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Fashion of windows, in civil and ecclesiastical buildings, before the conquest
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Table shewing the present amount of the assessed duties under-mentioned, and the rates as proposed in the committee of the whole House on ... the 19th of March 1798
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Observations on the Tea and Window Act, and on the tea trade
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The Wonder of the window-tax
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The absurdity and injustice of the window tax
considered with especial reference to the new survey -
Cases which have been determined by the judges relative to the duties on houses and windows, and on inhabited houses
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House & window taxes, &c
the following letter appeared in the Bath Journal of February, 25, 1833 -
Lucas, Chance, Homer, & Coathupe's prices of Crown window glass and glass bottles, for exportation
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The great designs of parliaments have ever been, when duties are granted, that the subjects have as little trouble and disturbance from the officers and collectors as is possible
and therefore, the consideration of what followeth is humbly offered and presented to the honourable House of Commons, before passing the act for a duty to be laid upon houses & windows -
The window in art
from the window of God to the vanity of man ; a survey of window symbolism in Western painting -
To the honourable House of Commons. A method humbly proposed for raising as great a sum (by a more equal way,) than the intended duty on windows
as appears -
The great designs of parliaments, have ever been, when duties are granted, that the subjects may have as little trouble and disturbance from the officers and collectors as is possible
and therefore, the consideration of what followeth, is humbly offered and presented to the honourable House of Commons, before passing the Act for a duty to be laid upon houses & windows -
New window tax table, added to the late duties upon the house and windows, exhibiting at one view the number of windows, the old duty, new duty, and total amount for each number
A very useful table for every housekeeper in the kingdom -
Observations on the tea and window Act
and on the tea trade. By Richard Twining -
A sermon on the window tax
not intended to be preached in Saint Stephen's Chapel, Candle-Mass day, 1785 -
A dialogue between a member of Parliament and one of his electors concerning the window-tax
containing ample instructions for every officer employ'd in the execution of the acts -
A scheme or proposal for taking off the several taxes on land, soap, starch, candles, leather, plate, pots, &c
and replacing the said duties by another tax, which will bring in more money, in a more easy and equal manner, and less burthensome to the subject -
Speech of the Right Honourable Thomas Spring Rice, Joint Secretary to the Treasury, in the House of Commons, on Tuesday, April 30, 1833
in the debate on the house and window tax -
Report of the Committee of Delegates Deputed by the Metropolitan Parishes to Collect Information on the Subject of the Window Duties
with a view to their repeal -
A speech delivered in the House of Commons on ... February 24, 1848 on a motion for leave to bring in a bill for the repeal of the window-tax
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A sermon on the window tax
Not intended to be preached in Saint Stephen's Chapel, on Candle --- Mass day, 1785. By somebody -
Cases which have been determined by the judges relative to the duties on houses and windows
and on inhabited houses -
New-College Chapel. As the painted windows of this Chapel make one of it's [sic] chief ornaments
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A scheme or proposal for taking off the several taxes on land, soap, starch
Candles, Leather, Plate, Pots, &c. and replacing the said duties by another tax, which will bring in more Money, in a more Easy and Equal Manner, and less burthensome to the Subject: Humbly offered to the Consideration of the Parliament, as also the People of England, for whose Ease and Benefit this is design'd. Plainly proving, That the Duties on Soap, Candles, and Leather, which do not bring in 600,000 l. a Year, cost the Subject more than double that Sum: So that this Method is calculated to ease the People of one Half of the Sum they now pay, on Account of those several Taxes, and at the same Time Encrease the Revenue. To which is added, Some Considerations on the several Duties upon Tea, Coffee, Chocolat, and Salt, which may be also taken off, and replaced by the same Method, with any Thing else, that is either burthensome to Trade, or a Hardship upon particular Persons, of which the Pot-Act is a glaring Instance; and upon any Emergency a larger Sum may be raised