat when it {preads its ftench, you cannot breathe for a while, and is feems as if you were ftifled; and in cafe the urine comes into the eyes, a perfon is likely to be blinded. Many dogs that in a chace purfue the polecat very eagerly, run away as faft as they can when they are wetted: however, if they be of the true breed, they will not give over the purfuit till they have caught and killed the polecat; but they are obliged now and then to rub their nofes in the ground in order to telieve themfelves. Crotues which have been wetted by this animal retain the fmell for more than a month ; unlefs they be covered with freth foil, and fuffered to remain under it for twenty four hours together ; when it will ina great meafure be removed. Thofe likewife who _ have got any of this urine upon their face and hands, rub them with loofe earth and fome even hold their hands in the ground for an hour; as wafhing will not help them | 5 2 fo 276 November 1748. fo foon. A certain man of rank who had by accident been wetted by the polecat, ftunk fo ill, that on going into a houfe, the people either ran away, oron his open- ing the door, rudely denied him entrance. Dogs that have hunted a polecat are fo offenfive for {ome days afterwards, that they cannot be borne in the houfe.. At PAzla- delphia I once faw a great number of people on amarket day throwing at a dog that was fo unfortunate as to have been engaged with a polecat juft before, and to carry — about him the tokens of its difpleafure. Per- fons when travelling through a foreft are often troubled with the ftink which this creature makes; and fometimes the air is fo much infected that it 1s neceffary to hold ones nofe. If the wind blows from the place where the pole-cat has been, or if it be quite calm, as at night, the {mell is more ftrong and difagreeable. 3 In the winter of 1749, a pole-cat tempt- ed by a dead lamb, came one night near the farm houfe where I then flept. Being immediately purfued by fome dogs, it had recourfe to its ufual expedient in order to get rid of them. The attempt fucceeded, the dogs not choofing to continue the — purfuit: the ftink was fo extremely great that, though I was at fome diftance it affected me in the fame manner as 4 : a ~ Penfylvama, Philadelphia. a7 had been ftifled ; and it was fo difagreeable to the cattle that it made them roar very loudly: however, by degrees it vanifhed. Towards the end of the fame year one of thefe animals got into our cellar, but no {tench was obferved, for it only vents that when it is purfued. The cook however found for feveral days together that fome of the meat which was kept there was eaten; and fufpecting that it was done by the cat fhe fhut up all avenues, in order to prevent ‘their getting at it. But the next night be- ing awoke by a noifein the cellar, fhe went down, and though it was quite dark, faw an animal with two fhining eyes, which feem- ed to be all on fire; fhe however refolutely killed it, but not before the polecat had filled the cellar with a moft dreadful ftench. The maid was fick of it for feveral days ; and all the bread, flefh, and other provifions kept in the cellar were fo penetrated with it, that we could not make the leaft ufe of them, and were forced to throw them all away. FRom an accident that happened at New York to one of my acquaintances, I conclude that the polecat either is not always very fhy, or that it fleeps very hard at night. This man coming home out of a wood ina fummer evening, thought that he faw a plant A 3 3 {tanding 278 November 1748. ftanding before him; ftooping to pluck it, he was to his coft convinced of his miftakey by being all on a fudden covered with the urine of a polecat, whofe tail as it ftood up+ right, the good man had taken for a plant: the creature had taken its revenge fo effec- tually that he was much at a lofs how to get rid of the ftench. However though thefe animals play {uch difagreeable tricks, yet the Englj/h, the Swedes, the French, and the Indians in thefe parts tame them. They follow their maf- ters like domeftic animals, and never make ufe of their urine, except they be very much beaten or terrified. When the Indi- ans kill {uch a polecat, they always eat its fiefh, but when they pull off its fkin, they take care to cut away the bladder, that the flefh may not get a tafte fromit. I have {fpoken with both Engh/bmen and French- — men, who aflured me that they had eaten of it, and found it very good meat, and not much unlike the flefh of a pig. The fkin which is pretty coarfe, and has long hair, is not made ufe of by the Europeans; but the Indians prepare it with the hair on, and make tobacco pouches of it, which they carry before them. November the 6th. In the evening I went out of town to Mr. Bartram, I found a man Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 279 a man with him, who lived in Carolina and I obtained feveral particulars about ° that province from him ; a few of which I will here mention. ‘TAR, pitch and rice are the chief pro- ducts of Carolina. The foil is very fandy, | and therefore many pines and firs grow in it, from which they make tar: the firs which are taken for this purpofe are com- monly fuch as are dried up of themfelves; the people here in general not knowing how to prepare the fits by taking the bark off on one, or on feveral fides, as they do in Offrobothnia. In fome parts of Carolina they likewife make ufe of the branches. The manner of burning or boiling, as the man defcribes it to me; HE entirely the fame as in Finland. ‘The pitch is thus made: they dig a hole into the ground and fmear the infide well with clay, into which they pour the tar, and make a fire round it, which is kept up till the tar has got the confiftence of pitch. They make two kinds of tar in the North American colonies: one is the common tar, which I have above defcribed, and which is made of the ftems, branches, and roots of fuch firs, as were already confiderably dried out before; which is the moft common way in this country. The other mane in a the bark from S 4 the ~< 280 November 1748. the firs on one fide, and afterwards letting them ftand another year ; during which the refin comes out between the cracks of the {tem. The tree is then felled and burnt for tar; and the tar. thus made is called green tar, not that there is that difference of colour init, for in this refpect they are both pretty much alike; but the latter is called fo from being made of green and frefh trees ; whereas common tar 1s made of dead trees: the burning is done in the fame manner as in Finland. ‘They ufe only black firs; for the white firs will not ferve this purpofe, though they are excellent for boards, matts, &c. green tar is dearer than common tar. It is already a pretty general complaint that the fir woods are almoft wholly deftroyed by this practice. | Rice is planted in great quantity in Ca- rolina; it fucceeds beft. in marfhy and — {wampy grounds, which may be laid un- der water, and likewife ripens there the fooneft. Where thefe cannot be had, they mutt choofe a dry foil; but the rice pro- duced here will be much inferior to the other: the land on which it is cultivated muft never be manured, In Carohna they fow it in the middle of 4pr7/, and it is ripe in September: itis planted in rows like peafe, and commonly fifteen inches fpace 1s left ' between Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 281 between the rows; as foon as the plants are come up, the gee is laid under water. This not only greatly forwards the growth of the rice, but likewife kills all weeds, fo as to render weeding unneceflary. The ftraw of rice is faid to be excellent food for cat- tle, who eat it very greedily. Rice requires a hot climate, and therefore it will not fucceed well in Virginia, the {ummer there being too fhort, and the winter too cold; and much lefs will it grow in Penfyluania. They are as yet ignorant in Carona of the art of making arrack from rice: it is chief- A‘ ly South Carolina that produces the ereateft quantity of rice; and on the other hand they make the moft tar in North Carolina. November the 7th. Tue ftranger from Carolina whom I have mentioned before, had met with many oyfter fhells at the bot- tom of a well, feventy Englifh miles dif- tant from the fea, and four from a river: they lay in a depth of fourteen Englith feet from the furface of the earth: the water in the well was brackith; but that in the river was frefh. ‘The fame man, had at the building of a faw-mill, a mile and a half _from a river, found, firft fand, and then clay filled with oyfter fhells. Under thefe he found feveral bills of fea birds as he call- ed them, which were already quite petri- fied: they were probably Glofopetre. THERE 282 November 1748. THERE are two fpecies of foxes in the Engh/b colonies, the one grey, and the other red: but in the fequel I thall thew that there are others which fometimes ap- pear in Canada. ‘The grey foxes are here con- ftantly, and are very common in Pen/ylva- nia and in the fouthern provinces: in the northern ones they are pretty fcarce, and the French in Canada, call them Virginian Foxes on that account: in fize they do not quite come up to our foxes. ‘They do no harm tolambs; but they prey upon all forts of poultry, whenever they can come at them. They do not however feem to be looked upon as animals that caufe a great deal of damage; for there is no reward given for killing them : their fkin is great- ly fought for by hatters, who employ the hair in their work. People have their clothes lined with it fometimes ; the greafe is ufed againft all forts of rheumatic pains. Thefe foxes are faid to be lefs nimble than the red ones: they are fometimes tamed ; though they be not fuffered to run about but are tied up. Mr. Cate/by has drawn and defcribed this fort of foxes in his Na- tural biftory of Carolina, by the name of the grey American fox, vol. 2. p. 78. tab. 78, A {fkin of it was fold in Philadelphia for two fhillings and fix-pence in Penfylvanian cur- rency. | THE Penfjloania, Philadelpbia. 283 Tue red Foxes are very fcarce here: they are entirely the fame with the European fort. ‘Mr. Bartram, and feveral others affured me, that according to the unani- — mous teftimony of the Indians, this kind of foxes never was in the country, before the Europeans fettled in it. But of the man- ner of their coming over I have two dif- ferent accounts: Mr. Bartram and feveral other people were told by the Indians, that thefe foxes came into America foon after the arrival of the Europeans, after an extra- . ordinary cold winter, when all the fea to the northward was frozen: from hence they would infer, that they could perhaps get over to America upon the ice from Greenland or the northern parts of Europe and 4fa. But Mr. Evans, and fome others affured me that the following account was ftill known by the people. A gentleman of fortune in New England, who had a _ great inclination for hunting, brought over a great number of foxes from Europe, and let them loofe in his territories, that he might be able to indulge his pafiion for hunting.* This is faid to have happened almoft * NEITHER Of thefe accounts appear to be fatisfaétory ; and therefore I am inclined to believe that thefe red foxes originally came over from 4fa, (molt probably from Kam- tchatha 284 | November 1748. almoft at the very beginning of New Eng- land’s being peopled with European inha- bitants. Thefe foxes were believed to have fo multiplied, that all the red foxes.in the country were their offspring. At prefent they are reckoned among the noxious crea- tures in thefe. parts; for they are not content- ed, as the grey foxes with killing fowl ; but they likewife devour the lambs. In Pen- fylvania therefore there is a reward of two fhillings for killing an old fox, and of one fhilling for killing a young one. And in all the other provinces there are likewife rewards offer’d for killing them, Their {kin is in great requeft, and is foldas dear as that of the grey foxes, that is two fhil- - lin gs tchatka where this fpecies is common, fee Miller’s Account of the Navigations of the Ruffians, &c.) though in remote times, and thus fpread over North America. It 1s perhaps true that the Indians never took notice of them till the Europeans were fettled among them; this, however, was becaufe they never had occafion to ufe their fkins: but when there was a demand for thefe they began to hunt them, and, as they had not been much accuftomed to them before, they efteemed them asanovelty. What gives additional com- firmation to this is, that when the Ru/fZans under Commo- dore Bering landed on the weftern coaft of America, they faw five red foxes which were quite tame, and feemed not to be in the leaft afraid of men: now this might very well have been the cafe if we fuppofe them to have been for many . generations in a place where no body difturbed them; but. we cannot account for it, if we imagine that they had been ufed to a country where there were many inhabitants, or where they had been much hunted. F. Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 288 lings and fix-pence, in Penfylvanian cut- rency. | , Tuey have two varieties of Wolves here, which however feem to be of the fame fpecies. For fome of them are yellowifh, or almoft pale grey, and others are black or dark brown. All the old Swedes related, that during their childhood, and ftill more at the arrival of their fathers, there were exceflive numbers of wolves in the country, _and that their howling and yelping might be’ heard all night. They likewife fre- quently tore in pieces, fheep, hogs, and other young and {mall cattle. About that time or foon after, when the Swedes and the Engh/bh were quite fettled here, the Indians were attacked by the {mall pox: this difeafe they got from the Europeans, for they knew nothing of it before: it killed many hundreds of them, and moft of the Indians of the country, then called New Sweden died of it. The wolves then came, attracted by the ftench of fo many corpfes, in fuch great numbers that they devoured them all, and even attacked the poor fick Indians in their huts, fo that the few healthy ones had enough todo, to drive them away. But fince that time they have difappeared, fo that they are now feldom {cen, and it is very rarely that they commit any 286 — November 1784... any diforders. This is attributed to the greater cultivation of the country, and to their being killed in great numbers. But further up the country, where it is not yet fo much inhabited; they. are ftill very abun- dant. .On the coafts. of Penfylvanta and New ferfey, the fheep ftay all night in the fields, without the. people’s fearing the wolves: however to prevent their multi- — plying too much, there is a reward of twen- ty fhillings in Pen/y/vama, and of thirty in New Ferfey, for delivering in a dead wolf, — and the perfon that brings it may keep the — fkin. But for a young wolf the reward is only ten fhillings of the Pen/ylvanian cur- rency. There are examples of thefe wolves being made as tame as dogs. Tue wild Oxen have their abode princi- _ pally in the woods of Carolina, which are ‘far up in the country. The inhabitants frequently hunt them, and falt their flefh like common beef, which is eaten by fer- vants and the lower clafs of people. But the hide is of little ufe, having too large pores to be made ufe of for fhoes. How- ever. the poorer people in Carona, {pread thefe hides on the ground inftead of beds. Tue Vifcum flamentofum, or Febraus mi ifle- foe, is found in abundance in Carohna; the inhabitants make ufe of it as ftraw in their eds, Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 287 beds, and to adorn their honfes; the cat= tle are very fond of it: it is likewife em- ployed in packing goods. Tue Spartium fcoparium grew in Mr. Bartram’s garden from Englih feeds; he faid that he had feveral bufhes of it, but that the froft in the cold winters here had killed moft of them: they however grow fpontaneoully in Sweden. _ Mr. Bartram had fome Truffles, or + Lin neus’s Lycoperdon Tuber, which he had got out of a fandy foil in New. Ferfey, where they are abundant. Thefe he fhewed to his friend from Carolna, and afked him. whether they were the Tuckahoo of the In- dians. But the ftranger denied it, and ad- ded that though thefe truffles were likewife very common in Carolina, yet he had never feen them ufed any other way but in milk, againit the dyfentery; and he gave us the following defcription of the Zuckahoo. It grows in Hevesi {wamps and marfhes, and is commonly plentiful. The hogs greedily dig up its roots with their nofes in fuch places; and the Indians in Carola likewife gather them in their rambles in the woods, dry them in the fun fhine, grind them and bake bread of them. Whilft the root is freth it is harfh and acrid, but being. dried it lofes the greateft part of its acrimony. To a ast “pant 288 November 1748. | To judge by thefe qualities the Tuckahoe may very likely be the rum Virginianum. Compare with this account, what fhall be related in the fequel of the Tahim and Tuckab. | Arter dinner I again returned to town. November the 8th. SeveRAL Enghjb and Swedi/hb oeconomifts kept bee-hives, which afforded their poffefiors profit: for bees fuc- ceed very well here: the wax was for the moft part fold to tradefmen : but the honey they made ufe of in their own families, in different ways. The people were unani- mous, that the common bees were not in North America before the arrival of the Europeans ; but that they were firft brought over by the Engh/h who fettled here. The Indians \ikewife generally declare, that their _/fathers had never feen any bees either in »\ the woods or any where elfe, before the Europeans had been feveral years fettled here. This is further confirmed by the name which the Indians give them: for having no particular name for them in their language, they call them Exngh/b flies, be- caufe the Exgh/h firft brought them over : but at prefent they fly plentifully about the woods of North America. However it has been obferved that the bees always when they fwarm, fpread to the fouthward, and never Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 289 never tothenorthward. It feems as if they do not find the latter countries fo good for their conftitution: therefore they cannot ftay in Canada, and all that have been car- ried over thither, diedin winter. It feem- ed to me as if the bees in America were fomewhat fmaller than ours in- Sweden. They have not yet been found in the woods on the other fide of the Blue Mountains, which confirms the opinion of their being brought to America of late. A man told Mr. Bartram, that on his travels in the woods of North America, he had found another fort of bees, which, inftead of fe- parating their wax and honey, mixed it both together ina great bag. But this ac- count wants both clearing up and confirm- ing. November the goth. Att the old Swedes and Enxgh/hmen born in America whom } ever queftioned, afferted that there were not © near fo many birds fit for eating at prefent, as there ufed to be when they were chil- dren, and that their decreafe was vifible.: They even faid, that they had heard their fathers complain of this, in whofe child- hood the bays, rivers and brooks were quite covered with all forts of water fowl, fuch as wild geefe, ducks, and the like. But at prefent there is fometimes not a | fingle 290 November 1748. fingle bird upon them; about fixty or fe- venty years ago, a fingle perfon could kill eighty ducks in a morning ; but at prefent you frequently wait in vain for a fingle one. A Swede above ninety years old, affured me that he had in his youth killed twenty-three ducks at a fhot. This good luck no body is likely to have at prefent, as you are forced to ramble about for a whole day, without getting a fight of more than three or four. Cranes* at that time came hither by hundreds in the {pring: at — prefent there are but very few. The wild Turkeys, and the birds which the Swedes in this country call Partridges and Hazel- hens were in whole flocks in the woods. But at this time a perfon is tired with walking before he can ftart a fingle bird. Tue caufe of this diminution is not dif- ficult to find. Before the arrival of the Europeans, the country was uncultivated, and full of great forefts. The few Indians that lived here feldom difturbed the birds. They carried on no trade among themfelves, iron and gun powder were unknown to them. *Wuen Captain Amadas, the firlt Engli/hman that ever landed in North America, fet foot on fhore (to ufe his own words) /uch a flocke of Cranes (the moft part white) arofe under us with fuch a cry, redoubled by many echoes, as if an armie of men had foouted altogether. | Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 2g1 them. One hundredth part of the fowl which at that time were fo plentiful here, would have fufficed to feed the few inhabi- tants ; and confidering that they cultivated their fmall maize fields, caught fifh, hunt- ed ftags, beavers, bears, wild cattle, and other animals whofe flefh was delicious to them, it will foon appear how little they -difturbed the birds. But fince the arrival of great crouds of Ewropeans, things are greatly changed : the country is well peo- _ pled, and the woods are cut down: the people increafing in this country, they have by hunting and fhooting in part aise a es the birds, in part feared them away: ipring the people ftill take both eggs, mo- thers and young indifferently, becaufe no regulations are made to the contrary. And if any had been made, the {pirit of freedom which prevails in the country would not _ fuffer them to be obeyed. But though the _ eatable birds have been diminifhed greatly, yet there are others, which have rather in- creafed than decreafeéd in number, fince the arrival of the Europeans: this can moft properly be faid of a fpecies of daws which the Enghjh call Blackbirds * and the Swedes Maize thieves, Dr. Linneus calls them Gra- ee 2 cula. * PROPERLY fhining blackbirds. — 292 November 1748. cula Quiftula. And together with them, the feveral forts of Sguzrrels among the qua-~ _ drupeds have fpread : for thefe and the for- mer, live chiefly upon maize, or at leaft they are moft greedy of it. But as popula- tion increafes, the cultivation of maize in- creafes, and of courfe the food of the above- mentioned animals is more plentiful : to this itis to be added, that thefe latter are rarely eaten, and therefore they are more at liberty to multiply their kind. There are likewife cther birds which are not eaten, of which at — prefent there are nearly as many as there were before the arrival of the Europeans. On the other hand I heard great com- plaints of the great decreafe of eatable fowl, not only in this province, but in all the parts of North America, where I have been. AcEp people had experienced that with the fith, which I have juft mentioned of the birds: in their youth, the bays, rivers, and brooks, had fuch quantities of fifh that at one draught in the morning, they caught as many as a horfe was able to carry home.. But at prefent things are greatly altered ; and they often work in vain all the night long, with all their fifhing tackle. The caufes of this decreafe of fith, are partly the fame with thofe of the diminution of ~ the number of birds; being of late caught by Penfylvuania, Philadelphia. 