<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<h3>LORD CORNBURY <i>makes</i> HIMSELF <i>very</i> UNPOPULAR</h3>
<br/>
<p>It was in the year that Princess Anne became Queen of England (1702)
that Edward Hyde, Lord Cornbury, eldest son of the Earl of Clarendon,
was sent to govern New York. He was a cousin of the Queen, and left
England to escape the demands of those to whom he owed money.</p>
<p>When Lord Cornbury arrived in New York, the Mayor, with much ceremony,
presented him with a box of gold, containing the freedom of the city,
which gave to him every privilege. It was a great deal of trouble and
expense to go to, for the Governor would have taken all the privileges,
even if the Mayor had not gone through the form of giving them.</p>
<p>Governor Cornbury very soon let his new subjects see that he was eager
to acquire wealth, and that he intended to get it without the slightest
regard for their interests or desires.</p>
<p>The Queen had told him that he should do all in his power to make the
Church of England the established church of the land; that he should
build new churches, punish drunkenness, swearing, and all such vices,
and that he should keep the colony supplied with negro slaves.</p>
<p>There was much sickness in the town—so much that it became epidemic. So
the Governor and his council went to the little village of Jamaica, on
Long Island, and carried on the business of the city in a Presbyterian
church building. When the epidemic had passed, he gave the church to the
Episcopalians, because he remembered that Queen Anne had told him to
make the Church of England the established church. There were riotous
times in Jamaica after that, but the Episcopal clergyman occupied the
house, and the Episcopalians worshipped in the church regardless of all
protests.</p>
<p>Not many improvements were made during Lord Cornbury's administration.
He cared little for the good of the city or for anything else except
his own pleasures. The constant fear of war gave the people little time
to think of improvements. They did, however, pave Broadway from Trinity
Church to the Bowling Green. But do not imagine that this pavement was
anything like those of to-day. It was of cobble-stones, and the gutters
ran through the middle of the street.</p>
<p>The Governor came to be detested more and more by the people, for as the
years went by he spent their money recklessly. He had a habit of walking
about the fort in the dress of a woman, and another habit of giving
dinners to his friends that lasted well on toward morning, when the
guests sang and shouted so boisterously that the quiet citizens of the
little town could not sleep.</p>
<p>So when the people grew very, very tired of it, they sent word to Queen
Anne that her kinsman was a very bad Governor. And she, after much
hesitation, when he had been Governor six years, removed him from
office. She no sooner did this, than those to whom he owed money, and
there were a great many of them, had him put in the debtors' prison, in
the upper story of the City Hall in Wall Street. And in jail he remained
for several months, until his father, the Earl of Clarendon, died, and
money was sent for the release of the debtor prisoner, who was now a
peer of Great Britain.</p>
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<center>
<ANTIMG src='images/image-29.jpg' width-obs='430' height-obs='300' alt='View in Broad Street about 1740' title=''>
</center><h5>View in Broad Street about 1740</h5>
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