J. Wilford
Active Years
Min year: 1721, Max year: 1741, Max count: 93
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1730: Blunt to Walpole
- 1730: The true crisis: shewing the name, origin and power of parliaments
- 1730: A letter to the Craftsman from Eustace Budgell Esq
- 1730: The progress of wit
- 1730: A letter to The craftsman from Eustace Budgell Esq
- 1730: A letter to the Craftsman from Eustace Budgell Esq
- 1730: A letter to the Craftsman from Eustace Budgell, Esq
- 1730: A letter to The craftsman from Eustace Budgell Esq
- 1731: The duties of the closet. Being an earnest exhortation to private devotion
- 1731: The religion of reason: a poem
- 1732: A thought relating to education
- 1732: A plan of education for a young prince
- 1732: The tryals of Jeremy Tooley, William Arch, and John Clauson, three private soldiers. For the murder of Mr. John Dent, constable
- 1733: An essay on man
- 1733: Remarks upon a pamphlet, called the report of the committee, &c. of the Parish of St Botolph's without Aldersgate
- 1733: A letter to the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole, concerning the election of a King of Poland, the claim of King Stanislaus, the views of the House of Austria, and the interest of Great-Britain. By Charles Forman, Esq;
- 1733: The Church of England man's compendium
- 1733: The oxford toast's answer to the Terr? filius's speech
- 1733: Observations upon the laws of excise
- 1733: The norfolk scheme: or a letter to William Pulteney, Esq
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: The scarborough miscellany: for the year 1734
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: Historical remarks on the second volume of Bishop Burnet's History of his own time
- 1734: The Scarborough miscellany
- 1734: The Oxford Act, A.D. 1733
- 1734: Select trials for murders
- 1734: An essay on man
- 1734: Back-gammon: or, The battle of the friars
- 1735: Letters from the Marchioness de M***
- 1735: A letter from a friend to Samuel Chandler
- 1735: The regulation of Easter
- 1735: The oxford Act, A.D. 1733
- 1735: The duties of the closet
- 1736: An essay on man
- 1736: Easter still recoverable: or, a method proposed for rectifying that great and fundamental solemnity
- 1736: Prodromos ekleipsis
- 1737: A speech without-doors, addressed to the national creditors for the redeemables at 4 l. per cent
- 1737: Reasons for a war against Spain
- 1738: Masonry farther dissected; or, more secrets of that mysterious society reveal'd. Faithfully Englished from the French original just publish'd at Paris, by the Permission and Privilege of M. De Harraut, Lieutenant-General of Police. With explanatory notes (both serious and comical) by the translator. Likewise, an appendix, wherein are contain'd, I. The Free-Masons Reception in Foreign Parts. II. The Free-Masons Apology, as publish'd at Paris. III. Free-Masons a dangerous Society; from the Craftsman.
- 1738: Reasons for a war against Spain
- 1738: The tryal of John Peter Zenger
- 1739: Scurrility
As Printer
As Bookseller
Tue Nov 28 10:31:15 CST 2023