An humble address and earnest appeal to those respectable personages in Great-Britain and Ireland : who by their great and permanent interest in landed property, their liberal education, elevated rank, and enlarged views are the ablest to judge, and the fittest to decide, whether a connection with, or a separation from the continental colonies of America, be most for the national advantage, and the lasting benefit of these kingdoms
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Dublin Core
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Title
An humble address and earnest appeal to those respectable personages in Great-Britain and Ireland : who by their great and permanent interest in landed property, their liberal education, elevated rank, and enlarged views are the ablest to judge, and the fittest to decide, whether a connection with, or a separation from the continental colonies of America, be most for the national advantage, and the lasting benefit of these kingdoms
Date
Extent
93, [3] pages, [1] leaf of folded plates ; 22 cm (8vo)
Description
An humble address and earnest appeal to those respectable personages in Great-Britain and Ireland : who by their great and permanent interest in landed property, their liberal education, elevated rank, and enlarged views are the ablest to judge, and the fittest to decide, whether a connection with, or a separation from the continental colonies of America, be most for the national advantage, and the lasting benefit of these kingdoms / by Josiah Tucker ... Second edition, corrected. Glocester : Printed by R. Raikes, and sold by T. Cadell, in the Strand, London, MDCCLXXV [1775].
Advertisements: p. [1-2] at end.
Rockefeller Library copy from the library of James Strohn Copley.
Identifier
Language
Subject
Contributor
Bibliographic Citation
Adams, T.R. Brit. pamphlets, 75-144b
ESTC, T36739
Collection
Citation
Tucker, Josiah, 1712-1799, “An humble address and earnest appeal to those respectable personages in Great-Britain and Ireland : who by their great and permanent interest in landed property, their liberal education, elevated rank, and enlarged views are the ablest to judge, and the fittest to decide, whether a connection with, or a separation from the continental colonies of America, be most for the national advantage, and the lasting benefit of these kingdoms,” Special Collections, John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, accessed May 4, 2024, https://cwfjdrlsc.omeka.net/items/show/3783.