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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 3 3 Browse Search
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. 1 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). You can also browse the collection for July, 1673 AD or search for July, 1673 AD in all documents.

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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Kansas, (search)
rankfort. De Soto and his followers ascended the west bank of the Mississippi, opposite the lower portion of the State, during......1543 Kentucky included in the charter of Virginia......1584 Colonel Wood, seeking trade with the Indians, explores Kentucky as far as the Mississippi......1654 Captain Bolt, from Virginia, travels in Kentucky......1670 Jacques Marquette, a Jesuit missionary, Louis Joliet, and five other Frenchmen, spend several days at the mouth of the Ohio......July, 1673 Chevalier Robert de la Salle and his lieutenant, Chevalier Henri de Tonti, with others, pass from the Illinois River down the Mississippi, stop a few days at the mouth of the Ohio, and claim both sides of the Mississippi for France......February, 1682 A vast tract, including Kentucky, deeded to the British by the Iroquois, by treaty at Albany, N. Y., concluded......1684 M. Longueil, from Canada, descends the Ohio, and discovers Big Bone Lick on a small creek which flows into the
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), New Jersey, (search)
dependent government whose deputies at Elizabethtown elect James Carteret governor......May 14, 1672 Gov. Philip Carteret returns to England to lay the matter of the government of New Jersey before the proprietors......1672 First Friends' meeting-house built at Shrewsbury......1672 Lord Berkeley sells his half interest in the province to two English Quakers, John Fenwick and Edward Byllinge......March 18, 1673 New Netherlands, including New Jersey, surrendered to the Dutch......July, 1673 New Jersey again becomes an English province, under treaty of peace between England and Holland......Feb. 9, 1674 Edward Byllinge, becoming financially embarrassed, assigns his contract to William Penn and others......Feb. 10, 1674 Philip Carteret returns and resumes authority in New Jersey, meeting the General Assembly at Bergen......Nov. 6, 1674 Fenwick, sailing from London in the ship Griffith, arrives with a small company of Quakers and settles at Salem......June, 1675
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), North Carolina, (search)
ly put into operation, the first set bearing date......July 21, 1669 William Edmundson, a Quaker, sent out from Maryland by George Fox, preaches at the narrows of Perquimans River, where Hertford was afterwards built......1672 Governor Stephens dies and George Cartwright, speaker of the Assembly of Albemarle, succeeds in 1673, but resigns and is succeeded by Governor Eastchurch, represented by a secretary, one Miller, whom he appoints president of the council and acting governor......July, 1673 People, tried by the extortion and tyranny of Miller, revolt under John Culpeper, imprison the president and six members of the council, call a legislature and assume control......December, 1677 Culpeper goes to England to explain to the lords proprietors, and John Harvey, president of the council, takes charge of the government, John Jenkins, being appointed governor by the proprietors, succeeding him......June, 1680 Governor Jenkins dies and is succeeded by Henry Wilkinson......