50 résultats
1760008890London: printed for S. Crowder and H. Woodgate at the Golden Ball in Paternoster Row no date but circa 1760. 1760. Volume 1 only.Collation engraved frontis 752 pages plus 7 engraved plates. Apparently volume 1 was only issued with an engraved frontis the additional 7 plates appear to be from volume 2. Book measures 8 1/2 x 5 1/4 inches.Weight 1.2kg.Bound in modern full calf raised bands red leather title label. Binding in excellent condition.Internally no loose pages month inscription in early hand on top margin of Jan/Fed/March some occasional light staining a few sections have been cleaned small chip from margin of frontis. Pages in good clean condition.A very nice clean well bound copy.F. First Edition. Full Calf. Very Good. 8vo. printed for S. Crowder and H. Woodgate, at the Golden Ball in Paternoster Row, no date but circa [1760?]. Hardcover
1727001253London: James Woodman and David Lyon 1727. FIRST EDITION. Late 18th century full calf leather binding professionally rebacked the original boards are panelled. Gilt rolled edges of boards have heavy wear as you would expect of books of this age. Title page in red and black four foldout plates. Overall a VERY GOOD book. Full title reads: A Complete Body of Husbandry; collected From the Practice and Experience of the most considerable Farmers in Britain particularly setting forth The Various Ways of Improving Land by Hollow Ditching Dreining Double Plowing Grasing Enclosing Watering and Manureing. With Particular DIRECTIONS for Fertilising of Broom-Ground Heath-Ground Furze Bushey and Chilturn-Ground: Also the METHOD of Improvement by assorting proper Plants to Lands and of shifting of Crops. To which is added Several Particulars relating to the Preservation of the GAME; and stated accounts of the Experience and Profits of Arable Pasture Meadow and Wood Lands. Adorn'd with Cuts. Richard Bradley was a botanist and a British naturalist born in 1688 and died on November 5 1732 in Cambridge. Bradley became a professor of botany at the University of Cambridge in 1724 and then taught courses in the medical sphere in 1727. Fellow of the Royal Society in 1712 he became interested in the generation of plants and plant anatomy. He published over twenty publications between 1716 to 1730 mainly devoted to agriculture and the horticulture: A Treatise on Succulent Plants 1710; New Improvements of Planting and Gardening both Philosophical and Practical 1717 reissued several times until 1731; The History of Succulent Plants 1717; A General Husbandry and Treatise on Gardening 1723; A survey of Ancient Husbandry and Gardening Collected from the Greeks and Romans 1725; The Riches of a Hop Garden Explained 1729; A Dictionary of Plants Their Description and Use 1747. . First Edition. Full Calf Leather. Very Good. Illus. by Adorn'd with Cuts. . 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. Hardcover. James Woodman and David Lyon Hardcover
17992510270031R. Phillips London 1799. Hardcover. Acceptable. Interesting provenance previously owned by Henry Barton Jacobs then later by noted medical scholar Owen Hannaway. 4 volume mixed set printed 1799-1800. Hardcover. Shelf wear. One board detached. Volume 3 bound in grey wraps. Edges chipped. Sold with all faults. Bookplate of Jacobs on verso. This is an oversized or heavy book which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US. <br> Henry Barton Jacobs was an educator and physician from Maryland. Jacobs came to Baltimore to become the private physician for Robert Garrett who was then president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. After Garrett's death in 1896 Jacobs joined the faculty of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine retiring in 1905. He actively participated in organizations directed toward the treatment and eradication of tuberculosis. In 1911 Jacobs was elected a trustee of The Johns Hopkins Hospital a position he held until his death. William Osler was considered a universal friend by physicians of his era but as with most people his intimate friends were few. Henry Barton Jacobs became a close friend as one of the 'latchkeyers' who lived next door to the Oslers in Baltimore and the friendship intensified after Jacobs married Mary Sloan Frick Garrett the fabulously wealthy widow of a former patient. The couples stayed close after the Oslers moved to Oxford vacationing together and corresponding frequently. The couple friendship between the Oslers and the Jacobses benefited American medicine in specific ways including the care of patients with tuberculosis and the care of children. <br> From the library Dr. Owen Hannaway. Hannaway was director of the Center for the History and Philosophy of Science at Johns Hopkins University. He authored numerous books and served as an editor of academic magazines in the history of science. Partial list of publications: Chemists and the Word: The Didactic Origins of Chemistry 1975; Observation Experiment and Hypothesis in Modern Physical Science 1985; The Evolution of Technology 1989; Science and the Practice of Medicine in the Nineteenth Century 1994; and The Foundations of Modern Science in the Middle Ages: Their Religious Institutional and Intellectual Contexts 1996. <br> The Medical and Physical Journal was a British medical periodical edited for many years by Dr. Thomas Bradley. It was published from the late 18th century into the early 19th century and included content on medical observations diseases and other physical and natural sciences. While Bradley was the primary editor other figures such as R. Batty and A. A. Noehden also contributed to editing. R. Phillips, London hardcover
