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Pennsylvania Chronicle and Universal Advertiser of November 30th December 3d, 1767, appeared the first of twelve successive weekly Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies in which the attitude assumed by the British Parliament towards the American Colonies was exhaustively discussed. So extensive was their popularity that they were immediately reprinted in almost all our Colonial newspapers. The outbursts of joy throughout America occasioned by the repeal of the Stamp A ct had scarcely subsided when, the protracted illness of Lord Chatham having left the Ministry without a head, the indomitable Charles Townsend, to the amazement of his colleagues and unfeigned delight of his King, introduced measure after measure under the pretence that they were demanded by the necessities of the Exchequer ;but in reality for the purpose of demonstrating the supremacy of the power of the Parliament of Great Britain over her colonies in America.
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Pennsylvania Chronicle and Universal Advertiser of November 30th December 3d, 1767, appeared the first of twelve successive weekly Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies in which the attitude assumed by the British Parliament towards the American Colonies was exhaustively discussed. So extensive was their popularity that they were immediately reprinted in almost all our Colonial newspapers. The outbursts of joy throughout America occasioned by the repeal of the Stamp A ct had scarcely subsided when, the protracted illness of Lord Chatham having left the Ministry without a head, the indomitable Charles Townsend, to the amazement of his colleagues and unfeigned delight of his King, introduced measure after measure under the pretence that they were demanded by the necessities of the Exchequer ;but in reality for the purpose of demonstrating the supremacy of the power of the Parliament of Great Britain over her colonies in America.
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