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                    <text>Memoirs of the Chevalier de St. George: with some private passages of the life of the late King James II. never before publish’d.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>Memoirs of the Chevalier de St. George: with some private passages of the life of the late King James II. never before publish’d.</text>
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                <text>Chevalier de St. George = James Francis Edward, the Old Pretender.&#13;
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://ocul-gue.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01OCUL_GUE/1gg5hgs/alma9923363933505154"&gt;s0270b07&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>James, II, King of England, 1633-1701 -- Early works to 1800.&#13;
ames, Prince of Wales, 1688-1766 -- Early works to 1800.&#13;
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Dr. James Dinwiddie (1746-1815) was a Scottish scientist, astronomer, itinerant lecturer, and natural philosopher during the latter half of the Scottish Enlightenment. Born at Kirkland, parish of Tinwald, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, he attended the Dumfries Academy before entering the University of Edinburgh, where he received an M.A. in 1778. After graduating, Dinwiddie first taught mathematics in Dumfries but soon after began his career as an itinerant lecturer, science popularizer, and experimental demonstrator travelling throughout Ireland, England, and Scotland.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In 1792, Dinwiddie received an honorary Doctor of Law degree from the University of Edinburgh and was invited to be a member of a British delegation to Beijing under the leadership of Lord George Macartney (1737-1806). The 100-member delegation was Britain’s first diplomatic mission to China and included politicians, physicians, artists, scholars, a group of scientists led by Dinwiddie, botanical gardeners, Chinese Catholic priests (as interpreters), as well as secretaries, attachés, valets, and a military escort.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Macartney Embassy’s main objective was to open trade with China. To encourage the Chinese to buy British goods, the delegation sought to demonstrate the efficacy and prowess of British science and technology and brought with them a number of gifts, including clocks, telescopes, weapons, and a planetarium, which took 18 days for Dinwiddie to assemble. Dinwiddie was also tasked with performing scientific demonstrations, including with a diving bell and hot air balloon.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;After the embassy in China failed, Dinwiddie found employment with the East India Company in &lt;span&gt;Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), &lt;/span&gt;India in 1794. He performed public experimental shows, acted as an advisor on potential manufactures, worked as a private tutor, and lectured on natural and experimental philosophy at Fort William. He was a pioneer in galvanism, and his time in colonial India signalled the emergence of public science in the region.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Dinwiddie left India in 1806 and returned to England. He was elected to the Royal Institution in 1810 and was a member of the Committee of Mathematics, Mechanics, and Mechanical Inventions. He died in North London in 1815.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Dinwiddie fonds at the University of Guelph contains 110 pieces of correspondence of Dr. James Dinwiddie from 1778 until his death in 1815. The letters illustrate the more practical aspects of Dr. Dinwiddie’s professional and personal life, his travels, and business affairs. The payment of lectures, inquires about books, the lending of money, and discussion of experiments highlights the commonplace elements in his life.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Dinwiddie letters were acquired through a donation by Philip Melanson of Sackville, Nova Scotia in May 1989 and by his wife, Yvonne Melanson, in May 1997.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="https://memoryns.ca/james-dinwiddie-fonds"&gt;Dalhousie University Archives&lt;/a&gt; has a much more extensive collection of Dinwiddie papers, including correspondence, journals, lecture notes, scientific journals, notebooks, early experiments, manuscripts, printed material, and also the Journal of W.J. Proudfoot, Dinwiddie's grandson.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The digitization of the Dinwiddie fonds made possible with the support of Professor Kevin James and the Scottish Studies Department.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Digitization: Josh Lehman&lt;br /&gt;Project Leads: Graham Burt, Ashley Shifflett McBrayne&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                <text>Memorandum regarding the manufacture of saltpetre in the Northern Circars delivered to Lord Hobart 19 march 1796 [extract of a letter from Dr. Keyne to Mr. Ross Smaulcottah, 10 March 1796]</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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James II, King of England, 1633-1701</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>National gratitude due for national mercies. A thanksgiving sermon preached at Peckham in Surry, October 9, 1746. On occasion of the total defeat of the rebels at Culloden By the King’s Forces, under the Command of His Royal Highness William Duke of Cumberland, April 16, 1746. By John Milner, D. D.</text>
