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A letter to a friend. Giving a concise, but just, representation of the hardships and sufferings the town of Boston is exposed to and must undergo in consequence of the late act of the British-Parliament; which, by shutting up it's port, has put a fatal bar in the way of that commercial business on which it depended for it's support. : Shewing, at the same time, wherein this edict, however unintended, is powerfully adapted to promote the interest of all the American colonies, and even of Boston itself in the end. / By T.W. a Bostonian.

Van Pelt - Microtext Microfiche 821 no. 13197
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Format:
Microformat
Author/Creator:
Chauncy, Charles, 1705-1787.
Series:
Early American imprints. First series ; no. 13197.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Boston Port Bill, 1774.
Boston Port Bill (1774).
Boston (Mass.)--History--Revolution, 1775-1783.
Boston (Mass.).
United States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783--Causes.
United States.
History.
Physical Description:
35 pages, 1 unnumbered page ; 21 cm (8vo)
4x6 in.
monochrome
service copy
negative
Other Title:
Letter to a friend; giving a concise, but just, representation of the hardships and sufferings the town of Boston is exposed to ...
Place of Publication:
Boston, N.E. : Printed and sold at Greenleaf's printing-office, in Hanover-Street., M,DCC,LXXIV. [1774]
Notes:
Attributed to Charles Chauncy in Sibley's Harvard graduates.
Microfiche. [New York : Readex Microprint, 1985] 11 x 15 cm. (Early American imprints. First series ; no. 13197).
Cited in:
Evans 13197
OCLC:
55818484

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