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Start Over You searched for: Era Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Remove constraint Era: Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Publication/Creation Date 1765 to 1769 Remove constraint Publication/Creation Date: <span class="from" data-blrl-begin="1765">1765</span> to <span class="to" data-blrl-end="1769">1769</span>
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3. Anno Regni Georgii III. Regis Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, & Hiberniae, quinto. : At the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the nineteenth day of May, anno Dom. 1761, in the first year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great-Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c. And from thence continued by several prorogations to the tenth day of January, 1765, being the fourth session of the twelfth Parliament of Great Britain

5. Answers to the reasons, lately published by the independents, in support of their malicious combination : the freeholder, no. 1 : the public having been promised an answer to the reasons above-mentioned, in a paper published on Monday, under the title of Observations on those reasons: the following refutation of the malicious calumnies they contain, is now submitted to the candid world

6. An appeal to the world; or A vindication of the town of Boston, from many false and malicious aspersions contain'd in certain letters and memorials, written by Governor Bernard, General Gage, Commodore Hood, the Commissioners of the American Board of Customs, and others, an by them respectively transmitted to the British Ministry : Published by order of the town

7. At the General Assembly of the governor and Company of the English colony of Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations, in New-England, in America : begun and held at Newport ... on the first Wednesday in May, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and sixty-seven ... It is voted and resolved, that the whole of that paragraph of the act of the General Assembly, passed in 1746, requiring all the freemen then in the colony, and all that should afterwards be made free, to take an oath against bribery and corruption, be, and the same is hereby repealed ...

11. Boston, 25 January, 1769. A Dialogue between Sir George Cornwell, a gentleman lately arrived from England, with a design to travel incog. thro' the continent of America, and Mr. Flint, an independent gentleman, descended from a good family of the first settlers of New-England that is neither placed nor pensioned : [One line of Latin text].

30. A concise account of North America : containing a description of the several British colonies on that continent, including the islands of Newfoundland, Cape Breton, &c. ... : also of the interior, or westerly parts of the country, upon the rivers St. Laurence, the Mississipi, Christino, and the Great Lakes : to which is subjoined, an account of the several nations and tribes of Indians residing in those parts, as to their customs, manners, government, numbers, &c. ...

31. A concise account of North America : containing a description of the several British colonies on that continent, including the islands of Newfoundland, Cape Breton, &c. : as to their situation, extent, climate, soil, produce, rise, government, religion, present boundaries, and the number of inhabitants supposed to be in each : also of the interior, or westerly parts of the country, upon the rivers St. Laurence, the Mississippi, Christino, and the Great Lakes : to which is subjoined, an account of the several nations and tribes of Indians residing in those parts, as to their customs, manners, government, numbers, &c. : containing many useful and entertaining facts, never before treated of

32. A concise account of North America : containing a description of the several British colonies on that continent, including the islands of Newfoundland, Cape Breton, &c., as to their situation, extent, climate, soil, produce, rise, government, religion, present boundaries and the number of inhabitants supposed to be in each : also of the interior, or westerly parts of the country, upon the rivers St. Laurence, the Mississippi, Christino and the Great Lakes : to which is subjoined, an account of the several nations and tribes of Indians residing in those parts, as to their customs, manners, government, numbers, &c. : containing many useful and entertaining facts, never before treated of

36. A Council held at Fort-George, in the city of ... York, on Wednesday the eleventh day of March, 1767 : present, His Excellency Sir Henry Moore, Baronet, Captain-General, &c. Mr. Horsmanden, Mr. Smith, Mr. Watts, Mr. Walton, Mr. Delancey, Mr. Apthorpe, Mr. Reade. The Council having duly considered all the proofs and allegations offered on the part of the complainants, Daniel Nimham, and the other Indians of the Wappinger Tribe, in support of their claim to certain lands, granted by letters patent, to Adolph Philipse, dated the seventeenth of June, 1697, as likewise, the proofs offered by Roger Morris, Beverley Robinson, and Philip Philipse, in support of their title ... A true Copy, examined, by Gw. Banyar, D.S. Cl. Con

