Local tracts; Considerations on the state of parties, and the means of effecting a reconciliation between them / ; An address to the inhabitants of Northumberland and Newcastle upon Tyne, who petitioned against the two bills lately depending in parliament / ; A View of the moral and political epidemic, which has devastated Europe for several years, and now rages with equal, if not increased violence; ... / ; Advice, addressed to the lower ranks of society: ; The political litany, diligently revised: ; Reflections on the national debt / ; A List of the principal places, pensions, and sinecures, held under the British Government, extracted from the Exaordinary Red Book: ; The right of the people of England to annual parliaments vindicated, on the principles of the constitution, confirmed by ancient statutes, of expediency, and of justice: ; An Essay upon the necessity of parliamentary inquiry into the transactions at Manchester, being a review of two pamphlets from the pens of the Rev. Mr. Davison, B.D., Rector of Washington and the Rev. Mr. Phillpotts, M.A., Prebendary of Durham; A letter to John Ralph Fenwick, Esq. / ; Declaration of the objects of the Newcastle upon Tyne Society for Promoting the Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions; A Letter to the electors of the counties of Northumberland and Newcastle upon Tyne / ; Observations addressed to the Rev. Dr. Phillpotts, Rector of Stanhope, on his letter to an English layman respecting the Coronation Oath ; by J. K. L.; A Letter on Mr. Wortley's affinity Marriage Bill, addressed to the Houses of Parliament / ; The necessity of restoring annual parliaments asserted on the principles of law, justice, and good policy / ; A Letter to the enfranchised tenantry of the county of Northumberland / ; The Age newspaper's account of the public meeting on the French Revolution, held in the Guildhall, Newcastle, September 7th 1830; A Report of the proceedings in the Guildhall at the election of the Members of Parliament for the town and county of Newcastle upon Tyne, July 30, 1830; A letter to all the friends of parliamentary reform, on the present crisis of affairs, and on the steps now proper to be taken / ; Observations on the second report of the Commissioners appointed to enquire into the Law of Real Property, respectfully addressed to the serious consideration of the gentry, freeholders, and merchants of the county of Durham / ; A Concise view of colonial slavery; The question of the vote by ballot plainly stated and objections fully examined and refuted, in a letter to John Hodgson, Esq., M.P. / ; Observations on parliamentary reform / ; Reasons against the ballot, candidly addressed: useful at all times, more especially in the present / ; to be said or sung until the appointed change come, throughout the dominion of England and Wales, and the town of Berwick upon Tweed / ; with an appendix; containing an account of the income and expenditure of the Civil List; from the most authentic historical records, ancient and modern / ; To which is added, the petition from the Society of the Friends of the People, presented to parliament by Charles Grey, Esq. in the year 1793Dy 33Political

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Sold by G.G. and J. Robinson; and J. Johnson, also by W. Charnley, E. Humble, R. Sands, and J. Bell, Newcastle upon Tyne
Publication Date
[1819]
Edition
2nd ed.
Language
English