Journals of the American Congress: from 1774-1788: In Four Volumes ... |
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If any officer should think himself to be wronged by his colonel or the
commanding officer of the regiment, and shall, upon due application made to him
, be refused to be redressed, he may complain to the general or commander in
chief of the ...
The field officers of each and every regiment are to appoint some suitable person
belonging to such regiment, to receive all such fines as may arise within the
same, for any breach of any of the foregoing articles, and shall direct the same to
be ...
Leslie, of the 26th regiment, from the 26th April to 11th July, and to Dr.
Huddleston, of the 7th regiment, from the 26th April to the 1st July, as prisoners of
war, 63 dollars: To captain Joseph Spur, of colonel Moore's battalion, for the
subsistence ...
The aforegoing articles are to be read and published once in every two months,
at the head of every regiment, troop or company, mustered, or to be mustered in
the service of the United States; and are to be duly observed and exactly obeyed
...
In Four Volumes ... United States. Continental Congress. ——* Resolved, That
col. James Livingston have leave to recruit his regiment in any of the United
States. A petition. o. Charles Noel Romand, sieur de Lisle, captain in a corps of -o
-, *gs ...
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Excellent Tool for Genealogy
This is an excellent tool for anyone who is interested in early American History, or who needs to research a Patriot ancestor, who served during the American Revolution in Pennsylvania. For example, by my knowing that my eighth Great Grandfather was from Bedford (now Somerset) County, Pennsylvania and had served, along with the ability to search for text within the book I discovered that along with being a Lt. Col, he was also the first Judge to serve beyond the Alleghany Mountains, and that he was present at the seige of Boston, and that he fought at the Battle of Germantown and was present at Cornwallis' surrender at Yorktown. I highly recommend this important set of records.