"Person ID","Last Name","First Name",Gender,"Birth Date","Birth City","Death Date","Death City",Role,"Title Id",Title,"Signed Author",Pseudonym,Imprint,"Self Published","Printing City","Printing Country","Printing Lat","Printing Long",Date,Format,Length,Width,Edition,Volumes,Pagination,Sources,"Price Pound","Price Shilling","Price Pence","Other Price",Genre,"Shelf mark" 7405,Fisher,"Elizabeth Munro",F,1759-12-02,Philadelphia,1850,Montréal,Author,17475,"Memoirs of Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher, of the city of New-York, daughter of the Rev. Harry Munro, who was a chaplain in the British Army, during the American Revolution.--Giving a particular account of a variety of domestic misfortunes, and also of her trial, and cruel condemnation to the state's prison for six years, at the instance of her brother, Peter Jay Munro. Written by herself. Neither the perfidy of private friendship, nor the persecution of relatives, nor the frowns of the world, nor domestic calamity, nor time, nor circumstance, can shake the mind that is armed with conscious virtue.","Memoirs of Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher",,"Printed for the author [by D.C. & P. Burkloe].",yes,"New York",US,43.0003500,-75.4999000,1810,Octavo,24,,,1,48,"American Antiquarian Society 277707; America's Historical Imprints II: Shaw-Shoemaker, 1801-1819 20117",,,,,Memoirs,