Home / Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. / Passage

History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I

Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. 310 words

That he had five young gentlemen from " the Island of Jamaica, one from Montreal, four " children of gentlemen now in England, committed " to his care, among others from New York and the " country. That he apprehends his school to be " broken up and his scholars dispersed, probably " some of them placed at other schools, and that it " may be difhcult, if not impracticable, again to " recover them. That if there should be no other " impediment, yet if the people of West Chester are to

'Tlie nifflanly leader of the banditti who seized Samuel Seabury and destroyed or carried away the property of James Rivington, had had a public controveniy with the latter, and had been most ignoniiniously defeated, (deLancey's A'b(« on Jones's Uisti>rij of S'ew York during the litrohaionary War, i., 561-568.) The te.xt of the Memorial of Samuel Seaburii, in this place, indicated that the same disreputable habitue of Jasper Drake's Bceknian's Slip unlicensed alehouse had also had a political tilt with the Rector of St. Peter's Church, in Westchester, with a similar result. The reader may gather from those facts, without resorting to that general fact of the disappointment of Sears, in his scramble for "a high office in the American Navy," of which Bancroft has made mention, just what was the rejison that that i-ufflan was so zealous, in his pursuit of the two who had so signally defeated him.

: Vide pages 304, :)06, ante.

" be liable to such treatment as your Memorialist hath " lately endured, no person will be willing to trust " his children there. That in this case, your Memor- " ialist must lie entirely at the mercy of his creditors " to secure him from a jail, or must part with every- " thing he has to satisfy their just demands.