Dodd, Anne
VIAF ID: 71283786 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/71283786
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Dodd, Anne
- 100 1 _ ‡a Dodd, Anne
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (10)
Works
Title | Sources |
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British inquisition displayed | |
A description of the Windward Passage and Gulf of Florida, with the course of the British trading-ships to and from the island of Jamaica : also an account of the trade-winds and of the variable winds and currents on the coasts thereabouts at different seasons of the year : illustrated with a chart of the coast of Florida and of the islands of Bahama, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and the adjacent smaller islands, shoals, rocks, and other remarkable things in the course of the navigation in the West-Indies, whereby is demonstrated the precariousness of those voyages to the West-India merchants and the impossibility of their homeward-bound ships keeping clear of the Spanish Guarda Costa's, the whole very necessary for the information of such as never were in those parts of the world : to which are added, some proposals for the better securing of the British trade and navigation to and from the West-Indies ... : to which is now annexed, a very remarkable letter, containing a succinct account of the galleons, flota, flotilla, and register-ships : as also of the ports of Havana, Porto Bello, Carthagena, Vera Cruz, Buenos-Ayres, and the coasts of the Caracca's : interspers'd with various curious remarks on the commerce of the Spaniards in America. | |
The harlot's progress, or, the humours of Drury-Lane, 1732: | |
Infants church-membership and baptism, 1736: | |
The London-citizen exceedingly injured, or, A British inquisition display'd : in an account of the unparallel'd case of a citizen of London, bookseller to the late Queen, who was in a most unjust and arbitrary manner sent on the 23d of March last, 1738, by one Robert Wightman, a mere stranger, to a private madhouse : containing, I. An account of the said citizen's barbarous treatment in Wright's private madhouse on Bethnal-Green for nine weeks and six days, and of his rational and patient behaviour whilst chained, handcuffed, straight-wastecoated and imprisoned in the said madhouse, where he probably would have been continued or died under his confinement, if he had not most providentially made his escape, in which he was taken up by the constable and watchmen, being suspected to be a felon, but was unchain'd and set at liberty by Sir John Barnard, the then Lord Mayor : II. As also an account of the illegal steps, false calumnies, wicked contrivances, bold and desperate designs of the said Wightman, in order to escape justice for his crimes, with some account of his engaging Dr. Monro and others as his accomplices : the whole humbly addressed to the Legislature, as plainly shewing the absolute necessity of regulating private madhouses in a more effectual manner than at present. | |
A narrative of the barbarous and unheard of murder of Mr. John Hayes, 1726: | |
A true account of the life and writings of Thomas Burnett, Esq., 1715: |