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A37361 A Declaration of some of the sufferings of the people of God called Quakers 1660 (1660) Wing D624; ESTC R37718 40,561 35

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A DECLARATION of some of the SUFFERINGS OF THE People of God CALLED QUAKERS FRIENDS WE lay these sufferings before you who have known sufferings and been exercised therewith for you in this the day of your prosperity in the Fear of the Lord and his Wisdom to read over and consider the sufferings of the People of God who have suffered all along in the dayes of the Common-wealth and of the two Protectors and now suffers in the Kings Name for Christ and his Truths sake and for obeying his commands And we have suffered all along under these changeable powers before you our meetings have been broken up our houses pluckt down our windows broken and pulled out of our Meetings and cruelly abused knockt down and stones and dirt thrown at us and have suffered cruel mockings and shameful reproaches and many whipt stockt and laid in Irons and D●n● 〈◊〉 and be●ty 〈◊〉 and prisoned till death and some put to death ●n these Dominions and the onely thing hath been for the speaking of the truth and warning people of the day that is come upon them yea many in sackcloth and ashes who would not hear nor regard whose day of visitation is over And there hath suffered for Conscience sake and the Truths sake the causes being hereafter expressed the number of 3179. 1. For meeting together in the Fear of the Lord as the Saints did in the primitive times and exhorting one another and building up one another and praying together in their several houses as the Apostles did from house to house have been beat imprisoned and not suffered to pray together as Daniel did but pluckt us up by the hair of the head when we have been at prayers and some have been stockt and whipt and others their ●●rses taken from them and some fined and imprisoned some until death and some knockt down and left for dead others drag'd on the ground by the hair of their heads and cruelly beaten and trod upon their cloaths rent and blood shed not sparing women with Child nor old age the number of 827 persons And they broke up our Meetings in the Common Wealths and Olivers time under pretence that we plotted to bring in Charls Stuart and now he is come in they are broken up by some of your Magistrates under pretence that we are against the King but we a●e in that which cannot lift up a hand nor plot against him nor no man by which we see all things and have unity with God and meets together to worship him in the Spirit and Truth and thus are we deprived of it by many who have been against us as much formerly as now who if they were tryed they are neither Friends to themselves nor to God nor the King who will not let us have so much liberty as Ballet fingers and such as use playes nor let us meet to pray together and build up one another in th● Holy Faith which was the command of the Apostle to the Saints in the Primitive times for which practice have we suffered all along as sheep for the slaughter and as such as have no helpers in the earth whose lives from it are taken And our sufferings has been also great in Scotland Ireland Virginia and New England the number of Sufferers and multitude of which sufferings and meetings which have been broken are to large hardly to be mentioned or numbred 2. And for not going to the publick worship many have been fined and imprisoned and their goods taken from them Now whe●e do you ever read that ever the Jews or Gentiles ever fined the Christians for not coming to the Temple at Jerusalem or the Synagogue or Dianas Temple Nay is it not worse then the Turks paying their Sessments and Taxes May they not have their liberty there to meet together to Pray and Worship God ye men of understanding cons●der this 3. And for warning people to repent in the Markets and other places of their sin and wickednesse have been whipt stockt and put in Fetters and Irons and some imprisoned the number of 516 persons 4. And ●●r not swearing as Christ commands they should not swear for obeying his Doctrin● and keeping to yea and nay in their Communications according to his command have been Stockt Whipt Fined and Imprisoned and suffered the losse of their goods ●●8 Persons And we have suffered under pretence of being Papists and Popishly affected and our Friends have suffered for going beyond the Seas to declare against the Papists George Ba ly imprisoned till death in France one John Love imprisoned till death in the Inquisition in Rome and John Parrot ●es there yet in Prison to finish his Testimony for the Truth and against Idolatry and yet the Oath of Abjuration hath been tendred unto us to make a prey on us knowing that our Principle was that we could not swear no manner of Oath for which cause we have suffered in our Lives and Estates and now the O●th of Supremacy and Allegiance is tendred to us against the Pope to make a prey upon us that knows our Principle is against the Papists that knows our P●●nciple that we cannot swear at all no Oath but keeps to yea and nay in our Communications according to Christs Doctrine who declares against all Popery and the supremacy of it Now if 〈◊〉 yea be not yea and nay nay so found to you and all men upon the earth then let us suffer for breaking of that as much as for breaking an Oath and besides very illegally is that Oath put to us as you may see in the examining of the manner of their putting it to us 5. For not paying towards the repair of Steeple-houses and for not paying Clerks wages have had their goods spoiled strained and taken away above treble the demand 256 which is worse then ever we read of the Jews or Gentiles that ever they made the Christians do to repair Dianas Temple or the Jews Synagogue or Temple that they fined them and took their goods for not doing so 6. For visiting Friends in Prison and carrying them necessaries that lay in nasty Straw and Dungeons Fetters and Irons lockt up beat and bruised their bodies like jellies have been ●mprisoned and beat and some whipt and stockt others fined and their goods taken away and some sent away w●●h passes as wanderers and vagabonds though Persons of Estates and some have had their goods taken and been imprisoned besides for entertaining of their friends which ●s worse then the heathen did to the Apostle who suffered his acquaintance to come to him and visit him and he taught in his own hired house in Rome where the Seat of the Emperour was and worse then ever we read the Heathen and the Jews did to the Christians in the Primitive times and therefore what can be paraleld with this Generation for it is for Truth and not for evil doing for which we suffer and for bearing witnesse to the Truth Therefore ye men of Reason
for tythes Surrey Arthur Standbridge Committed to Prison for tythes at the suit of Henry Hollowel Priest Richard Newman Imprisoned for tythes at the suit of Charles Blackwel Priest Thomas Avery Imprisoned because he could not pay tythes to Leonard Litchford Priest Robert Tribe Imprisoned because he could not pay tythes to George Vauhan George Brickstock committed to prison for Tythes Richard Web John Adams Richard Beard Imprisoned at the Sute of Edward Goring and John Apstle Nottinghamshire William Claytor Imprisoned because for Conscience sake he could not pay Tythes Cornwal Richard Tregenna Imprisoned at Bodmin for Tythes at the Sute of James Forbes Priest John Ellis prisoner at Pensame for Tythes Westmorland Richard Berket Richard Seddal Imprisoned in the eighth Moneth for not swearing in a Sheriffs return Norfolk John Hilton in present sufferings because he could not swear being summoned to serve in a Jury at a Coppy hold Court and therefore John Lovel Lord of the said Court and now Justice of Peace commanded his Bayliffe to seize all the estate of the said John Hinton which is done accordingly to the vallue of about a hundred pound and farther threatens to throw the said John Hinton his Wife and Children out of the possession which he bought and paid for and that for no other cause but because he could not swear though he exprest his willingnesse to serve if he might have been accepted without an Oath Sussex Abraham Chrichenden Nicholas Beard Imprisoned for Tythes this ninth Month 1660. Bucks John Lucas and two more in Alisberry Goal for Tythes Southampton Twenty one taken out of a peaceable Meeting and because they could not promise not to meet any more were kept several dayes prisoners not suffering their food to be brought to them eleven of which were afterwards releast but ten still remains prisoners Wilts Giles Shurmur John Garner And two more commmitted to prison for Tythes Huntingtonshire Francis Lambested of Elton imprisoned the eighth day of the ninth Moneth 1660. for Tythes by John Cooper Priest of Elton aforesaid William Griffin imprisoned for Tythes by the said John Cooper the thirty one day of the sixth Moneth 1660. John Apthorp of Abotsly imprisoned the same day for Tythes by John Luke impropriator York-shire William Overon John Barbar Miles Frankland All imprisoned for Tythes a● the Suit of Robert Hitch Priest Matthew Watson imprisoned at the Suit of Robert Ludson Priest William Norrison imprisoned by one called Sir William Cholmly for having a Meeting at his house Dorsetshire Hercules Toby and John Butler imprisoned by Edmund Butler the second day of the sixth Moneth 1660. for not paying him Tythe Robert Ring of Glazen Broadford a man of about fourscore years of age cast into prison for the Tythe of one Acre of Corn by Elias Harvy an Impropriator the seventeenth day of the eighth Month 1660. Elizabeth