1775. |
|
|
July 13, |
Letter from Egbert Benson to Peter Van Brugh Livingston, |
1657 |
13, |
Albany, New-York, Committee, authorize any four of their Delegates to the Provincial Congress to act for the County, |
1658 |
13, |
Committee of Safety for Connecticut. The difficulty with General Spencer arranged; he complained of and resented the promotion of General Putnam over him, but was persuaded to return to the Army for the present, |
1658 |
13, |
Letter from Governour Trumbull to General Washington: congratulating him on his appointment as Commander-in-Chief of the American Army, |
1658 |
14, |
Recantation of James Leonard and others, of Ulster County, New-York, who had heretofore refused to sign the Association, |
1659 |
14, |
Letter from General Washington to the President of Congress, |
1659 |
|
True account of the Officers of the Ministerial Troops Killed and Wounded at the Battle of Charlestown, June 17, 1775, |
1660 |
|
General Orders from July 11 to July 14, |
1661 |
13, |
Court Martial held for the trial of Colonel Scammons, of the Massachusetts Forces, accused of backwardness in the execution of his duty in the late action upon Bunkers Hill, |
1662 |
15, |
Letter from General Wooster to the New-York Committee of Safety; proposes to remove his encampment, which is now too near to the City, to Harlem, |
1665 |
13, |
Letter from the New-York Committee of Safety to their Delegates in the Continental Congress. Our enlisted men grow uneasy for want of money, which prevents the enlistment of others: we have no arms, we have no powder, we have no blankets: for Gods sake send us money, send us arms, send us ammunition. Be prudent, be expeditious, |
1788 |
|
15, |
Letter from the New-York Committee of Safety to General Schuyler. We have ordered Tents to Albany for one Regiment; our Troops can be of no service to you; they have no arms, clothes, blankets, or ammunition; the Officers no commissions; our Treasury no money; and ourselves in debt, |
1730 |
15, |
Letter from General Schuyler, at Saratoga, to the President of Congress, |
1665 |
14, |
Letter from the Albany Committee to General Schuyler, with alarming accounts from Tryon County, |
1666 |
13, |
Letter from the Tryon County Committee to the Committees of Schenectady and Albany, Colonel Guy Johnson is ready with eight or nine hundred Indians under Joseph Brandt and Walter Butler to attack Tryon County; and all the enemies of the Country it is feared will rise in arms on approach of the Indians,
| 1666 |
|
Return of the Army of the Associated Colonies, in the Colony of New-York, under the command of General Schuyler, |
1667 |
15, |
Letter from Gen. Schuyler to Gen. Washington, |
1668 |
15, |
Letter from the Tryon County, New-York, Committee, to the Provincial Congress, |
1668 |
15, |
Letter from the Committee for Newbury, Gloucester County, New-York, to the Provincial Congress, |
1668 |
16, |
Letter from General Schuyler to General Washington: enclosing a Letter from Albany and two other papers, which have, in some measure, removed his apprehensions for the safety of the People of Tryon County, |
1669 |
15, |
Letter from the Albany Committee to General Schuyler, |
1669 |
8, |
Letter from Colonel Guy Johnson to the New-York Congress: opened and read by the Albany Committee, and a copy sent to General Schuyler, |
1669 |
15, |
Examination of Garret Roseboom, of the City of Albany, before the Sub-Committee, |
1670 |
16, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the New-York Congress. Intelligence from all quarters evinces the necessity of strengthening the Garrisons of Ticonderoga and Crown Point; the fatal consequences that would follow their loss are too evident to need illustration, |
1671 |
17, |
Meeting of Merchants of Dublin: thanks to Lord Effingham, for having refused to serve against the Americans, |
1672 |
1775. |
|
|
July 17, |
Committee for Charles County, Maryland. Certificates for goods imported into this County must be signed by five of the Committee of the place whence they are sent, |
1673 |
17, |
Letter to the New-York Congress, from the President of the Continental Congress, |
1673 |
17, |
Letter to the New-York Congress, from their Delegates at Philadelphia, recommending Morgan Lewis for the appointment of Brigade Major to the Army under the command of General Schuyler, |
1674 |
17, |
Letter from the Elizabethtown, New-Jersey, Committee, to the Committee for New-York, informing them they have forwarded four hogsheads, containing fifty-two quarter casks of Powder from Philadelphia, |
1674 |
17, |
Elizabethtown, New-Jersey, Committee, restore the Inhabitants of Richmond County, New-York, to their commercial privileges, they having, in general, signed the Association, |
1674 |
17, |
Letter from the Committee of Safety for New-York to the Colonels of the several Regiments: requesting them to make a return of the number of Men ready and fit for service, in each Company, with all possible despatch, |
1674 |
17, |
Letter from John Lamb to the New-York Committee of Safety, requesting permission to enlist his own Men for the Artillery, |
1675 |
17, |
Letter from the Albany Committee to the New-York Congress; enclosing four intercepted Letters, and one from Colonel Guy Johnson, dated July 8th, of which they had sent a copy to General Schuyler, |
1675 |
17, |
Letter from Governour Trumbull to General Washington, |
1676 |
17, |
Letter from Governour Trumbull to General Schuyler, |
1676 |
17, |
Conduct of Captains Ayscough and Wallace, commanders of British Vessels of War, towards the Inhabitants of Newport, Rhode-Island: of their firing on the Town, seizure of vessels, and threats to set fire to the Town, |
1677 |
17, |
Committee for Lancaster, Worcester County, Massachusetts, publish Nahum Houghton as an enemy to his Country, |
1678 |
14, |
Message from Governour Wentworth to the New-Hampshire Assembly, requesting them to rescind the vote excluding three Members from the House returned by the Kings writ, |
1678 |
|
Answer to the Governours Message, refusing to rescind the vote, |
1679 |
|
Message from the Governour to the House; their refusing to rescind the vote for excluding the three Members for Plymouth, Lyme, and Orford, shows they did not meet with a disposition to proceed to business; he therefore adjourns them to the 28th of September next, |
1679 |
18, |
Letter from John Stuart, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, to the Committee of Intelligence at Charlestown, South-Carolina, |
1681 |
18, |
Proceedings of the Committee at Dagsberry, Delaware, on the charges against Thomas Robinson, of counteracting the measures of the Continental Congress, |
1682 |
18, |
Letter from the New-York Committee of Safety to their Delegates in the Continental Congress. A Committee was appointed by the Provincial Congress previous to their adjournment, on the subject of a Congress with the Five Nations: the proceedings relating to it are enclosed, |
1793 |
18, |
Letter to the New-York Committee of Safety, from their Delegates in the Congress. They are sensible of the distress to which New-York must be reduced for want of Money, Arms, and Powder: the first will soon be supplied; no assurances can be given of a supply of Arms and Ammunition, |
1684 |
18, |
Letter from Dr. John Mallett, (on board the Ship Asia,) to William Allman, New-York; instructing him how he may convey a quantity of Medicines from the City of New-York, on board the Asia, |
1684 |
18, |
Letter from General Schuyler, at Ticonderoga, to Governour Trumbull, |
1685 |
18, |
Letter from General Schuyler to General Washington. Carleton has about four hundred Men at St. Johns, which he has well secured: at Ticonderoga nothing has been done for offence or defence, |
1685 |
|