A History of Dartmouth College and the Town of Hanover, New Hampshire, Volume 1J. Wilson, 1891 - Hannover (N.H.) Collection consists of research materials for Chase's work, A history of Dartmouth College and the town of Hanover, New Hampshire (published as: A history of Dartmouth College and the town of Hanover, New Hampshire. --Cambridge : John Wilson and Son, c1891). Also includes research materials for the second volume of the work, which was completed by John King Lord, entitled A history of Dartmouth College, 1815-1909 (published as: A history of Dartmouth College, 1815-1909. -- Concord, N.H. : Rumford Press, c1913), and A History of the Town of Hanover, N.H., by John King Lord, edited by Arthur Fairbanks, *published as : A History of the Town of Hanover, N.H. -- Hanover, N.H.: The Dartmouth Press, c.1928.). |
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acres adjourned affair aforesaid agreeable appear appointed April Assembly Bedel's regiment Bennington Bezaleel Woodward Boston Burroughs Capt Captain charity charter Chase church Colonel committee Congress Connecticut River Continental convention Cornish Council County Dartmouth College David David Woodward desire Dresden ELEAZAR WHEELOCK Exeter favor friends frontier gentlemen Governor Wentworth Grafton Grafton County Grants Hampshire Hampshire Grants Haverhill Hist honor hundred Indians inhabitants John Wheelock Jonathan Chase Jonathan Freeman Joseph July June Kirkland land Landaff Lebanon Legislature letter Lyme March matter meeting miles militia Mink Brook N. H. State Papers Norwich Occom October officers Orford party persons petition Plainfield Portsmouth Presbytery present Province purpose received regiment respect Ripley road Russell Freeman Samuel School selectmen sent side Smith Storrs tion town of Hanover tribes trustees Vermont voted Whee Whitaker Wright wrote
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Page 394 - We, the subscribers, do hereby solemnly engage and promise that we will to the utmost of our power, at the risque of our lives and fortunes, with arms oppose the hostile proceedings of the British fleets and armies against the United American Colonies.
Page 379 - our Zion, and go round about her, tell the towers thereof, mark well her bulwarks, consider her palaces, that they may tell it to the
Page 354 - We the subscribers, inhabitants of the town of , having taken into our serious consideration the precarious state of the Liberties of North America, and more especially the present distressed condition of our Sister Colony of the Massachusetts Bay, embarrassed as it is by several Acts of the British Parliament tending to the entire subversion of their natural and charter rights, among which is the