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Garff, Jan edIn Pristine Condition. unknown
18612786np: np 1861. First edition. Original leather covers. Good. A REMARKABLY EXTENSIVE ARCHIVE OF A UNION SOLIDER INCLUDING DIARIES FROM 1861-1865 SPANNING HIS ENTIRE CIVIL WAR CAREER.<br /> <br /> THE SOLDIER CHARLES E. SMITH PARTICIPATED IN SOME OF THE MOST CRITICAL CAMPAIGNS OF THE WAR INCLUDING THE SEIGE OF VICKSBURG THE FALL OF ATLANTA AND SHERMAN'S MARCH TO THE SEA. Background:<br /> <br /> Charles E. Smith 1836-1905 was born in Berlin Township Ohio. He worked as a farmer and country schoolteacher in Alum Creek Delaware County Ohio. He enlisted in the 32nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry at the age of 25 on September 3 1861 and mustered in September 7 1861. He was promoted to the rank of corporal in Company I of the regiment on January 30 1864. He was slightly wounded on July 29 1864 during the Atlanta Campaign. He mustered out of the service on July 20 1865 at Louisville Kentucky.<br /> <br /> The 32nd Ohio Infantry was organized at Mansfield Ohio on August 20-September 7 1861 and mustered in for three years' service under the command of Colonel Thomas H. Ford. The regiment was involved in several important engagements and operations during the Civil War including the Battle of Greenbrier River the Battle of McDowell the Battle of Harpers Ferry the Battle of Champion Hill the Siege of Vicksburg the Atlanta Campaign the Battle of Jonesborough Sherman's March to the Sea the Carolinas Campaign and the Battle of Bentonville. The 32nd Ohio Infantry mustered out of service at Louisville Kentucky on July 20 1865.<br /> <br /> The Collection:<br /> <br /> The collection consists of 26 dairies dating from 1859 to 1866. Except for four volumes covering a period from 1856 to April 1861 and one covering the period September 18 1865 to December 5 1866 the remaining dairies 21 volumes span his entire Civil War career in the 32nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry covering the period September 3 1861 the date of his enlistment to the date of his mustering out of the service on July 20 1865. The diaries of various sizes average approximately 100 pages with few blank pages.<br /> <br /> His daily entries in his Civil War diaries many of which are detailed consist of descriptions of the weather diet geographical locations his devotion to the Union camp activities military news and description of engagements. He also included several drawings in the diaries some in color. He described his day of enlistment of September 3:<br /> <br /> "Enlisted at Lewis Center between 8 and 9 oclock in Captain Dyre's company of 3 years volunteers. I bid good bye to all my folks and started having resolved to assist in sustaining the Government. But the feelings which came over me when I left home friends and all that seemed dear to me I cannot describe."<br /> <br /> The new enlistees moved to Camp Dennison and Smith records the daily activities in camp as his company prepared for their first movement. From Camp Dennison the 32nd Ohio was ordered to western Virginia present-day West Virginia to assist in driving Confederate forces out of the region. On October 3 1861 the 32nd Ohio participated in the inconclusive Battle of Greenbrier River. Smith records in his diary beginning on September 29 through October 3:<br /> <br /> "In the evening we received orders to march to make an attack on Greenbrier about 12 miles distant. Our company numbered 86 men. Our regiment probably numbered 900 men present and able to perform duty. The 32nd. Went in advance and cleared out the road and took one prisoner. Our regiment stopped at the cross roads within four miles of Greenbrier and stopped. We expected there that the battle commenced. but they Confederate troops did not come and we. crept into the thick laurel bushes to lay till morning. When I awoke it was daylight and other regiments were passing. The artillery was hurrying along as fast as possible each gun was drawn by six horses and about nine oclock the canons began to roar. It was kept up till two oclock on both sides when our communication failed and our men withdrew from the field without losing any guns. The canons roared very loud and the sound rolled over the Mountains and valleys and made everything ring once more. Our loss was including those that were killed on the field and those that died of wounds after the battle about 12 men. We took 13 prisoners." <br /> <br /> Smith describes an engagement with Confederate forces around Beverly Virginia on December 18 1861:<br /> <br /> "The rebels came out and met our forces and a bloody fight ensued. The 32nd fought bravely and drove the enemy back. The 25th were in the advance and were cut up dreadfully. They fell back and the 32nd stood their ground and fought them like tigers. Our men made two or three gallant charges and drove them out of their entrenchments and were forced out themselves. Our boys could not drive them out again and after a desperate and bloody struggle our troops retreated. having lost about one hundred men."<br /> <br /> After spending the winter in Beverly Virginia the 32nd Ohio participated in the Shenandoah Campaign of 1862 where they engaged Stonewall Jackson's Confederate force at the Battle of McDowell Virginia on May 8 and were defeated. On that day Smith recorded the following:<br /> <br /> "We formed into line and gave three cheers to the cavalry and were waiting to welcome the infantry when a dispatch came for us to report immediately at headquarters armed and equipped. We went forthwith and formed into line of battle on an open field. The rebels came down on the hills & tried to pick a spot to plant a gun and our boys threw shell amongst and drove them out. The rebels gathered on a mountain at the right of town about 4000 men. Our boys did not find out what they were at or where they were till late in the afternoon. Two regiments went up the mountain and the ball was opened. The battle lasted till after 8 oclock at night when our boys withdrew bringing the wounded and mostly all the dead from the field. The fight lasted about 4 hours."<br /> <br /> The 32nd Ohio retreated to Franklin Virginia where they joined General John C. Fremont's command. Fremont followed the Confederates into the valley and engaged a Confederate force at Cross Keys Virginia on June 8 1862 but Smith's company did not participate in the action. The 32nd Ohio move on to Winchester Virginia where they performed garrison duty for the remainder of the summer.