Perez Morton (November 13, 1751 – October 14, 1837) was an American lawyer, politician and revolutionary patriot in Boston, Massachusetts. He was Massachusetts Attorney General from 1810 until 1832. (From Wikipedia) More about Perez Morton:
| | Books by Perez Morton: Morton, Perez, 1751-1837, contrib.: Orations, Delivered at the Request of the Inhabitants of the Town of Boston, to Commemorate the Evening of the Fifth of March, 1770 (second edition; Boston: W. T. Clap, 1807), also contrib. by James Lovell, Joseph Warren, Benjamin Church, John Hancock, Peter Thacher, Benjamin Hichborn, Jonathan Williams Austin, William Tudor, Jonathan Mason, Thomas Dawes, George Richards Minot, Thomas Welsh, and James Allen (multiple formats at archive.org)
Additional books by Perez Morton in the extended shelves: Morton, Perez, 1751-1837: Biographical sketch of Gen. Joseph Warren (Shepard, Clark & Brown, 1857), also by A Bostonian (page images at HathiTrust) Morton, Perez, 1751-1837: Biography of General Joseph Warren (Shepard, Clark & Brown, 1857), also by William Haliburton (page images at HathiTrust) Morton, Perez, 1751-1837: Memorial of the agents of the New England Mississippi land company to Congress, with a vindication of their title at law annexed. (A. & G. Way, printers, 1804), also by New England Mississippi land company (page images at HathiTrust) Morton, Perez, 1751-1837: An oration; delivered at the King's-Chapel in Boston, April 8, 1776, on the re-interment of the remains of the late most worshipful Grand-Master Joseph Warren, Esquire; president of the late Congress of this colony, and major-general of the Massachusetts forces; who was slain in the Battle of Bunker's-Hill, June 17, 1775. / By Perez Morton, M.M. (Boston: : Printed, and to be sold by J. Gill, in Queen-Street., 1776) (HTML at Evans TCP) Morton, Perez, 1751-1837: Orations delivered at the request of the inhabitants of the town of Boston, to commemorate the evening of the fifth of March, 1770; when a number of citizens were killed by a party of British troops, quartered among them, in a time of peace. (Boston, : Printed by Peter Edes, in State-Street., [1785]), also by Peter Edes and James Allen (HTML at Evans TCP)
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