1726248433London: Printed for W. Mears 1726. Fifth edition with an Appendix. Frontispiece 12 plates many folding. xvi 608 pp. 8vo. Bound in contemporary calf some wear to covers neatly rebacked. Fifth edition with an Appendix. Frontispiece 12 plates many folding. xvi 608 pp. 8vo. Printed for W. Mears unknown books
1731800611731. BRADLEY Richard. New Improvements of Planting and Gardening Both Philosophical and Practical. In Three Parts. London: J. and J. Knapton . A. Betteworth and C. Hitch.J. Pemberton. and D. Browne 1731. 6th ed. with an Appendix treating of several matters omitted in the former impressions. xiv 60923 indexpp. Frontis.13 copper-engraved plates some folding. Contemporary double gilt-ruled calf rebacked in matching leather raised spine bands red morocco spine label. Some wear to corners some light scattered foxing lacks rear free endpaper several of the folding plates repaired Plate II of Appendix missing part of plate else very good. New Improvements Parts II and III the section on Herefordshire Orchards and the Appendix have separate title pages all dated 1730 apart from the appendix which is dated 1731. Bradley ca. 1688-1732 was an English botanist and gardener appointed to be the first Professor of Botany at Cambridge University a Fellow of the Royal Society and the first to publish a pineapple recipe in English. Fussell Old English Farming Books p. 108 provides Bradley an entire chapter but only on the grounds that Bradley was the most prolific author of the period 1700-1730. unknown
1726248433London: Printed for W. Mears 1726. Fifth edition with an Appendix. Frontispiece 12 plates many folding. xvi 608 pp. 8vo. Bound in contemporary calf some wear to covers neatly rebacked. Fifth edition with an Appendix. Frontispiece 12 plates many folding. xvi 608 pp. 8vo. Printed for W. Mears unknown
175729504<p>Richard Bradley's A General Treatise of Agriculture London: W. Johnston et al. 1757 is the first edition of an eighteenth-century English agricultural and horticultural text. The work unites philosophical study and field practice presenting instruction in farming soil care plant growth and garden construction. Part I addresses husbandry focusing on the nature of soil air and environmental factors suited to vegetation. Part II concerns gardening covering the circulation of sap propagation and garden layout. Plates depict plows irrigation systems heating devices and garden designs. Bradley Professor of Botany at Cambridge was a leading figure in early agricultural science. Collation: viii 503 15 pp. Illustrations: 21 engraved plates including frontispiece final plate incomplete. Edition: First edition 1757. Format: Octavo 8vo single volume. Binding: Full leather with modern spine and hinges original boards preserved. Condition: Good; corners rubbed; binding firm; pages toned with mild foxing; plates largely clean; final plate incomplete. #29504 PHOTOS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST.</p> for W. Johnston, et al. hardcover
1756048096London: S. Crowder and H. Woodgate 1756. First Edition. Hardcover Full Leather. Good Condition. Two volumes one in tattered and torn original leather and the other in early acid calf boards crudely reattached. Some wear to page edges volume two with periodic light stains in pink and teal early on and a few light dampstains in margins not obscuring any text. Modest age toning generally uniform. Plates worn in a few cases frontis adhered to partially adhered to endpaper. A married set in slightly different sizes and different bindings. One bound with six of seven of the plates bound at the beginning and the other withfour of the plates the one missing from volume one and three repeats bound at the end. One the whole a well used and worn but complete copy. Undated but Cagle dates it as 1756 based on an ad for its serial publication in Scots Magazine dated January 1756 announcing its publication; the full book is thought to have been offered for sale shortly after the parts version. <br /> <br /> 752pp; 469 33pp. With the seven plates of place settings and three repeated. Vicaire 111 Bitting 54 Cagle 574 Oxford 104 Simon 236<br /> <br /> Scarce with both volumes volume 1 often showing up alone. The engraved menu plates are extremely well executed. Collects household management gardening and cookery recipes. Remarkable for it's detailed start to finish explanations giving origins of ingredients and preparations. It is unlike most 18th century English cookbooks aimed at women other than Raffald's in 1769 a decidedly practical and middle class cookbook aimed at the housewife not a gentlewoman. Learn to make calve brain paaties pitchcock eels grow pineapples cure the pimple evil in sheep or hysterick fits in your neighbors. Filled with eels puddings creams and pies - a work of delightful completeness. Size: Octavo 8vo. 2-volume set complete. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Cooking Wine & Dining; Inventory No: 048096. S. Crowder and H. Woodgate hardcover
