Two sins against tolerance.--An open letter to the conservative majority.--The sanctity of law.--Defending a bad cause.--The country lawyer.--A letter to my father.--A brief on the play scene in Hamlet.--A freeman's will.--Foreward to Leviathan and natural law.--The things that are Caesar's.--The things that are not Caesar's.--E pluribus unum.--Democracy and natural law.--Shakespeare and the law.--Browning and the law.--The idea of God as affected by modern knowledge.--The significance of American citizenship.--Religio advocati.
Prepared by Wm. W. Britton, begun 1734, completed May 30, 1935 ;
Date of Publication
1734 - 1935.
Physical Description
4 reels ; 35 mm.
Notes
Microfilmed in 1957. Contains 20 volumes. Lancaster County warrants are on V. 16.
Labeled on box # 257 - # 261.
Material arranged by county and includes names of warrantee, date, acreage, location, date of return, name of patentee, where patent recorded, and where survey is copied.
The Swope family book of remembrance; a history of the origins of the first Schwab, Schwob, Swope families in early Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and some of their descendents
"In the half century following the War of 1812, America went canal crazy, and a network of four thousand miles of artificial waterways was built in the eastern half of the country so as to provide a safe, adequate, and reasonably cheap system of transportation. These canals helped end the isolation of great sections of the country, not only opening a market for the farmer, back-country mills, and factories, but also providing employment for thousands of men - owners, captains, boaters, lock tenders, and weighmasters - most of whom were hard drinking and violent tempered, and often the prey of harpies and their criminal consorts. Life on the canal was seldom placid, and these men regarded themselves a breed apart from the rustics with whom they came into daily contact...." [from the dust jacket]. This book is generously illustrated.
Chapters: 1. How and where it began/ 2. Conecticutt River Canals/ 3. The Blackstone and other Yankee canals/ 4. Down Chesapeake way/ 5. The Dixie canals/ 6. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal/ 7. The James River and Kanawha Canal/ 8. The Delaware and Hudson Canal/ 9. The Lehigh Valley Canal/ 10. The Morris and Delaware Division Canals
A historical survey of the one-room schools of southern Lancaster County : a research project presented to the faculty of the Graduate School of Millersville State College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Education
1872 historical topographical atlas of the state of Pennsylvania : with descriptions and county histories, with maps of all counties and major cities, historical, scientific and statistical, together with a map of the United States and territories
Vol. 12 has imprint: Camden, Maine : Picton Press ; Plymouth, Mass. : [Distributed by] General Society of Mayflower Descendants.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents
v. 1. Families: Francis Eaton; Samuel Fuller; William White -- v. 2. Families: James Chilton; Richard More; Thomas Rogers -- v 3. pt.1 Family of William Brewster -- v. 3, pt 2. Family: George Soule -- v. 4. (2nd ed.) Edward Fuller -- v. 5. Families: Edward Winslow; John Billington -- v. 6. Family: Stephen Hopkins -- v. 7. Family: Peter Brown -- v. 8. Family of Degory Priest 2nd ed. -- v. 9. Family of Francis Eaton -- v. 10. Family of Samuel Fuller -- v. 11, pt. 1 Edward Doty: his descendants through sons Edward and John -- v. 11, pt. 2. Edward Doty: his descendants through sons Thomas and Samuel, and daughters Desire and Elizabeth -- 12. Francis Cooke of the Mayflower; the first five generations -- 13. Family of William White.
v.14. Family: Myles Standish -- v.15. Families: James Chilton; Richard More -- v.16. Family: John Alden -- v.16, pt.2. John Alden: descendants of his daughter Elizabeth -- v.16,pt.3. John Alden: descendants of his sons, John, Joseph, and Jonathan -- v. 16, pt 4 Family: John Alden -- v.16, pt 5 Family: John Alden -- v.17. Family: Isaac Allerton -- v.18, pt.1. Family: Richard Warren; -- v.18, pt.2. Richard Warren: his descendants of his daughters Mary, Anna and Elizabeth -- v.18, pt.3. Richard Warren: his descendants of Abigail, Nathaniel and Joseph -- v. 19 Thomas Rogers (2nd. ed) -- v. 19, pt. 2. Family of Thomas Rogers and Elizabeth Rodgers - v.20, pt.1. Family: Henry Samson - -v. 20, pt.2: Henry Samson: his descendants through son James and daughters Elizabeth, Hannah, [daughter], Dorcas - v. 20, pt. 3. Family of Henry Samson -- v. 21, pts. 1&2. Family: John Billington [compiled and revised by Harriet W. Hodge, Robert S. Wakefield, John Bradley Arthaud] v.21, pt3 Family of John Billington: sixth generation descendants compiled by John Bradly Arthaud-- v. 22. Family: William Bradford -- v.23, pt.1. Family: John Howland: First four generations of his children Lydia, Hannah, Joseph, Jabez, Ruth and Isaac -- v.23, pt.2. Family: John Howland: Fifth generation of his children Lydia and Hannah --v. 23. pt.3. John Howland: Fith and sixth generations of his sons Joseph and Jabez -- v.24, The Descendants of Elder Willilam Brewster, part 1: Generations 1 through 4 - v. 24, The Descendants of Elder William Brewster, part 2: Generations 5 and 6 - v. 24, The Descendants of Elder William Brewster, part 3: Generations 5 and 6 - v, 25, the Descendants of Governor Edward Winslow, Generations 1-8.
Cotton mills of Lancaster City, Pennsylvania : a collection of historical information about cotton from the Colonial Days (1770) of Lancaster City, through the 1800's when cotton mills were established, to the demise of the largest mill in the city in 1949, together with data on cotton production and the cotton market through 1976