Old Virginia and Her Neighbours, Vol. 2 (of 2)

ii. 29;

Chapter 19252 wordsPublic domain

his work in history, ii. 254.

Hyde, Edward, Lord Clarendon, ii. 272, 285.

Hyde, governor of Albemarle, ii. 296.

Idaho, i. 187.

“Il Penseroso,” i. 205.

Independence, Declaration of, ii. 108, 171.

Indian corn, as a floral emblem, i. 156; its importance in American history, i. 156; cultivated in Virginia, i. 231; raised in Maryland, i. 275; ii. 2.

Indian girls dancing, i. 114.

Indian troubles in Albemarle probably not incited by Carey and Porter, ii. 297.

Indians in Virginia, number of, ii. 8.

Indians of Carolina classified, ii. 298-300.

Indians of North Carolina, i. 32; of Virginia, i. 56, 74.

Indians sold for slaves, ii. 277.

Indigo, an important staple of South Carolina, ii. 326.

Industries, domestic, ii. 208.

Infanta Maria, i. 195, 198, 200.

Ingle, Edward, i. 228, 306-308; ii. 41, 43.

Ingram, David, i. 20.

Initiative in legislation, i. 284; ii. 151.

Inns in Virginia, i. 211; in Maryland, ii. 219.

Inquisition, the Spanish, i. 20, 36, 45.

Insolvent debtors in North Carolina, ii. 313; Oglethorpe’s plan for relieving, ii. 334.

Instructions for the Virginia colonists, i. 72-76.

Insurrections of slaves, ii. 196; in South Carolina, ii. 329.

Ireland, i. 66.

Isabella, Queen, i. 51.

Isle of Wight County, i. 302.

Isles of Demons, i. 150.

Isolation, barbarizing effects of, ii. 253, 321, 332, 333.

Jack of the Feather, a chief, i. 190.

Jackson, Andrew, ii. 391.

Jamaica, ii. 183; conquest of, ii. 349.

James I., i. 55, 62, 69, 104, 113, 147, 152, 218, 236-238, 255, 256, 263;