109 124 résultats
18930001444C.S. ELECTRA et al. Good. 1893. On offer is an interesting pair of 1893 and 1895 manuscript journals handwritten by Anton Hugh Syree Syree 1859-1924 M.R.C.S. L.S.A. surgeon on two cable laying ships the `Electra` and another unnamed describing his activities while plying the Mediterranean from home base in England then from Portugal Gibraltar Malta Bona Greece Alexandria and more. The diaries consist of short businesslike entries describing Syree's duties not onerous the ship's activities repairing and testing cable leisure activities shooting in Egypt bicycling sightseeing cricket poker socialising and corresponding Lady King-Hall is an acquaintance his health often 'very seedy' the weather. Historians and researchers will find insight to the difficulties and duties of the ship as it deals constantly with the weather conditions repairs to the ship and a basic lethargy in the operation at no fault to the ship and its crew. The first diary has Syree's ownership inscription on the front cover: 'A. H. Syree Lisbon January 1st. 1892 sic'. At the beginning of 1893 Syree's unnamed ship is anchored off Cascais Portugal; the ship will travel to Syra Tenedos Alexandria Zante Messina and Malta. Entry for 6 January: 'Find day - fresh - At 10 a.m. went out 3 miles in Gibraltar. Bay to repair the Gib. Lisbon cable - finished at 8 p:m: About 8 p:m: our little Monkey died - thro' taking some Carbolic Acid it seems - foul play suspected.' 20 January: 'Wretched day - raining - blowing - very dull - Lack invited me to "High Tea" and then "The Theatre" amateur - military - so rough couldn't get away from the Ship - Gifford made himself obnoxious - I was much upset - very seedy all day.' The diary resumes on 5 October 1893: 'Received letter from Pater enclosing letter fr. London Office asking if I will accept post as Surgeon on "The Electra" - Their letter was dated Decr. 3rd. - Will my pay begin from then - or fr. day of my acceptance -'. At this point Syree is in Cannock Staffordshire in the English Midlands. He packs and travels to Chartham in Kent. 17 October 1893: 'Went to the Ship and was signed on "The Articles" - lunched aboard. Had Supper at Scott's in the evening.' On 22 October the ship leaves Falmouth for Gibraltar; arriving in Malta on 2 November and Alexandria four days later. In Zante at the end of the month. Entry for 2 December typical: '4225 390 = 4615 m Anchored in Bay Terra Nuova about 8 a.m - Electrical staff went off at once testing - very isolated place - only the Cable House and Station anywhere near. Payton & I went shooting in morning - got nothing -'. Working off Greece at end of year. The Electra is at Malta at the beginning of 1895 as the year progresses it continues to do its work around the mediterranean. On 28 April 1895 Syree writes: 'The Anniversary of my Wedding Day. 9 years ago on a Wednesday - I little thought what was in store for me - mine was a very short innings of happiness.' Description of pleasant 'extended' stays: in Patras in May including one entry in French regarding a 'promenade avec M. Corus' Malta in June and in Gibraltar - where he has a long walks with 'darling' Edie Spratt whom he buys 'a gold Curb bracelet with Padlock' - in July. On 18 July he writes: 'feeling very miserable at leaving Gib - or rather the people who are there - I have had a very happy time at Gib and now have to pay for that in being miserable at leaving'. Back in London at the end of July he writes: 'Edie will receive my letter today. I wonder what she will think and what she will say.' Edie's answer 4 August 1895 is 'Yes if we can fight the good fight together' and the entries for the rest of the month contain further positive comments about their relationship. In the last entry 30 August 1895 Syree writes 'to Dr. Cormack about partnership at Bournemouth'. Loosely inserted in the first volume are Autograph Letters Signed from Edward W. Simmons Frederick H. Saunders and W. F. Webster all dated 7 May 1897 regarding a medical practice advertised by Syree in the Lancet. Also an Autograph Letter Signed from 'Alice' of East Mosely 12 May 1897 of a personal nature. Also two receipts by Syree written out on a Memorandum slip of the Eastern Telegraph Company Limited C.S. "Electra." The books proper: 1 January to 20 February 1893; 5 October to 31 December 1893; 1 January to 30 August 1895. 4to 87 pp including 3 pp of accounts. In two diaries: the first 'Letts's Rough Diary with a week on a page for 1893' with 23 pp including 2 pp of 'Expenditures'; the second 'T. J. & J. Smith's Large Quarto Manuscript Diary for 1895' with 64 pp including a page of accounts. All texts clear complete and legible. The books have rubbing and some general ageing and light soiling but internally sound on lightly-aged paper in worn and discoloured covers. Overall G.; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: CABLE SHIPS CABLE LAYING MEDITERRANEAN SURGEON MEDICAL DOCTOR PORTUGAL GREECE ALEXANDRIA BONA TRAVEL HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY TRAVEL 19TH CENTURY antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
