jg&^i&r o ,s<)(> )] Glass Book . M 9U RJb_ / ■->■: SHEKOMEKO OR, THE MORAVIANS IN DUTCHESS COUNTY. BY REV. SHELDON DAVIS. A. H. POUGHKEEPSIE: 06BORNE & XILLEY, POINTER*. 1858. ^ it PREFACE. The compilation of the following pages is a tribute of affection- ate regard and admiration for the singular Christian faithfulness and zeal, as well as general soundness in gospel doctrine, by which the Moravians have been distinguished. Nor has the striking fact been without its special interest, thai from the beginning of their very ex- traordinary and most successful missionary movements, they have ever been regarded with favor by the authorities of the Church of England, as an ancient Protestant Episcopal Church, deriving its Apostolic authority at all times entirely independent of Rome, from the Primitive times. The attention of the writer was first called to these interesting memorials in the discharge of his duties as Mis- sionary of Dutchess County. And the labor of collecting them has been more than rewarded, in the contemplation of such noble examples of Christian devotion and Christian Faith, and the manifest evi- dence of the Pivine blessing. The principal books consulted have been: — G. H. Loskiel's History of the United Brethren, Holmes' " " " Crantz's " " " Life of Count Zinzendorff, by Spangenberg, Heckewelder's Narrative, Southey's Life of Wesley, And the Documentary History of New York, Volume 3 Pleasant Valley, May 50th, 1858. SHEKOMEKO The memory of the wise and good, of the virtuous and just, of those who unrewarded in this life, have been willing to labor and suffer for the benefit of their fellow-men, should ever be held in veneration, and should ever be cherished as the most valuable her- itage to those who may afterwards profit by their example, or reap the fruits of their toil. All other worldly possessions are compari- tivcly worthless. They decay and vanish, and ultimately come to nought, but The sweet remembrance of the just Shall flourish when they sleep in dust. It is with reference to such sentiments as these that we propose to call attention to, and to gather together for preservation, the scattered memorials of the ancient Moravian mission at Shekomeko, the first successful Moravian mission to the heathen in North Amer- ica, and among the first efforts of a body of men, who, above all others, have distinguished themselves for their missionary zeal, and for the extraordinary success of their missionary labors, We would not willingly forget — we would rather embalm in our memories for perpetual preservation, the whole record of this worthy and noble people. But we feel especially bound as far as we are able, to rescue from oblivion, such notices of their noble and self- denying deeds as form a part of the history of our own imme- diate vicinity; and to appropriate as peculiarly our own, both as re- spects duty and privilege ; the memory of good examples, and gen- erous conduct, and self-denying devotion to the good of others, on the part of those to whom we have succeeded; and with whose names, in the order of time, on the ever unfolding scroll of history, whether written or unwritten; doubtless written in the annals of Him who holds our times in his hand, our names shall also be inscribed. 6 SHEKOMEKO. Before entering upon the more particular history of the mission at Shekomeko, we will briefly glance at the previous history of this very remarkable people. The Moravians claim, and that claim has never by intelligent historians been disputed, to have descended from on*' ui' the ear- liest churches founded by the Apostle St. Paul, in Ulyrieum, (Rom. 15: 19,) and by the Apostle Titus in Dalmatia, (2 Tim. 4: 10,) viz : The Sclavonian branch of the Greek or Eastern Church. Christianity was introduced into Bohemia and Moravia by two Greek Ecclesiastics, Cyrillus and Methodius, in the ninth century About this time occurred tin- great schism between the Eastern and Western churches, which has continued to the present day, and which is now r< ! on the one hand by the Greek Church of Constantinople and Russia, and their dependencies, now number- ing some 60 or 70 millions of souls; and on the other hand by the Church of Rome, the Church of England, the Moravian and other Protestant chun The Bohemian and Moravian Churches were thus unfortunately placed between two powerful antagonistic bodies, both of whom, but especially the Church of Rome, never scrupled to use the civil sword with all its | nforce submission to il - and to compel obedience to the doctrines and practices which i: joined. The controversy arose in the first place from the infamous attempt of the Church Rom rnChurch by its own authority, an alteratioi symbol of Christendom, the Nict no oi • i d, and thus to pa^ 6ubso. which has indelibly Btamped upon the forehead of the Papacy, the mark of Anti-Christ The Bohemians and Moravians adhei 1 t" tl tent faith; and hence a long Beriea of I - 'ill upon them, in order t<> Bubject them, if po • the Papal Set .