Click image to enlarge Troubles between England & the colonies...
Show image list »
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 1
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 2
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 3
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 4
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 5
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 6
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 7
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 8
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 9
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 10
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 11
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 12
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 13
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 14
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 15
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 16
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 17
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 18
Troubles between England & the colonies... - Image 19

Troubles between England & the colonies...

Item # 571697

Sorry, but this item is no longer available. Please be in touch at info@rarenewspapers.com if you would like to be placed on a want list or are interested in a potential alternate issue.

April 14, 1768
THE PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE, Philadelphia, April 14, 1768 

* Rare Colonial Pennsylvania title
* British & America tensions
* Pre Revolutionary War


Over two-thirds of the front page are taken up with a great: "Letter to the Right Hon. the Earl of Shelburne" from Massachusetts Bay, which goes to some length to detail the struggles of the colonists with the recent acts of Parliament. Portions include: "...your lordship will be pleased to remember that by the Act of Parliament the Colonies are prohibited from importing commodities & manufactures of the growth of Europe, saving a few articles, except from Great Britain...the colonies are restrained by Act of Parliament from sending to foreign ports. This is in reality a tax, tho' an indirect one, on the colonies..." with so much more. See photos for the full text.
Most of pg. 2 is similarly taken up with concerns on the relations between America & England, portions seen in the photos below. Pg. 2 also has a short item concerning protest against the billeting act & the suspension of the legislature of New York (see photos).
A wealth of ads including runaway reward ads, and on: "To be Sold...A Negroe woman with a child at her breast..." (see).
A wealth of fine content in this colonial newspaper once published by Benjamin Franklin. Complete in 4 pgs., coat-of-arms engraving in the masthead, tiny binding holes at the blank spine margin, scattered foxing, very nice condition.