18860001930HALIFAX NOVA SCOTIA. Good. 1886. On offer is a sensational later 19th Century original manuscript diary handwritten by George Elkana Morton noted bookseller apothecary and wholesale druggist publisher and author of Halifax Nova Scotia. Curiously and enigmatically the diary has a handwritten ownership inscription of the Reverend John Forrest D.D. who was Dalhousie University president from 1885-1910. However credible research finds the book was in fact authored by George Morton as references to Morton's sister his birth date address activities and other clues lead us to believe that the book was certainly written by Morton. How the book came into Morton's hands are lost to history but Forrest was his personal friend and as Morton was a bookseller one can suppose a number of scenarios. Morton does a superb job of relating life in 1886 Halifax. He is central to so many businesses and an obviously very well educated erudite student of local national and international events commerce social and political life historians and researchers of 19th Century Nova Scotia will be hard pressed to find a better source of the times. He comprehensive fills the well sized 5" by 8" never missing a day and always filling the page in tight succinct handwriting. He includes weather accounts train and ship activity music hall and military events sugar refinery Halifax board of trade meetings deaths accidents and other world events made note of and commented on by the writer. Of a large intellect he has the humility to at one point muses over the need to keep a diary and why if no one in his life time was to read it why it was important. HISTORICAL NOTES: from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography: MORTON GEORGE ELKANA druggist book-seller publisher and author; b. 25 March 1811 in Upper Dyke N.S. eldest son of John Morton and Ann Cogswell a sister of Henry Hezekiah Cogswell; m. 26 May 1849 Martha Elizabeth Katzmann in Preston N.S. and they had two children; d. 12 March 1892 in Halifax. George Elkana Morton the son of "one of the most distinguished of King's County's sons" was a pupil of local Presbyterian clergyman William Forsyth. Going to Halifax at age 17 George began working in the city's first "regular" drugstore which had been opened on Granville Street in 1822 by Dr William Macara. He eventually succeeded Macara and in 1837 moved to Hollis Street where he advertised for sale "a general assortment of drugs genuine patent medicines Spices Perfumery Garden and Flower Seeds." Five years later Morton's Medical Warehouse a wholesale and retail drug business was established on Granville Street; subsequently reported to have been the largest such business in the province in the 1850s it may also have been the first to employ commercial travellers. At various times Morton was in partnership with his brother Lemuel James dissolved in 1854 with Alexander Forsyth and possibly with Leander Cogswell. By 1856 G. E. Morton and Company was also acting as "Authorized Agents for the Illustrated London Newspapers the Illustrated Times and other pictorial publications." About this time Morton seems to have got into financial difficulties that led to the mortgaging of his property. By 1865 his premises had been sold under foreclosure of the mortgage and subsequently he appears to have operated out of rented quarters. Over the years the emphasis of his business shifted to the sale of books and stationery and by 1873 the company is listed only as a "books and news agency"; it continued as such until about 1890. Morton had long been involved in the literary life of Halifax. In the 1850s he had assisted in the publication of the Provincial: or Halifax Monthly Magazine edited by his sister-in-law Mary Jane Katzmann and he is said to have contributed articles to the Guardian the British Colonist and other newspapers. The Banter a satirical magazine begun in 1874 was published at Morton's news agency. His Halifax guide book one of the earliest tourist guides to the city appeared in 1878 and he may also have written a guide to Cape Breton some years later. Two unpublished diaries for the years 1878 and 1880 contain his comments on political and social events. Morton was a life member of the St George's Society serving as treasurer from 1848 to 1851 and as assistant vice-president from 1852 to 1854. Treasurer as well of the Micmac Missionary Society from 1850 to 1861 he sat on its management committee in 1863 and 1864 see Silas Tertius Rand. On 2 Jan. 1878 Morton attended the organizational meeting of the Nova Scotia Historical Society at Province House in Halifax and he was on the committee that made arrangements for the successful inaugural meeting on 21 June Halifax Natal Day the anniversary of the arrival of Edward Cornwallis in 1749. Through the crucial early years he sat on its council and he continued to be a faithful member until his death. Having always exhibited an interest in telegraphy Morton had joined Samuel Cunard and others as a director of the Nova Scotia Electric Telegraph Company. Incorporated in 1851 this company was formed to extend the province's telegraph system to Sydney Liverpool and Yarmouth. Morton remained a director until 11 Jan. 1860 when