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 ...
| Corporate Authors: | New York (State). Legislature, New York (State) |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Series: | Early American imprints. Evans (1639-1800) ;
no. 46240. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Evans Digital Edition |
Similar Items
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 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)
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 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
Parties, elections, and representation in the state of New York /
by: Scarrow, Howard A.
Published: (1983)
by: Scarrow, Howard A.
Published: (1983)
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.
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
by: Baker, Gardiner, 1761-1798
At a meeting of a number of freeholders of the city of Albany, at Wendell's Hotel, on Saturday the 12th day of April, 1800. ... Robert Yates, Esq. being nominated a candidate to be chosen as senator for the eastern district ... it was thereupon unanimously resolved, that he be supported by this meeting ...
Published: (1800)
Published: (1800)
To the independent electors, of the city and county of Albany : At a public meeting of a number of the anti-Federalists ... the following persons were unanimously nominated to represent the city and county in convention and Assembly. ...
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 independent electors, of the city and county of Albany : At a public and general meeting of the Federalists of the city of Albany, a committee, consisting of fifteen persons, was appointed for the purpose of collecting the sentiments of the different districts of the county, on the subject of nominating candidates for members of the Convention and legislature. ...
To the independent electors, of the city and county of Albany : At a public and general meeting of the Federalists of the city of Albany, a committee, consisting of fifteen persons, was appointed ...
New-York, November 10th, 1792 : Please to give the following extracts from the Journal of the Senate of the state of New-York a place in your paper, agreeably to the order of the Senate of the 17th instant thereto annexed. ...
Published: (1792)
Published: (1792)
Schenectady, April 13th, 1799 : In committee, present, Abraham Oothout, John Glen, Nicholas Veeder, Lawrence Van Boskerk, Stephen N. Bayard, John Peek. : Sir, It is the opinion of a great many of the respectable electors of the city of Schenectady in particular, and of the county of Albany in general, that a change in the representation from this city in the House of Assembly of the state, is essentially necessary ...
Published: (1799)
Published: (1799)
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)
Albany, January 26, 1789. Extract of a letter from a gentleman in this city, to his friend in New-York.
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)
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)
New-York, January 7, 1770. Advertisement : This is to give notice to all such, who are disposed to sign the petition to the Honourable House of Assembly, praying it to pass a law to elect our representatives by ballot, that there will be petitions lodged at the houses of Messrs. James M'Cartney ...
Published: (1770)
Published: (1770)
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)
To the Whig mechanicks of the city and county of New-York : My friends and fellow-citizens! You have in the course of the week, been addressed by a number of writers ... respecting the ensuing election for senators and assembly-men ...
by: Battered soldier
Published: (1783)
by: Battered soldier
Published: (1783)
A copy of the poll list, of the election for representatives for the city and county of New-York : which election began on Monday the 23d day of January, and ended on Friday the 27th, of the same month, in the year of our Lord, MDCCLXIX. : Alphabetically made.
At a meeting of a number of freeholders of the city of Albany, at Wendell's Hotel, on Saturday the 12th day of April, 1800. ... Robert Yates and Stephen Lush, Esqrs. being nominated candidates to be chosen as senators for the eastern district ... it was thereupon unanimously resolved, that they be supported by this meeting ...
Published: (1800)
Published: (1800)
To the freeholders & freemen of the city and county of New-York : Gentlemen, Many arts have been used to misrepresent to you the conduct of your committee, and the business of next Wednesday, which will be simply this; to elect eleven deputies, who are to meet in this city ... with the deputies that will be chosen by the other counties, for the sole purpose of chusing out of all those deputies, delegates to represent this colony in the next Congress ...
by: Friend to the Congress
by: Friend to the Congress
To the inhabitants of the city and county of New-York : My dear countrymen, There can be nothing more fatal to us than to bring our representation into contempt. ...
by: Watchman
Published: (1776)
by: Watchman
Published: (1776)
Gatekeepers to the franchise : shaping election administration in New York /
by: Hayduk, Ronald, 1958-
Published: (2005)
by: Hayduk, Ronald, 1958-
Published: (2005)
To the freeholders and freemen of the city and county of New-York : Whereas at a very considerable meeting of freeholders and freemen ... it was unanimously determined to preserve ... the peace of this city, by preventing a contested election for members to serve in the next General Assembly ...
Published: (1769)
Published: (1769)
Machine politics and money in elections in New York City.
by: Ivins, William Mills, 1851-1915
Published: (1970)
by: Ivins, William Mills, 1851-1915
Published: (1970)
To the free and independent electors of the city and county of New-York : A number of your fellow citizens ... respectfully beg leave to present the following list as the best calculated to represent the different classes of citizens, in the Hon. the House of Assembly ...
Published: (1789)
Published: (1789)
To the freeholders and freemen, of the city and county of New-York : Gentlemen, To pretend to prove what cannot be denied, would be wasting time to no purpose. That it seem'd to be the general voice of the inhabitants, to return the four late members to represent this city and county in the next General Assembly; is as true as the principle upon which that general voice was founded, is just, virtuous, and reasonable. ...
New York election frauds : hearings before the United States House Select Committee on Alleged New York Election Frauds, Fortieth Congress, third session.
Published: (1869)
Published: (1869)
New York Election Frauds : hearings before the United States House Select Committee on Alleged New York Election Frauds, Fortieth Congress, third session.
Published: (1869)
Published: (1869)
To the Honourable House of Representatives of this His Majesties province of New-York, in General Assembly met & convened : The humble petition of Samuell Staats, Johannes D'Peyster, Leonard Lewis and Abraham Gouverneur.
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.
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 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 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)
New-York, January 17, 1769. Advertisement : The members of the Ancient and Honourable Society of Free and Accepted Masons, in this city, in the interest of Philip Livingston, Peter Van Brugh Livingston, Theodorus Van Wyck, and John Morin Scott, Esqrs, candidates at the ensuing election, are requested to meet at the house of Abraham De Lancy, on Friday next, at five o'clock ...
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)
City-Hall, high noon, 10th March, 1768. A kick for a bite : From the old proverb: "One man may better steal a horse, than another look over the hedge."
by: Ditto
Published: (1768)
by: Ditto
Published: (1768)