Knowledge (XXG)

John Howe (loyalist)

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Court of Common Pleas. On October 9, 1813, his sixth and youngest child from his first marriage, David Howe, married Elizabeth M. Gethens. In 1815, John Howe was given a special commission as Justice "for the better and more effective administration of the office of Justice of the Peace and for the establishment of an active, vigorous and effectual Police." John Howe played a role in the establishment of a "House of Correction" and improving the police in Halifax by having "the daily attendance of one Magistrate in some Public Office in Halifax, for managing the Police of the Town." With his growing duties as a Magistrate and possibly due to a minor stroke, John Howe retired from his offices as King's Printer and Postmaster in 1818, appointments that were then awarded to his son, John Howe, Jr.
504:, was charged with criminal libel for printing an anonymous letter that charged that the police and magistrates had embezzled £30,000 from the people of Halifax. Joseph Howe made it clear that his father was not one of the corrupt magistrates when he argued his own defense. Joseph won an acquittal in the case on March 3, 1835, in a victory that was popularly seen as a triumph of freedom of the press and a blow to the corrupt governance of some of the magistrates. Just over eight months after Joseph won his case, but before Joseph had begun his political career, John Howe died in his sleep on December 27, 1835, at 81 years of age. He is buried in the 454:
that there were French emissaries throughout the country, commented on the anti-British sentiment of Irish immigrants in New York, and assessed the state of military preparedness. John Howe subsequently made a trip to the United States from November 10, 1808, to January 5, 1809, but this visit was under the more official guise of "bearer of Dispatches to the British Minister", that minister being David Montagu, Baron Erskine of Restormel Castle, the British Envoy at Washington from 1806 to 1810. This mission included accompanying Baron Erskine to interviews with President
408:, John was appointed King's Printer in 1801, responsible for printing the Nova Scotia Royal Gazette and the Debates of the House of Assembly. In the same year, he was also appointed Postmaster of Halifax and "agent manager and director of His Majesty's Packet boats in Halifax," a position that was extended to Deputy Postmaster-General of Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and the Bermudas in 1803. The postmaster positions included expanding and improving delivery routes and establishing way stations as required. 303: 478: 497:
to Lima, Peru, where she was planning to move with her husband. In 1826, John Howe's sixth child, David Howe, also died. But another family event followed on February 2, 1828, when Joseph Howe, John Howe's youngest child, married Catherine Susan Ann McNab. After this marriage, John Howe helped to produce his son's, Joseph Howe's, newspaper together with Joseph's wife, particularly when Joseph traveled.
635:, pp.7-8, indicates that Benjamin Franklin began his printer's apprenticeship in Boston at the age of 12, and Beck, J. Murray. (1982), Vol. I, p. 17, indicates that Joseph Howe, John Howe's youngest son, began his apprenticeship under his father at 13, so a start at 12 or 13 for John Howe would be consistent with the starting ages of an older contemporary and with John Howe's training of his own son. 462:. John Howe concluded that war with the United States could be avoided if the British blockade and tariff on ships entering French ports (which was having a devastating effect on the American economy) were rescinded, but if they were not, war was probably unavoidable and attacks on the British North American colonies were likely. When Madison declared war on Britain, beginning the 124:' expectations about their opportunities for expansion, all of which contributed to the colonists' determination to revolt against an increasingly costly, authoritarian, and obstructive British rule. John Howe was eight years old at the end of this war on September 7, 1763, so he grew to maturity influenced by the events that followed, such as colonial resistance to the 24: 331:
were staying: the Americans agreed because they feared the British would set fire to Boston as they left, the British agreed because they didn't want to suffer the costs of evacuating Boston under fire. On March 17, 1776, the last troops and loyalists boarded ships in Boston harbour and set sail for Halifax, Nova Scotia. Margaret Draper, John's partner in the
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child, William Howe, was born; and in 1788, Jane Howe, their fifth child was born. On November 10, 1790, David Howe, John and Martha's sixth child was born, but Martha (Minns) Howe died of complications from the birth on November 25, 1790. On December 25, 1797, John and Martha (Minns) Howe's first child, Martha Howe, married Edward Sentell.
