Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

The iron post above referred to is called the Crown Monument and is mark 475 of the International Boundary Survey of 1915. Its geographic position is lat 45°18'20.0'', long 71°05′04.4". The line was then run south to an old monument 60 rods north of Kimballs Pond.60 In 1874 the boundary line between Maine and New Hampshire was resurveyed (Hitchcock, 1874, p. 173), and in 1927 the legislatures of the two States authorized a retracement and remarking of the line from Salmon Falls northward to the Canadian line (Maine Public Laws of 1927, chap. 21; New Hampshire Public Laws of 1927, chap. 114). This work was commenced in 1927 and completed in 1929.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

The first charter of Virginia, granted in 1606 (see p. 143), included the territory of the present State of New Hampshire, as did the charter of New England, granted in 1620 (see p. 81), and the grant to Capt. John Mason and Sir Ferdinando Gorges of 1622 (see p. 82).

The president and council of New England made a grant to Capt. John Mason in 1629, in which the boundaries were given as follows (Thorpe, 1909, v. 4, p. 2434) :

All yt part of yo Maine land in New England lying upon y sea Coaste beginning from y Middle part of Merrimack River & from thence to proceed Northwards along y Sea coaste to passcattaway river & soe forwards up wth in y* sa river & to y furthest head thereof & from thence Northwestwards untill Threescore miles be finished from y ffirst entrance of passcattaway river & also from Merrimacke through y s River & to y° furthest head thereof & soe forward up into y land Westwards untill Threescore miles be finished and from thence to cross over land to y° Threescore miles end accounted from passacattaway river together with all Islands & Isletts wth in five leagues distance of y' premises & abutting upon y same or any parte or parcell thereof * wch ✶✶✶ land * Capt John Mason wth y consent of y° president & councill intends to name New Hampshire.

In 1635 the grant of 1629 was confirmed by a supplementary grant, of which the following is an extract (Thorpe, 1909, v. 4, p. 2441; Upham, 1920):

All y1 part of yo maine land of New England afores being from ye middle part of Naumkeck river & from thence to proceed, East wards along y sea Coast to Cape Anne & round about ye same to passcattaway harbour & soe forwards up wth in ye river of Newickewanock & to ye farthest head of y" said river & from thence Northwards till six miles be finished from y° first entrance of passcattaway harbour & alsoe from Naumkeck through y° river thereof up into yo land west Sixty miles from weh period to crose over land to ye sixty miles end accounted from passcattaway through Newickewanock river to ye land north west afores & also all yt ye south half of ye Isles of Sholds all wch lands wth ye consent of y Councill shall from henceforth be called New Hampshire & alsoe tenn thousand

ch

The notes of this survey may be found in the New Hampshire Legislative Jour. for

1859, p. 764–767.

acres more of land in New England afores" on yo south east part of Sagahahock at y mouth & entrance thereof from henceforth to be called by y' name of Masonia.

After the death of Capt. John Mason, in December 1635, the affairs of the colony coming into bad condition, the colonists sought the protection of Massachusetts in 1641 and enjoyed it till 1675, when Robert Mason, a grandson of John Mason, obtained a royal decree, under which, in 1680, a colonial government was established. But no charter was given to the colony, and its government was continued only during the pleasure of the King. The commission or decree issued by the King in 1680 to John Cutt, of Portsmouth, names the following limits for the colony:

Province of New Hampshire, lying & extending from three miles northward of Merrimack River, or any part thereof to y° Province of Maine.

In the year 1690 the Province of New Hampshire was again taken under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts Bay, but in 1692 it was once more separated.

A controversy that arose betweeen the Provinces of New Hampshire and Massachusetts Bay involved not only the boundary between New Hampshire and Maine (see p. 83) but also that between New Hampshire and Massachusetts. The commissioners appointed by the two Provinces having been unable to agree, New Hampshire appealed to the King, who ordered that the boundaries should be settled by a board of commissioners appointed from the neighboring colonies. The board met at Hampton in 1737 and submitted a conditional decision to the King, who in 1740 declared in council (Slade, 1823, p. 9) that the northern boundary of the province of Massachusetts be a similar curve line, pursuing the course of the Merrimack river, at three miles distance, on the north side thereof, beginning at the Atlantic Ocean, and ending at a point due north of Pautucket falls [now Lowell], and a straight line drawn from thence, due west, till it meets with his Majesty's other Governments.

