The Pine-tree coast . m the indian, orvice versa, is not ascertained. Bellamy, the pirate, went into the river to careen his two ves-sels ; he built intrenchments and landed his men and guns. Church, in ins expedition of1704, found a Frenchman named Lutterelle living on one of the islands about the bay. andremoved him. (Jennie S. Milliard, lawyer, scholar, and traveller, was a native of are some rock-markings at Burkes Point, which are BUpposed to have been made bythe Indians. I was not able to examine them. 3 For further information about this affair, see Winthrops Journal. II.


The Pine-tree coast . m the indian, orvice versa, is not ascertained. Bellamy, the pirate, went into the river to careen his two ves-sels ; he built intrenchments and landed his men and guns. Church, in ins expedition of1704, found a Frenchman named Lutterelle living on one of the islands about the bay. andremoved him. (Jennie S. Milliard, lawyer, scholar, and traveller, was a native of are some rock-markings at Burkes Point, which are BUpposed to have been made bythe Indians. I was not able to examine them. 3 For further information about this affair, see Winthrops Journal. II. 161, 162. 4 The first settlers of Machias came from Scarborough, Maine. 5 Colonel Jonathan Eddy was a native of that part of Norton, now incorporated asMansfield. After the French war of 1758, in which he served with credit, Eddy, like manyother New Englanders, settled in Nova Scotia. The town of Eddington, Maine, to which heremoved after the war, takes its name from him. See Kidders Eastern Maine and


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