hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Frederick H. Dyer, Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Regimental Histories 489 489 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 166 166 Browse Search
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington 164 164 Browse Search
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 6, 10th edition. 63 63 Browse Search
John Beatty, The Citizen-Soldier; or, Memoirs of a Volunteer 63 63 Browse Search
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 8 56 56 Browse Search
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 5, 13th edition. 35 35 Browse Search
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 4, 15th edition. 30 30 Browse Search
Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life 30 30 Browse Search
George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 7, 4th edition. 29 29 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Browsing named entities in George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 6, 10th edition.. You can also browse the collection for July or search for July in all documents.

Your search returned 63 results in 11 document sections:

the aristocracy—the Administration of Chatham. July—October, 1766. the obnoxious clauses of the Billeting Act had Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. been renewed inadvertently by Ministers, who had designe more country, whose people Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. had not separated from the Church of Rome. At of days of activity, when, Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. as he directed against the Bourbons the treasuaffections, he next invited Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. Temple, the beloved brother of his wife, the hend's character, said every Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. thing to dissuade Grafton from taking such a mighest judicial office were Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. confided to Camden, who had called taxing Amerhis door. But he was never Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. afterwards able to resume office, except with only for maintaining Privi- Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. lege against Prerogative; and if they mitigaten's Autobiography. The lion Chap. XXVI.} 1766. July. had left the forest, where he roamed as the un
a pound on tea, declared an American revenue expedient. 7 Geo. III. c. XLVI. By another Act 7 Geo. III. c. XLI. a July. Board of Customs was established at Boston; and general Writs of Assistance were legalized. For New-York the Lords of Trat Province would submit without delay; and that the Americans, as their tea would now come to them at Chap. XXIX} 1767. July. a less price than to the consumers in England, would pay the impost in their own ports with only seeming reluctance. Bina, a soldier who, in the army, had learned little but a fondness for display. To mark the boundary Chap. XXIX.} 1767. July. which in October, 1765, had been agreed upon between the Carolinas and the Cherokees, Tryon to Rutherford, &c., Commisf the most pernicious beast of prey in the mountains, ceremoniously distinguished the Governor by the Chap. XXIX.} 1767. July. name of the Great Wolf. Tryon to the Secretary of State, 14 July, 1767. The Highlands of North Carolina were alrea
d by France and America.—coalition of the King and the aristocracy. July—November, 1767. the anarchy in the Ministry was agreeable Chap. XXX.} 1767. July. to the King, for it enabled him to govern as well as to reign. Grafton made no tedious speeches in the closet, and had apprg him leave to treat with his own old associates, Chap. XXX.} 1767. July. though Grafton desired to effect through Gower a junction with the ompare 86. he surveyed calmly the condition of the Chap XXX.} 1767. July. chequered factions, which had been so freshly and so loosely put toe to Shelburne, 18 June, 1767. for the use of the Chap. XXX.} 1767. July. army, without specifications. This, by the advice of the Attorney We may as well demand one from you, cried Rich- Chap. XXX.} 1767. July. mond, Walpole's Memoirs, III. 80. that you never will disturb thingham to an audience; now that he had failed, he Chap XXX.} 1767. July. was received to make confession, that the country required a strong
for me to say any thing of them in this letter. This seems to me to approach an acknowledgment, that the public letter was his own. Indirect evidence abounds. Not only do the contemporary letters of Bernard and of Hutchinson, and the History of Hutchinson, and the biography of Eliot, attribute generally many Massachusetts State Papers to the pen of Samuel Adams, but there is also a report of a conversation between Otis and Samuel Adams, in which Otis, on the last day of June or early in July of this very year, blamed the latter for intending to print a public letter; and in the course of the dispute Otis said to S. Adams, You are so fond of your own draughts that you can't wait for the publication of them to the proper time. This remark which referred to a letter to Lord Hillsborough, defending the letter to De Berdt and its consequences, speaks not of a draught of one letter, but generally of draughts; which is in harmony with all the contemporary testimony. See the unpublishe