New Hampshire had claimed her southern boundary to be a line due west from a point on the sea 3 miles north of the mouth of the Merrimack River. Massachusetts had claimed all the territory within 3 miles north of any part of the Merrimack River. The King's decision gave to New Hampshire a strip of territory, more than 50 miles in length and varying in width, in excess of that which she claimed. This decree of the King was forwarded to Mr. Belcher, then governor of both the Provinces of New Hampshire and Massachusetts Bay, with instructions to apply to the respective assemblies to unite in making the necessary provisions for running and marking the line conformably to the said decree, and if either assembly refused, the other was to proceed ex parte. Massachusetts Bay declined to com

776-664 O-66-7

ply with this requisition. New Hampshire therefore proceeded alone to run and mark the line.

George Mitchell and Richard Hazzen were appointed by Governor Belcher to survey and mark the line. Pursuant to this authority, in February 1741, Mitchell ran and marked the line from a point on the seacoast about 3 miles north of the mouth of the Merrimack River to a point about 3 miles north of the Pawtucket Falls, and Hazzen, in March following, ran and marked a line from the point 3 miles north of Pawtucket Falls across the Connecticut River to the sup posed boundary line of New York, on what he then assumed to be a due west course from the place of beginning. He was instructed by Governor Belcher to allow for a westerly variation of the needle of 10°. The report of the surveyors has not been preserved, but the journal of Hazzen has been found. It was published in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1879, p. 323.

Subsequent investigation has proved that Hazzen's line was not run on a due west course, the allowance for the westerly variation of the needle being too large, throwing the line north of west. This mistake seems to have been known prior to the Revolution. In 1774 calculations were made by George Sproule, founded upon actual surveys and accurate astronomical observations, from which he determined that Hazzen's line was so far north of west as to lose to New Hampshire a tract of land computed at 59,872 acres. (New Hampshire H. Jour., 1826, p. 304; Williams, 1794, p. 379.)

In 1825 commissioners were appointed by the States of New Hampshire and Massachusetts to ascertain, run, and mark the line between the two States. New Hampshire asserted her claim to a due-west line, conformable to the decree of 1740, it being apparent from a survey made by the commissioners that the original line was north of west. The Massachusetts commissioners refused to run such a line, alleging that they were empowered only to ascertain and mark the original line.

On March 10, 1827, the Legislature of Massachusetts passed a resolution providing for the erection of durable monuments to preserve the boundary line between the States of Massachusetts and New Hampshire, as the same had been run and ascertained by the commissioners (see Massachusetts Legislature Resolves, 1827), and monuments were erected accordingly.

In 1885 the joint commission appointed by the States of New Hampshire and Massachusetts reran and marked the curved portion of the boundary following the course of the Merrimack River, changing it only to a trifling extent. This commission was, however, unable to agree upon the boundary west of Pawtucket Falls. The matter dragged along until finally in 1894 this commission, together with a

commission representing Vermont, agreed to maintain the Hazzen line, and this line was retraced and re-marked from Pawtucket Falls to the northwest corner of Massachusetts.

Under the King's decree of 1740 the Province of New Hampshire claimed jurisdiction as far west as the territory of Massachusetts and Connecticut extended, thus including the present State of Vermont. New York claimed all the country west of the Connecticut, under the charters of 1664 and 1674 to the Duke of York. A bitter controversy ensued. In 1749 the Governor of New Hampshire wrote to the Governor of New York as follows (Slade, 1823, p. 10):

PORTSMOUTH, November 17, 1749.

