[1] "The Sabbath in Puritan New England." Alice Morse Earle.[2] "Customs and Fashions in Old New England." Alice Morse Earle.[3] Ibid.[4] "Customs and Fashions in Old New England." Alice Morse Earle.[5] "Customs and Fashions in Old New England." Alice Morse Earle.[6] "Three Episodes of Massachusetts History." C. F. Adams.[7] "History of Massachusetts." Minot.[8] "Customs and Fashions in Old New England." Alice Morse Earle.[9] "Two Centuries of Costume in America." Alice Morse Earle.[10] "Gordon's History."[11] Author unknown.[12] "History of the United States of America." Bancroft.[13] "The American Revolution." Trevelyan.[14] I.e., their house in Boston.[15] It stood at the corner of Essex and Washington Streets.[16] "Twice-Told Tales." Nathaniel Hawthorne.[17] Be it remembered that Washington did not remain in Boston, but anticipating Howe's attack on New York, was encamped in Brooklyn Heights by April: these movements ended the operations in New England. New York was the centre of the next campaign.[18] "Legends of the Province House." Nathaniel Hawthorne.[19] "Social Life in Old New England." Mary C. Crawford.[20] "Concise Oxford Dictionary."[21] John Quincy Adams was at this time Ambassador at St. Petersburg.[22] "Memoir of S. E. M. Quincy."[23] "Memoir of S. E. M. Quincy."