Volume 41
Contains 5 Results:
A lecture on the atmosphere of London; as read before a public society, June 14th, MDCCLXXXVIII. with plates illustrative of the phenomena, and a preface, ca. 1788
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
The law given at Sinai: a poem / by A Young Gentleman, 1777
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
Recueil de pièces relatives a la fièvre jaune d'Amérique, envoyées par le Consul des États-Unis d'Amérique, à Marseille, au gouvernement des États-Unis., 1799
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
An oration, to commemorate the independence of the United States of North-America, delivered at the Reformed Calvinist Church, in Philadelphia, July 4th, 1786, and published at the request of the Pennsylvania Society of the Cincinnati / by W. Jackson, 1786
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
On the principle of vitality. A discourse delivered in the First Church in Boston, Tuesday, June 8th, 1790, before the Humane Society of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts / by B. Waterhouse, M.D., professor of the theory and practice of physic, and lectures on natural history in the University of Cambridge, 1790
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.