[A History of American Christianity by Leonard Woolsey Bacon]@TWC D-Link bookA History of American Christianity CHAPTER VII 22/24
28-32. [70:1] "The province, under the long years of Dutch supremacy, had gathered only some seven thousand inhabitants, against the hundred and twenty thousand of their New England neighbors" (Lodge, "English Colonies," p.
297). [71:1] See Corwin, p.
37; but compare the claim made in behalf of the Puritan Whitaker, "apostle to the Indians" thirty years earlier (Tiffany, "Protestant Episcopal Church," p.
18); compare also the work of the Lutheran Campanius in New Sweden (Jacobs, "The Lutherans," p. 83). [74:1] "The Puritans in Holland, England, and America" (New York, 1892). [76:1] The king's noble conceptions of what such a colony should be and should accomplish are quoted in Bancroft, vol.ii., pp.
284, 285. [78:1] Corwin, p.
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