<br /> <br /> In September 1862 the 32nd Ohio was dispatched to Harper's Ferry. The regiment again faced Stonewall Jackson participating in the Battle of Harper's Ferry September 12-15 1862. In this engagement Jackson captured the town and nearly twelve thousand Union soldiers including the 32nd Ohio subsequently paroling them after confiscating their supplies. In his entry for September 15 Smith describes the last day of the battle:<br /> <br /> "At sunrise the ball opened with a heavy cannonade from both sides. Our men were nearly out of ammunition for artillery and the enemy was mowing down our ranks. The shells and shot came down like hail all around and amongst us and many of our officers and soldiers were mortally wounded. Our artillerists run out of ammunition and there was no other way for us to do than surrender or be slaughtered on the field. At about 8 oclock the stripes and stars were hauled down and the white flag waved as a signal for surrender. The rebel cavalry and officers were soon riding through our camp. They hoisted the bars and stars where an hour before our glorious old star spangled banner floated proudly in the breeze. O how my heart beat and my bosom heaved to see that corrupt flag raised in defiance over us."<br /> <br /> The surrender of the 32nd Ohio resulted in a revolt in the ranks of the enlisted men against the regiment's officers which Smith later discusses in a January 15 1863 entry in his diary stating: "we were obliged to surrender 11500 men to the Rebels General A.P. Hill. It was the opinion of nearly all of our men that Colonel Miles of Baltimore betrayed us into the hands of the Rebels. It was said that he got 15 cents per head for us. Our Col Thomas H. Ford was examined by a committee and dismissed from the service for blame that was unjustly laid against him for the evacuation of the Maryland Heights. Since we were paroled a hard feeling was created between the officers of the regiment." Smith and his regiment eventually rejoined General Ulysses Grant's Army of the Tennessee in Memphis on January 25 1863. The regiment was involved in Grant's Siege of Vicksburg beginning in April 1863.<br /> <br /> A pivotal engagement in Grant's Vicksburg Campaign was the Battle of Champion Hill which occurred on May 16 resulting in a Union victory. Smith's entry for that day records the fighting:<br /> <br /> "A battle had begun on the left the firing seemed to be from large guns and the line seemed to be several miles long. We halted to await orders. Soon they came & we went forward & laid behind a ridge where we could see the fighting. The scene was grand but terrible. The heavy fighting was on the left & center at first. Our brigade charged on a rebel battery and took it & hauled it off. The 32nd did a noble part charging on the hills & ravines and out the battery driving the enemy before them killing a large number."<br /> <br /> The siege of Vicksburg ended on July 4 1863 when the Confederate forces surrendered and the Union troops under Grant including the 32nd Ohio entered the city. Smith recorded the events of July 3 and 4 in his diary. On July 3 he wrote: "This is the 46th day of the Siege. The rebels have sustained at this place and nobly and bravely have they defended it but General Grant has been too much for them." The next day's entry detailed the surrender. "At nine oclock it was announced that Vicksburg was surrendered. What a thrill of joy ran through every heart. The boys all seem lively and jubilant over the success which has crowned our arms. At half past ten oclock the rebels march out of their forts and rifle pits. and form in line outside their works and stuck arms."<br /> <br /> After Vicksburg the 32nd Ohio joined an expedition to Monroe Louisiana and then participated in General James McPherson's expedition to Brownsville Mississippi. In addition to his daily entries Smith also drew a number of pencil and ink sketches that reflected what he described in on a particular day such as sketching images that depicted the sleeping arrangements in the soldiers' tents maps of terrains and a two-page spread showing the capture of a Confederate battery in Mississippi. He also wrote down poems whether written by him or others. For example on January 31 1864 he added a six-stanza poem possibly written by him entitled "Evening Thoughts" to that day's entry. A partial transcription reads: "I'm weary and I'm lonely//As I'm sitting in my tent//And I'll take my leaden pencil//And give you my feelings sent// O would this war be over//And these bloody strivings cease//And our country now distracted//Return with lasting peace."<br /> <br /> In February 3 to March 6 1864 the 32nd Ohio was involved in General William T. Sherman's Meridian Expedition which resulted in the capture of Meridian Mississippi. On March 3 Smith recorded a diary entry that detailed the destruction rendered by the campaign:<br /> <br /> "I cannot fully give the amount of damage done to the Southern Confederacy while on this Expedition but the result foots up about as follows. About 200 miles of railroad running east & west was destroyed. About 60 miles of the Mobile and Ohio railroad was destroyed and about 40 miles of the Central Mississippi road destroyed. There were about 25 Locomotives and a considerable number of cars together with Confederate railroad houses machine shops and foundries manufacturing establishments of arms ammunition. A large amount of cotton was burned."<br /> <br /> On June 10 1864 the 32nd Ohio joined Sherman's Atlanta Campaign. In the campaign the 32nd fought in the Battles of Kennesaw Mountain Atlanta Ezra Church and Jonesborough. The campaign ended on September 2 1864 when Union forces occupied Atlanta. Smith's diary entry for June 27 mentions the engagement at Kennesaw Mountain:<br /> <br /> "We were aroused at early dawn. and then ordered to pile our knapsacks and be ready to move. A battery had been brought up and was shelling the Rebels lively for a while. Our division having formed a line of battle came to a right shoulder shift arms and then we advanced in line through the woods toward the enemy. The skirmishers engaged the enemy who replied by volleys of musketry which whizzed overhead and sounded hideous. The rebels brought several batteries down and opened upon us. Moved up a little higher and laid down again and the rebels opened with shot and shell which came whizzing overhead. Some of them sung like an old spinning wheel under the control of a northern farmer's wife. Our loss in this engagement was considerable. We fell back learning that the rebels were massing their force to right and formed a new line of battle in front of our new breastworks and behind the skirmishers. Skirmishing was kept up lively along the lines and many had hair breadth escapes. We made our demonstration to draw as much rebel force away from the right as possible."