157 résultats
17697521Paris: Ex Typographia Barbou 1769. Later printing. Full Calf. Fine. 12mo. 4xii5213pp. Woodcut device on title. Cont. mottled calf gilt tooled spine and dentelles brown morocco spine label. A.e.g. Fine copy. Ex Typographia Barbou unknown books
177726884London England: Printed for the Company of Stationers 1777. Twenty-two issues of this yearly British almanac bound in one volume; consecutive and inclusive from the 1777 issue to 1797. These are printed in red & black have the tax stamps on the margins of the title pages and are of 32 pages' length with exceptions or notes as below: 1782: On page 31 the section "VI Rebus by Mr. R. Richardson of Frosterly" has been solved with the manuscript letters & names of clues neatly written at the margins. 1786: pgs 1-2 15-32; However another issue is bound after this incomplete issue that is entire in 48 pages. These almanacs are noted on the title pages as printed for the Company of Stationers; and this "extra" issue is noted on the title page as "Printed for T. Carnan in St. Paul's Church Yard; who after an expensive Suit in Law and Equity by the unanimous Opinion of the Judges of the Court of Common Please dispossessed the Stationers' Company of their pretended exclusive Privilege of Printing Almanacks which they had usurped for two Centuries; a convincing Proof that no unjust Monopoly will ever stand the Test of an English Court of Justice." 1788: pgs 1-2 15-32 only. 1793 Misbound pages out of order and complete 32 pages. 1795: A name of "Old Batholomew" has been added in ms. at the 4th Sept. in the monthly almanac pages section. 1797 pgs 1-16 only. "The existence of the Ladies' Diary or the Woman's Almanack an 18th century English magazine devoted largely to problems and puzzles in mathematics indicates that stereotypes about the inability of women to understand and enjoy mathematics were less strongly believed in the 18th century than they are today.The Ladies' Diary became one of the widely read 18th century magazines devoted to the popularization of science and mathematics; these were addressed mainly to readers with no specialized training in the subjectsThe Ladies' Diary differed from these others primarily in the language used in some of the problems--language which reminds the reader that the problems were addressed to women" from the excellent overview of the magazine its influence & impact by Teri Perl San Francisco State Univ. Historia Mathematica 6 1979 article on the 'Diary' Indecipherable by us previous owner name on back endpaper.Approx. 4" x 6 3/8" size; bound in marbled-paper covered boards leather corners edges tinted yellow; spine covering gone; wear to the edges tips of the binding; bottom cord of top board let go; the block still solidly sewn some edges trimmed close; contents generally clean and in good condition. . First Edition. Hard Cover. Good. Printed for the Company of Stationers hardcover books
178427164A Vienne & A Strasbourg: Chez Les Freres Gay Imprimeus-Libraires et al 1784. Four eighteenth century publications; all French texts bound in one volume. All regarding the plague especially in Russia & Europe as below: De Mertens Charles. Traite de la Peste Contenant L'Histoire de Celle qui a Regne A Moscou en 1771A Vienne & a Strasbourg Chez les Freres Gay Imprimeurs-Libraires a Paris Chez Didot.Mequignon. MDCCLXXXIV. Frontispiece portrait engraving of de Mertens by J. Mansfeld 1783. xxviii 142 pages. "The plague stimulated local research in disease prevention which was boosted by discovering indigenous plague in newly conquered territories of the Caucasus. The epidemic was professionally exposed to Western European academia by Belgian physician Charles de Mertens 1737 - 1788. " from the online wiki Samoilowitz M.D. Lettre Sur Les Experiences Des Frictions Glaciales Pour La Guerison De La Peste Et Autres Maladies Putrides.A Strasbourg Chez Lorenz & Schouler Imrpimeurs du Directoire de la Noblesse. 1782. 43 pages. Danilo Samoilowitz Samoilovich et al 1742/4 - 1805 is noted among other titles as "Chirurgien-Major du Senat de Moscou" and was a witness to and attempted to treat the victims of the great Russian Plague of 1770-72 often at great personal hazard. The U.S. NIH National Library of Medicine lists several articles extolling the significance of Samoilowitz' contribution to epidemiology; see especially the 2013 June issue of Vesalius for the thorough Tatiana Sorokina article "A Victory Over the Plague in Moscow 1770-1772" which details the public and private response to the epidemic and specifically Samoilowitz' and others work combatting the outbreak. Samoilowitz M.D. Memoire Sur L'Inoculation De La Peste Avec A La Description de Trois Poudres Fumigatives Antipestilentielles. A Strasbourg Chez les Freres Gay Libraries. 