8 368 résultats
Presentazione a cura di Giovanni Legnini. Volume con titoli sia al piatto superiore che al dorso, leggermente stanco alle estremità. Copertina leggermente macchiata sia ai piatti che al dorso. Pagine ben salde alla cerniera, con ampio margine. Taglio superiore lievemente macchiato. Presente qualche illustrazione nel testo, in bianco e nero, con didascalia. Numero pagine 159. USATO
1932304062Shanghai: North-Daily News & Herald Ltd 1932. Sole edition. Cartographic endpapers 138 photographic illustrations and 12 cartoons. 48 pp. Oblong 4to. Publisher's cloth backed boards a little dusty some minor edgewear. Very good. Sole edition. Cartographic endpapers 138 photographic illustrations and 12 cartoons. 48 pp. Oblong 4to. "This album of views of the Sino-Japanese conflict at Shanghai consists principally of views taken in the field by Chinese Japanese and British photographers. Generally speaking few restrictions were placed on the free movement of accredited photographers during the operations and in this sense it is a unique record of modern war at close quarters."<br/><br/>This volume serves as a sort of companion volume to the work Sino-Japanese Disturbances published in Shanghai in the same year. Both works commemorate the First Battle of Shanghai which was the culmination of events beginning with the Mukden Incident the previous year. North-Daily News & Herald, Ltd unknown books
1932304062Shanghai: North-Daily News & Herald Ltd 1932. Sole edition. Cartographic endpapers 138 photographic illustrations and 12 cartoons. 48 pp. Oblong 4to. Publisher's cloth backed boards a little dusty some minor edgewear. Very good. Sole edition. Cartographic endpapers 138 photographic illustrations and 12 cartoons. 48 pp. Oblong 4to. "This album of views of the Sino-Japanese conflict at Shanghai consists principally of views taken in the field by Chinese Japanese and British photographers. Generally speaking few restrictions were placed on the free movement of accredited photographers during the operations and in this sense it is a unique record of modern war at close quarters."<br /> <br /> This volume serves as a sort of companion volume to the work Sino-Japanese Disturbances published in Shanghai in the same year. Both works commemorate the First Battle of Shanghai which was the culmination of events beginning with the Mukden Incident the previous year. North-Daily News & Herald, Ltd unknown
114292Cussac 1789 1790 A Paris, Chez Cussac, Et à Toulouse, Chez J. B. Brouilhiet, de l'Imprimerie J. J. Robert, 1789 (3 volumes) -1790 (4 volumes). Ensemble de 7 volumes in-8 de 125 x 195 mm contenant les tomes I à XIV (n° 1 à 414) et in-fine la "Table Générale et analytique [... des] 12 premiers volumes du Point du Jour" de 72 pages. Demi reliures à coins d'époque, cuir tacheté et papier bleu à la colle, dos lisses portant titres et tomaisons dorés sur pièces de cuir rouge et bleu, tranches jaspées, gardes blanches. Année 1789 : Volume 1. n°64 du 26 août constitué de 4 ff. (incomplet ?); Volume 2. n°96 du 2 octobre compte 2 cahiers inversés. Année 1790 : Volume 3. Pas de n°347 mais le numéro 346 relate la séance du 28 juin, le 348 annonce "suite du 28 juin"; Volume 4. Pas de n°367 (dimanche 18 juillet), pas de 392, 393 (10, 11 août) et les numéros 387 à 412 (14 au 31 août 1790) du "Journal des débats et des décrets" ont été intercalés (chacun avec plusieurs feuillets répétés). Ensemble en bel état malgré les défauts suivants : des frottements sur les coiffes et quelques coupes, discret travail de vers sur 4 mors, un plat fragilisé, quelques feuillets brunis et rousseurs.