at the annual meeting the stockholders and agents expressed their great dissatisfaction with the company's management and "the old hands every one got their walking ticket." Morton was involved in other business ventures. In 1854 he was one of William Henry Pope's financial backers in the purchase of Charles Worrell's estate in Prince Edward Island. Following the discovery of gold in Nova Scotia in the 1860s Morton held several mining claims in Halifax and Hants counties and he was one of the original shareholders in the Nova Scotia Sugar Refinery Limited incorporated in 1880. For a generation George Elkana Morton took an active part in the public life of the city of Halifax and the province of Nova Scotia. A strong supporter of confederation he was a personal friend of many Conservative leaders including James William Johnston Sir Charles Tupper and Simon Hugh Holmes. He died two weeks before his 81st birthday as a result of an accident in which his clothing caught fire. An obituary in the Halifax Herald recognized him as "a man of wide reading and cultivated literary taste" and stated that "possessing as he did a mind well stored with literary knowledge and a never failing supply of anecdote his bookstore was long a favourite resort for those of kindred tastes." Phyllis R. Blakeley. Overall G.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 19TH CENTURY GEORGE ELKANA MORTON HALIFAX NOVA SCOTIA MARITIMES CANADA CANADIANA BOOKSELLERS PUBLISHERS CURRENT EVENTS LOCAL HISTORY DALHOUSIE REVEREND JOHN FORREST D.D. ASSOCIATION COGSWELL KATZMANN SOCIAL HISTORY HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
19410001864PALESTINE EGYPT THE HOLYLAND PRE WAR ISRAEL. Good. 1941. On offer is an original absolutely fascinating 1941 - 1943 World War II manuscript diary handwritten by Mr. J.G. Manning the Australian YMCA representative in Palestine. The YMCA was dedicated to providing the armed services with many services critical to moral to soldiers throughout the world. Manning writes over 200 pages of entries starting 25th November 1941 in Palestine going to Egypt then Libya back to Palestine then to Sydney and Brisbane then to New Guinea and ending on 10 March 1943. Besides the fact that Manning's perspective of the War as an Australian representative of the YMCA is in itself unique what makes this diary so uncommon in our experience is the fact that Manning's diary is a history of his war experience observations and thoughts within a religious confessional on the paper upon which he writes. Every day he writes a prayer every day he cries out to his Creator every day he prays for hope health safety and strength and a hundred other things. He constantly uses the word 'surrendered' as he surrenders himself to his duty to God and he surrenders himself to his way of life he surrenders himself to his responsibilities. He constantly writes of his love and prayers for his wife and boys but a number of times he writes of surrendering himself to certain feelings. The mention of a number of men in his circle within the same entry leads us to believe that he was desperately trying to suppress homosexual feelings and in many ways was suppressing his feelings with his religious devotions. The 6½ x 4 inch book has some general ageing and rubbing but is overall G.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF YMCA REPRESENTATIVE J. G. MANNING A.I.F MILITARY AUSTRALIA PALESTINE HOLY LAND WORLD WAR II WW2 WWII RELIGION HOMOSEXUALITY GENDER STUDIES GAY INTEREST GAY STUDIES HOMOSEXUALS IN WAR SOCIAL HISTORY LATENT HOMOSEXUALITY AUSTRALIAN IMPERIAL FORCE HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS AMERICANA MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
19430001277ATTU ALEUTIAN ISLANDS ALASKA. Good. 1943. On offer is an original manuscript WWII diary handwritten by Lyndell Irving Price of Hillview Illinois. The five year diary has a total of 375 entries spread out over the years 1943 1944 and 1945 with the majority of the entries during 1944 his 2nd year in the service. Price who would one day be a Sergeant began his service and moved into a Military Police role soon after. He was stationed on the Aleutian Islands in Alaska. Collectors and historians of World War II will appreciate the candor of Mr. Price given the lack of censorship that letters would face. Few MPs would be as open and candid as our author is to his diary. Here are some snippets: "In Anchorage Alaska. Made New Years Res. to quit gambling for money with cards & dice. 3 civilians were killed in snow This makes around 8 or 9 men killed and several injured in snow slides. Leaving for Mt. McKinley tomorrow. Went to dance at Bloody Bucks. Snow to deep wind is terrible sometimes 100 mph. Blow truck off road once. Made it back ok. On guard. Gamble tonight lost $122.50. Also had 3 qts. of whiskey. Harbor full of ships mostly destroyers and cruisers. Northern end of Karile Islands has been catching hell lately. INVASION SOON I'M SURE. Same routine with prisoners. Navy sank two Jap subs last night. Bomber been taking off all day. Co. had a beer party. Three Red Cross women present. Paid $52.00 debt. Saturday night. celebrate Easter