1782. 36 pages. Paris J.-F. Memoire sur La Peste. A Avignon. Et se Trouve A Marseille Chez Jean Mossy Imprimeur du Roi de la Marine & Libraire au Parc. MDCCLXXVIII. xxxvi 86 pages. One leaf with small corner chip no loss. Provenance binding condition: A handwritten table of contents in French on the endpaper; below this is the handwritten name with the acquisition date of 21 June 1887 & the address of collector George Brush M.D. U.S. Navy; in service as a surgeon & medical inspector from 1861-1894; each title page of the contents also with the handwritten name of T.A. Emmet. Volume approx. 5" x 7 5/8" size; bound in marbled paper covered boards polished speckled calf leather corners and spine gilt titled spine label. Some edge tips wear and rubbing to the binding; surface of spine leather split at edges; securely sewn; first two leaves corners clipped; contents clean and fairly fresh in very good condition. Premiere Edition. Leather. Very Good. Chez Les Freres Gay Imprimeus-Libraires et al books
176729803London 1767. Bound in attractive contemporary or early 19th century half morocco marbled boards marbled endpapers and raised spine bands. 'Sermons' stamped in gilt on spine. Bookplate of Paul Beilby Thompson 1784-1852 the first Baron Wenlock an English Whig and Member of Parliament during the late 1820's and the 1830's. Pages 80; 77 1; 99 1; 88; 91; 119 1; 68 1; 98 1 pp each as issued. A lovely set in Near Fine condition tear to one blank margin on the 1767 Sermon and spotting on a couple of its leaves.<br/><br/> The Preachers listed chronologically are Thomas Hayter 1755 James Johnson 1758 Anthony Ellis 1759 Richard Newcome 1761 John Hume 1762 Philip Yonge 1765 William Warburton 1766 John Ewer 1767. In addition to their Sermons the pamphlets print the Society's Charter its Proceedings over the preceding year names of members and donors; the names of the Society's missionaries in Canada the American Colonies and the West Indies with their narrative reports on their work including conversions of Indians and Negroes; and a list of the Bishops and Deans who have preached before the Society beginning in 1701. The form of a bequest to the Society is usually printed at the end.<br/> The Society's efforts in the American colonies aroused great resentment among some leading American clergy particularly Charles Chauncy and Jonathan Mayhew who viewed its activities as attempts to establish the Church of England in the New World and to destroy the democratic organization of American churches. Their resistance during the 1760's paralleled political developments which would produce the American Revolution. <br/> Certainly the Sermons reflect the high-water mark of British self-assurance. Bishop Hume describes "the real state of the multitudes-- a set of thoughtless illiterate untutoured creatures." Warburton's 1766 Sermon "a statement of British manifest destiny." Gephart dismisses objections of non-Episcopalians to the Society's mission: Americans suffer from the "outrageous folly" of "Freethinking." They are "a People where wealth and Civil Faction have as usual inflamed religious zeal." And the Society of Jesus has "immerged themselves in the worst part of civil intrigues." At the same time he and his colleagues unequivocally denounce "the infamous traffic for Slaves" which "directly infringes both divine and human Law." They are "endowed with all our Faculties possessing all our qualities but that of colour; our BRETHREN both by Nature and Grace." <br/>HAYTER: ESTC T47758. JOHNSON: Goldsmiths' 9409. Sabin 36223. ELLIS: ESTC T14001. NEWCOME: Sabin 54938. ESTC N23710. HUME: ESTC N37286. Goldsmiths' 9804. YONGE: Adams American Controversy 65-28. WARBURTON: Adams American Controversy 66-61. Sabin 101276. Blockson 8984. Gephart 10084. EWER: Adams American Controversy 67-5. unknown books
179339065Norwich: Printed by Yarington & Bacon 1793. 8vo 20 cm 8". 22 pp. <br><br>Second edition of these detailed jury instructions.<br>Â Â Â Â Of the first edition WorldCat and ESTC find not U.S. institutions reporting ownership and of the second they find only the Universities of Colorado and Massachusetts reporting copies. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â ESTC T184465. Removed from a nonce volume. Very good. Printed by Yarington & Bacon unknown books
