Hickey, T. The last speech, and dying words of Thomas Hickey: (a soldier in the Continental Army,) who was executed in a field near the city of New-York, on Friday June 28, 1776, for joining in sedition and mutiny, and of treacherously corresponding with, inlisting, and receiving pay from the enemies of the United American Colonies.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationHickey, Thomas. The Last Speech, and Dying Words of Thomas Hickey: (a Soldier in the Continental Army,) Who Was Executed in a Field Near the City of New-York, on Friday June 28, 1776, for Joining in Sedition and Mutiny, and of Treacherously Corresponding with, Inlisting, and Receiving Pay from the Enemies of the United American Colonies.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationHickey, Thomas. The Last Speech, and Dying Words of Thomas Hickey: (a Soldier in the Continental Army,) Who Was Executed in a Field Near the City of New-York, on Friday June 28, 1776, for Joining in Sedition and Mutiny, and of Treacherously Corresponding with, Inlisting, and Receiving Pay from the Enemies of the United American Colonies.