260:. Richard Draper may have anticipated his demise, as he formed a partnership with John Boyle in May, the month before his death. However, Margaret Draper soon ended this partnership (between August 4 and 11, 1774) as Boyle did not share her loyalist sympathies. Margaret Draper published the paper by herself from August 11, 1774. 496:
After his retirement from his offices of King's Printer and Postmaster, John Howe continued to be active, serving as a magistrate. In 1822, Sarah Foster Howe, John's seventh child, married Daniel Langshaw, but in 1824, Sarah Foster (Howe) Langshaw died aboard ship on her way from Liverpool, England,
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Howe traveled through the American seaboard states, arriving in Boston on April 22, 1808, under the guise of visiting family and friends. He travelled from Boston to Washington, Norfolk, and New York. He reported on the political situation, predicted that Madison would be the next President, stated
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On October 26, 1779, the British evacuated their troops and the loyalists from Newport, RI, to New York. On Christmas Day, 1779, John and Martha Howe's first child, Martha Howe, was born in New York. Sometime during 1780, John Howe and his young family, along with his brother-in-law William Minns,
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until September 7, 1775, when she appears to have had some trouble as no issues were published (or at least no issues have been found) from September 14 to October 6, 1775. John Howe, although he was just completing his apprenticeship, became Margaret Draper's new partner, and he was listed as the
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led the final bayonet charge up the hill "with the bullets flying through the tails of his coat." After the battle, John told of aiding "a young officer whose leg had been amputated and who he cured of a raging fever by letting him drink a bucket of cold water." Shortly after the battle, John Howe
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at greater length. Both were quite likely written and printed by John Howe, who would have been just a few months short of his 21st birthday. After the Battle of Lexington and Concord news of the event quickly spread to the other colonies and American patriots came in great numbers to lay siege to
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That John Howe apprenticed under Richard Draper, and that he became a partner almost immediately after he had completed his apprenticeship, is drawn from Grant, John N. (1982), p.27. That his completion of his apprenticeship and his entry into partnership with Margaret Draper occurred in October,
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On October 25, 1798, John Howe married his second wife, Mary (Ede) Austen, the widow of Henry Austen. Only a few months later, on January 19, 1799, Martha (Howe) Sentell, the first child of John and Martha (Minns) Howe died in childbirth. But happier events followed with the birth of Sarah Foster
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During this period, John Howe's and Martha (Minns) Howe's family grew and suffered losses. On September 2, 1782, their second child, Sarah Howe, was born, but she died at the age of 10 months on June 23, 1783. On September 8, 1784, John Howe, Jr., their third child, was born; in 1786 their fourth
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to Boston. Realizing that taking the hill would be too costly, and that the Americans would soon have cannon in place, the British decided to evacuate the town of all of their forces and the loyalists. The two sides agreed upon an informal cease-fire proposed and negotiated by those in Boston who
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After his brief stint as a volunteer spy, John returned to his usual work as printer, loyalist writer and postmaster in Halifax. On October 16, 1808, John Howe's eldest son, John Howe, Jr., married Henrietta Hians. In 1810, John Howe was appointed Justice of the Peace and Justice of the Inferior
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As mentioned, John Howe was a religious man and a convert to the Sandemanian church. In Halifax, John served as an elder of the Sandemanian church, he served as a lay preacher to the community of 2000 blacks that fled the United States during the War of 1812 and settled in Halifax, and he made
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on November 16, 1776. On November 26, General Clinton and 6,000 troops were sent to take Newport, RI, which they succeeded in doing on December 1. After this victory, the British offered John Howe the position of Printer for the Provincial Forces. John Howe moved to Newport, RI, along with his
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and began building fortifications upon it from which they would be able to fire upon the town and harbour. In the morning light, a British ship in the harbour, seeing the fortifications being constructed on the hill, began firing on the hill. Soon, British troops were ferried from Boston to
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when the latter refused to submit to a search attempt. Fearing that these events presaged war, Sir George Prevost, the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia, arranged for a spy to tour the New England states and "observe whatever may be agitating." The man he chose for his spy was John Howe.
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descendants and, with the rising tensions between the colonists and royal rule, Sandman's command to "Fear God and honour the King" and "if it be possible...To live peacefully with all men" found a receptive audience amongst the loyalists. A Joseph Howe is listed as a member of the Boston
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in the Americas. As Richard Draper was known to be a frail and sickly man, and as he was Draper's apprentice, John Howe probably witnessed and wrote the article about the Boston Tea Party that appeared in the December 23, 1773, issue. Less than six months after the report on the
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was dedicated to foreign news and essays reprinted from European publications, there was a short Halifax section that covered shipping news and local events, and it reported on issues debated in the Assembly as well as laws and proclamations that were not covered in the
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1775, is indicated by the date of the first issue that bears his name, October 13, 1775, and it is consistent with the practice of indenturing apprentices until they reached 21 years of age. The start date is more open to conjecture. Rorabaugh, W. J. (1986),
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Sandemanians; this was probably John's father, but it might have been John's elder brother. John Howe's Sandemanian beliefs likely contributed to his loyalist stance, and definitely contributed to his lifelong pacifism.
