19TH-CENTURY POVERTY -- Facts ... illustrative of the Great Inequality of the Taxes on Houses and Windows, shewing how unjustly and oppressively they bear upon the middle and industrious classes. London: printed for the United Parishes of Westminster, sold by Edward Dunn, [1833?]. 8° (228 x 143mm). Stitched. Goldsmiths' 28005; Kress C.3476. With 19 other pamphlets, early to mid 19th-century, on pauperism and finance, all 8°, including:
19TH-CENTURY POVERTY -- Facts ... illustrative of the Great Inequality of the Taxes on Houses and Windows, shewing how unjustly and oppressively they bear upon the middle and industrious classes. London: printed for the United Parishes of Westminster, sold by Edward Dunn, [1833?]. 8° (228 x 143mm). Stitched. Goldsmiths' 28005; Kress C.3476. With 19 other pamphlets, early to mid 19th-century, on pauperism and finance, all 8°, including:

Details
19TH-CENTURY POVERTY -- Facts ... illustrative of the Great Inequality of the Taxes on Houses and Windows, shewing how unjustly and oppressively they bear upon the middle and industrious classes. London: printed for the United Parishes of Westminster, sold by Edward Dunn, [1833?]. 8° (228 x 143mm). Stitched. Goldsmiths' 28005; Kress C.3476. With 19 other pamphlets, early to mid 19th-century, on pauperism and finance, all 8°, including:

WESTERN, Charles Callis. Substance of the Speech... on the subject of the Corn Laws. London: for Budd and Calkin, 1814. (Some soiling.) Stitched. Goldsmiths' 20954 (2nd edition); Kress B.6421 -- RICHARDSON, William. Simple Measures by which the Recurrence of Famines may be prevented, and the Pressure of the Poor Laws greatly abated. [London: s.n.], 1816. Modern wrappers. From The Pamphleteer vol. VIII, no. 15.-- COURTENAY, Thomas Peregrine. Treatise upon the Poor Laws. London: John Murray, 1818. (Title browned, some spotting.) Stitched. Goldsmiths' 22191; Kress C.45 -- BRENTON, Edward Pelham. A Letter to the Committee of Management of the Society for the Suppression of Mendicity in Red Lion Square. London: C. Rice, 1830. (Title lightly browned.) Stitched. Brenton resigned as a committee member for the society, concluding that all beggars were impostors. Goldsmiths' 26349 -- An Address to the Labourers on the Subject of Destroying Machinery. London: Charles Knight for the S.D.U.K., 1830. (Some spotting and creasing.) Unbound. Kress C.2420 -- PALMER, J. Horsley. The Causes and Consequences of the Pressure upon the Money Market; with a statement of the action of the Bank of England from 1 October 1833 to 27 December 1836. London: Pelham Richardson, 1837. (Title lightly soiled, bent corners.) Stitched. Goldsmiths' 29961; Stephens p. 74: 'an able defence of the bank's line of action' -- GILMOUR, A. The Bath. In connection with the health of the working classes. Greenock: William Johnston and Son, 1845. Original blue printed wrappers. RARE. NOT IN COPAC.

More from Fine Printed Books and Manuscripts

View All
View All