18832111902160201163Yamanaka Ichibei Oku Kichigoro Calligraphy Matsuzaki Hanzo 1883. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Yamanaka Ichibei Oku Kichigoro Calligraphy Matsuzaki Hanzo paperback
42611London : The Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition 1950. Oblong quarto full crushed red morocco by Sangorski & Sutcliffe London the panels ruled and lettered in gilt spine in compartments with raised bands ruled in gilt all edges gilt endpapers creased introductory text 35 original photographs mounted on cards with printed captions opposite. Ex-library the University of National Development Library Canberra with library stamps and cancel marks to the front pastedown and the text sheet. In 1950 the Government of New Zealand transported by sea a full domestic house to London for display at The Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition to show Londoners what daily life looked like on the other side of the world. This fascinating album documents the exhibition the transportation of the house and its assembly the New Zealand women studying in London who served as hostesses for the visitors and some of the notable signatories who visited the house including Queen Mary Princess Elizabeth later Queen Princess Margaret the Duchess of Kent the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland and others. 'This album is the record of a unique enterprise which has successfully served two purposes. It has placed attractively before a multitude of home-lovers in Britain the products of the great Dominion it represented and it has shown intending immigrants of that Dominion the sort of home life they can look forward to when their turn comes to sally forth. For the first time a complete Dominion home was transported 12000 miles by sea to be set up furnished and provisioned in England so that a great throng of home-lovers might saunter through it and see it in detail as a portrayal of the way of life on that other side of the world' - the introduction. This album is bound and finished to the highest standard by the eminent bookbinders Sangorski & Sutcliffe no doubt for one of the prominent figures involved in the project. Possibly a unique example it entered the University Collection about 1957 the earliest library stamp and was subsequently deaccessioned making its way to a charity book fair in Canberra where we acquired it. hardcover
1909144664Dawson: Dawson Daily News 1909. 72 pp. Folio. 39 X 27.2 cm. Very attractive original printed covers. Very slightly frayed more so on the back cover. Title page somewhat browned but the rest of the text is clean. Dozens of black and white portraits scenery images and a single map. Several sections of Dawson advertising. A very nice example of a fragile and large item. Not in Kurutz but there are two similar items in Kurutz dated 1902 and 1905. Not in Smith Tourville or any other bibliography I consulted. One of the most interesting brochures I have encountered before. The design of the colorful wrappers is brilliant with gold being the theme. There are 20 small vignette images of Klondike themed items. A large White Pass Railway ad and on the front cover a map showing Northern Canada. The first interesting thing when you open to the title page is a Robert Service poem "Written Specially for the Dawson News"! There are over 60 individual articles written on all aspects of life in the North and composed by the who's who of famous people. You certainly get the impression that Dawson was booming 10 years after the Rush. One of the most interesting images is of a map of a 50 mile long Main Line Ditch to provide water for the mines. It must have been an engineering marvel!! Rare and I am surprised Gary never encountered another example. 1909 Dawson Daily News unknown
19006369<p>12 full size 11" x 14" b&w photos. Photos separate from previous page by tissue paper.Text unmarked. Set shows usuage. a popular series Text unmarked. rear volume 12 shows crease from bottom to middle of rear cover</p> Charles T Daily & Co paperback
16-6222Windsor: Feb. 4 1901. Ink on board. Signed annotated and dated. 33.5 x 27cm.Intended as an illustration for The Daily Graphic. Caption for the illustration as published is attached.T Windsor: Feb. 4, 1901 unknown
1936613h2005Vancouver B.C.: Household Service Department of the Vancouver Daily Province. Poor. 1936. First Edition. Paperback. A rare first edition example of this early Vancouver cookbook. Undated but Driver B86.1 suggests a printing date between 1935 and 1938. Subsequent revised editions were published in 1939 and 1941. "In this little booklet will be found recipes for almost every occasion. Each one has been carefully tested in The Province Modern Kitchen and if you have difficulty with any recipe a phone call or a letter to this household department of The Daily Province will bring the advice of trained home economist or dietitian to your rescue." - Introduction. 52 pages. Index. 25 x 17.7 cm. Few markings around the Lemon Cake Pudding and Butterscotch Sauce recipes on pages 25 and 26. Heavily worn with typical cookbook soiling. Middle page holding by one staple. Covers dangling from top staple. A wonderful piece of Vancouver culinary history.; Sm 4to . Household Service Department of the Vancouver Daily Province paperback
19922111902160303755Gogatsu shobo 1992. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 400 pages average Size: Large book 42 cm x 30 cm Number of books: 7 Gogatsu shobo paperback
In-8°: tre volumi rilegati insieme. Vol. 1: cc. (2), pp. 380. tav. ripiegate 4 raffiguranti pentagrammi musicali, più una raffigurante una silhouette di M. l’Abbè Raynal . Vol. 2: cc. (2), pp. 358. tav. 2 ripiegate ( pentagramma musicale, Joseph Montgolfier). Vol. 3: cc. (2), pp. 390. tav. 7 ripegate ( di cui 6 pentagrammi musicali e un ritratto di M. Pilatre de Rozier). Legatura in mezza pelle con angoli, con fregi in oro e tasselo con titolo sempre in oro sul dorso, stemma dorato al piatto, tagli in rosso.