Masters Widdow cast into Prison for Tythe by Elias Harvy the seventeenth of the eighth Moneth 1660. whose husband hath already suffered imprisonment until death because he could not for Conscience sake pay him Tythe to satisfie his covetous desire John Gillet cast into prison by John Hodder Priest the ninteenth of the eighth Moneth 1660. for not paying Tythe to satisfie the greedy desire of that covetous hireling that never hath enough These following are fined and imprisoned for not putting off their Hats and not giving men the honour below and some for meeting together in the fear of the Lord in their several houses as the Saints did in the primitive times and for not paying Clerks wages UPon the sixteenth day of the 7th Month 1660. there being a meeting of the Lords people who in scorn are called Quakers in the Town of Sherborn consisting of about thirty persons inhabitants of the same Town and the Parishes adjacent who being met together to wait upon the Lord and worship him having no other end nor purpose in their thus assembling together There came into their meeting one Bestel a Schoolemaster of the same Town with a Constable and others who did wickedly blaspheme Gods Truth and commanded them of the meeting to go with them to the Justices whereupon one asked if they had an Order either from Judge or Justices they answered That for Order they had none but the Constable was a Warrant of himself but they said nay and refused to go with them Then Bestel commanded the Constable to do his Office whereupon they pulled and haled them out of the house where they were peacably met and the said Bestel commanded the Constable to set one man to each of them and so to hale and drive them along to the Justice and after they had haled and beaten them along some part of the way they left them Then one demanded their Order for their thus laying violent hands on them So one put his hand on his sword and said That was th●ir Order many of them having swords and staves Then Bestel with the Constable commanded the Tithing-man to have them back again while they themselves went to the justices to fetch a Warrant So they were brought to the Bayliffs house of the Town where they were kept all night with watchmen to guard them and the ne●t day were had before Winston Churchel called a Justice and others who demanded of them Whether they did not know of an Order again●t their meeting together in a riotous manner thus they demanded of them though they were peaceably met together to wait upon the Lord as the Lords people use to do and with some other words asked them if they would give sureties which thing they could not do being peaceable men and having not broken any just or known Law but onely were met together to wait on the Lord in his fear having the word of a King That none should be wronged for Religion as long as they live peaceably So the Constable was commanded to take them away a Mitimus was made by which nine of them were sent to the County Prison at Dorchester and five more passed their words to appear at the Sessions which was about two weeks after where they did all appear who being brought before the Court of which John Davis sat as Judge and with him sat Winstone Churchel Giles Strangeways George Fulford and Thomas Baynard c. called Justices their accusation was read wherein was many false and wicked things charged against them which by them were never done nor spoken Then they were called over and the Schoolmaster likewise who was the causer of their imprisonment but he being not present nor any other to prove what was charged against them the aforesaid Iohn Davis Judge of the Court questioned Winstone Churchel who committed them for not binding over the said Schoolmaster to prosecute against them Then George Fulford one of them that should have done Justice and have freed the innocent when none appeared to accuse them of any evil or the breach of any known Law stood up and said There need no
Imprisoned in York Castle for tythes the nineteenth of the ninth Moneth 1659. By Thom●● Jackson impropiator William Peart and Richard Smith of Crake Imprisoned in York Castle for Tythes the fourth day of the first Moneth 1659. By John Humes Priest of the same Town and yet remains Prisoners Richard Arnel Richard Parker and Thomas Clark of Snaith Parish Imprisoned in Pontefract Goale for Tythes the nineteenth of the first Moneth 1659 by John Ludley Priest of S●aith Cumberland Anthony Patinson of the Abba imprisoned the eighteenth day of October 1659. by Thomas Craster and Cuthbert Studholm called Justices for following his calling being a Weaver in a Corporation Town as they call it although he had served four years to the trade and nine years in the Army Nottingham shire William Smith Imprisoned for not paying tythes by William Packlington of North Collingham Edward Laford Imprisoned for tythes by Richard Godsane and Richard Lamb of Collingham Robert Morefen Imprisoned at the suit of Thomas Huit called Knight for tythes and after the said Robert had suffered a years imprisonment the said Huit died and though no man prosecuted the said Robert yet he is kept in bonds by the Sheriff Edward Langford Imprisoned for tythes at the suit of Richard Godsaue and Richard Lamb aforesaid and he hath suffered eleven Months this eighteenth day of the eight Month 1660. Thomas Elsam imprisoned for tythes by William Pocklington aforesaid and hath suffered above five Months Roger Storrs imprisoned for tythes by Richard Standfield and hath suffered fifteen weeks Lincolne shire Robert Whitman now a Prisoner in Lincoln for Tythes at the suit of John Coale who hires the tythes of the priest he hath been prisoner ever since the twenty one of the ninth Month 1659. Vincent Frotheringham imprisoned the twenty third day of the first Month 1659. for tythes in the aforesaid Goale at the suit of Lawrance Sandon Priest Lincoln Edward Walley now a prisoner for tythes at the suit of Henry Wames and James Green hath been prisoner ever since the fourteen of the second Month 1660. Richard Frothingham now a prisoner for tythes at the suit of Lawrence Sandon a Priest he hath been a prisoner ever since the twenty one of the second Month 1660. This Richard is Father to the above named Vincet Forthingham and the Priest imprisons the Father because he cannot satisfie for the Sons tythes though the old man hath no interest in any Tythable goods where this priest can claim any property Northamptonshire A poor widdow woman who hath two children committed to Northampton Goal near a year since there remains still for Tythes of about five shillings vallue at the Suit of one Robert Wilds Priest William Vincent committed to the aforesaid Goal about ten Moneths since where he yet remains because he could not swear to his answer to one Priest Andrews Bill Lancashire Richard Myers Alexander Rigby imprisoned in Lancaster Castle for not paying Tythes Suffolk Richard White Imprisoned in that County at the Suit of Priest Vsher because for Conscience sake he could not pay him Tythes Thomas Burchham Prisoner in Bliborough Goal for Tythes Barbary Jarmine Imprisoned in Ipswitch Goal for speaking to a Priest John Easeling in Ipswitch Goal for Tythes Glocestershire the 11th of the 9th Moneth 1659. Thomas Hapcot Imprisoned at the Suit of Richard Bislon Priest of Breedon in Worcestershire for Tythes Ann Web Widow imprisoned the twenty fourth of the ninth Moneth 1659. upon a Capias at the Suit of Anthony Hungerford Impropriator for Tythes In the County of the City of Gloucester Thomas White imprisoned the eighth of the eighth Moneth 1659. upon a Capia● at the suit of Thomas Bishop Impropriator for Tythes Norfolk John Goddard Henry Goddard Abraham Howes imprisoned in Norwich Castle for Tythes at the Suit of Thomas Theodoreth the twenty seventh day of the second Moneth 1660. notwithstanding the said Thomas Theodoreth had not long before taken away several loads of Corn from two of the aforesaid parties and of A. Howe 's he took for the Tythes accounted to be five pound odd mony Cattel worth eleven pound and keeps them in prison besides Matthew King of Northwalsham in Norfolk imprisoned the nineteenth day of the second Moneth 1660. at the Suit of Thomas Simmons Priest in Suffeild for Tythes and yet remains Prisoner Bedfordshire John Apthorp Dorothy Neal John Samn Elizabeth Brace Imprisoned in Bedford Goal because for Conscience sake they could not pay Tythes Dorsetshire Roger Coward cast into prison by Benjamin Maber Priest the twenty fourth day of the ninth Moneth 1659. for not paying him Tythe Here followeth a short Relation of some few of the cruel and inhumane usages which have reached unto blood which many of the People of the Lord have met with and under-gone at their meeting together in the fear of the Lord as the saints did in the primitive times in their several houses which cruelty if it be not restrained will bring upon this present power and Authority the guilt of the inocent blood of many righteous souls Westminster IOhn Scafe Edward Bylling Thomas Matthews and about three or four score Persons more being at the house of Stephen Heart in new Palace yard at Westminster where on the seventh day of the twelfth month called February 1659. they were peacably met together in the fear of the Lord Some of the rude Souldiers and others the Inhabitants of VVestminster came in great rage and violently pulled many of them out of their meeting room and did sorely beat and bruise many and draged some on the ground by the hair of their heads others had their clothes rent and scarffs taken away and some were knockt down And one Woman with child was so abused and hurt that she said she was undone And after this and other mischief by them and some of the Inhabitants of Westminster was done they rifled the house and broke the glasse-windows and threatened more mischief for the future and some were heard to say they had taken an Oath to that purpose And at another meeting afterwards some of the rude Souldiers and others came again and did much abuse Friends and beat them and pulled the said Stephen Heart out of his house and knockt him down and beat him so that his senses were astonished Middle-sex John Wooldrige and others being on the first day of the week peacably met together to wait on the Lord in his own hired house at Brainford there came into the house two men who said they were Constables and without any warrant or Legal Authority they violently pulled him out of his house in which action they wrincht his wrist and had him before James Hawley called Justice who without the breach of any Law of God or man forthwith commanded a Warrant to be made and sent him to prison Surry As the people of God were peacably met together to wait on the Lord at Mitcham in Surry on the third day of the fifth month 1659. the rude
