42 résultats
183410325Louisville Wilcox Dickerman & Co. 1834. 1834. First edition first issue with Louisville imprint. Small 8vo. Frontispiece portrait of General George Rogers Clark. Full contemporary calf gilt stamped spine marbled edges upper joint cracked some light foxing through. Very good. No signatures or bookplates. Howes USIANA B-1059. F. Hardcover. Louisville, Wilcox, Dickerman & Co., 1834. hardcover books
186643988Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson & Brothers 306 Chestnut Street 1866. 1st edition McDade 775. Original publisher's printed buff paper wrappers. Front wrapper detached. Wrapper chipping along edges and a bit of paper loss at spine base. With a nod to the detached wrapper otherwise a Very Good copy. 120 8 adverts pp. 8vo. 9-3/4" x 6" <br/><br/> T. B. Peterson & Brothers, 306 Chestnut Street unknown books
183923575London: Smith 1839. First edition. 6360pp. Illus. folding map with some coloring backed. Modern leather backed 12 mo cloth boards spine gold stamped. Ferguson 2799. Mann's account of his Australian stay written on the voyage home includes details of official dealings with the last of the aboriginal Tasmanians in 1838. The final section on New Zealand is according to Hocken "taken chiefly from Rev. W. Yate whose proper dismissal from the New Zealand mission was in the author's opinions the result of the black conspiracy." Hocken p.73. Smith hardcover books
183835636Boston: Dutton and Wentworth State Printers 1838. Stitched 75pp. Untrimmed scattered foxing Good. 'Senate.No. 26' at head of title.<br/><br/> When Mann took office as Secretary the free public school system was characterized by "short school terms dilapidated and unsanitary school-houses untrained and underpaid teachers and irrational methods of teaching. He brought to his new duties such a degree of courage vision and wisdom that during the brief twelve years in which he held office the Massachusetts school system was almost completely transformed" DAB. This first Report was significant for its "presentation and discussion of school problems of crucial importance. The needs and remedies growing out of these problems are set forth with convincing clearness and with the fervor of a prophet and reformer" Id.<br/> Edward Everett was President of the Board of Education whose membership included Mann Jared Sparks and Robert Rantoul Jr.<br/>FIRST EDITION. AI 51561 5. Dutton and Wentworth, State Printers unknown books
1869772251869. MANN Mrs. Horace Mary T. Peabody & Elizabeth P. Peabody. MORAL CULTURE OF INFANCY AND KINDERGARTEN GUIDE WITH MUSIC FOR THE PLAYS. New York: J. W. Schemerhorn & Co. 1869. Second edition materially revised. Frontisp. 266 pp. 10 pp. music. 12mo. Original publisher's binding of brown cloth which is very worn and soiled with loss at heel and crown and weak joints. Ex-library with all of the usual marks. One signature is parially sprung. A scarce title it is offered with all faults. unknown books
185261667Boston: Commonwealth — Extra at head of first column 1852. Broadsheet 22 x 15 3/4 inches printed on both sides in six columns bearing only Mann's address. Mann 1796-1859; member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts 1848-1853 known as the father of American public education won John Quincy Adams's seat in Congress after he died and served for five years as an anti-slavery advocate; this speech reaffirms his opposition and excoriates the political efforts at the time to silence those in both houses of Congress who supported his views especially those concerning the extension of slavery into the western territories. The "Commonwealth" was a Boston newspaper published 1851-1853 see AAS online catalogue. LCP/HSP Afro-Americana 6316 and 6321 for pamphlet printings only. No printing in Work or Blockson catalogue. OCLC locates two copies of this broadsheet in separate entries New York Historical Society Texas-Austin and a goodly number of copies from several pamphlet printings. Long tear through bottom margin into text with no loss a very good example of a rare separate printing of this important speech. Folded. 8645. <br/><br/> Commonwealth — Extra [at head of first column] unknown books
