Postlethwayt, M. 1. (1745). The African trade, the great pillar and support of the British plantation trade in America: Shewing, that our loss, by being beat out of all the foreign markets for sugar and indigo by the French, has been owing to the neglect of our African trade ... that the support and security of the Negroe-trade depends wholly on the due and effectual support of the Royal African Company of England ... in a letter to the Right Honourable ************. Printed for J. Robinson.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationPostlethwayt, Malachy 1707?-1767. The African Trade, the Great Pillar and Support of the British Plantation Trade in America: Shewing, That Our Loss, by Being Beat Out of All the Foreign Markets for Sugar and Indigo by the French, Has Been Owing to the Neglect of Our African Trade ... That the Support and Security of the Negroe-trade Depends Wholly on the Due and Effectual Support of the Royal African Company of England ... in a Letter to the Right Honourable ************. London: Printed for J. Robinson, 1745.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationPostlethwayt, Malachy 1707?-1767. The African Trade, the Great Pillar and Support of the British Plantation Trade in America: Shewing, That Our Loss, by Being Beat Out of All the Foreign Markets for Sugar and Indigo by the French, Has Been Owing to the Neglect of Our African Trade ... That the Support and Security of the Negroe-trade Depends Wholly on the Due and Effectual Support of the Royal African Company of England ... in a Letter to the Right Honourable ************. Printed for J. Robinson, 1745.