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  • May 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1797: Page 50

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 3 of 8 →
Page 50

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Review Of New Publications.

him to adopt this measure . ' This resembles , ' said he , * the affair of America , which I never think of without regret . My youth was taken advantage of at that time , and we suffer for it now . The lesson is too severe to be forgotten . ' . " " On the whole , this work is interesting , and ws haA'e recei \* ed considerable p leasure and much information from tbe perusal of it . The translation , which seems to be executed . with spirit and fidelity , Avould have appeared to in the correcYion of the

greater advantage , had more pains been bestowed proof sheets . Journal of an Excursion to the United States of North America , in the Summer of 1794-Embellished with a Profile of General Washington , and a View of the State House at Philadelphia . By Henry Wansey , F . A . S . a Wiltshire Clothier . 8 vo . Pages 290 . bt . Baaris . Willcie .

MR . Wansey sailed from England for Halifax , in the Portland packet , March 20 th , 1794 .. His account of the passage will afford more diversion than instruction to a seaman , particularly his description of the manoeuvre of racking a ship ( D . ZO . ) They arrived at Halifax in Nova Scotia towards thc end of April . This colony , according to the author ' s description , appears to be neither thriving nor AVell protected . An embargo which Congress had just laid on all foreign vessels , on account of the disputes then subsisting between the United States and Great Britain , prevented the packet from

proceeding to- New York . The author , however , found an opportunity of being conveyed in a small American vessel to Boston ; and during his stay in the territory of the United States , ( not quite two months , ) he visited New-York and Philadelphia ; of which cities , and of other places through which he travelled , he has given descriptions . The Americans , like their former countrymen , are great politicians ; almost every town has its newspaper , and the larger towns have several ; and

it must be allowed that , in their public concerns , they shew an example of diligence which is well Avorthy of imitation . At Hartford , in Connecticut , the author attended to hear the debates of the House of Representatives ; and of two hundred and seventy members , only three were absent . A similar degree of attention appears in their police 5 among other instances of which , the author has given a detail of tbe management of the prisons at Philadelhia ' . The most general characteristics of the Americans of the

p United States , from the author ' s account , appear to be industry , sobriety , civility , and readiness to oblige ; hut he complains , that among the tradesmen there is a want of punctuality in their money transactions . He laments that his time was too much limited to permit him to visit the new city of Washington , which is intended to become the seat of the Government of the United States in December , 1800 . From the account which the author obtained of this grand undertaking , we give the following extrait :

* The whole area of tbe city consists of upwards of four thousand acres . The ground , is on an average forty feet higher than the water of the river , and yet a stream of fresh water , called Watt ' s Branch , may be brought within half a mile of the city , at the height of forty feet above the level of the city itself , which will be very convenient for all water-works and manufactures , & c . Many houses are already built , and a very handsome hotel , Avhich cost in the erection more than thirty thousand dollars ( six thousand

seven hundred pounds sterling . ) It is now apportioned into one thousand two hundred and thirty-six lots , for building ( which are for sale ) . Each lot contains ground for building three or four houses , according to general rules to be observed for making them uniform . The deepest lots are two hundred

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-05-01, Page 50” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051797/page/50/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, Article 4
WISDOM AND FOLLY: A VISION. Article 12
HISTORY OF THE GYPSIES. Article 19
CHARACTER OF THE POPE AND MODERN ROMANS. Article 22
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF THE GREAT EARL OF MANSFIELD. Article 25
DEVELOPEMENT OF THE VIEWS OF THE FRENCH NATION. Article 29
A VOYAGE Article 34
PRESENT STATE OF THE SPANISH THEATRE. Article 36
A WONDERFUL AND TRAGICAL RELATION OF , A VOYAGE FROM THE INDIES.* Article 38
ON APPARITIONS. Article 41
REMARKS MADE BY A LATE TRAVELLER IN SPAIN. Article 42
A REMARKABLE PRESERVATION IN THE GREAT EARTHQUAKE AT LISBON. Article 43
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 44
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 46
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 48
POETRY. Article 56
EPILOGUE Article 56
EPIGRAM Article 57
ODE TO ELOQUENCE; Article 57
LINES ADDRESSED TO Mrs. BISHOP, Article 58
A SONG, Article 58
ON IDLENESS. Article 58
GOGAR AND DULACH. Article 59
ADAM AND ELLEN. * Article 59
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 60
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 62
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 68
THE GENERAL IN CHIEF OF THE ARMY OF ITALY TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS M. PRINCE CHARLES. Article 74
ANSWER OF THE ARCHDUKE TO BUONAPARTE. Article 74
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 74
OBITUARY. Article 78
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Review Of New Publications.

him to adopt this measure . ' This resembles , ' said he , * the affair of America , which I never think of without regret . My youth was taken advantage of at that time , and we suffer for it now . The lesson is too severe to be forgotten . ' . " " On the whole , this work is interesting , and ws haA'e recei \* ed considerable p leasure and much information from tbe perusal of it . The translation , which seems to be executed . with spirit and fidelity , Avould have appeared to in the correcYion of the

greater advantage , had more pains been bestowed proof sheets . Journal of an Excursion to the United States of North America , in the Summer of 1794-Embellished with a Profile of General Washington , and a View of the State House at Philadelphia . By Henry Wansey , F . A . S . a Wiltshire Clothier . 8 vo . Pages 290 . bt . Baaris . Willcie .

MR . Wansey sailed from England for Halifax , in the Portland packet , March 20 th , 1794 .. His account of the passage will afford more diversion than instruction to a seaman , particularly his description of the manoeuvre of racking a ship ( D . ZO . ) They arrived at Halifax in Nova Scotia towards thc end of April . This colony , according to the author ' s description , appears to be neither thriving nor AVell protected . An embargo which Congress had just laid on all foreign vessels , on account of the disputes then subsisting between the United States and Great Britain , prevented the packet from

proceeding to- New York . The author , however , found an opportunity of being conveyed in a small American vessel to Boston ; and during his stay in the territory of the United States , ( not quite two months , ) he visited New-York and Philadelphia ; of which cities , and of other places through which he travelled , he has given descriptions . The Americans , like their former countrymen , are great politicians ; almost every town has its newspaper , and the larger towns have several ; and

it must be allowed that , in their public concerns , they shew an example of diligence which is well Avorthy of imitation . At Hartford , in Connecticut , the author attended to hear the debates of the House of Representatives ; and of two hundred and seventy members , only three were absent . A similar degree of attention appears in their police 5 among other instances of which , the author has given a detail of tbe management of the prisons at Philadelhia ' . The most general characteristics of the Americans of the

p United States , from the author ' s account , appear to be industry , sobriety , civility , and readiness to oblige ; hut he complains , that among the tradesmen there is a want of punctuality in their money transactions . He laments that his time was too much limited to permit him to visit the new city of Washington , which is intended to become the seat of the Government of the United States in December , 1800 . From the account which the author obtained of this grand undertaking , we give the following extrait :

* The whole area of tbe city consists of upwards of four thousand acres . The ground , is on an average forty feet higher than the water of the river , and yet a stream of fresh water , called Watt ' s Branch , may be brought within half a mile of the city , at the height of forty feet above the level of the city itself , which will be very convenient for all water-works and manufactures , & c . Many houses are already built , and a very handsome hotel , Avhich cost in the erection more than thirty thousand dollars ( six thousand

seven hundred pounds sterling . ) It is now apportioned into one thousand two hundred and thirty-six lots , for building ( which are for sale ) . Each lot contains ground for building three or four houses , according to general rules to be observed for making them uniform . The deepest lots are two hundred

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