To the independent electors of the city of New-York. : There was a time when a majority of the citizens of New-York were so opposed to lawyers as members of the legislature, that a single gentleman of that profession ... could not obtain a majority of suffrages ... But the times are changed ...
1788
INTERNET
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Details
E-resource Policy
Linked Resources
Title
To the independent electors of the city of New-York. : There was a time when a majority of the citizens of New-York were so opposed to lawyers as members of the legislature, that a single gentleman of that profession ... could not obtain a majority of suffrages ... But the times are changed ...
Published
[New York] : [Publisher not identified], [1788]
Call Number
INTERNET
Place of Publication or Printing
United States -- New York -- New York.
Description
1 online resource (1 sheet)
System Control No.
(NNC-L)LLMC62837854
(TEMPOCo)62837854
(TEMPOCo)62837854
Note
Signed: Many Federalists; followed by the names of John Jay and eight others, in two columns. Dated: New-York, April 28, 1788. However, in a reply by "One and all," dated 29th April, 1788, the author attempts to prove "that no Federalist had any hand in the paper ..." (Evans 21500).
Indexed In
Evans 21501
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF caption title (LLMC Digital, viewed February 19, 2021).
Record Appears in
Added Author