18612602080001Stone & Huse Lowell Mass 1861. First Edition. Hardcover. Acceptable. 6 months of a Civil War-era Daily newspaper from Lowell Middlesex County Massachusetts Rare 19th century Newspapers bound in a large folio. 3/4 cloth over blue marbled boards. Shelf wear. Many of the newspapers have loss tears and brittleness. Please note: this book is SOLD WITH ALL FAULTS. Many of the first pages have tears with some loss at the center. Not collated. <br> The Lowell Daily Courier was Whig in orientation. Numerous local ads. A newspaper of the industrialization much of the coverage deals with the business of textiles railroads commerce etc. <br> Important note: Due to the size and fragility of the paper this is sold not subject to returns. Please ask questions before purchase. Stone & Huse, Lowell, Mass hardcover
2020x-3030555011Springer Nature 2020. Hardcover. New. 264 pages. 9.25x6.10x0.63 inches. Springer Nature hardcover
2021x-3030555046Springer Nature 2021. Paperback. New. 264 pages. 9.25x6.10x0.63 inches. Springer Nature paperback
16641099721664 A Paris, Chez Iean Guignard le fils, en la Grand' Salle du Palais, à l'Image S. Iean - M. DC. LXIV. (1664) - Avec privilège du Roy - In-16 (7,5 x 14cm environ), reliure pleine peau claire, 5 nerfs, filets dorés au dos ainsi qu'en encadrements des 4 plats, pièce de titre rouge au dos, tranches rouges et signet - 467 pages + Table des chapitres - Avec des bandeaux, lettrines et cul-de-lampe - Griffe du relieur "T. Bouché" au fer à dorer, dans le coin supérieur gauche de la première de garde
Half-leather binding. Telephone Talk was the glossy bimonthly publication of the British Columbia Telephone Company. It was written by employees for employees to present information of interest to those engaged in the plant, traffic, commercial, operating, accounting and other departments of the service. Each issue is replete with black and white photos and information on topics such as: company, industry and technological news, traffic levels, expansion plans, personnel announcements, publicity and social events, deaths, weddings, lists of exchanges, and more. As such, these issues serve as a vital preserve of rare and fascinating British Columbia history. This volume covers topics including: awarding of Distinguished Flying Cross to Flt.-Lieut. Gordon Smith; Excellent photo of Vancouver radiotelephone operators at work; Long Distance Load in '44 set new record - statistics; Radiotelephone saves 3 lives when tug sinks; Annie Gillman - never late for work in 38 years as operator; Telephone Trouble - by Francis Aldham of the Vancouver Daily Province; Forty Miles of Telephone Bills - reprinted from the December 1944 issue of Western Business and Industry; Harold Morse retires; A few lines from the front lines - portions of letters from telphone employees on active service; Large black and white reproduction of B.C. Tel. Victory Bond advertisement featuring Winston Churchill; Expansion Programme will fall short of needs - with drawing of new central office building at Tenth Ave. and Yew St.; Digits control names of new Central Offices; Report shows phone situation still serious - no prospect of relief in near future; Al Miller retires after 36 years of service; Popular chief operator, Edna Green, resigns; Farewell to Don (Mac) McAuley; Photo of the "Kamloops Kid" - Dave Wilkie; Photos of Sports Starlets; A Telephone Man in the Navy - a lengthy letter to the editor from Elect. Lieut. N.J. Dunlop, R.C.N.V.R.; Article - Two Million Wait for Phones in North America, and relevant B.C. Tel advertisement; Cover photo of U.S. Army Bronze Star recipient Staff Sgt. Robert Creech; Photos of the three Stephan sisters who are operators; Photo of war shortage billboard; Voices with smiles - article from the Vancouver Daily Province by Gordon McCallum; Article - $64 question in the telephone business; Plagued by Shortages - article from the National War Finance Committee; article and photo - Pup Flies Atlantic with Flt. Lt. Gordon Heselton; Article on Robert Garnett Tatlow, Vancouver Pioneer; B.C.'s First Emergency Phone Call - Pants torn by Dog; Construction photos of 'Cedar'; War's End Brings Record Long Distance Load; Heading Back to Normal - but still a long way to go; Death removes Ernest F. Helliwell; Radiotelephone service to the rescue; Photo of phone installer Charlie McAndrew, and the billboard which used the photo; Photos of North Vancouver staff and facilities; Secret of wartime 'what-is-it' building on Seymour finally revealed - photos and two-page article; 5 excellent pages of photos and article on the building of the Pacific Communications System, 'One of our Biggest War Jobs'; Daisy Bonde retires; Excellent photo of B.C. Telephone's 'Sky Riders', dangling 350 feet in the air over Rock Creek Canyon; 3 more billboard photos; We are establishing an F.M. Radio Network; We subscribed nearly $2,000,000 to the war effort; Farewell to Miss Mary Lloyd, Ernest Cole and William Silver; Many photos of employees knitting; Trail operators at work; Eighteen Thousand Calls a day - article; New record for telephone calls in 1945; Difficulties of supply situation again stressed in telephone company's annual report; Charlie McAndrew has installed 40,000 photos; Cupid is main cause of our traffic problems - article; Only photo available of Vancouver's first telephone exchange, established in 1885 in Tilley's book store, on the east side of Carrall St.; PNE float; Alma open house; Hastings Hay Ride; Better phone service to central B.C. points Book
