"Lettre de M. Robert Napier, écrite à M. Braddock par ordre de M. le duc de Cumberland. A Londres, le 25 novembre 1754": p. 168-174. It was this letter that called forth the ironical defence of the Duke of Cumberland, published, London, 1756, under title: Reasons humbly offered, to prove, that the letter printed at the end of the French Memorial of justification, is a French forgery and falsly ascribed to His R--l H--ss. ; "Journal du Major Washinghton [!]" March 31-June 27, 1754": p. 109-146. ; Washington coll., 1897, p. 312. ; "Issued by the French government, and transmitted to the courts of Europe as a justification of the war with England . In this volume was printed for the first time, in a French translation, Washington's journal of the expedition of 1754, which, with other papers, had been found by the French at Fort Necessity after the departure of the English troops . The volume also contains translations of Braddock's papers captured at the battle of the Monongahela ."--Boston athenæum, Catalogue of the ; Mode of access: Internet.
Letter dated at end: New York, Sept. 20, 1765. ; Attributed to William Livingston--National Union Catalog pre-1956 imprints. ; A defense of General Shirley's conduct of operations during the war. ; Electronic reproduction. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 44
The letter is addressed to the Marquis of Townshend who served under Wolfe in the Quebec Campaign. ; Attributed to Junius--A Bibliography of Canadiana. ; Electronic reproduction. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 44
[2], 12, [2] p. ; 20 cm. (8vo) ; Signed on p. 12: Americanus. Tentatively attributed to Edmund Quincy by Isaiah Thomas in his The history of printing in America. ; Ascribed to the press of Ann Franklin on the basis of the ornament (Reilly 303) and headpiece (Reilly 44) used. ; Signatures: [A]^8 ([A]8 blank).
Attributed to Edward Thurlow, Baron Thurlow--National Union Catalog pre-1956 imprints. ; "Urit enim fulgor suo." ; Electronic reproduction. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 44
Attributed to Edward Thurlow, Baron Thurlow--National Union Catalog pre-1956 imprints. ; "Urit enim fulgore suo." ; Electronic reproduction. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 44
"A narrative. of the famous siege of Bois-le-Duc. By James Prempart": v. 2, p. [109]-155; "A relation of the campaign in Flanders and of the siege of Namur in 1695": v. 2, p. [157]-221; A journal of the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom in 1747" v. 2, p. [223]-255. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Dedication signed: De Ramsay. ; v.1. The history of Henry de La Tour, viscount of Turenne.--v.2. Authorities: Memoirs of the Viscount de Turenne. Relation of the campaign of Fribourg, by the Marquis de la Moussaye. Letters, memorials, political instructions, &c. Memoirs of the Duke of York, afterwards King James II. of Great Britain. ; Mode of access: Internet.
[2], xiii, [1], 71, [1] p., [3] folded leaves of plates : ill. ; 24 cm. (4to) ; Attributed to William Smith in the Dictionary of Amer. biography. Sometimes attributed to Thomas Hutchins. ; Two states of gathering A noted, with and without Latin mottoes on verso of title page. ; Two states of gathering K noted, with and without errata note at foot of p. 71. ; READEX NOTE: The last 71 p. only have been filmed.
This work by the anti-slavery campaigner Granville Sharp (1735–1813) brings together legal and historical documents, as well as the author's own legal arguments, demonstrating that slavery was illegal and therefore could not be upheld in England. Furthering his own intellectual development while working for a linen draper, Sharp later became a government clerk and pursued a writing career. His awakening to the horrors of the slave trade resulted from a chance encounter with an injured slave seeking help from his physician brother. Carrying out the necessary legal research, Sharp published this book in 1769 to demonstrate that slavery has no basis in English law. In 1772, the landmark case of James Somerset was brought before Lord Mansfield, who upheld Sharp's contention: as a result, it was henceforth understood that any slave reaching the shores of England became free. Sharp's memoirs of his life are also reissued in this series
1 sheet ([1] p.) ; Caption title. ; Under title: Licens'd, February 28. 1690. ; Concerns the defeat of the Duke of Berwick in an engagement at Cavan in Ireland. ; Reproduction of the original in the National Library of Scotland.