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William Penn
a life -
William Pen turn'd conjurer
Or, The Quakers prophecy for the remaining part of this year 1709, and the beginning of the next. With remarks on a late famous conjunction, between a certain lady and her monkey. As also a dialogue between a citizens wife in Cheapside and her parrot. Dedicated to Aminadab Jourdan, author of the Quakers dry bottle -
Some memoirs of the religious life of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania
and one of the people called Quakers -
Johnson's Pennsylvania and New-Jersey almanac, 1804
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Johnson's Pennsylvania and New-Jersey almanac, for the year 1807
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Johnson's Pennsylvania and New-Jersey almanac, for the year 1809
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Johnson's Pennsylvania and New-Jersey almanack, 1805
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Johnson's Pennsylvania & New-Jersey almanac, for the year 1808
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An historical, geographical, commercial, and philosophical view of the United States of America, and of the European settlements in America and the West-Indies
By W. Winterbotham. In four volumes -
The rebuker rebuked in a brief answer to Caleb Pusey his scurrilous pamphet [sic], entituled, A rebuke to Daniel Leeds, &c
Wherein William Penn his Sandy foundation is fairly quoted, shewing that he calls Christ, the finite impotent creature. By Daniel Leeds -
A just and plain vindication of Sir William Keith, Bart. late governour of Pennsilvania
from the untruths and aspertions contained in a paper, printed at London, and now reprinting at Philadelphia, under the title of The case of the heir at law and executrix of the late proprietor of Pennsilvania, &c -
A calm appeal to the people of the state of Delaware
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An advertisement of an intended meeting
to be held by George Keith and his friends, at their usual meeting-place, in Turners-Hall, in Philpot-Lane, the 29th. day of this instant and present month called April, 1697. to begin about the 9th. hour. To which meeting William Penn, Thomas Ellwood, George Whitehead, John Penington, and these of the second days weekly meeting at Lombard-street, are justly desired to be present, to hear themselves recharged and proved guilty of these vile and gross errors and heresies, wherewith they have been formerly charged by George Keith, and proved guilty off [sic], at a meeting held at Turners-Hall, on the 11th, of the month called June, 1696 -
William Penn's last farewel to England
being an epistle containing a salutation to all faithful friends, a reproof to the unfaithful, and a visitation to the enquiring, in a solemn farewel to them all in the land of my nativity -
A winding-sheet for controversie ended
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The foxonian Quakers
dunces lyars and slanderers, proved out of George Fox's journal, and other scriblers; particularly B. C. his Quakers no apostates, or the hammerer defeated: amanuensis, as is said, to G.C. (as he sometime wrote himself) Gulielmus Calamus, alias, William Penn. Also a reply to W.C. (a church-man, the Quakers advocate) his Trepidantium malleus intrepidanter malleatus, &c. By Trepidantium Malleus -
A letter to George Keith, concerning his late religious differences with William Pen and his party. By a moderate churchman
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For G.P. or the author of a little book entituled, Just measures, in an epistle, &c. and to all approvers thereof
with a postscript and a few words to the yearly meeting in London -
A vindication of W.P. from the erronious [sic] and false testimony of Thomas Budd
being in answer to a sheet of his, entituled, A testimony for truth, against error -
A letter to Mr. Penn, with his answer
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The peoples ancient and just liberties asserted
in the tryal of William Penn, and William Mead, at the sessions held at the Old-Baily in London, the first, third, fourth and fifth of Sept. 70. against the most arbitrary procedure of that court -
The peoples antient and just liberties asserted, in the tryal of William Penn and William Mead, at the sessions held at the Old-Baily in London, the first, third, fourth and fifth of Sept. 70, against the most arbitrary procedure of that court
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The tryal of William Penn & William Mead for causing a tumult
at the sessions held at the Old Bailey in London the 1st, 3d, 4th, and 5th of September 1670 -
The peoples ancient and just liberties asserted
in the tryal of William Penn, and William Mead, at the sessions held at the Old-Baily in London, the first, third, fourth and fifth of Sept. 70. against the most arbitrary procedure of that court -
William Penn and the Quakers either impostors, or apostates
which they please: proved from their avowed principles, and contrary practices. By Trepidantium Malleus