| Alan Axelrod - 2000 - 426 頁
...its delegates to the Continental Congress to "dissent from and utterly reject any propositions ... that may cause or lead to a separation from our mother...country or a change of the form of this government." While New Jersey and Pennsylvania temporarily recoiled from independence, Congress played for time.... | |
| Henry W. Elson - 2000 - 386 頁
...Pennsylvania instructed its delegates in Congress “to dissentfrom and utterly reject any propositions, should such be made, that may cause or lead to a separation from our mother country.” 1 The legislature of New Jersey followed a few weeks later in almost the same language. In December... | |
| Walter Isaacson - 2003 - 607 頁
...hold out; until June, its legislature had instructed its delegates to "utterly reject" any actions "that may cause or lead to a separation from our Mother Country." But under pressure from a more radical rump legislature, the instructions were changed. Led by Franklin,... | |
| Walter Isaacson - 2003 - 607 頁
...hold out; until June, its legislature had instructed its delegates to “utterly reject” any actions “that may cause or lead to a separation from our Mother Country.” But under pressure from a more radical rump legislature, the instructions were changed. Led by Franklin,... | |
| John Ferling - 2003 - 576 頁
...congressional delegation. The Pennsylvania congressmen were told to “utterly reject any propositions . . . that may cause or lead to a separation from our mother country.” Pennsylvania acted on the same day that Congress instructed New Hampshire. Delaware and New Jersey... | |
| Walter Isaacson - 2004 - 628 頁
...hold out; until June, its legislature had instructed its delegates to “utterly reject” any actions “that may cause or lead to a separation from our Mother Country.” But under pressure from a more radical rump legislature, the instructions were changed. Led by Franklin,... | |
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