335:, is listed as being amongst the loyalists evacuated from Boston to Halifax, and she was accompanied by John Howe. Margaret Draper then moved to England, where she lived on a pension from the British government. 355:
on January 16, 1777, and he continued printing that newspaper until the final issue of October 6, 1779. During their stay in Newport, John Howe married Martha Minns on June 7, 1778. John Howe was named in the
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regular Sunday visits to the prison to preach to the inmates. He was a practicing pacifist, yet on at least one occasion he knocked together the heads of two young men who were fighting on the Sabbath.
1055: 466:, he cited the British Orders in Council which established the blockade and tariff, just as John Howe had predicted, and attacks on the British North American colonies (later Canada) did occur. 315:
publisher from October 13, 1775 (the day before his 21st birthday, the time at which apprenticeships were completed in the practice of the time) to the paper's final issue on February 22, 1776.
276:"to destroy a Magazine of Military Stores deposited there." When the raid broke into a firefight, the "Troops had above Fifty killed, and many more wounded". In the April 20, 1775, issue of the 338:
In mid-1776, the British assembled troops on Staten Island. On August 22, they crossed over to Long Island, and on August 27, they engaged and defeated the Americans at the
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Charlestown, where they charged up and took the hill, although at an enormous cost in lives. John Howe witnessed, wrote, and printed the broadside describing the
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Howe in 1800, John Howe's seventh child and his first with Mary (Ede Austen) Howe. On December 4, 1804, his last and best-known child, Joseph Howe, was born.
364:, a native of Newport, as his apprentice, who later became the printer of the first newspaper in New Brunswick and then the King's Printer in Newfoundland. 1045: 505: 482: 422:"Although he was not, as one writer states, the John Howe who acted as a spy for Lieutenant-General Thomas Gage behind the rebel lines in 1775..." 618: 1040: 384:
on December 28, 1780. The paper remained in the Howe family until about 1819 and continued to be printed until about 1870. About half of the
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of 1778, possibly as a result of his work as printer for the British forces in Newport, Rhode Island. During this period, John Howe took on
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a short article appeared that briefly described the battle, and—a day or more later—a broadside was published that reported on the
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quit New York for Halifax, Nova Scotia. John Ryan remained in New York until 1783, becoming a partner with William Lewis in the
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Boston. On June 17, 1775, the American forces seized a hill across the Charles river to the north of Boston in
295: 89: 191:, as well as a strong opposition to state control over the church. These views led to his suspension from the 405: 1030: 273: 112:(1754–1763) began. It was the consequences of this conflict that required the British to demand greater 443: 339: 257: 105: 952:
Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. "The Family of John Howe, Loyalist and King's Printer" in the
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That William Minns was also in Newport is drawn from advertisements for things he had for sale in the
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. "The Family of John Howe, Loyalist and King's Printer" in the
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In 1803, as part of the British blockade of trade with French-controlled ports, which was during the
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The History of Printing In America: with a Biography of Printers & an Account of Newspapers
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The History of Printing In America: with a Biography of Printers & an Account of Newspapers
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and it was the consequences of this conflict that raised and disappointed the English-American
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Grant, John N. "John Howe, Senior: Printer, Publisher, Postmaster, Spy," pp. 24–57, in
675:(microfilm), as well as notes in the lists of available issues in library catalogs, such as 455: 327: 249: 184: 477: 427: 156: 148: 129: 65: 351:
fiancée, Martha Minns, and her brother, William Minns. He printed the first issue of the
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For these services, Joseph Howe said ruefully, his father "never received a farthing."
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in either 1766 or 1767. Richard Draper was the King's printer in Massachusetts and the
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Grant, John N. "John Howe, Senior: Printer, Publisher, Postmaster, Spy," pp.24-57, in
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and John N. Grant, eds. (Toronto and Charlottetown: Dundurn Press Ltd., 1982).
