Titles by Warner & Hanna in CHICAGO format
There are 9 titles associated with this firm.
Williams,
Helen,
M.,
and François-Guillaume
Ducray-Duménil.
Ambrose and Eleanor; or The adventures of two children, deserted on an uninhabited island. Translated from the French. To which is added, Auguste and Madelaine, a real history, by Miss Helen Maria Williams.
Thomas, Andrews & Butler,
1799.
Wakefield,
Priscilla.
A family tour through the British Empire; containing some accounts of its natural and artificial curiosities, history and antiquities, interspersed with biographical anecdotes. Particularly adapted to the amusement and instruction of youth. By Priscilla Wakefield.
Philadelphia:
Johnson & Warner,
1804.
Kilner,
Dorothy.
Short Conversations, or, An Easy Road to the Temple of Fame; Which All May Reach Who Endeavour to be Good.
Baltimore:
1805.
Rundell,
Maria E.
A new system of domestic cookery, formed upon principles of economy, and adapted to the use of private families. By a lady. Second edition.
Boston:
Andrews and Cummings,
Lemuel Blake,
1807.
Porter,
Anna M.
A sailor's friendship, and a soldier's love. Two volumes in one. First American Edition.
Baltimore:
1810.
Opie,
Amelia.
The black velvet pelisse, and The mother and son. From the tales of Mrs. Opie.
New York:
Elliot and Crissy,
1810.
West,
Jane.
The refusal. By Mrs. West, author of the "Tale of the times," "Infidel father," "Gossip's story," &c. Three volumes in two.
Philadelphia:
Mathew Carey [122 Market Street],
1810.
Porter,
Jane.
The Scottish chiefs, a romance. : Five volumes in two. By Miss Jane Porter, author of Thaddeus of Warsaw, and Remarks on Sidney's aphorisms. (From the London edition of 1810.)
New York:
David Longworth,
1810.
Porter,
Anna M.
A sailor's friendship, and a soldier's love. Two volumes in one. First American Edition.
Baltimore:
1810.