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Essays of Benjamin Franklin

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Essays of Benjamin Franklin

Monograph

Identifikator:
1752429486
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-127700
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Franklin, Benjamin http://d-nb.info/gnd/118534912
Title:
Essays of Benjamin Franklin
Place of publication:
New York
Publisher:
G. P. Putnam's Sons
Year of publication:
1927
Scope:
xi, 273 Seiten
Digitisation:
2021
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Essays of Benjamin Franklin
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • I. Plan for settling two western colonies in North America, with reason for the plan
  • II. The interest of Great Britain considered, with regard to her colonies and the acquisitions of Canada and Guadaloupe
  • III. Letter concerning the gratitude of America
  • IV. The examination of Dr. Benjamin Franklin in the british house of commons
  • V. Protective duties on imports and how they work
  • VI. Trade with England
  • VII. Causes of the american discontents before 1768
  • VIII. Positions to be examined, concerning national wealth
  • IX. To M. Dubourg
  • X. Plan for benefiting distant unprovided countries
  • XI. To Joseph Galloway
  • XII. Rules for reducing a Great Empire to a small one
  • XIII. An edict by the King of Prussia
  • XIV. Hints for conversation upon the subject of terms that might probably produce a durable ubion between Britain and the colonies
  • XV. To Mr. Strahan
  • XVI. To Joseph Priestley
  • XVII. The british nation, as it appeared to the colonists in 1775
  • XVIII. Vindication and offer from congress to parliament
  • XIX. Sketch of proposition for a peace
  • XX. Comparison of Great Britain and the United States in regard to the basis of credit in the two countries
  • XXI. To General Washington
  • XXII.From the count de Schaumbergh to the Baron Hohendorf, commanding the hessian troops in America
  • XXIII. To Gen. Washington
  • XXIV. A dialogue between Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Saxony, and America
  • XXV. To George Washington
  • XXVI. To Count de Vergennes
  • XXVII. To Benjamin Vaughan
  • XXVIII. To Mrs. Sarah Bache
  • XXIX. The international State of America; Being a true description of the interest and policy of that vast continent
  • XXX. To Bejamin Vaughan
  • XXXI.To Francis Maseres
  • XXXII. Proposales for consideration in the convention for forming the constitution of the United States
  • XXXIII. An adress to the public from the Pennsylvania Society for promoting the abolition of slavery, and the relief of free negroes unlawfully held in bondage

Full text

29 
2,500 acres of land under cabbage, and Middlesex 1,370 acres 
at the date of the annual returns. The total production of 
cabbage was estimated to be 410,000 tons, with an estimated 
vield of 112 tons per acre. 
Brussels Sprouts.—Bedford had no less than 8,900 acres out 
of a total of 21,300 acres of brussels sprouts, and Worcester 
had 2,700 acres. The remaining 45 per cent. of the area is dis- 
tributed throughout the country, with the largest proportion in 
bhe eastern and south-eastern counties. The yield is put at about 
4} tons per acre, giving a total production of 93,000 tons. 
Cauliflower and Broccoli.—Nearly 30 per cent. of the total 
acreage of cauliflower and broccoli on the land on 4th June is 
found in the home counties, chiefly in Kent, while a group 
of counties comprising Lancashire, Yorkshire (West Riding), 
Cheshire, Derby, Stafford and Nottingham, supplying the 
Northern industrial districts, have about 22 per cent. After 
Kent, however, the county with the greatest acreage is Corn- 
wall, and the crop is of particular importance in the latter 
county as supplies from Cornwall come on the market when 
Other supplies are small. Comparatively little cauliflower is 
grown on the vegetable farms of the eastern counties. The area 
cluded in the annual returns was 11,700 acres, but the area 
from which a crop was actually taken appears to have been over 
18,000 acres, owing to the clearing of some of the crop before 
the date of the returns. The total production during the year 
og estimated at 162,000 tons, the yield per acre being about 
Ons. 
Celery —Most of the celery produced in the country is grown 
I the counties round the Wash. Lincoln (Holland and Lindsey), 
Norfolk, Cambridge, Isle of Ely and Huntingdon together pro- 
vided no less than 2,890 acres, or nearly 60 per cent. of the total 
of 4,800 acres in 1925, while the adjacent groups, Comprising 
Lancashire, Yorkshire (East and West Ridings), Cheshire, Derby 
and Nottingham, had 1,360 acres. Only 540 acres of celery were 
8rown in the remaining 36 counties of England and the 13 counties 
of Wales. Over the whole country the total yield in 1925 wags 
estimated to be about 37,000 tons, with an average yield per acre 
of rather less than 8 tons. 
Rhubarb. —Yorkshire (West Riding) had 2,633 acres of the 
botal area of 6,246 acres of rhubarb in the country in 1925, and 
this county, Lancashire and Cheshire together had 56 per cent. 
of the total acreage, while the four home counties, Kent, Essex, 
Middlesex and Surrey together had 1,183 acres, or 19 per cent. 
The estimated yield per acre in 1925 was 92 tons, the total 
Production being over 60,000 tons.
	        

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The Agricultural Output of England and Wales 1925. Stat. Off., 1927.
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