Chronicles of Pennsylvania from the English Revolution to the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1688-1748: By Charles P. Keith, Band 1Patterson & White Company, 1917 - 981 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 100
Seite v
... Pennsylvania in the XVIIth andXVIIIth Centuries may be described as a panegyric upon William Penn , the Acta as a wonder- worker of Benjamin Franklin , or an epic about George Washington . Much matter , less vivid , but worthy of ...
... Pennsylvania in the XVIIth andXVIIIth Centuries may be described as a panegyric upon William Penn , the Acta as a wonder- worker of Benjamin Franklin , or an epic about George Washington . Much matter , less vivid , but worthy of ...
Seite vi
... Pennsylvania history has been used to correct misapprehensions as to matters not chronologically within its theme . Much of ... William Penn , if not of the Proprietaries in general ; but in opposition the Historical Review of the Consti ...
... Pennsylvania history has been used to correct misapprehensions as to matters not chronologically within its theme . Much of ... William Penn , if not of the Proprietaries in general ; but in opposition the Historical Review of the Consti ...
Seite viii
... William Penn or his representatives did , we have their own written words , published in the Penn and Logan Correspondence , or preserved among the letters and papers in the care of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania ; and the same ...
... William Penn or his representatives did , we have their own written words , published in the Penn and Logan Correspondence , or preserved among the letters and papers in the care of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania ; and the same ...
Seite 2
... William Penn , Proprietary and Governor in Chief . One cor- rection of tradition may well be made in passing : the bricks of the old buildings of Pennsylvania were not brought from England ; on the contrary , clay was most abundant in ...
... William Penn , Proprietary and Governor in Chief . One cor- rection of tradition may well be made in passing : the bricks of the old buildings of Pennsylvania were not brought from England ; on the contrary , clay was most abundant in ...
Seite 10
... William Penn asked for a grant of land was that Lord Baltimore had two degrees of latitude , and it was to such dimensions that Penn desired to hold him . Watkin's Point being 38 ° 10 ′ , made the tradi- tional northern boundary at ...
... William Penn asked for a grant of land was that Lord Baltimore had two degrees of latitude , and it was to such dimensions that Penn desired to hold him . Watkin's Point being 38 ° 10 ′ , made the tradi- tional northern boundary at ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acres aforesaid afterwards allowed America appointed asked Assembly Assemblymen Baptists Bishop Blackwell called Castle Charles charter Chester Christ Church Church of England Churchmen claim colony commission Commissioners congregation Council Councillors Court Creek Crown dated declared deeds Delaware Delaware Bay Delaware River Deputy Duke of York Dutch England English Evans Five Nations Fletcher Frame freemen Friends government of Maryland Governor grant Griffith Jones Growdon heirs House Indians inhabitants James Jersey John Justices Keith Keithians King King's land laws letter Lieutenant-Governor Logan London Lord Baltimore Lower Counties Markham Maryland Meeting ment mentioned miles minister non-Quakers oath officers passed patent Penn's Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Philadelphia County pirates plantations preached Proprietary Province purchasers Quakers Quary Queen quit rents religious River Samuel Samuel Finney says sent Sheriff Shippen Susquehanna Swedes Thomas Lloyd tion trade vessel Whitefield William Penn