Concept
Tariff on wool - Great Britain - Early works to 1800
Catalogue
- Books
- Online
Considerations on the duties laid in Ireland on wooll brought to England, humbly submitted to the Parliament.
Date: 1721?]- Books
- Online
Inland traders vindicated: Or, Some remarks on the Reverend Mr. Smith's scheme, intitled, Memoirs of wool: shewing the dangerous consequences which must ensue, should the government give a sanction to the said scheme. Also a brief discourse on good and evil, viz. The constitution of Britons, duty of representatives; duty of constituents; violencies of enemies; enormities of countrymen; mortality of cattle; use and liberty of speech and the press; and the mis-use and loss of either. By John Newball.
Newball, John, active 1730-1748.Date: MDCCXLVIII. [1748]- Books
- Online
An abstract of several clauses in an act of Parliament passed in the twelfth year of King George the Second, intituled, An act for taking off the duties upon woollen and bay yarn imported from Ireland to England, and for the more effectual preventing the Exportation of Wooll from Great Britain, and of Wooll, and Wooll manufactured, from Ireland to foreign Parts, so far as the same relate to the Exportation of Wooll, Woollen or Bay Yarn, Wooll-Sells, Shortings, Mortlings, Wooll-Flocks, Worsted Yarn, from Great Britain to foreign Parts, and of the said Goods, as also Cloth, Serge, Bays, Kerseys, Says, Frizes, Druggets, Cloth-Serges, Shalloons, Stuffs, and other Draperies, and Woollen Manufactures, or mixed with Wooll, or Wooll-Flocks, from Ireland, to foreign Parts (except certain Ports in England.),
Great Britain. Parliament.Date: M.DCC.XLII. [1742]- Books
- Online
Reasons to prove the necessity of the duty's being taken off Irish yarn imported to England; and securing wool and yarn from foreigners. Humbly offered to the consideration of Parliament, by the traders in the woollen manufactures.
Date: 1739]