Richard Bland, Conservator of Self-government in Eighteenth-century Virginia |
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Page 131
... Bishop of London , Thomas Sherlock , was convinced that the Virginia Assembly was exercising un- due power at the expense of the royal prerogative , and he used his influence with the Board to get it to recommend that the Two Penny 31 ...
... Bishop of London , Thomas Sherlock , was convinced that the Virginia Assembly was exercising un- due power at the expense of the royal prerogative , and he used his influence with the Board to get it to recommend that the Two Penny 31 ...
Page 203
... bishop of the Church of England in the American colonies . Only the King , as the temporal head of the Anglican Church , could appoint an American bishop and set the bounds of his authority . Thus , such a bishop would , in effect , be ...
... bishop of the Church of England in the American colonies . Only the King , as the temporal head of the Anglican Church , could appoint an American bishop and set the bounds of his authority . Thus , such a bishop would , in effect , be ...
Page 204
... bishops for the continental colonies , one of whom would have resided at Williamsburg . However , the Queen died before the plan could be put into effect . 2 When George I ascended to the throne of England , the Bishop of London ...
... bishops for the continental colonies , one of whom would have resided at Williamsburg . However , the Queen died before the plan could be put into effect . 2 When George I ascended to the throne of England , the Bishop of London ...
Contents
An Apprentice Burgess | 31 |
The Pistole Fee Dispute | 76 |
War with the French Brings Financial Problems | 95 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
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affairs American Revolution argument attitude authority bill Board of Trade British Colonies Camm Carter Church clergy Colonel Dismounted Colonial Virginia colonists colony's Committee of Correspondence Committee of Safety Continental Congress Crown defend delegates disallowed Dunmore eighteenth-century election England English ginia Governor Dinwiddie History home government House of Burgesses Ibid ideas imperial independence interference issue John King King's legislative legislature letter liberty London Mary Quarterly merchants ministers mother country pamphlet paper money Parliament Patrick Henry Pendleton Penny Act petition Peyton Randolph Pistole Fee dispute planters Prince George County Privy Council Proceedings protest provincial Purdie and Dixon resistance Reverend Richard Bland Richard Henry Lee Robert Dinwiddie Robinson royal prerogative society Stamp Act Statutes at Large Theodorick Theodorick Bland theory Thomas Jefferson tion tobacco took Virginia Assembly Virginia Committee Virginia Convention Virginia Gazette Virginia Gazette Purdie VMHB vols vote Washington William and Mary Williamsburg York