APA (7th ed.) Citation

Carey, M., Mercer, C. F., Jones, J., & Kentucky Colonization Society. (1838). Letters on the Colonization Societyigration to Liberia, disadvantages of slavery to the white population, character of the natives of Africa before the irruptions of the barbarians, effects of colonization on the slave trade, with a slight sketch of that nefarious and accursed traffic (13th ed. to which is prefixed the important information collected by Joseph Jones, a coloured man, lately sent to Liberia, by the Kentucky Colonization Society, to ascertain the true state of the country--its productions, trade, and commerce--and the situation and prospects of the colonists.). E.G. Dorsey, printer.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Carey, Mathew, Charles Fenton Mercer, Joseph Jones, and Kentucky Colonization Society. Letters on the Colonization Societyigration to Liberia, Disadvantages of Slavery to the White Population, Character of the Natives of Africa Before the Irruptions of the Barbarians, Effects of Colonization on the Slave Trade, with a Slight Sketch of That Nefarious and Accursed Traffic. 13th ed. to which is prefixed the important information collected by Joseph Jones, a coloured man, lately sent to Liberia, by the Kentucky Colonization Society, to ascertain the true state of the country--its productions, trade, and commerce--and the situation and prospects of the colonists. [Philadelphia]: E.G. Dorsey, printer, 1838.

MLA (8th ed.) Citation

Carey, Mathew, et al. Letters on the Colonization Societyigration to Liberia, Disadvantages of Slavery to the White Population, Character of the Natives of Africa Before the Irruptions of the Barbarians, Effects of Colonization on the Slave Trade, with a Slight Sketch of That Nefarious and Accursed Traffic. 13th ed. to which is prefixed the important information collected by Joseph Jones, a coloured man, lately sent to Liberia, by the Kentucky Colonization Society, to ascertain the true state of the country--its productions, trade, and commerce--and the situation and prospects of the colonists. E.G. Dorsey, printer, 1838.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.