Plain facts : being an examination into the rights of the Indian nations of America to their respective countries, and a vindication of the grant from the six united nations of Indians, to the proprietors of Indiana against the decision of the...
Add this copy of Plain Facts; Being an Examination Into the Rights of to cart. $6,500.00, Sold by Bartleby's Books ABAA rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Chevy Chase, MD, UNITED STATES, published 1781 by R. Aitken.
Edition:
1781, R. Aitken
Details:
Publisher:
R. Aitken
Published:
1781
Language:
English
Alibris ID:
17747196030
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Seller's Description:
First edition. 8vo. 164, (1, errata) pp. [with the appendix leaf in facsimile]. With the ownership signature of George Morgan ("George Morgans") in the margin of the title page and one interior leaf; Morgan (1743-1810), born in Philadelphia was an American merchant, Indian agent, and land speculator; after engaging in the fur business in the Illinois Territory in the 1760s, with Samuel Wharton, the author of this pamphlet, among his associates, and becoming interested in a large tract of land in present-day West Virginia, he helped form the Indiana Company in 1776, in part to challenge Virginia's claim to the land, a challenge that ultimately failed. A later ownership signature "Robert G. Harper Esq / Baltimore" appears on the verso of the errata leaf; Harper (1765-1825), best remembered for his phrase "Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute, " served in the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina, 1795-1801, and the U.S. Senate from Maryland in 1816. Howes W-307: "Disputes Virginia's claim to territory west of the Alleghanies where the Walpole interest proposed establishing their colony of Indiana. Attributed also to Anthony Benezet and to Benjamin Franklin." Sabin 63221: "It is an able treatise on the tenure of the Indian claim to the title of the lands occupied by them." Evans 17437. Field 1224. Streeter sale 1302: "Wharton, a Philadelphia merchant, was one of the principal members of the Indiana Company, whose holdings in what is now West Virginia, were being contested by Virginia." Siebert sale 538: "The first twenty-five pages of this gem of frontier history are a remarkable summary of land claims in America." For a detailed look at Morgan's role with the Indiana Company, see George Lewis's "The Indiana Company, 1763-1798" (Glendale, CA: Arthur Clark, 1941) and Max Savelle's "George Morgan, Colony Builder (NY: Columbia U. Press, 1932). With the major defect noted, a very good copy with a significant association. Disbound pamphlet (part of top margin of title page clipped, not affecting text). (#6285).