Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 14.djvu/510

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NEW HAMPSHIRE.
446
NEW HARMONY.

important of which was Strawberry Bank (Portsmouth). Many settlers came out, but the proprietors derived little profit from the colony. When the Council dissolved in 1635, Mason was confirmed in all his grants and received 100,000 acres more west of the Kennebec. The settlement of Exeter was founded by Rev. John Wheelwright in 1638 after his expulsion from Massachusetts Bay. All these settlements were practically independent and with little form of organized government. Mason was a busy man who paid little attention to this province, which was named for his native Hampshire in England. Massachusetts Bay looked with disfavor upon the settlements of Royalists and Churchmen, and laid claim to the territory. In 1641 all the settlements except Exeter were joined to Massachusetts, and Exeter followed in 1643. Mason's grandson, Robert Tufton Mason, applied to the King for restitution of the territory granted to his ancestor. A decision that Massachusetts had usurped possession was secured in 1677, and in 1679 a decree declaring New Hampshire a royal province was issued, but Mason received little satisfaction. It remained a royal province until the Revolution, but its existence was dependent entirely upon the King's will, as no charter was issued. The Governor of Massachusetts was often commissioned the Governor of New Hampshire as well. After the expulsion of Andros in 1689 New Hampshire asked to be incorporated with Massachusetts, but was refused. The colony suffered greatly in the Indian wars of the eighteenth century, but nevertheless gradually extended its settlements north and west. Boundary disputes were frequent. The dispute over the southern and eastern boundaries was settled in 1740, but the question of the possession of Vermont was not settled until 1764. During the Revolution New Hampshire bore a conspicuous part. The Continental Congress, from which counsel was asked, advised the formation of a temporary State. A convention at Exeter, December-January, 1775-76, adopted a brief constitution. In 1779 a constitution was submitted to the people, but was rejected. A convention, June 12, 1781-October 31, 1783, framed a new constitution, which was ratified and went into effect June 2, 1784. Another convention, September 7, 1791-September 5, 1792, drafted a third constitution, which was ratified during the session of the convention. This provided that the question of the expediency of revision must be submitted to the people every seven years. Accordingly, modifications were made in 1852, 1877, 1889.

The State was the ninth to ratify the Federal Constitution, June 21, 1788, thus making certain the establishment of the United States. The capital of the Province of New Hampshire was Portsmouth. Until 1805 it was migratory, but at that date Concord was chosen. New Hampshire was Federalist in national politics till 1816, with the exception of 1804, when it voted for Jefferson. From 1816 to 1852 it was consistently Democratic. Since 1856 it has been stanchly Republican. The following is a list of the Governors of the Colony and State of New Hampshire:

As a Royal Province
PRESIDENTS
John Cutts 1679-80
Richard Waldron 1681
GOVERNORS
Edward Cranfield 1682-85
Walter Barefoote 1686
Joseph Dudley 1686
Edmund Andros 1686-89
Simon Bradstreet 1690-92
Samuel Allen 1693-98
Richard Coote, earl of Bellamont 1699-1701
Joseph Dudley 1702-14
Samuel Shute 1716-24
William Buruet 1728-29
Jonathan Belcher 1730-40
Benning Wentworth 1740-67
John Wentworth 1767-75
As a State
Matthew Thornton, President Provincial Convention  1775 
Meschech Weare, President of the State 1776-84
PRESIDENTS UNDER THE CONSTITUTION OF 1784
Meschech Weare 1784
John Langdon 1784-85
John Sullivan 1786-87
John Langdon 1788
John Sullivan 1789
Josiah Bartlett 1790-92
GOVERNORS OF THE STATE
Josiah Bartlett Federalist 1792-94
John T. Gilman 1794-1805
John Langdon Democrat-Republican 1805-09
Jeremiah Smith Federalist 1809-10
John Langdon Democrat-Republican 1810-12
William Plumer 1812-13
John Taylor Gilman Federalist 1813-16
William Plumer Democrat-Republican 1816-19
Samuel Bell 1819-23
Levi Woodbury 1823-24
David L. Morril 1824-27
Benjamin Pierce 1827-29
John Bell Democrat 1829-30
Matthew Harvey 1830-31
Joseph M. Harper (acting) 1831
Samuel Dinsmoor 1831-34
William Badger 1834-36
Isaac Hill 1836-39
John Page 1839-42
Henry Hubbard 1842-44
John H. Steele 1844-46
Anthony Colby 1846-47
Jared W. Williams 1847-49
Samuel Dinsmoor 1849-52
Noah Martin 1852-54
Nathaniel B. Baker 1854-55
Ralph Metcalf American 1855-57
William Haile Democrat 1857-59
Ichabod Goodwin Republican 1859-61
Nathaniel S. Berry 1861-63
Joseph A. Gilmore 1863-65
Frederic Smyth 1865-67
Walter Harriman 1867-69
Onslow Stearns 1869-71
James A. Weston Democrat 1871-72
Ezekiel Straw Republican 1872-74
James A. Weston Democrat 1874-75
Person Colby Cheney Republican 1875-77
Benjamin F. Prescott 1877-79
Natt Head 1879-81
Charles H. Bell 1881-83
Samuel W. Hale 1883-85
Moody Currier 1885-87
Charles H. Sawyer 1887-89
David H. Goodell 1889-91
Hiram A. Tuttle 1891-93
John B. Smith 1893-95
Charles A. Busiel 1895-97
George A. Ramsdell 1897-99
Frank W. Rollins 1899-1901
Chester B. Jordan 1901-03
N. J. Bachelder 1903 —

Bibliography. Belknap, The History of New Hampshire (Boston, 1813); Barstow, The History of New Hampshire (Boston, 1853); Sanborn, History of New Hampshire (Manchester, N. H., 1875); McClintock, History of New Hampshire (New York, 1889); New Hampshire State Library Annual Report contains bibliography (Concord, 1891).

NEW HANOVER. The northernmost large island of the Bismark Archipelago (q.v.).

NEW HARMONY. A town in Posey County, Ind., 15 miles north of Mount Vernon, the county-seat, on the Wabash River and on a