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Observations, occasioned by the attempts made in England to effect the abolition of the slave trade
Shewing the manner in which Negroes are treated in the British colonies, in the West-Indies; and, also, some particular remarks on a letter addressed to the treasurer of the Society for effecting such abolition, from the Rev. Mr. Robert Boucher Nicholls, dean of Middleham -
An answer to the Rev. Mr. Clarkson's essay on the slavery and commerce of the human species
particularly the African; in a series of letters, from a gentleman in Jamaica, to his friend in London: wherein many of the mistakes and misrepresentations of Mr. Clarkson are pointed out, Both With Regard To The Manner in which that Commerce is carried on in Africa, And The Treatment of the Slaves in the West Indies. Shewing, At The Same Time, The Antiquity, Universality, and Lawfulness of Slavery, as as ever having been one of the States and Conditions of Mankind. By G. Francklyn, Esq -
Observations
occasioned by the attempts made in England to effect the abolition of the slave trade; shewing, the manner in which negroes are treated in the British Colonies In The West-Indies: and also, some particular remarks on a letter Addressed To The Treasurer Of The Society For Effecting Such Abolition, from the Rev. Robert Boucher Nicholls, Dean Of Middleham, By G. Francklyn, Esq -
Observations, occasioned by the attempts made in England to effect the abolition of the slave trade
shewing the manner in which Negroes are treated in the British colonies, in the West-Indies; and, also, some particular remarks on a letter addressed to the treasurer of the society for effecting such abolition, from the Rev. Mr. Robert Boucher Nicholls, Dean of Middleham -
Observations, occasioned by the attempts made in England to effect the abolition of the slave trade
shewing, the manner in which Negroes are treated in the British colonies in the West-Indies -
An answer to the Rev. Mr. Clarkson's Essay on the slavery and commerce of the human species, particularly the African
in a series of letters, from a gentleman in Jamaica, to his friend in London: wherein many of the mistakes and misrepresentations of Mr. Clarkson are pointed out