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Boston May 12. 1772 |
Sir |
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I send under Mr. Dickinsons care the Law |
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Books wch I have lately recd from London, Note |
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of wch you have annexd. |
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ye most Hble Servt |
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Saml Eliot |
Mr Joseph Barnard bot of |
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Boston May 12. 1772
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Saml Eliot |
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1 Jacobs Law Dictionary |
L 1 "17 |
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1 Burrows Reports 3 Vols. |
4. 10 |
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1 Every Man his own Lawyer |
"5.6 |
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L6"12"6 |
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Adv. a 59 pCt. |
5.18.2 |
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L10"10.8 |
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(c) Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, Deerfield MA. All rights reserved.
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By the early 18th century, colonial legal processes had become more complex and the number of lawsuits increased. As an English colony, Americans relied upon English Common Law and statutes to help them write their own local laws and to guide their legal arguments. Some American lawyers studied law at the Inns of Court in London. Those that did not travel to England still read English legal treatises such as Burrows Reports or Blackstone's Commentaries. Joseph Barnard of Deerfield, Massachusetts, ordered several English law books through a Boston bookseller in 1772.
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List of Books bought by Joseph Barnard
creator Samuel Eliot |
date May 12, 1772 |
location Boston, Massachusetts |
height 12.0" |
width 7.5" |
process/materials manuscript, paper, ink |
item type Legal Documents/Invoice |
accession # #L99.173 |
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