5 résultats
199924355NY: Crown. Fine in Fine dust jacket. 1999. Hardcover. 0517800497 . Illustrated by the author. Second printing. Fine in a fine dust jacket. . Crown hardcover books
190430356Toronto: Morang & Company 1904. First Canadian Edition. Cloth. Very Good . Cloth 8vo. 282 pp. Stories of hunting and camping in California's Sierra Nevada mountains. A sound very good copy in green illustrated cloth covers. Small neat inked notation to lower page edge. Gorgeous color frontis plus black and white illustrations by Fernand Lungren. Morang & Company unknown books
194929156Saint Paul: E. F. Cary 1949. First edition. Paperback. Very Good. Paperbound quarto. 132 pp. Camping hiking and fishing tales from Northern Minnesota into Ontario Canada. A very good copy in bound illustrated wrappers. INSCRIBED by the author. E. F. Cary paperback books
194526074New York NY: Not Published 1945. A group of 40 letters and cards; correspondence between a young man and a woman friend who he met and worked with at the Jewish summer Camp Achvah; he later became a student at UC Berkeley. He had also attended the Jewish Camp Cejwin. Mostly the letters are from Edwin Finkelstein to his friend Natalie Levy back in New York with a couple of notes to him from her. The Achvah material is mostly camp gossip and scuttlebutt regarding the owners of the camp who according to the writer took advantage of the counsellors and workers: ".Concerning your job. You will have the same job and privileges as a regular counsellor. That is you will have the same hours curfews time off and days off. In regard to a bonus don't make me laugh last year only one person got a bonus.a whole $ 5. The only reason he got it was because his father did legal work form Mr. Barshad.Don't get involved in any counsellor uprisings.be good to your kids and you will get good tipslast year a good percentage of the girls were willing to go out on strike with the boys." Edwin F. works at Steve Cohen Boys' Camp in Hopewell Junction NY 1946 and writes of his work and play there during that summer; he continues to ask about and advise about Camp Achvah where Natalie is a summer counsellor. He notes that ".Achvah is a dump compared with this placehere were are treated like humans not like dirt." Nevertheless there is a great feeling of camaraderie among those who attend and work at the camps many reunions and get-togethers over the years. The last group of 6 letters are from UC Berkeley and the difficulties of coursework and enjoyments of attending that school and living in California. NOTE: ".In the 1920s and 1930s a recognition began to arise that the summer camp might play a significant role in Jewish education and the socialization of the Jewish child into Judaism. Samson Benderly the first director of New York's Bureau of Jewish Education was the first to recognize the unique opportunity that the summer camp offered for teaching modern Hebrew and other traditional Jewish values through immersing children in a Hebrew and Judaic environment. In 1927 he opened Camp Achvah the first Hebrew-speaking camp in Arverne on New York City's Rockaway peninsula. In 1932 he sought to expand the program and purchased a campsite in a rural setting in upstate Godeffroy New York. The expanded program retained the intensive Judaic program but was not Hebrew speaking as had been the program at the Arverne site." ref. Encyclopaedia Judaica 2007 "Jewish Camping" article. Other social and political events are remarked upon in the letter content for instance the high school student strikes and riots in the boroughs of NYC in 1945 which required police intervention and mention of a similar race related riot in Bergen College New Jersey regarding a disqualified black football player. Most letters with their mailers & cancellations intact; some age-wear and soiling; contents clean and in very good condition. . Manuscript. Not Bound. Very Good. Not Published paperback books
1913WRCAM54479Peoria Il 1913. 148 photographs 1 1/2 x 2 1/2 to 3 x 4 inches mounted on 40pp. Oblong folio. Medium-weight green card stock cord tied. Light wear at edges. Thoroughly captioned. Very good. An attractive handmade photograph album documenting a camping trip made by the Tjaden family in June and July 1913 to a place they call "Camp John" near Peoria. The album features original and quoted verse numerous manuscript illustrations and other exceptional embellishments. Half of the group was made up of young women and the majority of the photos feature their exploits including water activities life in camp hiking cooking and washing and provisioning from the local farm. In general the action centers around their tent compound with several side trips to settings such as the Illinois Valley Yacht Club. <br> <br> An extensively captioned and inventive memento of an early 20th-century camping vacation. unknown books