. New Jersey as a colony and as a state : one of the original thirteen. eat fire in 1776. 134 PAOB Uniforms of British officers, 1776-79 85 Valley Forge, Washingtons headquarters at 175 Van Cortlandt Arms 99 Varick, Richard 431 Vergennes, Count de 253 Views 244, 366, 378,410 Wallace house atSomerville. 217Washington between the two armies at 155 Washington chair 456 Washington, George (Stuart portrait) 76 Washington, Martha 218 Washington medal 268 Washington taking the oath as President 432 Washington 228 Washingtons book-plate 285 Washingtons desk 437 Washingtons
. New Jersey as a colony and as a state : one of the original thirteen. eat fire in 1776. 134 PAOB Uniforms of British officers, 1776-79 85 Valley Forge, Washingtons headquarters at 175 Van Cortlandt Arms 99 Varick, Richard 431 Vergennes, Count de 253 Views 244, 366, 378,410 Wallace house atSomerville. 217Washington between the two armies at 155 Washington chair 456 Washington, George (Stuart portrait) 76 Washington, Martha 218 Washington medal 268 Washington taking the oath as President 432 Washington 228 Washingtons book-plate 285 Washingtons desk 437 Washingtons headquarters at the Brandy wine 172 Washingtons headquarters at Harlem 334 Washingtons headquarters at Morristown 231 Washingtons headquarters at Valley Forge 175 Washingtons headquarters at White Plains 215 Washingtons inaugural chair 425 Washingtons reception at Trenton 428 Washingtons writing table. 451 Wayne, Anthony 317 Waynes note to Washing-ton on the capture of Stony Point 314 White Plains, Washingtons headquarters at 215 William IV 333 Witherspoon, John 281. THE ORIGINAL THIRTEEN COLONIES. CHAPTER IWhig or Tory—Which? A CAREFUL and candid examinationof the true status of public senti-ment prevalent in the colony ofNew Jersey before 1776 fails to dis-close that intense opposition to thecrown which prevailed in Massachusetts andVirginia. Although the spirit of the men of NewJersey had been restive since the days of Corn-bury, the complaints of Assembly, as more close-ly representing the people, were of an economicrather than a political character. Her attitudein the French and Indian War had been but anexhibition of loyalty. While New Jersey hadraised her recruits for the expedition againstCanada, and had taken part in the siege of Ha-vana, the war itself and its results possessed littlemore than a direct personal interest for the peopleof the colony. Unlike Pennsylvania, her frontierhad not been deluged in blood and strewn withashes. So long as New York stood as a ba
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidnewjerseyasc, bookyear1902