- ions they endi immon w ith the Wal I Pranoe and I with whom, ' pari the) Bymbolized in doo trine, and for a considerabl apparently identi- fied, [ndeed Peter Waldo, thi F the Walden sian churches, is Baid to have finally Bet tied and found :• grave in Bohemia, From this period to the rise of John Wickliffe, .- Oxford, in England, in th< irl of the i 1th Century, and J hn Ha and Jerome oi I ' is the latter pari of tin- Century, the Boh< mians, Moravians and Waldi .itiuued to SHEKOMEKO. suffer similar persecutions, until the beginning of the Reformation; when, for the most part, they became absorbed in that general movement; and though the Moravians in particular, retained their ancient regimen, still they are little known in the history of subse- quent times, except under the general name of Protestants; a term which embraces everything hostile, and often nothing but what is hostile, to the Church of Rome. As will appear in the sequel, the Moravian Church was founded not so much on protest against Rome, as on the basis of the original Christian faith. With reference to John Huss, who is particularly claimed by the Moravians, as a representative of their Church, but who was cruelly martyred by the Papists in 1415, and who, among his last words, while burning at the stake, as if in prophetic foresight of the dawning Reformation, exclaimed to his tormentors, "A hundred years hence, and you shall answer for this before God and me." — We cannot forbear to present the testimony of the principal nobili- ty of Bohemia to the Romish Council of Constance in that year. — " We know not for what purpose you have condemned John Huss, Bachelor in Divinity, and preacher of the gospel. You have put him to a cruel and ignominious death, though convicted of no here- sy. We protest with the heart, as well as with the lips, that he was honest, just and orthodox ; that for many years he had his conver- sation among us with godly and blameless manners; that during these 'many years he explained to us the gospel, and the books of the Old and New Testament, according to the exposition of the doctors approved by the Church ; and that he has left behind him writings, in which he denounces all heresy. He taught us to de- test everything heretical. He exhorted us to the practice of peace and charity, and his life exhibited a distinguished example of these virtues." The name of Unitas Fratrum, or United Brethren, was the re- sult of a formal union in 1457-'60, between the Moravians, Bohe- mians, and Waldenses,all of whom, afterwards, so far as they were dis- tinctively known, bore the title of United Brethren, commonly called Moravians. About this time lived Gregory, afterwards styled the Patriarch of the Brethren, and synods were frequently held for the promotion of their common interests. "A most important subject of their deliberations," says one of their historians, "both at their synods, and at other times was how to maintain a regular succession of their ministers, when those who now exercised the ministry should SnEKOMEKO. be removed by death or other causes." Suitable measures were therefore taken for this purpose, which have be< o constantly and regularly sustained up to the present day. The Moravians, like all the old Eastern Churches, claim to have practically, as well as theoretically maintained an uninterrupted BOC hops from the Apostolic times. And, notwithstanding all the fiery trials and persecutions through which they hav. they arc well able to establish that claim to the satis! • »nable and intelligent men It was made a special subject of investigation in the early part of the last century, by the very learned and celebra- ted Archbishop Potter, whose del n « illll >' endorsed by Dr. Powden, and the great mass of learned men in the Church whose attention has been called to this sub The Moravians were the first Christii : the newly invent, -1 art of print! H°lj Scriptures, in a livii neral distributi ; the people. The first edition wi - \ ice about I rated version of the Bible in any European languagi Before the coram Reformation by Lu- ther in 1517, 1 ie,J tlirc0 editions i Scriptures. After this, h vio " In the midsl of tl hopii rati, a wno wa * consecral ' who tedapplic „ Burope,andpi ticularly both ' ^er- whiol be belonged. N A ■ laud and P of the I hurchol I i SHEKOMEKO. This brings us down to nearly the period, when under the direction of Christian David and Count Zinzendorff, who had just established themselves in Herrnhut, in Germany ; the Moravians commenced their very remarkable and successful labors among the heathen, and found their way for this purpose first to Greenland, in 1733 ; a mis- sion which has been singularly prosperous, and very noted up to the present day ; then to the Creek and Cherokee Indians in Georgia, under the pat.onage, and with the aid of the distinguished George Whitfield and John Wesley, in 1735 ; and then after the establish- ment of their colony at Bethlehem, their headquarters in this coun- try, to these