Germantown — Keith
641
to college, 26. — See Table of Contents, Parts I, II. |
Hoadly, Charles J., Public Records of Connecticut, 17, 202. |
Holdernesse, Earl of, Royal Orders to Resist the French, 356-357. |
Hopkins, Stephen, Planting and Growth of Providence, 15; The ALBANY PLAN of Union, 357-360; A True Representation, 360. |
Hopkinson, Francis, humor, 4; Miscellaneous Essays, 21, 275, 565; A Skit on College Examinations, 272-275; The Battle of the Kegs, 562-565. |
Hosmer, James Kendall, Life of Thomas Hutchinson, 19. |
Houses, as sources, 4. |
Howard, Martin, A Colonist's Defence of Taxation, 394-397; Letter from a Gentleman a Halifax, 397. |
Humphrey, George P., American Colonial Tracts, 12. |
Huntington, Benjamin, Regulation of Prices, 463-465; Letters, 465. |
Hutchinson, Thomas, adviser of English government, 7; Collection of Papers, 12; material not limited, 15; History of Massachusets Bay, 15; Diary and Letters, 18; house attacked by a mob, 397-400; Troops and Sons of Liberty in Boston, 420-423; Letters, 423. |
IBERVILLE, LEMOYNE D', in Louisiana, 312, 313, 315; at Schenectady, 337-339. |
Imlay, Gilbert, Topographical Description, 21. |
Independence, mentioned in 1748, 352-353; urged by South Carolina, 451; reasons for, 530-534; declared, 537-539; Mrs. Adams on, 552-553. — See also Revolution, Union, United States. |
Indians, incited by the French, 57; in Georgia, 113, 126; instruction, 286; expedition among the Sioux, 313-315; importance of trade with, 318; relations with French and English, 320-324; domestic life,327-330; small-pox and brandy, 330-331; oratory, 331-334; character, 334-336; at Schenectady, 337-339; used by Spanish and English, 340-343; capture Daniel Boone, 383; before the Second Continental Congress, 529. — See also French, and Vol. I, Index. |
Instructions, king's right of, questioned, 150-152; to envoys in France, 621-623. — See also Governor. |
Intellectual life, in the colonies, 255-275. |
Investigators, use of sources, 28. |
Iron works, in Virginia, 236. |
JAMESTOWN, once seat of government, 93. — See also Vol. I. |
Jay, John, Correspondence, 19; Explanation of the Peace of 1782, 623-625. |
Jay, William, Life of John Jay, 490. |
Jefferson, Thomas, splendid sentences, 4; Drafting of the Declaration of Independence, 537-539; Writings, 539. |
Jerseys. — See New Jersey. |
Jews, in Georgia, 115. |
Johns Hopkins University, Studies, 22. |
Johnson, Samuel, prejudices, 31; A Diatribe on the American Arguments, 445-448; Taxation on Tyranny, 448. |
Johnson, Sir William, A Flowery Speech to the Six Nations, 331-334. |
Johnston, Alexander, History of the United States for Schools, 33. |
Johnston, Gabriel, The Dissolution of an Assembly, 174-175. |
Jones, John Paul, A Desperate SeaFight, 587-590; Life and Correspondence, 590. |
Joseph, "the selling of," 293-297. |
Journals, value as sources, 2, 7-8; list, 18. |
Judges, colonial question of appointment, 202; character, 203. — See also Courts. |
Judson, Harry Pratt, Growth of the American Nation, 33. |
Juries, summoned, 188-189; charge to a grand jury, 189-191. — See also Courts. |
KALM, Peter, Travels, 2, 21, 326, 331, 353; The Government of Canada, 324-326; Small Pox and Brandy among the Indians, 330-331; The question of Colonial Independence, 352-353. |
Keith, Sir William, A Short Discourse on the Present State of the Colonies, 138-141. |