Chronicles of Pennsylvania from the English Revolution to the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1688-1748: By Charles P. Keith, Band 2Patterson & White Company, 1917 - 981 Seiten |
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Seite 468
... leave to sit at any further proceedings , or , if the Governor could not agree to this , that the Council , without him , meet the Assem- bly . Evans insisted that he was the Queen's repre- sentative and obliged to require deference ...
... leave to sit at any further proceedings , or , if the Governor could not agree to this , that the Council , without him , meet the Assem- bly . Evans insisted that he was the Queen's repre- sentative and obliged to require deference ...
Seite 475
... leaving it the next morning , arrived in the evening of the 2nd within three miles of the In- dian village called Peixtan , and , the next day , by lying in ambush just out of the village , and having Godin en- ticed out by Chartier ...
... leaving it the next morning , arrived in the evening of the 2nd within three miles of the In- dian village called Peixtan , and , the next day , by lying in ambush just out of the village , and having Godin en- ticed out by Chartier ...
Seite 476
... leaving the amount to be paid to Penn to her Majesty's grace and goodness , as it was found that Penn was ready to do . Replying on July 2 , 1707 , to certain queries , Penn said that his gains by the land ought not to be taken into ...
... leaving the amount to be paid to Penn to her Majesty's grace and goodness , as it was found that Penn was ready to do . Replying on July 2 , 1707 , to certain queries , Penn said that his gains by the land ought not to be taken into ...
Seite 478
... fruitless waiting and let him go live of his own . " Not long after the date of this letter , William Jr. and his wife recognized that they must leave their home at Worminghurst ; and William Jr. 478 CHRONICLES OF PENNSYLVANIA .
... fruitless waiting and let him go live of his own . " Not long after the date of this letter , William Jr. and his wife recognized that they must leave their home at Worminghurst ; and William Jr. 478 CHRONICLES OF PENNSYLVANIA .
Seite 479
By Charles P. Keith Charles Penrose Keith. must leave their home at Worminghurst ; and William Jr. , in exchange for some prospective settlement , let this inheritance from his mother be sold , and the pro- ceeds applied to the father's ...
By Charles P. Keith Charles Penrose Keith. must leave their home at Worminghurst ; and William Jr. , in exchange for some prospective settlement , let this inheritance from his mother be sold , and the pro- ceeds applied to the father's ...
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Chronicles of Pennsylvania from the English Revolution to the Peace ..., Band 1 Charles Penrose Keith Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
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acres aforesaid afterwards allowed appointed arrived asked Assembly Assemblymen Berthelsdorf bills called Castle chapter Chester County chiefs Church colonies Conestoga congregation Council Councillors Court Crown death debts declared deed Delaware delphia election England English ernor Evans Five Nations French friends George Germans Germantown Gookin Gordon Governor Hamilton Herrnhut House Indians issued John John Penn Justice Keith King King's Lætitia Lancaster Lancaster County land letter Lieutenant Lieutenant-Governor Logan Lord Lower Counties Lutheran Maryland meeting Mennonites ment minister Moravians Mühlenberg Norris ordained paid Palatinate paper money passed Pastor Penn's Pennsyl Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Philadelphia County preached Presbytery present Proprietaries Province Quakers quit rents received Sassoonan sent settled settlement Shawnees Sir William Six Nations Susquehanna sylvania Synod Tennent Thomas Penn tion took trade treaty Tulpehocken vania vessels Virginia voted Walking Purchase William Jr William Penn York Zinzendorf
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 670 - The Puritan hated bearbaiting, not because it gave pain to the bear, but because it gave pleasure to the spectators.
Seite 736 - Logan to be a gentleman of universal learning, and the best judge of books in these parts...
Seite 735 - The institution soon manifested its utility, was imitated by other towns, and in other provinces. The libraries were augmented by donations ; reading became fashionable ; and our people, having no public amusements to divert their attention from study, became better acquainted with books, and in a few years were observed by strangers to be better instructed and more intelligent than people of the same rank generally are in other countries.
Seite 772 - Granted, doth extend itself back into the Woods as far as a Man can go in one day and a half, and bounded on the Westerly Side with the creek called...
Seite 706 - Five Nations, told the Delawares and us, 'Since you have not hearkened to us nor regarded what we have said, now we will put petticoats on you, and look upon you as women for the future, and not as men. Therefore, you Shawanese, look back toward Ohio, the place from whence you came; and return thitherward; for now we shall take pity on the English, and let them have all this land.
Seite 607 - About that time [1720] considerable numbers of good, sober people came in from Ireland, who wanted to be settled. At the same time, also, it happened that we were under some apprehensions from ye Northern Indians. ... I therefore thought it might be prudent to plant a settlement of such men as those who formerly had so bravely defended Londonderry and Inniskillen, as a frontier, in case of any disturbance.
Seite 675 - ... inconceivable to think what a prodigious good Eft'ect immediately ensued. . . . The Shiping from the West of England, Scotland, and Ireland, which just before used to be detain'd five, six, and sometimes nine Months in the Country, before they could get in the Debts due to them and load, were now dispatch'd in a Month or six Weeks at farthest. The poor middling People, who had any Lands . . . paid off their usurious creditors : . . . lawful Interest was at this Time [by Act of Mch. 2, 1722-3]...
Seite 571 - ... present, that Andrew Hamilton, late of the City of Philadelphia, Esq., the tenth day of October, in the first year of the reign of our lord George, by the grace of God king of Great Britain, France and Ireland, defender of the faith the third, at the City aforesaid, of the honourable Charles Gookin, Esq., lieutenant.governor of the province of Pennsylvania, then and still being, the wicked, opprobrious and reproachful words following did speak, utter and pronounce, viz.: Damn him (the said lieutenant.governo...
Seite 756 - THAT no Person or Persons shall or may, at any Time hereafter, be obliged to answer any Complaint, Matter or Thing whatsoever, relating to Property, before the Governor and Council, or in any other Place, but in ordinary Course of Justice, unless Appeals thereunto shall be hereafter by Law appointed.
Seite 687 - •From hence it is that I, in a great measure, account to myself for their Choice of me before divers others who solicited their Favour, For Knowing that I had been bred to the Camp, remote from the refined Politicks which often serve to perplex mankind...