Ralph Inman (1713–1788) was an American merchant active in Boston with a residence in Cambridge, Massachusetts. During the American Revolution he was a Loyalist. Portraits of Inman were made by Robert Feke and John Singleton Copley.
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- Rules of incorporation for the Society for Encouraging Industry and Employing the Poor. Boston: 1754.
- The constitution of a Christian church illustrated in a sermon at the opening of Christ-Church in Cambridge on Thursday 15 October, MDCCLXI. By East Apthorp, M.A. late Fellow of Jesus College in the University of Cambridge. 1761.
- A state of the importations from Great-Britain into the port of Boston, from the beginning of Jan. 1769, to Aug. 17th 1769. With the advertisements of a set of men who assumed to themselves the title of "All the well disposed merchants," who entered into a solemn agreement, (as they called it) not to import goods from Britain, and who undertook to give a "true account" of what should be imported by other persons. The whole taken from the Boston chronicle, in which the following papers were first published. Boston: 1769.
- An Address of the gentlemen and principal inhabitants of the town of Boston, to His Excellency Governor Gage. Boston: 1775.
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