people of the Town came to the place where they were met and threw hatfulls and a pail full of dirty water on them and threw dirt on the face of him that was speaking And as they were going to the meeting many Friends were beaten and abused and some thrown down and trampled on and dragged on the ground by the hair of the head and kickt and some had their clothes torn and called them Rogues and threatened to kill them And one Friend was thrust into a pond and knockt down in it and there kept a pretty space and when they had so done they drave the Friends like Beasts out of the Town with staves and huncht them and puncht them and hurt them and no Officer neither Magistrate nor other would stir to preserve them or keep the peace which the rude people broke though some of them were told of this cruel usage and feared that some of them might be killed At another meeting on the 7th day of the same month the rude people came again and threw much dirt and Cow-dung upon them and sonn● 〈…〉 ●a●● and into the mouth of him that was speaking and declaring the Truth and when they saw this would not disturb them so as to cause them to break up their ●●●ing they fired a Gun or Pistol three times upon them At another meeting on the tenth day of the same Moneth the rude people came again to the house where they were peaceably met in the Fear of the Lord and with a Scoop-shovel cast in scoop-fulls of dirt and dirty water upon them which did so wet and daub them with them that they were almost covered therewith insomuch that they appeared as though they had been dragged through a dirty Channel And when the rude people had so done then they cryed out see now like Witches they look with other filthy and bruitish words not fit to be mentioned all which the people of God bore with patience without making any resistance And when this was done then they threw in clods of dirt upon them and drew them forth of the meeting and tore some of their cloaths and threw d●wn others and stoned others and brake the windows of the house and the fence of the Friends ground where they met and drove them through the Town And some of the Friends after all this in going to a Justices house were sorely beaten and some had their blood shed and were in danger of their lives and those ●●de people cryed out let the Justice kiss their breech Hartford-shire At a peaceable Meeting of the people of God at Sawbridgworth the rude people of the Town amongst whom were some of the Servants of him who is called Justice Hewet came to the door and threw in water rotten eggs mans dung and stones of which the said Justice Hewe● being informed and desired to preserve the people of God from violence and the rude multitude in peace he the said Justice Hewet instead of performing the duty of a Magistrate and preserving the people in peace so incouraged the rude ones that the hands of the wicked were strengthened and encouraged in their mischief and he refused to do Justice according to his place Northampton-shire The people of God being peaceably met together to wait on the Lord in a Close near the house of William Lovel and upon his own ground there came one Captain Pinkard and many of his Troopers on Horse-back and entred upon the ground and in a brutish and in humane manner rode amongst the Friends and many of them received much hurt with their Horses and otherwise and they broke up the Meeting and took away the said William Lovel and others and sent them to prison where divers of them were kept two Moneths and the said William Lovel kept prisoner nine Moneths and he was more cruelly used then can be briefly exprest for no other cause but for having a meeting at his house Warwick-shire There being a peaceable Meeting of the people of God at a place called Grin at the house of the Widdow Meeks the said Widdow for suffering a Meeting there was turned out of her house and the house its self pul'd down York-shire There being a peaceable meeting of the people of God at the house of Friend Blacklin in York-shire where were met about thirty persons the rude people came into the Meeting and violently pulled them out one by one and knockt many of them down and wounded many of them Nottingham-shire A peaceable Meeting of the people of God was by wicked and ungodly men 〈…〉 ●ewark and the Friends received much hurt and much of their 〈…〉 by the rude multitude and about four score of them were haled ●u● of the meeting one by one and were cruelly beaten and abused Sommerset-shire There being a peaceable meeting of about two hunded of the People of God at Martock upon the second day of the second Month 1657. five men who called themselves Minsters and who are called Mr. Hallet Mr. Stephenson Mr. Duke Mr. Collens and Mr. Thomas Lye come to the place where the meeting was and brought with them a great company of rude people with long staves Pikes and such like Weapons and fell on the Friends who were met in the fear of the Lord and beat them and pulled them and tore their Garments and made loud out-cryes and the rude peoples hands were so strengthened by the company and countenance of the Priests and their rage and madness such against the people of God that had not the Lord wonderfully appeared in his peoples deliverance some might have lost their lives At a meeting of the people of God on the first day of the fifth Month 1659. at Threshford the rude People came with Kettles Panns and blowing horns and with Pipes Lowbels and a Drum to make a noise and a cause a disturbance and the noise they made was great so that friends could not hear the truth declared Amonst which rude company there was one who is called a Minister and he to manifest him himself ruder then the rest beat the drum himself to make a greater noise then was made before who with the rude multitude flung stones and dirt and water at friends and some of them affirmed that they were hired to do so and that they that hired them stood by and encouraged them giving them Bear and Ale for their service Now let the understanding Reader judge who were chief Instruments in chis wickedness c. And whether such serve our Lord Jesus Christ or their own lusts and whether the end of such is not destruction Northumberland As divers of the People of God were met together in his fear at a place called Elledsdon there came a company of rude men and women amongst whom was the Priests wife of the Town of Elledsdon who came from the steeple-house and in great violence haled forth of the meeting about twenty friends and forced them out of the Town and over a little River
teared us out of their Town would not suffer us to stay in the common street or rest but haled us on a long lane and shoved us toward a common far from the Town and would not by any word was spoken keep themselves in peace towards us who offered harm to none Now in this manner and many several waies are we by Magistrates priests and rude people who are incouraged and by their leaders caused to err persecuted in pretence of warrant from the King and power given from him and as it was in Olivers time done by them unto us so is it now and our sufferings in many places greater and the hand of the evil doers more strenghthened against us who since we were a people have not persecuted any or sought revenge against our persecutors in the least manner but with patience have suffered what hath been done unto us knowing that all who will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution and be hated of all men for his Names sake and do rejoyce that we are counted worthy These Friends of the truth whose Names are under written who do give their Testimony of the truth and of Things herein mentioned who were present at the time of this persecution Nicolas Rawson John Jackson Michael Renold Anthony West William Overhead John Barber with many more Friends Darlington the eighteenth of the ninth Month 1660. This day week our meeting was broken and some had before one called a Justice who theatened if we met again to send us to prison South-hampton Friends being met together in the fear of the Lord in Portsmouth videlicet On the twenty one day of the eight Month last past they met together in silence at a Friends house where as they were waiting upon the Lord there came a guard of Souldiers and beset the house and some they hailed out of the meeting and dragged the man out of the house down the street to the main guard and then brought him up to his house again and shut him with the rest in the house until the secon● day about the seventh hour at night and then turned them forth and withdre● their guard