171820000417Utica NY 1817-1832. General wear. Some separation at letter folds and along edges. A collection of six letters between the mother and children of the Angier family originally of Southborough MA. The most consistent part of the letters is opening with an apology from the children for failing to write their mother Elizabeth Angier and how this failure means that they have neglected her in some way. The letters date were generally send from upstate New York from towns near Utica NY such as Whitestone and Frankfort where several of the siblings namely Mary Elizabeth and Sabrina had relocated to. It appears as though one of the older daughters after marrying Augustus Baldwin 1794-1880 in 1815 moved to Whitestone NY to start a family. As the years continued several of Mary's siblings such as Elizabeth and Sabrina who never married moved to the area to for better marriage and job prospects. Two of the six letters are between a pair of the siblings. The letters generally consist of updates on their lives family and friends as well as numerous religious missives and some mention of their jobs mostly teaching that the sisters were engaged in. Additionally in some of the letters the siblings have written missives addressed to their siblings still living in Southborough. All of the letters are folded stampless posts. Measures 5" x 3 1/2" folded. Below are excerpts from some of the letters: "We were presented with a daughter 14th Nov but alas! She is not that joy or comfort we so much hope for we have been called to a bitter trial God in his infinite goodness has seen fit to afflict us in taking our child by death our afflictions are sent to try us and oh that they mite sic prove a blessing to us that we mite sic feel reconciled under all the alotments sic of divine providence in submission to his will and that we might in full submission say the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away and blessed be the name of the Lord." - February 2 1817 Whitestone NY from Augustus and Mary Baldwin to Mary's mother Elizabeth Angier "Aunt Haven has been sick since she returned from Boston with the nervous tooth ache. She had her tooth pulled and it broke a nerve and it had such an effect on her that it obliterated the whole of the nervous system so that she was not able to do her work for six weeks but she has got to be quite well now. Mr. Laban Nicholas wife Mr. Lees sister the one that was down when Mary went up the first time is deranged. She tries every way to kill herself. She once took her husbands razor and attempted to cut throat but was caught before she had completed the fatal deed. Twice her husband has found her with a rope around her neck and once got to her only soon enough to catch her in his arms as she leap sic from the scaffold one half minute longer and she would have been an eternity." - June 13 1818 Whitestone NY from Eliza Angier to her mother Elizabeth Angier. "I hope that he who has upheld you thus far in life will still hold you in the hollow of his hand lest at any time your feet should stray from the path of virtue and rectitude. And may he find your heart fast to him that when in health you may be an able to render to him according to his benefit. I am rejoiced to hear that there is any attention to the one thing needful with you. Oh that there may be many praying souls in that place and may we realize that we have an interest in your prayers. It would give a pang to any Christian to realize the state of this church and society. Religion is trampled upon like hearts cast before swine. we have reason to fear that wrath of an offended God is kindled against us and that he will come upon us with great judgment if we continue in this stupid state. Afflictions in themselves are courteous and I am not as an able to bear them as anyone. Yet they are sent for our good to restore are wandering feet. I would choose to be afflicted rather than remain in this Im feeling state. More the treacherous calm I dread then tempest bursting over my head. - August 3 1825 Frankfort NY Eliza Angier Warriner to her siblings Roland Angier and his wife Mary Marsh 1803-1866 "Eliza has become the mother of twins both daughters one we call Cordelia Eliza the other Frances Beattie they were born 20 April the life of the mother was disposed for sometime. We had two of the best nurses one was Sabrina besides all the assistance that I could render. Eliza is now so that she is just about taking care of the babes but not able to do much she