The art of teaching in sport; designed as a prelude to a set of toys, for enabling ladies to instill the rudiments of spelling reading, grammar, and arithmetic, under the idea of amusement

People / Organizations
Imprint
London: printed and sold by John Marshall, at No. 4, Aldermary Church-Yard, in Bow-Lane; and No, 17, Queen-Street, Cheapside, [between 1790 and 1800?]
Added name
Marshall, John (Printer), printer, bookseller.
Publication year
1790-1800
ESTC No.
T80690
Grub Street ID
301675
Description
67,[1]p ; 12°.
Note
With a half-title

Attributed to Ellenor Fenn, on the basis of the footnote on p.14

John Marshall at Queen-Street from 1789. Initially as "John Marshall and Co." until Nov. 1789 when the partnership was dissolved. Thereafter as "John Marshall". Cf. David Stoker. "John Marshall, John Evans and the Cheap Repository Tracts 1793-1800". Article pending publication, 2012

"17 Queen Street" ceases to appear on the imprints of Marshall's children's books some time during 1796 but reappears after his break with Hannah More in Nov. 1797. - David Stoker

Without colophon.
Uncontrolled note
Not in Alston