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- Princeton
and Philadelphia in 1761
An article from The Ladies' Repository, vol.
4, no. 2 (August, 1876) contains the journal of
a missionary to the Indians. He visited Princeton
and Nassau Hall often in his travels.
- [Princeton
Tea Burning]
The footnote on page 165 of Journal & Letters
of Philip Vickers Fithian, 1773-1774.... recounts
the tea burning at Nassau Hall.
- Greenwich
Tea Burning: 1774 (Cumberland County, NJ)
The last paragraph of this account names the 5 American
tea-party towns, including Princeton.
- Princeton
University in the American Revolution
- The
Continental Congress (A Princeton Companion)
- Princeton and the Declaration of Independence (John F. Hageman, A history of Princeton and Its Institutions; v.1, 1879)
- A Brief Narrative of the Ravages of the British and Hessians at Princeton in 1776-77.... (1906) [ Another copy ]
- The Battle of Princeton, January, 1777
- Journals
of the Continental Congress (April, 1777)
A "committee appointed to enquire into the conduct
of the enemy" (page 276) reported on the local devastation.
From American Memory at the Library of Congress.
- The
Mutiny of the Pennsylvania Line (1781)
- The Continental Congress at Princeton, June - November, 1783
- The
Constitutional Convention of 1787 (A Princeton
Companion)
Last revised: December 18, 2010
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