![]() ![]() "'A Tender Regard to the Whole Creation': Anthony Benezet and the Emergence of an Eighteenth-Century Quaker Ecology," by Donald Brooks Kelley, 106.69–88Īnd test oaths, 123.309–310, 312, 315–316, 319, 327Ĭharles Thomson and, book on, 115.595–596 Support for Greek revolution and, 123.348, 351 "Specters of Subversion, Societies of Friends: Dissent and the Devil in Provincial Essex County, Massachusetts," by Christine Leigh Heyrman, rev., 108.377–378 "Ethnicity, Religion, and Politics in Early America," by Alan W. Catalogue by Miller and Mather, rev., 108.240–241Įngland and mental health care, 105.185–186Įnglish and colonial legal rights of, 114.323–340Įntrepreneurism, innovation and capitalism, 122.19–21, 26–27 His Peaceable Kingdom and Other Paintings, by Mather. "Editorial Practices in Eighteenth-Century Philadelphia: The Journal of Thomas Chalkley in Manuscript and Print," by George J. "The Domesticated Madman: Changing Concepts of Insanity at the Pennsylvania Hospital, 1780–1830," by Nancy Tomes, 106.271–286ĭomination of settlement at Wright's Ferry, 120.61–87 "August Edouart: A Quaker Album of American and English Duplicate Silhouettes 1827–1845," by Helen and Neville Laughon, 109.387–398īee Hive bibliography of Francis Daniel Pastorius, 122.241–291īooks on, 112.287–289, 298–300, 464–465, 119.258–260Ĭonscience in Crisis: Mennonites and Other Peace Churches in America, 1739–1789, by MacMaster, Horst and Ulle, rev., 106.126–128ĭoctrine and Lutherans, 121.80, 88, 89, 90 "Anti-Popery in Colonial Pennsylvania," by Joseph J. "Quaker Merchants and the Slave Trade in Colonial Pennsylvania," by Darold D. ![]() "Quaker Members of the Board of Controllers and Directors of Philadelphia Public Schools, 1818–1820" (table), 118.113 Quaker Industrial Alcohol Company, 109.218, 227–228 "Quaker Humanists: James Logan as a Classical Scholar," by Frederick B. Quaker House of Industry (Phila.), 114.317 The Quaker Family in Colonial America: A Portrait of the Society of Friends, by Frost, rev., 99.504–506 The Quaker Colonies: A Chronicle of the Proprietors of the Delaware, by Fisher, 91.188 Quaker City (Lippard newspaper), 79.296, 299 "Quaker, Shaker, Rabbi: Warder Cresson, The Story of a Philadelphia Mystic," by Frank Fox, 95.147–194 Quaife, Milo M., The History of the United States Flag from the Revolution to the Present, Including a Guide to Its Use and Display, by Quaife, Weig, and Appleman, rev., 87.372 Grenada, like any tropical island, has splendid beaches where to go swimming, snorkelling and diving.Quadrant, of Thos. Qua Qua Trail, will take you into the Grand Etang Rain Forest and to the peak of the mountain, from where you will be able to see all of the southeastern Caribbean islands. Carmel, Honeymoon or Paraclete they are all worth a visit.įollowing the Mt. Choosing among these waterfalls is truly difficult. They are not enormous, but they have an undeniable charm: they appear suddenly in the middle of the wood, each with its own small lake in which to cool down after a long walk. If an excursion takes you to higher elevations, you will discover an infinity of waterfalls. At Fort George, graffiti reads, “No pain no gain, brother” and a pole bears bullet holes from the shooting of Maurice Bishop, leader of the Grenadian revolution of 1979, who is much loved to this day. Once disembarked from your MSC ship, you can visit the Grenada National Museum, housed in French barracks dating to 1704, where Amerindian pottery, a still for distilling rum and a marble tub belonging to Joséphine de Beauharnais are on display.Īnother interesting excursion to go on during your holiday in Grenada will take you on a tour of French forts: Fort George (1705) Fort Frederick, the best preserved and Fort Matthew, which was bombarded by the Americans in 1983. Walking up the streets that climb the surrounding hills, one can admire some 19th century Creole houses, which still have roofs of red tiles used as ballast by Old World ships. George’s, the capital of Grenada appears to enclose its port, Carenage, like a horseshoe. ![]() ![]() To those arriving with a Caribbean Sea cruise to St. ![]()
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