shores, and to the Mohican and Wampano Indians at Shekomeko and its vicinity. In the language of the late celebrated poet James Montgomery who was himself a Moravian, brought up an orphan among the Mo- ravians, the son of Moravian parents, who died on the Missionary field in the West Indies, and the largest and most liberal support- er of the Moravian missions, Twaa thus through centuries she rose and fell, At length victorious seemed the gates of hell: But founded on a rock which cannot move — Th' eternal rock of the Redeemer's love — That church which Satan's legions thought destroyed. Her name extinct, her place forever void, Alive once more, respired her native air, But found no freedom for the voice of prayer. Then Christian David, strengthened from above ; Wise as the serpent, harmless as the dove : Bold as a lion on his Master's part, In zeal a seraph, and a child in heart, Plucked from the gripe of antiquated laws, (Even as a mother from the felon jaws Of a lean wolf that hears her babe away, With courage beyond nature rends the prey.) The little remnant of that ancient race. Far in Lnsatian wilds they found a place ; There — where the sparrow builds her busy nest. And the clime changing swallow loves to rest, Thine altar God of Hosts 1 there still appear The tribes to worship unassailed by fear; Not like their fathers vexed from age to age By blatant bigotry's insensate rage, Ahmad in every place, in every hour Awake, alert, and ramping to devour. No, peaceful as the spot where Jacob slept. And guard all night the journeying angels kept. Herrnhut yet stand-, amidst her .-heltered bowers; The Lord Lath set his watch upon her towers. Greenland. 10 SHEKOMEKO. At Herrnhut, in the province of Upper Lusatia in Germany, was established upon the estate of Count Zinzendorf, a German nobleman, by the emigrant Bohemians and Moravians, the Church, to which through long ages of persecution and suffering, their an- cestors in the faith, like themselves, had most rigidly and faithfully adhered. The point in their organization to which they attached the ut- most importance, was strict adherence to the moilel of the Primitive Church, both in doctrine and practice, as it had been re- tained by them, for the most part, in conformity to the Greek rit- ual, but ever in determined and uncompromising hostility to the corruptions of Rome, from their Sclavonian ancestors in the primi- tive times. The Moravians have always refused to be recognizee! as a Sect, and have in numerous instances protested against the use of that term, as descriptive of their history or character. And though Beveral individuals, have at different times, attained tu great distinc- tion among them, yet they have steadily declined cither to place themselves under the direction of any individual leader, or to be known or recognized as the followers or adh< rents of any one man. The term by which they designate themselves, and by which they prefer in he desi ■_ ■ : ( :if <•, a then* parr, to hn> derthei L work which he had begun am '■-to Lducctfl ible, into their i ; llfc > k ' ' (markable ,budbecomesonotorious through- out the country. . la thia extremity the name of John Rau should aedwnh honor, for his noble and disinterested protection and . the persecuted Moravian. B , his warn and steadfestfnend.- knd during all their subsequent troubl the faithful and un- tiring advocate of the de, ries; and until a: last, by an unjust and P e. Tnment, they were driven from the province, he still and persuaded other, to adhere, to thi Br. Bauch, by his meek and pe and cautious conduct, and his undaunt. ' »» enemies, and sowing the word of God in team, for a fmu- in g; • lined the ( of the Indian. B And fr.,,,1 the manifold dim h:ui and the 1., it 11 itww '"""" Uow-laboi at this period l Bethleh a and aid died up, and pn oft: oa,andwb grcv H I ■ new, and hall nUymau, baptised th* *» SHEKOMEKO. 17 veils who had accompanied theni from Shekuineko : tin- liist fruits ■•< perhaps the most remarkable Indian mission on record. * Tschoop was not anions them. From his lameness he had been unable to take the long journey. He was, however, baptized at Shekomeko on the loth of April following, receiving the christian name of Johu. The following is a portion of the letter dictated to the brethren on the occasion above referred to when his companions were baptized : "1 have been a poor, wild heathen, and torfortj years as ignorant as a dog. I was the greatest drunkard, and the most willing slave of the devil: and as I kn-.w nothing of our Saviour, I served vain idols, which I now wish to Bee destroyed with fire, of tins 1 have repented with man; tears. When 1 heard that Jesus was also the Saviour of the heathen, and that I ought to give him my heart, I felt a drawing within me towards him. But miy wife and children were my ene- mies ; and my greatest enemy was my wife's mother. She told me that I was worse than a dog, if 1 no mote believed in her idol. Bui my eyes being opened, I understood thai