Half-leather binding. Telephone Talk was the glossy bimonthly publication of the British Columbia Telephone Company. It was written by employees for employees to present information of interest to those engaged in the plant, traffic, commercial, operating, accounting and other departments of the service. Each issue is replete with black and white photos and information on topics such as: company, industry and technological news, traffic levels, expansion plans, personnel announcements, publicity and social events, deaths, weddings, lists of exchanges, and more. As such, these issues serve as a vital preserve of rare and fascinating British Columbia history. This volume covers topics including: Long Distance enters Canada's North Country; Telephone reunites B.C. Mother, Whilma Hincks, with son in Switzerland; Bayview and West win traffic service contest; Telephone calls that keep the doctor away; Article on diet/eating by K.F. Robins, Health Supervisor; The dial telephone's magic wheel and how it works - 4 page illustrated article; 2 photos and caption of the only Chinese telephone office outside of China - Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, San Francisco; Statistics re: number of telephone sets per community province-wide; Numerous changes in Vancouver's new telephone directory; Many merry mix-ups followed the directory changes; Calls to Australia now routed across the Pacific; Fred Buckle; A visit to London, England via its telephone directory; The Rolling Pin to the Rescue - the tabulators in the information office; B.C. Ship-to-Shore service expands rapidly in year; Harley D. Miller; Paving the way for Vancouver's dial system; White Rock to have dial system; Carrier now used on Gulf cables linking Vancouver and Nanaimo; New submarine cable laid from Copper Cove to Bowen Island; Greater Vancouver and Royal City have big cable programme; Half a million calls daily in Vancouver; William Tyre; Robert Browning Smith; Vacation from work but not from health; Cover photo of King George and Queen Elizabeth bidding farewell at Chilliwack; Gordon Farrell's yacht on Burrard Inlet; Telephones at the fingertips of Royal Couple throught the tour - 5 page article with great photos; Australia wins telephone 'ashes' in Port Day 'word match'; Wire Photos Transmitted from Vancouver for First Time - 3 pages with photos; "Our PNE exhibit was a crowd magnet - voice mirror"; Cecil Austin McMaster; Robert Smyth; Telephoning popular pastime of singers; Telephone equipment in new Hotel Vancouver - many photos plus article entitled "The House with 700 Phones"; White Rock now has dial system; Percy H. Wilson; Miss Dorothy Howard; Ernest E. Harris; Article on operators by Damon Runyon; Our Al Hunter now a one-man phone company in Liberia, Africa; Vancouver's First Dial Office now in service - 8 page article with photos; Thirtieth Year of Telephone Talk; Flood waters fail to keep Courtenay operators from work; Photos of heavy gang work near Kamloops; Fraser Office will go dial in fall of 1941; The Marine Office Power Plant; A.L. Creech; Some highlights of Vancouver's first dial office - 3 page article with photos; Take Care of your Skin; West Vancouver Office is doubled in size to keep pace with growth; Miss Grace D. Smith; Telephone displays are features of 'Bay' anniversary windows; Walter Hughes, Royal City Plant Man; Sunspots 'sabotage' service - one page article with diagram; Community gift of phone to Colebrook couple Mr. and Mrs. George Frith; Phone Company joins Vancouver's dial system; Allan W. Hunter in Liberia - 4 pages with photos; UBC Silver Jubilee section with many nice photos; Frederick J. Tremblay; Back cover devoted to Dunkerque (Dunkirk); Lumber for the Empire - 9 super pages of great photos (all with captions) of sawmills, logging scenes, buildings constructed of B.C wood; 3 page PNE report with photos; Marine Office now serves over 11,000 telephones; sensational 11-page photographic tribute to B.C's fishing industry; New Book
1989SONG080165758X1989-01-01. Subsequent. paperback. Used: Good. xx. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. paperback
