1775. |
|
|
|
Letter from William Sheriff, dated Boston, May 29, to Thomas Williams, Storekeeper of Ordnance at Annapolis Royal, |
902 |
June 3, |
Letter from Loammi Baldwin to the Massachusetts Congress, |
902 |
3, |
Letter from the New-Hampshire Congress to the Massachusetts Congress. Having undoubted intelligence of the attempts of the British Ministry to engage the Canadians and Indians in their interest, they have raised and sent three Companies for the protection of the frontier settlements, |
902 |
4, |
Letter from a Gentleman in London to his friend in Philadelphia. The duplicity of New-York will ever render them suspected. The many assurances given to the Ministry by their leaders, justify a suspicion, which the conduct of some of their Merchants confirms, that they would adopt any means to break through the Association, |
903 |
4, |
Meeting of the Committee of Observation for Anne Arundel County, Maryland, |
903 |
4, |
Letter from Colonel Philip Schuyler to the New-York Congress. He has been appointed by the Continental Congress to settle the Accounts of the People employed in the reduction of Ticonderoga, |
904 |
4, |
Letter from Ethan Allen, at present the principal commander of the Army at Ticonderoga, to our worthy and respectable countrymen and friends, the French People of Canada, |
904 |
4, |
Letter from Elbridge Gerry to the Massachusetts Delegates in the Continental Congress. Government is so essential that it cannot be too soon adopted. Every days delay will make the task more arduous. A regular General is wanted to assist in disciplining the Army; the pride of the People would prevent their being led by any General not American, yet General Lee could be of great service. The New-England Generals would acquiesce in the appointment of Colonel Washington as Generalissimo, |
906 |
4, |
Letter from General Ward and the Chairmen of the Committees of Safety and Supplies, to the Continental Congress. The Army at Cambridge is so entirely destitute of Powder that they are in danger of falling a prey to their enemies for want of the means of defence; they earnestly beseech that whatever can be spared in the other Colonies may be sent for their relief, |
906 |
4, |
Letter from Mrs. Bowdoin to the Massachusetts Congress, enclosing Depositions relating to the plundering and abuse of the Inhabitants of the Elizabeth Islands, by Captain Lindsey, of the Falcon Sloop-of-War, |
906 |
|
Deposition of Elisha Nye, |
907 |
|
Deposition of John Tucker, Jeremiah Robinson, Elisha Robinson and Ebenezer Meigs, |
908 |
|
Statement of Daniel Eyry, |
909 |
5, |
Political Observations on the Rebellion in America. Their wealth is the source of their Rebellion, and the Ministry have wisely begun to reduce them to reason by lessening it. If they persist in their Rebellion, all the calamities that arise from it will, in the sight of God and man, lie at their door, |
909 |
5, |
Association entered into at Savannah, in Georgia, |
1551 |
5, |
Philadelphia Committee, prohibit the landing or selling of Goods without a certificate from the Committee whence they are sent, that they were imported within the rules of the Congress, |
909 |
5, |
Letter to General Burgoyne, from a Pennsylvanian, |
910 |
5, |
Letter from William Duer to the New-York Congress, representing the Disturbances and Riots in the New-Hampshire Grants, |
910 |
5, |
Letter from Colonel Guy Johnson to the Committee for Tryon County, New-York, |
911 |
5, |
Letter from Hartford to a Gentleman in New-York. Robert Temple, a high-flying Tory, taken at Plymouth, and sent to Cambridge, with his papers, |
912 |
5, |
Letter from James Curgenven to Governour Trumbull, informing him of his appointment of Collector of the Customs for the Port of New-Haven, enclosing him a copy of the Oath of Office he had taken before the Board of Customs, and requesting to be informed if he will administer to him the usual Oath taken by Officers of the Crown, |
912 |
1775. |
|
June 5, |
Petition of Soldiers in Captain Drurys Company to the Massachusetts Congress, |
914 |
5, |
Petition of the Captains in Colonel Scammonss Regiment to the Massachusetts Congress, |
914 |
5, |
Town Meeting in Conway, New-Hampshire.Committee appointed, and empowered to inquire into the conduct of obnoxious persons, and refugees from other Towns, |
914 |
6, |
Address to the Minister. His (Lord Norths) policy has driven the Americans to resistance, |
915 |
6, |
Letter from the Committee of Intelligence for Charlestown, South-Carolina, to the New-York Congress. The apprehension of a defection in New-York gave inexpressible anxiety to all America, and at the same time encouraged the Ministry to proceed in all their measures; they are happy to find this apprehension was unjustly formed, |
1323 |
6, |
Committee appointed to receive the signatures of the Inhabitants of Charlestown to the Association adopted by the Provincial Congress of South-Carolina, on the 3d instant, |
915 |
6, |
Committee of Chester County, Pennsylvania. Proceedings on the charge against William Moore, that he is inimical to the Liberties of America, |
916 |
6, |
Letter from the New-York Congress to Governour Trumbull. The supply of Powder in the Colony is so insufficient that they cannot contribute in the least towards supplying Ticonderoga and Crown Point with it, |
916 |
6, |
Letter from Pierpont Edwards to the New-York Congress. Request the fullest information of the measures they have adopted, that he may communicate them to the Assembly of Connecticut, |
917 |
6, |
Letter from Jacobus Louw to the Ulster County, New-York, Committee, making concessions for his opposition to the Resolves of the Continental Congress, |
917 |
6, |
Meeting of the Committee for the Town of Kingston, in Ulster County, New-York. Mr. Louw having made reasonable satisfaction, is recommended as a friend to the rights and liberties of British America, |
917 |
6, |
Letter from Captain Henry B. Livingston to the New-York Congress, |
918 |
6, |
Meeting of Delegates from the several Towns in the County of Cumberland, New-York. They will resist and oppose the acts of Parliament for raising a Revenue in America, and adopt the Association entered into at New-York. They have many brave Soldiers, but nothing to fight with, and request a supply from the Congress |
918 |
6, |
Letter from James Easton, at Crown Point, to the Massachusetts Congress, |
919 |
6, |
Concession of Silvanus Whitney to the Committee of Observation for Stamford, Connecticut, |
920 |
|
Narrative of the destruction of the Tea, delivered up by Silvanus Whitney, |
920 |
6, |
Exchange of Prisoners at Charlestown, |
920 |
6, |
Declaration by John Prentice, of his reasons for signing the Address to Governour Hutchinson, |
921 |
7, |
Subscription of One Hundred Pounds, by the Constitutional Society, London, for the relief of the Widows and Orphans of those who were inhumanly murdered by the Kings Troops at Lexington and Concord, in April last, |
921 |
8, |
The Association of the Provincial Congress of South-Carolina, signed universally by the Inhabitants of Charlestown; two persons only treated it with contempt, |
922 |
|
Petition of Michael Hubart to the Committee of Correspondence at Charlestown, complaining of his treatment by Laughlin Martin and John Dealy, |
922 |
|
Account of the punishment of Martin and Dealy, (Note,) |
923 |
7, |
Letter from North-Carolina to a Gentleman in New-York. The Governour has sent his family to New-York, and has taken up his residence in Fort Johnston, at the mouth of Cape-Fear River, |
924 |
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