is afflicted with the canker in her throat and stomach which keeps her and the babes in continual afflictions." - June 25 1830 Frankfort Alford and Eliza Angier Warriner to Eliza's mother Elizabeth Angier "The anniversary of my birthday which is tomorrow reminds me of my obligations to you the kindest and best of mothers who under God have been instrumental in preserving my life that I am so far from you as not to visit you often when I think that six years have rolled away since I saw you I am really astonished! And now that I have left my brothers and sisters is misterous sic To myself but for not writing to you I can offer no reasonable excuse I must played guilty this pleasant evening the moon with her bright Waze conveys my thoughts to my native home . I find many pleasant people here but in my dreams I visit Southborough inhabitants could I but you know where my mother is and what her enjoyment is in the decline of life it would relieve my anxiety. we had a very pleasant journey here we started from Utica July 30 in a canal boat in the front cabin 13 and number moving at the rate of 5 miles an hour able to read right net and sell. Mr. Simmons spent his time writing and reading his sermons which was very interesting to us when we got to Troy Thursday we had to lay up a few hours on account of the water for a kind a machine called the mud turtle which was scraping the mud from the river before we could cross the way to Albany then went on board a steamboat to New York saw a great many of the works of nature and a part then a coach convey the family to the New York shore then in a steamboat to Newark." - October 3 1832 Newark NJ Sabrina Angier to her mother Elizabeth Angier To view images click: https://photos.app.goo.gl/8yiDE57vHQQXnc7R7 <br/><br/>Elizabeth Newton was born on April 30 1763 to Solomon Newton 1734-1830 and Elizabeth Howe 1733-1818 in Southborough MA. She had eight siblings: Catherine Newton Ball 1759-1834 Lucreita Newton 1761-1813 Larkin Newton 1765-1788 Dolly Newton 1767-1855 Jeremiah Newton 1769-1837 Willard Newton 1771-863 Anna Newton Sherman 1773-1863. She married Charles Angier 1752-1816 on December 23 1784 in Southborough MA and had eleven children together: Betsy Angier 1785-1793 Anna Agier Fay 1787-1861 Converse Angier 1789- Mary Angier Baldwin 1791-1875 Roland Angier 1793-1872 Austin As the letters date from after the death of their father Charles Angier in 1816 even though the letters are to their mother Elizabeth they are addressed to her son Roland Angier whom she was living with at the time. Angier 1795-1865 Elizabeth "Eliza" Angier Warrienr 1795-1882 Lydia Angier 1800-1820 Sabrina 1802- and Charles Angier 1806-1881. She died on February 11 1845 in Southborough MA of lung fever. unknown books
1712WRCAM43360London: Printed by Joseph Downing 1712. 266pp. Small quarto. Antique-style three-quarter speckled calf and marbled boards gilt morocco label. Text trimmed a bit close shaving the bottom of five words on one page. Some light foxing. Very good. From the Library of the Earls of Macclesfield with bookplate on front pastedown. Second edition of this collection after the first of 1706. The Society was charged with propagating the gospel in many far-flung regions including to the Indians of the British colonies in North America and to blacks in the West Indies. Included is the charter granted the Society by King William III the Society's request for fit ministers to be sent abroad a description of the qualifications of such ministers the standing orders of the Society and instructions for clergy and schoolmasters as to how they should comport themselves when on their missions. One chapter is devoted to prayers for schools in America. The final two chapters give a list of the members of the Society and a "Catalogue of the Missionaries Library." EUROPEAN AMERICANA and OCLC together locate only six copies of this second edition. A scarce and informative volume on the operations and philosophy of this important missionary organization. EUROPEAN AMERICANA 712/205. OCLC 228754493 54182866 460606759. SABIN 85934 note. Printed by Joseph Downing hardcover books
