Smuggling laid open, in all its extensive and destructive branches With proposals for the effectual remedy of that most iniquitous practice. Comprehending, among other particulars, the Parliamentary evidence of some of the most notorious smugglers; and a large sheet, shewing in one view, the whole state of the tea importation, consumption and revenue, from midsummer 1745, (when the reduction of two shillings per pound took place) to new Christmas 1763. Dedicated to the Right Hon. Charles Townsend, chancellor of the Exchequer. By Sir Stephen Theod. Janssen, bart. chamberlain of London

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Janssen, Stephen Theodore
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: London Printed for W. Owen, bookseller, near Temple-Bar, and W. Nicoll, in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1767, MDCCLXVII. [1767]
Edition:The second edition
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Eighteenth Century Collections Online / ECCO - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Item Description:English Short Title Catalog, T109926. - Goldsmiths', 10312. - Higgs, 4126. - Includes reports of the House of Commons committee appointed to enquire into the causes of smuggling of 1746. - Reproduction of original from University of London's Goldsmiths' Library. - With an initial leaf of errata before the half-title
Physical Description:Online-Ressource ([20],286p) 8°