More about Charles Pigott:
| | Books by Charles Pigott: Books in the extended shelves: Pigott, Charles, -1794: Female Jockey Club (London, printed: New-York, Reprinted: For Greenleaf, Fellows, and Wayland, 1794) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: The female jockey club, or A sketch of the manners of the age ... (Printed for D.I. Eaton ..., 1794) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: The female Jockey Club, or a sketch of the manners of the age ... (Printed for D.I. Eaton, No. 74, Newgate-street., 1794) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: The Jockey club; or, a sketch of the manners of the age... (H. D. Symonds, 1792) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: The Jockey club; or, A sketch of the manners of the age ... In three parts ... (Re-printed by T. Greenleaf, 1793) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: The jockey club; or A sketch of the manners of the age. : Part the third. (Printed for H.D. Symonds ..., 1793) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: Persecution. The case of Charles Pigott: contained in the defence he had prepared, and which would have been delivered by him on his trial, if the grand jury had not thrown out the bill preferred against him (Printed for Dr. I. Eaton, 1793) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: A political dictionary : explaining the true meaning of words (Printed for Thomas Greenleaf, 1796) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: A political dictionary: explaining the true meaning of words. Illustrated and exemplified in the lives, morals, character and conduct of the following most illustrious personages, among many others, the king, queen, Prince of Wales, Duke of York, Pope Pius VI., emperor, king of Prussia, the Tigress of Russia, dukes of Brunswick, Portland ... (Printed for D.I. Eaton, 1795) (page images at HathiTrust) Pigott, Charles, -1794: Treachery no crime, or The system of courts. Exemplified in the life character, and late desertion of General Dumourier, in the virtue of implicit confidence in kings and ministers, and in the present concert of princes, against the French Republic. (J. Ridgeway, 1793) (page images at HathiTrust)
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