Name Author
Description

The person responsible for the creation of the work.

Persons

Displaying 21551–21575 of 22976

Person Title
Unknown, [Woman] A tender address, to the young and rising generation, of both sexes, with desires that it may prove a blessing to them. Written some years since, by a young female of the Society of Friends in England. ; To which is added, sundry small poems
Unknown, [Woman] The beauty of earthly piety, illustrated in the lives of Henry Kirke White, Thomas Spencer, and John Urquhart. By the author of "Triumph of religion," "Memoirs of Eliza J. Drysdale," &c.
Unknown, [Woman] 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.
Unknown, [Woman] Extracts in Prose and Verse, By a Lady of Maryland. Together with a Collection of Original Poetry, Never Before Published, By Citizens of Maryland. In Two Volumes.
Unknown, [Woman] A poem on the death of Genl. Alexander Hamilton. By a young lady of Baltimore.
Unknown, [Woman] Ten Lithographic Coloured Flowers, with botanical descriptions, drawn and coloured by a lady
Unknown, [Woman] Winter Evening Pastimes; or, the Merry-Makers Companion: Containing a Complete Collection of Evening Sports, Including Twelfth-Night Ceremonies, with Copious Directions for Crying Forfeits, and Promoting Harmless Mirth and Innocent Amusement.
Unknown, [Woman] Memoirs of Miss Eliza J. Drysdale. By the author of "Triumphs of religion," &c. ; [One line of quotation
Unknown, [Woman] Juliet; or, The reward of filial affection. A tale for youth. By a lady.
Unknown, [Woman] An Appeal to American women.
Unknown, [Woman] The false young man. Written by a young lady who was deceived by her lover
Unknown, [Woman] The second annual report of the Philadelphia Female Tract Society, for the year 1817. Read before the members on the 25th December, 1817.
Unknown, [Woman] The Hapless Orphan; or, Innocent Victim of Revenge. A Novel, Founded on Incidents in Real Life. In a Series of Letters from Caroline Francis to Maria B----. In Two Volumes. By an American Lady.
Unknown, [Woman] Triumph of religion. By a young lady. ; "A Christian is the highest style of man
Unknown, [Woman] An Appeal to the Christian Women of America.
Unknown, [Woman] An humble intercession for the distressed town of Boston, now almost deserted by its former rightful inhabitants, many of whom have fled, chusing to take refuge in the woods and caves, for the sake of liberty, rather than to live in splendor and affluence among slaves and tyrants; which place is at present under the government of a lawless British soldiery ... who, under the sanction of martial law, exercise every cruelty that can possibly be invented by the most uncultivated savages or fiercest barbarians, on the remaining miserable inhabitants, who are obliged to dwell there contrary to the faith of that perfidious arch-traitor and truce-breaking T. Gage. By a young lady, who was late a resident in that unhappy town. ; Now published by the earnest request of a great number of its late inhabitants
Unknown, [Woman] Consolation under convictions. A dialogue between a penitent and her Christian friend.
Unknown, [Woman] As the piece dedicated to the young gentlemen has met with a kind reception, the author would address her own sex in the following manner; hoping it will have the like acceptance with the young ladies who are under the tuition of the several school-mistresses in this state, more especially in the town of Boston. --Composed June 10, 1786
Unknown, [Woman] Triumph of religion. By a young lady. ; "A Christian is the highest style of man
Unknown, [Woman] First annual report of the Ladies' New-York City Anti-Slavery Society
Unknown, [Woman] A New-Year's gift, written a few years ago, by a young woman in England, and presented to her nieces and nephews, ; and now re-published, with desires that it may prove a blessing to the young and rising generation of both sexes, unto whom it is at this time affectionately addressed, wherever it may come. ; To which is annexed, a few lines on procrastination
Unknown, [Woman] 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.
Unknown, [Woman] Martin and James; or, The reward of integrity; a moral tale. Designed for the improvement of children.
Unknown, [Woman] Effusions of female fancy. By a young lady, native of America: ; consisting of elegys [sic], and other original essays in poetry. ; [Eight lines of verse from Prior
Unknown, [Woman] The Wreath, or Ornamental Artist; containing instructions for making flowers of wax, rice-paper, lamb’s-wool, and cambric, with a great variety of articles; for charitable repositories. By a lady.