17625037London & York: W. Bristow and C. Etherington 1762. Hardcover. Good. 6 of 8 352 pages; possibly lacking a half-title otherwise complete. 12mo contemporary sheep rebacked top of spine damaged endpapers renewed. Very scarce. First published in 1727. ESTC locates only the Bodleian Library copy of this edition. <br/><br/> London & York: W. Bristow and C. Etherington hardcover books
1727015648London: Thomas Corbet at Addison's Head without Temple-Bar 1727. First and only edition. Small octavo pp 8 131 pages slightly waved as this is an unpressed copy occasional slight creases or marks a slim marginal worm-hoile affects the lower margin of a few leaves but overall a very clean copy internally endpapers a little stained a small contemporary signature label on the front endpaper contemporary mottled calf a simple single marginal gilt line rather worn at the edges the lower cover scuffed rebacked at a later stage with a simple calf spine raised bands and a black title label. The covers slightly bowed. RARE. Little is known about Bradley's childhood aside from an early interest in gardening and the fact that he lived in the vicinity of London a city at the time with many amateur naturalists. Though Bradley lacked a university education his first publication Treatise of Succulent Plants gained him traction with influential patrons like James Petiver and later Hans Sloane. With their support he was proposed and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1712 at the age of 24. Two years later Bradley visited the Netherlands and took an interest in horticulture. He spent the next decade back in England writing treatises on topics related to this central interest like weather fertiliser productivity and plant hybridisation. In recognition of his work in the field and with the thereafter unfulfilled promise that he would found and fund a university botanical garden the University of Cambridge named Bradley its first professor of botany in 1724 a position he would hold until his death. As Bradley was not a wealthy man in his later life and as this was an unsalaried position the newly minted academic continued to focus most of his efforts on making a living through publishing. According to his rival and successor John Martyn as well as his successor son Thomas Martyn Bradley did this at the expense of his students whom he reportedly neglected to even lecture to. Bradley made notable innovations and discoveries across a wide array of disciplines. For example this work included directions for the making and use of a rudimentary kaleidoscope to aid in formal garden design and layout. He also wrote about cooking and was the first to publish recipes in the English language using the then-exotic pineapple as the main ingredient. His History of Succulent plants was the seminal treatise on the topic and his studies of tulips and auriculas helped further accurate theories of plant reproduction. Bradley was also a pioneer in the examining of fungal spore germination and the pollination of plants by insects. His publications additionally contained information on how to build and use greenhouses early theories regarding agricultural productivity and pond ecology. First Edition. Full-Leather. Very Good. Thomas Corbet, at Addison's Head without Temple-Bar Hardcover
179000212072Dublin Ireland: P. Byrne J.Moore Grueber and M'Allister and W.Jones. Originally bound in brown full leather but now lacking front board this dated 1790 hardcover First Edition is Good. X1V/V111/352/74pp final 74page section is Appendix with convicts listed by name and sentence Sections of bookheaded as follows: Anecdotes of Governor Phillips Visit of Hope to Sydney-Cove Review of the Fleet and Establishment sent out with Governor Phillip Officers ShipsConvicts etc. Ships listed were: Alexander Scarborough Friendship Charlotte Prince of Wales and Lady Penrhyn Numbers of Marines with Officers Names assigned to individual ships Contents 22 Chapters Contents of Appendix: Routes of Individual Ships in 9 Tables List of 7 full page engraved Plates Frontis Head of Governor Phillips is missing and Plate 7 listed as Plan of Port Jackson is in fact View of New South Wales.They are all free of foxing. Complete list of convicts by name sent to NSW in 1787 appears in Appendix. Back boardcorners and spine worn spine has split running top to bottom spine title legible but indistinct single front endpaper stained title page follows with Frontis missing. Requires attention of binder. All text present and 6 out of 7 Plates: condition Good. . Good. Leather. First Edition. 1790. P. Byrne, J.Moore, Grueber and M'Allister and W.Jones hardcover