which is tomorrow. We drank 8 cases of beer. We had as much fun as possible. I was sort of plastered.President Roosevelt died today. Today is Friday the 13th. Allies within 45 miles of Berlin on Western front. I was half drunk all day. Still did my duties ok. Worked on our rings. I have a piece of Jap zero propeller to make my ring from. Germany surrenders unconditionally. Speech to made tonight by Truman Churchill Stalin. Div. hit Attu today. Also 4th Infantry and other units. Year ago today Japs were attacked by U.S. on Attu. Everyone stopped work and honored the dead in Little Falls Cemetary. Worked for M.P.'s guarding beer on ship. Tearing down Pacific huts. Been 2 planes crashed and burned last day or so. I think couldn't land good because of being shot up so bad. Bombers been plentiful lately. All makes today including big . 1st Sgt. says I'm being transfered to Military Police. Vera died tonight from a major operation on the 17th. Worked around area digging fox holes Rest of fellows went to Holtz Bay and Massacre Bay to honor the soldiers that gave their life a year ago. V.E. Day victory in Europe. France was invaded early this morning by British U.S. and Canada trouper. Invasion in Normandy of France. Pick up Japanese broadcast on sending & receiving Sat. JOE LOUIS arrived today. Invade Mariana's Island. Japan proper bombed. I left with advance party early this morning to San Francisco. Left Frisco harbor at 9am. Destination unknown for sure. We believe Kiski or Attu. Big rain today as road fell thru and a bridge washed out. Our provast marshall was promoted from 1st Lt. to Captain. He passed out Optimo cigars. Landed on Attu in morning. Went to see legal associate advisor lawyer at 4:00 about . Things began to look like something. Smith and I got 2 cases of beer. Beer party. on ship dock. got quart of rum. lost $33.50 in a crap game. Worked on my Jap ring until time to go on patrol. Case of whiskey came in on boat for officers. Some Army - huh Brought in officer. Urinating in public. Brought in drunk. Also case of whiskey. A lot of beer has been drunk lately plenty of drunks. Automatic pistol school. pistol range. I made sharpshooter. Had combat alert. Everyone slept outside tonight. I slept inside garage. Paid today $31.40. Whitney and I picked up prisoners at Air Base. Had Capt. Whitney and I to have prisoners work at Saranda Valley. In afternoon went with Sgt. Whitney to Chicagof to examine some Jap bodies. Crap game last night. Went to chemical warfare school this afternoon. Took prisoners to shower. Worked on ledger book for prisoners. Had prisoner digging ditch for pipe line water. Japs bombed us around 20:00 - no damage. Today is Friday the 13th but everything went fairly well. Left Attu for Adak. Sea is smooth for this time of year. Still waiting for transportation. I have lost $54.25 at black jack since stopping here.Left today for Anchorage." Along with the diary is his Selective Service card that has a mailing date of November 2 1942. The book is in good shape. The diary measures 6" x 4.5". Fair. ; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; CHICAGOF MILITARY POLICE ATTU ALEUTIAN ISLANDS ALASKA KISKI AMERICANA USN USAF UNITED STATES ARMED FORCES UNITED STATES NAVY JAPANESE JAPAN WWII WORLD WAR II HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORYantiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
18760009084ABBOT ACADEMY ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS MA. Good. 1876. On offer is the 1876 original handwritten journal and notebook of Margaret C. Webster a student at the Abbot Academy notable as one of the first secondary schools for educating young women in New England. This is an exceptional document of early womens education in America. It details the things women were learning how they learned them and a bit into the personal life of one of the few women being educated in the country. The book seems to have served two purposes for Ms. Webster. First the majority of the book is a school composition/notebook. Secondly at the end of the book there is a diary for writing down personal experiences. Margaret seems to have been born in 1858 making her around 18 at the time of this journal. The majority of the Margaret C. Webster book is devoted to school related work 65 pages. This includes: Poetry Margaret has written in her journal poems by Thackeray Proctor Homer and some quotations by Tennyson. There is also the poem Annie and Willies Prayer by Sophia Snow which is a Christmas poem similar to the The Night Before Christmas.; Original essays There is an essay by Margaret titled World Without Imagination.; Botany notes which include a list of 100 plants and flowers with their common name as well as their genus and specie; Notes/Discussions/Compositions on Famous Personages and Subjects These include Tennyson Wordsworth Aristotle Byron Pope Chaucer and more; A Student Study Schedule This contains Margarets schedule of morning study work for 1876 and 1877. There are a number of schedules written down here for nine different days in three different terms Fall Winter and Spring. Example: Jan. 13 1877. From 8:30 - 9:30am: Went to prayer meeting at Chapel. 