1968025532New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. 1968. SEE PHOTO. Consecutive run of the first 24 volumes of this important reference: #1 - #24 1968 - 1978. Very Good - Fine condition. Hinges are perfect. NO owner's name or bookplate. NOT a library discard. Probably from the private reference library of a librarian as the number "020.3" i. e. Melvil Dewey Classification Number for Library and Information Sciences Encyclopedias is inked on the front free endpapers of vols 9-24. Otherwise all pages are fresh crisp clean and unmarked. No underlining. No highlighting. No margin notes. These volumes are arranged alphabetically from A to Associac Vol. 1 through Printers & Printing to Public Policy Copyright Vol. 24. Illustrations. Bibliographical references. All volumes are uniformly bound in the original sturdy blue buckram gilt stamped over two red spine panels. From the publisher: "This thorough reference set -- written by 1300 eminent international experts -- offers librarians information/computer scientists bibliographers documentalists systems analysts and students convenient access to the techniques and tools of both library and information science. Impeccably researched cross referenced alphabetized by subject and generously illustrated THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCE integrates the essential theoretical and practical information accumulating in this rapidly growing field." Includes a wealth of useful and important articles and biographies. For example: Vol. 7 has DESCRIPTIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY by Roy Stokes. In Volume 18 you will find MINIATURE BOOKS by Romano Almagno. Hardcover. This very heavy 24 volume set will require extra postage for Priority and International shipments. But for media mail you pay only our standard charge for 1 volume and we ship the other 23 volumes at no extra cost. . First Printings of the First Edition. Hardcover heavy 24 vol. set. Very Good - Fine condition/No jackets as issued. Illus. by NOT a library discard. 24 consecutive volumes. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Marcel Dekker, Inc. Hardcover
190017379Charles T. Daily & Co. Very Good. 1900. First Edition. Softcover. To copies are very good to very good the rest are "fine". The price is for 10 parts of a 12 part set. ; Folio 13" - 23" tall . Charles T. Daily & Co. paperback
19199854London Geographia Ltd 1919. Lithographed folding map 76 x 101 cm printed in blue and red inset map of Theatre Land bottom right minor wear blank verso; folding into blue printed paper wrappers somewhat worn and dusty old ownership signature. The Daily Telegraph was one of a number of newspapers to sponsor Underground maps: a series issued by the Evening News published in various editions c. 1907-1910 predated the earliest official UERL common design maps and may even have spurred the UERL into action. The Telegraph map is uncommon and this may be due to the success of the official maps by this time as by 1919 they were widely available at stations and in guidebooks and they were free. OCLC: 556393303 BL; OCLC: 316455430 NLS. Map unknown
1928190163New York: Daily Worker 1928. First edition of this pamphlet of cartoons originally published in the Daily Worker a newspaper printed in New York by the Communist Party USA from 1924 to 1958. One of the illustrators Hugo Gellert published Karl Marx 'Capital' in Pictures in 1933. The other artists are Fred Ellis Jacob Burck William Siegel William Gropper Donalf Brown M. P. Bales Maurice Becker and K. A. Suvanto. Folio. Original illustrated wrappers titles in black to front cover cartoons to covers printed in black. Full-page cartoons in black and white throughout by various artists. Wrappers and central gathering carefully reattached a little light soiling to covers two red marks to rear cover short closed tear to lower margin of a page "Sunny Italy" illustration unaffected occasional spotting to margins mostly bright and clean. A very good copy. unknown
1890013395Northampton 1890. Book measures 68x47.cm. From Wednesday January 1st to Monday June 30th 1890 circa 4 issues each week each issue has 4 pages. Might possibly be the odd issue missing. Bound in modern cloth with black title lettering. Binding in good clean firm condition. Internally pages clean throughout. A good solid clean copy. OTHER VOLUMES DATED AVAILABLE . Hardcover. Very Good. Folio. Hardcover
183236785Washington DC: Gales & Seaton 1832. Newspaper. Good. Newspaper. Approx. 21" x 18." 