James Hoey
Active Years
Min year: 1727, Max year: 1780, Max count: 51
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
- 1763: Books, printed by and for James Hoey, junior
- 1763: Just published by James Hoey, Junior. Article I. The ladies complete letter writer; teaching the art of inditing letters on overy subject that can call for their attention, as daughers, wives, mothers, relations, friends, acquaintance, or mistresses of families;
- 1766: Books printed by James Hoey, at the Mercury in Skinner-Row
- 1770: A catalogue of books, &c
- 1773: A catalogue of books, &c
- 1773: A catalogue of books, &c. sold by James Hoey, at the Mercury, in Skinner-Row, Dublin
As Publisher
- 1729: Sir Courtly Nice
- 1730: A modest praise of pritty Miss Smalley
- 1730: The ladies diary
- 1730: A letter from Greenwich
- 1730: [W]hipping Tom
- 1731: A book of rates
- 1731: The state of innocence: and fall of man
- 1731: Absalom and Achitophel
- 1731: A picture of the age
- 1731: The critical minute
- 1731: The gentleman's miscellany. In verse and prose
- 1731: Friendship in death
- 1732: The craftsman's poems on several occasions
- 1733: The gentleman's pocket farrier improv'd
- 1733: The drapier's miscellany
- 1733: The dublin magazine
- 1733: The true-born English-man
- 1733: The ladies diary
- 1733: The drapier's miscellany. Consisting of several scarce pieces of that celebrated author; some of which were never in any collection before. I. A prologue spoke by Mr. Elrington
- 1733: Full instructions for country gentlemen, farmers, grasiers, farriers, carriers, sportsmen, &c
- 1735: The Weekly amusement: or, Universal magazine
- 1735: A picture of the age
- 1735: The state of innocence: and fall of man
- 1735: The Weekly amusement: or, Universal magazine
- 1735: The pig, and the mastiff
- 1735: The man of taste. A comedy
- 1752: Examples of the interposition of providence in the detection and punishment of murder
- 1753: An account of the life and character of the late Rev. John Murphy, D.D
- 1754: An index to mankind
- 1763: The chaplet of chearfulness
- 1764: Examples of the interposition of providence in the detection and punishment of murder
As Printer
- 1727: Absalom and achitophel
- 1727: To all well wishers of their country. An humble enquiry into the true state of the case between debtor and creditor·
- 1728: The splendid shilling
- 1729: The censor or, Observations on the prospect of a peace, and the conduct of our treaties abroad, occasioned by the last craftsman, relating to the succession of Don Carlos, to the Dukedom of Tuscany, &c. By the author of the Enquiry
- 1729: Absalom and Achitophel
- 1729: Sir Courtly Nice
- 1729: The drinking match
- 1730: The Dublin journal
- 1730: The Dublin journal
- 1730: A modest praise of pritty Miss Smalley
- 1730: The complaint
- 1730: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1730: The spinster's estimate
- 1730: A letter from Greenwich
- 1730: The ladies diary
- 1730: The life and character of James Butler
- 1730: [W]hipping Tom
- 1730: The Dublin journal
- 1731: The gentleman's miscellany. In verse and prose
- 1731: The state of innocence: and fall of man
- 1731: Absalom and Achitophel
- 1731: Friendship in death
- 1731: A picture of the age
- 1731: A book of rates
- 1731: The critical minute
- 1732: His Majesty's most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Thursday the first day of June, 1732
- 1732: An elegy on Dicky and Dolly
- 1732: The craftsman's poems on several occasions
- 1732: The metamorphoses of the town
- 1733: The drapier's miscellany
- 1733: The true-born English-man
- 1733: Rules proper to be observed by the receivers employ'd by the nobility and gentry of Ireland
- 1733: To the Right Honourable Lady Mary, Vis. T---y
- 1733: A letter to the Right Honourable Humphry French, Esq; present Lord Mayor of the City of Dublin
- 1733: The gentleman's pocket farrier improv'd
- 1733: Full instructions for country gentlemen, farmers, grasiers, farriers, carriers, sportsmen, &c
- 1733: The drapier's miscellany. Consisting of several scarce pieces of that celebrated author; some of which were never in any collection before. I. A prologue spoke by Mr. Elrington
- 1733: The gift of Pallas. A poem. Occasioned by a fine piece of linnen lately sent from Ireland, as a present to Her Royal Highness the Princess Ann
- 1733: The ladies diary
- 1733: The dublin magazine
- 1735: The Weekly amusement: or, Universal magazine
- 1735: A picture of the age
- 1735: The man of taste. A comedy
- 1735: The Weekly amusement: or, Universal magazine
- 1735: The pig, and the mastiff
- 1735: The state of innocence: and fall of man
- 1735: Woman's revenge
- 1737: The flowers of Parnassus: or, The lady's miscellany, for the year M.DCC.XXXVII
- 1738: The carpenter's plain and exact rule
- 1738: The english pleader
- 1739: The complete pocket companion; or, universal almanack
- 1739: The enthusiasm
- 1741: A comi-Farci-Operatical humorous and political burlesque scene between the King and Queen of Spain
- 1745: The cobler's poem
- 1745: The vintner trick'd: or, the white fox chas'd
- 1745: The vintner trick'd: or The white fox chas'd
- 1745: Deborah. An oratorio: or Sacred drama
- 1745: The History of the Earl of Westmorland
- 1746: Deborah
- 1746: Esther an oratorio: or, Sacred drama. The musick compos'd by Mr. Handel. The words by Dr. Arbuthnot
- 1747: Deborah an oratorio, or Sacred drama
- 1747: Deborah an oratorio: or, Sacred drama
- 1748: A catalogue of a curious, scarce and valuable collection of books, belonging to Ambrose Philips Esq
- 1748: Ladies amusement: being a new collection of songs, ballads, &c. with symphonies and thorough-bass. The music by John Frederick Lampe.
