Browsing named entities in George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 4, 15th edition.. You can also browse the collection for 1756 AD or search for 1756 AD in all documents.

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ule Newcastle's administration continued. 1755-1756. while the British interpretation of the bouLieutenant-Governor Dinwiddie to Secretary Fox, 1756. With more elaborateness and authority, Shiarliament, in which he professed to chap. IX.} 1756. have great reason to think the people would re be his superior; and, for the pur- chap. IX.} 1756. pose of a personal appeal to Shirley, Dinwiddie to Shirley, 1756. he made a winter's journey to Boston. How different was to be his next entryrestrain and regulate the emissions chap. IX.} 1756. of paper money; to make their own will, ratherand his prudence, humanity, and pa- chap. IX.} 1756. tience succeeded in establishing the intended rom the Quakers to receive in money chap. IX.} 1756. their share of assistance; and to keep the Fiv which was prepared by the chancel- chap. IX.} 1756. lor, Hardwicke, established a military power tsted solely to Sir William Johnson, chap. IX.} 1756. with no subordination but to Loudoun. Yet a[5 more...]
England— Newcastle's administration continued. 1756-1757. The open declaration of war was not maistorische Werke, IX., 47. Such was the rule of 1756. To charge England with ambition, said Charles her as calumny than accusation. The chap. X.} 1756. grave confidence of his discourse was by his os in motion to attack the place; and chap. X.} 1756. Webb, with the forty-fourth regiment, was orded send little parties to hover round chap. X.} 1756. the passes of Onondaga River, and intercept suoutpost, Montcalm, on the twelfth of chap. X.} 1756. August, at midnight, opened his trenches. Froshould have relieved the place, went chap. X.} 1756. tardily to the Oneida portage, and, after fell sense of its real weakness, and the chap. X.} 1756. weariness of the people of England at the unmicess dowager, and was the instructor chap. X.} 1756. of the future sovereign of England in the theopurposes of favor, in the present or chap. X.} 1756. any future day, that his own lively imaginatio[10 more...]