then upon the next first day being the twenty eight day of the eigh● Month as Friends were met together there was likewise a guard of Souldiers beset the house and kept about twenty and one persons close prisoners in the Friends house which was all that were then gathered together and there kept them not suffering any provision to come to them but 〈…〉 they kept them all there until about the sixth day of the week following and then came and haled forth such as was not of the Town and set them at liberty but the rest being about ten Friends they keep still prisoners in the house then the last first day those that were not Imprisoned met together in another place at a Friends house and them they haled forth of their meeting and committed the men to a prison it the Town called Felltons hole where they stil remain and all this is as they say because Friends will not promise them not to meet any more in Town as the baptists hath done This is a short relation of their cruelty in that place towards Friends Monmouth-shire David Jones Imprisoned in that County for not coming to the steeple-house wh● if he would pay 1. s. per week for 12. Moneths past all which time he hath not been there which comes to 2. pounds 12. s. he might be releast Fleet London John Pollard and Joseph Pollard imprisoned first in Colchester Castle 13. Moneths and 2. weeks then returned from Colchester to the upper Bench prison and there kept prisoner five Moneths and a week and is since committed to the Fleet Prison at the suit of Mathias Armiger Farmer of Tythes who with Benjamin Maddock for less then 2. years Tythes valued to be worth about 35. pound have taken 57. Cows and Bullocks with one Bull in all worth about 12 score pounds from the said John and Joseph Pollard and returned nothing again and is kept a Prisoner besides York-shire Samuel Thornton being in a Meeting at Leeds with many more of the Lords people though he be a free man of the same Town was taken violently out of the Meeting by Martin Iles and John Dawson Alderman and hailed to Prison and there detained 5. dayes with several others which was also haled forth of the same Meeting which were Inhabitants within the said Borrough and the said Samuel Thornton by the said Alderman was ordered to be whipt and sent from Constable to Constable which was done accordingly though the place of his natural birth was but three miles from thence and he well known in the said Town Also Samuel Thornton was taken forth of a peaceable Meeting of the people of God at Holbeck by order of the Priest there and haled to Leeds before the said Alderman with two more who caused a Mittemus to be made and sent him to the Correction-house at Wakefield for a Vagrant where he was detained three Moneths and he had been an Apprentice in the same Town and after was called to the Sessions and there fined 10. pounds and sent to Prison again though he had broken no known Law nor for any other thing but for being in a peaceable Meeting amongst Gods People Dudly Templer of Wethersfield in Essex sent William Allen to Prison for no other cause but for coming to the Town of Wethersfield to a Meeting there and since from time to time his Clerk with many of the Town in a violent manner have pulled us out of our Meetings and not suffered us to be at quiet but sometime set guards of men in several places to keep us from meeting and sometime fined several for coming to our meeting and from John Child by a warrant from him or by his Order they pretending a warrant they took a horse Sadle and Pillion and what belonged to him and kept him three weeks but one day and then sent him home without sadle bridle pillion and the rest which they keep to this day notwithstanding have been oft demanded of them And they beat many friends much for coming to the Town and suffered rude boyes and others without reproof to abuse sober people to the shame of Justice and the possession of their Town and this hath been done in the presence and hearing of him the said Dudly Templer and not reproved And he himself hath scoffed at Friends and evil intreated many and set the rude people on to hale us out of the Town when if any thing could have been charged against us he being a Justice and a Commander of a Troop of Horse might have brought any of us to tryal and not in such a manner contrary to Law and Justice have abused us and broken the peace of this Nation and so rendred himself uncapable to to Rule and is to be ruled by Justice himself And of this his proceedings hundreds can
being contrary to Christs Command amounting to about a Thousand pounds besides what they have done since that we have not heard of many families in which there are many children are almost ruined by these unmerciful proceedings Five kept 15. dayes in all without food and 58. dayes shut up close by the Jaylor and had none that he knew of and from some of them he stopt up the windows hindering them from convenient aire One laid neck and heels in Irons for sixteen hours One very deeply burnt in the right hand with the letter H. after he had been whipt with above 30. stripes One chained the most part of twenty dayes to a log of Wood in an open Prison in the Winter time Five appeals to England denied at Boston Three had their right Ears cut by the Hangman in the Prison the door being barred and not a Friend suffered to be present while it was doing though some much desired it One of the Inhabitants of Salem who since is banished upon pain of death had one half of his House and Land ceized on while he was in Prison a month before he knew of it At a general Court in Boston they made an Order that those who had not wherewithal to answer the fines that were laid upon them for their Consciences should be sold for Bond-men and Bond-women to Barbados Virginia or any of the English Plantations Eighteen of the People of God were at several times banished upon pain of death six of them were their own Inhabitants two of which being very aged people and well known among their Neighbours to be of honest conversations being banished from their Houses and Families and put upon traveling and other hardships soon ended their dayes whose death we can do no less then charge upon the Rulers of Boston they being the occasion of it Also three of the Servants of the Lord they put to death one of them they caused to be Executed in 24. hours after they had taken her And when we heard from thence last there was four more in prison who according to their Law were to be banished upon pain of death and twenty four of the Inhabitants of Salem were presented and more fines called for These things O friends from time to time have we patiently suffered and not for the transgression of any Just or Righteous Law either pertaining to the Worship of God or the civil Government of England but simply and barely for our consciences to God of which we can more at large give you or whom you may order a full account if you will let us have admission to you who are banished upon pain of death and have had our ears cut who are in England attending upon you both of the causes of our sufferings and the manner of their disorderly and illegal proceeding against us Who begun with Immodesty went on in Inhumanity and Cruelty and were not satisfied untill they had the blood of three of the Martyrs of Jesus Revenge for all which we do not seek but lay them before you considering you have been well acquainted with sufferings and so may the better consider them that suffer and may for the future restrain the violence of these Rulers of New Egland you having power in your hands they being but the children of the family of which you are chief Rulers who have in divers of their proceedings forfeited their Patent as upon a strict enquiry in many particulars will appear And this O King and you of his Counsel we are assured of that in time to come it will not repent you if by a close rebuke you stop the bloody proceedings of these bloody persecutors for in so doing you will engage the hearts of many honest People unto you both there and here and for such works of mercy the blessing is obtained and shewing it is the way to prosper We are witnesses of these things Who besides long Imprisonments and many cruel whippings had our Ears cut John Rous John Copland Who besides many long Imprisonments divers cruel whippings with the seizing on our Goods are banished upon pain of Death and waite here in England and desire that we may have an Order to return in peace to our Families Samuel Shattock Josiah Southick Nicholas Phelps A Declaration of the Sufferings of the Inhabitants of the Province of Mariland in Virginia as followeth WIlliam Fuller and Thomas Homwood had taken from them because they could not be conformable to the unrighteous Orders of Court made by the Officers of Cicilia Baltamore in Mariland to the value in goods eight pounds five shillings and eight pence Taken from Richard Keen for not training the sum of six pounds fifteen shillings by the Shireff and his Servants have received much abuse The Sheriff drew his Cutlash and with the point made a thrust at his Breast and struck him over the shouldiers and said you Rogue I could find in my heart to split your brains The Sheriffs name is William Coursey there be several Witnesses to testifie the Truth of this thing Again this Captain of the Souldiers whose name is John Odbor with Justice Askam with a rude crew drank out certain Casks of Wine bought of Justice Askham for which Wine they came to Richard Keen and to other mens houses to take away their Goods to make payment for that which they had idlely spent Justice Askham so called coming to Richard Keens house was taxed by the wife of Richard Keen for being drunk at one of their Randivous He replyed he was not drunk for said he a man is never drunk if he can go out of the Carts way when it is coming towards him William Muffet fined for not training to the value of six pounds fifteen shillings one John Bogge an Officer of Captain Thomas Brook gave order to the Sheriff that if he could not take his goods to take his Chest if not his Chest his Shirts John Knap had taken from him for not training goods to the value of seven pounds ten shillings with a Chest and fined to the value of three pounds ten shillings for not swearing he being an antient man about sixty years of age and hath laboured hard in the strength of his dayes and years to get those goods together William Berry was fined to the value of three pounds fifteen shillings for entertaining Thomas Thurston into his house one night Michael Brooks fined seven pounds ten shillings because he could not swear and four pounds ten shillings because he could not train under the command of John Odbor Captain who declared in the presence of many that they were not fit to be Souldiers that could not swear be drunk and whore it Edward Keen fined for not training to the value of four pounds ten shillings under the said Odbor Captain Edward Hinkesman fined to the value of four pounds ten shillings for not training under the said J. Odbor Henry Osborn fined to the value of three pounds fifteen shillings because he
