To the friends of American liberty : Gentlemen. As Mr John Thurman, declared, yesterday, on the Coffee-House Bridge ...
| Format: | eBook |
|---|---|
| Language: | English |
| Series: | Early American imprints. Evans (1639-1800) ;
no. 14502. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Evans Digital Edition |
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To the friends of American liberty : Gentlemen. As Mr. John Thurman, declared, yesterday, on the Coffee House Bridge ...
To the inhabitants of the city and county of New-York : My friends and fellow citizens, It has frequently given pain to every well-wisher of his country, when it has been observed, that in many of our public assemblies, party-zeal, instead of public-good, has evidently biased the minds of those who have constituted these assemblies. ...
by: American
Published: (1774)
by: American
Published: (1774)
To the very learned, loquacious, rhetorical, oratorical, disputative, flexible, incomprehensible, impenetrable, pathetic and irresistably eloquent chairman : A certain John Thurman who stiles himself chairman of a certain ministerial junto ...
by: Tory
by: Tory
To the freemen and freeholders of the city and county of New-York : Friends and fellow citizens, From the prudence of your councils, and the wisdom of your determinations, you have heretofore deservedly acquired the approbation of the wise and the prudent. ...
To the free and respectable mechanicks, and other inhabitants of the city and county of New-York : In this perilous time, when the iron hand of tyranny is held over our heads ...
by: Tincker
by: Tincker
To the free-holders of New-town : My friends and fellow-townsmen! We are now called upon to oppose the encroachments, which, for some time past, have been made upon our rights and liberty. ...
by: New-town free-holder
Published: (1775)
by: New-town free-holder
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New-York, Committee-chamber, 16th March, 1775 : Gentlemen, The late Congress having deemed it expedient, that, in the present critical state of American affairs, another should be held at Philadelphia ...
The Following are the names of the gentlemen nominated, as deputies, by the General Committee; for whom the Friends of Liberty are requested to give their votes: Isaac Low ...
Published: (1775)
Published: (1775)
To the free-holders of New-town : My friends and fellow-townsmen! We are now called upon to oppose the encroachments, which, for some time past, have been made upon our rights and liberty. ...
by: New-town free-holder
Published: (1775)
by: New-town free-holder
Published: (1775)
To the freeholders, freemen, and inhabitants of the city and county of New-York : Gentlemen, The favourable sentiments many of you were pleased to entertain of me, in nominating me one of your deputies for this city and county, lay me under great obligations ...
by: McDougall, Alexander, 1732-1786
Published: (1774)
by: McDougall, Alexander, 1732-1786
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A Seasonable advertisement to the freeholders and freemen of the city of New-York, and all the real friends to liberty, and lovers of their country.
To the freemen and freeholders of the city and county of New-York : Friends and fellow citizens, From the prudence of your councils, and the wisdom of your determinations, you have heretofore deservedly acquired the approbation of the wise and the prudent. ...
by: Thurman, John
by: Thurman, John
New-York, April 16, 1776 : The Mechanics in Union and their associates, beg leave to offer the under mentioned gentlemen to the public ...
Published: (1776)
Published: (1776)
O Liberty, thou goddess heavenly bright! Profuse of bliss, and pregnant with delight! ...
by: Portius
by: Portius
Notice. The subscriber takes the liberty to acquaint his friends and the public, that he intends to offer himself as a candidate at the ensuing election in September next, for the office of collector to the third ward of this city ...
by: Baker, Gardiner, 1761-1798
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Albany, January 26, 1789. Extract of a letter from a gentleman in this city, to his friend in New-York.
An act directing the times, places and manner of electing representatives in this state, for the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States of America : Passed the 27th January, 1789.
The urban voter : group conflict and mayoral voting behavior in American cities /
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by: Kaufmann, Karen M., 1959-
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The urban voter : group conflict and mayoral voting behavior in American cities /
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Committee-chamber, New-York, April 9, 1776 : Whereas the late Provincial Congress of the colony of New-York, by their resolve of the twelfth of March last, did order a new election of deputies to represent this province in Provincial Congress, for the ensuing year: the freemen and freeholders, and such other inhabitants of the city and county of New-York ... are therefore requested to meet ... to elect, by plurality of voices, twenty-one deputies ...
To the electors of the city of New-York : Friends and fellow citizens! That the acts of the Legislature may faithfully correspond with the interest and sentiments of the society at large ...
by: Citizen
by: Citizen
To the freeholders, and freemen of the city and province of New-York : Gentlemen, The method of taking the suffrages of the people, for places of trust, by ballot, is so manifestly conducive to the preservation of liberty, that its opposer must necessarily be eyed with jealousy ...
