Cartwright, John, 1740-1824
Cartwright, John
John Cartwright English naval officer and political reformer
John Cartwright
קרטרייט, ג'ון, 1740-1824
Cartwright, John, landeigenaar, majoor, politiek hervormer, radikaal, 1740-1824
VIAF ID: 15552299 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/15552299
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Cartwright, John
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cartwright, John ‡d 1740-1824
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cartwright, John, ‡d 1740-1824
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cartwright, John, ‡d 1740-1824
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Cartwright
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Cartwright ‡c English naval officer and political reformer
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (15)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Address to the electors of Westminster | |
American independence, the interest and glory of Great-Britain. | |
American independence, with a copious appendix; a postscript. | |
An appeal : on the subject of the English constitution | |
Arguments to prove | |
A bill of free and sure defence, or, An act for constitutional revival of the county power, or, Proper militia of the realm | |
The Commonwealth in danger. | |
The comparison: in which mock reform, half reform, and constitutional reform are considered. | |
The constitutional defence of England, internal and external. By John Cartwright, Esq | |
A declaration of the rights of Englishmen | |
A defence delivered at Warwick, third of August, 1820 | |
England's aegis, or, The military energies of the constitution | |
The English constitution produced and illustrated | |
An extra number of The black dwarf containing the last public legacy of Major Cartwright to the reformers. | |
Give us our rights!, or, A letter to the present electors of Middlesex and the metropolis : shewing what those rights are, and that according to a just and equal representation, Middlesex and the metropolis are intitled to have fifty members in the Commons' house of Parliament ... | |
Internal evidence : or an inquiry how far truth and the Christian religion have been consulted by the author of Thoughts on a Parliamentary reform | |
Letter, &c | |
A letter from John Cartwright, Esq. to a friend at Boston, in the county of Lincoln; and to all other commoners who have associated in support of the constitution | |
A letter to Edmund Burke, Esq : controverting the principles of American government, laid down in his lately published speech on American taxation, delivered in the House of Commons, on the 19th of April, 1774 | |
A letter to the Duke of Newcastle, lord lieutenant of the county of Nottingham, auditor of the exchequer, &c., &c., &c., respecting His Grace's conduct in the disposal of commissions in the militia: together with some remarks touching the French revolution; a form of Parliament in Great Britain, and the royal proclamation of the 21st of May. To which is added an appendix, containing an effectual plan for providing navy timber; opposed to the dangerous and unprofitable system of cultivating the public forests under the management of officers of the crown. | |
A letter to the Earl of Abingdon : discussing a position relative to a Fundamental Right of the Constitution: Contained in his Lordship's thoughts on the letter of Edmund Burke, Esq. to the sheriffs of Bristol. By John Cartwright | |
A letter to the High Sheriff of the county of Lincoln, respecting the bills of Lord Grenville and Mr. Pitt, for altering the criminal law of England, respecting treason and sedition. Including a copy of the author's petition to the Honourable House of Commons, presented by Mr. Fox, on Wednesday the 25th of November, 1795. By John Cartwright, Esq | |
Letters to the deputies of the associated and petitioning counties, cities, and towns; on the means necessary to a reformation of Parliament. By Major John Cartwright | |
Letters to the Lord Mayor, 1817?: | |
The life and correspondence of Major Cartwright : in two volumes. | |
The memorial of Common-Sense, upon the present crisis between Great-Britain and America | |
New preamble and explanatory table of contents of a bill of rights and liberties, or an act for a constitutional reform of Parliament | |
The postscript to Major Cartwright's reply to Soame Jenyns, Esq : humbly recommended to the perusal of Lord North's admirers, previous to his Lordship's next speech against a parliamentary reform | |
Reasons for reformation | |
Six letters to the Marquis of Tavistock, on a reform of the Commons House of Parliament, discussing the best mode of uniting policy with principle | |
A sketch of the River Exploits and the east end of Lieutenant's Lake in Newfoundland. | |
The state of the nation in a series of letters to His Grace the Duke of Bedford | |
Stockton and Auckland canal | |
A summary of a treatise by Major Cartwright, entitled The people's barrier against undue influence: or the Commons' House of Parliament, according to the constitution | |
Take your choice! : Representation and respect: imposition and contempt. Annual Parliaments and liberty: long Parliaments and slavery | |
[to Sir Francis Burdett] |