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. i. 4. Their agreement and constitution of government before landing. i. 5. Remarks upon it by Messrs. Bancroft and Young. i. 6. Inflated American accounts of their voyage. i. 7. Their first "Harvest-home." i. 9. Pitt (afterwards Earl of Chatham) changes the whole fortune of the war with the French in America in favour of England. i. 260. Policy of the British Ministry in employing foreign soldiers and Indians, deprecated by all classes in Europe and America. ii. 72-74. Pownall (Governor)--His speech and amendment in the House of Commons to repeal the duty on tea; rejected by a majority 242 to 204. i. 361. Preface--The reason and objects of writing the history of the Loyalists of America. i. 3-5. Protests and Loyal Petitions of the Colonists against English Parliamentary Acts to raise a revenue in the Colonies. i. 337. Puritan authorities alone adduced in this historical discussion. i. 59. Puritan letters suppressed by the biographer of Governor Winthrop. i. 59. Puritans of Massachusetts Bay Company. i. 24. Their Charter and settlement in 1629. i. 23. Their intolerance. i. 24. Their wealth and trade. i. 25. Their enterprise under two aspects. i. 26. Professed members of the Church of England when they left England. i. 26. Puritan treatment of the Indians. i. 298. Puritan legal opinions in England on the constant violation of the first Charter by the Massachusetts Bay Rulers. i. 233. Quebec taken by General Wolfe. i. 263. Queenston Heights--Battle of. ii. 365-8. Quo Warranto--Notice of sent to the Rulers of Massachusetts Bay in July, 1683, to answer to thirteen complaints against them for violating the Royal Charter; received in October, 1683; judgment given July, 1685, nearly two years afterwards. i. 208-211. Remonstrances of the Rev. Drs. Owen, T. Goodwin, and other Nonconformist ministers in England against the persecutions by the Massachusetts Bay Puritans. i. 185. Retrospect of the transactions between Charles I. and II. and the Massachusetts Bay Rulers from 1630 to 1666, with extracts of correspondence. i. 171. Revolution--Principal characteristics of it, and the feeling which should now be cultivated by both of the former contending parties; by J.M. Ludlow. ii. 145. Richardson (Rev. James)--Letter by. ii. 208. Robinson (Beverley). ii. 196. Robinson (Christopher). ii. 198. Robinson (Sir J.B.).
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