1775. |
|
|
|
Account of the Tory Leaders in the upper parts of South-Carolina, (Note,) |
1715 |
July 23, |
Letter from the Schenectady, New-York, Committee, to General Schuyler, informing him of the flight of Alexander White, Sheriff of Tryon County, |
1730 |
24, |
Meeting of the Committee of Observation for Prince Georges County, Maryland, at Piscataway, |
1716 |
24, |
Letter from John Adams to Mrs. Adams, |
1717 |
24, |
Letter from John Adams to James Warren, |
1717 |
|
Letter from General Gage to the Earl of Dartmouth, dated August 26. The designs of the leaders of the Rebellion prove that a plan was laid in Massachusetts for a total independence, while they amused the People with professions of attachment to the Parent State, |
1718 |
|
Remarks on the intercepted Letters of John Adams, |
1718 |
24, |
Letter from the New-York Committee of Safety to the Continental Congress: are sorry to say that the supposition of a quantity of Powder being received there is without foundation, |
1719 |
24, |
Letter from Colonel Van Schaick to the New-York Committee of Safety, |
1719 |
|
Return of the Second Provincial Regiment in the Colony of New-York, under the command of Colonel Van Schaick, |
1719 |
24, |
Meeting of the Committee of Safety for Connecticut, Committee appointed to make arrangements for equipping and fitting out two Armed Vessels, |
1720 |
24, |
Letter from Governour Trumbull to General Schuyler. Is it not high time to proceed into, and even hasten forward to secure the government of Quebeck, and thereby the whole Indian strength and interest in our favour? |
1721 |
24, |
Note from General Lee to General Sullivan, |
1721 |
24, |
Letter from the Camp at Cambridge to a Gentleman in Philadelphia. Information from Boston, brought out by deserters, |
1722 |
24, |
Letter from General Gage to the Earl of Dartmouth. The Congress, in their declaration for taking up arms, pay little regard to facts, for it is as replete with deceit and falsehood as most of their publications, |
1723 |
25, |
Address of the Delegates of Virginia and Pennsylvania, in the Continental Congress, to the Inhabitants of the two Colonies, on the West side of Laurel Hill, urging them to lay aside their disputes among themselves, and unite in supporting the common rights of the Country, |
1723 |
25, |
Letter from the President of the Council of Safety for South-Carolina to Clement Lempriere, commander of the Sloop Commerce, ordering him to proceed to the Island of New-Providence and procure all the Gunpowder he may find there, |
1724 |
24, |
Commission from the South-Carolina Council of Safety to Clement Lempriere, appointing him Captain of the Sloop Commerce, belonging to New-York, |
1724 |
|
Captain Hattons Report to the Council of Safety, of the occurrences which took place on board the Sloop Commerce, in taking the Powder from Captain Lofthouse, off Augustine Bar, |
1724 |
25, |
Letter from the Elizabethtown, New-Jersey, Committee, to the New-York Congress, |
1726 |
25, |
Letter from Christopher P. Yates to the New-York Congress, |
1726 |
25, |
Letter from Sir John Johnson to Alexander White, |
1726 |
25, |
Letter from Governour Trumbull to the New-York Congress, requesting them to furnish Tents for the Connecticut Troops at Ticonderoga, |
1726 |
25, |
Letter from General Thomas to General Washington, informing him of the sailing of thirteen Ships from Boston, apparently bound to the South, |
1727 |
25, |
Letter to a Gentleman in London, from an Officer in the Army at Boston. At present we are worse off than the Rebels: they know our situation as well as we do ourselves, from the villians that are left in Town; last week one was caught swimming over to the Rebels, with one of their Generals passes in his pocket: he will be hanged in a day or two, |
1727 |
1775. |
|
|
July 26, |
Letter from a Gentleman in London to his friend in New-York. The King does not mean to enslave the Colonies; his bosom heaves with compassion for the People there, under an unhappy delusion: England asks nothing but what is for the benefit of the Colonists themselves, and the Parliament could not, if they would, divest themselves of the power they exercise over the Colonies, |
1727 |
26, |
Letter from Marinus Willett to the New-York Congress, |
1729 |
26, |
Letter from the Albany Committee to General Schuyler. The apprehensions of the Inhabitants of Tryon County, respecting the Indians, are entirely removed, and the disputes between the Inhabitants of the upper part of the County with Sir John Johnson and the Sheriff of that County, amicably accommodated, |
1746 |
26, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the Continental Congress, |
1729 |
26, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the New-York Congress, |
1731 |
26, |
Letter from Colonel Reed, Secretary to General Washington, to General Wooster, |
1731 |
27, |
Letter from James Christie, Jun., of Baltimore, to the Public, relative to his Letter to Col. Christie, of Antigua, written in February last, |
1732 |
27, |
Meeting of the Officers of the Military Association for the City and Liberties of Philadelphia, |
1733 |
27, |
Letter from the Committee for New-Brunswick, New-Jersey, to the New-York Committee of Safety, |
1733 |
27, |
Letter from the New-York Congress to the Continental Congress, |
1734 |
27, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the Continental Congress, |
1734 |
|
An account of the voyage of Captain Remember Baker, begun on the 13th day of July, and ended July 25, 1775, on Lake Champlain, |
1735 |
27, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the New-York Congress. Such intelligence has just been received as makes it indispensably necessary that the stores requested on the 3d instant, should be sent without one moments delay, |
1735 |
27, |
Letter from General Washington to John Augustine Washington, |
1735 |
27, |
Letter from General Washington to General Schuyler, respecting three Companies of New-Hampshire Troops, |
1736 |
27, |
Letter from Gen. Washington to the Continental Congress. Three Men of War and nine Transports gone from Boston, as reported, to plunder Block Island, Fishers Island and Long Island, and bring off what Cattle they may find, |
1736 |
|
General Orders, from July 22 to July 27, |
1737 |
27, |
Letter from Colonel Hurd to the New-Hampshire Congress, |
1740 |
28, |
Letter from London to a Gentleman in Philadelphia. People here are anxious to hear the Resolves of the Congress; and those who a week ago thought General Gage had Troops enough to march through America, now alter their tone, on finding the dispute for a mile of ground cost him one thousand and fifty-four men wounded and slain, |
1741 |
28, |
Letter to the Printer of the London Morning Chronicle: on the American question, |
1742 |
28, |
Meeting of the Committee and Officers of the Militia Company of York County, Pennsylvania. Field-Officers for the Battalion of Minute-Men chosen. Regulations for the Minute-Men and Militia of the County, |
1744 |
28, |
Meeting of the Freeholders of Somerset County, in the Province of New-Jersey. Committee of Correspondence elected. Committee of Inspection for the several Towns recommended; who are to take cognizance of every person, of whatsoever rank or condition, who shall, either by word or deed, endeavour to destroy our unanimity in opposing the arbitrary and cruel measures of the British Ministry, |
1745 |
28, |
Letter from General Schuyler to the Continental Congress, |
1745 |
25, |
Speech of two Oneida Indians, at a Conference with the Albany Committee, on the 25th of July, |
1746 |
28, |
Certificate from Captain Delaplace, that he never saw Colonel Easton at the time Ticonderoga was surprised, |
1087 |
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