But after some season the rage of the rude people abated and so by permission of the chief Actors the people of the Lord met together again then the Priest himself came from his steeple ho●●● and having a stone in his hand of two or three pound waight he desperate●y threw it at one of the friends and his wife also threw stones at friends and they did so encourage the rude multitude that they made a fresh assault upon them and with great fury dragged and haled friends out of the meeting again and threw them down and dragged them on the ground and the Priest encouraged the rude people to stone the Friends and said it was warrantable by the Scriptures and he would bear them out in it and that if ever they came again he would set his mastiff dog at them Wrexham in Wales the eight day of the eleventh Month 1659. The people of the Lord being met together to wait upon the Lord many rude Souldiers that belonged to the Irish Brigade came to the meeting place with staves and crab-tree cudgels and thrust and pusht one another upon Friends and one standing up and bidding them be civil and quiet they cryed out pull him down and out with him and so fell upon him and the rest of Friends and forced them out of the meeting place striking them with their staves and some friends getting up into some upper rooms the Soldies followed them up and broke open the door and came to them and there beat them abused them very much and at that time they drove some Friends into the water and one they pu●● down in the water and bruised him so that the Blood ran down another mans head was broken and his blood shed in the street Middle-sex the sixth day of the third Month 1660. Some of the People of God being met together c. in the house of one John Elson in St. Johns street so called there came a great company of rude people who violently threw stones at the said John Elson and other Friends and broke his windows very much and endeavoured to break down his door and after the meeting was ended the rude multitude fell upon one man and pluckt off much of his hair and shed much of his blood and rent the clothes of others and threw dirt in the said John Elsons face and eyes and spit upon him Wilt-shire the 13. of the 3d. month called May 1660. Many Friends being assembled together in the fear of God in Cummerwell in the Parish of Bradforth there came several Troopers of Captain Edward Hungerfords Troop who forced into the meeting and pul'd out one Robert Storr and had him to the City of Sarrum before the Commissioners who upon examination of him said they found that he had been at an unlawful meeting and so committed him to prison Gloucester-shire the 8. day of the 3d. month 1660. Friends being peacably met together in Mase-moor to wait upon the Lord there came one John Coney of that place with a sword in his hand and violently thrust open the door and came into the room and said be gone and struck one Nicholas Wasfield several blows with his sword in his scabbard after which he drew his sword and thrust violently at the said Nicholas Wasfield and gave him many sore blows on the shoulders with his naked sword and being asked by whose order he did this he said by the Mayors order At another meeting of Friends at Cirencister in the County aforesaid on the 13. day of the 3d. Month 1660. and on the 16. day at Nailsworth there came a wicked man that is a great Professor with some others with him with their swords drawn and their pistols cocked and lighted matches in their hands into the meeting and laid hands on one Friend and had him before the Mayor of Glocester who said to the Marshal he should take him away and set a strong guard of Musketeers to look to him and this they did upon suspition that he was a Jesuit Wilt-shire the 16. day of the 3d. Month 1660. Friends being met together in the fear of the Lord at Calne there came into the meeting several rude Souldiers with two Serjeants who are under the command of Colonel Edward Bainton and of his own company commanded by Captain Lieutenant John Lavington and commanded Friends to depart their meeting who desired to see their order for breaking up their meeting they being peacably met together but the Souldiers answered their swords was their authority and so with violence did hale Friends out of their meeting using threatening words ●nd came in amongst Friends with drawn swords and muskets cockt although Friends made no resistance Cumberland At a meeting of Friends at Carlisle the Souldiers came to the meeting and with ●iolence haled and thrust out Friends out of their own house and carried some to their guard and one Friend they pluckt out by the head when he was at prayer ●nd pluckt him down Lanca-shire the 13. day of the 3d. Month 1660. John Thomas a servant of Sr. George Middleton so called set upon three women with impudent scoffs said he would kisse one of them and did abuse them and wrong them and pluckt their coats loose And the same man did abuse Friends and he would have cut Friends with an Ax but that he was restrained by some of his fellows and the same Knights man set upon six friends as they were going to a Meeting to wait upon the Lord who beat them and abused them and bruised their faces and shed much of the blood of two of them Che-shire 17. day of the 3d. Moneth 1660. Friends being at a Meeting at Northwich there came one John Cumberbatch of Nantwich with ●any others of the new raised Militia and haled out three of our friends and carried them before the Commissioners and keeps one a Prisoners and shewed much abuse to friends York-shire 12. day of the 3d. Moneth 1660. Friends going to a Meeting at or near Bellerbe the Militia Souldiers beat them and broke their Meeting and violently abused them and struck them with their naked Swords and would not suffer them to meet and this they did in the Name of the Higher Powers Cambridge 8. of the 3d. Moneth called May 1660. At a Meeting of Friends in Wesbidge Thomas Lecock had his head broke that the blood ran down and was knockt down also another man was feld down with stones also a maid was shot in the neck with a Pistol which did receive much harm and one William Allen was pluckt out of the Meeting and when they had got him out they cryed fall on and few there was of our Friends that passed away without receiving much hurt and it was judged by friends that a load of stones and dirt were thrown into the Meeting room at Friends At a Meeting of Friends in Cambridge on the twentieth day of the 3d. Moneth 1660. there came a great company of Scholars and
other rude people to the meeting and did exceedingly abuse Friends by dragging them out of the Meeting and kicking them and throwing them against the ground both old and young men and women and tore one Friends hair off his head and abused others so that it is a shame to relate Gloucester-shire 25 of the 3d. Moneth 1660. Two Friends being in a house reading in the Bible there came in some Souldiers and fetcht them before the Captain who askt them several questions to ensnare them about the King and would have forced them to drink the Kings health and when he saw they would not be subject to his will he began to rage and enquired for the stocks and then he called for a halter and put it about one of the Friends neck and so they put it over an iron hook and strained it as if they would have immediately taken away his life and then he committed them into the hands of the Constable and about two hours after they were brought before him again and he asked them about the King again and being not answered according to his will he was much enraged against them and struck them several times on their bare heads with his Pistol and then after much threatning he let them go And the same Captain Abbington came that day to Nailsworth where Friends Meeting was and got Bear and would have had one Friend to drink the Kings health but he refused and said if the King were there himself he did believe that the King would not require it of him then one of the Souldiers presented a Pistol towards him and threatned to shoot and struck fire and the same Souldiers beat and abused other friends at that time and one of the Souldiers fell upon one friend and drew his sword and threatned to run him through and afterwards put a rope