Person
Green, Samuel, 1743-1799
Catalogue
- Books
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A description of a new chart of history. Containing a view of the principal revolutions of empire that have taken place in the world. By Joseph Priestley, LL.D. F.R.S. [One line in Latin from Horace]
Priestley, Joseph, 1733-1804.Date: MDCCXCII. [1792]- Books
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Remarks on a pamphlet, entituled "A dissertation on the political union and constitution of the thirteen United States of North-America." "By a citizen of Philadelphia." With some brief observations, whether all the western lands, not actually purchased or conquered by the crown of Great-Britain, antecedent to the late cession, made to the thirteen United States of North-America, ought not to be considered as ceded to the thirteen states jointly---and whether all the confiscated estates of those people, by some termed Loyalists, are to be considered as forfeited to the states in which they were resident, or to all the states included in the confederation. By a Connecticut farmer.
Sherman, Roger, 1721-1793.Date: M,DCC,LXXXIV. [1784]- Books
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A sermon, containing Scriptural instructions to civil rulers, and all free-born subjects. In which the principles of sound policy and good government are established and vindicated; and some doctrines advanced and zealously propagated by New-England Tories, are considere and refuted. Delivered on the public fast, August 31, 1774. With an address to the freemen of the colony. By Samuel Sherwood, A.M. Pastor of a church of Christ in Fairfield. Also, an appendix, stating the heavy grievances the colonies labour under from several late acts of the British Parliament, and shewing what we have just reason to expect the consequences of these measures will be. By the Rev. Ebenezer Baldwin, of Danbury. [Five lines of quotations]
Sherwood, Samuel, 1730-1783.Date: [1774]- Books
- Online
An address to the inhabitants of the new settlements in the northern and western parts of the United States.
General Association of Connecticut.Date: [1795]- Books
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The great importance of speaking in the most intelligible manner in the Christian church. A sermon, preached at the installation of the Rev. Nathaniel Sherman, over the Church of Christ in Mount-Carmel, New-Haven, May, 18th, 1768. By the Rev. Naphtali Daggett, A.M. professor of divinity in Yale-College, in New-Haven, and president of the same. Published at the desire of the hearers. [One line of Latin text]
Daggett, Naphtali, 1727-1780.Date: [1768]