To the public. By the following letters, these facts appear unquestionable ... : and therefore, there is no reason to doubt but the present Assembly will (after the laudable example of a former House, on a similar occasion) approve the acts of the late general Congress ...
Creator / Contributor
Remembrancer ; Holt, John, 1721-1784 ; New York (State). General Assembly ; Committee of Correspondence (New York, N.Y.) ; Boston Committee of Correspondence
Title
To the public. By the following letters, these facts appear unquestionable ... : and therefore, there is no reason to doubt but the present Assembly will (after the laudable example of a former House, on a similar occasion) approve the acts of the late general Congress ..., page [2]
Creator / Contributor
Remembrancer ; Holt, John, 1721-1784 ; New York (State). General Assembly ; Committee of Correspondence (New York, N.Y.) ; Boston Committee of Correspondence
Title
To the public. By the following letters, these facts appear unquestionable ... : and therefore, there is no reason to doubt but the present Assembly will (after the laudable example of a former House, on a similar occasion) approve the acts of the late general Congress ..., page [1]
Creator / Contributor
Remembrancer ; Holt, John, 1721-1784 ; New York (State). General Assembly ; Committee of Correspondence (New York, N.Y.) ; Boston Committee of Correspondence
Title
To the respectable inhabitants of the city of New-York. : Friends and fellow citizens! On the 23d day of May 1774, the Committee of Correspondence wrote a letter to Boston, in which are these remarkable passages ... a congress of deputies from the colonies in general ... ought to be assembled without delay ... The same Committee on the 7th of June, 1774, wrote another letter to Boston ... The suspension of trade, and every other resolution, we have thought most prudent to leave for the discussion of the proposed General Congress ...
Creator / Contributor
Freeholder ; Holt, John, 1721-1784 ; Boston Committee of Correspondence