about his neck as if that they would have hanged him At another meeting of Friends on the first day of the 4th moneth 1660. the same Souldiers with a drum beating came violently into the meeting place with their swords drawn and Guns and other weapons and one of the Souldiers with a naked sword in his hand puld down the friend that was a declaring and forced him out of the room and took away him and most of the men that were there as Prisoners and the Mayor of Gloucester committed two of them to prison where they yet remain On the third day of the fourth Month Friends being peacably met together to wait upon the Lord at Chillingham there came a Souldier under Captain How and said he had Orders to Break up the meeting and hailed one out and because he could not break up the meeting himself he said he would fetch more Souldiers who when they came said they had Orders to break up such meetings then the Friends asked them to shew their Orders but one replyed his sword was his Order and asked whether they would have it and so fell upon them and haled them forth violently out of the meeting and one of the Souldiers drew his sword at a Friend and said he would run him thorow Cambridge upon the eight of the second Month called April 1660. The Scholers with other rude People came into our meeting place where we were met to worship God did fall violently upon us beating us until they drew the blood of many pulling us out by the hair of the head having no regard to old or young men nor women with child but tearing their cloaths casting them into the nasty and loathsome Channels in the streets and those things they continued to us as a practice in our meetings upon the thirteenth of the third Month called May in the like manner they came into our meeting and violently broke the Locks and boults with great hammers shamefully abusing many and no Magistrate appearing to suppress these things but Alderman Blakely whom they also abused in the like manner throwing him in the Channel Again upon the twenty seventh of the same Month the Scholers joyned themselves together in a great number falling upon us with sticks and struck Friends on the heads faces and hands to the hurting of many a Justice of peace being in the room charged them in the Kings Name several times to be quiet and to keep the peace but they not regarding that Authority proceeded in violence and got a Smiths great hammer and broke open four doors and broke a wooden window and took pieces of the boards and beat us with them and drew us out into the streets and there knocked several of us down shedding the blood of twenty four persons that the blood lay upon the stones in the street in the sight of the People and thus having broke down all the seats windows and stairs that the people could not get up into their lodging chambers and having pulled us out into the streets some they held untill others put dirt into their mouths at the same time also they stabbed two women in the street as it is judged with penknives the one being an Aldermans Wife in the Town the other a widow woman And in the like manner every first day of the week do they continue abusing of us more or lesse And the Mayor of the Town who should discourage and punish these evil doers doth countenance and incourage them in it setting his Officers to stop us from our meeting saying we shall have no more meetings and hath given order unto his Officers to hinder us the next first day These are but a ●aint of things to represent the whole Witnesses hereof Henery Forster William Allen John Smith John Webb Samuel Nottingham Mathew Blakely Edward Salmon John Moone Eusebius Read Thomas Golden John Peace Thomas Read Thomas Hawkes George Nash Philip Williamson Clement Crabb John Harte Ruben Stevens Jeremiah Rose Richard Steaton Edward Wright Samuel Cater Robert Letchworth Gregory Tingy James Blakely Alderman John Cranwell John Parnell Bark-shire the twenty seventh of the third Month called May 1660. Friends being peacably met together at Kingstone-lye in that County there came to the meeting place many rude people four of whom went into the meeting with swords drawn to break up the meeting and one friend desiring to know their Order for so doing their answer was their swords was their order and so they violently abused Friends as followeth Richard Greenway was dragged by the hair of the head out of the meeting and thrown into a standing poole of stinking water and mud Richard Ballers was wounded with a sword John Clerk was pricked with a sword Edward Ballard was pricked with sword Robert Crook had his head br●ke and was thrust into a pond and Edward Walte● had his head broke Barth Mayling and Thomas Coeburn were both thrown into a pond and beat Robert Samson was beaten Adam Lawrence thrust into a pond and beat Andrew Pearson thrown into a pond head-long these were all dragged to the pond by the hair of the head
and many others were abused York-shire the thirteenth of the third Month called May 1660. Friends being met together at Bellerby in the County aforesaid in the worship and service of God there came to the door divers armed men crying where be these rogues we have order to break up your meeting some of them saying we will cut you as small as bread whereupon a Friend went to the door to know the real cause of these so coming and whether they had any order to hinder our peaceable meeting so speaking in meekness to them telling them our meeting was in the fear of the Lord without a thought of harm to any Creature and desiring to see their order for so doing one of them drew his sword and said that was his order and with it struck him that spoke to him upon which all the rest fell upon friends beating and cutting them and pulling them out of the meeting shedding the blood of many and brusing many in a most uncivil and cruel manner striking down many to the ground with that violence that their sences were taken away some lying upon the ground for dead in which act of cruelty they cryed they were for the King and pleaded his Authority for it and so do abuse his Name and Authority Laws and subjects in which cruelty about forty men of honest and good repute was cut with swords in their heads and bodies and bruised and maimed upon which several are lame and some of them so wounded that it may be their death the particular wounds in head body and arms we shall forbear to mention particularly but the cruelty of it was such that there was no regard unto any man of account office or otherwise which thing being considered in it cruelty might break the heart of him that pitties the people or would preserv● the Nation in peace besides several women about ten or twelve were every on● of them sore abused with swords and staves and some of them drawn through the water which is not onely suffering unto them but is a great reproach and dishonour unto the supreme authority and goverment in this Nation which if it continue will produce very bad effects Some of the Names of those that did appear with swords and staves in this cruel persecution are as followeth Christopher Haw Christopher Dixon Christopher Collison William Imson Leonard Wright Mar. Jaques Francis Burg Christopher Burrell Henry Wright John Foster Robert Wray Christopher Dawson Henry Fawcet Christopher Kerby John Wright Mathew Ellerton Westminster On the twelf day of this Month called June we being meet in the new Pallace-yard in the fear of the Lord according to our accustomed manner we were again abused by the Lacquies and rude people and pursued as far as Whithall and many friends had their blood drawn in a cruel manner and after the meeting was ended the prophane People entred into the meeting house and abused the people that dwelt there in so much that we were forced to entreat some Officers of the Army whom we knew to clear the house who with some difficulty did it our oppressions are great and hard to be uttered and Numbered Therefore O King in the fear of the Lord lay them to heart and let them be removed that the Land may no longer mourn for the testimony of Jesus and exercise of a good conscience At Steventon in Bark-shire The seventh day of the eight Month. 1660. many of the people of God coming together to worship God at Steventon in Bark shire the Constable with many more being armed with halberts prongs pikes-staves and other weapons came to the house and pulled Friends out in a horrible brutish manner tore their cloaths from their backs and threw about six of them into the water and took one man and trode upon him so long till the blood came from his mouth and till some of the wicked brutish people cryed out take heed you do not stifle him and some near 60. years of age were so served and then they drove us along in the dirt dashing up the dirt upon us and Friends demanding what warrant they had for their so doing they said they had Order but shewed not any and though we told them we had the word of the King for our quiet meetings and General Moncks Order but they regarded it not Norfolk At a meeting in Fowlsham the Constable charged several of the Town to aid him in the Kings Name and hailed Friends out of the meeting beating some of them himself and others throwing them down in the mire rending their cloaths and caried away above one half of one mans cloak and when he had got the rude Multitude together he left Friends in their hands who beat them and threw stones and mire upon them John Hilton York-shire the seventh day of the ninth Month 1660. Upon the twenty fourth day of the eight month in the year one thousand six hundred and sixty Christopher Taylor and Richard Scostrop with many other Friends of the truth being met together in peace without harm to any