Call Number (LC) Title Results
MFM 1144, reel 328.9 The golden state: a history of the region west of the Rocky mountains; embracing California, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Arizona. Idaho, Washington territory, British Columbia, and Alaska, from the earliest period to the present time with a history of Mormonism and the Mormons. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.1 The present state of Great Britain and North America, with regard to agriculture, population, trade, and manufactures, impartially considered. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.10 Memoirs of the war in the southern department of the United States. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.11 Biographical, literary, and political anecdotes, of several of the most eminent persons of the present age. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.2 The necessity of repealing the American Stamp-act demonstrated: or, A proof that Great-Britain must be injured by that act. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.3 A New and impartial collection of interesting letters, from the public papers; 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.4 An account of a late conference on the occurrences in America. In a letter to a friend. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.5 The Supremacy of the British legislature over the colonies candidly discussed. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.6 A letter to the Reverend Josiah Tucker, D.D. dean of Glocester, in answer to his Humble address and earnest appeal. & c., with a postscript, in which the present war against America is shewn to be the effect, not the causes assigned by him and others, but of a fixed plan of administration, founded in system: the landed opposed to the commercial interest of the state, being as the means in order to the end. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.7 Peace the best policy; or, Reflections upon the appearance of a foreign war, the present state of affairs at home and the commission for granting pardons in America. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.8 The narrative of Lieut. Gen. Sir William Howe, in a committee of the House of commons, on the 29th of April, 1779, relative to his conduct, during his late command of the king's troops in North America: to which are added, some observations upon a pamphlet, entitled, Letters to a nobleman. 1
MFM 1144, reel 329.9 The siege of Savannah, in 1779, as described in two contemporaneous journals of French officers in the fleet of Count d'Estaing. 1
MFM 1144, reel 330.2 The women of the American revolution. 1
MFM 1144, reel 330.3 An original and authentic journal of occurrences during the late American war, from its commencement to the year 1783. 1
MFM 1144, reel 330.4 Memoir of the life and times of General John Lamb, an officer of the revolution, who commanded the post at West Point at the time of Arnold's defection, and his correspondence with Washington, Clinton, Patrick Henry and other distinguished men of his time. 1
MFM 1144, reel 330.5 Life of Arthur Lee, LL.D., joint commissioner of the United States to the court of France, and sole commissioner to the courts of Spain and Prussia, during the revolutionary war. With his political and literary correspondence and his papers on diplomatic and political subjects, and the affairs of the United States during the same period. 1
MFM 1144, reel 331.1 Life and correspondence of George Read, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. With notices of some of his contemporaries. 1
MFM 1144, reel 331.2 A memoir of the life of William Livingston, member of Congress in 1774, 1775, and 1776: delegate to the federal convention in 1787, and governor of the state of New-Jersey from 1776-1790. With extracts from his correspondence, and notices of various members of his family. 1
MFM 1144, reel 331.3 Life of Captain Nathan Hale, the martyr-spy of the American revolution. 1
MFM 1144, reel 331.4 The Virginia convention of 1776. A discourse delivered before the Virginia Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in the chapel of William and Mary college, in the city of Williamsburg, on the afternoon of July the 3rd, 1855. 1