293 by a greater variety of contrivances, and in different manners than before. The nu- merous mills on the rivers and brooks like- wife contribute to it in part: for it has been obferved here, that the fifh go up the river in order to {pawn in a fhallow water ; but when they meet with works that pre- vent their proceeding, they turn back, and never come again. Of this I was aflured by a man of fortune at Boffon: his father was ufed to catch a number of herrings throughout the winter and almoft always in _fummer, in ariver, upon his country feat : but he having built a mill with a dyke in this water, they were loft. In this man- ner they complained here and every where of the decreafe of fifh. Old people afferted the fame in regard to oyfters at New York ; for though theyare ftill taken in confiderable quantity, and are as big and as delicious as can be wifhed, yet all the oyfter-catchers own, that the number diminifhes greatly every year: the moft natural caufe of it, 1s probably the immoderate catching of them at all times of the year. Mr. FRANKLIN told me that in that part of New England, where his father lived, two rivers fell into the fea, in one of which, they caught great numbers of herring, and in the othernotone. Yet the places where 3 thefe 294. November 1748. thefe rivers difcharged themfelves into the fea, were not far afunder. They had ob- ferved that when the herrings came in {pring to depofit their {pawn, they always fwam up the river where they ufed to catch them, but never came into the other. This cir- cumftance led Mr. Frankiin’s father who — was fettled between the two rivers, to try whether it was not poffible to make the herrings likewife live in the other river. For that purpofe he put out his nets, as they were coming up for fpawning, and he © caught fome. He took the {pawn out of them, and carefully carried it acrofs the land into the other river. “It was hatched, and the confequence was, that every year afterwards they caught more herrings in that river; and this is ftill the cafe. This leads one to believe that the fifh always like to {pawn in the fame place where they were hatched, and from whence they firft put out to fea; being asit were accuftomed to it. Tue following is another peculiar obfer- vation. It has never formerly been known that codfith were to be caught at cape Hin- lopen: they were always caught at the mouth of the Delaware: but at prefent they are numerous in the former place. From \ hence it may be concluded that fith likewife change Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 295 changs peor places of abode, of their own accord. A CAPTAIN of a fhip who had been in © Greenland, afferted from his own experi- ence, that on pafling the feventieth deg. of north lat. the fummer heat was there much greater, than it is below that degree. From hence he concluded, that the fum- mer heat at the pole itfelf, muft be ftill more excefflive, fince the fun fhines there for fuch a long fpace of time, without ever fetting. The fame account with fimilar confequences drawn from thence, Mr. Franklin had heard of the fhip captains in Bojton, who had failed to the moft northern parts of this hemifphere. But {till more aftonifhing is the account he got from cap- tain Henry Atkins, who ftill lives at Boffon. — He had for fome time been upon the fith- ery along the coafts of New England. But not catching as much as he wifhed, he failed north, asfaras Green/and. At lat he went fo far, that he difcovered people, who had never feen Europeans before (and what is more aftonifhing) who had no idea of the ufe of fire, which they had never employed ; and if they had known it, they could have made no ufe of their knowledge, as there _ were no trees in the country. But they eat the birds and fith which they caught quite | Be raw. 296 November 1748. raw. Captain Atkins got fome very fcarce {kins in exchange for fome trifles. Ir is already known from feveral ac- counts of voyages, that to the northward neither trees nor bufhes, nor any ligneous plants are to be met with, fit for burning. But is it not probable that the inhabitants of fo defolate a country, like other northern nations which we know, burn the train oil of fifhes, and the fat of animals in lamps, in order to boil their meat, to warm their fubterraneous caves in winter, and to light them in the darkeft feafon of the year? elfe their darknefs would be infupportable. November the 11th. In feveral writings we read of a large animal, which is to be met with in New England and other parts of North America. ‘They fometimes dig very long and branched horns out of the ground in Ire/and, and no body in that | country or any where elfe in the world, knows an animal that has fuch horns. This has induced many people to believe that it is the Moofe-deer fo famous in North America, and that the horns found, were of animals of this kind, which had former- ly lived in that ifland, but were gradually deftroyed. It has even been concluded, that Ire/and, in diftant ages either was con- nected with North America, or that anum- | ber Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 297 ber of little iflands, which are loft at pre- fent, made achain between them. This led me to enquire, whether an animal with fuch exceffive great horns, as are afcribed to the Moofe-deer, had ever been feen in any part of this country. Mr. Bartram told me, that notwithftanding he had care- fully enquired to that purpofe, yet there was no perfon who could give him any in- formation, which could be relied upon, and therefore he was entirely of opinion, that there was no fuch an animal in North America. Mr. Frankia related that he had, when a boy, feen two of the animals which they call Moofe-deer, but he well remembred that they were not near of fuch a fize as they mutt have been, if the horns found in Ireland were to fit them: the two animals which he faw, were brought to Boffon in order to be fent to England to Queen Ann. The height of the animal up to the back was that of a pretty tall horfe; om the head and its horns were (ftill high- er: Mr. Dudley has given a defcription of hi Moofe-deer which is found in North America. On my travels in Canada, I of- ten enquired of the Frenchmen, whether there had ever been feen fo large an animal in this country, as fome people fay there asin North America; and with fuch great horns 298 November 1748. horns as are fometimes dug out in Ireland, But I was always told, that they had never heard of it, and much lefs feen it: fome added, that if there was fuch an animal, they certainly muft have met with it, in fome of their excurfions in the woods. ‘There are elks here, which are either of the fame fort with the Swedi/b ones, or a variety of them : of thefe they often catch fome which are larger than common, whence perhaps the report of the very large animal with ex- ceflive horns in North America firft had its rife. Thefe elks are called Original’s by the French in Canada, which name they have borrowed from the Indians: perhaps Dudley, in defcribing the Moofe-deer, meant no other animals, than thefe large elks.* Mr. Franklin gave me a piece of a ftone, which on account of its indeftructibility in the fire, is made ufe of in New England for making melting furnaces and forges. It * Wuar gives ftill more weight, to Mr. Ka/m’s opinion of the Z/& being the Moofe-deer, is the name Mu/u which the Algonkins give to the elk, as Mr. Ka/m himfelf obferves in the fequel of his work ; and this circumftance is the more remarkable, as the d/gonkins before the Lrokee/e or five nati- ons got fo great a power in America, were the moft powerful nation in the northern part of this continent; in fo much, that though they be now reduced to an inconfiderable num- ber, their language is however a kind of univerfal language in North America; fo that there is no doubt,. that the elk 1s « the famous Mao/e-deer. F. Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 209 Ir confifts of a mixture of Lapis Ol/aris or Serpentine ftone, and of Abe. The gréateft part of it is a grey Serpentine ftone, which is fat and {mooth to the touch, and is eafily cut and worked. Here and a there are fome glittering fpeckles of that fort of afbeft, whofe fibres come from a center like rays, or Star Afbef. This ftone is not found in ftrata or folid rocks, but here and there {cattered on the fields. ANOTHER ftone is called Soap/fone by many of the Swedes, being as {mooth as foap on the outfide. They make ufe of it for rubbing fpots out of their cloaths. It might be called Saxum tal ‘cofum parti- ; culus fpatacets, granat i/que 1mmIxXtts, ora talc with mixed particles of {par and gar- nets. A more exact defcription I referve for another work. At prefent I only add that the ground colour is pale green, with ‘fome dark fpots, and fometimes a few of a ereenifh hue. It is very fmooth to the touch, and runs always waved. It is like- wife eafily fawed and cut, though it is not very fmooth. Ihave feen large {tones of it, which were a fathom and more long, pro- portionably broad, and commonly fix inches or afootdeep. But I cannot determine any thing of their original fize, as I have not been at the place hore they are dug, and have only 300 November 1748. only feen the ftones at Philadelphia, which are brought there ready cut. The particles of talc in this {tone are about thirty times as many as thofe of {par and garnet. | It is found in many parts of the country, for example in the neighbourhood of Chefer in Penfyluama. The Enghjh likewife call it Soapftone,* and it is likely that the Swedes have borrowed that name from them. Tuts ftone was chiefly employed in the following manner. Firft, the people took {pots out of their cloaths with it. But for this purpofe the whole ftone is not equally ufeful, for it includes in its clear particles fome dark ones which confift wholly of fer- pentine ftone, and may eafily be cut witha knife ; fome of the loofe ftone is {craped off like a powder, and ftrewed upon a greafy fpot, in filk or any other ftuff; this im- bibes the greafe, and after rubbing off the powder the {pot difappears: and as this ftone is likewife very durable in the fire, the country people make their hearths with it, efpecially the place where the fire lies, and where the heat is the greateft, for the ftone {tands * Tr feems to be either the fubftance commonly called French Chalk, or perhaps the Soap-rock, which is-common in Cornwall near the Lizard point, and which confiftssbefides of fome particles of talc, chiefly of an earth like magnefia, — which latter with acid of vitriol, yields an earthy vitriolic falt, or Ep/om Jalt. F. Penfyloania, Philadelphia. 301 ftands the ftrongeft fire. If the people can get a fufficient quantity of this ftone, they lay the fteps before the houfes with it, inftead of bricks, which are generally ufed for that purpofe. Tue walls round the court yards, gar- dens, burying places, and thofe for the floping cellar doors towards the ftreet, which are all commonly built of brick, are covered with a coping of this ftone; for it holds excellently againft all the effects of the fun, air, rain and ftorm, and does not decay but fecures the bricks. On account of this quality, people commonly get the door pofts in which their hinges are faften- ed made of this ftone: and in feveral pub- lick buildings, fuch as the houfe of af- fembly for the province, the whole lower wall is built of it, and in other houfes the corners are laid out with it. Tue Salt which is ufed in the Englith North American colonies is brought from the Weft Indies. ‘The Indians have in fome places falt fprings from which they get falt by boiling. I fhall in the fequel have oc- cafion to defcribe fome of them. Mr. Franklin was of opinion that the people in Penfylvania could eafier make good falt of fea water, than in New England, where fometimes falt is made of the fea water on their 302 November 1748. ; me their coaft ; though their fituation is more northerly. Lead-ore has been difcovered in \ Penfylvania, but as it is not to be met ' with in quantity, no body ever attempted to ufe it. Loadjiones of confiderable goodnefs have likewife been found; and I omyfelf — _ pofiefs feveral pretty pieces of them. IRon is dug in fuch great quantities in Penfylvania and in the other American pro- vinces of the Englj/b, that they could provide with that commodity not only England, but almoft all Europe, and per- — haps the greater part of the globe. The ore is here commonly infinitely eafier got in the mines, than our Swedi/b ore. For in many places with a pick ax, a crow-foot and a wooden club, it is got with the fame eafe with whicha hole can be made ina hard foil: in many places the people know nothing of boring, blafting and firing; and the ore is likewife very fulible. Of this iron they get fuch quantities, that not only:the numerous inhabitants of the colonies themfelves have enough of it, but great quantities, are fent to the Weft Indies, and they have lately be- gan even to trade to Europe with it. This iron is reckoned better for fhip building than our Swedj/b iron, or any other, becaufe falt water does not corrode it fo much. Some people believed that without reckon- . ing Penfjlvania. Philadelphia. 302 ing the freight, they could fell their iron in England at a lower rate than any other nation; efpecially when the country be- comes better peopled and labour cheaper. Tue mountain flax,* or that kind of ftone, which Bifhop Browallius calls Ami- antus fibris feparabihous molliufculs, in his leGtures on mineralogy which were pub-_ lifhed in 1739, or the amiant with foft fibres which can eafily be feparated, is found a- bundantly in Penfylvania. Some pieces are very foft, others pretty tough: Mr. Frank- lin told me that twenty and fome odd years ago, when he made a voyage to England, he had a little purfe with him, made of the mountain flax of this country, which he prefented to Sir Hans Sloane. I have likewile feen paper made of this ftone: and I have likewife received fome {mall pieces of it, which I keep in my cabinet. Mr. Frankiin had been told by others that on expofing this mountain flax to the open air in winter, and leaving it in the cold and wet, it would grow together, and more fit for fpinning. But he did not venture to deter- © Amiantas ( Afbeftus) fibrofus, fibris feparabilibus flexili- bus tenacibus, Linn. Sy/?. nat. p. 55. Amiantus fibris mollibus parallelis facile feparabilibus, Wall. Min. 140. Mountain Flax, Linum montanum, Fovfter’s Mineralogy, p- 17. F, 304. November 1748. determine how far this opinion was ground~ ed. On this occafion she related a very pleafant accident, which happened to him with this mountain flax: he had; feveral years ago, got a piece of it, which he gave to one of his journeymen printers, in order to get it made into a {heet at the paper mill. As foon as the fellow brought the paper, Mr. Franklin rolled it up, and threw it in- to the fire, telling the journeyman he would fee a miracle, a fheet of paper which did not burn: the ignorant fellow afferted the — contrary, but was greatly aftonifhed, upon feeing himfelf convinced. Mr. Franklin then explained him, though not very clear- ly, the peculiar qualities of the paper. As foon as he was gone, fome of his acquaint- ance came in, who immediately knew the paper. The journeyman thought he would fhew them a great curiofity and aftonifh them. He accordingly told them that he had curioufly made a fheet of paper, which would not burn, though it was thrown in- to the fire. They pretended to think it impofflible, and he as ftrenuoufly maintain- ed his affertion. At laft they laid a wager about it; but whilft he was bufy with ftir- ring up the fire, the others flyly befmeared the paper with fat: the journeyman, who © was not aware of it, threw it into the eS | an Penfylvania, Philadelphia. oe and that moment it was all in flames: this aftonifhed him fo much, that he was almoft fpeechlefs ; upon which they could not help laughing, and fo difcovered the whole arti- fice. In feveral houfes of the town, a number of little 4vts run about, living under ground and in holes in the wall. The length of their bodies is one geometrical line. Their colour is either black or dark red: they have the cuftom of carrying off {weet things, if they can come at them, in common with the ants of other countries. Mr. Franklin was much inclined to believe that thefe lit- tle infects could by fome means commu- nicate their thoughts or defires to each other, and he confirmed his opinion by fome / examples. When an ant finds fome fugar, it runs immediately under ground to its hole, where having ftayed a little while, a whole army comes out, unites and march- es to the place where the fugar is, and carries it off by pieces: or if an ant meets with a dead fly, which it cannot carry alone, it immediately haftens home, and foon after fome more come out, creep to the fly and carry it away. Some time ago Mc. Frankhn put a little earthen pot with | treacle intoaclofet. A number of ants got into the. pot, and devoured the treacle very quietly. 