Lee, Arthur, 1740-1792
Arthur Lee American politician
VIAF ID: 17232714 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/17232714
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Arthur Lee ‡c American politician
- 200 _ | ‡a Lee ‡b Arthur ‡f 1740-1792
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- 100 1 0 ‡a Lee, Arthur ‡d 1740-1792
- 100 1 _ ‡a Lee, Arthur ‡d 1740-1792
- 100 1 _ ‡a Lee, Arthur ‡d 1740-1792
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Lee, Arthur, ‡d 1740-1792
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (49)
Works
Title | Sources |
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An addres[s] from the United States in Congress assembled to the legislatures of the several states. | |
American wanderer, through various parts of Europe, in a series of letters to a lady... by a Virginian... | |
Answer to considerations on certain political transactions of the province of South Carolina | |
appeal &c. | |
An appeal to the justice and interests of the people of Great Britain : in the present disputes with America | |
Arthur Lee, M. D., LL. D., F. R. S., 1740-1792 ... | |
Berufung auf die Gerechtigkeit und den Vortheil der Grossbrittanischen Nation in den gegenwartigen Streitigkeiten mit Amerika. Alten Mitgleide des Parlements. | |
Board of Treasury, June 22, 1786 : Sir, we do ourselves the honour of submitting, through Your Excellency, to the consideration of Congress, the report of this board on the requisition of the present year. ... | |
The Board of Treasury, to whom it was referred to revise the system adopted for the settlement of the accounts of the five great departments, and to report such alterations therein, or such other mode as in their opinion may be more conducive to a speedy and just settlement of said accounts : beg leave to report ... | |
The Board of Treasury to whom was referred their letter of the 29th of June last, together with sundry letters from the comptroller of the state of Pennsylvania, to Thomas Smith Esq; commissioner of the loan-office in the said state, beg leave to report : that the act of the state of Pennsylvania of the 8th of March 1786, directs their treasurer to pay to the order of the United States ... | |
diplomatic correspondence of the American revolution being the letters... concerning the foreign relations of the United States during the whole revolution, together with the letters in reply from the Secret Committee of Congress and the Secretary of foreign affairs. Also, the entire correspondance of the French ministers, Gerard and Luzerne, with Congress [dated 1775-1784] | |
Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de cortice peruviano: quam ... ex auctoritate ... Gulielmi Robertson ... Academiæ edinburgenæ præfecti ... pro gradu doctoratus ... | |
An essay in vindication of the continental colonies of America. American. | |
Estimate of the annual expenditure of the civil departments of the United States, on the present establishment. | |
Extract from an address, in the Virginia gazette, of March 19, 1767. | |
Extracts from a letter written to the president of Congress : by the Honorable Arthur Lee, Esquire, in answer to a libel published in the Pennsylvania gazette of the fifth of December, 1778, by Silas Deane, Esquire. In which every charge or insinuation against him in that libel, is fully and clearly refuted. | |
The Farmer's and Monitor's letters to the inhabitants of the British colonies. | |
Life of Arthur Lee, LL.D., joint commissioner of the United States to the court of France, and sole commissioner to the courts of Spain and Prussia, during the Revolutionary War; with his political and literary correspondence and his papers on diplomatic and political subjects, and the affairs of the United States during the same period. Boston, Wells and Lilly, 1829. | |
Observations on certain commercial transactions in France, laid before Congress. | |
Observations on the review of the controversy between Great-Britain and her colonies | |
The Olive branch, petition of the American Congress to George III, 1775 | |
An ordinance for the establishment of the mint of the United States of America, and for regulating the value and alloy of coin. | |
Papers in relation to the case of Silas Deane. | |
The political detection, or, The treachery and tyranny of administration both at home and abroad, 1770: | |
A speech, intended to have been delivered in the House of Commons, in support of the petition from the general congress at Philadelphia | |
A summary view of the rights of British America | |
To the freeholders of the Counties of Gloucester, Middlesex, Essex. King and Queen, King William Caroline, Westmoreland, Richmond, Northumberland, and Lancaster. Woodbury, in Richmond County : Gentlemen. When I offer myself as a candidate to represent you in the general Congress of the United States, I think it proper to declare the principles, which shall govern my conduct, if I have the honour of being elected. ... |