178420089London: Printed for J. Walker 1784. 92 pp. 8vo. Stitched as issued. Stitching lacking loosening gatherings some light spotting or soiling of front and back leaves and general edgewear else a very good copy. A contemporary owner has annotated and underlined several sections in the Tea Act. 92 pp. 8vo. These acts passed that years were seen by the author as being the most pertinent and so included in this work the rest of the acts of Parliament were to be released shortly thereafter in a second part.<br/><br/>The acts abstracted were the 1 Tea and Window repealing the several Duties and for granting other duties in lieu and duties on coffee and cocoa nuts Act 2 The Game Act hunting license 3 The Horse Act granting duties on riding and carriage horses 4 The Postage Act increasing postage rates 5 The Pawn Broker's Act trying to reduce the handling of stolen goods 6 The Soap and Starch Act requiring the licensing of makers of starch and instilling new laws on soapmakers 7 The Cotton and Linen Act placing duties 8 The Hatter's Act requiring licenses laying additional duties on imported hats 9 The Excise Goods Act laying duties upon licences to be taken out by the makers and delers in exciseable commodities 10 The Candle Act cancelling the duty on wax candles made in Britain 11 The Distillery Act trying to discourage home distillation by discontinuing the duties uon low wines and spirits for home consumption. 12 The Hackney Coach Act increasing the charge for Hackey license 13 The Smuggling Act trying to prevent 14 Brick and Tile Act placing duties on brick and tile made in Great Britain and additional duties on those imported 15 Wax Candle Act placing additional duties on all candles except wax and spermaceti candles. Printed for J. Walker unknown books
1751204039London: W. & J. Mount & T. Page 1751. unbound. very good. Sea Chart. Uncolored engraving. Image with text measures 18.5" x 11.75".<br/><br/> From the "English Pilot" a composite sea-chart atlas published in several editions from 1671 to 1803. This map of St. Peters in Newfoundland was part of the fourth book "The West-India Navigation" published by W. & J. Mount & T. Page in 1751. The Mount family was active in publishing in various manifestations for many generations from the 1650s to 1800. On the back of the page is a beautiful print of two Auks along with a description of the birds and their abundance in this area. These birds were eventually hunted into extinction.<br/><br/> W. & J. Mount & T. Page unknown books
177745115Norwich CT 1777. 1st printing Bristol B4457; Shipton & Mooney 43243. Printed self-wrappers stitched. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Age-toning to paper. Abrasion to lower left of text block tips rounded. Very Good. 22 2 pp. 12mo: A - C4. 6-7/8" x 4-1/2" <br/><br/>Early Colonial publication on the subject in which the author proclaims that the second coming of Christ "is nigh at hand even at the very Door and That it is very probable this glorious Day will begin or commence in America." RBH has no sale record for this work solely noting its inclusion in 'Evans' though technically it was not recorded by Evans being added by Bristol. OCLC records just 3 holding institutions: Yale AAS & the Library Co of Philadelphia. Rare. unknown books
1797WRCLIT24531Worcester: Printed by Leonard Worcester 1797. 2341pp. Full 20th century calf raised bands gilt contrasting labels. Early endsheets from former binding retained with 1798 acquisition inscription. Light tanning and occasional foxing but a very good or better copy. First edition of this substantial work by Edwards the younger written chiefly in defense of his father's doctrine as elucidated in A CAREFUL AND STRICT ENQUIRY INTO.FREEDOM OF THE WILL 1754. "He lacked the imagination and originality of his father but he had a powerful mind and gave a great impulse to the development of a more progressive type of thought in theology" - DAB. EVANS 32073. Printed by Leonard Worcester hardcover books
1756690221756. London 1756. 4th edition. London 1756. 4th edition. Attributed to Matthew Bacon Robert Foley Sir Geoffrey Gilbert and Henry Pooley Gentleman of the Middle Temple. A General Abridgment of Cases in Equity Argued and Adjudged in the High Court of Chancery &c. With Several Cases Never Before Published Alphabetically Digested Under Proper Titles; With Notes and References to the Whole. And Three Tables The First of the Names of the Cases The Second of the Several Titles With Their Divisions And Subdivisions; And the Third Of the Matter Under General Heads. London: Printed by and For Henry Lintot 1756. xxviii 417 27; xxiii 780 pp. Folio 13-3/4" x 8-3/4". Recent period-style quarter calf over marbled boards raised bands and lettering pieces to spines endpapers renewed. Moderate toning to text somewhat heavier in places occasional light foxing light soiling to margins in a few places tiny library stamps to title pages and a few other leaves. $750. Fourth edition "Corrected." First published in 1732 this set of reports has been attributed to Matthew Bacon Robert Foley Sir Geoffrey Gilbert Henry Pooley or a combination of these authors. Marvin believes about half of the reports were by Pooley "a lawyer of great eminence in his time." Viner says Pooley was the sole reporter. Marvin Legal Bibliography 48. Viner A General Abridgment of Law and Equity XXI:489. English Short-Title Catalogue T97047. unknown books
