[319]. McMaster and Stone, Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution, p. 701.
[320]. The American Museum, Vol. II, p. 248.
[321]. Ms. Treasury Department: Pa. Loan Office Certificates, 1788, folio 45.
[322]. Ibid.: Ledger C, 3% Stock, Pa., folio 48. John F. Mifflin was a holder of paper to the amount of several thousand dollars funded in 1790. Ibid., Loan Office, Pa., 1790–1791, folio 6; Ledger C, 3% Stock, Pa., folio 6.
[323]. Roosevelt, G. Morris, pp. 1, 24.
[324]. Ibid., p. 167.
[325]. Oberholtzer, Robert Morris, p. 4.
[326]. Ibid., p. 108.
[327]. For his multifarious operations see Oberholtzer, Robert Morris; Sumner, The Financier and the Finances of the American Revolution, 2 vols.
[328]. Library of Congress: Morris Mss. Consult the Index to the three volumes of Morris’ Letter Books of Private Correspondence for references, under “James Marshall.” Only by turning over this enormous mass of correspondence can one gain a correct notion of the ramifications of Morris’ interests and the number of prominent men involved in his schemes.