to wait upon the Lord being in a piece of Ground belonging unto William Cave in the Town of Bramhup Priest Crossland called Minister of that Town and Edward Wadington who called himself high Constable came in amongst us in much hatred emnity having gathered a Multitude of the rude people and baser sort of together and when the said Richard Scostrop and Christopher Tailor being moved of the Lord did instruct Friends and people in the way of the Lord the said Priest Crossland and Edward Wadington was the first that layd violent hands on them and hailed them away charging the rude people who were found in swearing lying and cursing to assist them to which they were ready like their Priest showing forth the fruits of his teaching hailing and pushing them as if they had been theeves that Christopher Tailor was moved to say they were like to murther him and Richard Scostrop was bloody with their tearing of him not suffering them to speak any words of exhorta●ion to the people But Priest Crossland said they had an order from the King not to suffer us to meet or speak together but we supposing it was not so the Kings word being that none should trouble or molest us for our Religion or opinion while we lived peacably in the Nation we demanded to see his warrant which he denyed and the rude people pulled Richard Scostrop as they were comanded by their Priest up from his knees being calling upon the Name of the Lord in prayer with Friends now let all who have any soberness or understanding consider if this Priest who is called a Minister of Christ abides in his Doctrine or if he be come to the Law and the Prophets who saith do unto all men as you would they should do unto you or did he so unto us and he and the rest dragged us out of their Town and after they had like Wolves amongst sheep
testifie who have been eye-witnesses and sufferers by him and his Clerk and others of the Town of Wetherfield Essex At a Meeting in Thaxted in Essex the People of God being met peaceably together to wait upon the Lord a great company of rude people of the Town gathered otgether about the house swearing and cursing what they would do to the Quakers as they called them and the place of their meeting being neer the high way they cast in dirt and stones to the great annoyances of the peaceable people that were then waiting upon the Lord and they were much abused by stones and abundance of dirt cast upon them which the rude people took out of the open street and there came a drunkard swearing and raging like unto a mad man and he and the rude people broke into the house and laid violent hands upon many of the peaceable people and endeavoured to pull him down that was speaking to the people in the fear of God And for some hours in this manner they abused sober people in their own house that were met together to wait upon the Lord and to worship him in spirit and when some went to some of the Magistrates in the Town to acquaint them with this abuse desiring them to keep the peace they made light of the matter and would not appease the rude Multitude nor preserve the sober people in their just right and liberties for it was said that one of the Magistrates should speak to the drunken fellow aforesaid to come up into our meeting and bad him make sport and so great was the abuse that the sober People was forced to remove their meeting to another place whither the rude people also followed them and did cast dirt and stones at them Some more of the cruel sufferings of the people of God called Quakers related which hath been acted in the Town of Cambridge by the rude Scholars Souldiers and Towns people Cambridge UPon the thirteenth day of the third Month following called May the Scholers and rude Multitude came and brake open several doors and burst the locks and bolts with a great hammer and when we passed out from our meeting we were most shamefully abused by the Scholars and rude Multitude several hundreds standing in the streets some beating of us and some rejoycing to see us beaten Upon the twentieth day of the same Month the Scholers and Souldiers and the rude Multitude came in with one of the chief Constables which said that the Mayor had a letter from Ja. Tompson of Trumpington called a Justice which did inform the Mayor that several of us had arms whereupon we desired that we might be searched they searching some few of us finding none the rude Multitude fell violently upon us and drew some of us out by the hair and pulled and haled all the rest out and kickt William Allen who was moved to declare the truth to the people in the Power of the Lord being so grosly abused that he was very unable to go abroad for several days After that we was parted from the meeting-house they came with hammers and what pieces of wood they could get and fell to work on their Sabbath day and they did break and batter the house within and without that it is judged by their own Generation that twenty pounds will scarce make it as it was Sutton Henry Foster was pulled out of the meeting house and had before the Mayor and Aldermen where he was searched for Arms but found none and discharged to come any more to his own hired house upon a first day Upon the second of the fifth Month 1660. Friends being peaceably met together several of the Scholars and others with them came with a Smiths great hammer and other things and broke up the house although two doors was open into the same and with the boards and shivers of the house armed themselves with which they knockt down many in the house and in the street shedding the blood that day of near thirty and bruising the flesh of nere an hundred in a very lamentable manner some of whom were dangerously wounded Also the eight of the fifth Month the Scholers assaulted the meeting again and tore friends out in an exceeding uncivil manner And on the 15th day they broke up Friends meeting again and near pulled down the house and with the ruins of the same wounded several Friends And besides the Scholers and others that joyn with them do daily tear friends cloathes as they passe in the Streets and nip and abuse their flesh and pull them by the hair and stone buffet and knock Friends down when they have pulled them out of the meeting and tread them in the channels that had not the Lord wonderfully preserved them many Friends had been slain ere now The Names of part of twenty four that had their blood shed by the Scholers and others in Cambridge besides many that had their cloaths rent and knockt down into the Channels and kickt and trod upon and one was kept in the mud till he was almost smothered and others pinched and pulled by the nose and some stabbed John Smith John Webb Ann Norris William Allen John Ware Thomazin Blackly Margret Mathews Robert Letchworth William Page George Nath John Tournel Chatris Edward Matthew Blackly John Harvy Edward Salmon Phillip Williamson William Wells Thomas Gray Phillip Viping James Viping Cheshire Friends being met together in the fear of the Lord at one Lawrence Fletcher his house there came some Souldiers and broke up the meeting and they fell on the Friends and haled them forth and some they threw forth and down tearing others by the hair of the head till they had all forth and this they did without shewing any order but being asked for their order they said they had left it at the Town Glamorgan-shire In the eight Month called October 1660. Friends being peaceably met together several Souldiers with their Muskets swords lighted matches in a brutish manner took all the men Friends out of their Meeting being twenty and had them to the Castle and set them in the Dungeon till the next day and then the oath of Allegiance was proffered to them because they could not break Christs comand who saith swear not at all they were ordered to be kept prisoners where they yet remain this tenth Month 1660. From Cirencester in Glocester-shire Wee whose names are here under written on the eighteenth day of the ninth Month were met peaceably together in the fear of the Lord there ●●me in amongst us the two high Constables so called with other Offices and men of our Town that were gathered together charging us in the Kings Name to go along with them answer was made that we were met peacably together in the fear of the Lord and if they had any thing to lay to our charge we were there ready to make answer but that would not satisfie them and one of them said he had a
