The Story of Manhattan by Charles Hemstreet
page 70 of 149 (46%)
page 70 of 149 (46%)
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news reached New York, the city was draped with mourning. But in another
week all signs of sadness had disappeared in honor of the new King, George III. Then General Robert Monckton, who had been in command of the English forces on Staten Island, was made Governor. He was a young man, somewhat careless, but, as was the case with all the new governors, he was welcomed with glad shouts of approval. England at this time needed men in her navy, and the captains of war-ships were in the habit of boarding any vessel that sailed from the colonies in America and taking sailors by force to serve on the English ships. This increased a bitter feeling that the colonists were beginning to have against England. The city had now 14,000 inhabitants and was in quite a flourishing condition. After two years Monckton tired of the cares of government, and sailed away to England, with never a thought of the wild scenes that were to take place in the land he left behind. CHAPTER XX THE STORY of the STAMP ACT The colonists were becoming more and more dissatisfied, not only in New York, but in all of the thirteen English colonies in America. For they |
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