ID 5604
Last Name Bailey
First Name Lydia R.
Title
Gender Female
Date of Birth 1779
Date of Death 1869-02-02
Place of Birth Pennsylvania
Place of Death
Related Firms Lydia R. Bailey
VIAF URI http://viaf.org/viaf/294939731
Wikipedia Entry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Bailey_(printer)
Image URL https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Bailey_(printer)#/media/File:Lydia_R._Bailey.jpg
Notes
Timeline

Titles

Displaying 126–150 of 219

Role Title Date
Printer Bailey's Rittenhouse almanac, for the year of our Lord, 1817. Being the first after bissextile, or leap year. Calculated by Joshua Sharp. 1816
Printer Ballad Romances, and Other Poems. By Miss Anna Maria Porter, Author of The Hungarian Brothers, &c. &c. 1816
Printer Bennett & Walton's almanac, for the year of our Lord, 1817. Being the first after bissextile, or leap year. Calculated by Joshua Sharp. 1816
Printer Catalogue of books, in various departments of literature, for sale, by M. Carey, no. 121, Chesnut Street, Philadelphia. 1816
Printer Death a continuation of life. A sermon preached at the New Jerusalem Temple, in Red Cross Street, near Cripplegate, London, on John XI. 23. Thy brother shall rise again. By Manoah Sibly, N.H.M. To which is added, Two letters. By the Rev. John Clowes, minister of St. John's, Manchester. 1816
Printer Ellen; or, The young godmother. A tale of youth. By Alicia Catherine Mant. First American, from the second London, Edition. 1816
Printer God's revenge against murder; or The drown'd wife. A tragedy, as lately performed, with unbounded applause, (of the Devil and his court) by Ned Findley, Esquire, one of the grand company of tragedians in the service of the Black Prince, who was so highly gratified with Ned's performance, that he instantly provided him rooms in one of his own palaces; created him a knight of the most ignoble order of the halter, clapped bracelets on his wrists, and an ornament round his neck; and in a few days promoted him to the ridge pole of the gallows, at Edgefield Court-House, South Carolina. By M.L. Weems, of Lodge no. 50, Dumfries. Tenth Edition, Enlarged—Price, 25 cents. 1816
Printer Historical sketch of, and remarks upon congressional caucuses for president & vice-president. From the olive branch. Published by the Author. 1816
Printer History of the United States, from their first settlement as English colonies, in 1607, to the year 1808, or the thirty-third of their sovereignty and independence. By David Ramsay, M.D. Continued to the Treaty of Ghent, by S.S. Smith, D.D. and L.L.D. and other literary gentlemen. In three volumes. 1816
Printer Industry and idleness, a pleasing and instructive tale, for good little girls, in words not exceeding two syllables. 1816
Printer Kite's town and country almanac, for the year 1817. Being the first after leap year. Calculated by Joshua Sharp 1816
Printer Letter from a dying soldier, in America, to his wife, in England. 1816
Printer Lorimer. A tale. By Lucy Aikin. 1816
Printer Memoirs of Charles Howard Brodhead. 1816
Printer No. 13. A Sunday's excursion. 1816
Printer Paris chit-chat; or A view of the society, manners customs, literature, and amusements of the Parisians, being a translation of "Guillaume le franc-parleur," and sequel to the "Paris spectator." 1816
Printer Some account of the happy death of Edwin Tapper, aged 15 years. 1816
Printer The African widow. An interesting narrative. By a clergyman. 1816
Printer The Awful doom of murderers. 1816
Printer The Christian drummer: a true and interesting story. 1816
Printer The doctrine of life for the New Jerusalem, from the commandments of the Decalogue. Translated from the Latin of the honourable and learned Emanuel Swedenborg. To which is prefixed, a short account of the life of the author. 1816
Printer The drunkard's looking glass: reflecting a faithful likeness of the drunkard, in sundry very interesting attitudes, with lively representations of the many strange capers which he cuts at different stages of his disease; as first, when he has only "a drop in his eye;" second, when he is "half shaved;" third, when he is getting "a little on the staggers or so;" and fourth and fifth, and so on, till he is "quite capsized;" or "snug under the table with the dogs," and can "stick to the floor without holding on." By M.L. Weems, author of The life of Washington, &c. Fourth edition, greatly improved. 1816
Printer The first annual report of the Philadelphia Female Tract Society, for the year 1816, read before the members, at their first annual meeting, held on the 26th December, 1816. 1816
Printer The heart and the fancy, or, Valsinore. A tale. By Miss Benger. 1816
Printer The life of Catherine Haldane. (Concluded). 1816

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"Bailey, Lydia R." The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 5604, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/5604. Accessed 2024-11-23.

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