<br /> <br /> His diary entry for September 3 1864 reported the good news concerning the fall of Atlanta:<br /> <br /> "Atlanta was evacuated yesterday morning at daylight the rebels having blown up large magazines of ammunition destroyed government stores and eighty carloads of ammunition. The Twentieth Corps under General Slocum marched into and took possession of the city of Atlanta an eleven oclock. We have last caused the rebels to evacuate what they called the 'Gate City' or 'Key' to the southern Confederacy and that without a very general battle. The rebels have made many boasting speeches and declared that they would fight for Atlanta till the last man woman and child was sacrificed before they would give it up. Where is their vain boasting where are their prophesies"<br /> <br /> The capture of Atlanta had a major impact on the presidential election of 1864 and helped President Lincoln's chances for reelection enormously. On election day November 8 the 32nd Ohio voted in the field. Smith's diary entry for the day reads "This being election day the polls were opened and we voted for President. Abe Lincoln carried the day."<br /> <br /> In mid-November 1864 the 32nd Ohio participated in General Sherman's "March to the Sea." The command engaged in no noteworthy battles or skirmishes until reaching Savannah Georgia. On December 10 1864 the regiment was among the lead Northern units that drove the Confederate garrison into the confines of city. Upon the Union Army's capture of Savannah on December 21 1864 the 32nd entered and encamped in the city.<br /> <br /> Within a week of the fall of Richmond the capital city of the Confederacy the news of President Lincoln's assassination and death on April 15 spread slowly to the soldiers in the south including the 32nd Ohio. On Monday April 17 Smith recorded in his diary:<br /> <br /> "An order said to have come from Secretary Stanton to General Howard was announced to the soldiers. That President Lincoln Secretary Seward and son were assassinated and that the President was killed. Whether this be true or not it caused sadness in many hearts and was believed to be reliable."<br /> <br /> The next day's entry was in response to the confirmation that Lincoln was dead:<br /> <br /> "News of the death of our President Abraham Lincoln causes a gloom over our minds. We feel that in losing him we have lost one of the best men our nation ever produced. In losing him we lose a wise and intelligent statesman a great and good counsellor a lover of freedom and humanity and the deliverer of our nation from the curse of slavery."<br /> <br /> In addition to the dairies there are several documents and papers relating to Smith and his family including the following: 1 An autograph manuscript entitled "The Vicksburg Campaign from Millikens Bend Louisiana. From March to July 4th 1863" 81 pages one side only in a bound copy book cover missing 8.5" x 11.5" n.p.; n.d.<br /> <br /> 2 An autograph manuscript entitled "The Siege of Vicksburg Continued" 34 pages one side only in a bound copybook 6.75" x 8.25 n.p.; n.d.<br /> <br /> 3 Autograph manuscript signed entitled "Diary of Events Transpiring between the United States and Spain over Cuban affairs." 117 pages in bound copy book 5.75" x 9" n.p.; circa 1901.<br /> <br /> 4 Autograph manuscript signed entitled "Closing Scenes of the Rebellion. An Original Poem" Six pages one side only in bound copybook 8" x 10" n.p.; May 30 1895. Poem was recited on Decoration Day at Cheshire Ohio on May 30 1895.<br /> <br /> 5 An autograph manuscript entitled "The Great Three Days Battle of Gettysburg Fought July 1 2d & 3d 1863. The Greatest and Most Decisive Conflict of the Great Struggle for American Independence" 28 pages one side only in bound copy book missing front cover 8" x 10" n.p.' n.d.<br /> <br /> 6 Autograph manuscript part 2 of number 4 above 27 pages one side only in bound copy book 8" x 10" n.p.; n.d.<br /> <br /> 7 Autograph manuscript entitled "Original Poem Written for the 49th anniversary of the birth of Mrs. Louisa Rolson Smith" Five pages one side only 8" x 10" n.p.; June 22 1895.<br /> <br /> 8 Autograph manuscript signed entitled "Incidents in the war of the rebellion from 1861 to 1865. Poetical Effusions from the pen of Charles E. Smith late of Co. F. 32d Ohio veteran volunteer Infantry" 68 pages one side only in bound copybook missing front and back cover 8.5" x 11.75" n.p.; n.d.<br /> <br /> 9 Photograph of Charles E. Smith 3.5" x 4.75 oval albumin print mounted on board n.p; circa 1894. <br /> <br /> 10 CDV of George Smith brother of Charles E. Smith 2.5' x 4" T.Beach photographer Delaware Ohio; circa 1860s. <br /> <br /> 11 Medal with badge for 32nd National Encampment GAR Cincinnati 1898.<br /> <br /> 12 Photograph of residence of Charles E. Smith West Berlin Ohio an 9.25" x 7.5 albumen print on a 10.25" x 8.5" mount Acme View Company McAlisterville Pennsylvania; 1894. <br /> <br /> 13 A Confederate envelope "captured on the battle field of Raymond Miss. May 12 1863 by C. E. Smith. <br /> <br /> 14 Discharge of Charles E. Smith from the service one page 6" x 8.5" Columbus Ohio; July 28 1865.<br /> <br /> 15 Two pencil sketches by Smith of "A residence near camp of 20th Ohio sketched by C. E. Smith Dec 3d 1863" on front and "A scene in co. D. 20th O.V.I. Thursday evening Nov 26th 1863. A Thanksgiving oyster supper. Sketch by C. E. Smith Nov 27th 1863." <br /> <br /> 16 A pencil sketch of the "View of The Court House at Vicksburg. Drawn by C.E. Smith Nov 4th 1863."<br /> <br /> 17 Pencil sketch of the Rock House inside the Confederate fortifications at Vicksburg "Sketched by C.E. Smith Nov 2d 1863." On verso is sketch by Smith of the city vault in Vicksburg November 2 1863.<br /> <br /> 18 Photocopy of will of Charles E. Smith Two pages West Berlin Ohio; December 18 1901. <br /> <br /> Condition: The 26 diaries all have leather covers over boards which in most cases are worn but intact. The front cover of volume #9 has separated. Most have flaps. Overall the dairies are in good condition. The other items in the collection are overall good; numbers #1 and #7 manuscripts are brittle and fragile. Foxing and toning to letters along with creasing and light tearing at edges. Wear and staining to the exterior of diaries.<br /> <br /> Note: The text of the collection has been published as "A View From the Ranks: The Civil War Diaries of Corporal Charles Smith" in a very limited printing by the Delaware County Historical Society 1999. A copy of the book is included with the collection. <br /> <br /> A REMARKABLE UNBROKEN RUN OF DIARIES OFFERING A HIGHLY LITERATE FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT OF THE CIVIL WAR EXPERIENCE THROUGH THE EYES OF A UNION SOLDIER. np unknown