306 November 1748. quitely. But as he obferved it he fhook ther out, and tied the pot with a thin ftring toa nail which he had faftenedin the ceiling; fo that the pot hung down by the ftring. A fingle ant by chance remained in the pot: this ant eat till it was fatished; but when it wanted to get off, it was'under great con- cern to find its way out: it ran about the bottom of the pot, but in vain: at laft it _ found after many attempts the way to get to the ceiling by the firing. After it was come there, it ran to the wall, and from — thence to the ground. It had hardly been away for half an hour, when a great fwarm of ants came out, got up to the ceiling, and crept along the ftring into the pot, and began to eat again: this they continued till the treacle was all eaten: in the mean time one fwarm running down the ftring, and the other up. November the 12th. A MAN of fortune who has long been in this province afferted, that, by twenty years experience, he had found a confirmation of what other people. have obferved with regard to the weather, viz. that the weather in winter was com- monly foretold by that on the firft of No- vember, old ftile, or twelfth new ftile; if that whole day be fair, the next winter will bring but little rain and fnow along with _ Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 307 with it: but if the firft half of the day be clear, and the other cloudy, the beginning of winter would accordingly be fair, but its end and fpring would turn out rigorous and difagreeable: of the fame kind were the other prefages. I have hkewife in other places heard of fimilar figns of the weather ; but as a mature judgment greatly leffens the confidence in them, fo the meteorological obfervations have fufficiently fhewn, how infinitely often thefe prophecies have failed. PENSYLVANIA abounds in fprings, and you commonly meet with a fpring of clear water on one or the other, and fometimes on feveral fides of a mountain. The people near fuch {prings, ufe them for every purpofe of a fine {pring water. They alfo condu& the water into a little ftone building near the houfe, where they can confine it, and _ bring freth fupplies at pleafure. In fummer they place their milk, bottles of wine and other liquors in this building, where they keep cool and frefh. In many country houfes, the kitchen or buttery was fo fitu- ated, that a rivulet ran under it, and had the water near at hand. | | Nor only people of fortune, but even’ others that had fome poffeffions, common- ly had fith ponds in the country near their houfes: They always took care that freth U2 water 308 ~ November 1748. water might run into their ponds, whichis very falutary for the fifth: for that purpofe the ponds were placed near a {pring on a hil. ; November the 13th. I saw in feveral parts of this province a ready method of ~ getting plenty of grafs to grow in the mea- — dows. Here muft be remembered what I have before mentioned about the fprings, which are fometimes found on the fides of hills and fometimes in vallies. The mea- dows lie commonly in the vallies between the hills : if they are too {wampy and wet, the water is carried off by feveral ditches. But the fummer in Penfylvania is very hot; and the fun often burns the grafs fo much, that it dries up entirely. The hufbandmen therefore have been very attentive to pre- vent this in their meadows: to that pur- — pofe they look for all the fprings in the neighbourhood of a meadow; and as the rivulets flowed before by the fhorteit way into. the vallies, they raife the water as much as poffible and neceffary, to the higher part of the meadow, and make feve- ral narrow channels from the brook, down into the plain, fo that it 1s entirely wa- tered by it. ' When there are fome deep- er places, they frequently lay wooden gut- ters acrofs them, through which the water | — flows | Penfylvania, near Germantown. 309 flows to the other fide; and from thence it is again by very narrow channels car- ried to all the places where it feems ne- ceflary. To raife the water the higher, and in order to {pread it more, there are high dykes built near the {prings, between which the water rifes till it is fo high as to run down where the people want it. Induf- try and ingenuity went further: when a brook runs in a wood, with a direétion not towards the meadow, and it has been found by levelling, and taking an exa& furvey of the Jand between the meadow and the ri- vulet, that the latter can be conducted towards the former; a dyke is made, which hems the courfe of the brook, and the water is led round the meadow over many hills, fometimes for the {pace of an Engh/h mile and further, partly acrofs _ vallies in wooden pipes, till at laft it is brought where it is wanted, and where it can be {pread as above-mentioned. One that has not feen it himfelf, cannot believe how great\a quantity of grafs there is in fuch meadows, efpecially near the little channels; whilft others, which have not been thus managed look wretchedly. The meadows commonly lie inthe vallies, and one or more of their fides have a declivity. The water can therefore eafily be brought to U2 run - a 4 NY = * Pits, 310 November 1748 run down in them. Thefe meadows which are fo carefully watered, are commonly — mowed three times every fummer. But it is likewife to be obferved, that fummer continues feven months here. The inha- bitants feldom fail to employ a brook or {pring in this manner, if it is not too far from the meadows to be led to them. Tue leaves were at prefent fallen from all the trees; both from oaks, and from all thofe which have deciduous leaves, and they covered the ground in the woods fix — inches deep. The great quantity of leaves which drop annually, would neceffarily feem to encreafe the upper black mould greatly. However, it is not above three or four inches thick in the woods, and under it lays a brick coloured clay, mixed with a fand of the fame colour. It is remarkable, that a foil which in all probability has not been ftirred, fhould be covered with fo little black mould: but I fhall {peak of this in the fequel. November the rath. Tue Squirrels which run about plentifully in the woods are of different fpecies; I here intend to defcribe the moft common forts, more accurately. Tue grey Squirrels are very plentiful in Penfylvania and in the other proyinces of North America. Their fhape correfponds | with Penfylvania, near Germantown. 311 with that of our Swedi/b {quirrel ; but they _ differ from them, by keeping their grey colour all the year long, and in fize being fomething bigger. The woods in all thete provinces, and chiefly in Pen/ylvania, con- fit of trees with deciduous leaves, and in fuch thefe fquirrels like to live. Ray in his Synopfis Quadrupedum, p. 215, and Catefby in his Natural Hiftory of Carolina, Voi. 2. p. 74, tab. 74, callit the Virginian greater grey Squirrel; and the latter has added a - figure after life. The Swedes call it grao Ichorn, which is the fame as the Englith grey Squirrel. Their nefts are commonly in hollow trees, and are made of mofs, ftraw, and other foft things: their food is chiefly nuts; as hazel nuts, chinquapins, -chefnuts, walnuts, hiccory nuts, and the acorns of the different forts of oak which grow here; but maize is what they are moft greedy of. The ground in the woods is in autumn covered with acorns, and all kinds of nuts which drop from the nume- rous trees; of thefe the fquirrels gather _ great ftores for winter, which they lay up in holes dug by them for that purpofe ; they likewife carry a great quantity of them into their nefts. As foon as winter comes, the fnow and cold confines them to their holes | U4 for 512 November 1748. holes for feveral days, efpecially when the weather is very rough. During this time they confume the little ftore, which they © have brought to their nefts : as foon there- fore as the weather grows milder, they creep out, and dig out part of the ftore which they have laid up in the ground: of this they eat fome on the fpot, and carry the ref{t into their nefts on the trees. We frequently obferved that in winter, at the eve of a great froft, when there had been fome temperate weather, the fquirrels, a day or two before the froft, ran about the woods in greater numbers than common, partly in order tofeat their fill, and partly to ftore their nefts with a new proviffon for the enfuing great cold, during which they | did not venture to come out, but lay fnug in their nefts: therefore feeing them run in the woods in greater numbers than ordina- ry, was a fafe prognoftic of an enfuing cold. Tue 4ogs which are here droven into the woods, whilit there is yet no fnow in them, often do confiderable damage to the poor {quirrels, by rooting up their ftore-holes, and robbing their winter provifions. Both the Indians, and the European Americans, take great pains to find out thefe ftore- holes, whether in trees or in the ground, as all the nuts they contain are choice, and ; not Penfylvania, near Germantown. 313 © not only quite ripe, but likewife not pierc- ed by worms. ‘The nuts and acorns which the Dormice, or Mus Cricetus, Linn. tore up in autumn, are all in the fame conditi- on. The Swedes relate, that in the long winter, which happened here in the year 1741, there fell fuch a quantity of f{now, that the fquirrels could not get to their ftore, and many of them were ftarved to death. Tue damage which thefe animals do in the maize fields, I have already defcribed : _ they do the more harm, as they do not eat all the corn, but only the inner and {weet part, and as it were take off the hufks. In {pring towards the end of ri/, when the oaks were in full flower, I once obferved a number of {quitrels on them, fometimes five, fix, or more in a tree, who bit off the _ flower ftalks a little below the flowers, and dropt them on the ground: whether they eat any thing off them, or made ufe of them for fome other purpofe I know not: but ‘the ground was quite covered with oak flowers, to which part of the ftalk adhered. For this reafon the oaks do not bear fo much fruit by far, to feed hogs and other animals, as they would otherwife do. Or all the wild animals in this country, the fquirrels are forme of the eafieft to tame, efpecially 314 November 174. efpecially when they are taken young for that purpofe. I have feen them tamed fo far, that they would follow the boys into the woods and run about every where, and when tired would fit on their fhoulders. Sometimes they only ran a little way into the wood, and then returned home again to the little hole that had been fitted up for them. When they eat, they fit almoft up- right, hold their food between their fore- feet and their tail bent upwards. When © the tame ones got more than they could _ eat at a time, they carried the remainder to their habitations, and hid it amongft the wool which they lay upon. Such tame | {quirrels fhewed no fear of ftrangers, and would fuffer themfelves to be touched by every body, without offering to bite, They fometimes would leap upon ftranger’s cloaths and lie ftill on them, in order to fleep. In the farm houfes where they were kept, they played with cats and dogs: they ok likewife eat bread. Tue wild grey fquirrels likewife hold up their tails when fitting. As foon as they perceive a man, they continually wag their tails and begin to gnafh with their teeth, and make a great noife, which they do not rea- dily give over. Thofe who go a fhooting birds and other animals, are therefore very angry Penfylvanid, near Germantown. 315 angry at them, as this noife difcovers them, - and alarms the game. Though a grey {quirrel does not feem to be very fhy, yetit is very difficult to kill; for when it per- ceives a man, it climbs upon a tree, and commonly chufes the higheft about it. It then tries to hide itfelf behind the trunk, fo that the fhooter may not fee it, and though he goes ever {fo faft round the tree, yet the {quirrel changes its place as quick- ly, if not quicker: if two boughs bend to- wards each other, the fquirrel lies in the middle of them, and preffes itfelf fo clofe, that it is hardly vifible. You may then - fhake the tree, throw fticks and ftones to the place where it lies, or-fhoot at it, yet it will never ftir. Ifthree branches join, it takes refuge between them, and lies as clofe to them as poffible, and then it is fuf- ficiently fafe. Sometimes it efcapes on a tree where there are old nefts of {quirrels, or of large birds: it flips into fuch, and can- not be got out, either by fhooting, throw- ing, or any thing elfe; for the grey {quir- tels feldom leap from one tree to ano- ther, except extreme danger compels them. They commonly run dire@ily up the trees and down the fame way, with their head ftraight forward. Several of them which I fhot 316 November 1748. I fhot in the woods, had great numbers of fleas. | I HAve already mentioned that thefe {quirrels are among the animals, which at prefent are more plentiful than they for- merly were, and that the infinitely greater cultivation of maize, which is their favou- rite food, is the caufe of their multiplica- tion. However it is peculiar, that in fome years a greater number of fquirrels come down from the higher countries into Pen- Sylvania, and other Exgh/b colonies. They — commonly come in autumn, and are then very bufy in the woods gathering nuts and acorns, which they carry into hollow trees or their ftore-holes, in order to be fuffici- ently provided with food for winter. They are fo diligent in ftoring up of provifions, that though the nuts have been extremely | plentiful that year, yet it is difficult to get a confiderable quantity of them. The peo- ple here pretended from their own experi- ence to know, that when the {quirrels came down in fuch numbers from the higher parts of the country, the winter enfuing was un- | commonly rigorous and cold, and for that reafon they always look upon their coming down, as a fure fign of fuch a winter. Yet this does not always prove true, as I experi- enced in the autumn of the year 1749: at that time Penfylvania, near ‘Germantown. 317 time a great numberof fquirrels came down into the colonies, yet the winter was very mild and nocolder than common. But it ap- peared that their migration was occafioned by the fearcity of nuts and acorns, which happened that year in the higher parts of the country, and obliged them to come hither for their food. Therefore they ge- nerally return the next year to the place from which they came. SoME people reckon {quirrel flefh a great dainty, but the generality make no account of it. The fkin is good for little, yet {mall firaps are fometimes made of it, asit is very tough: others ufe it as a furr lining, for want of a better. Ladies fhoes are like- _wife fometimes made of it. Tue Rattle fnake often devours the {quirrels, notwithftanding all their agi- lity. This unwieldy creature, is faid to catch fo agile an one, merely by fafcination, _I have never had an opportunity of feeing how it is done: but fo many credible peo- ple affured me of the truth of the fact, and afferted that they were prefent, and paid peculiar attention to it, that I am almoft forced to believe their unanimous accounts. The fafcination is effected in the following manner: the {nake lies at the bottom of the tree upon which the {quirrel fits; its eyes 318 November 1784. eyes are fixed upon the’ little animal, and from that moment it cannot efcape; it be- gins a doleful outcry, which is fo welk known, that a perfon pafiing by, on hear-— ing it, immediately knows that it is charm- ed by a fnake. The fquirrel runs up the — tree a little way, comes downwards again, then goes up, and now comes lower again. On that occafion it has been obferved, that. the fquirrel always goes down more than it goes up. The fnake ftill continues at the root of the tree, with its eyes fixed on the fquirrel, with which its attention is fo entirely taken up, that a perfon accidental- ly approaching, may make a confiderable noife, without the fnake’s fo much as turn- ing about. The {fquirrel as before-men- tioned comes always lower, and at laft leaps down to the {nake, whofe mouth is already wide open for its reception. The poor lit- tle animal then with a piteous cry runs in-— to the fnake’s jaws, and is fwallowed at once, if it be not too big; but if its fize will not allow it to be fwallowed at once, the fnake. licks it feveral times with its tongue, and fmoothens it, and by that means makes it fit for fwallowing. Every thing elfe remarkable at this enchantment, I have defcribed in a treatife inferted in the Memoirs of the Royal Swedifa Academy of | NCLENCES » Penfylvania, near Germantown. 319 Sciences, im the Volume for the year 1753, 1 therefore am not fo circumftantial here. The fame power of enchanting is afcribed to that kind of fnake, which is commonly called the black /nake in America, and it 1s faid to catch and devour fquirrels in the fame manner as the former.* ' Bur thefe little animals do confiderable damage to the maize, not only whilft it is upon the ftalk, as I have before obferved, but even when it is brought home into the barns: for if they can come at it without any obftacle, they can in a few nights bring a whole bufhel away into their lurking holes. The government in moft of the North American colonies, has therefore been obliged to offer a certain premium, to be paid out of the common treafury, for the head of a fquirre}. It feems inconceivable what a fum of money has been paid for grey and black fquirrel’s heads, in the pro- vince * Ir has been obferved, that only fuch fquirrels and birds as have their nefts near the place where fuch fnakes come.to, make this pitiful noife, and are fo bufy in running up and _ down the tree and the neighbouring branches, in order to draw off the attention of the fnake from their brood, and of- ten they come fo very near in order to fly away again, that being within reach of the fnakes, they are at laft bit, poi- foned and devoured; and this will, I believe, perfectly account for the powers of fafcinating birds and {mall creatures in the fnakes. F. 320 November 1748. vince of Penfylvania only, from the firft of Ffanuary 1749, to the firft of ‘fanuary 17505 for when the deputies from the feveral dif- tricts of the province met, in order to deli- berate upon the affairs of the province, each of them complained that their treafu- ries were exhaufted by paying fo much for {quirrels : for at that time the law had ap- pointed a reward of three-pence for each © {quirrel’s head. So far extended the ven- — geance taken upon thefe little creatures, 1. e. upon the grey and black fquirrels. It was found, by cafting up accounts, ‘that in that one year eight thoufand pounds of Pen- fylvania currency, had been expended in © paying thefe rewards: this I was affured of by a man who had looked over the accounts himfelf. -Many people, efpecially young men, left all other employment, and went into the woods to fhoot fquirrels: but the go- vernment having experienced how much ~ three-pence per head took out of the trea- fury, fettled half that fum upon each fquir-_— rel’s head. : FiyinG SQUIRRELS are a peculiar kind, which feem to be the fame with thofe which inhabit Finland, and which Dr. Linnaeus in his Fauna Svecica, No. 38. calls Sezurus volans. The American flying {quirrel at the utmoft Penfylvamia, near Germantown. 321 utmoft is only a variety of that which we have in Finland. Catefby in his Natural Hiftory of Carohna, Voki 2, op. 176311977, has defcribed it, and tab. 76, 77, drawn it after life. He likewife calls ‘it Sciurus volans. Edwards in his Natural Hiflory of Birds reprefents it, t. 191. They are met with in the woods, but not very frequently. They are fcarce ever feen in. the day time, unlefs they are forced out by men who have difcovered their nefts: for _ they fleep in the day time, but as foon as it grows dark, they come out and run about ~ almoft all night. They live in hollow trees, and by cutting one down, feven or more flying {quirrels are frequently found in it. By the additional fkin with which Provi- dence has provided them on both fides, they can fly from one tree toanother. They expand their fkins like wings, and contract them again as foon as they can get hold of the oppofite tree. Some people fay that they fly in a horizontal line; but others af- ferted that they firft went a little down- wards, and then rofe up again, when they approached the tree to which they would fly: they cannot fly further than four or five fathoms. Among all the fquir- rels in this country, thefe are the moft ea- fily tamed. The boys carry them to fchool, | x. or R22 November 1748. ~~ or wherever they go, without their ever at- tempting to efcape: if even they. put their {quirrel afide, it leaps upon them again im- mediately, creeps either into their bofom, or their fleeve, or any fold of the clothes, and lies down to fleep: its food is the fame with that of the grey fquirrel. THERE is a imall {pecies of {quirrels abounding in the woods, which the Engli/h call ground Squirrels. Catef/by has defcribed and drawn them from life, in the 2d. Vol. of his Natural Hiftory of Carolina, p. 75, tab. 75, and Edwards in his Natural Hi/- tory of Birds, t. y31.