1721AL7GLTBLK22ALondon: W. Mears 1721. Hardback recently rebound in full-calf gilt titles to spine labels. 29.5cm x 22.5cm. 20 194pp. 28 hand-coloured engraved plates 1 of which is folding. 1st edition. Title in red and black with L. E. Newton Library ink stamp to lower margin. Subscribers list present. Some occasional toning/spotting and light offsetting. A splendid copy. A heavy book additional postage may be required for orders outside the UK. al7. 1st Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. W. Mears Hardcover
1748133622<p>London England: The Royal Society 1748; 8vo. disbound all edges uncut; 48 pages. Book # 133622</p><p>DNB IOI 1074-9. First printing of Bradley's "great discovery" of the oscillation of the earth's axis due to the gravitational pull of the moon. Bradley 1693-1762 held the title of Astronomer Royal. In 1748 he presented his findings in a long letter to his patron the Earl of Macclesfield which was read at a meeting of the Royal Society on February 14 1747. Also includes a letter to Martin Folkes from James Parsons with observations on shell fish read at the Society's meeting January 21 1747. Disbound from Philosophical Transactions XLV 1. Tanning and light soiling at edges of text.</p> (The Royal Society)
17246689112 monthly editions April to March in 2 volumes Volume I: xii 358 pages; Volume II: 372 pages 14 including Indices; 11 woodcut plates with titles including 6 folding ornately engraved initials friezes and tailpiece to each monthly edition 3 double-sided weather-recording tables to Volume I title page to Volume I including title and dedicatory page to each monthly edition armorial bookplate with coronet to upper pastedown of each volume Printed for T Woodward and J Peele hardcover
1721BB2754London: printed for P. Vaillant in the Strand and W. Mears and F. Clay without Temple-Bar 1721. Half-Calf. Fine. First Edition in English of the "first treatise on cuttings and graftings." Hunt Demy 4to 276 x 214mm: 243004pp with 31 i.e. 33: in the numbering of plates XXIII and XXVIII are repeated engraved plates inserted on 22 sheets some folding; head- and tail-pieces and historiated initials. Recent half calf over marbled boards spine in sic compartments divided by gilt-ruled raised bands small gilt ornaments red morocco lettering piece gilt title page printed in red and black end papers renewed. An excellent example beautifully bound to period style generally fresh and bright occasional light spotting and dust-soiling with excellent impressions of the plates. Henrey II 443-46 and III 411. Hunt II 452. First published in two volumes in German "High-Dutch" in 1716 as Neu-und nie erhörter doch in der Natur und Vernunfft wohlgegründeter Versuch der Universal- Vermehrung aller Bäume Stauden und Blumen-Gewächse and soon afterward translated into French 1720 Dutch 1719 and this English edition. A key gardening text in which Agricola announced a new method of propagating plants by grafting twigs to roots of the same species and sealing the graft with a turpentine and pitch plaster he called "vegetable mummy." His text also explains "many Useful Secrets in Nature for helping the Vegetation of Trees and Plants and for fertilizing the most Stubborn Soils." The plates reproduced from first German edition illustrate Agricola's procedures which were used by fruit growers for years. Richard Bradley 1688-1732 was appointed first professor of botany at Cambridge in 1724. N. B. With few exceptions always identified we only stock books in exceptional condition. All orders are packaged with care and posted promptly. Satisfaction guaranteed. Fine Editions Ltd is a member of the Independent Online Booksellers Association and we subscribe to its codes of ethics. printed for P. Vaillant in the Strand, and W. Mears and F. Clay without Temple-Bar unknown
17202131London: Printed for W. Mears at the Lamb without Temple Bar 1720. Three volumes bound as one. Thick octavos 71 136 290 2 pages. Third editions corrected. & 2 xv 124 pages. 2 leaves of plates. Illustrated in all with 11 engraved plates. Third edition corrected. New Improvements and the Kalendar were often found bound together as such. Bradley ca. 1688-1732 was an English botanist and gardener appointed to be the first Professor of Botany at Cambridge University a Fellow of the Royal Society and the first to publish a pineapple recipe in English. Fussell Old English Farming Books provides Bradley an entire chapter but only on the grounds that Bradley was the most prolific author of the period 1700-1730. Very good with all plates present rebound in modern half-calf with raised bands and ornamented compartments. Fussell page 108. Printed for W. Mears at the Lamb without Temple Bar hardcover books