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and John N. Grant, eds. (Toronto and Charlottetown: Dundurn Press Ltd., 1982).
323: 212: 180: 164: 77: 61: 567: 430:, the Royal Navy searched American ships trading with continental Europe and 677: 517: 435: 244: 236: 152: 125: 23: 256:, died on June 5 or 6, 1774, leaving the paper in the hands of his widow, 176: 172: 168: 121: 597:(Kingston and Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1982), pp.7-8, 224: 160: 144: 93: 380:
On his return to Halifax, John Howe, published the first issue of the
208: 200: 85: 41:. New Brunswick Museum, Saint John, N.B. (accession number: 1962.94). 476: 171:, sought a return to a "New Testament Christianity" that included 113: 22: 620:
The Craft Apprentice: From Franklin to the Machine Age in America
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. (1976), pp. 318 and 322.
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John Howe was born October 14th in 1754, the same year that the
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Eleven Exiles: Accounts of Loyalists of the American Revolution
938:(Kingston and Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1982). 551:
Eleven Exiles: Accounts of Loyalists of the American Revolution
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proposed to Martha Minns, who accepted and became his fiancée.
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occurred when the British forces raided inland from Boston to
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http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3644
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http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3644
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http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3644
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http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=3644
704:(New York: The Macmillan Company, 1952), vol. 1, pp. 129-30. 231:
John Howe probably began his apprenticeship as a printer to
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. (1976), p. 318-20.
584:(New York: Weathervane Press, 1970), pp.151, 210, and 290. 416:
Note other spying claims regarding a John Howe, denied in
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Battle of Lexington and Concord & Siege of Boston map
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. (1976), p. 322.
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. (1976), p. 322.
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Punch, Terrance M. and Marble, Allan E. (1976), p. 318.
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Massachusetts Gazette and the Boston Weekly Newsletter
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Joseph Howe, Vol. I, Conservative Reformer, 1804-1848
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Joseph Howe, Vol. I, Conservative Reformer, 1804-1848
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Howe was a serving magistrate when his youngest son,
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On March 5, 1776, American forces seized control of
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18th-century Canadian newspaper publishers (people)
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
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Massachusetts Gazette and Boston Weekly News Letter
128:(1765–66), when he was 11, and the violence of the 346:, which was concluded with the British victory of 211:, where he helped his nephew get established as a 434:sailors onboard that were alleged to be British 151:, the famous scientist. The sect began when the 92:, the son of Joseph Howe, a tin plate worker of 956:, Vol. 6 (September, 1976), pp. 317–327. 