what she said was altogethet folly, for I knew thai she had received her idol from her ^rand-mo- ther. If is made of leather, and decorated with wampum, and she, being the oldest person in the house, made us worship it; which we have done, till our teacher came, and told us of the Lamb of God, who shed His blood, and died for us poor ignorant people. ■• Now i feel and believe, that our Saviour alone can help me, t>\ the power of Hia blood, and no other. I believe that he is my God and my Saviour, who died on the cross for me a sinner. I wish to be baptized, and long for ii most ardently. I am lame, and cannot travel in winter; but in April or May I will come to you. "1 am your poor wild •' Tschoop/' The wonderful change which had taken place in this wild Indian, and in the others who had been baptized, awakened the attention of the other Indians, and from twenty and thirty miles round, they con- stantly flocked to Shekomeko, to hear the new preacher, who spoke, to use their own language, " of a God who became a man, and had * These three Indian-; wereShabash baptized Abraham ; Seim, Isaac ; and Kiop, Jacob. IS SHEKOMEKO. loved the Indian* so much that he gave up his life to rescue them from the devil, and from the service of sin." In the summer of 171-2, the mission at Shekom. ko was visited by the Bishop Count Zinzeudorff, who was on fJ a accompanied by his beautiful and interesting da nigua. They crossed the country from Bethlehem in Pennsylvania 'to Esopus (now Kingston), and arrived at Shekomeko on the 27th of August, u aftet passing through,'" to use his own a, "dreadful wildernesses, woods and swamps, in which he and his companions Buffered great hard- ships." Br. Rauch received them into his hut with great joy, and the day following, lodged them in a col . irk Count Zinzen- dorff afterwards declared this cottage to have been the most agreeable dwelling he had ever inhabited. On the occasion of this visit six Indians were baptized by the missionary Ranch. A regular congre- gation was then formed, the first congregation of believing Indian* established in Xorth America, consisting often persons. September 4th, 1742, Count Zinzendorff took leave of this inter- .-ting mission, and was accompanied to Bethlehem by two Indian* as guides, who were there baptized by Gottlob Bu.-ttner, and called respectivelv I >avid and Joshua. Count Zinzendortl assisted in the ad- ministration. This was the first baptism of Indians at Bethlehem. October 1st, 1742, Gottlob Buettner and hi* wife rejoined the miss- ionary Rauch at Shekomeko, and devoted themselves with groat energy and success t-> the instruction of the Indian-, constantly r.-ading to them the Hob - i 1 explaining t" them the doctrines of the Word of < I December 6th, 17-12 was laid out a burying-ground for the use of the baptized, die same in which the missionary Buettner|was after- wards buried At the end of the year 1742, the Dumber of baptised Indians in Bhekomeki About this time arrived Martin Mack and his wife I n the mission. Br. Black how< took charge of the station at P gatgoch, (no* S | where the suooess of the M raviaui was even greater than a( Shekomeko, and where at int. u the] continued to labor for more Mian twenty years, A portion oi the tril.e i- -till remaining, and their history is full ofmelanoholj in by of an imperishable reoonl M.u. I. 18th, 1743. I il Communion was, after due pt ration, foi the firs) time, administered to the firstlings ol Indian nation- v Shekomeki It t^as preceded bys : . 1 followed SHEEOMEKO. 19 by the Pedilavium, or washing of one another's feet, both of which are established customs among the Moravians. The missionary writes : " While I live I shall never lose the impression this first communion with the Indians in North America made upon me." In July, 1743, the new chapel at Shekomeko was linished and con- secrated. The building was thirty feet long and twenty broad. It was entirely covered with smooth bark. It is represented to have been a very appropriate and commodious building, quite striking in its appearance, and of great convenience to the mission. It was con- stantly open on Sundays and on Festival occasions ; and the greatest interest was exhibited by thp Indians in the religious services which were regularly and constantly held in their new chapel. But troubles uow began again to thicken upon the missionaries and their new con- verts. " The white people who had been accustomed to make the dissolute lite ot' the Indians, but chiefly their love of ardent spirits, subservient to their advantage, were greatly enraged when they saw that the Indians began to turn from their evil doings, and to avoid all those sinful practices which had been so profitable to the traders. They therefore caught at every false rumor and evil imputation which wa3 put in circulation against the missionaries. They were publicly branded with the epithets of papists and traitors; and the public au- thorities, l.oth in New York and Connecticut, were called upon