17240000801London: W. Mears 1724. Contemporary calf. Very good. 4th Edition. 8vo 18.2 x 11.6 cm. Contemporary paneled calf with some wear; raised bands on later spine; gilt label; small patches to lower cover repaired; two ink spots on fore edge of text block; edges speckled red. Collation: xvi 63 64 viii 65-435 1-Bl ii 1-104 ii 36 7-Index 1-Corrigenda 2-Addenda 1-Errata 5-Cat. pp. 11 copper engraved plates. 8 folding. Text has light browning at head. <br />The organization of this series of tracts has continuous pagination with separate title pages printed in red and black. There is a fourth part The Gentleman and Gardener’s Kalendar where it is noted on the title page that this tract includes several “Acts of Parliament to encourage the Planting of Timber-trees Fruit-Trees and other Trees for Ornament Shelter or profit…” The last tract of this publication contains for the first time a copy of John Beale’s Herefordshire-Orchards A Pattern for all England. Written in and Epistolary Address to Samuel Hatlib Esq. “John Beale was a clergyman and writer on agriculture and natural philosophy. Beale began a weekly correspondence with Samuel Hartlib in 1656 two of his early letters being published as Herefordshire Orchards a Pattern for All England 1657. Nichols Lit. anecdotes 1.447.”ODNB. <br /> <br/><br/>Provenance: Engraved bookplate of Patrick Hume Earl of Marchmont on front paste down. He was a politician born at Redbares Berwichshire who served several English monarchs and Queen Anne. His coat of arms occupies the bookplate with motto “True to the King” along with description of his position as Viscount Blasonberrie and Lord Polwarth of Polwarth and Lord High Chancelor of Scotland. There is also a loose bookplate from Rachel McMasters Miller Hunt library tipped in. <br />This work contains the three different tracts that Bradley wrote on botany gardening and vegetable physiology from 1717 to 1718. In this 1724 fourth edition of the New improvements of planting and gardening there is addition of John Beale’s treatise on Herefordshire-Orchards. Henrey p. 437. Bradley was a Fellow of the Royal Society and in 1724 was elected Professor of Botany at Cambridge. ODNB <br /> W. Mears unknown books
1718800431718. BRADLEY Richard. New Improvements of Planting and Gardening Both Philosophical and Practical; Explaining the Motion of the Sapp and Generation of Plants. London: Printed for W. Mears 1718. 2nd ed. corrected. In three parts. 14701 advertisement title page for Part II14136 title page for Part III102902advertismentspp. with BRADLEY Richard. The Gentleman and Gardeners Kalendar Directing What Is Necessary To Be Done Every Month . London: Printed for W. Mears 1718. Xii1162 advertisementspp. Illus. 10 plates 8 folding. Orig. gilt-bordered calf rebacked with matching period-style spine gilt-ruled raised spine bands compartments gilt red morocco spine label upper free corner of page 95/96 of Part Two torn not affecting text inset damage to upper free corner of final leaves professionally repaired else very good. Henrey 488. New Improvements and the Kalendar were often found bound together as such. Bradley ca. 1688-1732 was an English botanist and gardener appointed to be the first Professor of Botany at Cambridge University a Fellow of the Royal Society and the first to publish a pineapple recipe in English. Fussell Old English Farming Books p. 108 provides Bradley an entire chapter but only on the grounds that Bradley was the most prolific author of the period 1700-1730. unknown
1748133622London England: The Royal Society 1748. disbound all edges uncut. 8vo. disbound all edges uncut. 48 pages. DNB IOI 1074-9. First printing of Bradley's "great discovery" of the oscillation of the earth's axis due to the gravitational pull of the moon. Bradley 1693-1762 held the title of Astronomer Royal. In 1748 he presented his findings in a long letter to his patron the Earl of Macclesfield which was read at a meeting of the Royal Society on February 14 1747. Also includes a letter to Martin Folkes from James Parsons with observations on shell fish read at the Society's meeting January 21 1747. Disbound from Philosophical Transactions XLV 1. Tanning and light soiling at edges of text. The Royal Society unknown books