9:30 - 10:30: Studied Shakespeare. 10:30 - 11:15: Studied Botany. 11:30 - 12:00pm: Studied and did various things. From 5:15 - 6pm: Studied Shakespeare. 7:30 - 8: Studied Shakespeare. 8:30 - 9: Gymnastics. Finally there is also a 10-page section within the notebook which is not related to school but is a more personal diary. It contains two separate entries. And it is somewhat of an anomaly. It appears that the first entry of 6 pages is done by a person other than Margaret - perhaps a relative. The woman writing this section states that she is around forty years old and reports that she has just found her old diary in the attic. She proceeds to write in this journal some of the more important entries from her original diary. Thus she is copying them into this Margarets notebook probably around the same time frame that Margaret used it 1870-1880. Sample entries: "Journal you this day May 1 1850 my 16th birthday have been presented to me by my father as a present. If you prove a pleasure and comfort as he says you will I will patronize your pages now unsullied. But if you prove a bother as I think you will you will at quick notice be dispatched to Hades.; Aug 28 1850 Journal in spite of my resolution I believe I am going to like you. Something tells me that if all other friends desert me you will be true to the last I am to enter upon a very important period of my life. I am going away to school to Abbot Academy. I want to go because I am sick of staying at home. I am curious to see the girls there. I have about made up my mind not to like them. The remaining entries reveal that the young girl attends the academy and greatly enjoys the experience making many new friends. In her last entry dated July 28 1854 she reports that she is graduating that day and is excited about her achievement - but sad that she is leaving friends. It is possible that this section was provided by a relative who may have also attended Abbot Academy. And perhaps the relative wanted to show Margaret that the school would be a pleasant and worthwhile experience. The author of the last four pages of this section is most probably Margaret considering the similar handwriting. The entry is titled My Walk and describes a walk she took into Andover Massachusetts where she lives. During her walk she strolls by a Captain Perrys house and past the Old South Church. She also comes across Parson Watkins who is on horseback and after a greeting she returns home. As she nears her house a driverless carriage races by with the two lady occupants so absorbed in conversation that they fail to take notice of the danger they are in. Running behind them is the driver who eventually gets the carriage back under control. The notebook is 7 by 8 in size. It has worn green boards with a floral design and a bit of discoloration at points. It has a red leather spine with wear at head and foot. Pages are lightly toned but clean and the writing is neat and easily legible. The binding is tight and the ink is slightly faded but very readable. The book has approximately 75 handwritten pages of which all but a few have writing in them. Background: Abbot Academy also known as Abbot Female Seminary and AA was an independent boarding preparatory school for women boarding and day students in grades 912 from 1828 to 1973. Located in Andover Massachusetts Abbot Academy was notable as one of the first incorporated secondary schools for educating young women in New England. It merged with Phillips Academy in 1973 and campus buildings along School Street continue to be used for the combined school. In 1859 the "strong-willed" but "ideologically moderate" McKeen sisters headmistress Philena and Phebeexerted strong leadership by adopting a "school-home" approach. The years were marked by substantial expansion of buildings.The McKeens fostered the study of French and German and introduced a "systematic oral language program" on a par with that of Harvard University.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF MARGARET C. WEBSTER ABBOT ACADEMY ABBOT FEMALE SEMINARY INDEPENDENT BOARDING PREPARATORY SCHOOL PHILLIPS ACADEMY MCKEEN SISTERS FEMINISM WOMEN'S RIGHTS EDUCATION OF WOMEN IN THE 19TH CENTURY FIRST SECONDARY SCHOOL FOR WOMEN ANDOVER MASSACHUSETTS SUBJECTS OF EDUCATION WOMEN'S EDUCATION WOMEN ONLY INTELLECTUAL GROWTH OF YOUNG GIRLS PRE SUFFRAGE AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