44. Extracts from the proceedings of the High Court of Vice-Admiralty : in Charlestown, South-Carolina, upon six several informations, adjudged by the Honourable Egerton Leigh, Esq, sole judge of that court, and His Majesty's attorney-general in the said province, in the years 1767 and 1768 : with explanatory remarks, &c. and copies of two extraordinary oaths : to which are subjoined, recapitulation, reflections arising from a retrospect of a late case, and some general observations on American custom-house officers, and courts of vice-admiralty

46. Extracts from the proceedings of the High Court of Vice-Admiralty, in Charlestown, South-Carolina, upon six several informations, adjudged by the Honourable Egerton Leigh, Esq; sole judge of that court, and His Majesty's attorney-general in the said province, in the years 176 and 1768 : With explanatory remarks, &c. And copies of two extraordinary oaths. To which are subjoined, recapitulation, reflections arising from a retrospect of a late case, and some general observations on American custom-house officers, and Courts of Vice-Admiralty

47. Glorious news, just received from Boston, brought by Messrs. Jonathan Lowder, and Thomas Brackett : Boston, Friday 11 o'clock, 16th May, 1766. This instant arrived here the brig Harrison, belonging to John Hancock, Esq ; Captain Shubael Coffin, in 6 weeks and 2 days from London, with important news, as follows : From the London gazette. Westminster, March 18th, 1766

50. Histoire de la Nouvelle-York : depuis la découverte de cette province jusqu'a notre siécle [i.e., siècle] : dans laquelle on rapporte les démêlés qu'elle a eus avec les Canadiens & les Indiens : les guerres qu'elle a soutenues contre ces peuples : les traités & les alliances qu'elle a faits avec eux, &c. : on y a joint une description géographique du pays, & une histoire abrégée de ses habitans, de leur religion, de leur gouvernement civil & ecclésiastique, &c

62. Laws of Maryland at large, with proper indexes : now first collected into one compleat body, and published from the original acts and records, remaining in the Secretary's-office of the said province : together with notes and other matters, relative to the constitution thereof, extracted from the provincial records : to which is prefixed, the charter, with an English translation

64. A letter to a friend : containing remarks on certain passages in a sermon, preached by the Right Reverend John, Lord Bishop of Landaff, before the Incorporated Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, at the anniversary meeting, in the Parish Church of St. Mary Le Bow, London, February 20, 1767, in which the highest reproach is undeservedly cast upon the American colonies

65. A letter to a friend, containing remarks on certain passages in a sermon preached by the Right Reverend Father in God, John Lord Bishop of Landaff, before the Incorporated Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, at their anniversary meeting in the parish church of St. Mary-Le-Bow, London, February 20, 1767 : in which the highest reproach is undeservedly cast upon the American colonies

75. Memoirs of Captain Roger Clap : Relating some of God's remarkable providences to him, in bringing him into New-England; and some of the straits and afflictions, the good people met with here in their beginnings. And instructing, counselling, directing and commanding his children and childrens children, and houshold, to serve the Lord in their generations to the latest posterity. [One line from Hebrews].

82. New-York, July 7, 1769 : At this alarming crisis when we are threatened with a deprivation of those invaluable rights, which our ancestors purchased with their blood ... A number of the inhabitants of this city, have determined to drop all party distinction that may have originated from difference in sentiments in other matters--to form ouselves into a society, under the general and honourable appellation, of the United Sons of Liberty, --and strictly to adhere to the following resolutions ...

85. The North-Carolina gazette

88. Observations on several passages in a sermon preached by William Warburton, Lord Bishop of Gloucester, before the Society for Propagating the Gospel in Foreign Parts: on Friday February 21. 1766 : Wherein our colonies are defended against his most injurious and abusive reflections. By Andrew Croswell, V.D.M. in Boston. [One line from Titus].

93. The Pennsylvania gazette

96. The present state of the British empire in Europe, America, Africa and Asia : containing a concise account of our possesions in every part of the globe ; the religion, policy, customs, government, trade, commerce, and manufactures, with the natural and artificial curiosities, of the respective parts of our dominions ; the origin and present state of the inhabitants ; their sciences and arts ; together with their strength by sea and land