Massachusetts was left without a Legislature July Its people had no intention to begin a rebellioand of historic tradition. Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. The Americans, observed the clear-sighted Du Cmore at their service than Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. our liberties. In New-York, the merchants sMassachusetts, 23 June, 1768; received early in July, Prior Documents, 219. As for South Carolina, t an account of the cost to Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. the Exchequer of the Stamp Act, so as to draw n enlightened one. As yet Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. none is thoroughly so. But tyranny combined wionsieur le Comte du Ohatelet. to Du Chatelet in July, after a conversation of six hours with a perso and Spain. They may want Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. confidence in the strength of our navy; they mies. and he took his opin- Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. ions from Bernard. That favorite Governor wasis duplicity, and wrote an Chap. XXXIV.} 1768. July. answer to be shown the Council, Bernard to
—Hillsborough's Ad-Ministration of the Colonies continued. July—September, 1768. The people of Boston had gone out of favor with Chap XXXV.} 1768. July. almost every body in England. W. S. Johnson to Thaddeus Burr, London, 28 July, 1768. Evhey expressed it, against that insolent Chap. XXXV.} 1768. July. town of Boston. W. S. Johnson's P. S. to Letter of 23 Jts sent from Boston in June. met little Chap. XXXV.} 1768. July. notice. At the same time Narrative of Facts relative t act of bad faith conducted by his col- Chap. XXXV.} 1768. July. leagues. Grafton's Autobiography. Unsolicited by Paoli,inia, it was most properly resolved that Chap XXXV.} 1768. July. the office of its Governor should no longer remain a sinecits insolence; and its Town Meetings no Chap. XXXV.} 1768. July. longer be suffered to threaten and defy the Government of pport of the troops, nor was it for his Chap. XXXV.} 1768. July. Majesty's service or the peace of the Province, that any s
recede. The House, having disdainfully rejected his de- July. mand, Answer of the House of Representatives, 4 July, 1ng hold; and an issue was made up between Chap XLI.} 1769. July. the hereditary Senate of the modern Imperial Rome, and theed from the revenue officers, whose ship Chap. XLI.} 1769. July. named Liberty, was destroyed. Hulton, Temple, Paxton, t Hutchinson, 3 May, 1769. on the evening of the last day of July left Boston to sail for Europe. He was to have sent home whom he pleased, said the Boston- Chap. XLI.} 1769. July. eers; but the die being thrown, poor Sir Francis Bernard was the he found that the Ministry had promised Chap. XLI.} 1769. July. the London merchants never to employ him in America again.welcome master, nothing but a desert. When near the end of July, it was told that O'Reilly had arrived at the Balise with ad'accnsation in Gayarre. O'Reilly is not Chap. XLI.} 1769. July. come to ruin the Colony, said Aubry, who had received inst
was willing to wait, being persuaded that the associations for nonmportation would fall asunder of themselves. Canada, Carolina and Georgia, and even Maryland July. and Virginia had increased their importations; and New England and Pennsylvania had imported nearly one half as much as usual; New-York alone had been perfectly tf any merchant should presume to break through the non-importation agreement, except in concert with the several Provinces, the goods imported Chap. XLIV.} 1770. July. should be burnt as soon as landed, and I am ready to peril my life in the attempt. Such were the words of Isaac Sears at a public meeting of the resolute patriots. The decision was on the balance; an appeal was again taken to the people; and as it appeared that a majority favored resuming importations, the packet of July which had been detained for a few days, sailed before the middle of the month with orders for all kinds of merchandise excepting tea. Golden to Hillsborough, 10 July,
ial law introduced into Massachusetts.—Hillsbo-rough's Administration of the Colonies continued. July—October, 1770. greater joy was never shown than prevailed in CHAP XLV.} 1770. July. London atJuly. London at the news that America was resuming commercial intercourse. The occasion invited corresponding concessions, which Lord North would have willingly made; but the majority of his colleagues had been ledway for closing the Port of Boston. Hutchinson paid court by acting in the same spirit; and in July once more summoned the Legislature to Cambridge. For this repeated wrong to the public service o divine right of regal power had never gone so far as to claim, that it might CHAP. XLV.} 1770. July. be used at caprice, to inflict wanton injury. There was no precedent for the measure but duringof Saturday, the eighth day of September, Hutchinson received the order which had been adopted in July by the King in Council, and which marks the beginning of a system of measures having for their o
t to the Charter and the laws. The Protest had hardly been adopted, when the July. application of its doctrines became necessary. The Commissioners of the Customfrom the colonial income tax; and Hillsborough, disregard- Chap. XLVII.} 1771. July. ing a usage of more than fifty years, commanded the compliance of the legislatuevied and extorted from those, who, if they have property, Chap. XLVII.} 1771. July. have a right to the absolute disposal of it. To withhold your assent to this bind Franklin foretold a bloody struggle, in which America's Chap. XLVII.} 1771. July. growing strength and magnitude, B. Franklin to Committee of Correspondence i county in Great Britain. Of this statute, which violated every safeguard of July. justice and might be still more mischievous as a precedent, the Assembly of Masd was so resolved, that a Governor who like Hutchinson was Chap. XLVII.} 1772. July. not dependent on the people for support, was not such a Governor as the people