* He and Dr. Lz- neus call it Sciurus ftriatus, or the ftreaked Sguirrel. ‘Thefe do not properly live in trees, as others of this genus, but dig holes in the ground (much in the*fame manner as rabbets) in which they live, and whither they take refuge when they perceive any danger. Their holes go deep, and com- monly further inwards divide into many branches. They are alfo cunning enough to * As Catefby and Edwards have both reprefented the fying Squirrel in a iitting attitude, I have given here, plate I a fi- gure of one with the expanded membrane, and joined to it on the fame plate, a more accurate figure of the ground Squirrel. __ Ir is not yet made out with certainty, whether the dmeri- can flying fquirrel, and that found in Finland and ‘in the ~ north of Exrope and Afa, be the fame animal. — The Ameri- — ean kind has a flat pennated tail, but the European kind a round one, which affords a very dilftinguifhing character. F. 7 ee FLYING Saquir REL cu \) \\ \\ Z x Usssiien by Uf Uy Penfylvania, near Germantown. 32 3 to make fometimes an opening or hole to the furface of the ground from one of thefe branches. The advantage they have from hence, is that when they ftroll about for food, and the hole is ftopt up through which they went out, they may not expofe themielves to be caught, but prefently find the other hole, into which they may re- treat: but in autumn, when the leaves fall from the trees, or fometime after, it is di- verfion to fee the confternation they are fometimes in when purfued ; for their holes being eafily covered with the great fall of leaves, or by the wind, they have a great - deal to do, to find them on a fudden: they then run backwards and forwards, as if they had loft their way: they feem to know the places where they have made their fub- terraneous walks, but cannot conceive where _ the entrances are. If they be then purfued, and one claps his hands, they know no other refuge than that of climbing upon a tree; for it is to be obferved that thefe {quirrels always live under ground, and ne- ver climb upon trees unlefs purfued, and unable in the hurry to find their holes. This kind of fquirrels is much more nume- rous in Penfylvania, than in any other pro- vince of North America through which I have travelled. Its-length is commonly fix xX 2 inches, 324 November 1748. inches, without the curved tail; and it i$ © very narrow. The fkin is ferruginous, or of a reddifh brown, and marked with five black ftreaks, one of which runs along the back, and two on each fide. Their food confifts of all forts of corn, as rye, barley, wheat, maize, and of acorns, nuts, &c. They gather their winter provifions in au- tumn, like the common grey fquirrels, and © keep them in their holes under ground. If — they get into a granary, they do as much mifchief as mice and rats. It has often been obferved that if, after eating rye, — they come to fome wheat, they throw up the former, which they do not like fo well as the wheat, in order to fill their belly with the latter. When the maize is reaped in the fields, they are very bufy in biting off the ears, and filling the pouches in their mouth with corn, fo that their cheeks are quite blown up. With this — booty they haften into the holes which they have made in the ground. | As a Swede was making a mill-dyke, pret- — ty late in autumn, he employed for that — purpofe the foil of a neighbouring hill, and met with a hole on a fubterraneous walk belonging to thefe fquirrels: he followed it for fome, time, and difcover- ed a walk on one fide like a branch, parting — from the chief ftem: it was near two feet long, Penfylvania, near Germantown. 325 long, and at its end was a quantity of choice acorns of the white oak, which the little careful animal had ftored up for win- ter. Soon after he found another walk on the fide like the former, but containing a fine ftore of maize: the next had hiccory nuts, and the laft and moft hidden one con- tained fome excellent chefnuts, which _ might have filled two hats. | In winter thefe fquirrels are feldom feen, for during that feafon they live in their fubterraneous: holes upon the provifions, which they have ftored up there. How- ever on a very fine and clear day they fome- times come out. They frequently dig through the ground, into cellars in which the coun- try people lay up their apples, which they partly eat, and partly {poil, fo that the mafter has little or nothing left. They handle the maize ftores full as roughly as the apples. But the cats are their great enemies, who devour them and bring them home to their young ones: their flefh is not eaten by men, and their {kin is not made ufe of. Or all the fquirrels in the country, thefe are the moft difficult to be tamed; for, though they be caught very young, yet it is dangerous to touch them with naked | elag as they bite very fharp when one is X 3 not 326 November 1748. not aware of them. Many boys, who had loft a deal of time in trying to tame thefe {quirrels, owned that they knew of no art to make them quite tame; at leaft they are never fo far tamed as the other fpecies. In order to do any thing towards taming them they muft be caught when ‘they are. very fmall. Some people kept them in that ftate in a cage, becaute they looked 'very pretty. . Tsuatt take an other opportunity of {peaking of the black and ferruginous fquir- rels, which likewife inhabit this country. November the 15th. In the morning I returned to Philadelphia. Mr. Cock told me to day, and on fome other occafions af- terwards, an accident which happed to him, and which {eemed greatly to confirm a pe- culiar fign of an imminent hurricane. He failed to the Weft Indies in a {mall yacht, and had an old man on board, who had for a confiderable time failed in this fea. The old man founding the depth, called to the mate to tell Mr. Cock to launch the boats — immediately, and to put a fufficient num- ber of men into them, in order to tow the yacht during the calm, that they might reach the ifland before them, as foon as poflible, as within twenty-four hours there would be a ftrong hurricane. Mr. Cock afked him what reafons he had to think fo, the Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 327 the old man replied, that on founding, he faw the lead in the water ata diftance of many fathoms more than he had feen it be- fore ; that therefore the water was become clear all of a fudden, which he looked up- on as a cértain fign of an impending hur- ricane in the fea. Mr. Cock likewile faw the exceflive clearnefs of the water.’ He therefore gave immediate orders for launch- ing the boat, and towing the yacht, ‘'{o that they arrived before night in a fafe harbour. But before they had quite reached it the waves began to rife more and more, and the water was as it were boiling, though no wind was perceptible. In the enfuing night the hurricane came on, and ‘raged with fuch violence, that not only many hips were loft, and the roofs were torn off from the houfes, but even Mr. Cock’s yacht and other fhips, though they were in fafe harbours, were by the wind, and the vio- lence of the fea, wafhed fo far on fhore, that feveral weeks elapfed, before they could be got off. -- | 7 ry An old Dutch fkipper faid, that he had once caught a dogfifh in the bay of New York, which being cut open, had a quan- tity of eels in his ftomach. November the 18th. Mr. Bartram thewed me an earthen pot, which had been found X 4 in 328 November 1 74.8. in a place, where the Indians formerly liv= ed. He, who firft dug it out, kept greafe and fat in it to fmear his thoes, boots and all. forts of leather with: Mr. Bartram bought the pot of that man; it was yet entire and not damaged : I could perceive nO glaze or colour uponit, but on the out- fide it was yery much ornamented and up- on the whole well made... Mr. Bartram fhewed me feveral pieces of broken earthen veffels which the Indians formerly made ufe. of. It plainly appeared in all thefe that they were not made of mere clay ; ; but that different materials had been mixed with it, according to the nature of the places where they were made.. Thofe Jndiaus, for exam- ple, who lived near the fea fhore, pounded } the thells of {nails and mufcles, and mixed them with the clay. Others. who lived further up in the country, where mountain cryftals could be found, pounded them and mixed them with their clay ; but. how they proceeded i in making the veffels, is entirely unknown: it was plain, that they did not burn them much, for they were fo {oft that they might be cut in pieces with a knife: the workmanthip however feems to have been very good; for at prefent they find whole veffels or pieces in the ground, which are not damaged at all, though they have Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 329 have lain in the ground above a century. Before the Europeans fettled in North Ame- rica, the Indians had no other vefiels to boil their meat in, than thefe earthen pots of their own making: -but fince their arri- val, they have always. bought pots,: kettles, and other neceflary veffels of the Europeans, and take no longer the pains of making fome, by which..means this art is entirely. lofttamong them. Such veffels of their own conftruction are therefore a great rarity even, among the Indians. 1 have feen fuch old pots and pieces of them, confifting of.a kind of Serpentine ftone, or Linneus’s Talcum, Syft. Nite Z- Pr 52> Mr. Bartram likewife fhewed me little ae pieces of a black flate, which is plentifully “> found in fome parts of the river SkulJézll. There are pieces to be found, which are four feet and above fquare: the colour and configuration is the fame as in the Tadle fate (Schijius tabularis, Linn.) Syf. nat. 3. p- 37- except that this is a little thicker. The inhabitants of the country thereabouts (in the neighbourhood of the Sku//ill) cover their roofs with it; Mr. Bartram affured \ me, that he had feen a whole roof com- “\ pofed of four fuch flates. The rays of the - fun, heat, cold, and rain do not act upon the ftone. Mr. 330 ~ November 1748. Mr. Bartram further related, that in’ fe- veral parts of the country, caves or holes were to be met with, going deep into the \. mountains : he had been in feveral of them and had often found a number of Stalaétites, Linnaeus’s Stalaétites ftillatitius, Sytt. nat. 3. p- 183. of different dimenfions at the top; they differed in colour, but the greateft curiofity was, that in fome of the caves Mr. Bartram had found Stalaétites, whofe outward fide was as it were wreathed from top to bottom ; he had fent fome pieces of it to London, and had none at prefent. November the 20th. Turis morning I fet out in company of a friend, on a jour- ney to Racoon in New Ferfey, where ‘many Swedes live, who have their own church. We had three miles to go before we came to the ferry which was to bring us over the Delaware. The country here was very low in fome places: the plains on the banks of the river, were overflowed at every high water or flowing of the tide, and at the eb- bing they were left dry again. However the inhabitants of the country hereabouts, made ufe of this plain: for that purpofe they had in feveral places thrown up walls or dykes of earth towards the river, to pre- vent its overflowing the plains, which they made Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 331 made ufe of as meadows. On’ them the Weater-beeches ( Platanus. occidentalis, Linn.) were planted in great numbers on both fides the road, quite clofe together: thefe in fammer afford a pleafant fhade,. on ac- count of the abundance and fize of their leaves, and make the road extremely de- lightful, as it refembles a fine fhady walk. The Delaware has nearly the: fame breadth here, which it has near Philadelphia. Near the place where the ferry is to be met with, _ feveral pretty houfes were built on both fides, where travellers might. eet all kinds of refrefhment. - On our journey from Pen- Sylvania to New ‘ferfey, we were brought over the De/aware in a ferry belonging to, and kept in repair by: the Pen/ylvania-men ; but on our return we were obliged to take the ferry belonging to the New fer/ey fide. As foon as we had croffed the river, we were in a different province, for the De/a- ware makes the divifion between Pen/ylua- nia and New ‘ferfey, {o that every thing to the weft of it belongs to the former, and all to the eaft, to the latter province. Both thefe provinces have in moft things differ- ent laws, and their peculiar coin. We now purfued our journey further, and foon obferved that the country on this fide appeared very different from that on the 332 November 1748. the other; for in Pen/fylvania the ground confifts of more clay and black mould, and is very fertile; but in New Yer/ey it is more fandy and very poor, fo that the horfes. went very deep in fand in feveral parts of the road.. Near the place where we were brought over, and a little way along the fhore was a thick firwood: the trees were not very high, but in their greateft vigour ; between them appeared now and then a low bufh of oak. But after travelling about three Englith miles, the firwood ended,. and we fawno more trees of this kind till wecame to the church in Raccoon. In all the parts of Penfylvania where I have been, I have found few firwoods; onthe other hand, they are abundant in New ‘ferfey, and efpecially i in the lower part of that province. We af- terwards found all the day long no other trees, than fuch as have deciduous leaves ; moft of thefe were oaks of different forts, and of confiderable height, but they ftood every where far enough afunder, to admit a chaife to pafs through the wood without any inconvenience, there being feldom any fhrubs or underwood between the trees, ta obftruc& the way. The leaves were all fallen, and covered the ground more than a hand’s breadth: this had an appearance of encreafing the upper black foil greatly. In feveral New Ferfey, near Gloucefter. 333 feveral places flowed a finall rivulet. The country was commonly plain, but fome- times formed a few hills with an eafy de- clivity, though no high mountains appear- ed, and in a few places we found fome {mall ftones not bigger than a fift. Single farm houfes were fcattered in the country, and in one place only was a {mall village: the country was yet more covered with fo- refts than cultivated, and we were for the greateft part always in a wood. Tus day and the next we pafled feveral Kills, or {mall rivulets which flowed out of the country into the De/aware with no great defcent nor rapidity. , When the tide came upin the De/aware, it likewife rofe in fome of thefe rivulets a good way; formerly they muft have fpread to a confiderable breadth by the flowing of the tide, but at prefent there were meadows on their banks, form- ed, by throwing up ftrong dykes as clofe as poflible to the water, to keep it from overflowing. Such dykes were made along all rivers here to confine their water ; there- fore when the tide was higheft, the water in the rivers was much higher than the meadows: in the dykes were gates through which the water can be drawn from, or led into the meadows; they were fometimes placed on the outward fide of the wall, fo that 334 November 1748. that the water in the meadows forced it open, but the river water fhut it. In the evening we came into the houfe of a Swede called Peter Rambo, and we ftaid the night at his houfe. | Tue pines which we had feen today, and which I have mentioned before, were of that kind which has double leaves and ob- long cones covered with aculeated fecales. The Engh/h to diftinguifh it call it the Ferfey Pine: commonly there were only two {pines or leaves in one fafcicle,; as in our common Swedi/h pines, but fometimes three; the cones had long fpines, fo that they were difficult to be touched. - Thefe pines look at a diftance wholly like the Swedi/b ones, fo that if the cones were not regarded, they might eafily be taken for the fame fpecies. Of thefe pines they make a great quantity of tar, of which I thall fpeak in the fequel ; but as moft of them are but {mall, they are good for nothing elfe; for if they be employed as pofts, or poles in the ground, they are in a fhort time rendered ufelefs by rotting: as foon as they are cut down the worms are very greedy of them ; they foon eat through the wood, and only a few weeks after it iscut down; how- ever it is made ufe of as fuel where:no other wood New “ferfey, Racoon. 335 wood is to be got, in feveral places they make charcoal of it, as I intend to mention in the fequel. There is another thing which deferves notice, in regard to thefe trees, and which feveral people, befides myfelf, have experienced. In the great heat of the fummer, the cattle like to ftand in the fhade of thefe trees, preferably to that of the oak, hiccory, walnut, water- beech and other trees of this kind, whofe foliage is very thick ; and when the cattle find the latter with the former, they always choofe to ftand under the firs and pines, though the other trees with annually deci- duous leaves could afford a better thade: and if there be but a fingle pine in a wood, as many cattle from the herd as can ftand under it, throng to it. Some people would infer from hence, that the refinous exhalations of thefe trees, were beneficial to the cattle, and which made them more _ inclined to be near firs and pines, than any other trees. THE Spoon tree, which never grows to a great height, we faw this day in feveral places. The Swedes here have called it thus, becaufe the Indians who formerly lived in thefe provinces, ufed to make their fpoons and trowels of the wood of this tree. 1n my cabinet of ‘natural curiofities, I have a {poon 336 November 1748. a {poon made of this wood by an Indiati; who has killed many ftags and other ani- mals on the very {pot where Pdiladelphia af- terwards was built; for in his time that {pot was yet covered with trees and fhrubs. The Englifh call this treea Laurel, becaufe its leaves refemble thofe of the Laurocera- fus. Dr. Limneus, conformable to the pe- culiar friendfhip and goodnefs which he has always honoured me with, has been pleafed to call this tree, Kalua folus ovatis, corym= bis terminalibus, or Kalma latifolia. It fuc- ceeds beft on the fide of hills, efpecially on the north fide, where a brook pafiles by; therefore on meeting with fome fteep places (on hills) towards a brook, or with a fteep fide of a hill towards a marfh, you are fure to find the Ka/mza. But it frequently ftands mixed among beechtrees. ‘The higher the ’ Kalmias ftand on the north fide of a moun- tain, the lefs they grow: I have feen them not only in Penfyfvania and New Ferfey, but even in New York, but there they are more f{carce: I never found them beyond the forty-fecond deg. of north lat. though I took ever fo great care to look for them: they have the quality of preferving their fine green leaves throughout winter, fo that when all other trees have loft their ornaments, and ftand quite naked, thefe chear New Ferfey, Raccoon. 