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2014109957Sternberg Press. New. 2014. Paperback. 3956790669 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened - -- with a bonus offer-- . Sternberg Press paperback
2013__0415500354Routledge 2013. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 1592 pages. 9.80x6.61x4.88 inches. Routledge hardcover
2023Manohar-9780367629977Routledge Manohar 2023. Paperback. New. Routledge (Manohar) paperback
2023Manohar-9780367629977Routledge Manohar 2023. Paperback. New. Routledge (Manohar) paperback
17741242201774. First Edition. AMERICAN REVOLUTION HITCHCOCK A.M. Gad. A Sermon Preached Before His Excellency Thomas Gage Esq; Governor: The Honorable His Majesty's Council and the Honorable House of Representatives of the Province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England May 25th 1774. Being the Anniversary of the Election of His Majesty's Council for said Province. Boston: New England: Edes & Gill 1774. Slim octavo period-style full calf-gilt red morocco spine label; pp. 1-5 6-56. $5200.First edition of the famed Congregationalist minister's electrifying Sermon an ""unmistakable and direct challenge"" to Britains new Governor Gage of Massachusetts in the audience with Hitchcock boldly pronouncing ""our contention is not about trifles but about liberty and property and not ours only but those of prosperity.""In May 1774 barely two months after Britain passed the infamous Port Act one of four Intolerable Acts aimed at punishing Americans for the Boston Tea Party Congregational minister Hitchcock delivered the year's annual Election Sermon. With Britain's new Governor Thomas Gage in the audience ""Hitchcock spoke bluntly."" Aligning himself with opposition to the Port Act. he ""returned repeatedly to the assertion that people were the proper judges of their rulers his overall message presented an unmistakable and direct challenge"" to Gage Norton 1774: Long Year of Revolution 104. Hitchcock especially triggered fury in Gage by declaring ""our contention is not about trifles but about liberty and property; and not ours only but those of posterity."" In his sermons ""Old and New Testaments classic writers modern and ancient philosophers and divines and often 'the great Mr. Lock' were cited in proof of the duty as well as the right to resist tyranny and any attack upon the rights of men"" Baldwin New England Clergy 129n.Hitchcock's Sermon ""is almost entirely devoted to the nature of political liberty"" Jenkins Early American Imprints 257. He notably states: ""No individual has any authority or right to attempt to exercise any over the rest of the human species however he may be supposed to surpass them in wisdom and sagacity Rulers are under the most sacred ties to consult the good of society"" he declares but if they ""contrive and attempt the ruin of the publick sic it is the duty of the people to consult the common happiness and oppose them."" Arguing ""much lies at stake"" he asserts ""prerogative itself is not a power to do anything it pleases."" Hitchcock particularly calls on colonial legislatures to recognize how ""the united voice of America with the solemnity of thunder and with accents piercing as the lightning awakes your attention and demands fidelity our danger is not visionary but real."" Less than year after he pronounced these words the first shots of the American Revolution were fired at Lexington and Concord. Subsequently Hitchcock along with other radical clergymen was sent to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1779-1780 as a representative of his town Pembroke and became one ""the members of the committee to draw up the Massachusetts constitution"" Baldwin 145. First edition first printing: with half title; woodcut-engraved head-pieces. ESTC W29308. Evans 13330. Sabin 32260. Bailyn Ideological Origins of the American Revolution 38 310. Hyneman & Lutz American Political Writing during the Founding Era 1760-1805 V.I:281-304. Containing inscription in an early unidentified cursive above the half title front wrapper: ""For Capt. Ebenezer Hitchcock."" We have been unable to definitively confirm the inscription is in the hand of Gad Hitchcock; the recipient is said to be his father Capt. Ebenezer Hitchcock who died in 1776. Half title verso with owner inscription in a different hand: ""Lucy Goounclearly her book given to her by her Mother."" Text very fresh with mere trace of soiling tiny gutter-edge pinholes from original stitching. A fine copy of a Revolutionary classic. unknown