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                <text>London : printed for the author; and sold by J. Noon, at the White Hart in Cheapside, near Mercer’s Chapel; J. Waugh, at the Turk’s Head in Gracechurch Street; and R. Davis, at the Corner of Sackville Street, Piccadilly</text>
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                <text>Jacobite Rebellion, 1745-1746.&#13;
Culloden, Battle of, 1746 -- Sermons.</text>
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                  <text>&lt;p&gt;Dr. James Dinwiddie (1746-1815) was a Scottish scientist, astronomer, itinerant lecturer, and natural philosopher during the latter half of the Scottish Enlightenment. Born at Kirkland, parish of Tinwald, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, he attended the Dumfries Academy before entering the University of Edinburgh, where he received an M.A. in 1778. After graduating, Dinwiddie first taught mathematics in Dumfries but soon after began his career as an itinerant lecturer, science popularizer, and experimental demonstrator travelling throughout Ireland, England, and Scotland.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In 1792, Dinwiddie received an honorary Doctor of Law degree from the University of Edinburgh and was invited to be a member of a British delegation to Beijing under the leadership of Lord George Macartney (1737-1806). The 100-member delegation was Britain’s first diplomatic mission to China and included politicians, physicians, artists, scholars, a group of scientists led by Dinwiddie, botanical gardeners, Chinese Catholic priests (as interpreters), as well as secretaries, attachés, valets, and a military escort.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Macartney Embassy’s main objective was to open trade with China. To encourage the Chinese to buy British goods, the delegation sought to demonstrate the efficacy and prowess of British science and technology and brought with them a number of gifts, including clocks, telescopes, weapons, and a planetarium, which took 18 days for Dinwiddie to assemble. Dinwiddie was also tasked with performing scientific demonstrations, including with a diving bell and hot air balloon.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;After the embassy in China failed, Dinwiddie found employment with the East India Company in &lt;span&gt;Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), &lt;/span&gt;India in 1794. He performed public experimental shows, acted as an advisor on potential manufactures, worked as a private tutor, and lectured on natural and experimental philosophy at Fort William. He was a pioneer in galvanism, and his time in colonial India signalled the emergence of public science in the region.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Dinwiddie left India in 1806 and returned to England. He was elected to the Royal Institution in 1810 and was a member of the Committee of Mathematics, Mechanics, and Mechanical Inventions. He died in North London in 1815.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Dinwiddie fonds at the University of Guelph contains 110 pieces of correspondence of Dr. James Dinwiddie from 1778 until his death in 1815. The letters illustrate the more practical aspects of Dr. Dinwiddie’s professional and personal life, his travels, and business affairs. The payment of lectures, inquires about books, the lending of money, and discussion of experiments highlights the commonplace elements in his life.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Dinwiddie letters were acquired through a donation by Philip Melanson of Sackville, Nova Scotia in May 1989 and by his wife, Yvonne Melanson, in May 1997.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="https://memoryns.ca/james-dinwiddie-fonds"&gt;Dalhousie University Archives&lt;/a&gt; has a much more extensive collection of Dinwiddie papers, including correspondence, journals, lecture notes, scientific journals, notebooks, early experiments, manuscripts, printed material, and also the Journal of W.J. Proudfoot, Dinwiddie's grandson.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The digitization of the Dinwiddie fonds made possible with the support of Professor Kevin James and the Scottish Studies Department.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Digitization: Josh Lehman&lt;br /&gt;Project Leads: Graham Burt, Ashley Shifflett McBrayne&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                <text>Newsletter regarding improvements in steam power due to well bucket valves, dated January 1795</text>