337 chear the woods with their green foliage. About the month of May they begin to flower in thefe parts, and then their beauty rivals that of moft of the known trees in na- ture: the flowers are innumerable, and fit in great bunches. Before they open, they have a fine red colour, but as they are ex- panded, the fun bleaches them, fo that fome are quite white; many preferve the colour of rofes. Their fhape is fingular, for they refemble a crater of the ancients: their {cent however is none of the moft agreeable. In fome places it was cuftomary to adorn the churches on chriftmas day or _ new-years day with the fine branches of this tree, which are then thick covered with leaves. Bur tively trees are known ft another > remarkable quality; their leaves are poifon \— - to fome animals, and food for others: ex- perience has taught the people that when fheep eat of thefe leaves, they either die immediately, or fall very fick, and recover with great difficulty. The young and more tender fheep are killed by a {mall portion, _ but the elder ones can bear a ftronger dofe. Yet this food will likewife prove mortal to them, if they take too much of it: the fame noxious effect it fhews in regard to calves which eat too much of the leaves: they 338 November 1748. they either die, or do not recover eafily. “I can remember, that in the autumn of the year 1748, fome calves eat of the leaves, but fell very fick, fwelled, foamed at the mouth, and could hardly ftand, however they were cured by giving them gunpowder -and other medicines: the fheep are moft expofed to be tempted by thefe leaves in winter ; for after having been kept in ftables, | for fome months they are greedy of all greens efpecially if the {now {till lies upon the fields, and therefore the green but poifonous leaves of the Kalmia, are to them very tempting. Horfes, oxen and cows which have eaten them, have likewife been very. ill after the meal, and though none of them ever died of eating thefe leaves, yet moft people believed, that if they took too great a portion of them, death would cer- tainly be the refulte. For it has been ob- ferved that when thefe animals only eat {mall quantities, yet they fuffer great pains. On the other hand the leaves of the Kalmia are the food of ftags, when the {now covers the ground, and hides all other provifions from them. Therefore, if they be fhot in winter, their bowels are found filled with thefe leaves; and it is very extraordinary, that if thofe bowels are given to dogs, they become quite itupid and as it were drunk, and New Fefey, Raccoon. 339 and often fall fo fick, that they feem to be at the point of death, but the people, who have eaten the venifon, have not felt the leaft indifpofition. The leaves of the Kal- mia are likewife the winter food of thofe birds, which the Swedes in North America call Hazel-hens, and which ftay here. all winter, for when they are killed, their ‘crop is found guite filled with them. Tue: wood of the Ka/mia is very hard, and fome people on that account, make the axis of their pullies of it. Weavers fhuttles are chiefly made of it, and the weavers are -of opinion, that no wood in this country is better for this purpofe, for it is compact, may be made very fmooth, and does not eafily crack, or burft. The joiners and turners here, employ it in making all kinds of work, which requires the beft wood; they chiefly ufe the root becaufe it is quite yellow; the wood has avery fuitable hard- nefs and finenefs, and from the center, fpread as it were {mall rays, which are at fome diftance from each other. When theleaves of the Ka/ma-are thrown into the fire, they make a crackling like falt. The chimney fweepers make brooms in winter of the branches with the leaves on them, fince they cannot get others in that feafon. In the fummer. of the year 1750, a certain 2 kind 340 November 1748, kind of worms, devoured. the leaves of al- moft all the trees in Penfylvania; yetthey — did not venture to attack the leaves of the Kalmia. Some people aflerted, that when a fire happened in the woods, it never went further, as foon as it came to the Kalmias, or Spoon trees. | November the 21ft. Tue Saal and all the other inhabitants of the country plant great quantities of maize, both for them- felves and for their cattle. It was afferted that it is the beft food for hogs, becaufe it makes them very fat, and gives their flefh an agreeable flavour, preferable to all other meat. I have given in two differtations up- on this kind of corn to the Swedi if Royal Academy of Sciences, which ftand in their Memoirs, one in the Volume for the year 1751, in the laft quarter, and the other in the firft quarter of the Volume for the year 1752, and thither I refer my readersy, - Tuer wheels of the carts which are: here made ufe of, are compofed of two different. kinds of wood. The felloes were made of what is called the Spanifh oak, and the {pokes of the white oak. Tue Safafras tree grows every where in this place. I have already obfery- ed feveral particulars in regard to it, and intend to add a few more here. On throwing New ferfey, Raccoon. 341 throwing fome of the wood into the fire, it caufes accrackling as falt does. The wood is made ufe of for pofts belonging to the enclofures, for it is faid to laft a long time in the ground: but it is likewife faid, that | there is hardly any kind of wood, which is more attacked by worms than this, when it is expofed to the air without cover, and - that in a fhort time it is quite worm-eaten through and through. The Swedes related, that the Indians who formerly inhabited thefe parts, made bowls of it. On cutting fome part of the faffafras tree, or its fhoots, and holding it to the nofe, it has a {trong but pleafant {mell. Some people peel the root, and boil the peel with the beer which _ they are brewing, becaufe they believe it wholefome for the fame reafon. The peel is put into brandy, either whilft it is diftil- _ling, or after it is made. An old Swede remembered. that his mo- ther cured many people of the dropfy, by a decoction of the root of faffafras in water drank every morning: but fhe ufed, atthe fame time to cup the patient on the feet. The old man aflured me, he had often feen people cured by this means, who had been brought to his mother wrapped up in fheets. Y 3 WHEN 242 November 1748 WHEN a part of a wood is deftined for cultivation, the faflafras trees are commonly left upon it, becaufe they have a very thick foliage, and afford a cool fhade to the cattle, during the great heats. Several of the Swedes, wath and fcour the veflels in which they intend to keep cyder, beer or brandy, with water in which the fafla- fras root or its peel has been boiled; which they think renders all thofe liquors more wholefome. Some people get their bed- pofts made of faffafras wood, in order to expel the bugs; for its ftrong {cent it is faid prevents thofe vermin from {fettling in them. For two or three years together this has the defired effect ; or about as long as the wood keeps its {trong aromatic {mell; but after that time it has been obferved to lofe it effect. A joiner fhewed me a bed, which he had made for himfelf, the pofts of which were of faffafras wood, but as it was ten or twelve years old, there were fo many bugs in it, that it feemed likely, they would not let him fleep peaceably. Some Enghfhmen related, that fome years ago it had been cuftomary in London, to drink a kind of tea of the flowers of faflafras, be- caufe it was looked upon as very falutary ; but upon recollecting that the fame potion was much ufed againft the venereal difeafe, ! « 1f New ‘ferfey, Raccoon. 343 it was foon left off, left thofe that ufed it, fhould be looked upon as infected with that difeafe. In Pen/ylvania fome people put chips of faffafras into their chefts, where they keep all forts of woollen ftuffs, in or- der to expel the moths (or Larva, or ca~- terpillars of moths or tinies) which com- monly fettle in them in fummer. The root keeps its fmell for a long while: I have | feen one which had lain five or fix years in the drawer of a table, and ftill pretcerne the {trength of its fcent. A swEDE named Rambo, related that the Indians formerly dyed all forts of leather red with the bark of the chefnut oak. SOME old people remembered that in the year 1697, there had been fo rigorous a: winter, that the ice in the river Delaware was two feet thick. November the 22d. Aokrt Heim was one of the moft confiderable Swedes in this place, and his father came over into this country along with the Swedz/b governor Prince; he was upwards of feventy years of © age. This old man told us, that in his youth there was grafs in the woods, which grew very clofe, and was every where two feet high; but, that it was fo much leffened at prefent, that the cattle hardly find food enough, and that therefore four cows now give no more milk than one at that time; ie but 244 November 1748. but the caufes of this alteration are eafy to find. In the younger years of old Helm, the country was little inhabited, and hardly the tenth part of the cattle kept which is at prefent; a cow had therefore as much food at that time, as ten now have. Fur- ther, moft kinds of grafs here are annual, and do not for feveral years together fhoot up from the fame root, as our Swedt/h grafles: they muft fow themfelves every year, becaufe the laft year’s plant dies away every autumn. The great numbers of cat- tle hinder this fowing, as the grafs is eaten before it can produce flowers and fruit. We need not therefore wonder that the grafs is fo thin on fields, hills, and paftures in thefe provinces. This is likewife the reafon why travellers in New Ferfey, Penfylvania, and Maryland, find many difficulties, efpe-’ cially in winter, to get forwards with their own horfes, for the grafs in thefe provinces is not very abundant, becaufe the cattle eat it before it can bring feeds: but more to the north, as in Canada, are a fuflicient quantity of perennial grafles ; fo wifely has the Creator regulated every thing. The cold parts of the earth, naturally bring forth a more durable grafs, becaufe the inhabi- tants want more hay to feed their cattle with, on account of the lepgen of the win- | ter. New Serfey, Raccoon. — 34.5 tet. The fouthern provinces again have lefs perennial grafs, as the cattle may be in the fields all the winter. However care- ful ceconomiits have got feeds of perennial graffes from England, and other European ftates, and fowed it in their meadows, _ where they feem to thrive exceedingly well. Tue Perfimon ( Diofpyros Virginiana) was pretty common here: I have already men- tioned it before, but I intend now to add fome more particulars. Some of its fruits began to ripen and to become fit for eating © about this time, for they always ripen very late in autumn, and then the people eat them like other fruit: they are very {weet and glutinous, yet have a little aftringency I frequently ufed to eat a great quantity of them, without. feeling the leaft inconve- nience. From the perfimon feveral Ex- ghjhmen and Swedes brew a very palatable liquor in the following manner. As foon as the fruit is ripe, a fufficient quantity is gathered, which is very eafy, as each tree is well ftocked with them. Thefe perfimon apples are put into a dough of wheat or other flour, formed into cakes, and put into an oven, in which they continue till they are quite baked, and fufficiently dry, when they are taken out again: then, in order to brew the liquor, a pot full of water is put on the fire 34.6 November 1748. fire and fome of the cakes are put in: thefe become foft by degrees as the water grows warm, and crumble in pieces at laft; the pot is then taken from the fire, and the water in it well ftirred about, that the cakes may mix with it: this is then poured into another vefiel, and they continue to fteep and break as many cakes as are neceflary for a brewing: the malt is then infufed, and they proceed as ufual with the brewing. Beer thus prepared is reckoned much preferable to other beer. ‘They likewife make brandy of this fruit in the following mannner: having collected a fuflicient quantity of per- fimons in autumn, they are altogether put into a veflel, where they lie for a week till they are quite foft. Then they pour water on them, and in that ftate they are left to ferment of themfelves, without promoting the fermentation by any addition. The brandy is then made in the common way, and is faid to be very good, efpecially if grapes (in particular of the fweet fort) which are wild in the woods, be mixed with the perfimon fruit. Some perfimons are ripe at the end of September, but mott. of them later, and fome not before Novem- ber and December, when the cold firft over- comes their acrimony. The wood of this tree is very good for joiner’s inftruments, fuch New Ferfey, Raccoon. 347 fuch as planes, handles to chifels, &c. but - if after being cut down, it lies expofed to f{unfhine and rain, it is the firft wood which rots, and in a year’s time there is nothing left but what is ufelefs. When the perfi- mon trees get once into a field, they are not eafily got out of it again, as they {pread fomuch. I was told, that if you cut off a branch and put it into the ground, it ftrikes root, but in very ftrong winters, thefe trees often die by froft, and they, to- gether with the peach trees, bear cold the leaft of any. November the 23d. SEveRAL kinds of gourds and melons are cultivated here: they have partly been originally cultivated by the Indians, and partly brought over by Europeans. Of the gourds there was a kind which were crooked at the end, and oblong in general, and therefore they were called crooked necks (Crocknacks;) they keep al- moft all winter. ‘There is yet another {pe- cies of gourds which have the fame quality: others again are cut in pieces or flips, drawn upon thread and dried; they keep all the year long, and are then boiled or ftewed. All forts of gourds are prepared for eating in different manners, as is likewife cufto- mary in Sweden. Many farmers have a whole field of gourds, SQUASHES 348 November 1748. SquasuHEs are a kind of gourds, which the Europeans got from the Indians, and I have already mentioned them before. They are eaten boiled, either with flefh or by them- felves. In the firft cafe, they are put’on the edge of the difh round the meat; they require little care, for into whatever ground they are fown, they grow in it and fucceed well. Ifthe feed is put into the fields in autumn, it brings fquafhes next {pring, though during winter it has fuffered from froft, {now and wet. Tue Calabafhesare likewife gourds, hick are planted in quantities by the Swedes and other inhabitants, but they are not fit for eating, and are made ufe of for making all forts of veflels ; they are more tender than the {quafhes, for they do not always ripen here, and only when the weather is very warm. In order to make veflels of them, they are firft dried well: the feeds, toge- ther with the pulpy and fpungy matter in which they lie, are afterwards taken out and thrown away. The fhells are {craped very clean within, and then great {poons or ladles, funnels, bowls, difhes and the like may be made of them; they are particular- '/\ ly fit for keeping feeds of plants in, which are to be fent over fea, for they keep their power of vegetating much longer, if they be New “ferfey, Raccoon. 349 be put in calabafhes, than by any other means. Some people fcrape the outfide of the calabafhes before they are opened, dry them afterwards and then clean them with- in; this makes them as hard as bones: they are fometimes wathed, fo that they al- ways keep their white colour. | Most of the farmers in this country, fow Buck-wheat, in the middle of uly ; it muft not be fown later, for in that cafe the froft ruins it, but if it be fown before Fuly, it flowers all the fumimer long, but the flowers drop, and no feed is generated. Some people, plough the ground twice where they intend to fow buck-wheat ; others plough it only once, about two weeks before they fow it. As foon. as it is fown the field is harrowed. It has been found by experience, that in a wet year. buck-wheat is moft likely to fucceed: it ve ftands on the fields till the froft comes on, When the crop is favourable, they get twenty, thirty and even forty bufhels from one. The Swedi/h churchwarden Ragni/l- fon, in whofe houfe we were at this time, had got fuch a crop: they make buck- wheat cakes. and pudding. The cakes are commonly made in the morning, and are baked:in a frying pan, or on a ftone: are battered and then eaten with tea or coffee, inftead 350 November 1748. inftead of toafted bread with butter, or toatt, which the Engl/h commonly eat at break- faft. The buck-wheat cakes are very good, and are likewife ufual at Philadelphia and in other Engl/b colonies, efpecially in win- ter. Buck-wheat is an excellent food for fowls; they eat it greedily, and lay more eggs, than they do with other food: hogs are likewife fattened with it. Buck-wheat ftraw is of no ufe; it is therefore left upon the field, in the places where it has: been thrafhed, or it is fcattered in the orchards, in order to ferve as a manure by putrify- ing. Neither cattle nor any other animal will eat of it, except in the greateft ne- eefiity, when the fnow covers the ground and nothing elfe is to be met with. But though. buck-wheat is fo common in the Engl colonies, yet the French had no right notion of it in Canada, and it was never cultivated among them. | Towarps night we found fome Ghw Worms in the wood, their body was linear, confifting of eleven articulations, a little. / pointed before and behind; the length from AN head to tail was five and a half geometrical lines; the colour was brown and the arti- culations joined in the fame manner as in the onifci or woodlice: The antenne or — feel horns were fhort and filiform, or thread- fhaped ; | New Ferfey, Raccoon. Rey fhaped; and the feet were faftened to the foremoft articulations of the body: when the infect creeps, its hindmott articulations are dragged on the ground, and help its motion. The extremity of the tail con- tain a matter which fhines in the dark, with a green light: the infect could draw it in, fo that it was not vifible. It had rained confiderably all day, yet they crept in great numbers among the bufhes, fo that the ground feemed as it were fown with ftars.. I fhall in the fequel have occafion to mention another kind of infedts or flies ¥'“ which fhine in the dark, when flying in the air. | November the 24th. Horry, or Ikx Aquifolium, grows in wet places, fcattered in the foreft, and belongs tothe rare trees ; its leaves are green both in fummer and in winter. The Swedes dry its leaves, bruife them in a mortar, boil them in fmall beer, and take them againft the pleurify. ~~, Rep is dyed with brafil wood, and like- wife with a kind of mofs, which grows on X’ _ the trees here: d/we is dyed with Indigo, but to get a black colour, the leaves of the common field forrel (/Rumex Acetofella) are boiled with the ftuff to be dyed, which is then dried, and boiled again with /og-wood and copperas: the black colour thus produ- ced, 352 November, 1 748. ced, is faid to be very durable. The peo- ple {pin and weave a great part of their every day’s apparel, and dye them in their houfes. , Flax is cultivated by. many people, and ’ fucceeds very well, but the ufe of hemp i iS not very common. Rye, wheat, and buck-wheat are cut with the fickle, but oats are mown with a {cythe. The fickles which are here made ufe of are long and narrow, and their fharp edges have clofe teeth on the inner fide. The field lies fallow during a year, and in that time the cattle may graze on it. Aut the inhabitants of this place from the higheft to the loweft, have each their orchard, which is greater or lefs according to their wealth. The treesin it are chiefly peach trees, apple trees and cherry trees : compare with this what I have already faid upon this fubjec before. A LITTLE before noon, we left this place and continued our journey, paft the Swedifb church in Raccoon, to Perils groves. The country, on the fides of this road, is very fandy in many places and pretty near level. Here and there appear fingle farms, yet they are very {carce, and large extenfive pieces of ground are ftill covered with fo- refts, which chiefly confit of feveral {pecies ——~ . oak and hiccory. However we could | go New Ferfey, Raccoon. 