1779CAT000511Bath: R. Cruttwell 1779. First Edition. Hardcover rebound in cloth. Very Good Condition. Rebound in full green cloth two volumes in one. Scattered minor foxing small hole touching text in artichoke section - a nice copy. Printed in two columns alphabetically. Size: 4to. 2-volume set complete. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: Farming & Rural Life; Inventory No: CAT000511. R. Cruttwell hardcover books
1788WRCLIT56785Nottingham: Printed by Samuel Tupman 1788. 111pp. plus plate. Oblong small quarto. Contemporary sewn marbled wrappers. Old vertical crease with short break in lower margin at crease small tidemark in gutter at crown of spine modest foxing early ink name inside upper wrapper otherwise a very good copy. First edition of this work commemorating the 1688 Revolution accompanied by an engraving of the house near Chesterfield Derbyshire by Hayman Rooke. The whole including the text derived from a letter from Pegge was prepared by Rooke for presentation to friends and his prefatory note to that end has a small textual revision in ink. Both Rooke and Pegge made considerable contributions to the antiquarian and topographical studies of the area. An uncommon production; ESTC Online locates six copies: BL Bodleian Nottinghamshire County Library Yale Harvard and UCLA. ESTC N9997. Printed by Samuel Tupman unknown books
1789007684London: Printed for the Editor at Mr. Lewis's 1789. Two volumes bound in contemporary mottled calf red leather labels with gilt lettering back with gilt rules edges of covers gilt. x 443 4 471 4 Index. Very Good Plus spines sunned small corner rubs light toning throughout small loss of leather top edge at spine Vol. II. A handsome set well-bound and clean. SCARCE- Worldcat shows only one university holding in the U.K. . First Edition. Mottled Calf . Very Good Plus/No Jacket As Issued. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Printed for the Editor at Mr. Lewis's Hardcover books
174349119London: Printed for W. Webb near St. Paul's 1743. 1st Printing. Disbound now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Age-toning with some soiling to outer leaves. POS 2 to top of t.p. Faint pencil annotations under "finis" p. 78. Very Good. 2 78 pp. 8vo. 7-11/16" x 4-7/8" <br/><br/> Printed for W. Webb, near St. Paul's unknown books
1757263153London: The London Magazine 1757. unbound. Miniature map. Uncolored engraving. Image measures 4.75" x 6.75".<br/><br/> This unusual plan of Prague was published by The London Magazine just a few months following the 1757 Battle of Prague. Oriented with north facing left it depicts the position of the two armies with a key in the bottom margin locating the positions of the artillery reserves batteries and mortars of the Prussian Army on the map. The Battle of Prague part of the Seven Years' War was fought between the Prussians and the Austrians for control of Prague and its surroundings. Although Frederick The Great from Prussia eventually succeeded in forcing the Austrians to retreat he was unable to take the city due to the heavy losses. A beautiful title cartouche adorns the bottom right corner. Most likely engraved by Thomas Kitchin. The map is in very good condition with narrow bottom margin. "The London Magazine or Gentleman%u2019s Monthly Intelligencer" was founded in 1732 as a rival to the popular Gentleman's Magazine. It is England's oldest cultural and literary journal. The magazine has published a wide range of writers from Wordsworth Shelley Keats T.S. Eliot W. H. Auden Evelyn Waugh among others. The first two installments of Thomas De Quincey's "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater" appeared in the 1820 edition of the journal. Today after nearly three centuries The London Magazine continues to publish some of the best writings from London and beyond.<br/><br/> The London Magazine unknown books
