THE HISTORY OF THE LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM IN ENGLAND:

A Fragment of Autobiography

Submitted For The Perusal Of Her Majesty's Attorney-General And The British Clergy.

By George Jacob Holyoake

I was present in the court, to witness the trial of George Jacob Holyoake. I heard Wooler and Hone defend themselves successfully in 1817; but I would prefer to be declared guilty with Holyoake to being acquitted on the ground of Wooler and Hone.—Richard Carlile.

LONDON: JAMES WATSON, 3, QUEEN'S HEAD PASSAGE,
PATERNOSTER ROW. 1850.
TO
WILLIAM JOHN BIRCH, M.A.,
OF NEW INN HALL, OXON.
IN WHOM FREE DISCUSSION HAS FOUND
AN ACCOMPLISHED DEFENDER AND MUNIFICENT FRIEND;
WHO WAS FIRST TO HELP US
WHEN A FRIEND IS TWICE A FRIEND,
WHEN WE WERE UNKNOWN AND STRUGGLING;
THIS HISTORY OF SIX MONTHS IMPRISONMENT