568:""Sandemanians" in the Catholic Encyclopedia" 268:On April 19, 1775, the opening battle of the 264:A Loyalist printer in the American Revolution 116:from, and assert greater control over, their 48:(October 14, 1754 – December 27, 1835) was a 8: 987:, Vol. 17, No. 2 (Jan., 1912), pp. 332-354 195:in 1728. With the help of his son-in-law, 855:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online: 815:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online: 766:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online: 744:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online: 483:Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia) 16:For other people with the same name, see 671:This is drawn from the mastheads of the 301: 1000:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online 529: 418:Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online 370:New-York Mercury and General Advertiser 310:Margaret Draper continued to print the 1026:American Loyalists from Massachusetts 617:Rorabaugh, W. J. (11 February 1988). 7: 983:Secrets Reports of John Howe, 1808. 963:(New York: Weathervane Press, 1970). 342:. A series of battles continued the 735:(from the microfilm of that paper). 540:, Vol. 6 (September, 1976), p. 317. 644:Thomas, Isaiah (1970) , pp.143-45. 76:, and the father of Joseph Howe a 14: 1046:Loyalists who settled Nova Scotia 846:Grant, John N. (1976), pp. 42-44. 837:Grant, John N. (1976), pp. 39-42. 653:Thomas, Isaiah (1970), pp.175-76. 954:Nova Scotia Historical Quarterly 877:Grant, John N. (1976), pp. 45-6. 806:Grant, John N. (1976), pp. 35-6. 779:Grant, John N. (1976), pp. 32-4. 538:Nova Scotia Historical Quarterly 682:, Sept. 28, 1769-Feb. 29, 1776" 326:brought the cannon seized from 282:Battle of Lexington and Concord 252:, Richard Draper, owner of the 985:The American Historical Review 713:Thomas, Isaiah (1970), pp.176. 404:Meanwhile, after the death of 203:in 1760 and then, in 1764, to 155:(1695–1773), who had been the 147:, whose best-known member was 1: 922:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 54. 913:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 49. 895:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 47. 886:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 48. 828:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 39. 722:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 30. 662:Grant, John N. (1976), p. 29. 412:John Howe volunteers as a spy 96:ancestry, and Rebeccah Hart. 31: 1041:Colony of Nova Scotia judges 358:Massachusetts Banishment Act 472: 39:William Valentine (painter) 1072: 979:American Loyalists, p. 370 520:- distant relation to Howe 376:Building a life in Halifax 15: 702:The War of the Revolution 391:Nova Scotia Royal Gazette 296:General Sir William Howe 135:John Howe's family were 90:Massachusetts Bay colony 1051:United Empire Loyalists 473:John Howe's later years 442:fired several shots on 406:Anthony Henry (printer) 485: 438:. In June, 1807, HMS 307: 42: 480: 340:Battle of Long Island 305: 292:Battle of Bunker Hill 243:, the oldest English 106:French and Indian War 28:Portrait of John Howe 26: 481:John and Mary Howe, 458:and President-elect 215:, and then moved to 947:Phyllis R. Blakeley 700:Ward, Christopher, 687:Library of Congress 555:Phyllis R. Blakeley 270:American Revolution 54:American Revolution 52:printer during the 1036:People from Boston 506:Old Burying Ground 486: 320:Dorchester Heights 308: 193:Church of Scotland 43: 998:Biography at the 934:Beck, J. Murray. 593:Beck, J. Murray. 344:New York Campaign 189:communal property 118:American colonies 84:. He was born in 80:of the Colony of 1063: 959:Thomas, Isaiah. 923: 920: 914: 911: 905: 902: 896: 893: 887: 884: 878: 875: 869: 866: 860: 853: 847: 844: 838: 835: 829: 826: 820: 813: 807: 804: 798: 795: 789: 786: 780: 777: 771: 764: 758: 755: 749: 742: 736: 729: 723: 720: 714: 711: 705: 698: 692: 691: 669: 663: 660: 654: 651: 645: 642: 636: 634: 612: 606: 591: 585: 580:Thomas, Isaiah, 578: 572: 571: 564: 558: 547: 541: 534: 456:Thomas Jefferson 328:Fort Ticonderoga 250:Boston Tea Party 207:. He arrived in 110:Seven Years' War 36: 33: 1071: 1070: 1066: 1065: 1064: 1062: 1061: 1060: 1006: 1005: 994: 973:Newport Gazette 931: 926: 921: 917: 912: 908: 903: 899: 894: 890: 885: 881: 876: 872: 867: 863: 854: 850: 845: 841: 836: 832: 827: 823: 814: 810: 805: 801: 796: 792: 787: 783: 778: 774: 765: 761: 756: 752: 743: 739: 733:Newport Gazette 730: 726: 721: 717: 712: 708: 699: 695: 676: 670: 666: 