1721032919London: Printed for W Mears at the Lamb without Temple-Bar 1721 A very good copy in largely contemporary pannelled calf with 28 hand coloured plates. Richard Bradley 1668-1732 was elected to the Royal Society on the basis of his work and ideas on the balance of nature and productivity although he lacked a university education. He became Chair of Botany at Cambridge an unsalaried position in 1724 and attempted to make a living through writing. He was known to a number of eminent and influential people including Hans Sloane and a 2012 post from the Sloane Letters Project reveals a man constantly seeking funds but then failing to use them properly - the post is headed up 'Richard Bradley An Eighteenth Century Rogue'! This work is Bradley's attempt to provide an overview of the plant and animal kingdoms and the subscribers' list shows a number of eminent customers including Isaac Newton 6 copies and Hans Sloane. The calf binding has a blind-stamped pannelled design to the boards. The spine is newer with raised bands and gilt titles and date. The board corners have been repaired. Internally an old catalogue entry for the book has been pasted to the front pastedown endpaper. Contents: title in red and black; dedication to the Earl of Orrery 2pp; subscribers' list 8pp with hand written note that this amounted to 514 copies; contents list 3pp; directions to binder 1p with remains of old bookmark; introduction 3pp; text pp 1-194 with 28 plates - of which 1 is folding; advert for 3 works by Bradley 1p. Text with decorative head and tailpieces and initial capitals. The contents are in very good clean condition with some toning to the margins particularly at the top. There is a stain to the bottom margin of plates XIV and XV and a stain to one page of the subscribers' list. There is a note pasted at the rear pastedown endpaper about the receipt of the book in 1770. Printed for W Mears, at the Lamb, without Temple-Bar hardcover
1724193858937552T. Woodward 1724. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. THIS COMPLETE THREE VOLUME SET IS IN VERY GOOD CONDITION BEAUTIFULLY REBACKED RETAINING ORIGINAL COVERS WITH BRIGHT GILT RULE TO BOARDS SIX COMPARTMENTS AND FIVE RAISED BANDS TO SPINES WITH BRIGHT GILT DETAILS AND TITLE. SOME RUBBING TO LEATHER BOARD EDGES. BINDING AND HINGES ARE VERY GOOD NO LOOSE OR MISSING PAGES PAGES ARE WITHOUT MARKS AND LIGHT TO MILD SPORADIC FOXING. PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED WITH COPPER PLATES - NUMEROUS FOLD OUTS BOOKS MEASURE 7.75"x5". FIRST EDITION 297 YEARS OLD. A NICE EXAMPLE IN GREAT CONDITION. T. Woodward hardcover
1724663P21Edinburgh: Robert Fleming and Company 1724. First edition. Leather. Very Good Indeed. 7.5" by 5". Not Stated. A very pleasing copy of this uncommon first edition of this treatise on agriculture and linen manufacture in Scotland during the beginning of the eighteenth century. The first edition of this work. An uncommon work. Illustrated with five folding plates and two plates. This work is an octavo with the signatures running as A-K8 L7. A fascinating work discussing various aspects of agriculture focussing on fallowing ground raising grass-seeds and training lint and hemp. The advice is focussed on Scotland the soils that can be found in Scotland intending to provide the materials to stimulate the linen trade. The work also goes into detail of the production of linen illustrated further by the plates. Linen manufacture was the primary industry in Scotland in the eighteenth century and help light the spark of the industrial revolution in Scotland eventually leading onto the cotton jute and woollen industries. Chapters 5-8 incorporate Lewis Crommelin's essay towards improving the manufacturing of hempen and flaxen in Ireland. Crommelin was the director of an Irish linen business following his exile from France. Following the 1696 parliament act admitting all products of hemp and flax to be duty free from Ireland to England he ordered looms from Flanders and Holland. He was intrinsic to the introduction of Huguenot weavers to Ireland. His writings which are cited in this work was one of the earliest Irish books on Irish industry. Published by the Honourable Society for Improving in the Knowledge of Agriculture. This was the first agricultural society in Europe forming in June 1723. The work has been variously attributed to both William Macintosh and Richard Bradley though it is also thought that large portions of the work was written by Sir Thomas Hope. Sir Thomas Hope was the first president of the Honourable Society for Improving in the Knowledge of Agriculture. Robert Maxwell was the secretary of the Honourable Society for Improving in the Knowledge of Agriculture and wrote 'The Practical Husbandman' and 'The Practical Beemaster'. Prior owner's ink inscription to the title page 'William Tomlinson'. Rebacked full calf with the original boards retained. Externally generally smart. Light rubbing and marking to the boards. A little discolouration to the spine. A small amount of loss of leather to the rear board. Internally firmly bound. Pages are light age-toned and generally clean with the odd spot. Leaf A2 is lifting to the tail. Closed tear to the margin of page 3/4. Small loss to the gutter and bottom edge of page 33/34 not affecting text with a closed tear to the following page in the same corner. Very Good Indeed Robert Fleming and Company hardcover
