Name American Antiquarian Society
Online Source https://www.americanantiquarian.org/
Description

The American Antiquarian Society is a national research library of American history and culture through 1876 which has been sharing American stories for more than two hundred years.

Citation

American Antiquarian Society. https://www.americanantiquarian.org/

Titles

Displaying 776–800 of 5770

ID Title Author Firms (City) Date Edition
17676 An epistle to the clergy of the southern states. By Sarah M. Grimké. ; [Three lines from Luke 1836
17976 An epistle to the inhabitants of South-Carolina; containing sundry observations proper to be consider'd by every professor of Christianity in general. By Sophia Hume. ; [Four lines of quotation Hume , Sophia
1754
21320 An Epitome of Electricity & Galvanism. By two gentlemen of Philadelphia. Green , Jacob
Hazard , Erskine
1809
19458 An epitome of sacred history containing the principal events recorded in the Old and New Testaments by Mary Ann Rundall Rundall , Mary Ann
1826
17537 An essay on combustion, with a view to a new art of dying and painting. Wherein the phlogistic and antiphlogistic hypotheses are proved erroneous. By Mrs. Fulhame. The First American Edition. Fulhame , Elizabeth
1810 The First American Edition.
18573 An essay on the character and practical writings of St. Paul. By Hannah More. Two volumes in one. More , Hannah
Wells and Lilly (Boston)
1815
21270 An essay on the culture and management of hemp, more particularly for the purpose of making coarse linens. : [Two lines in Latin from Virgil] By a farmer 1775
16545 An essay on the education of female teachers. Written at the request of the American Lyceum, and communicated at their annual meeting,--New York, May 8th, 1835. By Catharine E. Beecher. Published at the desire of a meeting of ladies in New York. Beecher , Catharine Esther
Van Nostrand & Dwight (New York)
Corey & Fairbanks (Cincinnati)
1835
18234 An essay to vindicate the cause of truth. By Ruth Lane, of Abington, Mass. ; [Two lines from Isaiah Thomas Bradlee (Boston)
1820
18578 An estimate of the religion of the fashionable world. By one of the laity. ; [Four lines from Bacon More , Hannah
Henry Willis (Philadelphia)
1793
18579 An estimate of the religion of the fashionable world. By one of the laity. ; [Four lines from Bacon More , Hannah
1795
21326 An etymological dictionary and expositor of the English language: containing the radicals and definitions of words derived from the Greek, Latin, and French, languages; and all the generally used technical and polite phrases, adopted from the French and Latin. By William Grimshaw, author of a History of the United States, History of England, &c John Grigg (Philadelphia)
1826
16563 An eulogy on the life, character and services of Brother George Washington, deceased. Pronounced before the fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons, by request of the Grand Lodge, at the Old South Meeting-House, Boston, on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1800. Being the day set apart by them to pay funeral honors to their deceased brother. By Brother Timothy Bigelow. ; To which are added, two addresses to the deceased, when president of the United States, and his answers: together with--the letter of condolence of the Grand Lodge to Mrs. Washington, and her answer. ; [Two lines of quotations 1800
18244 An evening hymn
17977 An exhortation to the inhabitants of the province of South-Carolina, to bring their deeds to the light of Christ, in their own consciences. By S.H. ; In which is inserted, some account of the author's experience in the important business of religion. ; [Seven lines of Scripture texts Hume , Sophia
1748
17978 An exhortation to the inhabitants of the province of South-Carolina, to bring their deeds to the light of Christ, in their own consciences. By S.H. ; In which is inserted, some account of the author's experience in the important business of religion. ; [Seven lines of Scripture texts Hume , Sophia
1748
17979 An exhortation to the inhabitants of the province of South-Carolina, to bring their deeds to the light of Christ, in their own consciences. By Sophia Hume. In which is inserted, some account of the author's experience in the important business of religion. ; [Seven lines of quotation Hume , Sophia
1752
16293 An explanation of the Ten Commandments, partly composed, and partly compiled by an aged school-mistress, in the state of Massachusetts. Unknown , [Woman]
1794
21767 An extract from the proceedings of the South-Carolina Yazoo Company Ann Timothy (Charleston)
1791
17585 An extract of Miss Mary Gilbert's journal. With some account of the Lady Elizabeth Hastings, &c. : [Four lines of Scripture texts 1769
20548 An historical and moral view of the origin and progress of the French Revolution; and the effect it has produced in Europe. By Mary Wollstonecraft. ; Volume I Wollstonecraft , Mary
1795
20635 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]
1775
20892 An Impartial and concise history of the French Revolution, from its first causes and commencement in 1789, to the conclusion, and coronation of Bonaparte, Emperor of the French, on the 2d Dec. 1804. From the most authentic sources. First American edition. Unknown ,
Esther Prentiss Low (New York)
1810 First American edition.
21854 An inaugural dissertation on absorption. By Goodridge Wilson, of Virginia. ; [Two lines in Latin from Ovid 1797
21195 An Inaugural Dissertation on Lithotomy. Submitted to the examination of the Rev. John Andrews, D.D. Provost. The trustees and medical faculty of the University of Pennsylvania. On the twenty-fifth day of April, 1811. For the degree of doctor of medicine. By Micajah Clark, of Virginia. Honorary member of the Philadelphia Medical Society---member of the Philadelphia Linnean, and honorary member of the Columbian Society of Virtuosi, Pittsburgh. Clark , Micajah
1811