to interfere for the purpose of banishing them from the country. Three of them were taken up at Paehgatgoch, and after being dragged up and down the country for three days, they were, upon a hearing, hon- orably dismissed by the Governor of Connecticut ; yet their accusers insisted upon their being bound over in a penalty of one hundred pounds to keep the laws of the country, when they immediately retired to Shekomeko. whither they were followed by many of the Indians, whom they had instructed, and where many others con- stantly resorted to them to re ■ iv< their instructions. No charges could be mure preposterous and utterly without foun- dation, than tie the harmless Mora- v »»n8i who previous history as a people, consisted of little else than an account of tb< -., utions and Bufferings, which, on account of them, they had endured at the hand of the Church of Rome; and who had always made it a fixed principle of their policy, never to interfere with the polities of the countries where they Bojourned, but to labor simply fov the spiritual benefit i : their fellow-men ; even offering -though the •30 -HEKOMEKU sacrifice was not required — to sell themselves foe slaves id the West Indies, in order to gain an opportunity ofinstructing the poor negroes, and who were rewarded for such self-devotion, by almost unbounded success, iu a short period numbering their converts by thousands among that neglected and degraded race. Just previous to the departure of Count Zinzendorfl to Europe, in ihe beginning of the year 1748, he sent Br Shaw to Bhekomeko as ;i schoolmaster to the Indian children : and not long alter the Breth- ren Pyrleus, ami Senseman, and Frederic Post, (the last <>!' whom u.ii! married a baptized Indian woman) with their wives, joined the mission. At the no-.' of tie \ ear l 743, tie- congregation of baptized Indians in Shekomeko consisted ..t' sixty-three persons, exclusive of those be- longing to the neighboring station at Pachgatgoch, and a much greater number of constant and regular bearers. A hi.ut this time however commenced tin- difficulty the French and English Governments, with reference i- the Colonial boundaries, which a fe\» years afterwards, resulted in the bloody war hi whi(' the French, ••■ and malignant Jesuits. This state "i the public mind afforded an excellent oppoitunitj the ei fthemissio Shekomeko to give currei and injurious reports with reference i<> them. Thej were <•!. with being Papists J rite in disguise, who we nlj preps the oolonisui ; and the] ■Msjaei of having a r that pin;-. i • ■ report terrified the inhabitai ,k . that man] of them forsook their farmt Hatahl ■ ; • M r. J ■■ ■ n I Ma \ille. or Littk I ■ tries, that ii was bii dot] to inquire what wrl ot ;• >ple th« t,.i that the n parous tei • SHEKOMEKO. 21 them ; that for himself, however, he gave no credit to the lying re- ports which were circulated concerning them, and he was fully con- vinced that the mission at Shekomeko was indeed a work of God. because by the labors of the Brethren, the most savage heathen had been so evidently changed, that he and many other christians were put to shame by their godly walk and conversation. Buettner, the principal missionary, was at this time absent in Bethlehem. Imme- diately upon his return, the missionaries were summoned to L'ickipsi (Poughkeepsie) to exercise with the militia, which they refused on the ground that as ministers of the Gospel, they could not legally be required to bear anus. On June 24th. 1744, a Justice of the Peace arrived at Shekomeko from Pickipsi to examine into the whole affair. He admitted that the accusations made against the missionaries were entirely groundless. Hut he required them to take two oaths, as involving the matters concerning which they had been accused, and which had been the occasion of the interference of the Government : 1st. That King George being tlie lawful sovereigu of the kingdom, they would not in any way encourage the Pretender. 2d. That they rejected Transubstantiatiou. the worship of the Vir- gin Mary, Purgatory, .>y them, and to examine into the truth of these startling reports. Bnettner and Beneeman, from Shekomeko, and Shaw, from Bethlehem, went accordingly to New ^*"^k. and found, upon their arrival, thai th<- attention of the whole '.own was aroused concerning them. Mr. Justice Beekman, however. who bad before examined them in Eteinbeck, publicly took their part m New York, and affirmed that "the lt<""! done by them amongthe Indian- was undeniable/ 1 Hie commencement of these nrooeedii g« before (the Governo Sew York was at :i Council, held at the Council Chamber, in the • Sty of N<-\\ ^i ork, on the fifth of July, IT 14, at which his Bxcellencj communicated to the Board, thai he bad Bent letters to Col. Henry Heekinan, on.- of hi- Majesty's Justic* - of the Peace for Ihitchess Co. and Col. <»f the Militia for that county ; acquainting him with the information which be bad received concerning tl N ' mans, and requiring him to make tb ■ investigation. His Excellency also communicated t.. the Board, a letter from Col. Beekniui in the effect that then were four Moravian Priests and many Indians at Bchacomico, and that be bad mail.' s.