1831F72I8N01U79Omostly on board the barque Sarah of London 1831. Contemporary sheepskin parchment sewn on 2 tapes. 4to 19.5 x 16.5 cm. The journal with an engraved view as frontispiece "Island of Saint Helena" engraved by Everingham in London 15 full-page 1 nearly full-page and 1 smaller manuscript maps and coastal profiles plus a small engraved view "Tomb of Napoleon" mounted on 1 page. The lecture notes with a matching pair of engravings of a scull one signed "A. East del" on and facing the title-page and 27 pencil and/or ink anatomical drawings including 2 full-page some also with red. Most are drawn on the album leaves a few on separate slips mounted on the leaves. Both the lecture notes and the journal are written in brown ink with occasional additions in pencil. Including: MANUSCRIPT - ANATOMICAL. MORSE Edward George.Lecture Book notes on anatomical lectures by Joseph Constantine Carpue.London November-December 1828. A manuscript ship's journal kept by Edward George Morse Bromyard 1805-Deal post 1850 who no doubt served among other functions as the ship's surgeon. Morse made his earliest dated entries in April 1831 at the island Mauritius in the Indian Ocean and others at Madagascar and its surrounding islands from May to August 1831. Morse provides extensive notes on the natural history topography and people of the Seychelles Madagascar and the neighbouring islands and provides detailed maps of many of the islands and coastal areas along with a few coastal profiles. The two manuscripts are written in a single album of laid paper. Morse used it 1828 to take notes when he attended the London lectures on anatomy and blood circulation by the innovative surgeon Joseph Constantine Carpue who had pioneered facial reconstructive surgery by introducing ancient Indian techniques. He was famous for illustrating his lectures with chalk drawings which no doubt served as the models for the anatomical illustrations in Morse's notes. A few clippings and hand-written notes have been inserted. unknown
20202081502111906507Hoo shubbansha 2020. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Hoo shubbansha paperback
231217Wilson and Mackinnon Melbourne 1873 - 1884. The Australasian Sketcher from # 1 April - 1873 to # 186 Nov. 1884 contained in 5 uniform very good half-morocco volumes and two other cloth volume vol. 11. With wood-engraved illustrations throughout some folding or double-page wood-engraved or lithographed plates This set lacks many of the supplements as is often the case however a few are present. the final volume does have 8 of the coloured supplements and the earlier volumes have 2. Issues 168- 174 are duplicated./ All items in very good sound & clean condition. This gorgeous item is a virtual window into the rich and burgeoning times in Australia rolling on from the wealth of the goldfields. Bursting with 1000's of engravings many full page and double-page views the collection defines this maturing period of our history from every aspect imaginable - including the Kelly saga Sport Racing Cricket and Football the Exhibitions the City the Country Disasters Flood Fire & Shipwrecks Architecture Theatre Social & Community Events - even the Pacific and New Guinea - a window into the past not matched elsewhere in breadth depth or sheer visual impact. This gathering comprises the most important part of the Sketcher's run went to issue 252 Dec. 1889. In its later issues it turned to Victorian serial romance for much of its content and also many of these later issues were plagued with unsatisfactory acid paper. Wilson and Mackinnon, Melbourne, 1873 - 1884 hardcover
1866010620London: Office for Advertisments and Publications 1866. A near complete run from 1866 to 1994. 231 volumes. Lacking July-Decenber 1948 & January-June 1949. Books measure 36x26.5 last 31 volumes measure 30x21.5. Illustrated throughout. Most volume bound in modern black cloth with gilt lettering others bound in quarter calf. The calf volumes are faded on spines. Generally all bindings in very good clean firm condition. Internally very occasional library mark stamp. Pages and illustrations in very good clean condition. . Cloth. Very Good. Small Folio. Office for Advertisments and Publications Hardcover
1822ABC_49460Aboard the Winchelsea written and drawn at sea 1822. Contemporary half gold-tooled brown calf marbled paper sides each volume with a different marbled paper the journal volume with marbled endpapers. 8vo. The two sketchbooks contain a total of ca. 100 pages of sketches of ships done in pencil including 1 page containing signal flags in colour. 3 volumes. With: Two sketchbooks with pencil drawings of ships. A neatly-written and illustrated sea journal kept by James Dudman the second mate on board the East India Company's ship Winchelsea during a 1822-23 voyage to India. Launched in 1803 the Winchelsea was already a veteran East Indiaman this being her ninth voyage - she made a total of eleven voyages for the EIC before she was broken up in 1834. On the present voyage commanded by Captain William Adamson she carried 592 people including the 17th and 44th Regiments of Foot and detachments of the King's and EIC's soldiers and a number of women and children. The sea journal volume is accompanied by two additional volumes by Dudman containing pencil sketches of unidentified masted sailing vessels.The Winchelsea's journey from its departure at Blackwall Dock on April 24 1822 to its arrival in Bengal and eventual return to England via St. Helena and The Downs on May 24 1823 reflects the extensive maritime routes integral to British imperial dominance. The ship's role in transporting personnel and cargo exemplifies the strength of the EIC's logistical network sustaining Britain's colonial and economic interests in India. The journal with its careful record-keeping offers an intimate glimpse into the daily operations experiences and extraordinary events encountered by the second mate aboard an East Indiaman during Britain's height of imperial expansion.The journal written in Dudman's beautiful scribe-like handwriting opens with an entry dated 24 April 1822 at Blackwall Dock where the voyage started "bound for Bengal." The next few pages contain a detailed listing of the people on board beginning with the ship's company of 122 men with names followed by the troops on board: "List of a detachment of His Majesty's Troops belonging to the 44th Regt. of Foot on board the Honable. Company's Ship Wincelsea for Bengal" comprising name and rank of 