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rulers on the intolerance and unreasonableness of their conduct. i. 160. Braddock's unfortunate expedition. i. 247. Bradstreet (Colonel)--His brilliant achievement in taking and destroying Fort Frontenac. i. 261. Bradstreet and Norton--Sent to England to answer complaints; favourably received; first thanked and then censured by the Massachusetts Bay rulers; Norton dies of grief. i. 142. Brock (Sir Isaac)---His address to the Legislature of Upper Canada, ii. 341, 342. Takes Detroit. ii. 352-354. Proclamation to the inhabitants of Michigan. ii. 362, 363. Killed at Queenston Heights. ii. 366. Brown, Samuel and John--Their character and position. i. 35. Banished from Massachusetts Bay for adhering to Episcopal worship. i. 35. Misrepresented by Messrs. Palfrey and Bancroft. i. 37. Their letters and papers seized, and their complaints successfully denied to the King by their persecutors. i. 46. Their conduct unblamable. i. 42. Bunker's Hill, Concord, and Lexington--Battles of, numbers engaged, with the accounts, on both sides. i. 460, 461. Burke (the celebrated Edmund)--Reviews and denounces the persecuting laws and spirit of the Massachusetts Bay Puritans, during thirty years. i. 122. Canadian Militia--Their character. ii. 461. Canada--What had been claimed by old American colonies in regard to the payment of official salaries contended for by, and granted to Canada, to the satisfaction and progress of the country. i. 267. Canada wholly surrendered to the King of Great Britain, through Lord Amherst. i. 267. Canada--State of at the close of the war. ii. 471. Carscallen (Luke). ii. 202. Causes--Characteristics of early emigration to New England. i. 25. Change of government in England and end of Lord North's administration. ii. 57. Change of tone and professions at Massachusetts Bay on the confirmation of the King's restoration. i. 131. The King's kind reply to their address--their joy at it, but they evade the six conditions on which the King proposes to forgive their past and continue their charter. i. 135-137, 139. Characteristics of fifty-four years' government of Massachusetts Bay, under the first charter. i. 217. Charles the First--Deceived by the misstatements of the Massachusetts Bay Puritans, to decide in their favour against the complaints made in 1632. i. 67. His kind and indulgent conduct to the Massachusetts
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