Great Britain - Colonies - Commerce - America - Early works to 1800
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The true interest of Britain, set forth in regard to the colonies and the only means of living in peace and harmony with them, including five different plans, for effecting this desirable event. By Jos. Tucker, D.D. dean of Glocester. Author of the Essay on the advantages and disadvantages which respectively attend France and Great-Britain, with regard to trade. To which is added by the printer, a few more words, on the freedom of the press in America.
Tucker, Josiah, 1712-1799.Date: MDCCLXXVI. [1776]- E-books
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Tract V. The respective pleas and arguments of the mother country, and of the colonies, distinctly set forth; and the impossibility of a compromise of differences, OR A Mutual Concession Of Rights, plainly demonstrated. With a prefatory epistle, to the Plenipotentiaries of the late Congress at Philadelphia. Second edition. By Josiah Tucker, D.D. Dean of Glocester
Tucker, Josiah, 1712-1799.Date: M.DCC.LXXVI. [1776]