18720001357MILTON CAYUGA HAMILTON ONTARIO ONT ON UPPER CANADA. Good. 1872. On offer is a super archive of nine 9 original manuscript diaries very full and descriptive of the rural life and times in and around Milton in south-central Ontario. Dated 1872 through 1883 missing 1873 1880 and 1882 the author while unidentified in fact we suggest his name is Nelson Green. There are a number of references to the Green family and some ephemeral clues that local historians genealogists and collectors of the Milton Cayuga and Hamilton Ontario area should no doubt be able to confirm his identity. The author leads the simple yet extraordinarily hard life of a church going farmer lumber and quarryman with a horse charmingly named "Timber". Nelson does a very good job mentioning the names of visitors business contacts and the births and deaths and other local events faithfully. He does not live in Milton proper but almost daily he travels there to deliver wood or ice in winter or stone or apples etc. Sometimes he'll make the trip to Hamilton or Cayuga and another number of smaller places like Six Ridges New Celedon Burlington Beach Brontey sic Harvey's Mill Flamborough. He mentions his: Uncle David Mildred Brownridge Marguerite Brownridge Mathew Dunn Allen and William Bowman David Hogg Roert Forrest J.P. Walker Sam Cook Buddyse Suter d.01.03.1883 Mary Rixon d.09.15.1877 Peter Scots Cousin Isaac Green d.12.15.1872 James Green William Forrest William Cummings d.04.21.1878 and many many more. Our author also details the commerce and economy of a rural existence: lumbering delivering wood apple orchards and the duties involved prices realized yields explained. Overall the books are G.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; MILTON FARMING RURAL LUMBERMAN QUARRYMAN STONE MASON STONE CUTTER HAMILTON CAYUGA GUELPH SIX RIDGES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY NIAGARA ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES CANADA CANADIANA . unknown
18440001300LONG RIGGING LUDDENDEN BRADFORD SALTERE HALIFAX. Very Good. 1844. On offer is the super original manuscript diary handwritten by Richard Sutcliff Thomas b. May 25th 1844 - . Mr. Thomas draws his life in exceptional detail from his birth until 1911. This diary stands unique as an epic story of a man the youngest of ten of a below middle class family who left school at age eleven and a sign of his character: he appreciated that his parents could give him that much education as many a lad started working at age seven or eight but through work education religion and determination Mr. Thomas bettered himself to a significant degree. Even the book proper is small testament being a near two and a half inch thick cloth cover whose spine plainly yet elegantly states in gild "RECOLLECTIONS - R.S.T." In the Preface Thomas who writes in a strong sound hand lays out the foundation: "My sons Milton and Ernest ask me to put on record the story of my earlier life. In my 67th year compelled to relinquish regular employment and being as Ernest put it 'a retired gentleman of some means' and having time on my hands my mind inclines to the doing of which they desire. Hence the following pages .I have been waiting till now Oct. 1910 ." What follows over 667 pages is his life story but moreso the history and genealogy of his family and the history of business and commerce throughout Middle England. Collectors and historians of trade and commerce will be overwhelmed by the intimate detail Thomas provides as he climbs the business ladder as he names his associates partners their character and the background of their business. Visitors travel hosts church relations politics and all manner of life are named and detailed. Rarely have we seen so thorough a diary that explores so thoroughly one man's progress: from child to boy to man; from child laborer to captain of industry; from hard-scrap beginnings to an old age of comfort and grace and satisfaction. One other area that is noteworthy throughout his adult life is his relationship which Freemasonry and he was a noted speaker lecturing on Good Templarism. A bastion of his local Church many times referring to Bishops and Priests of note whose circles he is a constant we believe he also preaches in his later years. The diary is headed by six chapters by locale: I. Long Rigging 1844-1851 II Luddenden Foot 1851-1867 III Bradford 1867-1869 IV Bradford Lightcliffe 1870-1874 V Saltere 1875-1879 and finally VI Halifax 1879. The last entry reads: Completed on July 30th 1911 and signed by the author. Also bound into the book is a pamphlet: 'In Memoriam Alfred Nicholl' published in Halifax in 1885. The pamphlet notes the songs sung by a Miss Thomas and that Thomas was himself a main speaker. Save for splitting to the spine the book is overall VG.; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; WEST YORKSHIRE LEEDS SALTAIRE LUDDENDENFOOT LONG RIGGING LUDDENDEN FOOT BRADFORD LIGHTCLIFFE SALTERE HALIFAX FREEMASONRY MASONS TEMPLARS TEMPLARISM ENGLAND HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA Als antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . hardcover
19860001648CHINA PRC. Good. 1986. On offer is a charming manuscript relic of post-Mao Zedong Communist China being a diary handwritten by a girl named Wang Chen Hua during her high school years of 1986 - 1987. In some ways typical of all teen age girls she recorded all of the ups and downs especially the missteps with hopes that they will aid her in her future decisions but dramatically unique given the backdrop of the People's Republic of China leading up to the events of Tiananmen Square 2 years later. Approximately 200 pages 13cm x 18cm. Overall G.; Chinese Language; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF TIANANMEN SQUARE GREAT PROLETARIAN CULTURAL REVOLUTION CULTURAL REVOLUTION CONFESSIONS RECENT ANTI SOCIALIST ACTIVITIES ANTI CAPITALISM MAO ZEDONG WANG CHEN HUA MAO TSE TUNG GREAT LEAP FORWARD MAOIST SOCIALISM COMMUNISM MOVEMENT OF SUPPRESSING COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARIES MIAO ZI YU COMMUNIST CHINE CHINESE SINO POLITICS JIANG QING GRASSROOTS SOCIALISM PROPAGANDA POST FIVE YEAR PLAN 5 YEAR PLAN GANG OF 4 GANG OF FOUR LIN BIAO BEIJING PENG LUO LU AND YANG ZHONGFA 267 INDOCTRINATION RED CHINA CHAIRMAN MAO CHINA MARXISM-LENINISM MAOISM LIN YURONG HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito . unknown