353 | go with eafe through thefe woods, as there are few bufhes (or under-wood) and {tones _to be met with. It was not only eafy to _ ride in every part of the wood on horfe- back, but even in moft places there was fufficient room for a {mall coach or a cart. Sometimes a few lying trees which had been thrown on the ground by a hurricane, or had fallen down through great age, cau{- ed fome hindrance. November the 25th. Durinc my ftay at Raccoon, at this time and all the enfuing winter, 1 endeavoured to get all informati- ons from the old Swedes relating to the in- creafe of land, and the decreafe of water in thefe parts; 1 fhall therefore infert the an- - fwers here, which I have received to my queftions. They are asI got them, and I fhall only throw in a few remarks which may ferve to explain things: the reader therefore is left at liberty to draw his own - gnferences and conclufions. One of the Swedes, called King, ea | was above fifty years of age, was convinced, that about this time the little lakes, brooks, _ fprings and rivers had much lefs water, than they had when he was a boy. He could mention feveral lakes on which the people went in large boats in his youth, and had fufficient water even in the hotteft | Z fummers ; 354 November 1748. fummers; but now, they were either en= 4 tirely dried up, or for the greateft pare s ¥ and in the latter cafe, all the water wasloft — in fummer. He had himfelf feen the fith © dying in them, and he was apt to believe that _ at this time it did not rain fo much in fum- : mer, as it did when he was young. One — of his relations, who lived about eight — 4 miles from the river Delaware, on a hill : near arivulet, had got a well, dug in his court yard: at the depth of forty feet, they found a quantity of fhells of oyfters and mufcles, and likewife a great quantity of — reed, and pieces of broken branches. I afked, to what caufes they afcribed what they had difcovered ? and I was anfwered, that fome people believed thefe things had lain there ever fince the deluge, and others, - that the ground increafed. PeTER RamBo, a man who was near fixty years of age, aflured me that in {feveral places at Raccoon, where wells had been dug, or any other work carried deep into the ground, he had feen great quantities of mufcle fhells and other marine animals. On digging wells, the people have fome- times met with logs of wood at the depth of twenty feet, fome of which were putri- fied, and others as it were burnt. They once found a great oe in the ground, at a us he, 4 =) . a aan Yow . eee New “ferfey, Raccoon. 355 : at ‘this depth. Query, Is it not probable, that. the burnt wood which has been thus _ dug up, was only blackened by a fubterra- neous mineral vapour? People however have concluded from this, that America has had inhabitants before the deluge. This man (Peter Rambo) further told me, that bricks had been found deep in the ground ; but may notthe brick coloured clay (of which _ the ground here chiefly confifts, and which is a mixture of clay and fand) in a hard ftate have had the appearance of bricks? I have feen fuch hardened clay, which at firft fight is eafily miftaken for brick. He likewife afferted, that the water in rivers was {till as high as it ufed to be, as far back as memory could reach; but little lakes, ponds, and _ waters in marfhes are vifibly decreafed, and many of them dried up. Maons Keen, a Swede above feventy _ years old, afferted, that on digging a well he had feen at the depth of forty feet, a G great piece of chefnut wood, together with roots and ftalks of reed, and a clayey earth like that which commonly covers the fhores of falt water bays and coves. This clay ~ had a fimilar fmell and a faline tafte. Maons fh Keen and feveral other people inferred from hence, that the whole country where Rac- toon and Penn’s neck are fituated, was ancient- Z2 ly 356 November 1 748. ly quite overflowed by the fea. They like- | wife knew, that at a great depth in the © ground, fuch a trowel as the Indians make ufe of, had been found. Sven Lock, and Wilham Cobb, both above fifty years of age agreed, that in many places hereabouts, where wells had been dug, they had feen a great quantity of | reed, moftly rotten, at the depth of twenty — \ or thirty feet and upwards. As Cobé made a well for himfelf, the workmen after digging twenty feet deep, — came upon fo thick a branch, that they could not get forwards, till it was cut in two places ; the wood was ftill very hard. | It is very common to find near the furface of the earth, quantities of all forts of leaves — not quite putrified. On making a dyke fome years ago, along the river on which the church at Raccoon ftands; and for that — purpofe cutting through a bank, it was found quite full of oyfter fhells, though this place is above a hundred and twenty Englith miles from the neareft fea fhore. Thefe men, and all the inhabitants of Raccoon, concluded from this circumftance (of their own accord, and without being led to the thought) that this tract of land was a part of the fea many centuries ago. They like- wife afferted that many little lakes, which in New Ferfey, Raccoon. 387 - in their youth were full of water, even in the hotteft feafon, now hardly formed a ‘narrow brook in fummer, except after heavy rains; but it did not appear to them _ thatthe rivers had loft any water. Aoxe Hem, found (on digging a well) firft fand-and little ftones, to the depth of eight feet; next a pale coloured clay, and _ then a black one. At the depth of fifteen feet he’ found a piece of hard wood, and feveral pieces of mundick or pyrites.. He told me that he knew feveral places in the Delaware, where the people went in boats, when he was young; but which at prefent were changed into little iflands, fome of which were near an Exglifh mile in length. Thefe iflands derive their origin from a fand or bank’ in ‘the river ; on this the water wafhes' fome clay, in which rufhes come up, and thus the reft is generated by de- grees. On a meeting of the oldeft Swedes in the patith of Raccoon, I obtained the following anfwers to the queftions which I afked them on this account. Whenever'they dig a well in this neighbourhood, they always find at the depth of twenty or thirty feet, great numbers of oyfter fhells and clams: the latter are, as was above-mentioned, a kind © Z 2 of 358 November, 1748. of large fhells, which are found in bays, and of which the Indians make their mo- ney. In many places, on digging wells a quantity of rufhes and reeds have been found almoft wholly undamaged; and once on fuch an occafion a whole bundle of flax was brought up, found between twenty and thirty feet under ground ; it feemed as lit- tle damaged as if it had been lately put under ground ; all looked at it with afto- nifhment, as it was beyond conception how it could get there; but I believe the good people faw fome American plants, fuch as the wild Virginian flax, or Linum Virginia- num, and the Antirrhinum Canadenfe, which look very like common flax, yet it is re- markable that the bundle was really tied together. The Europeans on their arrival in America, found our common flax neither growing wild nor cultivated by the Indians, how then could this bundle get into the ground? Can it be fuppofed, that paft ages have feen a nation here, fo early ac- quainted with the ufe of flax? I would ra- ther abide by the opinion, that the above © American plants, or other fimilar ones, have ‘been taken for flax. Charcoal and fire- brands have often been found under ground: The Swedifh churchwarden, Eric Ragnilfon, told me that he had feen a quantity of them, meee New Serfey, Raccoon. 359 which had been brought up at the digging of a well: on fuch occafions, people have often found (at the depth of between twen- ty and fifty feet) great branches and blocks. There'were fome fpots where twenty feet under the furface of the earth, the people had found fuch trowels as the Indians ufe : from thefe obfervations they all concluded, that this tract of land had formerly been the bottom of the fea. It is to be obferved, that moft of the wells which have hitherto been made, have been dug in new fettle-. ments, where the wood was yet ftanding, and had probably ftood for centuries toge- ther. From the obfervations which have hitherto been mentioned, and to which I fhall add fimilar ones in the fequel, we may, with a confiderable degree of certain- ty conclude, that a great part of the pro- vince of New ‘fer/ey, in-ages unknown to pofterity, was part of the bottom of the fea, and was afterwards formed by. the flime and mud, and the many other things which the river Delaware carries down along with it, from the upper parts of the country: however Cape May feems to give fome occafion for doubts, of which I fhall {peak in the fequel. Z 4. Novem- foal svt 360 November 1748. November the 27th. THE American ever greens are side Aquifolium, belle, 2. Kalmia latifolia, the {poon tree. | 3- Kalmia angujtifola, another {pecies of i it. 4. Magnolia glauca, the beaver tree. The young trees of this kind only keep their leaves, the others drop them. 5. Vifcum album, or mifletoe ; this com- monly grows upon the Ny//a aquatica, or tupelo tree, upon the Liguidambar ftyraci- jlua, or {weet gum tree, the oak and lime tree, fo that their whole fummits-were fre- quently quite green in winter. | 6. Myrica cerifera, or the candleberry tree; of this however only fome of the youngeft fhrubs preferve fome leaves, but moft of them had already loft them. 7. Pinus Aows, the pine. 8. Pinus fylvefiris, the fir. 9. Cupreffus thyoides, the white “oa oe 10. YuniperusVirginiana, the red cedar. . SEVERAL oaks and other trees. dropt their leaves here in winter, which however keep them ever green, a little more to the fouth, and in Carolina. November the 30th. Ir has been ob- ferved, that the Europeans in North Ame- rica, Whether they were born in Sweden, England, New Ferfey, Raccoon. 361 England, Germany or Holland; or in North America, of European parents, always loft \/ their teeth much fooner than: commons the women efpecially were fubyect to this difagreeable circumftance, the men did not _fuffer fo’ much from it.. Girls not above twenty years old, frceriven tly had loft half of their teeth, without any hopes of getting new ones: I have attempted to penetrate into the caufes of this early fhedding of the teeth, but I know not, whether I have hit upon a true one. Many people were of opinion that the air of this. country hurt the teeth: fo much is certain that the weather can no where be fubje& to more frequent and fudden changes; ‘for the end of a hot day, often turns out piercing cold, and vice werfa. ' Yet this change of wea+ ther, cannot be looked upon as having any effe& upon the fhedding of the teeth, for the Indians prove: the contrary: they live in the fame air, and always keep fine, en- tire white teeth; this I have feen myfelf, and have been affured. of by every body: others afcribe it to the great quantities of fruit and {weet meats which are here eaten. But I have known many people, who never eat any fruit, and neverthelefs had hardly a tooth left. I THEN began to fafpee the tea, dotted 1S 362 November 1748: is drank here in the morning and afternoon, efpecially by women, and is fo common at prefent, that there is hardly a farmer’s wife ot a poor woman, who does not drink tea in the morning: I was confirmed in this opinion when I took a journey. through fome parts of the country which were {till inhabited by Indians.. For Major General “fobnfon told me at that time, that feveral of the Indians who lived clofe to the Euro- pean fettlements, had learnt to drink tea. And it has been obferved, that fuch of the Indian women, as ufed themfelves too much to this liquor, had in the fame manner as the European women, loft their teeth pre- maturely, though they had formerly been quite found. Thofe again, who had not ufed tea preferved their teeth ftrong and found to a great age. I AFTERWARDs found, that the ufe of tea could not entirely caufe this accident. Several young women who lived in this country, but were born in Europe, com- plained that they loft moft of their teeth after they came to America: Lafked, whe- ther they did not think that it arofe from the frequent ufe of tea, as it was known, that {trong tea, as it were enters into and corrodes the teeth; but they anfwered, that they had loft their teeth before ct ad New Ferfey, Raccoon. 363 had began to drink tea, but continuing my enquiries, I found at laft a fufficient caufe, to account for the lofs of their teeth : each of thefe women owned, that they were ac= cuftomed to eat every thing hot, and no- thing was good in their opinion, unlefs, they could eat it as faft as it came from the fire. This is likewife the cafe with the women in the country who lofe their teeth much fooner and more abundantly than the men. They drink tea in greater quantity and much oftener, in the morning, and even at noon; when the employment of the men will not allow them to fit at the tea-table. Befides that, the Exgh/hmen care very little for tea, and a bowl of punch is much more agree- able to them. When the Engh/h women drink tea, they never pour it out of the cup into the faucer, but drink it hot as it is out of the former. The Jzdian women in imi- tation of them, {wallow the teain the fame manner. On the contrary thofe Indians whofe teeth are found, never eat any thing hot, but take their meat either quite cold, or only juft milk warm. I asxep the Swedi/h churchwarden in Philadelphia, Mr. Bengtfon, and a number of old Swedes, whether their parents and countrymen had likewife loft their teeth as foon as the American colonifts; but they told 364. November 1748. told me:that they had preferved them toa very great.age. Bengt/on aflured me, that his father at the age of feventy, cracked peach ftones and the black walnuts with his teeth,. notwithftanding their great hard- nefs, which.at this time no body dares to venture atthat-age. This confirms what I have before faid; for at that time the ufe of © tea: was not yet known in North America. ~~ No difeafe is more common here, than that which the Engli/h call fever and ague, which is fometimes quotidian, tertian or quartan. \ But it often happens, that’a per- fon who has had a tertian ague, after lofing it for a week or two, gets a quotidian ague in its ftead, which after a while again changes into a tertian. The fever com- monly attacks the people at the end of 4u- guft, or beginning of September, and com- monly continues during autumn and win- ter till towards {fpring, when it ceafes en= tirely. | tease - STRANGERS who arrive here, common= ly are attacked by this ficknefs the firft or fecond year after their arrival ; and it is more violent upon them, than upon the natives, fo that they fometimes. die of it ; but if they efcape the firft time, they have the advantage of not being vifited again the next year, or perhaps never any more. It is: - commonly New “ferfey, Raccoon. 365 commonly faid here, that ftrangers get the fever to accuftom them to the climate. The natives of European offspring, have annual fits of this ague in fome parts of the coun- try: fome however are foon delivered from it, with others on the contrary it continued for fix months together, and others are affiiéted with it till they die. The Indi- ans alfo fuffer it, but not fo violently as the Europeans. No age is fecured againft it : in thofe places where it rages annually, you fee old men and women attacked with it; and even children in the cradle, fome- times not above three weeks old: it is likewife quotidian, tertian or quartan with them. This autumn the ague was more violent here, than it commonly ufed to be. People who are afflicted with it, look as pale as death, and are greatly weakened, but in general are not prevented from doing their work in the intervals. It is remark- able, that every year there are great parts of the country where this fever rages, and others where fcarce a fingle perfon has been taken ill. It likewife is worth notice, that there are places where the people can- not remember that it formerly prevailed in their country, though at prefent it begins to grow more common: yet there was no other vifible difference between the feveral places 366 November 1 748 : places. All the old Swedes, Englifhmen, Germans, &c. unanimoufly afferted, that the fever had never been fo violent, and of — {uch continuance when they were boys, as it is at prefent. They were likewife ge- nerally of opinion, that about the year 1680, there were not fo many people af- flidted with it, as about this time. How- ever others equally old, were of opinion that the fever was proportionably as com- mon formerly, as it is at prefent; but that it could not at that time be fo fenfibly per- ceived, on account of the {carcity of inha- bitants, and the great diftance of their fet- tlements from each other; it is therefore probable that the effets of the fever have at all times been equal. Ir would be difficult to determine the true caufes of this difeafe; they feem to be © numerous, and not always alike: fome- times, and I believe commonly feveral of them unite. I have taken all poffible care to found the opinions of the phyfieians here on that head, and I here offer them to the reader. Some of them think that the peculi- ar qualities of the air of this country caufe this fever; but. moft of them affert that it is generated by the ftanding and putrid water, which it feems is confirmed by ex- perience. New “Ferfey, Raccoon. 367 perience. For it has been obferved in this country, that fuch people as live in the neighbourhood of Morafles or Swamps, or in places where a ftagnant, ftinking water is to be met with, are commonly infefted with the fever and ague every year, and get it more readily than others. And this chiefly happens at a time of the year when thofe ftagnant waters are moft evaporated by the exceflive heat of the fun, and the air is filled with the moft noxious vapors. The fever likewife is very violent in all places which have a very low fituation, and where falt water comes up with the tide twice in twenty four hours, and unites with the ftagnant, frefh water in the country. Therefore on travelling in fummer over fuch low places where frefh and falt water unite, the naufeous ftench arifing from thence often forces the traveller to ftop his nofe. On that account moft of the inhabi- tants of Penn’s neck, and Salemin New “fer- fey, where,the ground has the above-men- tioned quality, are annually infefted with the fever to a much greater degree, than _ the inhabitants of the higher country. If an inhabitant of the higher part of the country, where the people are free from the fever, removes into the lower parts, he may be well affured that the fever will attack him 368 November 1748. him at the ufual time, and that he will get it again every year, as long as he continues In that country. People of the livelieft complexion on coming into the low parts of the country, and continuing there for fome time, have entirely loft their colour and become quite pale. However this can- not be the fole caufe of the fever, as I have been in feveral parts of the country which had a low fituation and had ftagnant waters near them, where the people declared they feldom fuffered from this ficknefs: but thefe places were about twoor three degrees more northerly. ne : OTHERS were of opinion that diet did . very much towards it, and chiefly laid the blame upon the inconfiderate and intem- perate confumption of fruit. This is par- ticularly the cafe with the Europeans, who come into America, and are not ufed ta its climate and its fruit; for thofe who are born here can bear more, yet are not en+ tirely free from the bad effects of eating too much. I have heard many Englh/bmen, Germans, and others fpeak from their own experience on this account; they owned, that they had often tried, and were certain - that after eating a water melon once or — twice before they had breakfafted, they would have the fever and ague in a ond ays New ‘ferfey, Raccoon. 369 days after. Yet itis remarkable, that the French in Canada told me that fevers were lefs common in that country, though they confumed as many water melons as the Enghjb colonies, and that it had never been obferved that they occafioned a fever; but that on coming in the hot feafon to the Ilinois, an Indian nation which is nearly in’ the fame latitude with Pen/y/vanza and New Ferfey, they could not eat a water melon without feeling the fhaking fits of an ague, and that the Indians therefore warned them not to eat of fo dangerous a fruit.. Query, Does not this lead us to think that the greater heat in Pen/y/vania, and the country of the Z/4nozs, which are both five or fix degrees more foutherly than Canada, makes fruit in fome meafure more dangerous? In the Exgh/h North American colonies, every countryman plants a number of water me- lons, which are eaten whilft the people make hay, or during the harveft when they have nothing upon their ftomachs, in order to cool them during the great heat, as that juicy fruit feems very proper to give re- frefhment. In the fame manner melons, cucumbers, gourds, {quafhes, mulberries, apples, peaches, cherries, and fuch like fruit are eaten here in fummer, and altoge- ther contribute to the attacks of the ague. | Aa But 370 November 1748. Bur that the manner of living contributes greatly towards it, may be concluded from — the unanimous accounts of old people, con- cerning the times of their childhood; ac- cording to which, the inhabitants of thefe parts, were at that time not fubject to fo many difeafes as they are at prefent, and people were feldom fick. All the old Swedes likewife agreed, that their country- men, who firft came into North America, attained to a great age, and their children nearly to the fame; but that their grand children, and great grand children did not © reach the age of their anceftors, and their health was not near fo vigorous and durable. But the Swedes who fir fettled in America, lived very frugally ; they were poor, and could not buy rum, brandy, or other ftrong liquors, which they feldom diftilled them- felves, as few of them had a diftilling vef- fel. However they fometimes had a good {trong beer. They did not underftand the art of making cyder, which is now fo com- mon in the country: tea, coffee, choco- late, which are at prefent even the country people’s daily breakfaft, were wholly un- — known to them: moft of them had never tafted fugar or punch. The tea which is now drank, is either very old, or mixed with all forts of herbs, fo that it no longer deferves New Ferfey, Raccoon. 