Published: (1769)
Published: (1769)
New-York, January 8, 1770 : All the real friends of liberty, and our happy Constitution, having with the greatest regret, beheld at several of our late elections, the most infamous bribery and corruption ...
Published: (1770)
Published: (1770)
The Following are recommended as proper persons to represent the city and county of New-York, in Provincial Congress. The election will commence on Tuesday next, being the 16th of April, 1776.
Published: (1776)
Published: (1776)
General Committee, May 1, 1775 : The following persons were mentioned in the Committee of Observation, as proper to be elected for a General Committee for the City and County of New-York, in the present alarming exigency. ...
The Following are recommended as proper persons to represent the city and county of New-York, in Provincial Congress. The election will commence on Tuesday next, being the 16th of April, 1776.
Published: (1776)
Published: (1776)
State of New-York, in Senate, 16th February, 1791 : Resolved, (if the honorable the Assembly concur herein,) that the printer to this state shall ... print three hundred copas printed], 18th 1791 Resolved, that this house do concur ...
To the public : Whereas advertisements were published yesterday to convene the inhabitants to take their sense on the expediency of a law to elect our representatives by ballot; and whereas it is suspected that the enemies of that salutary design, have destroyed many of the advertisements ... the meeting is postponed 'till the morrow morning ... the 29th ... at Liberty Pole. New-York, December 28, 1769.
Published: (1769)
Published: (1769)
--Once more--for the--liberties of the people of America : The present election is important--it may give peace or war to this state, and, perhaps, to the union.--The sons of liberty ... do therefore invite all ... to vote for the following nomination, as members of the legislature ...
Published: (1788)
Published: (1788)
To the freeholders and freemen of the city and county of New-York : Gentlemen, Every good citizen must necessarily desire to preserve the peace of the city, and the freedom of elections ...
by: Scott, John Morin, 1730-1784
Published: (1769)
by: Scott, John Morin, 1730-1784
Published: (1769)
The mode of elections considered.
by: J. W., a squinter on public affairs
Published: (1769)
by: J. W., a squinter on public affairs
Published: (1769)
To all true Whigs, and particularly to such as are independent electors of the city and county of New York : Gentlemen, The conduct of several of the magistrates of this city, having, for a considerable time been so notoriously inimical and unfriendly to the liberties of this country, and diametrically opposite to the sentiments of a number of their constituents; who ... have agreed to choose the undermentioned gentlemen as guardians of their city liberties ...
Published: (1775)
Published: (1775)
New-York, January 9, 1769 : The freeholders and freemen of this city and county, in the interest of Philip Livingston, Peter Van Brugh Livingston, John Morin Scott, and Theodorus Van Wyck, Esqrs, ... are requested to meet at the house of Mr. Van De Water ... tomorrow at 5 o'clock in afternoon.
To the citizens of New-York : Fellow-citizens, December 30, 1775. The design of electing a new Assembly at this time, is plainly to distract your attention. ...
by: Poor man
Published: (1775)
by: Poor man
Published: (1775)
To the worthy and industrious mechanicks of this state : Fellow citizens!!! In all countries, it is no uncommon practice for men, grasping at power, to call first upon the mechanicks, and endeavour to use them as mere ladders to their ungovernable ambition. ...
by: Friend to mechanicks
by: Friend to mechanicks
To the freeholders and freemen of New-York : My dear countrymen, December 29, 1775. I have good reason to assure you that there is a scheme in agitation to surprise and confound you in a matter of the last importance--the election of members for a new Assembly. ...
by: Citizen
Published: (1775)
by: Citizen
Published: (1775)
New-York, April 28, 1775. To the public : At a meeting of a great number of the inhabitants of this city, at the Liberty Pole, yesterday afternoon, the following nomination of deputies, to serve in Provincial Congress, were unanimously agreed to, viz. ...
Published: (1775)
Published: (1775)
New-York, January 4, 1769. To the freeholders and freemen of the city and county of New-York : The appointment of two members only, by the various denominations of dissenters, who form a majority of the electors of this city and county, having been offered and not complied with; it was unanimously agreed, at a meeting of several hundred inhabitants, that Philip Livingston, Peter Van Brugh Livingston, Theodorus Van Wyck, and John Morin Scott, Esqrs, be candidates at the ensuing election for representatives. The votes and interest of the freeholders and freemen are therefore requested for those gentlemen.
American ticket, patriotic Americans, and honest foreigners : No Genet---no Emmet---no Clinton. No dictators---no Jacobins. No governed governor, but an independent executive. Republicanism and our country, for ever. Down with the first consul. Down with his legion of honour[.].
Published: (1793)
Published: (1793)