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 10801–10825 of 10929

Firm Title
Benjamin Collins [Salisbury] An essay on schism. With several discourses contrary to the Methodists-Doctrine. By Mary Hill, of Sarum.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] Harlequin-Hydaspes: or, the Greshamite. A mock-opera. As it is perform'd at the theatre in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields.
Edward Cave Merlin: a poem. Humbly inscrib'd to Her Majesty. To which is added, The Royal Hermitage: a poem. Both by a lady.
James Abree Poems on several occasions.
Samuel Powell [Crane Lane] Poems on several occasions.
William Bowyer I [White Friars] The hardships of the English laws in relation to wives. With an explanation of the original curse of subjection passed upon the woman. In an humble address to the legislature.
Samuel Richardson Poems on several occasions. By Mrs. Barber. To which is prefix'd, a recommendatory letter from the Revd Dr. Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's, to the Right Honourable the Earl of Orrery.
Margaret Rhames The reform'd coquet; or, memoirs of Amoranda. A surprising novel. By Mrs. Davys.
Hugh Meeres The northern heiress: or, The Humours of York. A comedy. As it was acted at the New-Theatre in Lincoln's-Inn-Fields. By Mrs. Mary Davys.
S. Powell Philomela: or, poems by Mrs. Elizabeth Singer, now Rowe, of Frome in Somersetshire. The third edition.
Henry Woodfall I The distress'd orphan, or Love in a mad-house. The third edition.
Cornelius Crownfield I Love intrigues: or, the history of the amours of Bosvil and Galesia as related to Lucasia, in St. Germains garden. A novel. Written by a young lady.
John Hart Letters on spiritual subjects, and Divers Occasions; sent to relations and friends. By one who has tasted that the Lord is gracious.
Mary Luckman The complaint: or, night-thoughts, on life, death, and immortality. To which are added, The Last Day; a Poem: A Glossary: and The Life of the Author.
Elizabeth and Richard Nutt A compleat history of Cambridgeshire. Containing, 1. The geographical description of the county in alphabetical order. 2. The ecclesiastical history. 3. The civil history. 4. The natural history. 5. The literary history. 6. The antiquities. 7. A map of the county. 8. A table of the names of all the towns and villages, &c. with the value of the livings, the patrons, incumbents, and gentlemens seats: also a scheme of all the market-towns, &c. their distance from London, and from one another, &c. With a map of the great level of the fens.
Elizabeth Reeve An essay upon the effects of camphire and calomel in continual fevers. Illustrated by several cases. To which is added, an occasional observation upon the modern practice of inoculation. And from the whole is deduced an argument in support of the opinion, that the alimentary Canal is the principal Seat of a Fever. By Daniel Lysons, M.D. Physician at Bath, and late Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Mary Watson [Cambridge] Peter not infallible! Or, a poem, addressed to Peter Pindar, Esq. on reading his Nil admirari, A Late Illiberal Attack on the Bishop of London; Together with Unmanly Abuse of Mrs. Hannah More. Also Lines Occasioned By His Ode to some Robin Red-Breasts in a Country Cathedral. By the author of Gleanings after Thomson, or the village muse, &c. I Too Am A Poet!
George Story An Account of the Experience of Mrs. H. A. Rogers. Written by herself. With a brief extract from her diary.
Elizabeth Brooke Thomas Crowley's Dissertations on Liberty of Conscience, respecting The Payment of Tythes, and other Pecuniary Legal Assessments. In Four Parts. Together with The Proceedings of the Society of Quakers against him thereon, and his subsequent Letters on That Occasion.
Elizabeth Brooke A Description of the Royal Hospital for Seamen, at Greenwich; with A Short Account of the Present Establishment of Officers, Pensioners, Out-Pensioners, Nurses, and Boys. With a list of the Directors. Published by the Chaplains.
Elizabeth Brooke The Map Pedometer, or Universal Measurer, Invented by J. J. Dallaway, Mathematical Instrument-Maker, No. 4, George-Lane, behind the Monument, London; to Measure Distances on Maps, Plans, &c. applicable to Any Scale, by Reference to the Annex'd Table.
Elizabeth Brooke Sir, It having been my Intention to present a Petition to the Court of Common-Council, holden this Day: The Prayer of which went to request a Suspension of the twenty-fifth standing Order of the Court; by which I was precluded from becoming a Candidate for any Place of Emolument, in the Gift of the said Court, while I continued a Member thereof. Although I have ever thought the Intention of that Order was not mean to go the Length of precluding Persons so peculiarly situated as I was at the Time that Order was made. Yet, with all due Respect to the Orders of the court, to which I have always submitted, upon mature Consideration, together with the Advice of many respectable Friends, I relinquished presenting the said Petition, trusting that upon some future Opportunity, when duly qualified, I shall meet with the Support of those, who on the present Occasion have generously interested themselves in my Behalf, as well as of many others who had previously engaged their Votes. I have the Honour to be, Sir, With the greatest Respect, Your most faithful and obedient Servant, William Anderson. Gracechurch-Street, Nov. 22, 1799.
Benjamin Franklin An account of the particular soliloquies and covenant engagements, past betwixt Mrs. Janet Hamilton, the defunct Lady of Alexander Gordon, of Earlstown; upon the several dyets, and at the several places underwritten; which were found in her cabinet, among her papers, after her death at Earlstown, February 26, 1696. Being all written and subscribed with her own hand ...
William Bradford [Senior] A letter from Mrs. Anne Dutton, to the Reverend Mr. G. Whitefield.
Samuel Keimer [Philadelphia] Taylor, 1726. A compleat ephemeris for the year of Christ 1726. Exhibiting the daily motions of the sun and moon, and other planets, the daily rising and setting of the sun and moon, the course of the tydes, lunations, length of the days, and eclipses, &c. Calculated and fitted to the latitude of 40 degrees north, and a meridian five hours (75 degrees) west from London, serving Pennsylvania, and the parts adjacent. By Jacob Taylor, to which is added, by another hand, calculations and infallible predictions on the eclipse of the sun, &c. with a brief introduction towards learning the Hebrew and other tongues, with several other useful, informing, and diverting subjects, not to be found in any other almanack in America.