371 _ deferves the name of tea: therefore it can- - not have any good effect upon thofe who ufe it plentifully ; befides, it cannot fail of relaxing the bowels, as it is drank both in the morning and in the afternoon quite boiling hot. The Indians, the offspring of the firft inhabitants of this country, are a proof of what I have faid. It is well known that their anceftors, at the time of the firft arrival of the Eurapeans, lived to a very great age. According to the common ac- counts, it was then not uncommon to find people among the Indians, who were above a hundred years old: they lived frugally, and drank pure water: brandy, rum, wine, and all the other {trong liquors, were utter- ly unknown to them; but fince the chrif- tians have taught them to drink thefe li- guors, and the Indians have found them too palatable, thofe who cannot refift their appetites, hardly reach half the age of their parents. LasTLy, fome people pretended that the lofs of many odoriferous plants, with which the woods were filled at the arrival of the Europeans, but which the cattle has now extirpated, might be looked upon as a caufe of the greater progrefs of the fever at prefent. The number of thofe ftrong plants occafioned a pleafant {cent to rife in Aaz2 the 372 November 1748. the woods every morning and evening. Ie is therefore not unreafonable to think that — the noxioufnefs of the effluvia from putrify- ing fubftances was then prevented, fo that they were not fo dangerous to the inhabi- tants. | | SEVERAL. remedies are employed againft this difeafe: the jefuit’s bark was formerly a certain one, but at prefent it has not always this effect, though they fell it genuine, and for the very beft. Many people accufed it of leaving fomething noxious in the body. Yet it was commonly obferved, that when the bark was good, and it was taken as foon as the fever made its appearance, and before the body .was weakened, it was almoft fure to conquer the fever, fo that the cold fts never returned, and no pain or ftiffnefs remained in the limbs; but when the di- feafe is rooted in, and has confiderably weak-- ened the patients, or they are naturally very weak, the fever leaves them after ufing the jefuit’s bark, but returns again in a fort- night’s time, and obliges them to take the bark again; but the confequence frequently is a pain and a ftiffnefs in their limbs, and fometimes in their bowels, which almoft hinders them from walking : this pain con- tinues for feveral years together, and even accompanies fome to the grave. ‘This bad effect a OS New Ferfey, Raccoon. 373 effect is partly attributed to the bark, which can feldom be got genuine here, and partly to the little care which the patients take in ufing the bark. A man of my acquaintance was particularly dexterous in expelling the ague by the ufe of the jefuit’s bark. His manner of proceeding was as follows: when it was poffible, the patient muft ufe the re- medy as foon as the fever begun, and be- fore it was fettled in his body: but before he took the medicine, he was to take a dia-_ phoretic remedy, as that had been found very falutary; and as the fever isyfrequent- ly of fuch a nature here, as not to make the patient {weat, even when the hot fit is upon him, a perfpiration was to be brought about by fome other means. To that pur- pofe the patient took his dofe on the day when he had his cold fit, and was not al- lowed to eat any thing at night. ‘The next morning he continued in a warm bed, drank a quantity of tea, and was well covered that he might perfpire plentifully. He conti- nued fo till the perfpiration ceafed, and then left the bed in a hot room, and wath- ed his body with milk warm water, in or- der to cleanfe it from the impurities that fettled on it from the perfpiration, and to prevent their {topping up of the pores. The patient was then dried again, and at laft he Aa} took 374. | November 1748. took the bark feveral times in one day. This was repeated twice or thrice on the days after he had the ague, and it com- monly left him without returning, and moft people recover fo well, that they do not look pale after their ficknefs, Tue bark of the root of the Tus tree, or Liriodendron Tulipifera, taken in the fame manner as the jefuit’s bark, fometimes had a fimilar effect. SEVERAL people peeled the roots of the Cornus florida, or Dog wood, and gave this peel to the patients; and even fome people, who could not be cured by the jefuit’s bark, have recovered by the help of this. I have likewife feen people cured of the fever, by taking brimftone reduced to powder, and mixed with fugar every night before they went to bed, and every morning before they got up: they took it three or four times in the intervals, and at each time drank fome warm liquor, to wafh the powder down. However others that tried the fame remedy did not find much relief from it. SoME people collected the yellow bark of the peach tree, efpecially that which is on _ the root and boiled it in water, till half of ~ it was evaporated by boiling. Of this de- co¢tion the patient took every morning about a wine glafs full, before he had eaten any New “ferfey, Raccoon. 375 any thing. This liquor has a difagreeable tafte, and contracts the mouth and tongue like alum; yet feveral perfons at Raccoon who had tried many remedies in vain, were cured by this. Oruers boiled the leaves of the Baten! tilla reptans, or of the Potentzlla canadenfs, in water, and made the patients drink it before the ague fit came on, and it is well known that feveral perfons have recovered by this means. Tue people who are fettled upon the river Mohawk in New York, both Indians |, and Europeans collect the root of the * Geum rivale, and pound it. This powder fome of them boil in water till it is a pret- ty ftrong decoction: others only infufe cold water on it and leave it fo for aday; others mix it with brandy. Of this me- dicine the patient is to take a wine glafs . full on the morning of the day when the fever does not come, before he has eat- en any thing. I was affured that this was one of the fureft remedies, and more cer- tain than the jefuit’s bark. Tue people who live near the iron mines, declared that they were feldom or .. never vifited by the fever and ague; but when they have the fever, they drink the water of fuch fountains, as arife from the Aa4 iron 376 November 1748. iron mines, and have a ftrong chalybeat tafte ; and they affured me that this remedy was infallible. Other people therefore who did not live very far from fuch fprings, went to them for a few days, when they had the fever, in order to drink the water, which commonly cured them. — _ I wave already fhown above, that fage mixed with lemon juice, has been found very falutary again{t the ague. ) Ir was however univerfally remarkable, that that which cures one perfon of it, has no effect upon another. ) Tue pleurify is likewife a difeafe which the people of this country are much fubject to. The Swedes in this province call it fiitches and burning, and they always mean the pleurify whenever they mention thofe words. Many of the old Swedes told me that they had heard very little of it when they were young, and that their parents — had known ftill lefs of it in their childhood ; but that it was fo common now, that many people died every year of it: yet it has been obferved, that in fome years this di- feafe has been very moderate, and taken few people away with it, whilft in other "years it makes great havock : “it likewife is more violent in fome places than in others. In the autumn of the year 1728, it {wept — away New Serfey, Raccoon. — 377 away many at Penn’s neck, a place below Raccoon, and nearer to the De/aware, where a number of Swedes are fettled. Almoft all the Swedes there died of it, though they were very numerous. From hence it hap- pened that their children who were left in a very tender age, and grew up among the Engh/h children, forgot their mother tongue, fo that few of them underftand it -at prefent. Since that time, though the pleurify has every year killed a few people at Penn’s neck, yet it has not carried off any confiderable numbers. It refted as it were till the autumn of the year 1748, but then it began to make dreadful havock, and every week fix or ten of the old people died. The difeafe was fo violent, that when it at- tacked a perfon, he feldom lived above two or three days; and of thofe who were taken ill with it, very few recovered. When the pleurify was got into a houfe, it killed moft of the old people in it: it was a true pleu- rify, but it had a peculiarity with it, for it commonly began with a great {welling un- der the throat and in the neck, and with a difficulty of {wallowing. Some people look- ed upon it as contagious; and others feri- oufly declared, that when it came into a fa- _ mily, not only thofe who lived in the fame houfe fuffered from it, but even fuch rela- | tions 378 November 1 748. tions as lived far off. There have been fe- veral people at Penn’s neck, who, without vifiting their fick friends, have got the pleurify and died of it: I do not difpute the truth of this, though I do not agree to the conclufion. The pleurify was the moft vio- lent in November; yet fome old people died of it even in the next winter; but children were pretty free from it. The phyficians did not know what to make of it, nor how to remedy it. : Ir is difficult to determine the caufes of fuch violent difeafes. An old Exghjh fur- geon who lived here gave the following reafon. The inhabitants of this country drink great quantities of punch and other ftrong liquors in fummer, when it is very hot ; by that means the veins in the dia- phragm contraét, and the blood grows thick. Towards the end of Odfober and the begin- ning of November, the weather is apt to alter very fuddenly, fo that heat and cold change feveral times a day. When the people during this changeable weather are in the open air, they commonly get this difeafe. It is likewife certain that the air is more unwholefome one year, than ano- - ther, which depends upon the heat, and other circumftances: this peculiar quality of the air muft of courfe produce a pleurify. It Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 379 It is remarkable, that both in the year 1728, and in the prefent, when fo many people died at Penn’s neck, few died at Raccoon, though the two places are near each other, and feem to have the fame foil and climate. But there is this difference that Penn’s neck lies remarkably low, and Raccoon pretty high. The people in the former place have fettled between marfhes and fwamps, in which the water ftagnates and putrifies; and moft of thefe places are covered with trees, by which means the wet is fhut up ftill more, and near fuch marfhes, are the houfes. Laftly the water at Penn’s neck is not reckoned fo good as that in Raccoon, but has fome tatfte. It likewife becomes brackith in feveral little rivers when the Delaware during the tide rifes very high,’ and runs up intothem. On the banks of thefe rivulets live many of the Swedes, and take water for common .” ufe from them. ye December the 3d. Tuis morning I fet, ~ out for Philadelphia, where I arrived in the evening. WILD grapes are very abundant in the woods, and of various kinds; a fpecies of them which are remarkable for their fize, grow in the marfhes, and are greedily eaten by the Raccoon: they are therefore called mar fh 380 December 1748. marfh grapes, but the Exglij/h call them fox grapes; they have not an agreeable flavour, and are feldom eaten by the inhabitants of this country, who make ufe of a {mall kind of wild grapes, which grow on a dry foil, and pretty late in autumn when they are quite ripe, are eaten raw, and have a very good flavour, being a mixture of fweet and acid: fome people dry thefe grapes when gathered and bake them in tarts, &c. they likewife make ufe of them as dried {weetmeats. The Swedes formerly made a pretty good wine from them; but have now left it off. However fome of the Ez- ghjb ftill prefs an agreeable liquor from thefe grapes, which they aflured me was as good as the beft claret, and that it would keep for feveral years. ! Tue manner of preparing this fort of wine has been defcribed at large in an al- manack of this country, for the year 1743, and is as follows: the grapes,are collected — from the twenty firft of September to about the eleventh of November, that is as they grow ripe: they muft be gathered in dry weather, and after the dew is gone off: the grapes are cleared of the cobwebs, dry leaves, and other things adhering to them. Next a great hogfhead 1s prepared which has either had treacle or brandy in; itis wafhed , very Penfylvania, Philadelphia. «gh very clean, one of the bottoms beat out, and the other placed ona ftand for the pur- pofe, or on pieces of wood in the cellar, or elfe in a warm room, about two feet above the ground: the grapes are put into this hogfhead, and as they fink lower in three or four days time more are added. A man with naked feet gets into the hogfhead and treads the grapes, and in about half an hour’s time the juice is forced out ; the man then turns the loweft grapes uppermoft, and treads them for about a quarter of an hour: this is fufficient to f{queeze the good juice out of them: for an additio- nal prefiure would even crufh the unripe grapes, and give the whole a difagreea- ble flavour. The hogfhead is then co- vered with a thick blanket; but if there is nocellar, oritis very cold, two are f{pread over it. Under this covering the juice is left to ferment for the firft time, andin the next four or five days it ferments and works very ftrongly. As foonas the fermentation ceafes, a hole is made about fix inches from the bottom, and fome of the juice is tapped off about twice in a day. As foon as this is clear and fettled, it is poured into an anker of a middling fize; for from twenty bufhels of grapes, they get about as many gallons of juice: the anker remains un- | touched 382 December 1748. touched and the muft in it ferments a fe- cond time: at this time it is neceffary thae the anker be quite full; the fcum which fettles at the bunghole, muft be taken off, and the anker always filled up with more muft, which is kept ready for that pur- pofe: this is continued till chriftmas, when the anker may be ftopped up; at laft the wine is ready in Fedruary and bottled. It is likewife ufual here, to put fome of the ripe grapes into a veffel in order to make a vinegar, and that which is got by this means is very good. Several people made brandy from thefe grapes which has a very pleafant tafte, but is ftill more pleafant, if the fruits of the perfimon are mixed with it. The wood of thefe vines is of no ufe, it is fo brittle that it cannot be ufed for fticks: on cutting into the ftem, a white, infipid refin comes out a few hours after the wound ismade. In many gardens vines are planted for the purpofe of making arbours for which they are indeed excellent; as their large and plentiful leaves form a very clofe cover again{ft the {corching heat of the fun. When the vines flower here in May and une, the flowers exhale a ftrong, but exceeding pleafant and refrefhing fmell, which is perceptible even at a great dif- tance. Therefore on coming into the woods about Penfyluania. Philadelphia. 383 about that time, you may judge from the {weet perfume in the air, arifing from the flowers of the vines, that you are near them, though you do not fee them. Though the winters be ever fo fevere, yet they do not affe&t the vines. Each grape is about the fize of a pea, but further fouthward they are faid to be of the fize of common raifins, and of a finer flavour. Further up in the country, during a part of autumn, they are the chief food of bears, who climb up the trees in order to pluck them. People are of opinion that if the wild vines were cul- tivated with more care, the grapes would grow larger, and more palatable. December the 5th. I sua here men- tion two prognofticks of the weather, which were greatly valued here. Some people pretended to foretel that the enfuing winter would not be a fevere one: this they con- jectured from having feen wild geefe and other migratory birds go to the fouth in Oéfober, but return a few days ago in great numbers, and-even pafs on further to the north. Indeed the enfuing winter was one of the moft temperate ones. SEVERAL perfons likewife affured us that we fhould have rain before to morrow night. The reafon they gave for this conjecture was, that this morning at fun rifing, from their a December 1748. their windows they had feen every thing very plainly on the other fide of the river, fo that it appeared much nearer than ufual, and that this commonly foreboded rain. This prefage was likewife pretty exadly fulfilled. | | ~~Tue Indians before the arrival of the Europeans, had no notion of the ufe of iron, though that metal was abundant in their country. However they knew in fome meafure how to make ufe of copper. Some | Dutchmen who. lived here, ftill preferved the old account among them, that their anceftors on their firft fettling in New York had met with many of the Indians, who had tobacco pipes of copper, and who made them underftand by figns, that they got them in the neighbourhood: afterwards the fine copper mine was difcovered, upon the fecond river between Elzabeth-town and New York. On digging in this mine, the people met with holes worked in the moun- tain, out of which fome copper had been taken, and they found even fome tools, which the Indians probably made ufe of, when they endeavoured to get the metal for their pipes. Such holes in the mountains have likewife been found in fome parts of Penfylvania, viz. below Newca/tle towards the fea fide, and always fome marks of a copper Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 385 ‘copper ore along with them. Some peo- ple have conjectured, that the Spanzards, after difcovering Mexico, failed along the coafts of North America, and landed now and then, in order to enquire whether any gold or filver was to be met with, and that they perhaps made thefe holes in the moun- tains: but fuppofing them to have made fuch a voyage along the coafts, they could not immediately have found out the copper mines ;.and they probably did not ftop to blaft this ore, as they were bent only upon gold and filver; it is therefore almoft un- doubted that the Indians dug thefe holes : or may we be allowed to fufpect that our old Normans, long before the difcoveries of Columbus, came into thefe parts and met with fuch veins of copper, when they {fail- ed to what they called the excellent Wine- land,* of which our ancient traditional re- cords called Sagor f{peak, and which un- doubtedly was North America. But in re- gard to this, I fhall have occafion in the fequel better to explain my fentiments. It was remarkable, that in all thofe places where fuch holes have lately been found in the mountains, which manifeftly feem to have * See for this opinion the fcarce and curious work intitled, Torfai hiftoria Vinlandie antique feu partis America feptentri- onalis. Hafnie 1715. 