Galloway, Joseph, 1731-1803
Galloway, Joseph
Joseph Galloway American politician
VIAF ID: 67529663 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/67529663
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Galloway, Joseph
- 100 1 _ ‡a Galloway, Joseph
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Galloway, Joseph ‡d 1731-1803
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Galloway, Joseph, ‡d 1731-1803
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Galloway, Joseph, ‡d 1731-1803
- 100 0 _ ‡a Joseph Galloway ‡c American politician
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (43)
5xx's: Related Names (6)
- 500 0 _ ‡a American
- 500 1 _ ‡a Dunlap, William ‡d d. 1779
- 500 1 _ ‡a Franklin, Benjamin ‡d 1706-1790
- 500 1 _ ‡a Joly, Jaspar Robert ‡d 1819-1892
- 500 1 _ ‡a Smith, William ‡d 1727-1803
- 500 1 _ ‡a Wesley, John ‡d 1703-1791
Works
Title | Sources |
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An address to the Rev. Dr. Alison, the Rev. Mr. Ewing, and others, trustees of the Corporation for the Relief of Presbyterian Ministers, their Widows and Children : being a vindication of the Quakers from the aspersions of the said trustees in their letter published in th London chronicle, no. 1223. To which is prefixed, the said letter. By a lover of truth. [One line in Latin] | |
Brief commentaries upon such parts of the Revelation and other prophecies as immediately refer to the present times. With The prophetic, or, anticipated history of hte church of Rome. To which is added, A pill for the infidel and atheist | |
A candid examination of the mutual claims of Great-Britain, and the colonies with a plan of accommodation on constitutional principles | |
The claim of the American loyalists : reviewed and maintained upon incontrovertible principles of law and justice | |
Considerations upon the American enquiry | |
Cool thoughts on the consequences to Great Britain of American independence | |
The examination of Joseph Galloway, esq; late Speaker of the House of Assembly of Pennsylvania. Before the House of Commons, in a committee on the American papers. With explanatory notes. | |
An extract from A reply to the observations of Lieut. Gen. Sir William Howe, : on a pamphlet, entitled Letters to a nobleman | |
Fabricius: or, letters to the people of Great Britain; on the absurdity and mischiefs of defensive operations only in the American war; and on The Causes of the Failure in the Southern Operations | |
Franklin and Galloway | |
Interrogatoriën van Joseph Galloway : onlangs Spreeker van de Vergadering van Pensylvaniën, voor het Lagerhuis, in eene Commissie op de Americaansche papieren. Met ... aanmerkingen. ... Om te dienen tot opheldering, en wederlegging van verscheide voornaame gronden, van de Memorie door John Adams onlangs aan H.H. MM. gepresenteerd. | |
Letter I | |
Letter to the author of Dispassionate thoughts on the American war | |
A letter to the people of America, : lately printed at New York; now re-published by an American. With a postscript, by the editor, addressed to Sir W****** H*** | |
A letter to the Right Honourable Lord Viscount H-e, : on his naval conduct in the American war | |
Letters from a distinguished American : twelve essays by John Adams on American foreign policy, 1780 | |
Letters from Cicero to Catiline the Second. With corrections and explanatory notes | |
Letters to a nobleman, on the conduct of the war in the middle colonies | |
Observations on the fifth article of the treaty with America and on the necessity of appointing a judicial enquiry into the merits and losses of the American loyalists to which is added, an appendix stating some important facts relative to the conduct of Congress &c. | |
Plain truth | |
Political reflections on the late colonial governments. An American. | |
Reflections on the rise and progress of the American rebellion | |
Réflexions impartiales sur l'Amérique : ouvrage traduit de l'anglois. | |
Regulations, under which the inhabitants may purchase the enumerated articles, mentioned in the proclamation of His Excellency Sir William Howe, K.B. general and commander in chief | |
Selected tracts | |
The speech of Joseph Galloway, Esq : one of the members for Philadelphia County: in answer to the speech of John Dickinson, Esq; delivered in the House of Assembly, of the province of Pennsylvania, May 24, 1764. On occasion of a petition drawn up by order, and then under the consideration of the House; praying His Majesty for a royal, in lieu of a proprietary government. [One line of Latin] | |
A true and impartial state of the province of Pennsylvania : Containing, an exact account of the nature of its government; the power of the proprietaries, and their governors; as well those which they derive under the royal grant, as those they have assumed in manifest violation thereof, their father's charter, and the rights of the people: also, the rights and privileges of the Assembly, and people, which they claim under the said grant, charter, and laws of their country, confirmed by the royal approbation. With a true narrative of the dispute between the governors and assemblies, respecting the grants of supplies so often made by the latter, and rejected by the former. In which is demonstrated, by incontestable vouchers, that arbitrary proprietary instructions, have been the true and only cause of the refusal of such supplies, and the late defenceless state of the province. The whole being a full answer to the pamphlets intitled A brief state, and A brief view, &c. of the conduct of Pennsylvania. [Nine lines from Cato's letters] |