184156092Boston: Dutton and Wentworth State Printers 1841. First edition 8vo pp. xvi 328; original cloth-backed tan paper-covered boards; title printed in black on front cover; gilt lettering on spine; ex-Massachusetts Historical Society pressure stamp on title page boards rubbed; corners bumped; some dampstaining; otherwise very good. Bookplate on the front pastedown noting a donation by Rev. S. C. Jackson 1859. Presentation copy inscribed on the front free endpaper by Horace Mann to the Boston Unitarian minister Rev. Ezra S. Gannett. Compiled by Horace Mann the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. <br/><br/> Dutton and Wentworth, State Printers hardcover books
18449483Boston: William B. Fowle 1844. First Edition. Half calf. Very good. Tall 8vo. iv398pp. Index. Bi-weekly journal 24 issues. With 7 of 8 plates one folding. This copy inscribed on the front paste-down by Horace Mann in 1847. The name of the recipient is difficult to interpret. Half calf over marbled boards. Title and some text foxed. Note: Early American journals with illustrations are often found lacking something. Perhaps the plates weren't glued in well or possibly that illustrations were pulled from journals more often than from regular illustrated books William B. Fowle unknown books
1853316013Yellow Springs OH 1853. 2 pp. 12mo. Single leaf of stationery shallow chip at blank left margin with no loss of text. 2 pp. 12mo. The "father of American public school" writes to accept the invitation of the State Teacher's Association of Ohio to deliver their annual address and to express his admiration. In part: "I sincerely hope the time has now come when I can establish cordial relations with a Society which I have long regarded with so much honor & respect. I shall gladly avail myself of this ocassion to show the deep interest which I feel in the noble efforts of the Ohio Teachers of Common Schools." The letter dates from two months after Mann assumed the presidency of the newly established Antioch College at Yellow Springs. unknown books
183662501Cincinnati OH and Louisville KY: J. A. James and Co. and the author 1836. Second and best edition revised and enlarged by the author. 8vo. lxxii 551 pp. Howes B-1059: "Disputes many of Marshall's finding; contains the journal of Col. George Croghan one of the earliest accounts in English of the Ohio country." Sabin 9654: "Some copies have a Louisville imprint as here." American Imprints 36479 Virginia Miami. Coleman 3229: "The 1836 edition issued without the portrait more desirable than the first contains an appendix with materials on the Treaty at Fort Stanwix and on Col. Richard Henderson." Much scarcer than the first edition OCLC locates 11 copies of this edition and it appears to be wanting in most major southern institutional collections. At the Brinley sale 1881 the first edition brought two dollars the second nine. Very good. Later three-quarter red morocco gilt rebacked with the original spine laid down gilt ornaments and title between raised bands on spine marbled boards and endpapers top edge gilt by R.W. Smith. 9246. <br/><br/> J. A. James and Co. and the author hardcover books
1850315820Washington D.C. 1850. 1 page. 12mo. Fine condition. 1 page. 12mo. Opposing the Fugitive Slave Act. Horace Man 1796-1859 writes a scathing condemnation of the Fugitive Slave Act which Congress passed on 12 September 1850 in spite of Mann's vote against it: "The intellect of the world must grow stronger and its heart must grow purer before the former can adequately comprehend or the latter appropriately feel the moral turpitude of the Bill which the House of Representatives has this day passed nominally for reclaiming slavery but really for perilling the liberties of freemen." <br/>One of the most notorious bills in U.S. history the so called Fugitive Slave Act required the cooperation of law enforcement officials and citizens of free states in returning escaped slaves to their masters. The bill was the most explosive element of the Compromise of 1850 which sought and ultimately failed to preserve the Union.<br/><br/>"By placing himself in opposition to Henry Clay's Compromise of 1850 Mann alienated many in the Whig party none more than Senator Daniel Webster whose support of the compromise floored Mann. Forced out of the Whig party by Webster's supporters Mann sought vindication under the banner of the Free Soil party in 1850. Narrowly reelected he was unable to mount an effort to repeal the odious fugitive slave law of 1851; the following year he failed to win the Massachusetts governorship as the Free Soil candidate" ANB. unknown books
