Murder: death of Miss Mack Coy [i.e., McCoy], and the Young Teazer : On the death of Miss Elizabeth Mack Coy, of Lee, (N.H.) who was cruelly, murdered it is expected, towards the end of August, 1813: and on the deaths of Capt. Dobson, Lieut. Johnson, sailing master Merril, prize master Allen, and twenty five others, killed by a dreadful explosion on board a privateer called the Young Teazer: fire having been conveyed to the magazine it is expected, by this Johnson, who it is likely would have been hanged, had he not killed himself. / Written by J. Plummer, travelling preacher.

Author/creator Plummer, Jonathan
Format Electronic
Publication Info[Boston] : Sold [by Nathaniel Coverly, Jr.] corner Theatre-Alley, Milk-St. Boston, [1813?]
Description1 sheet (1 unnumbered page) : illustrations (releif cuts) ; 47 x 30 cm
Supplemental ContentShaw-Shoemaker Digital Edition
Subjects

SeriesEarly American imprints. Second series no. 29532. ^A575643
General noteHymn of forty lines, followed by a sermon.
General noteNathaniel Coverly, Jr. had his bookstore at this address in 1813. American Antiquarian Society copy folded and bound in the Isaiah Thomas collection of broadside ballads, v. III, no. 4, presented to the society in August 1814.
General noteText in three columns; printed area measures 41.4 x 23.0 cm.
References Shaw & Shoemaker 29532
References Ford, W.C. Broadsides, 3296
References Ford, W.C. Thomas ballads, 175
References Wegelin, O. Amer. poetry, 1102
Other formsMicroform version available in the Readex Early American Imprints series.
Reproduction noteElectronic text and image data. [Chester, Vt. : Readex, a division of Newsbank, Inc., 2004-2007] Includes files in TIFF, GIF and PDF formats with inclusion of keyword searchable text. (Early American imprints. Second series ; no. 29532).
Genre/formBroadsides.
Genre/formHymns.
Genre/formSermons 1813.