Name Printer
Description The firm responsible for compositing and printing the work. Usually indicated by the phrase “printed by” in the imprint and/or the colophon.

Firms

Displaying 7876–7900 of 10929

Firm Title
Asher Miner The Budget, or, Moral and Entertaining Fragments. Representing the Punishment of Vice, and the Reward of Virtue. First American Edition.
Asher Miner Matilda, or The Barbadoes girl. A tale for young people. By the author of The clergyman's widow and family, Merchant's widow and family, Affectionate brothers, Panorama of Europe, The sisters, &c.
Asher Miner The conversations of Emily. Abridged from the French.
S. and D.A. Forbes Aunt Mary's tales, for the entertainment and improvement of little boys. Addressed to her nephews. First American from the Third London Edition.
James Maxwell Conversations on the Bible. By a lady
Joseph Robinson [4 North Charles Street] Dangerous friendship, or, The letters of Clara D'Albe. Translated from the French by a lady of Baltimore.
Samuel Wood [357 Pearl Street] A legacy; or, Widow's mite: left by Alice Hayes to her children and others. Being a brief relation of her life; with an account of some of her dying sayings.
Thomas Gillet [Gillett] A Series of Plays: in Which It is Attempted to Delineate the Stronger Passions of the Mind. Each Passion being the Subject of a Tragedy and a Comedy. By Joanna Baillie. The Third Edition. Vol. II,
Nicholas Van Riper Zuma, or The tree of Health. To which are added, The Fair Pauline,—Zeneida,—The Reeds of the Tiber,—and The Widow of Luzi. By Madame de Genlis.
George Hough A tender address, to the young and rising generation, of both sexes, with desires that it may prove a blessing to them. Written some years since, by a young female of the Society of Friends in England. ; To which is added, sundry small poems
Lincoln and Gleason Dinarbas: a tale. First American Edition.
William Fessenden Dinarbas: a tale. Second American Edition.
Samuel Turell Armstrong Family lectures. By Mrs. N. Sproat
Elisha Babcock A tribute of respect to the memory of Miss Hannah Bull. By a female friend.
Jonathan Seymour A year and a day. A novel. Two volumes in one. By Madame Panache. Author of Manners.
Samuel Green Effusions, religious, moral, and patriotic; in prose and verse. By Abby H. Sterry.
Lydia R. Bailey Keeper's Travels in Search of his Master.
Lydia R. Bailey Mary the Milk-Maid.
Charles Mowry Fruits of retirement. A collection of pieces, in prose and poetry. By Ann Welch.
Thomas B. Wait and Co. Isabel and Louisa. Some account of two little girls who lived in Boston. By a lady of Boston.
Sheldon and Goodwin Moral pieces in prose and verse. By Lydia Huntley.
Daniel Lawrence A brief account of the vision and death of the late Lord Lyttleton; to which is added, an anecdote of Lord Kaimes, and the melancholy end of a profligate young man
William Fry A bridle for the ass, and a rod for the fool's back: Containing an answer to a book entitled A seal upon the lips of Unitarians, Trinitarians, and all others who refuse to acknowledge the sole, supreme, and exclusive divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; containing illustrations of one hundred and forty-four passages in the four Evangelists and the Apocalpyse, in proof that Jesus Christ is the supreme and only God of heaven and earth. By Robert Hindmarsh. By Catharine Charleton.
Israel W. Clark An address to the public; particularly to the members of the legislature of New-York, proposing a plan for improving female education. By Emma Willard.
Israel W. Clark No. 2, being an additional account of the conduct of the Shakers, in the case of Eunice Chapman and her children with their religious creed. Written by herself. Also, a refutation of the Shakers remonstrance to the proceedings of the legislature of 1817. By Thomas Brown. Also, the deposition of Mary Dyer, who petitioned the legislature of the state of New-Hampshire for relief in a similar case. Also, affidavits from different persons who have been members of the Shaker society. Also, communications from the state of Ohio, respecting the Shakers in that state, and others. Also, the proceedings of the Legislature of the state of New-York, in this case for three years.