Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 2
1630-06-08
The winde still w: and by S: faire weather, but close and colde. we stood n: n: w: with a stiffe gale, and about 3: in the afternoone we had sight of lande to the n: w: about ten: ten written above a cancelled figure 8
we supposed inserted latermonhegen:1
but it proved mount mansell:
2 then we tacked and stood w: s: w: we had now faire sunneshine weather, and so pleasant a sweet ayre, as did muche refreshe vs, and there came a smell off the shore
smell of a garden.
there came a wild panother small land birde.
As originally written, the portion of this sentence, beginning with “about” and ending with “monhegen,” read: “about 8 le
Winthrop wrote in, above the line, and probably later: “but it proved otherwise.” Later still he struck out “otherwise” and inserted the words “mount mansell.” Mount Mansell was named for Proceedings
, The American Antiquarian Society, 1866–1868, “The Records of the Council for New England,” 71. The Indian name was Pemetig, or according to Parkman, Pioneers of France, 276, note, Pemetic; Champlain called the island Mt. Desert. For a good account of it, see 1
Collections
, Maine Historical Society, 26–27.