179456240Philadelphia: printed for Mathew Carey no. 118 Market-Street October 14 1794. First edition 8vo pp. iv 3 8-22; removed from binding; lacks the terminal ad leaf otherwise very good. An influential poem combining the images of patriotism manufacturing and the work ethic. Humphreys was a colonel in the Revolutionary War and served as Washington's aide-de-camp. Evans 27145; Sabin 33813; Wegelin 225. <br/><br/> printed for Mathew Carey, no. 118, Market-Street, October 14 unknown books
179433750Manchester: Printed by Order of the Society for the Information of the Ley-Payers 1794. 4 xxx 31 1 blank pp. Disbound. Title page dusted inner margin and spine reinforced. Else a clean and Very Good text.<br/><br/> On the taxation of citizens for the "support and government of the poor" of Manchester.<br/>ESTC T100801. Kress B.2785. OCLC records nine locations under several accession numbers as of January 2018. Printed by Order of the Society for the Information of the Ley-Payers unknown books
179657661Boston: printed by Samuel Hall no. 53 Cornhill 1796. 8vo pp. 29 1; removed from binding half-title wanting; very good. BAL 937; Evans 30052; Sabin 4438. <br/><br/> printed by Samuel Hall, no. 53, Cornhill unknown books
177158556Boston New-England: Printed by Richard Draper 1771. First edition. 8vo. 63 pp. Lacking the half-title. "All men are naturally in a state of freedom and have an equal claim to liberty. No one by nature nor by any special grant from the great Lord of all has any authority over another. All right therefore in any to rule over others must originate from those they rule over and be granted by them." Sabin 97325. Evans 12256. Foxed ink numeral "6" at head of title page early ink notes on blank verso of final leaf otherwise a very good copy. Disbound pamphlet. #5873. <br/><br/> Printed by Richard Draper unknown books
177058553Boston: Printed by Edes and Gill 1770. First edition. 8vo. 47 pp. Lacking the half-title. With memory of the Boston Massacre still fresh Cooke remarks "military aid has ever been deemed dangerous to a free civil state and often has been used as an effectual engine to subvert it" and closes the sermon with a plea for "our African slaves and humbly propose the pursuit of some effectual measures at least to prevent the future importation of them." Reprinted in John W. Thornton's Pulpit of the American Revolution 1860. Sabin 16348. Evans 11613. Foxed ink numeral "5" at head of title page early ink names on title page and blank verso of final leaf some ink markings in margins tear in final leaf and damage along its hinge not affecting text still a good solid copy. Disbound pamphlet. #5872. <br/><br/> Printed by Edes and Gill unknown books
1799170745Portsmouth NH: John Melcher printer to the state 1799. 23p. calendared paperstock with deckle edges bare signatures fastened with thick old thread through stab-holes floret devices open and close the text. Entire pamphlet was at one time folded lightly in quarters concluding leaf verso blank has suffered some crumpling and short closed tears item now reasonably flat. A better than reading copy. Laid in is a scrap of old paper from the same stock bearing an impression of the device that opens our text here enclosing the legend "Election Sermon 1799" plus holograph figures that suggest this is Melcher's receipt for the job. Note that pagination is so ordered that the pamphlet starts with title at "p.3" may indicate an absent half-title. John Melcher, printer to the state unknown books
176858555Boston New-England: Printed by Richard Draper 1768. First edition. 8vo. 70 pp. With the half-title. With the Townsend Acts put in place the previous year and a fresh contingent of British troops only months in the future Shute declares "the security of our liberty and property by the fundamental laws of our civil constitution is the strongest motive to maintain an inviolable attachment to it . arbitrary and oppressive measures in the state would indeed dispirit the people and weaken the nerves of industry and in their consequences lead to poverty and ruin." Sabin 80802. Evans 11071. Foxed ink numeral "3" at head of half-title early ink names on half-title and rear blank ink annotations on several leaves else a very good copy. Disbound pamphlet. #5871. <br/><br/> Printed by Richard Draper unknown books
175647549London: Printed in the Year 1756. 1st Printing. Printed by William Bowyer; his records show 500 cc printed. Disbound red edgestain. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Nr Fine. 2 38 pp. Headline for pp 24 - 28: A Further Account of the Domesday Survey. 4to: A1 B - D4 E5 F2. 9-1/2" x 7-1/4" <br/><br/> Printed in the Year unknown books