4to. F ' 386 December 1748. have been dug by men, they were always. covered with a great quantity of earth, asif they were intended to remain hidden from ftrangers. ny December the 6th. _ On long voyages the failors fometimes catch fuch fifh as are known to none of the fhip’s company ; but as they are very greedy after freth provifi- ons, they feldom abftain from eating them. however it proves often venturing too much, experience haying fhown, that their want of caution has often coft them their lives, for fometimes poifonous fifh are caught. But there is a method of finding them out, as I have heard from feveral captains of fhips : it is ufual when fuch unknown fifh are boil- ed, to put a falver button, or any piece of filver into the kettle, which if the fith be poifonous, will turn quite black, but if it be not, it will not change: fome of the feamen referred to their own repeated expe- rence.* 14% 7 _ Mr. Franklin and feveral other gentle men frequently told me, that a powerful id Indian, _* Turis experiment with the filver, fuppofes that the broth of the fifh would be fo ftrong as to act as a folvent upon the filver; but there may be poifons, which would not affect the filver, and however prove fatal to men; the fureft way there- fore would be to fupprefs that appetite, which may become fatal not only to a few men of the crew, but alfo endanger the whole fhip, by the lofs of neceflary hands. F. - ———- Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 387 Indian, who poffefled Rhode Ifand had fold it to the Engi/b for a pair of {pectacles: it is large enough for a prince’s domain, and makes a peculiar government at prefent. This Indian knew to fet a true value upon a pair of fpectacles: for undoubtedly if thofe glaffes were not fo plentiful, and only a few of them could be found, they would on account of their great ufe, bear the fame price with diamonds. Tue fervants which are made ufe of in the Engl/h American colonies are either free perfons, or flaves, and the former are again of two different forts. 1. THose who are quite free ferve by the year, they are not only allowed to leave | their fervice at the expiration of their year, but may leave it at any time when they do not agree with their mafters. However in that cafe they are in danger of lofing their wages, which are very confiderable. A man fervant who has fome abilities, gets between fixteen and twenty pounds in Pen- _ fylvania currency, but thofe.in the country do not get fo much> -A fervant maid gets eight or ten pounds a year: thefe fervants have their food befides their wages, but muft buy their own clothes, and what they get of thefe they muft thank their mafter’s goodnefs. for. Bb 2 2. THE 388 —— December 1748. 2. Ine fecond kind of free fervants con- fift of fuch perfons as annually come from Germany, England and other countries, in order to fettle here. Thefe new comers are very numerous every year: there are oldand young ones, and of both fexes; fome of them have fled from oppreffion, under | which they fuppofed themfelves to have laboured. Others have been driven from their country by perfecution on account of religion; but moft of them are poor, and have not money enough to pay their paflage, which is. between fix and eight pounds fterling for each perfon; therefore they agree with the captain that they will fuffer themfelves to be fold for a few years, ‘on their arrival. In that cafe the perfon who buys them, pays the freight for them, but frequently very old people come over, who cannot pay their paflage, they there- fore fell their children, fo that they ferve both for themfelves and for their parents : there are likewife fome who pay part of their paflage, and they are fold only for a fhort time. From thefe circumftances it appears, that the price of the poor foreigners who come over to North America is not equal, and that fome of them ferve longer than others: when their time is expired, they get a new {uit of clothes from their matter Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 389 mafter, and fome other things: he is_like- wife obliged to feed and clothe them during the years of their fervitude. Many of the Germans who come hither, ‘bring money enough with them to pay their paf- face, but rather fuffer themfelves to be fold, with a view that during their fervitude they _ may get fome knowledge of the language and quality of the country, and the like, that they may the better be able to confider what they fhall do when they have got their liberty. Such fervants are taken preferable to all others, becaufe they are not fo dear; for to buy a Negroe or black flave, requires too much money at once; and men or maids who get yearly wages, are likewife too dear; but this kind of fervants may be _ got for half the money, and even for lefs ; for they commonly pay fourteen pounds, Penfyluania currency, for a perfon who is to ferve four years, and fo on in proportion. Their wages therefore are not above three pounds Pen/fylvania currency per ann. This kind of fervants, the Engh/b call /ervings. When a perfon has bought fuch a fervant for a certain number of years, and has an intention to fell him again, he is at liberty to do fo; but he is obliged, at the expira- tion of the term of the fervitude to provide . the ufual fuit of cloaths for the fervant, un- Bb 3 lefs 390 _ December 1748. lefs he has made. that, part of the bargain with the purchafer. The Ezghjh and Irifb commonly fell themfelves for four years, but the Germans frequently agree with the captain before they fet out, to pay him a certain fum of money, for acer- tain number of perfons; as foon as they ar- rive in America, they go about and try to get a man who will pay the paflage for them. In return they give according to the circumftances one, or feveral of their children to ferve a certain number of years, at laft they make their bargain with the higheft bidder. 3. Tue Negroes or Blacks make the third kind. They are in a manner flaves; for when a Negro is once bought, he is the purchafer’s fervant as long as he lives, un- lefs he gives him to another, or makes him free. However it is not in the power of the mafter to kill his Negro for a fault, but he mutt leave it to the magiftrates to pro- ceed according to the laws. Formerly the Negroes were brought over from frica, and bought by almoft every one who could afford it. The quakers alone fcrupled to have flaves; but they are no longer fo nice, and they have as many Negroes as other people. However many people cannot con- quer the idea of its being contrary a the aws — Penfylvania, Philadelphia. 391 laws of chriftianity to keep flaves. ‘There are likewife feveral free Negroes in town, who have been lucky enough to get a very zealous quaker for their mafter, who gave them their liberty, after they had faithfully ferved him for fome time. AT prefent they feldom bring over any Negroes to the Engl/h colonies, for thofe which were formerly brought thither have multiplied confiderably. In regard to their martiage they proceed as follows: in cate you have not only male but likewife fe- male Negroes, they muft intermarry, and then the children are all your flaves: but if you poffefs a male Negro only, and he has an inclination to marry a female belong- ing to a different mafter, you do not hinder your Negro in fo delicate a point; but it is nio advantage to you, for the children be- long to the mafter of the female; it fs therefore advantageous to have Negro- women. A man who kills his Negro muft fuffer death for it: there is not however an example here of a white man’s having been executed on this account. A few years ago it happened that a mafter killed his flave; his friends and even the magiftrates fecretly advifed him to leave the country, as otherwife they could not avoid taking him prifoner, and then he would be con- Bb 4 demned 392 December 1748. demned to die according to the laws of the country, without any hopes of faving him, — This lenity was employed towards him, that the Negroes might not have the fatif- faction of feeing a mafter executed for kill- ing his flave; for this would lead them to all forts of dangerous defigns againft their mafters, and to value themfelves too much. Tue Negroes were formerly brought from Africa, as 1 mentioned before; but now this feldom happens, for they are bought in the Weft Indies, or American Iflands, whi- ther they were originally brought from their own country: for it has been found that on tranfporting the Negroes from Africa, immediately into thefe northern countries, they have not fuch a good {tate of health, as when they gradually change places, and are firft carried from Africa to the Weft In- dies, and from thence to North America. It has frequently been found, that the Ne- groes cannot ftand the cold here fo well as the Europeans or whites; for whilft. the latter are not in the leaft affected by the cold, the toes and fingers of the former are frequently frozen. There is likewife a ma- terial difference among them in this point; for thofe who come immediately from 4/r7- ca, cannot bear the cold fo well as thofe who are either born in this country, or have Penfy lvania, Philadelphia. 393. have been here for a confiderable time; for the froft eafily hurts the hands or feet of the Negroes which come from 4frica, or occafions violent pains in their whole body, | or in fome parts of it, though it does not at all affect thofe who have been here for fome'time. There are frequent examples that the Negroes on their paflage from Africa, if it happens in winter, have fome ef their limbs deftroyed by froft on board the fhip, when the cold is but very inconfiderable and the failors are fcarce obliged to cover their hands. I was evenaflured, that fome Negroes have been feen here, who have had an exceffive pain in their legs, which after- wards broke in the middle, and dropt en- tirely from the body, together with the fleth onthem. Thus it is the fame cafe with men here, as with plants which are brought from the fouthern countries, and cannot ac- cuftom themfelves to a colder climate. Tue price of Negroes differs according to their age, health and abilities. A full grown Negro cofts from forty pounds and upwards to a hundred of Pen/fy/vania cur- rency.. There are even examples that a gentleman has paid hundred pounds for a black flave at Philadelphia, and refufed to fell him again for the fame money. A Ne- gro boy, or girl, of two or three years old, can hardly be got for lefs than eight or fourteen 394 December 1748. fourteen pounds in Pen/ylvanian currency. Not only the quakers, but likewife feveral chriftians of other denominations fometimes fet their Negroes at liberty. This is done if the following manner: when a gentle- man has a faithful Negro who has done him great fervices, he fometimes declares him independent at his death. This is however very expenfive ; for they are oblig- ed to make a provifion for the Negro thus fet at liberty, to afford him fubfittence when he is grown old, that he may not be driven by necefflity to wicked aétions, or that he may be at any body’s charge, for thefe free Negroes become very lazy and indolent afterwards. But the children which the free Negro has begot during his fervi- tude are all flaves, though their father be free. On the other hand thofe Negro chil- dren are free whofe parents are at liberty. The Negroes in the North American colo- niés are treated more mildly, and fed better than thofe in the Weft Indies. They have as good food as the reft of the fervants, and they poffefs equal advantages in all things, except their being obliged to ferve their whole life time, and get no other wages than what their mafter’s goodnefs allows them: they are likewife clad at their mafter’s expence. On the contrary, in the Weft Indies, and efpecially in the Spani/h Iflands Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 395 Tflands they are treated very cruelly ; there- fore no threats make more impreffion upon a Negro here, than that of fending him over to the Wef Indies, in cafe he would not reform. It has likewife been frequent- ly found by experience, that when .you fhow too much remifine(s to thefe Negroes, they grow fo obftinated, that they will no longer do any thing but of their own ac- cord: therefore a ftrict difcipline is very neceflary, if their .mafter expects to be fa- tisfied with their fervices. | In the year 1620, fome Negroes were brought to North America in a Dutch hip, and in Virginia they bought twenty of them. Thefe are faid to have been the firft that came hither. When the Indians who were then more numerous in the country than at prefent, faw thefe black people for the firft time, they thought they were a true breed of Devils, and therefore they called them Manitto for a great while: this word in their language fignifies not only God, but likewife the Devil. Some time before that, when they faw the firft European fhip on their coafts, they were perfectly perfuaded that God himfelf was in the fhip. This account I got from fome Indians, who pre- ferved it among them as a tradition which they had received from their anceftors : therefore the arrival of the Negroes feemed te 396 -. December 1748. to them to have confufed every thing; but fince that time, they have entertained lefs difagreeable notions of the Negroes, for at prefent many live among them, and they even fometimes intermarry, as I myfelf have feen. Tue Negroes have therefore been up- wards of a hundred and thirty years in this country: but the winters here efpecially in New England and New York, are as fevere as our Swedi/h winters. I therefore very carefully enquired whether the cold had not been obferved, to affect the colour of the Negroes, and to change it, fo that the third or fourth generation from the firft that came hither, were not fo black as their an- ceftors. But I was generally anfwered, that there was not the leaft difference of colour to be perceived; and that a Negro born here of parents which were likewife born in this country, and whofe anceftors both men and women had all been blacks born in this country, up to the third or fourth generation, was not at all different in co- lour, from thofe Negroes who are brought directly over from Africa. From hence many people conclude, that a Negro or his pofterity do not change colour, though they © continue ever fo long in a cold climate ; but the mixing of a white man with a Negro woman, or of a Negro with a white woman has Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 397 has a different effect, therefore to prevent any difagreeable mixtures of the white peo- ple and Negroes, and that the Négroes may not form too great an opinion of them- felves, to the difadvantage of their matters, Tam told there is a law made prohibiting the whites of both fexes to marry Negroes, under pain of death, and deprivation of the clergyman who marries them: but that the whites and blacks fometimes mix, ap- pears from children of a mixed complexion, which are fometimes born. pt Ir is likewife greatly to be pitied, that the mafters of thefe Negroes in moft of the Englifh colonies take little care of their {piritual welfare, and let them live on in their pagan darknefs. There are even fome, who would be very ill pleafed at, and would by all means hinder their Negroes from be- ing inftructed in the do@rines of chriftianity, to this they are partly led by the conceit of its being fhameful, to have a fpiritual brother or fafter among fo defpicable a peo- ple, partly by thinking that they fhould not be able to keep their Negroes fo meanly afterwards ; and partly through fear of the Negroes growing too proud, on feeing themfelves upon a level with their mafters in religious matters. SEVERAL writings are well known, which mention, that the Negroes in South Ame- | rica 398 December 1748. rica have a kind of poifon with which they , kill. each other, though the effe& is not _y fudden, but happens a long time after the '\ perfon has taken it : the fame dangerous art of poifoning is known by the Negroes in- North America, as has frequently been expe- rienced. However only a few of them know the fecret, and they likewife know the. re- medy againft it, therefore when a Negro feels himfelf poifoned and can recolle& the enemy, who might poflible have given him the poifon, he goes to him, and endeavours by money and entreaties to move him to deliver him from the poifon; but if the Negro is malicious, he does not only deny that he ever poifoned him, but likewife that he knows a remedy againft it: this poifon. does not kill immediately, for fometimes the fick perfon dies fome years after. But from the moment he has the poifon he falls into a confumption and enjoys few days of good health: fuch a poor wretch often knows that he is poifoned, the moment he gets the poifon. The Negroes commonly employ it on fuch of their brethren as behave well, ' are beloved by their mafters, and feparate as it were from their countrymen, or do not like toconverfe with them. They have likewife often other reafons for their enmi- ty; but there are few examples of their : | having Penfyluania, Philadelphia. 399 having poifoned their mafters. Perhaps the mild treatment they receive, keeps them from doing it, or perhaps they fear that they may be difcovered, and that in {uch ‘a cafe, the fevereft punifhments would be inflicted on them. | _ Tey never difcover what the poifon confifts of, and keep it fecret beyond con- ception. It is probable that it is a very common thing which may be got all the world over, for wherever they are they can always eafily procureit. Therefore it can- not be a plant, as feveral learned men have thought; for that is not to be met with every where. I have heard many ac- counts here of Negroes who have been killed by this poifon. I {hall only mention one incident which happened during my {tay in this country. A man here had a Negro who was exceedingly faithful to him, and behaved fo well, that he would not have given him for twenty other Negroes. His mafter likewife fhewed him a peculiar kindnefs, and the flave’s conduct equalled that of the beft chriftian fervant; he like- wife converfed as little as poffible with the other Negroes; on that account they hated him to excefs, but as he was fcarce ever in company with them, they had no opportu- nity of conveying the poifon to him, which they 400 December 1748. | they had often tried. However on coming to town during the fair (for he lived in the country) fome other Negroes invited him to drink with them. At firft he would not, but they prefied him till he was obli- ged to comply. As foon as he came into the room, the others took a pot from the- wall and pledged him, defiring him to drink likewife : he drank, but when he took the pot from his mouth, he faid what beer is this? It is full of ******_~. Dopurpotely omit what he mentioned, for it feems un- doubtedly to have been the name of the poifon with which malicious Negroes do fo much harm, and which is to be met with almoft every where. It might be too much employed to wicked purpofes, and it is therefore better that it remains unknown. The other Negroes and Negro-women fell a laughing at the complaints of their hated ‘countryman, and danced and fung as if they had done an excellent action, and had at -laft obtained the point fo much withed for. The innocent Negro went away immedi- ately, and when he got home, faid that the other Negroes had certainly poifoned him: he then fell into a confumption, and no remedy could prevent his death. End of Vou. I. sae apOVEeR TISEMEN’T. HE whole Sheet Map of a : great Part of North America, intended for the Illuftration _ of thefe Travels, could not be got rea-_ dy in Time for the firft Volume, on Account of its Size and the great many Names of Places brought into it, which muft give it a Superiority above any Map hitherto publifhed of this Part of — the World: but the Tranflator hopes, the Public will the more readily excufe this Omiffion, as it will greatly tend to make the Map more perfect, and as the fecond Volume will foon appear, where itfhall undoubtedly be inferted. At the fame Time he intreats the Encouragers of this Work to compleat the Subfcriptions for the fecond Vo- lume, and to favour him with the Lifts of Subfcribers as foon as poffible; and if any more Gentlemen will favour him with their Subfcriptions, he will look upon it as an incentive the more vigoroufly to go on with the reft of the Publication.. « Sate els mh ye uD Ay ee Mote f Ce ¥ ae H! # Mi," 7 ry) ie * , Bea el Seley (v , 14 Z eh Oe in ae ie at = av y \ i ” orl = avia99 : aly é . } us i i x aN me ‘ x FU mf y