181665448Dedham MA: Printed by H. Mann and Co 1816. First edition. 8vo. 317 1 pp. Sabin 44328: "Contains information relative to the war not found elsewhere." HOWES M-258. AUSTIN 1190. American Imprints 38138. Bookplate of prominent Rhode Island physician Irving Addison Beck on front pastedown some light browning to the text but very good. Contemporary calf rubbed and somewhat eroded rebacked with gilt rules and leather label on the spine. 11197. <br/><br/> Printed by H. Mann and Co hardcover books
18165778fdDedham: Printed by H. Mann and Co. 1816. First Edition. Octavo bound in modern cloth-backed marbled boards hardcover uncut 317 i pp. Howes M258. “The primary record of medicine during the War of 1812.†– Garrison & Morton 5th 2161.1. The book bears the ownership signatures of John Whitridge 1793-1878 a practicing medical doctor in Baltimore and a later 19th century medical doctor John W. Partridge. Very Good; the book shows old damp-staining and some toning; the final leaf pp. 317-18 has been professionally repaired. Printed by H. Mann and Co., 1816. First Edition. hardcover books
1816013667Dedham: H. Mann and Company 1816. Title continues; "Also an appendix comprising a dissertation on dysentery. and observations on thre winter epidemic 1815-16 denominated peripneumonia notha." Rebacked with original paper labels laid-down. Label chipped with three letters MED missing from title. Original blue paper-covered boards printed front and rear covers. Hinges rather crudely repaired long ago. Top of covers water-stained as well as top edge. Fore-edge untrimmed. Cover printing is readable but faded a bit. See photos. Many pages are browned at periphery some foxing and staining. Owner's embossed stamp at foot of front free endpaper of Ira M. Rutkow M.D. noted bibliographer of military history. The author was an Army surgeon during the American Revolution and also served during the War of 1812. According to Rutkow GS4 this is probably the best and most vivid picture of early 19th century American military life. Garrison and Morton 2161.1 calls it "the primary record of medicine during the War of 1812". 318pp. First Edition. Quarter Cloth Printed Boards. General Cover Wear and Soiling/No Jacket. Tall Octavo. H. Mann and Company Hardcover books
1898178388Berlin: Fischer 1898. First. hardcover. very good. Small 8vo 3/4 suede over mottled bronze paper boards. Berlin: S. Fischer 1898. First Edition. A collection of six short stories. His first published book written when Mann was twenty three years old. The binding is unlettered and worn with dust soiling to suede; internally fine aside for light foxing on last several pages and one or two spots on preliminary pages. A very good copy.<br/><br/> Ownership signature of art historian Meyer Schapiro.<br/><br/> Fischer unknown books
181179039London: John Booth 1811. First Edition. hardcover. good. With fine folding colored map lacking the 4 plates. Off setting on the title page otherwise a nice clean copy. Rebound in the early 1900s in 3/4 leather over marbled boards; corners bumped spine worn cracking to hinges which has been repaired. London: John Booth 1811. First Edition. Scarce.<br/><br/> John Booth unknown books
18421071958vo. Boston: Fowle and Capen 1842. 8vo iv 390pp. Old half calf marbled boards binding sound text quite foxed especially at the front and back. § Volume 4 of this series; this copy inscribed by Horace Mann: : “C. Sumner from Horace Mann 1847â€. Later signature of Mary C. Chapman. Horace Mann inscriptions are uncommon and this is a superb association. “Charles Sumner January 6 1811 – March 11 1874 was an American politician and senator from Massachusetts. As an academic lawyer and a powerful orator Sumner was the leader of the antislavery forces in Massachusetts and a leader of the Radical Republicans in the United States Senate during the American Civil War working to destroy the Confederacy free all the slaves and keep on good terms with Europe. During Reconstruction he fought to minimize the power of the ex-Confederates and guarantee equal rights to the freedmen.†Mary Chapman was involved with the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society and was a friend of poet Julia Ward Howe and close friend of Charles Sumner and Horace Mann. Fowle and Capen hardcover books