ID 1349
Last Name Haywood
First Name Eliza
Title
Gender Female
Date of Birth 1693
Date of Death 1756-02-25
Place of Birth
Place of Death City of Westminster
Related Firms Eliza Haywood
VIAF URI http://viaf.org/viaf/64027723/
Wikipedia Entry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliza_Haywood
Jackson Entry
Image URL https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/Eliza-haywood.jpg
Notes
Timeline

Titles

Displaying 151–175 of 177

Role Title Date
Author A new present for a servant-maid: containing rules for her moral conduct both with respect to herself and her superiors: the whole art of cookery, pickling, preserving, &c. &c. and every other direction necessary to be known in order to render her a complete, useful, and valuable servant. In ten books. I. Necessary cautions and precepts for gaining goodwill and esteem. II. Directions for marketing, or the method of chusing all kinds of butchers meat, fish, fowl, &c. with instructions for carving. III. The whole art of cookery fully displayed, both with regard to dressing plain victuals, and also that of made dishes, soups, broths, &c. together with the best methods of pickling all kinds of fruits, buds, flowers, &c. IV. The art of preserving the most useful fruits, &c. V. The method of candying the fruits, &c. generally kept in a family. VI. The best methods of making all kinds of english wines, and giving them the true flavour of those imported from abroad. VII. The whole art of distillation; with the methods of making the cordial and sweet scented waters hitherto used in England, and also those imported from other countries. VIII. Useful family receipts. IX. Some general rules and directions for maid-servants. X. Instructions for carving according to the terms of art. With marketing tables, and tables for casting-up expences, &c. The whole interspersed with a great number of original receipts, never before published. By Mrs. Haywood. 1771
Author The female spectator. By Mrs. Eliza Haywood. The Seventh Edition. In Four Volumes. 1771
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. By Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. The SEVENTH EDITION. In FOUR VOLUMES. VOLUME I. 1771
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. By Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. The SEVENTH EDITION. In FOUR VOLUMES. VOLUME II. 1771
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. By Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. The SEVENTH EDITION. In FOUR VOLUMES. VOLUME III. 1771
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. By Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. The SEVENTH EDITION. In FOUR VOLUMES. VOLUME IV. 1771
Author The history of Miss Betsy Thoughtless. In four volumes. The fifth edition. 1772
Author The invisibe [sic] spy. By Explorabilis. In two volumes. A new edition. 1773
Author The wife. By Mira, One of the Authors of the Female Spectator, and Epistles for Ladies. The Third Edition. 1773
Author The female spectator. By Mrs. Eliza Haywood. In four volumes. 1775
Author The female Spectator. By Mrs. Eliza Haywood. In four volumes. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. I. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. I. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. II. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. III. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. IV. 1775
Author THE FEMALE SPECTATOR. BY Mrs. ELIZA HAYWOOD. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. IV. 1775
Author Epistles for ladies. By the authors of The female spectator. A new edition. In two volumes. 1776
Author The history of Jemmy and Jenny Jessamy. A new edition. ... By the author of Miss Betsy Thoughtless. 1776
Author A Collection of Novels, Selected and Revised by Mrs. Griffith. 1777
Author The history of Miss Betsy Thoughtless. By Mrs. Haywood. In four volumes. 1783
Author The distress'd orphan; or, Love in a mad house; shewing that she was left with a great fortune to the care of an uncle who would have married her contrary to her inclination, to his own son, and on her refusal to comply, and-having fixed her heart on a colonel, she was sent to a mad-house, where she continued till her faithful lover sham'd himself mad, and by that means obtained her liberty. Interspersed with a great many entertaining letters. Written by herself, after her happy union with the colonel. 1785
Author The distress'd orphan; or, Love in a mad-house. Shewing, that she was left with a great fortune, to the care of an uncle, who would have married her contrary to her inclination, to his own son, and on her refusal to comply, and having fix'd her heart on Honorio, she was sent to a mad-house, where she continued till her faithful lover sham'd himself mad, and by that means obtained her liberty. Interspersed with a great many entertaining letters. Written by herself, after her happy union with Honorio. 1785
Author The distress'd orphan; or, Love in a mad-house; shewing, that she was left with a great fortune to the care of an uncle, who would have married her contrary to her inclination, to his own son, and on her refusal to comply, and having fix'd her heart on a colonel, she was sent to a mad-house, where she continued till her faithful lover sham'd himself mad, and by that means obtained her liberty. Interspersed with a great many entertaining letters. Written by herself, after her happy union with the colonel. 1785
Author The history of Jemmy and Jenny Jessamy. By Mrs. Haywood. In three volumes. 1785

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"Haywood, Eliza" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 1349, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/1349. Accessed 2025-03-31.

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