ID 6217
Name William W. Woodward
Gender Male
Street Address No. 52, south-west corner of Chestnut and Second Streets
City Philadelphia
Start Date
End Date
Sources
Notes

Titles

Displaying 1–7 of 7

Firm Role Title Contributors Date
Bookseller Don Sebastian; or, The house of Braganza. An historical romance. Four volumes in two. By Miss Anna Maria Porter, authoress of The Hungarian brothers. Porter , Anna Maria (Author)
1810
Bookseller The refusal. By Mrs. West, author of the "Tale of the times," "Infidel father," "Gossip's story," &c. Three volumes in two. West , Jane (Author)
1810
Publisher Songs in the night; by a young woman under heavy afflictions. With a supplement. Third American edition. Harrison , Susannah (Author)
Conder , John (Editor)
1810
Bookseller Practical piety; or, The influence of the religion of the heart on the conduct of the life. By Hannah More. More , Hannah (Author)
1811
Bookseller A Sermon, Preached at Haverhill, (Mass.) in Remembrance of Mrs. Harriet Newell, Wife of the Rev. Samuel Newell, Missionary to India . Who Died at the Isle of France, Nov. 30, 1812, Aged 19 Years. To Which are Added Memoirs of her Life. By Leonard Woods, D.D. Abbot Professor of Christian Theology at the Theol. Sem. Andover. Woods , Leonard (Author)
Newell , Harriet (Author)
Doyle , William M. S. (Illustrator)
and 1 more.
1814
Bookseller Writings of Miss Fanny Woodbury, who died at Beverly, Nov. 15, 1814, aged twenty-three years. Selected and edited, by Joseph Emerson, Pastor of the Third Congregational Church in Beverly. Fourth Edition. Woodbury , Fanny (Author)
Emerson , Joseph (Editor)
1819
Publisher Songs in the night; with the supplement. By a young woman, under heavy affliction for twelve years. To which is added, A remarkable scene in the author's life. Sixth American edition. Harrison , Susannah (Author)
Conder , John (Editor)
1821

Cite this Page

"William W. Woodward" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Firm ID 6217, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/firm/6217. Accessed 2024-04-27.

Suggestions and Comments for William W. Woodward
Follow Up