Volume III : page 226

delphia; by Luther Martin, Esquire, Attorney-General of Maryland, and one of the delegates in the said Convention. Together with a Letter to the Hon. Thomas C. Deye, Speaker of the House of Delegates, an Address to the citizens of the United States, and some Remarks relative to a standing army, and a Bill of Rights . . . Philadelphia: printed by Eleazer Oswald, m,dcc,lxxxviii . [1788.]
JK171 .M3
First Edition. 8vo. 51 leaves: A-M 4, N 3; the dedication to the Honorable Thomas Cockey Deye dated from Baltimore, January 27, 1788.
Sabin 44897.
Evans 21220.
Ford, Bibliography of the Constitution, 119.
For Luther Martin, see no. 3225.
[3015]
Pinkney’s observñs on the plan of gov ( ~m )t submitted to the fed l. conventñ.
? J. 5. PINCKNEY, Charles.
Observations on the Plan of Government submitted to the Federal Convention, in Philadelphia, on the 28th of May, 1787. By Mr. Charles Pinckney, delegate from the State of South-Carolina. Delivered at different times in the course of their discussions. New-York: printed by Francis Childs, n.d. [ 1787.]
JK148 .P5 A4
First Edition. 4to. 14 leaves.
Sabin 62895.
Evans 20649.
This issue not in Ford, who cites only the issue with the author’s name on the title printed as The Hon. Charles Pinckney, Esq. L.L.D.
This pamphlet is now rebound in half morocco; the leaves have been at one time folded, probably to fit into an octavo volume.
Charles Pinckney, 1757-1824, a native of South Carolina, was Governor of that state over a period of years. He was a Federalist in politics for a time, but later became a Jeffersonian Republican. In 1801 he was appointed by Jefferson minister to Spain. Pinckney married the daughter of Henry Laurens, q.v.
[3016]
Jay’s address to the people of N. York.
6. [JAY, John.]
An Address to the people of the State of New-York, on the subject of the Constitution, agreed upon at Philadelphia, the 17th of September, 1787. New-York: printed by Samuel and John Loudon, printers to the State, n.d. [ 1787.]
JK171 .J4
First Edition. 4to. 10 leaves: [ ] 2, B-E 2, signed at the end: A Citizen of New-York.
Sabin 35830.
Evans 21175.
Ford 106.
John Jay, 1754-1829, at the time of writing this pamphlet, held office as Secretary of Foreign Affairs.
[3017]
Monroe’s observñs on the Constñ.
J. 7. [MONROE, James.]
Some Observations on the Constitution, &c. Without name of place or printer, n.d. [? Petersburg: Hunter and Prentis? 1788.]
25.7 5125
4to. 11 leaves, lacks the first leaf which may have had a title, the first present leaf is numbered [3] and has a caption title; list of Errata at the end.
Not in Sabin.
Evans 21263.
Not in Ford.
Cronin and Wise, 89.
Rebound in half morocco, the leaves folded, probably in order to fit into an octavo volume.
On the first leaf, below the caption title, Jefferson has written: by Col o. James Monroe . Corrections and annotations in ink occur in the text by Monroe.
This is probably the pamphlet referred to by Monroe in a letter to Jefferson written from Fredericksburg on July 12, 1788, when the latter was in Paris:

Volume III : page 226

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