Concept
Inclosures - Great Britain
Catalogue
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A political enquiry into the consequences of enclosing waste lands, and the causes of the present high price of butchers meat. Being the sentiments of a society of farmers in ----shire.
Date: M.DCC.LXXXV. [1785]- Books
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Reflections on the cruelty of inclosing common-field lands, particularly as it affects the church and poor; in a letter to the Lord Bishop of Lincoln. By a clergyman of that diocese.
Pretyman, George, 1750-1827.Date: MDCCXCVI. [1796]- Books
- Online
The true interest of the land-owners of Great Britain: or, the husband-men's essay. Containing A Short View of the Principal Impediments to Inclosing many of our Common Fields: and, Shewing the Great Necessity of removing these trivial Difficulties, which obstruct and hinder such vast Improvements. Together With the Best and Only Method of Rend'ring Inclosures more easily accomplish'd. For the benefit of the publick.
Date: MDCCXXXIV. [1734]- Books
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A sketch of a plan for reducing the present high price of corn and other provisions, and for securing plenty of both for the time to come. In a letter to a Member of Parliament.
Pamphilus.Date: MDCCLXXII. [1772]- Books
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Enclosures, a cause of improved agriculture, of plenty and cheapness of provisions, of population, and of both private and national wealth; Being an examination of two pamphlets, entitled, the one, A political enquiry into the consequences of enclosing waste lands, and the cause of the present high price of Butcher's meat, &c. The other, Cursory remarks upon enclosures, by a Country Farmer; together with some slight observations upon the report of the London Committee, appointed the 16th of July, 1786, to consider the causes of the present high prices of provisions. By the Rev. J. Howlett, vicar of Great Dunmow, Essex.
Howlett, John, 1731-1804.Date: MDCCLXXXVII. [1787]