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  1. Methods for ecological monitoring of coral reefs [electronic resource] : a resource for managers

    Hill, Jos.
    Version 1. - Townsville, Qld. : Australian Institute of Marine Science, 2004.

    Online bibpurl.oclc.org

  2. Indigenous trade and market places in Ghana, 1962-64

    Hill, Polly, 1914-2005
    [Jos] : Department of History, University of Jos, 1984.

  3. Hill family letters : Correspondence 1825/04/07-1852/10/27

    Hill, Ebenezer
    Marlborough, Wiltshire : Adam Matthew Digital, 2017

    Description: The collection contains handwritten letters regarding the publication and distribution of Hill's Tennessee Almanac (later called Hill's Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi and Arkansas Almanac, and State Register), and life in the antebellum period in the United States. The letters also include writings about cholera in Nashville in 1849, local and regional politics, religion, slavery, and a Fayetteville tornado in 1851. Mostly letters from Lydia S. Foord to Joseph B. Hill and from Ebenezer Hill to Rev Joseph B. Hill. The collection contains 37 letters, 4 partial letters, and one partial transcript of a letter. Ebenezer Hill is the author of most of the letters. Most of the letters are addressed to an iteration of Reverend Joseph B. Hill (Rev. Jos. B. Hill, Rev. Joseph B. Hill, and Joseph B. Hill). Other authors are Lydia S. Foord, Edward S. Hill, Jas. S. Whitman, Shields Whiteman and Co., Reverend Joseph B. Hill, Isaac Southworth, P.M. Cowan, B.W. Mirriam, A.G. Gibson, and Emily A. Hill. The letters are arranged chronologically. Ebenezer Hill (1791-1875) was a printer in Amherst and Nashua, New Hampshire, as well as Troy, New York, from 1807-1819. In 1819, Ebenezer moved to Huntsville, Alabama, and subsequently to Fayetteville, Tennessee. He printed the town's first newspaper, The Village Messenger, with the first edition being printed on March 11, 1823. Ebenezer was also the printer of Hill's Almanac, which brother Joseph edited. In 1862 Union soldiers destroyed Ebenezer's printing materials, effectively ending his publication career

    Online Frontier Life

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