| Edmund Burke - America - 1770 - 340 pages
...irregularity, and the greater, as thefe foreigners, by their induftry, frugality, and a hard way of living, in which they greatly exceed our people, have in a...them out in feveral places ; fo as to threaten the cclony with the danger of being wholly foreign in h-Tguage, manners, and perhaps even inclinations.... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1839 - 710 pages
...living, in which they greatly exceed our people, have in a manner thrust them out in several places ; so as to threaten the colony with the danger of being...inclinations. In the year 1750, were imported into Pennsylvania and its dependencies four thousand three hundred and seventeen Germans, whereas of British... | |
| Horace Wemyss Smith - 1879 - 632 pages
...living, in which they greatly exceed our people, have in a manner thrust them out in several places; so as to threaten the colony with the danger of being...inclinations. In the year 1750 were imported into Pennsylvania and its dependencies 4,317 Germans, whereas of British and Irish but 1,000 arrived; a... | |
| Horace Wemyss Smith - Philadelphia. College, academy and charitable school - 1880 - 614 pages
...living, in which they greatly exceed our people, have in a manner thrust them out in several places; so as to threaten the colony with the danger of being...manners, and, perhaps, even inclinations. In the year 1 750 were imported into Pennsylvania and its dependencies 4,317 Germans, whereas of British and Irish... | |
| American Historical Association - Historiography - 1894 - 626 pages
...other writers in the middle of the eighteenth century believed that Pennsylvania t was "threatened with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even inclinations." The German and Scotch-Irish elements in the frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle... | |
| State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Meeting - Wisconsin - 1892 - 898 pages
...other writers in the middle of the eighteenth century believed that Pennsylvania l was " threatened with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even inclinations." The German and Scotch-Irish elements in the frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle... | |
| State Historical Society of Wisconsin - Wisconsin - 1894 - 884 pages
...other writers in the middle of the eighteenth century believed that Pennsylvania ' was " threatened with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even inclinations. " The German and Scotch-Irish elements in the frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle... | |
| American Historical Association - Electronic journals - 1894 - 624 pages
...and other writers in the middle of the eighteenth century believed that Pennsylvaniat was "threatened with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even inclinations." The German and Scotch-Irish elements in the frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle... | |
| National Society for the Study of Education - Education - 1900 - 1068 pages
...Society, vols. i, ii. •BURKE, European Settlements, etc. (1763 ed.), vol. ii, p. 200. " threatened with the danger of being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even inclinations." The German and ScotchIrish elements in the frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle... | |
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