History of the United States: From the Earliest Period to the Administration of President Johnson, Količina 1Johnson, Fry, 1866 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 77
Stran 81
... tion belonged to him . Soon after , he sent over a collection of statutes which he had drawn up , to be laid be- fore a second Assembly ; that body , however , refused to admit the proprietary's claim to the initiative , or to adopt the ...
... tion belonged to him . Soon after , he sent over a collection of statutes which he had drawn up , to be laid be- fore a second Assembly ; that body , however , refused to admit the proprietary's claim to the initiative , or to adopt the ...
Stran 252
... tion was by no means acceptable to the Louisianians . They did everything in their power to manifest their unwilling ness and disgust , even proceeding to a show of force ; but it was of no avail ; the transfer to the Spanish rule took ...
... tion was by no means acceptable to the Louisianians . They did everything in their power to manifest their unwilling ness and disgust , even proceeding to a show of force ; but it was of no avail ; the transfer to the Spanish rule took ...
Stran 468
... tion of the private soldiers ; and they from thence argued , that it was exactly such as he and his council had devised . After General Washington's success in the Jerseys , the obduracy and malevo- lence of the royalists subsided in ...
... tion of the private soldiers ; and they from thence argued , that it was exactly such as he and his council had devised . After General Washington's success in the Jerseys , the obduracy and malevo- lence of the royalists subsided in ...
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
History of the United States, from the Earliest Period to the ..., Količina 1 J. A. (Jesse Ames) Spencer Predogled ni na voljo - 2012 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
affairs America appointed arms army arrived Assembly attack attempt authority body Boston Britain British Burgoyne Canada Carolina carried cause charter Church Church of England civil claim colonists colony command Company Congress Connecticut council court crown death declared Delaware dispute Duke of York Dutch duty emigrants endeavored enemy England English entered established expedition favor force France French governor grant History honor House hundred independence Indians inhabitants Island justice king land laws liberty Lord Lord Baltimore Lord Delaware Maryland Massachusetts measures ment militia mother country Netherland North obtained officers Parliament party peace Penn Pequod plantations Plymouth prisoners proprietaries province provisions Puritans Quakers Quebec returned Rhode Island river royal sailed sent settled settlement settlers ships soldiers soon South Carolina spirit Stamp Act stamp duty thousand tion town trade tribes troops United vellum vessels Virginia voyage Washington William York