London (England) - Earthquake, 1750
Works from the collections
7 works
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An address to those who have either retired, or intend to leave the town, under the imaginary apprehension of the approaching shock of another earthquake being the substance of a sermon delivered on the last Lord's-Day, the first of this instant April. By Roger Pickering, Pastor of the Church of Protestant Dissenters in Silver-Street, Lord's-Day Evening Lecturer at Salters-Hall, and Fellow of the Royal Society, London.
Pickering, Roger, d. 1755.Date: 1750- E-books
- Online
A supplement to the Barbarian cruelty; or, an authentic narrative of the sufferings of the British captives, belonging to the Inspector Privateer, During Their Slavery under Muley Abdallah, Emperor of Fez and Morocco, from January 1745-6, to their happy Deliverance, which was compleated the 8th of December 1750, by his Excellency William Latton, Esq; Containing An additional Account of several very surprising and unaccountable Transactions which occurred to the four young Men, viz. Edward Fitzgerald, George Beale, Emanuel Rochester, and Thomas Stanton; Part of the above-mentioned Captives, who were stopped by the Emperor, in order to be made a Present of to his Majesty King George the II. without the Payment of Head-Money, from the Time they were separated from their Companions, for the Purpose aforesaid, to the Time of their happy Releasement from Slavery on the 11th of April, 1751
Date: 1751- E-journals
- Online
A Supplement to the Bishop of London's letter to the clergy and people of London and Westminster, on occasion of the late earthquakes
Date: MDCCL. [1750]- E-books
- Online
A Supplement to the Bishop of London's letter to the clergy and people of London and Westminster, on occasion of the late earthquakes
Date: MDCCL. [1750]- E-books
- Online
A Supplement to the British directory of trade, commerce, and manufacture, 1792 . Containing the alterations, corrections, and additional names, in the list of merchants, manufacturers, brokers, and traders; and in the law directory. To which is added, the commercial, and principal Coffee-Houses, in the city of London; arranged in alphabetical order, describing the different classes of merchants and traders resorting to them, and the particular species of business transacted at each.
Date: 1792?]