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(Boston Covenant). Calling for cessation of all trade with Great Britain
1774/06
Blank form, leaving empty the name of the town. Calls for a complete cessation of trade with Britain until repeal of the Boston Port Bill.
GLC04071
Boston evening post. Supplement [printing Boston Port Act]
1774/05/16
Great Britain. Parliament. Boston Port.
Slight text loss to newspaper banner at top.
GLC06743
to Ezekiel Williams
29 July 1774
Adams, Samuel, 1722-1803
Written by Adams as a member of the Massachusetts General Court (he would join the First Continental Congress on 5 September 1774) to Williams as Deputy Commissioner of Prisoners in Connecticut and a Sheriff for Hartford County. References Williams...
GLC06657.01
[Request for donations for the poor of Boston]
October 25, 1774
Boston (Mass.). Committee of Donations
Broadside listing the twenty six members of the committee (including Samuel Adams, Thomas Boylston, and John Adams) seeks donations in accord with their mission to relieve the "Poor, suffering by means of the Act of Parliament, commonly called the...
GLC06657.02
February 23, 1776
Wolcott, Oliver, 1726-1797
Written by Wolcott, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, as a Continental Congressman from Connecticut, probably to Ezekiel Williams as Connecticut Commissioner of Prisoners and Wolcott's son-in-law. Notes already in Past Perfect said this...
GLC06659
The Gentleman's Magazine
June 1775
Urban, Sylvanus, 1745-1826
Printed for D. Henry at St. John's Gate, London. Includes a fold-out regional map of Boston area and dramatic "Account of the proceedings of the American Colonists Since the passing the Boston Port-Bill," including Lexington and Concord. Also has...
GLC02360
to Catharine Macaulay
December 28, 1774
Adams, John, 1735-1826
Adams describes the effects of the Boston Port Bill upon the government and people of the colony. He warns that the arrest of Parliament's opponents "will produce Resistance, and Reprisals, and a Flame through America, Such as Eye hath not yet Seen...
GLC01788
December 29, 1774
Warren, Mercy Otis, 1728-1814
Warren describes the resolve of the people to resist "the strides of Wanton power" and fears the results, "an innocent Land Drenched [in] Blood." Believes that surely this destruction and anger can't continue much longer, particularly the blockade...
GLC01800.01
The Country twenty-five miles round New York
1 November 1776
Hawkes, W., fl. 1776
Irregular shaped paper. Engraving with letterpress chronological table of events from 1773-Oct. 1776, engraved by J. Barber and printed by W. Hawkes. Irregularly shaped. Nebenzahl, Battle Plans of the American Revolution, 110, who notes that a later...
GLC02005
An act to discontinue... shipping... within the Harbour, of Boston [Port Bill]
1774
Great Britain. Acts.
The Boston Port Act. Paginated 515-522 + unpaginated title page. [one of the five "Intolerable Acts"]
GLC00402
to Henry Knox
19 November 1774
Rivington, James, 1724-1802
Indicates that he is in desperate need of printing ink and wants Knox to procure it for him. Discusses pricing for Rivington's edition of Lord Chesterfield's Letters, asking Knox to find purchasers immediately because the resolutions for non...
GLC02437.00187
4 July 1774
Knox, Hugh, 1727-1790
Asks Henry to help him acquire subscribers for his new publication, which will be printed in New York shortly, possibly referring to "Moral and religious miscellany; or, Sixty-one aphoretical essays, on some of the most important Christian doctrines...
GLC02437.00161
13 July 1774
Fletcher, Thomas, fl. 1774
Tells Knox that he referred a friend, Hugh Knox, to him for the purpose of obtaining subscriptions for his upcoming publication of religious essays. Although Fletcher feels that the world has enough of such treatises, he thinks it may be of use to...
GLC02437.00163
to William Knox
9 November 1774
Waldo, Jonathon, fl. 1721-1779
Makes a lengthy, poetic comparison of the reception of Knox's last letter to a lost sailor finding land. Also gives a lengthy explanation for why he has not written sooner and apologizes for being remiss. Continues with a discussion of friendship...
GLC02437.00185
26 June 1774
Requests that Knox buy and send him soap. Also asks Knox to write him a letter describing the state of things in Boston; at the time, the British had just passed the Intolerable Acts, including the Boston Port Bill, which closed Boston Harbor on 1...
GLC02437.00157
6 October 1774
Brown, Christopher, fl. 1772-1774
Reports shipment of publications to Knox from Thomas Longman, with Brown writing on Longman's behalf. Reports that there have been diminished shipments from Boston. Mentions that parliament dissolved, which may work to America's advantage. Longman...
GLC02437.00183
3 September 1774
Reports shipment of publications to Knox from Thomas Longman, with Brown writing on Longman's behalf. Reports that there have been no recent shipments from Boston. Longman was a London bookseller.
GLC02437.00179
14 May 1774
Longman, Thomas, 1731-1797
Indicates that he has received the bill of Thomas Boylston and an order for books. Acknowledges the implementation of the "Boston Port Bill," which closed the Boston Harbor in retaliation for the Boston Tea Party. Expresses concern at how it will...
GLC02437.00146
14 July 1774
Wright, & Gill, fl. 1753-1798
Indicates that they received Knox's payment. In regard to the Boston Port Bill, they write that they "are extremely sorry for the Situation of our Friends at Boston, and heartily wish that every Difference was so far settled, as that a mutual good...
GLC02437.00164
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