-.-irdi for arms and ammunition, hut could find none, nor beat .'ran), But that be- fore the receipt order, the Sheriff, Justice of the • and eight otb mico, where they found all th»' Indian- at work on their plantations, who Beemed in a consternation at the approach of the Sheriff and hi- company, but received them •ivill- thej found no ammunition and as few arms as could rpected for such a Dumber of men. L'hut i>'.'\ denied that the] • •■1 t.i the crown, Baying that they therosi afrai't' them t" tak< the oath-, hut they refused, a- they alleged, through a scruple of And i ha' ih.' Justice then bound them over to answer what should be obj< i |., n tl of the mi 1 1 Shaw ind S< i ■■'•II • Council, tl ; and were made lh< ••ml and deliberate invei fipati..fi An.l at R Bubsequenl in< i ting of the < ouncil, it wa» ponclti SHEKOMEKO. 28 ded — "As to the Moravian Priests : The General Assembly of this Province having ordered in a Bill for the securing this his Majesty'* Government, the Council were of opinion to advise his Excellency to Order the Moravian Priests back to their homes, and required them to live there peaceably, and await the further orders of his Excellency.'' The prosecution of the Moravians thus far was under the Provin- cial law against the Jesuits, passed July 31st, 1700. The Bill above referred to, passed the Colonial Assembly, Sept. 21st, 1744. It. ex- pired by its own limitation Sept. 21st, 1745. Only the Title is pub- lished in any copy of the Colonial Laws, to which the writer has been able, as yet, to gain access. But that it was to the last degree unjust and persecuting, evidently appears from all the documentary evidence connected with it. indeed the earnest Protest of Count Zinzendorfi, and other leading Moravians, together with the demand of the Board of Trade for an explanation, induced the Governor and Council to publish officially, the reasons which they supposed had influenced the Assembly in the passage of the law — a document which for its miscon- ceptions of the real character of the zealous and good men against whom it was aimed, and the odious imputations which it casts upon them, is seldom equalled.* It is some palliation, perhaps, of these per securing measures, that the public mind was exceedingly sensitive, and that the whole country was filled with rumors to the prejudice of the harmless Moravians. But, on the other hand, it is equally true, that they had fully proved themselves clear of every charge that had been preferred against them, and finally secured a full vindication by the highest authority of the British Government ; for by an Act of the British Parliament, passed May 12th, 1749 : 1 . "The Unitas Fratrum were acknowledged as an ancient Protes- tant Episcopal Chnrch. 2. Those of its members who scrupled to take an oath were ex- empted from it, on making a declaration in the presence of Al- mighty God, as witness of the truth. 3. They were exempted from acting as jurymen. 4. They were entirely exempted from military duty under rea- sonable conditions." Such was the ultimate result of the remonstrances of the Moravian." to the British and colonial governments ; a result, however, so tard\ as that, though it aided their subsequent missionary efforts, it was ye\ "•Doc. Hist, of N". York, Vol. Ill, Page 1032 U SHEKOMEKO nf" little or Hi) service t«> the poor Christian [ndians and their sett denying teaehera at Bhekomeko. I i. 9th, 17 II, Baettner was again required to appear at Pic kipsi, lint was again h rably dismissed. Bo that, notwithstanding all the trouble and vexation to which they had been subjected, they were found to 1"- entirely innocent, and had established the convic- tion "m the mind- of th< •_.. al mass of the people, of their entire sincerity, and of the • I arising from their labours Their adversaries were therefore foiled in this direction. But they had adopted other expedients, which were more successful for on the fifteenth D tnber, 1744, the Sheriff and three Jus tices of th« Peace arrived at Shekomeko, and in the name oi Governor and Council of New Fork, prohibited nil meetings of the Brethren, and commanded the missionaries to appear before the t'uiirt at Pickipsi, on the seventeenth Buettnerbeingill,thc othei missionaries alone appeared, when the Act before referred to, which had been pa 1 with Bpi irence to their ease, was read to them ; by which the ministers of the congregation of the Brethren, employed in teaching the [ndians, were expelled the country, under pretence of being in league with the French, and forbidden, nndei a heavy penalty, ever mor< to appear among the [ndians, without having first taken the oaths of allegianci Soon afterwards the station at SI was visited by the Moravian Bishop, \ <; with the view of devising means by which the missionaries might