warrant from the Lord Harbert to take us we requiring the warrent to be shewed but could not see it they gave order first to hale our women and children forth and then said they would send for pistols and when they had discharged three or four amongst us we would be willing to go forth but we were not willing to break our meeting so they began to hail and teare and push us forth adoors and ran against us as wee passed along the streets we acquainted them that the King had promised us our liberty in worship one of the Constables made answer that the King had promised no such thing so they brought us to prison and thrust us in and gave the Jaylor orders to keep us there untill the Comissioners came to Town and at present there we remain prisoners for the truths sake Thomas Onyon Robert Newcome Walter Howlings John Roberts Philip Gray Richard Townsend Thomas Barnfield John Silvester Thomas Elridge William Hinton Richard Bartlot John Ovendell Henry Stacy Richard Bowly Thomas Knight John Clark Thomas Bowly John Cripes Jacob Howlings Roger Sparks William England Durham Darlington the third of the tenth Month 1660. Where we the people of God called Quakers had a meeting peaceably and waiting upon the Lord in the aforesaid Town the Captain sent some Souldiers and violently broke up our meeting and carried away forty or more of us to the Castle of Durham and as we were passing along we met the Captain and the Justice who threatened us much in high expressions and five of us they single out and said we should go to prison if we did not give bond for our good behaviour and four of them is sent to Durham Castle for no other cause but for meeting together to worship God in spirit according to Christs Doctrine which now is come to be fulfilled and witnessed Portsmouth the second of the tenth Month 1660 As the people of the Lord were met together to worship God in the spirit peaceably in the said Town Captain Sprag sent several files of armed men with firelocks and violently haled out of our meeting eighteen men and women and punched them dragged them along shut the Gates men and wives were turned from their habitations and children and families and callings and are not permitted to come in again though some came in again yet were turned out of the Town again from their Families and imployments some desiring to have their Instruments to labor withal was not permitted besides were kept in a house where Friends met by a guard nineteen daies denyed to see their wifes Families Children and gave commandment no victualls should be brought to them and a Officer said if they turnd us out of the Town and set Souldiers to plunder our houses they served us well enough though we never acted any thing against this Goverment Ireland FOr speaking the truth to people in Steeple-houses Markets and other place● have sufferred in the Nation of Ireland and for other causes herein exprest have been fined whipt Stockt Imprisoned and suffered loss of their goods 94 persons For meeting together in the fear of the Lord in their own houses according to the practice of the Apostels and the true Churches in the Scriptures mentioned have been Imprisoned c. nineteen persons For speaking the truth to the people in Steeple-houses and Markets and other places have been Whipt and Imprisoned and some stockt and shamefully beaten and abused thirty four persons For not swearing as Christ commands they should not swear two persons had goods taken from them worth eight pounds ten shillings and one had taken from him seventy barrels of Salt For not paying Tythes for conscience sake that bears Testimony to the everlasting Priest-hood that ends the first that takes tythes eight persons for two pounds sixteen shillings four pence demanded for Tythes have had taken from them goods worth thirty four pounds ten shillings Stopt as they were passing the streets and high ways about their occasions and Imprisoned twelve Persons For receiving Friends and for visiting Friends in Prison one was Imprisoned and another fined five pounds Sufferers for other causes for the truths sake eleven Persons An Account of the sufferings of Friends in Scotland where there hath suffered for the causes hereafter exprest in all ninety one Persons SCOTLAND For denying the Priest practices have been Excommunicated forty five Persons For meeting together in the fear of the Lord have been stoned and beaten eleven persons For speaking the truth to people in Steeple-houses and Markets and asking Priests questions have been Imprisoned and some stockt and whipt and some banished in all fifteen Persons There was likewise Imprisoned and otherwise abused and some banished and no cause why shewed in all eighteen persons A Declaration of some Part of the Sufferings of the People of God in scorn called Quakers from the Professors in New-England onely for the exercise of their Consciences to the Lord and obeying and confessing to the Truth as in his light he had discovered it to them TWo honest and innocent women stripped stark naked and searched after such an inhumane manner as modesty will not permit particularly to mention Twelve strangers in that Country but freeborn of this Nation received twenty three whippings the most of them being with a whip of three cords with knots at the ends and laid on with as much strength as they could be by the arme of their executioner the stripes amounting to three hundred and seventy Eighteen Inhabitants of the Country being freeborn English received twenty three whippings the stripes amounting to two hundred and fifty Sixty four Imprisonments of the Lords people for their obedience unto his will amounting to five hundred and nineteen weeks much of it being very cold weather and the Inhabitants kept in Prison in harvest time which was very much to their loss besides many more Imprisoned of which time we cannot give a just account Two beaten with pitcht roops the blows amounting to an hundred thirty nine by which one of them was brought near unto death much of his body being beat like unto a Jelly and one of their own Doctors a member of their Church who saw him said it would be a miracle if ever he recovered he expecting the flesh should rot off the Bones who afterwards was banished upon pain of death there are many witnesses of this there Also an Innocent man an Inhabitant of Boston they banished from his Wife and Children and put to seek a habitation in the Winter and in case he returned again he was to be kept Prisoner during his life and for returning again he was put in Prison and hath been now a Prisoner above a year Twenty five Banishments upon the penalties of being whipt or having their Ears cut or branded in the hand if they returned Fines laid upon the Inhabitants for meeting together and edifying one another as the Saints ever did and for refusing to swear it
thing was revealed to him that sat by the first was to hold his peace and this was the order in the Church of God 2. Cor. 1● And now in the Churches so calld that are established since the Apostles daies if one that sits by something be reveled to him from the Lord to speak it forth it is called disturbance and he is haled out and persecuted and if he bid people Repent in the Markets and streets that swears and curses and lyes and ●re drunkerds they fall upon him with fists and staves and hales him before Magistrates and casts him into Prison as a peace-breaker whereby truth hath not had so m●●● liberty as Balad-singers and singing ballads and jest Books in streets and if one aske a question in the Synagogue being not satisfied what another delivers or speaks or disputes upon by them that be in the Synagogue they are haled out and cast into prison in steed of giving them satisfaction or convincing the gain-sayers if they were such that did question which shews a degeneration amongst the Christians from the Apostles practice and command and life And armed and disguised men have come into our meetings with naked swords falling upon Innocent harmless naked people in our meetings and men carried out in the night and in winter season and time of the snow and there bound and laid on hills And many cast into nasty holes and deep dungeons not suffered straw though the place was so bad that they stood almost over shoes in water and trampled in mud and excrements and not suffered to have a little fire to take away the smels and cruel Jaylors have thrown chamber potts full of excrements on our heads and thus we have suffered by the professors of Christs words who have no such example in the Scripture for these their practices which shews they are those that have the form of Godliness but denyes the Power and from such the Apostle bids turn away And further sixty of our Friends have been sued up to appeare at London by Priests and others this last term And you cannot say our meetings are tumultuous for they are such people as the Priests and Teachers of the world do teach and be under their nature that comes with clubs staves stones dirt shoutings making a noise scoffs mocks reproches slanders which is a dishonour to the Teachers and not a grace to the Governors and Rulers and they are 〈…〉 makes tumults against whom we never lifted up a hand but with members 〈…〉 patiently suffered except it hath been to let you know that such dishonour the very profession and Name of Christ and Government and are a grief to the Rig●●●us and causes the way of Truth to be evil spoken of and all that we desire is that they that profess themselves to be Teachers teach their people the way of holiness and they that are Magistrates do bring them into the practice of civility and that them that fear the Lord may live peaceably that is our prayers and that you may grace your Government and your Teachers may do that that their fruits may be so seen that others may glorifie God and that they might be followers of them as they are followers of Christ Kent Edward Noak●s of Word in East Kent farming Land at the rate of eighty pounds the year for one years Tythes clamed which was but twenty pounds had taken from him goods to the value of one hundred pounds and was kept two years and a half in prison called the Kings Bench besides Shropshire We being peaceably met together in Shrowsbury this tenth Month 1660. There came some Souldiers and broke up the meeting and had us to prison because we could not for conscience sake take the Oath of Allegiance being twenty one persons Richard Moore John Shield Oliver Atherton Thomas Jackson Richard Ward Edward Jefferis John Jefferis 〈◊〉 Trotte 〈◊〉 Ienks Abraham Poyner Iames Farmer Constantine Overton Iohn Payne Iohn Millington Owen Roberts Thomas Studly Ralph Sharply Samuel Averal Humphry Overton Francis VVinsor Henry Rawson POSTSCRIPT A further Account being sent up of more that are Imprisoned since the other in this Book were printed which being added to the former there is at present in prison of our Friends sufferers for conscience sake three hundred and seventeen persons THE END