19170001868CHAMPAGNE MARNE FRANCE. Good. 1917. On offer is a sensational archive of World War I manuscript diaries 2 and ephemera handwritten or accumulated by William O. Swenson a 23 year old soldier who was part of the 117th Ammunition Train 42nd Rainbow Division occupied as a driver. The first diary 2.5 x 4 inches has 42 well filled handwritten pages starts in Sept. 1917 to Oct. 31 1917 mostly the trip to overseas arriving in N.J. getting on boat go to London Paris Parade Day etc. The second diary that is 2.5 x 4.25 inches has 138 well filled pages starting Jan. 1918 to Dec. 27 1918. This diary details much more intense war content. Here are some snippets: 'May 1 1918 We landed at New Port New VA and at 6:30 we pulled into the Chesapeake Bay and there was a tug boat pulled up beside us with women and 3 men in it. They were the welcoming committee from Kansas. We got off the boat at 10 am the Red Cross gave us chocolate a package of Camels and cookies. We lined up and marched up there turned and passed in review of Gen. March. The shute was all decorated and had a banner from every state where the rainbow was from. We loaded our packs in trucks and started for camp. May 18 1918 I wanted to go home so we finally started. There stood mama she was surprised I'll say she was glad. How good everything looked and so quiet and peaceful and to think I was free and oh so happy and home with mother. June 21 1918 We went to Baccarat and got Inf. men and took them to Rheims and got home at 6 am. July 5 1918. Drove to Bursy Fe Chataen. Sunday morning: we went to the front with flying pigs for the 117th French Mortar Bat. July 14 1918 The night of 14th at midnight the hell started. We got up and went back up a hill a manuvaled And stayed until daylight. The shells were lightning all around and the sky was as light as day. It was awful. They stopped shelling for a while just as I got there breakfast and went to the And tried to get some sleep. I laid down for 15 min. And they started again. They started to shell the hospital and the shells were coming straight over our head and I decided to go to the hill again and just then a shell 12 yards from the and blew up a dug out and threw the breakfast food full of dirt. Watch them shell the hospital and I went over there after they let up and it sure was a sight. Two men were killed and men laying and bed and it made me feel bad the rest of the day. Left for the front 175s Inf. 149. I hauled 400 rounds and worked all night. The airplane men dropped bombs and it was quite interesting. July 18 1918 We went to the front with flying pigs for the 117th French Mortar Bat. We had an awful trip. Shell holes and muddy roads. July 31 1918 When Suneanger was coming home on one of the trucks an airplane dropped a bomb and killed him. Aug. 1 1918 An airplane came over at dust and flew over us twice he sure was low. We could see him but the machine gun drove him away. Oct. 10 1918 Just got to bed when the huns started shelling the place. We got up and went down the road and we came back at 5 am. Archer was killed and dorms got his leg shot off. Oct 29 1918 Met a French Lt. and a girl who could speak English and also an ex-soldier from Austria who was in Eng. Army. Jan. 25 1918 Went back abut 10 miles after 4 loads of French mortar bombs or flying pigs and we stayed all night. Jan. 30 1918 I went on the rifle range and beat the record for the day 37. March 25 1918 Went to 168 Inf. and got Lut. Stunley and Col. Bear of 167 and took them to Ahnuerler. Nov. 20 1918 Went to Montrimeby The French had flags out and gave us a warm welcome. Got a room and had electric light in it. A fine room. This town is not shot up and it is a treat to get in a place and see civilization.' Last entry is Dec. 27 1918. And still overseas. Ephemera includes: 30 X 34 inch blueprint map of the Motor Battalion 117th Ammunition Train 42nd Rainbow Division through France bBelgium Luxembourg and Germany. few pin holes on creases this is folded up so it has creases; 19 x 25 black and white map of Nouvelle Carte Nord-Est folded and has some tears along some of the creases; 5 real photo postcards: 1. a soldier perhaps William Swenson. 