still carry on theii work. Bui all in vain After a staj of two weeks, be was obliged to leave the converted Indiana and their friends, still ex] oaed to all the evil influences by which thoj were surrounded. \ii'l not long niter," says the Moravian historian, " the white people came to a resolution to drive the believing Indians from Shekomeko, by main foro< , on pretence that the ground on whicl the town was buill belong) d to others The white people took ■ a of the land, and then appointed a watch to pr< venl all visits from ' thleln m Thus, l> such unworth) means, was summarily broken up and dispersed, the mosl promising, and the most important, n issioa t< the Aborigines in this country whioh had as yet been established a mil ion which, if it had oontinued, might havi preserved > remnant oi thai unhappj people, who were soon afterward disported SHEKOMEKO. 35 and scattered abroad, never again to be gathered, and never again to be blessed with such noble and self-denying teachers, as the faith- ful Moravians, who labored with such devoted zeal at Shekomeko. Gottlob Buettner soon ended his weary pilgrimage. He gently and happily fell asleep in Christ on Feb. 23d, 1745, in the twenty- ninth year of his age. Blessed be his memory. The Indians wept over him like children over a beloved parent. They dressed his corpse in white, and buried him with great solemnity in the bury- ing ground at Shekomeko, watering his grave with their tears, and for a long time afterwards they used to visit and weep over it. The stone afterwards placed over his grave contained the following in- scription, in German : "Here lies the body of Gottlob Buettner, " who according to the commandment of his crucified God and Sa- • v viour, brought the glad tidings to the heathen, that the blood ot "[Jesus had made an atonement for their sins. As many as em- " braced this doctrine in faith were baptized into the death of the " Lord. His last prayer was that they might be preserved until the u day of our Lord Jesus Christ. He was born Dee 29th, 1716, " and fell asleep in the Lord February 23d, 1745," Only a small portiou of this stone, very much mutilated ami scarcely at all intelligible, is still preserved. The locality is still shown by the proprietor, Mr. Edward Hunting, as also the locality of the missionary buildings, some portions of the foundations of which are still recognized. The orchard planted by the missionaries has within a few years past, with the exception of a single apple- tree, entirely disappeared ; and the medicinal roots which they culti- vated have, until quite recently, refused to quit their home in the soil, but, as if prompted by the instinct of Moravian zeal and love to man, have remained a blessing to those who have since continu- ed to dwell about the spot. The effect of the persecuting measures of their enemies, and the death of their beloved teacher, was exceedingly disheartening to the poor Indians. A portion of them removed to Pachgatgoch, where they attempted to make themselves a home among the tribe which resided there. Another portion formed a colony at Wechquatnack, on the eastern border of Indian Pond, [Indian, Wequagnok, or Wequodnoc,J in the town of Sharon, Ot. And at this place was formed an Indian congregation under the charge of the Moravians David Bruce, a Moravian missionary, r a Scotchman by birth, was appointed to the station, where he died greatly lamented in 17-J'. 1 When the soil came into the possession of the present occupant, Mr bHEKOMEKO Andrew Lake. I missing; but a portion of it con- taining the inscription \s .uud, laid as a common stone into a stone wall. The inscription is as follows : " David Bruce, "from JSdinburg Scotland^, Minister of the Brethren's Church " among the Indian- Departed 1 ! Vi'tor th' Indian- at Wechquatnack, a Moravian ■ ougregation of whife p< ns to have been established on the west* in Pond in the town of North East, on the present ferm of Mr. Don iri Here was a meeting house built, which was standing ontQ within a few years ; and near the spot, in an adjoining burying ground, is the grave of the Rev. Joseph Powell — doubtless the Moravian missionary of that name \- appears from tin- stone which stood at his grave, he died in 1774, aged 63." Another portion ui the Indian congregation at Shekmueku emi- grated with thru i hey attempted m a colon, v. which was fruitless. Tin name given to this col- ony, as Significant "1 the condition aud hopes of the Indians, was Freidenshuttt-n — (Tents ol P< These Indians finally s. at Gnailcnhutt- tg the Christian Indians who setth «l iln Indian interpreter, John, formerly Tschoop. John finally I victim, at Bethlehem, of thai rible the [ndi hi athen," Moravian historian, " John distinguisl bj hie -inl'ul practices. And u- hi- vices became thi eductive on account ■ ii' his natural wit ind humoi . ' powerful and i lion tified bj tl iployed in i a manner as to I"- the means of blessing, both to Europeans and Indian- i hie countrymen could vie with him in point of Indian oratory B were roll of animation, and hie woni ke fire into thi f his countrymen. In nhort tin Bfl to . and ♦17 ich.