Name Bookseller
Description The firm from which the work can be purchased. Indicated by the phrase “sold by” in the imprint.

Firms

Displaying 6251–6275 of 9735

Firm Title
Mary Kingman An Address to that Honest Part of the Nation, Call'd the Lower Sort of People; on the Subject of Popery and the Pretender. The Second Edition.
Patrick Byrne The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Mathew Carey [222 Market Street] The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
John Conrad & Co. The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Samuel F. Bradford The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Samuel Campbell The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Isaiah Thomas and Ebenezer Andrews The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
M. and J. Conrad & Co. The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Bonsall and Niles The Parents' friend: or Extracts from the Principal Works on Education, from the time of Montaigne to the present day, methodized and arranged. With observations and notes by the editor. In two volumes.
Benjamin and Thomas Kite The Picture of Philadelphia, giving an account of its origin, increase and improvements in arts, sciences, manufactures, commerce and revenue. With a compendious view of its societies, literary, benevolent, patriotic, & religious. Its police--the public buildings--the prison and penetentiary [sic] system--institutions, monied and civil--museum. By James Mease, M. D.
Joseph Delaplaine The Picture of Philadelphia, giving an account of its origin, increase and improvements in arts, sciences, manufactures, commerce and revenue. With a compendious view of its societies, literary, benevolent, patriotic, & religious. Its police--the public buildings--the prison and penetentiary [sic] system--institutions, monied and civil--museum. By James Mease, M. D.
Mudie and Sons The Soldier's Friend: or, the Means of Preserving the Health of Military Men; Addressed to the Officers of the British Army: By William Blair, A. M. Surgeon of the Lock Hospital and Asylum, and of the Old Finsbury Dispensary.
James Leake I A description of Bath: a poem. In a letter to a friend.
Samuel Lobb A description of Bath: a poem. In a letter to a friend.
James Leake I A description of Bath. A poem. Humbly Inscribed to her Royal Highness the Princess Amelia.
John Gray A description of Bath. A poem. Humbly Inscribed to her Royal Highness the Princess Amelia.
William Phillips Some Account of the Religious Experience and Gospel Labours of Thomas Rutter.
Robert Foulis Hardyknute, a fragment of an antient Scots poem.
Mary Cooper [8 Paternoster Row] Honour. A Poem. Inscribed to the Right Honble the Lord Viscount Lonsdale.
Mary Cooper [8 Paternoster Row] An ode To The Right Honourable the Earl of Huntingdon. By Dr. Akinside.
William Bowyer I [White Friars] George for Britain. A poem. Written by the Lady Piers.
Albert Cockshaw Apology for Ladies' Anti-Slavery Associations. By the author of "Immediate, not Gradual Abolition," &c. &c.
John Harrisson The Horrors of Oakendale Abbey. A romance
John and Thomas Fleet A narrative of the captivity, sufferings, and removes, of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, who was taken prisoner by the Indians, with several others; and treated in the most barbarous and cruel manner by those vile savages: with many other remarkable events during her travels. Written by her own hand, for her private use, and since made public at the earnest desire of some friends, and for the benefit of the afflicted.
William Alexander and Son Biographical Sketches and Interesting Anecdotes of Persons of Colour. Compiled by A. Mott.