4 pages. Two folds. Sheets are detached. Newspaper has light toning. Name of R. J. Ingersoll New Haven Con" written top of issue. Possibly the same Ingersoll that served 4 terms in Congress from 1825-1833. <br /> <br /> Entire contents of page 2 concern "The Cherokee Case. Opinion of the Supreme Court delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall January Term 1832. Samuel A. Worcester vs. The State of Georgia." The case is also printed on the first column of page 3. Supreme Court case of Samuel Worcester. From the Brittannica website: <br /> <br /> Worcester v. Georgia involved a group of white Christian missionaries including Samuel A. Worcester who were living in Cherokee territory in Georgia. In addition to their missionary work the men were advising the Cherokee about resisting Georgia's attempts to impose state laws on the Cherokee Nation a self-governing nation whose independence and right to its land had been guaranteed in treaties with the United States government. In an effort to stop the missionaries the state in 1830 passed an act that forbade "white persons" from living on Cherokee lands unless they obtained a license from the governor of Georgia and swore an oath of loyalty to the state. Worcester and the other missionaries had been invited by the Cherokee and were serving as missionaries under the authority of the U.S. federal government. They did not however have a license from Georgia nor did they swear a loyalty oath to that state. Georgia state authorities arrested Worcester and several other missionaries. After they were convicted at trial in 1831 and sentenced to four years of hard labour in prison Worcester appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.<br /> <br /> Worcester argued that Georgia had no right to extend its laws to Cherokee territory. He contended that the act under which he had been convicted violated the U.S. Constitution which gives to the U.S. Congress the authority to regulate commerce with Native Americans. The Constitution also bars the states from passing laws that alter the obligations of contracts-in this case treaties. Several treaties between the Cherokee and the U.S. government recognized the independence and sovereignty of the Cherokee Nation. Furthermore Worcester argued that the Georgia laws violated an 1802 act of Congress that regulated trade and relations between the United States and the Indian tribes.<br /> <br /> The Supreme Court agreed with Worcester ruling 5 to 1 on March 3 1832 that all the Georgia laws regarding the Cherokee Nation were unconstitutional and thus void. Writing for the court Chief Justice John Marshall held that "the Indian nations had always been considered as distinct independent political communities retaining their original natural rights as the undisputed possessors of the soil." Even though Native Americans were now under the protection of the United States he wrote that "protection does not imply the destruction of the protected." Marshall concluded:<br /> The Cherokee Nation then is a distinct community occupying its own territory.in which the laws of Georgia can have no force and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter but with the assent of the Cherokees themselves or in conformity with treaties and with the acts of Congress. The whole intercourse between the United States and this Nation is by our Constitution and laws vested in the Government of the United States.<br /> <br /> Georgia however ignored the decision keeping Worcester and the other missionaries in prison. Eventually they were granted a pardon and were released in 1833. Pres. Andrew Jackson declined to enforce the Supreme Court's decision thus allowing states to enact further legislation damaging to the tribes. The U.S. government began forcing the Cherokee off their land in 1838. In what became known as the Trail of Tears some 15000 Cherokee were driven from their land and were marched westward on a grueling journey that caused the deaths of some 4000 of their people.<br /> <br /> The Supreme Court agreed with Worcester ruling 5 to 1 on March 3 1832 that all the Georgia laws regarding the Cherokee Nation were unconstitutional and thus void. Writing for the court Chief Justice John Marshall held that "the Indian nations had always been considered as distinct independent political communities retaining their original natural rights as the undisputed possessors of the soil." Even though Native Americans were now under the protection of the United States he wrote that "protection does not imply the destruction of the protected." Marshall concluded:<br /> The Cherokee Nation then is a distinct community occupying its own territory.in which the laws of Georgia can have no force and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter but with the assent of the Cherokees themselves or in conformity with treaties and with the acts of Congress. The whole intercourse between the United States and this Nation is by our Constitution and laws vested in the Government of the United States.<br /> <br /> Georgia however ignored the decision keeping Worcester and the other missionaries in prison. Eventually they were granted a pardon and were released in 1833. Pres. Andrew Jackson declined to enforce the Supreme Court's decision thus allowing states to enact further legislation damaging to the tribes. The U.S. government began forcing the Cherokee off their land in 1838. In what became known as the Trail of Tears some 15000 Cherokee were driven from their land and were marched westward on a grueling journey that caused the deaths of some 4000 of their people. Gales & Seaton unknown