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Letters concerning the trade and manufactures of Ireland, principally so far as the same relate to the making iron in this kingdom, and the manufacture and export of iron wares, in which certain facts and arguments set out by Lord Sheffield in his observations on the trade and present state of Ireland are examined ...

By: O'Brien, Lucius, Sir, 3rd Bart.Contributor(s): Holroyd, John Baker, 1st Earl of Sheffield. Observations on the manufacture, trade, and present state of Ireland.Publisher: Dublin : Luke White, 1785Description: [2], 125, [1]p. ; 8.°.Subject(s): Iron industry and trade -- Ireland
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Item type Current library Collection Class number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Reference material House of Lords Library - Palace Librarian's Room, Principal Floor Farnham Tracts VOL.212(4) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 26353-1001
Reference material House of Lords Library - Palace Upper (Harcourt) Corridor, Second Floor Peel Tracts VOL.171(1) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 26353-2001
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VOL.212(1) An essay concerning the establishment of a national bank in Ireland. VOL.212(2) The proposed system of trade with Ireland explained. VOL.212(3) Short observations on the necessity of admitting Dublin to participate in the corn export bounties, in order to remove a present great discouragement to the agriculture and corn trade of Ireland, particularly addressed to the landed interest of the kingdom. VOL.212(4) Letters concerning the trade and manufactures of Ireland, principally so far as the same relate to the making iron in this kingdom, and the manufacture and export of iron wares, in which certain facts and arguments set out by Lord Sheffield in his observations on the trade and present state of Ireland are examined ... VOL.212(5) Report of the Lords of the Committee of Council, appointed for the consideration of all matters relating to trade and foreign plantations, upon the two questions referred to them by His Majesty's Order in Council, of the 14th of January last; viz. I. Upon the propriety of reducing the duties payable in Great Britain on the importation of goods, the growth and manufacture of Ireland, to the same rate as the duties payable in Ireland on the importation of the like goods, the growth and manufacture of Great Britain. II. What references are now given to the importation of any article, the growth, produce, or manufacture of Ireland, by any duty or prohibition on the importation, use, or sale of the like articles from foreign parts; and how far it may be the interest of Great Britain in future to continue or alter the same. VOL.212(6) An enquiry how far the restrictions laid upon the trade of Ireland, by British acts of Parliament, are a benefit or disadvantage to the British dominions in general, and to England in particular, for whose separate advantage they were intended. With an address to the gentlemen concerned in the woollen commerce of Great Britain, and particularly to the members of Parliament for the severl counties, cities, and boroughs connected with those manufactures. To which is prefixed a letter to Sir John Duntze, Bart. Member of Parliament for Tiverton, on the same subject; in which the union between the two kingdoms is discussed. With extracts of such parts of the statutes as lay the trade of Ireland under those restrictions. By Sir James Caldwell, Bart.... VOL.212(7) A letter to the Earl of Carlisle, from William Eden, Esq. on the representations of Ireland, respecting a free trade.

Signed at the end: Lucius O'Brien.

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