INTRODUCTION. 5 



sent of the proprietor to the institution of a representative assembly.* After 

 that period, restricted legislative powers were vested in the governor and council 

 " and the people met in general assembly." 



Although the States General of the Netherlands were at the zenith of com- 

 mercial power, and learning and the arts were cherished in that country, when 

 the colony was planted, its inhabitants seem not to have been distinguished by 

 intellectual acquirements ;t and although the conquest occurred at a time when 

 the English people had attained even an higher supremacy in literature than in 

 arms, yet that event seems not to have resulted in an improvement of the con- 

 dition of society.} Knowledge dawned upon the colony about the year 1754,§ 

 but was obscured during the civil commotions which a little more than twenty 

 years afterwards resulted in its political independence. 



Columbia College was established by royal charter, under the name of King's 

 College, in 1754, under the care of doctor Samuel Johnson of Connecticut, as 

 president. The governors of the college were the archbishop of Canterbury, 

 the first lord commissioner for trade and plantations, the lieutenant-governor of 

 the province, and several other public officers, together with the rector of Trinity 

 Church, the senior minister of the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, the 

 ministers of the German Lutheran Church, of the French Church and of the 

 Presbyterian Church, the president of the college, and twenty-four of the prin- 

 cipal gentlemen of the city. The college was endowed with funds derived from 

 lotteries, and voluntary contributions of private individuals in this country, and in 

 England and France. Dr. Johnson was succeeded as president in 1763, by the 

 reverend Miles Cooper, D.D. of Oxford. He, in 1767, acknowledged that the 

 institution had recently received great emoluments from his majesty king George 

 III., from liberal contributions by many of the nobility and gentry in the parent 

 country, from the Society for the propagation of the Gospel iii foreign parts, and 

 from several public spirited gentlemen in America and elsewhere. He gave also 



 Ban'CROPT. t Clinton, Introductory Discourse. t Id. S Id. 