I think it my duty * to transmit to your Excellency the description of New-Hampshire, as the King has determined it in the words of my commission, * *. In consequence of His Majesty's determination of the boundaries between New Hampshire and Massachusetts, a surveyor and proper chainmen were appointed to run the western line from 3 miles north of Pautucket Falls; and the surveyor, upon oath, has declared that it strikes Hudson's River, about eighty poles north of where Mohawk's River comes into Hudson's River.

B. WENTWORTH.

The following is the description of the south boundary of New Hampshire as given by King George II to Benning Wentworth when Wentworth was appointed governor, July 3,1741 (O'Callaghan, 1851):

* province of New Hampshire, within our Dominions of New England in America, bounded on the south side by a simular Curve line pursuing the Course of the Merrimac River at three miles distance, on the North side therof, beginning at the Atlantick Ocean & ending at a point due North of a place called Pautucket Falls, and by a Straight Line drawn from thence due West Cross the said River 'till it meets with our other Governments,

The south boundary of New Hampshire as surveyed between 1885 and 1898 is marked by 50 large cut-granite monuments at irregular intervals. The initial point of this survey is the southwest corner of New Hampshire and southeast corner of Vermont, marked by a copper bolt in the top of a block of granite set in a mass of concrete 6 feet square, "at or near ordinary low-water line" on the west bank of the Connecticut River, the geographic position of which is lat 42°43′37.21′′ N., long 72°27′32.08" W. A witness mark of polished granite, suitably inscribed, stands on the Massachusetts-Vermont line, 582 feet N. 87°48′ W. from the corner.

From the State corner the line was run on a general course about 21⁄2° south of east (true bearing), measured distance of 57.84 miles to

the boundary pine monument, so-called, standing between the towns of Pelham, New Hampshire, and Dracut, Massachusetts, in the pasture land owned by Zachariah Coburn, at a point where one George Mitchell, surveyor, marked a

pitch pine tree, March 21, 1741, then supposed to be 3 miles due north of a place in the Merrimack River formerly called Pawtucket Falls, now Lowell.

This monument is also granite, and its geographic position is lat 42°41′50.25" N., long 71°19′22.02′′ W.

From this point the boundary consists of a series of straight lines, approximately paralleling Merrimack River and 3 miles distant therefrom.

The terminal mark is a granite monument, 42 by 14 by 12 inches in size, marked

[blocks in formation]

on its south face and north face, respectively. It stands on Salisbury Beach about 80 feet from high-water line and 250 feet from low-water line of the Atlantic Ocean. Its geographic position is lat 42°52′19.28′′ N., long 70°49'02.94" W. From this point the boundary extends for "three miles***to the limit of State jurisdiction" on a course 86°07′30′′ E.

This survey was approved by Massachusetts (act of May 12, 1899, chap. 369) and by New Hampshire (act of Mar. 22, 1901, chap. 115). The acts of the State legislatures give the complete notes of the surveys. Copies of the notes and many geographic positions on the lines are given in the town boundary atlases prepared by the harbor and land commission of Massachusetts.

The question concerning the western boundary of New Hampshire was submitted to the King, who in 1764 made the following decree (Slade, 1823, p. 19):

AT THE COURT of St. JAMES,
The 20th day of July, 1764.

Whereas there was, this day read at the board, a report made by the Right Honorable the Lords of the Committee of council for plantation affairs, dated the 17th of this instant, upon considering a representation from the Lords Commissioners for trade and plantations, relative to the disputes that have, some years subsisted between the provinces of New-Hampshire and New-York, concerning the boundary line between those provinces-His Majesty, taking the same into consideration, was pleased with the advice of his privy council, to approve of what is therein proposed, and doth accordingly, hereby order and declare the western banks of the river Connecticut, from where it enters the Province of the Massachusetts Bay, as far north as the forty-fifth degree of northern latitude, to be the boundary line between the said two provinces of New Hampshire and New York. Wherefore the respective Governors and Commanders in Chief of his Majesty's said Provinces of New-Hampshire and New-York, for the time being, and all others whom it may concern, are to take notice of His Majesty's pleasure hereby signified and govern themselves accordingly.

« ZurückWeiter »