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                <text>Gift of Philip and Yvonne Melanson</text>
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                <text>Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph Library, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives-catalogue.lib.uoguelph.ca/f651"&gt;XS1 MS A164 File 1.28&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                    <text>Observations and remarks on the two accounts lately published, of the behaviour of William late Earl of Kilmarnock and of Arthur late Lord Balmerino, while under sentence of death, and at the place of execution.</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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                <text>Moore, R., of the Tower-Hamlets.</text>
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                <text>London : printed for M. Cooper in Pater-Noster Row</text>
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                <text>Anonymous. By R. Moore.&#13;
The two accounts are ’Account of the behaviour of the late Earl of Kilmarnock,’ by James Foster, London, 1746 and ’By authority of the sheriffs. An account of the behaviour of William, late Earl of Kilmarnock, and Arthur, late Lord Balmerino’ by T. Ford, London, 1746. [ESTC]&#13;
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                <text>Balmerino, Arthur Elphinstone, Lord, 1688-1746 -- Early works to 1800.&#13;
Kilmarnock, William Boyd, Earl of, 1704-1746 -- Criticism and interpretation -- Early works to 1800.</text>
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                <text>In the public domain; For high quality reproductions, contact Archival &amp; Special Collections, University of Guelph. libaspc@uoguelph.ca, 519-824-4120, Ext. 53413</text>
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                    <text>Official catalogue of exhibits : Highland &amp; Jacobite Exhibition, Inverness, 1903 : Free Library and Science &amp; Art Building, Inverness : open from 14th July to 26th September, 1903</text>
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                  <text>The University of Guelph Library purchased a collection of Jacobite materials for the Scottish Studies Collection in 1975 with a grant from the Macdonald Stewart Foundation of Montreal. Today, the collection includes over 450 Jacobite and anti-Jacobite works including Jacobite histories, biographies, fictional accounts, speeches, sermons, polemics, satires, chapbooks, broadsides, letters, manuscript materials, and artefacts.&#13;
&#13;
The Jacobite period spanned a number of important political, religious, and economic events in Scotland. Separate from the Jacobite Collection Archival &amp; Special Collections also holds related complementary materials such as Scottish chapbooks containing Jacobite songs, ballads, and poetry popular in the 19th century, and materials related to other contemporary political, religious, and socio-economic events including the Darien colony scheme in 1698-99, and the Act of Union with England in 1707.&#13;
&#13;
The provenance of the materials varies but bookplates represented in the collection include those of Sir Ian Zachary Malcolm, the 17th Laird of Poltalloch, a member of Parliament, and Chieftain of Clan Malcolm/MacCallum; Duncan MacNeill, the 1st Baron Colonsay; book collectors Alasdair Campbell of Kilmartin (d. 1901) and John Whitefoord Mackenzie; and the Scottish-American industrialist, Andrew Carnegie, among others.&#13;
&#13;
Digitization of the Jacobite Collection began early in 2022 and has been made possible with support from Kevin James, Scottish Studies Foundation Chair &amp; Professor of History, and Curtis Sassur, Head, Archival &amp; Special Collections.&#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgements&#13;
&#13;
Ashley Shifflett McBrayne, Special Collections Librarian (Acting) - Project Lead&#13;
Graham Burt, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Gavin Hughes, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Andrew Northey, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Wilda Thumm, M.A. Student, History&#13;
Bev Buckie, Archival &amp; Special Collections Associate&#13;
Lara Carleton, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Gillian Manford, Archival &amp; Special Collections Clerk&#13;
Adam Doan, Systems Architect and Developer&#13;
Ali Versluis, Head, Research &amp; Scholarship (Acting)</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
Correction on Half-TItle: "26th" written in manuscript above 19th with strike out. &#13;
&#13;
The same correction is also on the title page. </text>
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