[101] Hutchinson's History, iii. 212. They were the Fourteenth, Twenty-ninth, and part of the Fifty-ninth British regiments.
[102] Parliamentary History, vol. xvi. 476 et seq.; Mahon's History, v. 240; Hutchinson's History, iii. 219.
[103] W. S. Johnson, Trumbull Papers, 317.
[104] Hutchinson's History, iii. 221.
[105] Ibid., iii. 494.
[106] Writings, i. 3 (Boston ed.).
[107] North Carolina adopted resolutions similar to those of Virginia, and associations were formed to prevent importation of British goods. Ramsay, Amer. Rev., i. 84.
[108] Part of the Sixty-fourth and Sixty-fifth regiments, under Colonels Mackey and Pomeroy, arrived at Boston November 10th.
[109] Hutchinson's History, iii. 233.
[110] Ibid., vol. iii. 498.