ID 4873
Last Name Unknown
First Name [Woman]
Title
Gender Female
Date of Birth
Date of Death
Place of Birth
Place of Death
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Notes
Timeline

Titles

Displaying 376–400 of 510

Role Title Date
Author Tales Original and Translated from the Spanish. By a Lady. Embellished with Eight Engravings on Wood. 1810
Author The Adulteress; or, Anecdotes of Two Noble Families: A Tale. In Four Volumes. By an English-Woman. 1810
Author The Amusing Moralist, Containing a Collection of Fables from Aesop. Transposed into Easy Verse. By a lady. 1810
Author The Soldier of Pennaflor: or, A Season in Ireland. A Tale of the Eighteenth Century. In Five Volumes. 1810
Author A short account of the experience of Mrs. Hester Ann Rogers. Written by herself. With a brief extract from her diary. To which are now added, her Spiritual letters. 1811
Author Blossoms of Fancy. Original Poems, and Pieces in Blank Verse. By the Authoress of the "Observant Pedestrian" – "Mystic Cottager" – "Montrose" – "Human Frailties" – "Splendid Follies" &c. &c. 1811
Author Julia de Vienne. A Novel. In Four Volumes. Imitated from the French, by a lady. 1811
Author The Soldier of Pennaflor; or, A Season in Ireland. A Tale of the Eighteenth Century. In Five Volumes. By the author of Amasina, or The American Foundling. 1811
Author The Young ladies' selection of elegant extracts from the writings of illustrious females: and of some of the best authors of the other sex. Containing a great variety of lessons in prose and poetry, adapted to improve and exalt the female mind. Designed for academies and schools. By Joseph Richardson, A.M. Minister of the First Parish in Hingham, and author of "The American reader." 1811
Author Original Fables...in verse...By a lady...with wood engravings. 1812
Author The Little Scholar's Mirror: Consisting of instructing and amusing tales. By a lady. Illustrated with engravings. 1812
Author The Lowestoft Guide: Containing a Descriptive Account of Lowestoft and Its Environs. By a Lady. Embellished with Engravings 1812
Author A short account of the experience of Mrs. Hester Ann Rogers. Written by herself. With a brief extract from her diary. To which are now added, her Spiritual letters. 1813
Author A short narrative of the sickness, religious exercises, and death of Sally Fuller, of Sandisfield, (Mass.) who died June 3d, 1812, in the 17th year of her age. Together with a poem on her death. By a female friend. 1813
Author Address of the authoress of the Newport female evangelical miscellany, to all the benevolent female associations, in the United States. 1813
Author Amusements of solitude; a collection of poems, written in a long series of years. By a lady. In two volumes. 1813
Author Cramer's Pittsburgh almanack, for the year of our Lord 1814. Being the second after bissextile or leap year—and after the fourth of July, the 39th year of American Independence. Calculated by the Rev. John Taylor, for the meridian of Pittsburgh, in latitude 40° 35' north, longitude 80° 8' west from the meridian of Greenwich, but will serve without any sensible variation for the states of Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, &c. 1813
Author Cramer's Pittsburgh almanack, for the year of our Lord 1814. Being the second after bissextile or leap year—and after the fourth of July, the 39th year of American Independence. Calculated by the Rev. John Taylor, for the meridian of Pittsburgh, in latitude 40° 35' north, longitude 80° 8' west from the meridian of Greenwich, but will serve without any sensible variation for the states of Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, &c. 1813
Author Isabel and Louisa. Some account of two little girls who lived in Boston. By a lady of Boston. 1813
Author Memoirs of Miss Eliza Van Wyck: To Which is Added, The Story of The Happy Waterman. 1813
Author St. Herbert, a Tale. By an American Lady. 1813
Author The mirror of the graces; or, The English lady's costume. Combining and harmonizing taste and judgment, elegance and grace, modesty, simplicity, and economy, with fashion in dress; and adapting the various articles of female embellishments to different ages, forms, and complexions; to the seasons of the year, rank, and situation in life: : with useful advice on female accomplishments, politeness and manners; the cultivation of the mind and the disposition and carriage of the body: offering also the most efficacious means of preserving beauty, health, and loveliness. : The whole according with the general principles of nature and rules of propriety. By a lady of distinction, who has witnessed, and attentively studied, what is esteemed truly graceful and elegant amongst the most refined nations of Europe. 1813
Author The Nursery Companion . . . Rules of English Grammar, in Verse. By a lady. 1813
Publisher The school: or, A present from a preceptress to her pupils, on the first of January 1813. By a lady of Boston. 1813
Author Verses for little children. Written by a young lady, for the amusement of her junior brothers and sisters; with copper-plates. 1813

Cite this Page

"Unknown, [Woman]." The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 4873, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/4873. Accessed 2024-04-26.

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