- 1748: Judas Maccabæus
- 1749: The universal coquet: a fable
- 1749: Deborah
- 1749: The plaint of the Blessed Virgin
- 1750: The chronological remembrancer
- 1750: The gentleman's hour glass
- 1750: The builder's guide, or The carpenter's plain and exact rule
- 1751: The modern fine lady[.]
- 1751: Youth's general director, or Hoey's new instructor
- 1751: Judas Maccabæus
- 1752: A new geography of Ireland
- 1752: A full and true account, of a barbarous and inhumane murder, committed on the body of Mrs. Oldham, by her foot-man Andrew Vail
- 1752: The Covent-Garden journal
- 1753: An account of the life and character of the late Rev. John Murphy, D.D
- 1753: The Covent-Garden journal: or, the Censor
- 1753: Dissertations on the antient history of Ireland
- 1753: The young grammarian's magazine of words
- 1753: The labyrinth
- 1754: The history of a young lady of distinction
- 1754: A manual of modern geography according to the latest discoveries, and improvements
- 1754: The young man's best companion
- 1754: An index to mankind
- 1755: Eliza
- 1755: The history of Sir Harry Herald and Sir Edward Haunch
- 1755: The adventures of Mr. Thomas Pellow
- 1756: A journal of a voyage to Lisbon
- 1756: The merry fellow; or, Jovial companion
- 1757: Epistles for ladies
- 1757: The Muses holiday, or The polite songster
- 1757: The merry fellow; or, jovial companion: being the wit's pocket-book and entertaining magazine of Pleasant Adventures Brilliant Jests, Comic Tules, Smart Puns, Droll Quibbles, English Bulls. Exquisice Epigrams Humorous Epitaphs Ingenious Novels, Recreative Riddles Keen Repairees, Jocund Whims, Risible Jokes, Amorous Pastorals Amusing Fables, Excellent Poems, Diverting Stories, Facetious Songs, Chearful Dialogues, Arch Questions, Ludicious Speeches, Gay Letters, Witty Reflexions, Characters, &c. &c. The whole designed, To prevent the Spleen, banish Melancholy, and expel from the Heart those malignant and sullen Humours which destroy the Harmony of social Life. By Luke Lively, gent
- 1759: The anatomist
- 1759: A second letter to a late noble commander of the British forces in Germany
- 1759: The compleat farmer
- 1759: The genteel philosopher
- 1762: A treatise on the virtues and efficacy of a crust of bread Eat Early in a Morning Fasting
- 1762: Rules for bad horsemen
- 1763: The country seat
- 1763: King Arthur: or, The British worthy
- 1763: The chaplet of chearfulness
- 1764: The hibernian warbler
- 1765: Every young man's companion; or Youth's new general director
- 1766: Institutes or, Principles of health
- 1768: Medical advice to the consumptive and asthmatic people of England
- 1769: The amusing instructor
- 1770: The economist
- 1771: The life of Francois de Salignac de la Motte Fenelon, archbishop and Duke of Cambray, author of Telemachus, &c. Written by the Chevalier Ramsey
- 1772: The universal letter-writer; or, New art of polite correspondence
- 1773: The golden cabinet: being the laboratory, or handmaid to the arts
- 1773: The Wag: or, Life of humour, and the soul of whim
- 1774: A treatise on English shooting
- 1775: The way to be rich and respectable
- 1776: Hoey's Dublin mercury, and public advertiser
- 1776: Hoey's Dublin mercury, and public advertiser
- 1776: Hoey's Dublin mercury, and public advertiser
- 1778: Congratulatory ode, to General Sir William Howe, on his return from America
- 1780: The economist
As Bookseller
Sun Dec 10 08:45:49 CST 2023