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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.
Found 21 total hits in 13 results.
1735 AD (search for this): entry alexander-james
1690 AD (search for this): entry alexander-james
Alexander, James, 1690-1756
An active public man in the province of New York, to which he emigrated from Scotland in 1715, where he was born in 1690.
He had fled from Scotland because of his peril there as an adherent of the Young Pretender.
He was accompanied by William Smith, afterwards chief-justice of the province and its historian.
He was made surveyor-general of New Jersey and New York.
was secretary of the latter colony, and attained eminence in the profession of the law. As atto1690.
He had fled from Scotland because of his peril there as an adherent of the Young Pretender.
He was accompanied by William Smith, afterwards chief-justice of the province and its historian.
He was made surveyor-general of New Jersey and New York.
was secretary of the latter colony, and attained eminence in the profession of the law. As attorney-general of the province and occupant of other important positions, he became distinguished.
He was one of the able counsel who defended the freedom of the press in the person of John Peter Zenger in 1735.
Because of the part which he took in that famous trial he was arbitrarily excluded from the bar, but was reinstated in 1737.
He was associated with Franklin and others in founding the American Philosophical Society.
He was the father of William Alexander, known as Lord Stirling, a gene
1737 AD (search for this): entry alexander-james