17568C7AI5UKANV9Paris 1756. 12mo. Pierre-Aug. Paulus du Mesnil Jean-Luc Nyon & Siméon-Prosper Hardy colophons: printing offices of Moreau vol. II and Aug. Mart. Lottin vol. III Contemporary mottled tanned sheepskin sewn on 4 cords anchored in the boards but with 5 raised bands on the gold-tooled spine the 3rd false each volume with a red morocco label in the 2nd compartment and the volume number in the 3rd each of the others with a thisle and several floral and other stamps gold-tooled board edges red edges. Engraved frontispiece depicting the gardens of a country estate and 12 numbered folding engraved plates by Pierre-François Legrand showing all kinds of flowers garden lay-outs insects etc. including 3 very interesting plates of a greenhouse plan interior and exterior views in vol. 3 3 volumes. frontispiece plus XXXVI 358 2: 4 blank 5 X-XVI 510 2 blank; 2 12 "442"=440 pp. First and only edition of the French translation of two horticultural and botanical works by the English botanist Richard Bradley 1688-1732 the first professor of botany at Cambridge University 1724. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1712. Bradley "deserves pre-eminent notice as one of the most voluminous writers upon agriculture and gardening" McDonald Agricultural writers pp. 170-171.This French translation made by Philippe-Florent de Puissieux 1713-1772 is based on Bradley's New improvements of planting and gardening both philosophical and practical London 1717; sixth edition: London 1731 and on his Gentleman and gardeners calendar London 1718.The translation is adapted to French circumstances and conditions especially regarding the proper dates for planting cropping etc. the various plants and trees. Spines damaged mostly at the heads and feet but with the loss of the headbands hinges and board edges worn; some minor foxing and with a crease in the half-title of vol. III but still in good condition.l Oxford companion to gardens p. 70; Pritzel 1076; cf. Hünersdorff Coffee: a bibliography pp. 174-175. hardcover
1732EXP3-C-10London: D. Browne and T. Woodman 1732. First edition. Leather. Very Good. 8" by 5". None. The scarce first edition of the second volume of Bradley's fantastic instructional guide from the farmer's wife. Part II only published here for the first time as part I was in its sixth edition by this point. There are no recorded copies seen of the first edition of part one and any edition prior to 1760 are very scarce indeed. 'Including a great variety of the most curious receipts for dressing all the sorts of flesh fish fowl fruit and herbs which are the productions of a farm or from any foreign parts. Contained in letters and takne from the performances of the most polite proficients in most parts of Europe. Now published for the good of the publick by R. Bradley professor of Botany in the University of Cambridge'. 'To which is added from a poulterer in St. James-Market the manner of trussing all sorts of poultry. Adron'd with cuts: shewing how ever fowl wild or tame ought to be prepared for the spit; and likewise any kind of game'. With twelve illustrations in the text to the rear detailing the trussing of animals. Decorative head and tail pieces and capitals. Rebound in decorative full crushed morocco. Externally very good and sound just a trifle rubbed. Internally firmly bound. Bright but with scattered spotting and handling and dust marks a couple of spill burns. Very Good D. Browne and T. Woodman hardcover
179912534Paris: Du Pont 1799. Three engraved maps 465 by 420 mm 550 by 340 mm and 530 by 350 mm respectively with fine contemporary hand-colour in full old folds. These maps from the library of the Rochambeau family were published in the first edition of Rochefoucauld-Liancourt's travels in the United States 'Voyage Dans les États-Unis D'Amérique Fait en 1795 1796 et 1797 " Paris 1799 annotated in an early 19th-century hand after Abraham Bradley Junior's 1796 map 'A Map of the United States. Exhibiting Post Roads & Distances'. They are reduced copies of the 1796 first edition of Bradley's map and are therefore the first French edition of these maps. The Comte de Rochambeau 1725-1807 was a battle-hardened French general chosen by King Louis XVI in 1780 to command the expeditionary corps in the United States under the orders of General George Washington. Their combined success at the Siege of Yorktown on the 19th of October 1781 ended the Revolutionary War and secured American independence. 1."Carte générale des États-Unis de l'Amérique Septentrionale divisée en ses 17 provinces" annotated in an early 19th-century hand numbering each of 16 states giving the location of Native American tribes providing a key showing the major post roads from Main to South Carolina all after Abraham Bradley's map of 1796 acknowledged by the inscriber who has replaced the imprint with "par Abraham Bradley Jun.r" This map of the East Coast extends from Quebec south to include part of East and West Florida; the western boundary of Georgia extends to the Mississippi River; a strip of land extending westward between Georgia and Tennessee is designated "United States Territory" having been ceded back to the United States in 1787 from South Carolina; another strip between Georgia and West Florida is "Land claimed by the united states" referring to the ongoing dispute between the United States and Spain; all the land to the west which would become the Louisiana Purchase is "Spanish Territory Louisiana." English captions and French title. Manuscript ink annotations in French indicating the names of the 17 states and the position of the Indian tribes. Ink manuscript inscription to verso "IK 403" shelfmark of Rochambeau family library and as "Etats-Unis en 17 provinces." 