661: 657: 652: 648: 643: 639: 631: 616: 613: 609: 592: 588: 579: 575: 566: 565: 561: 548: 544: 535: 531: 527: 514: 475: 428:Napoleonic Wars 414: 386:Halifax Journal 382:Halifax Journal 378: 353:Newport Gazette 348:Fort Washington 266: 258:Margaret Draper 197:Robert Sandeman 149:Michael Faraday 139:to a religious 130:Boston Massacre 102: 34: 21: 12: 11: 5: 1069: 1067: 1059: 1058: 1053: 1048: 1043: 1038: 1033: 1028: 1023: 1018: 1008: 1007: 1004: 1003: 993: 992:External links 990: 989: 988: 981: 976: 970: 964: 957: 950: 939: 930: 927: 925: 924: 915: 906: 897: 888: 879: 870: 861: 848: 839: 830: 821: 808: 799: 790: 781: 772: 759: 750: 737: 724: 715: 706: 693: 664: 655: 646: 637: 629: 607: 586: 573: 559: 542: 528: 526: 523: 522: 521: 513: 510: 474: 471: 413: 410: 377: 374: 265: 262: 233:Richard Draper 153:Rev. John Glas 101: 98: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1068: 1057: 1054: 1052: 1049: 1047: 1044: 1042: 1039: 1037: 1034: 1032: 1031:British spies 1029: 1027: 1024: 1022: 1019: 1017: 1014: 1013: 1011: 1002: 1001: 996: 995: 991: 986: 982: 980: 977: 974: 971: 968: 965: 962: 958: 955: 951: 948: 944: 940: 937: 933: 932: 928: 919: 916: 910: 907: 901: 898: 892: 889: 883: 880: 874: 871: 865: 862: 858: 852: 849: 843: 840: 834: 831: 825: 822: 818: 812: 809: 803: 800: 794: 791: 785: 782: 776: 773: 769: 763: 760: 754: 751: 747: 741: 738: 734: 728: 725: 719: 716: 710: 707: 703: 697: 694: 689: 688: 683: 681: 674: 668: 665: 659: 656: 650: 647: 641: 638: 632: 630:9780195363982 626: 622: 621: 611: 608: 604: 603:0-7735-0387-0 600: 596: 590: 587: 583: 577: 574: 569: 563: 560: 556: 552: 546: 543: 539: 533: 530: 524: 519: 516: 515: 511: 509: 507: 503: 498: 494: 490: 484: 479: 470: 467: 465: 461: 460:James Madison 457: 451: 448: 447: 441: 437: 433: 429: 424: 423: 419: 411: 409: 407: 402: 398: 394: 392: 387: 383: 375: 373: 371: 365: 363: 359: 354: 349: 345: 341: 336: 334: 329: 325: 321: 316: 313: 304: 300: 297: 293: 288: 283: 279: 275: 271: 263: 261: 259: 255: 251: 246: 242: 238: 234: 229: 226: 222: 218: 214: 210: 206: 202: 198: 194: 190: 186: 182: 178: 174: 170: 166: 162: 158: 154: 150: 146: 142: 138: 133: 131: 127: 123: 119: 115: 111: 107: 99: 97: 95: 91: 87: 83: 79: 75: 72:prior to the 71: 67: 63: 59: 55: 51: 47: 40: 29: 25: 19: 999: 984: 975:(microfilm). 972: 969:(microfilm). 966: 960: 953: 942: 935: 918: 909: 900: 891: 882: 873: 864: 851: 842: 833: 824: 811: 802: 793: 784: 775: 762: 753: 740: 732: 727: 718: 709: 701: 696: 685: 679: 672: 667: 658: 649: 640: 619: 610: 594: 589: 581: 576: 562: 550: 545: 537: 532: 499: 495: 491: 487: 468: 452: 445: 439: 425: 421: 417: 415: 403: 399: 395: 390: 385: 381: 379: 369: 366: 352: 337: 332: 317: 311: 309: 277: 267: 253: 240: 230: 159:minister at 157:Presbyterian 145:Sandemanians 134: 103: 45: 44: 27: 1021:1835 deaths 1016:1754 births 502:Joseph Howe 464:War of 1812 287:Charlestown 221:Connecticut 205:New England 143:called the 100:Early years 82:Nova Scotia 74:War of 1812 35: 1820 1010:Categories 929:References 446:Chesapeake 324:Henry Knox 213:bookseller 181:good works 165:Perthshire 78:Magistrate 62:Postmaster 518:C.D. Howe 444:USS  436:deserters 432:impressed 362:John Ryan 245:newspaper 237:publisher 126:Stamp Act 122:colonists 46:John Howe 18:John Howe 512:See also 177:pacifism 169:Scotland 137:converts 50:loyalist 440:Leopard 274:Concord 239:of the 225:Puritan 217:Danbury 185:charity 161:Tealing 94:Puritan 66:Halifax 58:printer 627:  601:  209:Boston 201:London 173:Agapēs 86:Boston 525:Notes 114:taxes 37:, by 625:ISBN 599:ISBN 141:sect 68:, a 60:and 56:, a 108:or 70:spy 64:in 1012:: 945:, 684:. 623:. 553:, 508:. 420:, 372:. 219:, 187:, 183:, 179:, 175:, 167:, 163:, 88:, 32:c. 30:, 859:. 819:. 770:. 748:. 690:. 633:. 605:. 570:. 20:.

Index

John Howe

William Valentine (painter)
loyalist
American Revolution
printer
Postmaster
Halifax
spy
War of 1812
Magistrate
Nova Scotia
Boston
Massachusetts Bay colony
Puritan
French and Indian War
Seven Years' War
taxes
American colonies
colonists
Stamp Act
Boston Massacre
converts
sect
Sandemanians
Michael Faraday
Rev. John Glas
Presbyterian
Tealing
Perthshire

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