The French convert: : being a true relation of the happy conversion of a noble French lady, from the errors and superstitions of popery, to the reformed religion, by means of a Protestant gardener, her servant. Wherein is shewn her great and unparallelled sufferings, on the account of her said conversion; as also her wonderful deliverance from two assassins, hired by a popish priest to murder her: and of her miraculous preservation in a wood for two years; and how she was at last providentially found by her husband; who, together with her parents, were brought over to the embracing of the true religion, as were divers others also.

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:[United States] : Printed for the booksellers., 1789.
Description:84 p. ; 16 cm (12mo)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Print Book
Local Note:Library Company copy 66741.D bound in contemporary calf, with one leaf of printed waste (p. 5-6 of unidentified verse) serving as back endpaper; inscribed by William Baker.
Library Company copy 107682.D is from the Michael Zinman Collection of Early American Imprints; bound in contemporary calf, with one leaf of printed waste (two pages unidentified verse) serving as back endpaper, and a remnant of printed waste (p. 8 of unidentified verse) evident on inside front board; signature clipped from title page, with loss of first word of title; imperfect: wanting p. 15-22.
NEH-Readex: not in Readex; not at AAS.
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10358572
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:D'Auborn, A.
McGowan, John, active 1793.
Notes:"The copy of a letter sent from a French Protestant minister in France, to his friend in London, with the following relation."--p. [3]-4, signed: A. D'Auborn.
Attributed by Cushing to John McGowan.
Signatures: A-G⁶.
Not in Evans or Bristol.
ESTC (BL) W42124
Electronic reproduction. Philadelphia, Pa.: NewsBank, inc., 2010. Available via the World Wide Web. Access restricted to Readex Early American Imprints, Series I: Supplement from the Library Company of Philadelphia, 1670-1800