State of the British and French colonies in North America : with respect to number of peoples, forces, forts, Indians, trade and other advantages. In which are considered, I. The defenceless condition of our plantations, and to what causes owing. II. Pernicious tendency of the French encroachments, and the fittest methods of frustrating them. III. What it was occasioned their present invasion, and the claims on which they ground their proceedings. With a proper expedient proposed for preventing future disputes. In two letters to a friend.
Item
Dublin Core
Title
State of the British and French colonies in North America : with respect to number of peoples, forces, forts, Indians, trade and other advantages. In which are considered, I. The defenceless condition of our plantations, and to what causes owing. II. Pernicious tendency of the French encroachments, and the fittest methods of frustrating them. III. What it was occasioned their present invasion, and the claims on which they ground their proceedings. With a proper expedient proposed for preventing future disputes. In two letters to a friend.
Date
Extent
[1] leaf, 190 [i.e. 150] pages ; 21 cm
Description
State of the British and French colonies in North America : with respect to number of peoples, forces, forts, Indians, trade and other advantages. In which are considered, I. The defenceless condition of our plantations, and to what causes owing. II. Pernicious tendency of the French encroachments, and the fittest methods of frustrating them. III. What it was occasioned their present invasion, and the claims on which they ground their proceedings. With a proper expedient proposed for preventing future disputes. In two letters to a friend. London : Printed for A. Millar, in the Strand, MDCCLV [1755].
"(Price 2s. 6d.)"
Errata on p. 190 [i.e. 150].
Language
Subject
Bibliographic Citation
ESTC, T45619
Sabin, 90601
Collection
Citation
“State of the British and French colonies in North America : with respect to number of peoples, forces, forts, Indians, trade and other advantages. In which are considered, I. The defenceless condition of our plantations, and to what causes owing. II. Pernicious tendency of the French encroachments, and the fittest methods of frustrating them. III. What it was occasioned their present invasion, and the claims on which they ground their proceedings. With a proper expedient proposed for preventing future disputes. In two letters to a friend.,” Special Collections, John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, accessed May 2, 2024, https://cwfjdrlsc.omeka.net/items/show/3734.