Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (vol. 95, no. 3)American Philosophical Society |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 24
Página 216
... problems of securing a peace at all commensu- Jay , Hon . John , On the Peace Negotiations of 1782- 1783 , as illustrated by the Secret Correspondence between France and England , Papers of the American Historical Association 3 : 79–100 ...
... problems of securing a peace at all commensu- Jay , Hon . John , On the Peace Negotiations of 1782- 1783 , as illustrated by the Secret Correspondence between France and England , Papers of the American Historical Association 3 : 79–100 ...
Página 227
... problems of finance , in securing aid from abroad , and in considering the Articles of Confederation . The government of Pennsylvania , resting on the con- stitution of 1776 , over the merits of which there was a most violent division ...
... problems of finance , in securing aid from abroad , and in considering the Articles of Confederation . The government of Pennsylvania , resting on the con- stitution of 1776 , over the merits of which there was a most violent division ...
Página 256
... problem of the oars , he kept it alive . His letters to the Royal Society repeat the boat's advantages tirelessly ; and as late as 1745 he addressed Admiral Peter War- ren in what may be regarded as the clearest and final exposition of ...
... problem of the oars , he kept it alive . His letters to the Royal Society repeat the boat's advantages tirelessly ; and as late as 1745 he addressed Admiral Peter War- ren in what may be regarded as the clearest and final exposition of ...
Página 258
... problem of imperial defence against the French . Citing Hennepin , he viewed the West as a rich land whose resources would profit America and Great Britain . " I wld have us be speedy . The French wId be so if it were their work , yt so ...
... problem of imperial defence against the French . Citing Hennepin , he viewed the West as a rich land whose resources would profit America and Great Britain . " I wld have us be speedy . The French wId be so if it were their work , yt so ...
Página 279
... problems in a com- parable institution . The borrower at the desk is tak- ing out some amorous novels of a type not popular with the Philadelphia Library directors . the way to the clear understanding and laborious perusal of any , the ...
... problems in a com- parable institution . The borrower at the desk is tak- ing out some amorous novels of a type not popular with the Philadelphia Library directors . the way to the clear understanding and laborious perusal of any , the ...
Términos y frases comunes
Amer American Philosophical Society archeology architecture Archives Astronomer Royal Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Rush Benjamin Vaughan boat British building Cayuga ceramic Charles Charles Darwin collection Committee Conference Congress count culture Darwin David Rittenhouse Deborah Delaware dialects early England ethnologist ethnology Fenton field George Hall Handsome Lake Heckewelder historic Huron Ibid Indian interest Iroquoian Iroquois Iroquois studies John Joseph June languages late later Letters and Papers Library Company linguistic Loganian London manuscript Maskelyne Mason and Dixon material meeting of Council method Minutes Mohawk Moravian Morgan MPDLC North notes October Ojibwa Onondaga Parker Penna Pennsylvania persons Phila Philadelphia Philos Plate pottery prehistoric present published records Royal Society Rush Seneca Seneca Nation sent Six Nations Smith Society's Speck Street Tayloe Thomas Thornton tion Tonawanda transit of Venus translation treaty Univ Washington William York
Pasajes populares
Página 229 - A sermon on the present situation of American affairs, preached in Christ Church, June 23, 1775, at the request of the Officers of the Third Battalion of the city of Philadelphia and District of Southwark.
Página 254 - The author, with the aid of a grant from the Penrose Fund of the American Philosophical Society, is trying to locate, identify, and catalog all extant versions, such as those that appear here. The magnificent "Young Omahaw, War Eagle, Little Missouri, and Pawnees...
Página 242 - Considering our well-furnished, plentiful market as the best of gardens, I am turning mine, in the midst of which my house stands, into grass plots and gravel walks, with trees and flowering shrubs.
Página 253 - The last of the above officers has accepted of the new office of inspectorgeneral of our army, in order to reform abuses ; but the remedy is only a palliative one. In one of his letters to a friend he says, ' A great and good God hath decreed America to be free, or the [General] and weak counsellors would have ruined her long ago.
Página 223 - The American Society for promoting and propagating Useful Knowledge, held in Philadelphia (1766-1768).
Página 253 - Dear Sir; The common danger of our country first brought you and me together. I recollect with pleasure the influence of your conversation and eloquence upon the opinions of this country in the beginning of the present controversy. You first taught us to shake off our idolatrous attachment to royalty, and to oppose its encroachments upon our liberties, with our very lives. By these means you saved us from ruin. The independence of America is the offspring of that liberal spirit of thinking and acting,...
Página 215 - Oswald was empowered to treat " with any commissioners or persons, vested with equal powers by and on the part of the Thirteen United States of America.
Página 253 - ... common danger of our country first brought you and me together. I recollect with pleasure the influence of your conversation and eloquence upon the opinions of this country in the beginning of the present controversy. You first taught us to shake off our idolatrous attachment to royalty, and to oppose its encroachments upon our liberties with our very lives. By these means you saved us from ruin. The independence of America is the offspring of that liberal spirit of thinking, and acting, which...
Página 271 - Be it remembered, In honor of the Philadelphia Youth, (Then chiefly artificers,) That, in MDCCXXXI, They cheerfully At the Instance of Benjamin Franklin, One of their Number, Instituted the Philadelphia Library, Which, though small at first, Is become highly valuable, and extensively useful. And which the Walls of this Edifice Are now destined to contain and preserve; The first Stone of whose Foundation Was here placed The 31st of August, MDCCLXXXIX.
Página 306 - I arose, and, as I attempted to step over the threshold of my door, I stumbled and should have fallen had they not caught me. They were three holy men who looked alike, and were dressed alike. The paint they wore seemed but one day old. Each held in his hand a shrub bearing different kinds of fruit. One of them, addressing me, said, " We have come to comfort and relieve you. Take of these berries and eat; they will restore you to health.