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History of New York:

In Words of One Syllable (Google eBook)
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Belford, Clarke & Company, 1888 - New York (State) - 186 pages
  

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Page 76 - ... natural rights of the colonies, — their right of making their own laws, and disposing of their own property by representatives of their own choosing, — if such is really the case between Great Britain and her colonies, then the connection between them ought to cease ; and sooner or later it must inevitably cease.
Page 165 - Clermont," and made the trip from New York to Albany, at the rate of five miles an hour, against the wind and tide.
Page 78 - ... effect of this was to unite all the colonies in resistance, for they all felt that they would soon meet the same treatment themselves if they allowed Massachusetts to be so treated. The third was the Transportation Bill: it ordered that Americans who should commit murder in resisting the laws should be sent to England for trial. The fourth was the Quebec Act: it made the country north of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi a part of Canada.
Page 155 - ... companies were organized and drilled ; men of all trades and avocations offered to labor on the works of defense about the city ; and through individual enterprise alone New York fitted out and sent to sea from her port, within four months after the declaration of war, twenty-six privateers, carrying two hundred and twelve guns and two thousand two hundred and thirty-nine men.1 Fortresses had been in slow process of erection in the harbor since 1808. Governor's Island possessed a regular inclosed...
Page 37 - ... if this were so, it could hardly be thought that this was of any weight, after they had suffered the Dutch to occupy the country unmolested for some fifty years. Nevertheless, in 1664 Charles II. and his advisers, while England and Holland were at peace, resolved to assert this claim. They sent out a fleet of four ships, with a force of four hundred and fifty men on board, under the command of Colonel Nicholls. The commissioners who were at the same time sent out to New England were ordered to...
Page 169 - ... Washington counties were of great value to the state during the war as source of that indispensable and at the time scarce substance, common salt. Mineral Waters. It would be impossible to enumerate all the mineral wells and springs of the state, even those which have a more than local reputation. They are to be found in all parts of the state and show great variety in quality. The following springs and wells either ship water to all parts of the state and outside of the state, or are places...
Page 91 - In the name of the great Je-ho-vah and the Con-ti-nen-tal Congress.
Page 57 - The strug-gle be-tween France and Eng-land for the con-trol of the West-ern Con-ti-nent last-ed but a short while af-ter this.
Page 147 - It was thought that to join the wa-ters of the Hud-son Riv-er with those of the great lakes...
Page 79 - ... ig-no-rant of the char-ac-ter of the men he had to deal with, that he was still bent up-on forc-ing them to sub-mit, and real-ly thought he could do it, too.

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