George Rose, Esq., one of the secretaries of the Treasury against William Williams, the printer and Richard Tattersall, horse-dealer and proprietor of the Morning-Post for a libel : in which he is charged with having used the terrors of the excise laws as an instrument to subvert the freedom of election : tried before the Right Honourable Lloyd Lord Kenyon and a special jury, at Westminster, on Monday, July 9, 1792.
1792
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Details
Title
George Rose, Esq., one of the secretaries of the Treasury against William Williams, the printer and Richard Tattersall, horse-dealer and proprietor of the Morning-Post for a libel : in which he is charged with having used the terrors of the excise laws as an instrument to subvert the freedom of election : tried before the Right Honourable Lloyd Lord Kenyon and a special jury, at Westminster, on Monday, July 9, 1792.
Added Corporate Author
Variant Title
At head of title: One hundred pounds damages.
Imprint
London : Printed for J. Owen and Symonds, 1792.
Description
23 pages, 1 unnumbered page.
Series
Making of modern law. Trials, 1600-1926.
Note
"Taken verbatim in short-hand."
Reproduction of the original from Harvard Law School Library.
Reproduction of the original from Harvard Law School Library.
Linked Resources
Language
English
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Gale, a part of Cengage Learning, 2007. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
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