Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Sales catalogue 625: Maggs Bros. Source: Wellcome Collection.
44/68 page 42
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image![[176] [MOORE (Francis) ]. Original Manuscript Account of “A Voyage to Georgia begun the 15th of October, 1735,” and some further particulars concerning Generat Oglethorpe added later. 4to. 234 pages. Original vellum. ce. 1735-6. 42 The five additional pages have been added later and close with the recording of Oglethorpe’s death in 1785. The coe of the Voyage to Georgia and events there was published at London in 1744. From 1730 until 1735 Francis Moore was employed by the Royal African Company on the River Gambia, and on one occasion penetrated five hundred miles inland. He published a valuable record of his experiences in 1738. In 1736 Moore was employed by the Trustees for establishing the Colony of Georgia, as a storekeeper, and accompanied General Oglethorpe until July, 1736. He visited Georgia again in 1738 and remained until 1743, being present at the siege of St. Augustine in 1740, and during the Spanish invasion of 1742. It is his first journey to Georgia which is described in this volume and which was also published. He had intended publishing his second journey, but did not meet with sufficient encouragement to do so. [177] MORMON TRACTS. Published at Liverpool, England. 8vo. Unbound. Liverpool, 1848-1853. &2 28 1. Pratt (Orson). Divine Authority of the Book of Mormon. Parts 1—7. Liverpool, 1849-1851. 2. Pratt (O). Absurdities of Immaterialism. Liverpool, 1849. 3. Pratt (O). Reply to “Remarks on Mormonism.” Liverpool, 1849. 4. Snow (L). The Only Way to be Saved. Liverpool, c. 1849. 5. Pratt. Divine Authority. 1848. 6. Pratt. The Kingdom of God. Parts 2, 3 and 4. 1848-9. 7. Series of Tracts. True Repentance. Water Baptism. Spiritual Gifts. Necessity for Miracles. Universal Apostacy. Latter-Day Kingdom. By Orson Pratt. c. 1850. 8. Spencer (O). The Prussian Mission. Report to Brigham Young. 1853. g. Gibson (W.) and Woodman (Rev. W.). Report of Three Nights’ Public Discussion in Bolton. 1851. : [178] MORRIS (Maurice O’Connor, Late Deputy Postmaster-General of Jamaica). Rambles in the Rocky Mountains: with a visit to the Gold Fields of Colorado. 8vo. Half morocco. London, 1864. 3 &1 1s [179] MORSE (Jedidiah). Autograph Letter Signed, to Mr. John Stockdale, the famous London Publisher who published Morse’s American Geography, concerning this work. 3 pp. 4to. Charleston, S. Carolina, 28 June, 1787. £2 2s “By the politeness of Doctor Ramsay I have the honour of an Introduction to your Self ao the designs of this Introduction are to make you acquainted with my intentions of publishing a Geographical Grammar of the United States, and of early soliciting your Patronage of its publication in England.” Then follows suggested terms etc. [180] The American Geography; or, A View of the present situation of the United States of America: containing ...a particular description of Kentucky, the Western Territory, the Territory South of Ohio, and Vermont: ... with a view of the British, Spanish, French, Portuguese, and Dutch Dominions, on the Continent, and in the West Indies, etc. A New Edition, revised, corrected, and greatly enlarged, by the Author, and illustrated with 25 maps, including John Filson’s large and important map of Kentucky marking the various settlements and outposts. Thick 4to. Original half calf. London, Stockdale, 1794. &4 4s [ 42 |](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b3181539x_0044.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)