367 men followed by the names of 42 women on board as well as the name and age of 57 children on board including 3 who died at sea plus 4 additional passengers.At Saugur meaning Sagar Island they took on board further passengers duly noted in an additional "List of H.M. 17th Regiment of Foot with the Women and Children accompanying them. Embarked on board the Honble. Company's ship Winchelsea at Saugur New Anchorage for England."Beyond the usual records of position winds weather and other ships Dudman includes interesting notes on unusual occurrences. Perhaps the most fascinating event was recorded on February 10 1823: a major earthquake off the coast of India experienced by the Winchelsea: "At 10 minutes past 1 PM every one on board was greatly alarmed at the singular feel of the ship which was in a violent trembling motion as if the ship was grazing over a rocky shoal and a loud rumbling noise similar to the roll.g! of a Bull quickly along the deck this very singular seuration lasted certainly not less than a minute those below ran on deck to enquire the cause and those below the poop below to ask the same question. I was in the round house at the time when it comen'd. The noise appeared to me as coming along the quarter deck and instantly over the poop the sea was smooth and the day clear. I looked out at the stern windows but saw no appearance of any shoal which I certainly would have done had such existed. The water being very clear and the ship not going more than 2 knots I cannot account for this very singular phenomenon in any other way than its being the shock of an Earthquake".The voyage journal of the Winchelsea during its 1822-23 journey to Bengal provides valuable insight into the maritime operations of the EIC its commercial and colonial reach and the strategic importance of British trade with India in the early 19th century. As a veteran East Indiaman the Winchelsea was part of the vast trading network that connected Britain with the Indian subcontinent transporting soldiers goods and passengers under the auspices of the EIC which functioned as both a commercial enterprise and a colonial governing force.The journal volume contains the typographic book plate of Mr. Jas. Dudman on the front pastedown and a manuscript inscription in ink on the first flyleaf by Lumsden Dudman who was married to Mary Anne Shirreff "Joseph H. Shirreff from L.S. Dudman Xmas 1892" one of the sketchbooks contains a manuscript inventory list in Greek of goods for sale on the first flyleaf and one of the sketchbooks with ownership signature "L: Dudman / Sept. 27 1836" likely Rev. Lumsden S. Dudman perhaps a brother of James Dudman. Some general wear to the leather spines and corners of the boards of the volumes occasionally foxed but overall internally clean. Overall in good condition. unknown
20202081502111906754Hoo shubbansha 2020. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Hoo shubbansha paperback
20192081502111906862Hoo shubbansha 2019. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Hoo shubbansha paperback
181319270Paris: L’Imprimerie de la Republique 1813. FIRST EDITIONS. Woodcut vignettes head- and tailpieces many with folding engraved plates. All volumes in original bindings uncut some unopened completely unsophisticated. Other than 2 volumes in the original calf-backed marbled boards all are bound in original plain or printed wrappers and preserved in half-calf slipcases with morocco spine labels. First editions of the Journal de l'Ecole Polytechnique one of the oldest scientific journals. It contains sections in mathematics physics chemistry geology astronomy and mechanics design and architecture. Here you find original contributions by the top French scientists of the time. A listing of each of the issues is set forth below with a sampling of the contributors. We offer Numbers 1-16 missing only Numbers 2 9 10.<br /> <br /> No. 1. viii 189 pp. Folding engraved plate. No binding.1 leaf of contemporary manuscript describing the plate laid in. Contributions from Monge Prony Barruel Hassenfratz Fourcroy Chaptal Berthollet Guyton etc.<br /> <br /> No. 3. iv xvi ii 209-444 pp. Original marbled wrappers. Contributions from Prony Guyton Berthollet Observations on the eudiometric properties of phosphorus.<br /> <br /> No. 4. ii xxviii 445-743 3 pp. including errata. With 9 folding engraved plates. Contemporary calf-backed marbled boards. Not in a folding case. Contributions from Fourcroy et Vauquelin Hassenfratz.<br /> <br /> Tom II No. 5. iv 208 iv pp. Original printed wrappers. Contributions from Fourcroy Lagrange Laplace Guyton Prony.<br /> <br /> Tom II No. 6. iv 209-456 pp. Original printed wrappers. Contributions from Fourcroy Lagrange Hassenfratz Laplace Monge.<br /> <br /> Tom III Nos. 7 and 8. iv vii I 477 2 pp. Original marbled paper-covered boards. Contribution from Prony Philosophical mechanics or reasoned analysis of the various parts of the science of balance and movement.<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> Tome IV No. 11. ii 395 pp. With 9 folding engraved plates. Contemporary calf-backed marbled boards. Not in a folding case. Contributions from Monge Prony Hachette Poisson Biot Hassenfratz Buyton Berthollet Gauss a short report on his Disquisitiones arithmeticae<br /> <br /> Tom V No. 12. iv 324 pp. Original wrappers. Contribution from Lagrange Lecons sur le calcul des fonctions.<br /> <br /> Tom VI No. 13. ii 378 1 pp. Original wrappers. Contributions from Monge Poisson Ampere Biot Fourcroy et Thenard chemistry Hassenfratz chemistry.<br /> <br /> Tom VII No. 14. iv 400 4; ii 90 pp. Supplement. With 3 full-page engraved plates. Original wrappers. Contemporary signature on title. The Supplement is Lagrange Supplement aux lecons sur le calcul des fonctions. Also a contribution from Montgolfier On the possibility of substituting the hydraulic ram for the old Marly machine.<br /> <br /> Tom VIII No. 15. ii 358 pp. Original wrappers uncut and partially unopened. Contributions from Poisson Memoir on the secular inequalities of the means of movement of the planets <br /> Lagrange Clarification of a singular difficulty which is encountered in the calculation of the attraction of spheroids very little different from a sphere Monge Essay on the application of analysis to some questions of elementary geometry another from Monge Construction of the vibrating string equation a number of articles from Poisson Laplace Dissertation on various points of analysis.<br /> <br /> Tom IX No. 16. iv 354 2 pp. Original boards. Contributions from Cauchy Poisson.<br /> <br /> École Polytechnique was created in 1794 a politically and economically troubled time but also the culmination of the Enlightenment. The Journal commenced publication the following year and has since then maintained the highest reputation of published research. L’Imprimerie de la Republique unknown