— In thi ' cal U . ■ '- Their whit. ra in 1 >ui i New Voi k .•• verm ikii'i obtained a minister from Bethlehem. I if the Unit**! Brathn 101 SffEKOMEKO. was four years active in this service. Noi was ht less respected a chief among the Indians; no affair's of state being transacted without his advice and consent. During his illness, the believing Indians went often, and stood weeping around his bod. Even then he spoke, with power and energy, of the truth of the ^<>spel, and in all things he approved himself, to his la>t breath, as a minister of God." John died at Bethlehem, August 27th, 17 JO, where his remains now lie buried with those of many other Indians. Driven from their ancestral home, and deprived of their new born Christian privileges and hopes, by the rapacious and unprincipled hostility of the white man, the ultimate dispersion and final annihil- ation of this interesting tribe of Indians, is only the more affecting, because they had exhibited so great a capacity for Christian instruc- tion, and because their whole history places in so strong a light, the fact, that the vices of the white man, his rapacity , deceit and cruelty , have exiled the red man from his country, from his native soil and heritage, and irrespective of good or evil on his part, have nearl) supplanted him from the face of the earth From the execution of the Act of the Colonial Government be- fore referred to, it became impossible of course for the Moravians to continue their labors among the heathen within the Province of New York. And its effects were most disastrous upon the Mission- in Connecticut, and caused their final abandonment, for fields where the devoted missionaries ruighl enjoy the freedom of religious liber- ty, and the opportunity to carry on their self denying labors, with- out the restraint of penal law-;, and without the petty annoyance of a government nominally free, bu1 in this ease, at least, practically tyrannical and unjust. The hostility to Jesuit influence which so strongly appears iu this history of the Moravians at Shekoi in itself better founded, had its direction been intelligent, and uninfluenced by those who cared less for the Jesur their own private purposes and ends. The Ji igainst the ttovern- ment, and exri _ [nsl the Kngli9h Colonies. The < -1>1 French war •■'■ be work of the Jesuit* And the Indian ho d< - themselves which gave so terrible an aspect to that war, w< illy led On by Romish Jesuits disguised in the garb of Indians. And to them was mainly due the terrible fe- rocity by which thai wai rikingbj characterized 26 SHEKOMEKO. The Colonial Government, as well as that of the mother country, had for a long time been aware of this fact. And hence by the provincial laws, not only a known Jesuit, but any man suspected of being a Jesuit, \vi- put upon hi- trial, and if convicted, was banish- ed from the colony of New York on pain of perpetual imprisonment, and in case of escape from prison, of death. To such as are not familiar with the infamous political intrigues and wholesale treachery of the minions of Rome, and especially of the Order of Jesuits, so stringent a law may seem too severe, and may seem to partake of a persecuting character. But it must be observed that it was aimed at them, not as members of a Christian Society as such, but as necessarily by the principles which they had adopted and the oaths by which they were bound, traitors and spies in the country, whose leading purpose was rsion of even Protestant government, and the bringing in of. the dominant power of Rome. And as opportunity offered the vile spirit of these malig- nant principles and oaths, have always been carried out in practice in every treacherous and treasonable form, the extent of overthrowing governments, and of deposing kings, and declaring their subjects absolved from their allegiance, thereby inculcating as a sacred duty, upon all members of the Church of Koine, whol- -on, murder, and rebellion. Thnf i I .'land, to say nothing of tin other governments of Kur ■ John in 1210, King Henry A' III, in 1538, Queen Elisabeth in 1569, ind finally George II, in . aliout ti: - vious to the expulsion of the Moravians t'roni S anathemal ind their sub- ■ ■"! from their allegiance by th< I ' pes of Rome.* And it if authentic history, that in the troublous time* ad Qm i a Elizabeth, many ol the mo-t turhulentand f the Puril in thi I kw, th. least justifiable, if nol . d( manded bj the The great thai it should have been used for a purpose for which it w:i itilV the malioe or allay the fears of aid at all the barml ins from I Art ill SHEKEMEKO. 2» the country, without regard to the purity of their purpose, or the righteousness of their cause ; and the greater misfortune still that it should have led to the passage of another law against the Moravians by name, of the most odious, unjust, and persecuting character. '