I doubt not but you will be glad
to hear from the Congreſs — I have ſir Done every
thing I could both by Prayer Conſultation
& applica‐
tion — I have conſulted
Coll
Buttler. —& others — I have
laid the Cauſe before ſir
Wm Johnson
perſonally and
by an addreſs in writeing
ſubſcribd by Meſrs
David Avery
&
my ſelfe (For
Dn Tho.s went Home not well)
A copy of which I encloſe which you will pleaſe to
preſerve (for I have no other copy, & the original
is in
ſir
W.ms
poſseſion) I have oppertunity to con‐
verſe with the chief Gent
n here as
Governer Frank‐lin of the
Jerſie
Govenr Penn
Mr Peters of
Philidelpa
& others many others — I coud be heartily glad you ſir
was here you woud be receivd
moſt
Hon
bly
& affectionate
I can aſſure you your name is often mentiond with
a great deal of Reſpect by ſr
Wm
Johnſon
Gov.r
Frankd
& others —
Govenr Penn is gone Home but before
He went I took an oppertunity to confer with Him
about ſetting up an Ind
n College on the
ſuſquahanna or ſome where
there about He told me He had ſeen
Dr
Whittaker
& his Requeſt of a conſiderable Tract of Land
& that the affair was ſent Home to the Proprietors I aſk'd
Him if he tho't the Propoſals
woud be granted He ſ
d He
tho't not — I aſkd Him if the Proprieters
woud not
part with a tract of Land for that purpoſe He ſ
d He beliv'd
not as requeſted — will they ſd I upon any Terms He
ſ
d yes as they ſold it to others upon no other terms
reply'd I He anſwerd no He beliv'd not or to that
purpoſe — I aſk'd Him if the Proprieters
woud
not come to ſome agreement with the
New Eng.d
Purchacers
on the
ſuſquahanna He ſ
d yes as they would with any other
Purchacers and upon no other Terms ſ
d I He anſwr
d no — . I confer'd with
Mr Peters of
Philadelpa upon the ſubject — He thot great care ſhoud be taken to
chooſe
ſuch a place to ſet up an Ind.
n
Academie as
might not intefere with any other public School or
occaſion
diſcontent or envy or the Like leſt it Shoud
nt
anſwer the deſign —and beſides He tho't few of the Ind
ns
woud ever do for Miſsionaries that in gen
ll it waſ not
worth while to do more for them than to learn them
to read & write & be induſtrious
&c I confer'd
ſir william upon the ſame
ſubject what His opinion was
about it— He tho't it a Laudable & very good deſign — I
aſkd Him where He tho't
beſt to ſet up the School
His Excellency ſ
d He ſuppoſ
d that affair was ſent Home already
&
determind — I infirm'd his Excellency It was now in agi‐
tation &
preperation to be ſent — But I ſuppoſd not yet
gone — I aſkd Him where He tho't the moſt proper
place to ſet it — He reply'd he ſuppoſd in or near
Alba‐ny — I mentiond
Penſylvania He ſ
d He ſuppoſd the
Proprieters woudn't part with their Lands for that pu
[gap: tear][guess: rpose] upon any other Terms than they woud to others
— I mentiond
Kohoſs —He tho't that too much a one
ſide — I mention'd
Pittfield — His Excelleny
aſk'd if
they had any conſiderable of Lands &c for that pur‐
poſe — I told his Excelleny they woud
ſubſcribe in
Lands & money a Thouſand pounds & more He ſmild
&
made no reply onely that
Coll Williams was propriet'r
there &&— upon laying the encloſd
addreſs before
Him when He had read it he aſk'd me where I
woud have the Bounds of the Provines
Reſtricted I told
Here eſpecially at the
Onoidas He ſ
d that was at the Ind
ns election whether they woud part with their Lands or no
At preſent He coudn't tell no more than I coud where
the Diviſion Lines woud run when all the chiefs were
come together He ſhoud know & not before — and
that He ſhoud be as tender of the Ind.
ns
Intreſt as I
or any other friend coud be to 'em — that twas
eaſie for
deſigning men to get away their Land by inſinuateing
themſelves into their faver together with a few Gifts good
words &c that many too many had done it For the Ind
ns in gen
ll valu'd not their Lands — & much were
paſs
d
betwixt Him & me alone — (which I have not time or
room to write for Paper is here ſo
ſcarce that 12 ſheets
has Coſt me as much as 2 quire in
New Engd
& with great
difficulty I have got ſo much &
uſd Halfe of it already)—
But ſ
d He viz
ſir
Wm upon the Concluſion he ſhoud
make open proclamation of the Doings of the Congreſs that
all might
might know & in the mean Time that I
might have further opportunity to confer upon
theſe things — And ſir I muſt
confeſs that
ſir
wm has
& does treat me & mankind in the moſt
Handſome
&
genteel manner Imaginable which has endeard Him to
me very much tho' He has no Grace yet has no ſmall
Share of lovely Humanity — But ſir on the whole
the ſituation of the Ind.
ns with reſpect to there' Lands
is very tickliſh
& doubtful — no leſs than 15 thou‐
ſand Pounds worth of goods & a vaſt deal of Proviſien
with 7 cheeſts of Gold &
ſilver weighing not leſs than
a Barrel weight of Cyder or Peck each is ſent as a
Temptation with Rum wine & high Spirits propertiona
^le^ if not to Exceed &
[illegible] great numbers of adventuorers from
all parts eſpecially
Albany
New York
Penſylvn
&
virgina
& many
beyond— And beſides
tis
tho't
the King has a deſign to
make a large purchace of the natives for ſome pious
uſe — But this is kept as a ſecret which has not yet
tranſpird
& known onely to a very few — I muſt leave you
as I am to gueſs in this matter what it portends but we
may be pretty ſure
ſome thing to the
ch-h of Engd or ſome
Dignatary — you will likely ſr have a more full
acct.
& view of theſe things at the Cloſe of the Congreſs
w
ch I am apt to think will be about the Latter end of
next week it may be
not before the week after
Pleaſe to forward the Encloſed—