16386London: John van Voorst 1883-1886; Gurney and Jackson 1887-1903; R.H. Porter 1904-1913; British Ornithologists’ Union 1914-1932. FIRST EDITIONS. Hundreds of exquisite full-page lithographed plates many hand-colored after J.G. Keulemans J. Wolf J. Jennens H. Gronvold and others text illustrations distribution maps and tables. The first group of volumes also contain a list of members of the Union and the date of their election. The first six volumes bound in contemporary half-calf over marbled boards spine in compartments with the remaining volumes in library cloth and most have the original printed wrappers bound in where the journal was issued quarterly; interior excellent. Bookplate withdrawn of Trinity College Library on the paste-downs; a wonderful set. First printings of this famous journal of ornithology. <br /> <br /> Included are:<br /> <br /> Fifth series Volumes 1 1883 - 6 1888<br /> Sixth series Volumes 1 1889 - 6 1894<br /> Seventh series Volumes 1 1895 - 2 1896<br /> Eighth series Volumes 2 1902 - 6 1906<br /> Ninth series Volumes 1 1907 - 6 1912<br /> Tenth series Volumes 1 1913 - 6 1918<br /> Eleventh series Volumes 1 1919 - 6 1924<br /> Twelfth series Volumes 1 1925 - 6 1930<br /> Thirteenth series Volumes 1 1931 - 2 1932<br /> <br /> Authors include G.E. Shelley Sclater John Henry Gurney Edward Hargitt William C. Tait Henry Seebohm Osbert Salvin O. Finsch W. L. Buller R. Bowdler Sharpe Scott B. Wilson; literally all of the great ornithologists throughout the publishing history of this journal. Sclater 1829-1913 a co-founder and editor of Ibis was a well-known and highly productive over 1400 publications ornithologist by trade. He is also remembered for his 1858 paper setting out the faunal regions classification of zoogeography later adopted by Alfred Russel Wallace. He was also secretary of the Zoological Society of London a member of more than forty professional societies at home and abroad and a council member of the Royal Society of London. Assisting him as co-editor of some of the issues was Howard Saunders or A.H. Evans until 1931 when C.B. Ticehurst took over as editor.<br /> Now subtitled the International Journal of Avian Science it is in its present form a peer-reviewed scientific journal which covers ecology conservation behavior palaeontology and taxonomy of birds. For it’s first nearly one hundred years however the journal focused on a more popularistic type of article often introducing species and images to the public for the first time.<br /> <br /> A group of friends mostly wealthy collectors of bird specimens founded the British Ornithologists' Union in 1858 with the primary intent of starting an ornithological journal. The first volume of the journal The Ibis appeared in 1859. Lists of species observed by traveling ornithologists and long catalogues of specimens obtained on expeditions filled the journal. “This random fact gathering on distribution persisted unchanged from 1859 to the 1940s.†In her article entitled “The Ibis: Transformations in a Twentieth Century British Natural History Journal†in Journal of the History of Biology October 2004 Volume 37 No. 3 pp. 515–555 Kristin Johnson points out in a much more complete and professional manner the difference between “popular†ornithology and “scientific†ornithology study of the living bird in its natural environment more on a biological aspect the transition of which occurred post-1940. Meanwhile the articles appearing in the Ibis were geared more toward the popularization of the science and the spread of knowledge of geographic distribution and the habits and patterns of the various bird species. John van Voorst (1883-1886); Gurney and Jackson (1887-1903); R.H. Porter (1904-1913); British Ornithologists’ Union (1914-1932 unknown
16-6233New York: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper 1870. Two Original wood-engravings mounted on a support sheet.25 x 35.5cm. Ambassador John Lothrop Motley April 15 1814 – May 29 1877 was an American author and diplomat. As a popular historian he is best known for his works on the Netherlands the three volume work The Rise of the Dutch Republic and four volume History of the United Netherlands. As United States Minister to Austria in the service of the Abraham Lincoln administration Motley helped to prevent European intervention on the side of the Confederates in the American Civil War. He later served as Minister to the United Kingdom Court of St. James during the Ulysses S. Grant administration.Provenance: Lt.-Col. Herbert Alexander St. John-Mildmay was born on 20 July 1836.He was the son of Captain George William St. John-Mildmay and Mary Baillie. He married Susan Margaret Stackpole Motley daughter of the American writere and diplomat the Hon. John Lothrop Motley 1814 -1877 on 7 May 1884.1 He died on 21 October 1922 at age 86. He gained the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the Rifle Brigade. He was appointed Member Royal Victorian Order M.V.O. [New York: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1870] unknown
19402110502150415302Taiko Shrine Shiga Prefecture Hachiman Town 1940. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of copies: 162 copies Taiko Shrine (Shiga Prefecture Hachiman Town) paperback
BAY_01_SH_042345Journal of Light Construction. Used - Like New. Text block wraps and binding are in like new condition without markings of any kind. Supporting Bay Area Friends of the Library since 2010. Well packaged and promptly shipped. Journal of Light Construction paperback
43301Madrid: Año 1 n.º 1 18 de octubre de 1976 hasta Año 5 n.º 1250 3 de octubre de 1980; Tamaño aprox.: 43 x 31 cm con un ancho en conjunto de 175 m; Sin encuadernar.- Se ofrecen todos los números de los años indicados desde el primero aparecido en plena Transición hasta finales de 1980 reflejando los cambios importantÃsimos que vivió la sociedad española de aquellos años. Diario 16 proseguirÃa su andadura hasta el año 2001 cuando dejó de publicarse. RARA PUNTA DE COLECCION DE ESTE PRESTIGIOSO DIARIO MADRILEÑO. ETAPA DEMOCRÃTICA-JUAN CARLOS I Libro en español Diario 16 paperback
19662110502151005279Publication of newspaper materials 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 44 Publication of newspaper materials paperback
