tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">79
|
The college designed, |
79 |
132. |
Francis Nicholson, lieutenant governor, |
79 |
|
He studies popularity, |
79 |
|
The college proposed to him, |
79 |
|
He refuses to call an assembly, |
79 |
133. |
He grants a brief to the college, |
79 |
134. |
The assembly address King William and Queen Mary for a college charter, |
80 |
|
The education intended by this college, |
80 |
|
The assembly present the lieutenant governor, |
80 |
|
His method of securing this present, |
80 |
135. |
Their majesties grant the charter, |
80 |
|
They grant liberally towards the building and endowing of it, |
80 |
136. |
The lieutenant governor encourages towns and manufactures, |
80 |
|
Gentlemen of the council complain of him and are misused, |
81 |
|
He falls off from the encouragement of the towns and trade, |
81 |
137. |
Edmund Andros, governor, |
81 |
|
The town law suspended, |
81 |
138. |
The project of a post office, |
81 |
139. |
The college charter arrived, |
81 |
|
The college further endowed, and the foundation laid, |
82 |
140. |
Sir Edmund Andros encourages manufactures, and regulates the secretary's office, |
82 |
141. |
A child born in the old age of the parents, |
83 |
142. |
Francis Nicholson, governor, |
83 |
|
His and Colonel Quarrey's memorials against plantations, |
84 |
143. |
His zeal for the church and college, |
84 |
144. |
He removes the general court from Jamestown, |
84 |
145. |
The taking of the pirate, |
84 |
146. |
The sham bills of nine hundred pounds for New York, |
86 |
147. |
Colonel Quarrey's unjust memorials, |
87 |
148. |
Governor Nott arrived, |
88 |
149. |
Revisal of the law
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