To the freeholders and gentlemen, of Baltimore County : Gentlemen, On Tuesday last we received by (express) a letter from the Committee of Correspondence at Philadelphia ...
| Other Authors: | Buchanan, Andrew, approximately 1733-1786 |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Series: | Early American imprints. Evans (1639-1800) ;
no. 42549. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Evans Digital Edition |
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At a general meeting of the freeholders, gentlemen, merchants, tradesmen and other inhabitants of Baltimore County, held at the Court-House of the said county on Tuesday the 31st of May, 1774 : Capt. Charles Ridgley, chairman. Resolved 1st. ...
At a meeting of the freeholders and other inhabitants of the town of Boston : duly qualified and legally warned, in public town meeting assembled at Faneuil-Hall, on Tuesday the 26th day of July, Anno Domini 1774 ... Voted, that a printed copy of the following letter to our brethren in the several towns ... be forthwith signed by the town-clerk, and transmitted by the Committee of Correspondence ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
At a very large and respectable meeting of the freeholders and freemen of the city and county of Philadelphia, on Saturday, June 18, 1774. Thomas Willing, John Dickinson, Esquires, chairmen : Resolved, I. That the act of Parliament, for shutting up the port of Boston, is unconstitutional; oppressive to the inhabitants of that town; dangerous to the liberties of the British colonies, and that, therefore, we consider our brethren, at Boston, as suffering in the common cause of America. ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Boston, May 12, 1774 : Gentlemen, By the last advices from London we learn that an act has been passed by the British parliament for blocking up the harbour of Boston ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Gentlemen, The evils which we have long foreseen are now come upon this town and province, the long meditated stroke is now given to the civil liberty of this country? : ... The bill for blocking up the harbour of Boston is replete with injustice and cruelty ... There can be no doubt of our succeeding to the utmost of our wishes, if we universally come into a solemn league, not to import goods from Great Britain ... we have drawn up a covenant ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Gentlemen, The evils which we have long foreseen are now come upon this town and province, the long meditated stroke is now given to the civil liberty of this country? : ... The bill for blocking up the harbour of Boston is replete with injustice and cruelty ... There can be no doubt of our succeeding to the utmost of our wishes if we universally come into a solemn league, not to import goods from Great Britain ... we have drawn up a form of a covenant ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Boston, September 27, 1774 : Gentlemen, The committees of correspondence of this and several of the neighbouring towns, having taken into consideration the vast importance of withholding from the troops now here, labour, straw, timber ... beg your close and serious attention to the inclosed resolves ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
At a meeting of the delegates of every town and district in the county of Suffolk : on Tuesday the sixth of September, at the house of Mr. Richard Woodward of Dedham, and by adjournment at the house of Mr. Daniel Vose of Milton, on Friday the ninth instant ... a committee was chosen to bring in a report to the convention, and the following being several times read and put paragraph by paragraph, was unanimously voted, viz. ...
Notification : Agreeably to the order of the town at their last meeting---the freeholders and other inhabitants of the town of Boston legally qualified ... are hereby notified, to meet at Faneuil-Hall, on Tuesday the 26th of July instant ... to determine on the expediency of appointing a committee of seven by ballot, for the purpose of considering of proper measures to be adopted for the common safety ... when the acts of the British Parliament ... shall be enforced in the province ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Extracts of private letters from London : dated April 7 and 8, to persons in New-York and Philadelphia.
by: T.
by: T.
To the inhabitants of the township of [blank.] : At a meeting of a respectable body of the freeholders inhabitants of the county of Chester, on Saturday the 18th of June, 1774 ... the following propositions were deliberately and unanimously agreed to viz. ...
New-York, Aug. 9, 1774 : Gentlemen, The distresses of the poor of the town of Boston, now sinking under the hands of power, deprived of her commerce and exposed to all the miseries which must attend so fatal a calamity; call aloud for our tender and compassionate concern ...
An die Einwohner der Stadt und Caunty Philadelphia.
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
At a meeting of the committees appointed by the several counties of the province of Maryland, at the city of Annapolis, the 22d day of June, 1774, and continued by adjournment from day to day, till the 25th day of the same month ...
We the subscribers, inhabitants of the town of [blank] : having taken into our serious consideration the precarious state of the liberties of North-America ... Do, in the presence of God, solemnly and in good faith, covenant and engage with each other, 1st, that from henceforth we will suspend all commercial intercourse with the said island of Great Britain ... Witness our hands, June [blank] 1774.
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
We the subscribers, inhabitants of the town of [blank] : having taken into our serious consideration the precarious state of the liberties of North-America ... Do, in the presence of God, solemnly and in good faith, covenant and engage with each other, 1st, that from henceforth we will suspend all commercial intercourse with the said island of Great Britain ... Witness our hands, June [blank] 1774.
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
American independence the interest and glory of Great Britain : containing arguments which prove, that not only in taxation, but in trade, manufactures, and government, the colonies are entitled to an entire independency on the British legislature; and that it can only be by a formal declaration of these rights, and forming thereupon a friendly league with them, that the true and lasting welfare of both countries can be promoted. : In a series of letters to the legislature. : [Nine lines from Trenchard].
by: Cartwright, John, 1740-1824
by: Cartwright, John, 1740-1824
Tuesday, the 24th of May, 14 Geo. III. 1774 : This House being deeply impressed with apprehension of the great dangers to be derived to British America, from the hostile invasion of the city of Boston, in our sister colony of Massachusetts Bay, whose commerce and harbour are on the 1st day of June next to be stopped by an armed force, deem it highly necessary that the first day of June be set apart by the members of this House as a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer ...