19414132<p>Buenos Aries Ahora Periodico Illustrado. 1941. Oblong. 210x278mm. 32 leaves with 31 black and white photographs pasted in. Each photograph has printed captions text in Spanish pasted onto the bottom edge. The first leaf has the title details printed on white paper pasted in. Each photograph has a glassine protective sheet. Contemporary string bound album covered in maroon cloth and stamped with the name of the owner "Mervyn F. Ryan" on the upper cover with "Ahora Periodico Illustrado" stamped at bottom right corner. Some slight rubbing to extremities and wear to corners but otherwise very good and in excellent condition internally with the photographs especially well preserved. This album or anything like seems to be unrecorded and we have found nothing similar in the auction records. This fascinating collection of is a rare photographic record of the signing of the Atlantic Charter by Roosevelt and Churchill. It was produced by the Argentinian illustrated periodical Ahora. This was a news magazine and these photographs are enlarged versions printed on good quality gloss photographic paper of the pictures used in a series of issues of the magazine between 22nd August and 5th September 1941. There is little staged about these images and they have the immediacy of a true journalistic record. Unsurprisingly Roosevelt and Churchill feature heavily – they were the two big beasts Churchill holding the line in Europe and Roosevelt playing a very delicate domestic game with American public opinion – but there is a strong sense of the broader picture with lots of other figures contributing to the bustle and urgency of a major diplomatic conference. The Atlantic Conference took place between 9th-12th August 1941 at the US Naval Base Argentia in Newfoundland and the declaration issued as a statement rather than as a written document was made on 14th August. Although it was in a sense merely one of a number of similar declarations and agreements made that year the Anglo-Soviet Agreement – Evelyn Waugh's "day of apocalypse for all the world" - had been signed the previous month the Atlantic Charter the name was coined by a British newspaper and it stuck had a greater immediate impact and has had a longer lasting effect. Arguably it led to Pearl Harbour the Japanese interpreting it as an act of aggression; its call for national self-determination set the ball of decolonization rolling; and it laid the foundations for NATO and the United Nations. A new world order was emerging. The recipient of this album given to him we assume by Ahora magazine was Mervyn Ryan an engineer who worked in railways in America Britain India and Argentina. He was in Argentina for most of his working life latterly advising the Argentine government on the management of the previously British-owned railways. With fingers in lots of pies and a prominent member of the British community in Buenos Aries the editors of Ahora no doubt thought that Ryan was the right audience for this specially produced record of a major political event.</p> [Buenos Aries] Ahora Periodico Illustrado. � hardcover
144688hardcover. Began the 9th Day of April 1691; and Ended the 27th of September 1743. Vol. I. Published by Order of the General Assembly. title vignette. iv 840 2pp. folio contemporay calf; expertly rebacked in modern calf with leather labels; first few and last few leaves heavily foxed in margins; some light browning to text; binding moderately rubbed edges of corners worn small rubberstamp of a former owner on margin of t.p. N.Y.: Hugh Gaine 1764.<br/> <br/> "The largest issue of Gaine's press and the first piece of government printing he secured. The pp. 2 is `An Act of reversing the Attainder of Jacob Leisler and others' and is often lacking. The work was edited and the index made by Abraham Lott Junr." Ford The Journals of Hugh Gaine I p. 113 This work is complete in itself vol. II was published in 1766. Evans 9756.<br/> <br/> unknown
1688GT404aLondon: Printed by Authority 1688. Original issue 1st Printing. No Binding. Fine. 4to. 2pp. Original single sheet issue of the London Gazette No 2400 dated November 15th to Saturday November 17thst 1688. Double column layout printed by Edw: Jones in the Savoy 1688. AN IMPORTANT ISSUE REPORTING William of Orange landed at Brixham in Devon with an invasion force on November 5th 1688 that deposed of James II of England and James VI of Scotland. The unfolding events are dramatically reported in the opening paragraph of this rare surviving original edition of the London Gazette. The worlds first newspaper. The Invasion fleet entered the English Channel on 3/13 November.Britain had became a Protestant Society and the last Catholics reign of James II would soon be over. 2pp complete. <br/> <br/> Printed by Authority unknown
187943501Paris Aux Bureau du Journal 1879-88. 4to. Bound in 29 uniform contemp. hcalf. Spines gilt and with gilt lettering.Top of spine on 3 vols. with wear. A nick to spine on 2 vols. 4 vols. with some wear to spines. A few vols. slightly rubbed. Internally fine. More than 14000 pp. Profusely illustrated with fine woodcuts in the text. The work is known for its fine executed illustrations of machinary and apparatus. <br/><br/><em>This is the first journal entirely devoted to theory of light and electricity in its practical applications documenting the early history of Telegraphy and Telephony. It describes and depicts the new inventions of electrical apparatus used in industries and communications. It describes the installments of telegraphy in Amerika as well as in Europe. It describes arch-lamps Eddison-lamps the Telephoneworks of Gray Edison Bell and others the introduction of electric lightening in houses and towns applications of electricity to railways electro-motors and dynamoes electromagnetism microphones etc. etc. It contains importent papers on the theory of electricity and magnetism as well.- Weaver Cat.of the Wheeler Gift No. 5919. </em> unknown
1964LL 638<p><strong><em>"Cuadernos del Ciclo de arte de hoy: Bosch Llucia Mensa Pellsjo Amelia Riera Valbuena.</em></strong> "</p><p>Folio; 7 vols. ALL PUBLISHED. Unbound as issued. With texts by Vicente Aguilera Cerni and Carlos Vivo among others; with original work in each issue; folders with loose sheets; Continuous pagination.</p><p>COMPLETE RUN OF THIS PRACTICALLY UNKNOWN CATALAN MODERN ART PERIODICAL. ALL ISSUES CONTAIN ORIGINAL ART BY DIFFERENT ARTISTS MAKING EACH ISSUE A UNIQUE COPY: Contents: 1. works by ALL participating artists; 2. with 1 work by Bosch; 3. with 1 work by Llucia; 4. with 1 work by Mensa; 5. with 1 work by Owe Pellsjo; 6. with 1 work by Amelia Riera; 7. with 1 work by Valbuena.</p><p><u>Collaborating artists</u>: Bosch i Cruanas Lluis 1929; Llucia Joaquim 1929-1973; Mensa Carlos 1936-1982; Pellsjo Owe 1937; Riera Amelia 1928-2019; Valbuena Francisco; Bosch i Cruañas LluiÌs 1929; LluciaÌ€ Joaquim 1929-1973; Mensa Carlos 1936-1982; Pellsjö Owe 1937; Riera AmeÌ€lia 1928-2019.</p><p>Issue # 1 contains original illustrations by all six of the founding artist collective members: LluÃs Bosch i Cruañas Joaquim Lluciá Carlos Mensa Owe Pellsjö Amèlia Riera and Francisco Valbuena. <u>Accompanying the illustrations are statements about art and form</u> which the collective has associated with six Modernist masters Pablo Picasso Emil Nolde Paul Klee Vasily Kandinsky Piet Mondrian and Wilhelm Lehmbruck. Also in this issue are statements and poems by other Catalan artists.</p><p><strong>EXTREMELY RARE AS WE FIND ONLY ISSUE # 1 ONLY AT MoMA AND NO OTHER COPIES IN LIBRARIES IN THE US</strong>.</p><p># WolrdCat US Libraries: No copies</p> Graficas El Tinell