2. The "Carte des États-Unis Provinces méridionales" shows Kentucky Virginia Tennessee North and South Carolina Georgia a strip of land between Tennessee and Georgia as "United States Territory" and to the south of Georgia "Land claimed by the united states". 3. The "Carte des États-Unis provinces Septentrionales" shows the states from Main sic to Maryland and Delaware. François Alexandre Frédéric duc de La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt 1747-1827 was a French writer and courtier. A social and scientific reformer he was elected to the Estates-General and pushed for changes to the absolute monarchy of France. Rochefoucauld-Liancourt was the first to warn Louis XVI of the fall of the Bastille; when the king called it a revolt Rochefoucauld Liancourt replied "No sire it is a revolution". Despite being sympathetic to the original aims of the Revolution and serving as the first president of the Constituent Assembly he opposed republicanism and secretly tried to arrange for the escape of the king. Following the storming of the royal palace in August 1792 and the beginning of the September Massacres later that same year precipitated his flight from France and he went into self-imposed exile in America. From London in September 1794 Angelica Schuyler Church wrote to her brother-in-law Alexander Hamilton with a glowing introduction. Liancourt made his was to Philadelphia in November and travelled extensively from "le Haute-Canada" above Lake Ontario to Charleston South Carolina taking notes on everything from the economy to slavery to agriculture. After returning to France in 1799 when Napoleon took power he published his analysis as an eight-volume work in which these maps were published. Related Letters and Historic Background Angelica Church to Alexander Hamilton September 19 1794: "My dear Brother I have very particular and very good motives to ask your kindness for the Duke de Liancourt. he loved Liberty with good sence and moderation; and he meant so well towards his country as to introduce into France a better system of Agriculture and to soften the situation of the Lower class of people there: Virtue has not found its reward for in the many scenes of distress that has afflicted his unfortunate country he like many more good men has been obliged to leave his possessions and seek an Asylum in this country. He goes to America and goes there without a friend unless my dear Brother who is always so good will extend to Monsieur de Liancourt his ease. besides many good Qualities this gentleman is the friend of the Marquis de La Fayette. Angelica Church." On April 10 1795 Liancourt wrote to Hamilton in a letter docketed by the recipient and then later by his widow Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton. Rough translation from French: "You have allowed me to count on your interest Monsieur and this without complaint a hope for which I am flattered. I am herewith asking you to prove it which I hope will be one for you interest since it seems to me not being a stranger to you. I am at the point of leaving for a voyage that will take me as far as Canada. I will enter the United States through the province of Maine from there for another voyage in the east There are introduction letters to principle places that I am due to visit that I would be more pleased to get from you rather than anyone else. If you agree as I think you will to give them to me would you please send them to General Knox in the province of Maine where I will be until the end of July. I flatter myself that you will excuse my importunity!." Although France and the United States had been allies since 1778 political developments in both countries damaged the relationship. The French Revolution was viewed by Federalists like Alexander Hamilton as a dangerous precedent; and the ensuing wars between Britain and France placed the neutral United States in a precarious position. Relations deteriorated further on the signing of Jay's Treaty 1794 with Great Britain. France ordered the seizure of American ships carrying British goods and in 1796 the French refused to admit American diplomats. This impasse led to the XYZ Affair which provoked Congress in turn to suspend commercial relations with France and to authorize American warships to seize armed French vessels. This undeclared naval war lasted for three years with the United States capturing about eighty-five French vessels Du Pont, unknown