The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 7, Part 1John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell |
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Page 107
... the officers of the 46th ( 1814 ) bound themselves never to admit to their society or have intercourse with persons who had arrived in the colony under sentence of transportation ; and when the colonel and two brigade majors of the ...
... the officers of the 46th ( 1814 ) bound themselves never to admit to their society or have intercourse with persons who had arrived in the colony under sentence of transportation ; and when the colonel and two brigade majors of the ...
Page 111
If free persons were to be permitted to come at all , Macquarie thought that they ought to be recruited from a class of persons likely to hold themselves aloof from the convict population and possessed of capital to enable them to ...
If free persons were to be permitted to come at all , Macquarie thought that they ought to be recruited from a class of persons likely to hold themselves aloof from the convict population and possessed of capital to enable them to ...
Page 570
The far - reaching regulations made from time to time - indeed , from day to day — and the several amendments of the principal Act included provisions to punish persons who advocated disloyalty or hostility to the British Empire ...
The far - reaching regulations made from time to time - indeed , from day to day — and the several amendments of the principal Act included provisions to punish persons who advocated disloyalty or hostility to the British Empire ...
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