The case of our fellow-creatures, the oppressed Africans, respectfully recommended to the serious consideration of the legislature of Great-Britain, by the people called Quakers [electronic resource].
1784
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The case of our fellow-creatures, the oppressed Africans, respectfully recommended to the serious consideration of the legislature of Great-Britain, by the people called Quakers [electronic resource].
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Publication Details
[Philadelphia] : London, printed: Philadelphia: re-printed by Joseph Crukshank, in Market-Street, between Second and Third-Streets, MDCCLXXXIV [1784]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (13, [3] p.)
Note
Anonymous. Written by William Dillwyn and John Lloyd on behalf of the Society of Friends' Meeting for Sufferings. See: 'A note on the authorship of The Case of our Fellow-Creatures (1784)'. By Patrick C. Lipscombe III and Edward C. [sic] Milligan IN: Quaker history : the bulletin of the Friends Historical Association, vol. 55, No. 1, Spring 1966, p.47-51. Authorship often wrongly attributed to Anthony Benezet (See: Brooks, G.S. Friend Anthony Benezet, 1937).
A petition to Parliament from the London Yearly Meeting of 1783 and the London Meeting for Sufferings, Nov. 11, 1783.
Bookseller's advertisement, p. [14-16].
Signatures: [A]⁴ B⁴
Reproduction of the original from the Library of Congress.
A petition to Parliament from the London Yearly Meeting of 1783 and the London Meeting for Sufferings, Nov. 11, 1783.
Bookseller's advertisement, p. [14-16].
Signatures: [A]⁴ B⁴
Reproduction of the original from the Library of Congress.
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Series
Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 2: Slave trade in the Atlantic world.
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