New-York. Every friend to the Americans, and to those natural and inestimable rights of mankind which they are now struggling to defend, will be pleased to find the sense and spirit of our countrymen, natives of the British colonies, expressed in the following petition; wherein they have asserted our rights, and arraigned the injustices and illegality of the proceedings against their country in Parliament ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
A letter to a friend : giving a concise, but just, representation of the hardships and sufferings the town of Boston is exposed to, and must undergo in consequence of the late act of the British-Parliament, which by shutting up it's port has put a fatal bar in the way of that commercial business on which it depended for it's support ... /
by: Chauncy, Charles, 1705-1787
by: Chauncy, Charles, 1705-1787
Sir, You are desired to attend a special meeting of the committee this [blank] at [blank] o'clock precisely, at the Carpenter's Hall.
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Sir, You are desired to attend a special meeting of the committee at the Philosophical Hall, on Wednesday next, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, appointed to consider of the subscriptions for Boston, and bringing that affair to a conclusion. ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
A letter to a friend. Giving a concise, but just, representation of the hardships and sufferings the town of Boston is exposed to and must undergo in consequence of the late act of the British-Parliament; which, by shutting up it's port, has put a fatal bar in the way of that commercial business on which it depended for it's support : Shewing, at the same time, wherein this edict, however unintended, is powerfully adapted to promote the interest of all the American colonies, and even of Boston itself in the end. /
by: Chauncy, Charles, 1705-1787
by: Chauncy, Charles, 1705-1787
A serious address to the inhabitants of the colony of New-York : containing a full and minute survey of the Boston-Port Act, calculated to excite our inhabitants to conspire, with the other colonies on this continent, in extricating that unhappy town from its unparalleled distresses, and for the actual redemption, and security of our general rights and liberties.
by: Citizen of New York
by: Citizen of New York
A Serious address to the inhabitants of the colony of New-York : containing a full and minute survey of the Boston-Port Act, calculated to excite our inhabitants to conspire, with the other colonies on this continent, in extricating that unhappy town from its unparalleled distresses, and for the actual redemption, and security of our general rights and liberties.
Extract of a sermon preach'd at the South Church in Boston, November 27th, 1746 /
by: Prince, Thomas, 1687-1758
by: Prince, Thomas, 1687-1758
By the Honorable Joseph Wanton, Esquire ... A proclamation : ... voted and resolved, that Thursday, the thirtieth day of this instant June, as a day of fasting, prayer, & supplication ... Given under my hand ... at Newport, this twentieth day of June ... one thousand, seven hundred and seventy-four ...
At a meeting of the inhabitants of the city of Annapolis, on Wednesday the 25th day of May, 1774, after notice given of the time, place and occasion of this meeting ...
In Provincial Congress, Cambridge, December 6, 1774 : The operation of the cruel and iniquitous Boston-port-bill, that instrument of ministerial vengeance, having reduced our once happy capital ... It is therefore resolved, that it be recommended to our constituents the inhabitants of the other towns ... that they farther contribute liberally to alleviate the burden ...
New-York : The following dialogue being conceived, in some measure, calculated to advance the cause of freedom, in the present critical situation of affairs, is for that purpose presented to the public.
New-York, May 11, 1774 : The mechanics of this city are requested to meet, this evening, at 7 o'clock, at the house of David Philipse, in Horse and Cart Street, on business of the utmost importance.
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
An address to New-England /
by: Daughter of liberty
by: Daughter of liberty
To the freemen, freeholders, and other inhabitants of the city and county of New-York : Gentlemen, In times of public danger, I conceive it to be the indispensable duty of every member of the community to communicate his sentiments to the fellow citizens on public affairs ...
The committee (consisting of the following members, namely Mr. Samuel Adams [and 25 others]) : appointed by the town of Boston to receive donations for the charitable purpose of relieving and employing the poor, suffering by means of the act of Parliament, commonly called the Boston Port-Bill, would gratefully acknowledge the receipt of many generous collections ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)
Supplement to the Boston evening-post, (no. 2016.) Monday May 16. 1774.
Supplement to the Massachusetts gazette, and Boston post-boy. Monday May 16. 1774.
Observations on the act of Parliament commonly called the Boston port-bill : with thoughts on civil society and standing armies /
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
Published: (1774)
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
Published: (1774)
Observations on the act of Parliament commonly called the Boston Port-Bill : with thoughts on civil society and standing armies. /
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
Observations on the act of Parliament commonly called the Boston Port-Bill : with thoughts on civil society and standing armies. /
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
by: Quincy, Josiah, 1744-1775
At a meeting of the freeholders and other inhabitants of the town of Boston : duly qualified and legally warned, in public town meeting assembled at Faneuil-Hall, on Tuesday the 26th day of July, Anno Domini 1774 ... Voted, that a printed copy of the following letter to our brethren in the several towns ... be forthwith signed by the town-clerk, and transmitted by the Committee of Correspondence ...
Published: (1774)
Published: (1774)