The Centinel, Warnings of a RevolutionElizabeth I. Nybakken |
Contents
19 | |
28 | |
The Crisis of 1768 | 40 |
An Appeal to the Colony | 53 |
Conclusion | 71 |
Notes | 73 |
Centinel Number I | 83 |
Centinel Number II | 91 |
Centinel Number XII | 148 |
Centinel Number XIII | 154 |
Centinel Number XIV | 158 |
Centinel Number XV | 166 |
Centinel Number XVI | 171 |
Centinel Number XVII | 175 |
Centinel Number XVIII | 181 |
Centinel Number XIX | 186 |
Centinel Number III | 98 |
Centinel Number IV | 105 |
Centinel Number V | 110 |
Centinel Number VI | 116 |
Centinel Number VII | 120 |
Centinel Number VIII | 126 |
Centinel Number IX | 132 |
Centinel Number X | 136 |
Centinel Number XI | 142 |
Common terms and phrases
abuse Admiralty Alison to Stiles American Bishop American Episcopate Anatomist Anglican Archbishop Archbishop of Canterbury arguments Assembly party Attempt Authority Beinecke Bishop of London Brethren British Bryan called Caner Centinel Number Charter Christian Church in America Church of England Churchmen civil and religious Clergy Colonies colonists conscience Country dangerous denominations Discipline dissenters divine English Episcopacy Episcopal Church Episcopalians established church Ezra Stiles fear Francis Alison Franklin Gospel Government Governor INTERNAL NOTES Ireland John Dickinson Johnson Joseph Galloway Judges Jurisdiction King Laity Laws leaders legislative Legislature ment ministers ministry Missionaries New-England New-York November October oppressive Ordination Parliament Pennsylvania Persecution petition Philadelphia political Power Prelates Presbyterians pretended Privileges proprietor Protestant Province Quakers Reason Reformation Religion religious liberties Remonstrant royal says Schneider Secker sent Society Spirit Stamp Act Stiles Collection Subjects suffered Superiors Thomas Penn Thomas Secker tion Townshend Acts vols William Smith
Popular passages
Page 7 - Episcopacy contributed fifty years ago, as much as any other cause, to arouse the attention, not only of the inquiring mind, but of the common people, and urge them to close thinking on the constitutional authority of Parliament over the colonies?