Thomas Neale
Active Years
Min year: 1643, Max year: 1786, Max count: 15
As Author
- 1643: A treatise of direction, how to travell safely, and profitably into forraigne countries
- 1643: A treatise of direction, how to travell safely, and profitably into forraigne countries
- 1664: A treatise of direction, how to travell safely, and profitably into forraign countries
- 1692: To preserve the East-India trade
- 1693: A translation of the articles
- 1693: A profitable adventure to the fortunate, and can be unfortunate to none
- 1693: Proposals of an adventure for the fortunate in fifty thousand tickets
- 1693: (Numb. I.) The prizes drawn at the profitable adventure to the fortunate, in Free-man's-Yard Cornhill, on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, the 1. 2, and 3. of this instant November, 1693
- 1694: Suppose for the year 1695.
- 1694: Two several proposals made by Tho. Neale and Dalby Thomas, Esqs; for exchanging the payments of one pound yearly upon the unbenefitted tickets in the late million adventure, so as to make all the tickets so exchang'd to be payable together in some one or two years of the sixteen
- 1694: The profitable adventure to the fortunate. Erected by Thomas Neale, Esq; groom porter to their Majesties
- 1694: A profitable adventure to the fortunate, and can be unfortunate to none
- 1694: A million lottery was proposed in print by T.N. Nov. 15. 1694. And now for raising a fond of 140000 l. yearly for this million lottery, a three months tax of 70000 l. a month, and the duty continued on salt, will do it
- 1694: The profitable adventure to the fortunate: lately begun by Thomas Neale, Esq; their Majesties groom-porter
- 1694: The profitable adventure to the fortunate: lately begun by Thomas Neale, Esq; their Majesties groom-porter. Having been reported in town
- 1694: Suppose for the year 1695. wanting five or six millions
- 1694: A profitable adventure to the fortunate, and can be unfortunate to none
- 1694: A proposal for raising a million on a fund of interest
- 1694: A way how to supply the King's occasions with two millions of money, on a fond of 120000 l. yearly, which is at 6 only per cent. without any prejudice to His Majesties present revenue, or compulsion to those that shall receive it, but rather a convenience to both
- 1695: A further account of the proposals made by Thomas Neale and Dalby Thomas, Esquires
- 1695: A way humbly proposed on a fund of 200000 l. yearly (if seven years given) to take in one million of the now currant clipt money
- 1695: A way how to supply the King's occasions with two millions of money
- 1695: About mending the coyn
- 1695: To preserve the East-India trade. The contents of a paper set out by T.N. the 10th of October, 1695
- 1695: A way how to supply the King's occasions with two millions of money
- 1695: A proposal concerning the coin
- 1695: To preserve the East-India trade
- 1695: A second profitable adventure to the fortunate
- 1695: A profitable and golden adventure
- 1695: How unpassable money may pass in an adventure now set out by Thomas Neale, Esq; master and worker of his Majesty's mint
- 1695: About mending the coyn.
- 1695: The national land-bank, together with money
- 1695: A profitable and golden adventure
- 1695: The second drawing of the blank tickets of the million adventure
- 1696: A way to make plenty of money for all sorts of occasions, and to pay the debts of the publick, with the least charge that it can be, and yet with ease, justice and honour, if people would think so, and accept this proposal; but if it so be (as I truly believe) they will not and do after repent, that they may have nothing to blame but themselves, for not timely petitioning for it, is the cause now of printing this
- 1696: A second profitable adventure to the fortunate
- 1696: A second profitable adventure to the fortunate
- 1696: The contents of a paper for preserving the East-India trade
- 1696: For supplying five milions of money. Note
- 1696: A proposal for amending the silver coins of England
- 1697: The best way of disposing of hammer'd money and plate
- 1697: The best way of disposing of hammer'd money and plate
- 1697: Fourteen hundred thousand pound, made into one hundred and forty thousand bills, of ten pound apiece, to be given out for so much, as occasion requires, and to be paid as chance shall determine in course, out of 1515000 l. to be raised on a duty on malt, the odd 115000 l. being left to be only made use of to pay interest, premium and charge
- 1697: The best way of disposing of hammer'd money and plate
- 1704: An abstract of the sea-laws, as established in most Kingdoms of Europe, but more particularly in England and Scotland
- 1706: Eny[p]nion: or The vision, in imitation of the latter-part of the VIth book of Virgil
- 1748: The ruinous state of the parish of Manea in the Isle of Ely, with the causes and remedy of it, humbly represented in a letter to Matt. Robinson Morris, Esq; Lord of the Manor of Coveney with Manea. By Thomas Neale, M. A. Rector of the said Parish
- 1756: A practical treatise on the venereal disease
- 1775: An account of the Swift grab's track from Bencoolen towards the Seychelles islands, in which she fell in with the shoals and islands of Chagos, ... By Captain Thomas Neale,
- 1786: Practical observations on venereal complaints, or, A plain, easy, safe, and certain method of cure
Thu Jun 08 17:32:38 CDT 2023