1) Pickering, Timothy. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...Pickering, Timothy, 1745-1829, American political leader and Revolutionary War army officer, b. Salem, Mass. He was admitted to the bar (1768) and played an active... 2) §6. John Pickering. XXV. Scholars. Vol. 18. Later National Literature, Part
III. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...by the broad humanism of his work was John Pickering (17771846), a son of the more celebrated Timothy Pickering. In Salem and in Boston John Pickering continued... 3) 804. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746-1825). Respectfully Quoted: A
Dictionary of Quotations. 1989 ...no; not a sixpence. CHARLES COTESWORTH PINCKNEY, American minister to France, letter to Timothy Pickering, October 27, 1797, relating the American response to a French... 4) Essex Junto. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...later encouraged the disaffection of the Hartford Convention. Prominent among them were Timothy Pickering, George Cabot, and Theophilus Parsons.... 5) Treaty with the Six Nations. 1909-14. American Historical Documents,
1000-1904. The Harvard Classics ...all causes of complaint, and establishing a firm and permanent friendship with them; and Timothy Pickering being appointed sole agent for that purpose; and the agent... 6) Hartford Convention. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...in New England, despite prosperity there. Federalist extremists, such as John Lowell and Timothy Pickering, contemplated a separate peace between New England and... 7) Chapter 2. The Beginnings of American. 1. The First Differentiation.
Mencken, H.L. 1921. The American Language ...on National Literature; Boston, 1823. [back] Note 8. Pickering was a son of Col. Timothy Pickering, quartermaster-general of the Continental Army, and later Postmaster-General,... 8) Chapter 3. The Period of Growth. 1. Character of the New Nation. Mencken,
H.L. 1921. The American Language ...similar publications many subscribers. Letters from American readers appear occasionally in British magazines [of the period], and others imply the existence of a... |