Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- 1775-1865See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
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Filed under: Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- 1775-1865- Address and Resolutions, Adopted at the Whig State Convention, Worcester, October 3, 1849, by Whig Party (Mass.) (page images at Google)
- Address of the Central Committee Appointed by a Convention of Both Branches of the Legislature Friendly to the Election of John Q. Adams as President and Richard Rush as Vice-president of the U. States, Held at the State-House in Boston, June 10, 1828, to Their Fellow-Citizens (1828), by National Republican Party (Mass.) Central Committee
- Answer of the Whig Members of the Legislature of Massachusetts, Constituting a Majority of Both Branches, to the Address of His Excellency Marcus Horton, Delivered in the Convention of the Two Houses, January 22, 1840, by Whig Party (Mass.) (page images at Google)
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Filed under: Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- 1775-1783
Filed under: Boston (Mass.) -- Politics and government -- 1775-1783- An Appeal to the World: or, A Vindication of the Town of Boston, From Many False and Malicious Aspersions, Contained in Certain Letters and Memorials, Written by Governor Bernard, General Gage, Commodore Hood, the Commissioners of the American Board of Customs, and Others, and By The Respectively Transmitted to the British Ministry (Boston: Printed by Edes and Gill, 1770)
Filed under: Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- PeriodicalsFiled under: Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- To 1775- The Declaration, of the Gentlemen, Merchants, and Inhabitants of Boston, and the Countrey Adjacent: April 18, 1689 (Boston: Printed by S. Green, and sold by B. Harris, 1689) (HTML at Evans TCP)
- The Revolution in New England Justified, and the People There Vindicated From the Aspersions Cast Upon Them by Mr. John Palmer, in His Pretended Answer to the Declaration, Published by the Inhabitants of Boston, and the Country Adjacent, on the Day When They Secured Their Late Oppressors, Who Acted by an Illegal and Arbitrary Commission From the late King James ("E. R." and "S. S." believe to be Rawson and Sewall; Boston: Printed for J. Brunning, 1691), by Edward Rawson and Samuel Sewall
- The Revolution in New-England Justified, and the People There Vindicated From the Aspersions Cast Upon Them by Mr. John Palmer, in his Pretended Answer to the Declaration Published by the Inhabitants of Boston (with an added narrative of the proceedings of "Sir Edmund Androsse and His Accomplices" by Stoughton et al.; Boston: Reprinted and sold by I. Thomas, 1773), by Edward Rawson and Samuel Sewall, contrib. by William Stoughton, Thomas Hinckley, Wart. Winthrop, Bartholomew Gedney, and Samuel Shrimpton (HTML at Evans TCP)
- A Few Remarks Upon Some of the Votes and Resolutions of the Continental Congress Held at Philadelphia in September, and the Provincial Congress, Held at Cambridge in November 1774 (Boston: Printed for the purchasers, 1775), by Harrison Gray
- An Impartial Account of the State of New England: or, The Late Government There, Vindicated in Answer to the Declaration Which the Faction Set Forth When They Overturned That Government, by John Palmer (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- The Public Life of Joseph Dudley: A Study of the Colonial Policy of the Stuarts in New England, 1660-1715 (Harvard Historical Studies v15; New York et al.: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1911), by Everett Kimball (multiple formats at archive.org)
Filed under: Massachusetts -- Politics and government -- To 1775 -- Humor |