The justice of the peace, and parish officer /

About this Binary

Label : Library of the Congregation of U.B. of the Borough of Bethlehem and its vicinity. #463-466.; Inscription : [illegible inscription in vol. 1].; Volumes 2-4 appear to have been released before volume 1. Cadell is listed as bookseller in 2-4, but as publisher and ""successor to Mr. Millar"" in volume 1.; ESTC,

Publisher
London : Printed by A. Strahan and M. Woodfall for T. Cadell,
Date Issued
1770
Language
English
Type
Subject (Geographic)
Identifier
CongLib 463 [1]; CongLib 464 [2]; CongLib 465 [3]; CongLib 466 [4]
moravian-church_392
Subject (LCSH)
Record Origin

Converted from Dublin Core to MODS during migration from CONTENTdm to Islandora

Citation


        
      
@misc{burn1770,
  title = {The justice of the peace, and parish officer /},
  author = {Burn, Richard,1709-1785. and Cadell, T,publisher. and Millar, A,publisher. and Congregation of U.B. of the Borough of Bethlehem and its vicinity, former and W. Strahan and M. Woodfall, printer.},
  year = {1770},
  publisher = {London : Printed by A. Strahan and M. Woodfall for T. Cadell,},
  abstract = {Label : Library of the Congregation of U.B. of the Borough of Bethlehem and its vicinity. \#463-466.; Inscription : [illegible inscription in vol. 1].; Volumes 2-4 appear to have been released before volume 1. Cadell is listed as bookseller in 2-4, but as publisher and ""successor to Mr. Millar"" in volume 1.; ESTC,},
  language = {English},
}

In Sub-Collections

1159 Items

Moravian Archives Collections

Lehigh University, in partnership with the Moravian Archives, was awarded a $90,000 grant under the Council on Libraries and Information Resources (CLIR) Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives Program funded by the Mellon Foundation. This two-year collaborative project, "The Moravian Community in the New World: The First 100 Years," processed collections documenting the material culture, religious values and cultural diversity of the Moravian community of Bethlehem from its founding in 1741 until the opening of the community to non-Moravians in 1844 and the subsequent incorporation of Bethlehem in 1851. Work on the project commenced in March 2010, and was completed in April 2012.

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