189911386AB1899. 12 volumes. Paris Levy 1899 - 1913. 29 : 215 cm. Richly illustated with many partly coloured plates. Original half-cloth. Important French arts periodical on modern art and architecture with many partly half tone plates on architecture decorative arts painting graphic design sculpture furniture textiles gardens etc. The present volumes covering mainly the art nouveau period. The illustrationas are by Walter Crane Eugene Grasset Alphonse Mucha William Nicholson Auguste Rodin Theo van Rysselkberghe Carlos Schwabe M.P. Verneuil. Present are the following volumes: V. Janvier-Juin 1899 - VII. Janvier-Juin 1900 - VIII. Juillet-Décembre 1900 - IX. Janvier-Juin 1901 XIII. Janvier-Juin 1903 - XVII. Janvier-Juin 1905 missing page 59/60 and 173-176 - XX. Juillet-Decembre 1906 missing pages 141-172 - XXV. Janvier-Juin 1909 - XXVI. Juillet-Décembre 1909 missing page 1/2 and 37-69 - XXVIII. Juillet-Décembre 1910 missing page 115-120 and 143/144 - XXXII. Juillet-Décembre 1912 missing page 17-20 - XXXIII. Janvier-Juin 1913 missing page 177/178. - Also some pages and plates are missing it is still an extensive overview of the arts movements in Europe and overseas containing articles and illustrations of the most important artists of that time. - Binding a bit rubbed some pages in two volumes with menor tears otherwise a good copy. hardcover
193042139Kiev: Katedr far Yidisher Kultur ba der Ukr. Visnshaftl. Akademye Filologishe Sektsye 1930. Paper Wrappers. 1st edition. Original printed publisher’s color paper wrappers 4to large ca 72-116 columns ca 36-58 pages per issue. 28 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates roughly as “The Yiddish Language.†Succeeded in 1931 by “Afn shprakhfront.â€Di Yidishe Shprakh was a “Yiddish linguistic journal published in Kiev from 1927 to 1930. A bimonthly journal Di yidishe shprakh The Yiddish Language was published by the cooperative publishing house Kultur-lige and was the main philological publication of the Kiev Yiddish academic center. Its editor was the veteran Yiddishist Nokhem Shtif a founder of YIVO who had returned to Kiev from Germany in 1926. The journal’s inaugural issue March–April 1927 was published under the auspices of the Central Yiddish Bureau of the Ukrainian Commissariat for Education. With the next issue Di yidishe shprakh was an organ of the Chair and from July to October 1929 it was an organ of the Institute for Jewish later Proletarian Jewish Culture at the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. Initially defined as a 'journal for practical Yiddish linguistics' from May to June 1927 it appeared as simply a 'journal for Yiddish linguistics. 'Shtif distinguished three language registers: the vernacular of the old generation partly represented in the works of Sholem Aleichem and predecessors; the highbrow language of modern writers such as Dovid Bergelson; and the contemporary 'culture language' most notably of the press. Although Shtif sought to target speakers of the mass 'culture language' the journal’s circulation hovered around 500 copies read mainly by Yiddish teachers.Apart from Shtif who published articles on various language-planning problems the most active contributors to Di yidishe shprakh were Ber Slutski Ayzik Zaretski Elye Falkovitsh Lipe Reznik and Shimen Dobin. In early 1929 Moscow literary critic Aron Gurshteyn criticized the journal for its purist approach to language planning. In the July–October 1929 issue Shtif published his article 'Di sotsyale diferentsiatsye in yidish' The Social Differentiation in Yiddish heralding an intensification of Soviet linguists’ anti-Hebraist campaign. That issue of Di yidishe shprakh adopted completely reformed Soviet spelling omitting for example final consonant letters.Although the last—twenty-fifth—issue of the journal was dated November–December 1930 it included materials from the First All-Union Yiddish Language Conference convened in Kiev from 8 to 13 February 1931 that issue is present here. Published under the imprint of the Central Publishing House this issue also signaled the demise of the remaining vestiges of the Kiev Kultur-lige. Yoysef Liberberg’s article 'Far parteyishkayt in der yidisher visnshaft-arbet' For a Party Approach to Yiddish Linguistics marked a full break with YIVO scholars particularly with YIVO director Max Weinreich whom Liberberg ridiculed for presenting Yiddish as an emanation of the Ashkenazic Jews’ soul. The Yiddish Language Conference decided to change the name of the journal. Between 1931 and 1939 it appeared sporadically under the title Afn shprakhfront On the Language Front reflecting its new more aggressive and politically charged approach' Gennady Estraikh in YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe 2010. For more see David Shneer “Yiddish and the Creation of Soviet Jewish Culture 1918–1930†Cambridge and New York 2004. SUBJECTS: Yiddish language -- Periodicals. Title also listed on covers in Russian “Ievreis'ka Mova†and German “Jiddische Sprachâ€. OCLC: 22840298. Most holdings in OCLC appear to be fragmentary. Covers are browning and fragile as expected but are otherwise very well preserved with very little edgewear. Internal text pages are also toning but remain relatively strong as pulp paper. Very important journal scarce in this degree of completeness Note that Estraikh suggests a circulation of only 500!. B YID-43-5-E. Kiev: Katedr far Yidisher Kultur ba der Ukr. Visnshaftl. Akademye, Filologishe Sektsye unknown
19872111902160500109Not Available 1987. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of publications: Choi Shimbunsha Not Available paperback
1996ZB445765London: The Economist Newspaper Ltd. 1996. volumes 340 to 377 an uninterrupted run of complete volumes mostly in orignal pictorial softcovers ex library good. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. London: The Economist Newspaper, Ltd. paperback