Steele, R. (1720). The crisis of property: An argument proving that the Annuitants for ninety-nine years, as such, are not in the condition of other subjects of Great Britain, but by Compact with the Legislature are exempt from any new Direction relating to the said Estates. Printed for W. Chetwood, under Tom's Coffee-House in Covent-Garden ; J. Roberts, near the Oxford-Arms in Warwick-lane ; and Charles Lillie, at the Corner of Beaufort-Buildings in the Strand.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationSteele, Richard. The Crisis of Property: An Argument Proving That the Annuitants for Ninety-nine Years, as Such, Are Not in the Condition of Other Subjects of Great Britain, but by Compact with the Legislature Are Exempt from Any New Direction Relating to the Said Estates. London: Printed for W. Chetwood, under Tom's Coffee-House in Covent-Garden ; J. Roberts, near the Oxford-Arms in Warwick-lane ; and Charles Lillie, at the Corner of Beaufort-Buildings in the Strand, 1720.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationSteele, Richard. The Crisis of Property: An Argument Proving That the Annuitants for Ninety-nine Years, as Such, Are Not in the Condition of Other Subjects of Great Britain, but by Compact with the Legislature Are Exempt from Any New Direction Relating to the Said Estates. Printed for W. Chetwood, under Tom's Coffee-House in Covent-Garden ; J. Roberts, near the Oxford-Arms in Warwick-lane ; and Charles Lillie, at the Corner of Beaufort-Buildings in the Strand, 1720.