2. Soldiers Altenahr 1918-19 On the back he wrote "I am not in here as I was with Div. Hdg. at the time"; 3. a group of soldiers; 4. R.M.S. Arabic and 5. Paris. Additionally pay records clippings autograph album telegrams French money travel documents tickets . Overall G. HISTORICAL NOTES: THE Rainbow Division sailed from Hoboken New Jersey on Oct. 18 1917 and was the fourth American combat unit to arrive in France and they became the first American troops to be entrusted with a whole sector of the western front on their own as they moved into the Baccarat Sector. In late June they moved into the Champagne a desolated battleground east of Rheims. On midnight July 14-15 the greatest artillery barrage of the war opened the battle guns every 10 meters along 42 kilometers of front on both sides roared for 4 hours then 200000 German infantrymen assaulted the French and American position. The battle of Champagne went on through the 15-17th most of the fighting was hand to hand with grenades clubbed rifles bayonets and trench knives. During the 3 days the furious artillery barrage continued to rake all areas within 10 miles of the battle line. These three days of horror were subsequently labelled the "Champagne-Marne Defensive". ; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CHAMPAGNE MARNE DEFENSIVE RAINBOW DIVISION AMMO TRAIN AMMUNITION TRAINS EXPLOSIVES DANGEROUS DUTIES WORLD WAR I WW1 WWI THE WAR TO END ALL WARS WILLIAM O. SWENSON WAR WITH GERMANY HUNS HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS AMERICANA MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
19110001529ASEA. Good. 1911. On offer is the original pre-World War I and early commencement of the War manuscript diary of Commander Alfred Frederick Bell "AFB" Woodhouse Royal Navy. Entries date from June - August 1911 and May 1914 - April 1915 providing a unique pre-War commentary and then leading up to the actual conflict. Woodhouse begins on HMS Fantome off north west coast of Australia surveying: ".Shifted camp to Byron Islands for 4 days. Got there by 11am. Comber went away sounding in steamboat. I first saw the camp rigged up & then went away coastlining in 2 whaler.Away coastlining again at 7am nearly finished Byron Islands by evening. Enormous number of small islands had to be put in.Coastlining longcreek about 5 miles in & then small mangrove swamp.Dozens of flies about appallingly stung.Practically no sleep last night owing to bites. Away 7am started near Beehive. Fixed one point & when turning found myself in whirlpool pass. Went down with flood. Whaler hole in side. Camp - no rum no sugar no flour no tea very little water.". Then HMS Research May 1914 off Ireland and Scotland: ".Weighed at 9.30 after the first mail had come on board & proceeded to the entrance to Wexford. Picked up tide pole & then to Blackwater Bank. Went away in motor boat with Hazlefoot but too misty to see anything. Returned at 3.30 & ship started for Larne. Then HMS King Alfred August 1914: ".After dinner joined King Alfred from Research as my war appointment.We are at present ammunitioning & getting ready as quickly as possible. Invincible in harbour. List of officers.12 Midnight War declared against Germany.My first gun crew do not appear to know much about their drill but they are enthusiastic which is something & I have an excellent gun-layer.Submarine gun crews told off & stationed.Everyone pleased we are getting away but do not know where we are to go. Azores seems popular.Received orders to proceed to Scapa Flow.Ships here are all King Edwards 1st Battle Cruiser Squadron. Drake & 2 Edgar Cyclops & a good number of scouts light cruisers & destroyer. All are painted light grey in different parts & black elsewhere so as to be difficult to take ranges on & also distinguishes them very well.We are painting our funnels & masts light grey & are chipping as much paint as possible off the ship.proceeded round west of Orkneys. At about 11.30 the Drake stopped a Russian barquentine but allowed her to proceed later. We stood by for firing practise.The Drake stopped & boarded a Norweigan steamer but let her proceed afterwards. Sighted a battle cruiser in evening. Heard that a German submarine had been sighted.Received news that German ships were in Norweigan fjords. Ordered by c-in-c to support Alsatian who is to patrol 20 miles from coast.Sighted Alsatian an enormous liner carrying as far as I could see only 8 4.7in or 6in. One shell would probably finish her.In afternoon intercepted signal from c-in-c to destroyers to attack enemies submarines which were apparently sheltering in Linza Sound Stronsea Orkney Is.Our army according to Poldhu message has held its own in Belgium but has had 2000 casualties German losses unknown but believed to be very heavy.Heard the Monarch had a torpedo fired at her which only just missed.Sighted Drake in dog watches she told us that 1 BCS had had a scrap on friday morning with a good deal of success. Light cruisers destroyers & 1 BCS raided near Heligoland & intercepted German cruisers & destroyers returning on friday early. Result 2 German L cruisers & 2 destroyers sunk 1 L cruiser & several destroyers badly damaged.At 6.30 suddenly sounded off night defence stations. Falmouth had seen a submarine following the G into harbour & had waited till her conning tower came up & then fired at her. She says she hit her twice.Superb fired twice at supposed submarine.First shots fired in earnest today.We have received orders to convoy floating dock from Pentland Firth to Cromarty.The Pathfinder & Speedy have been blown up by mines but little loss of life.Got news that the Aboukir was sunk by submarine & that the Hague & Cressy going to her assistance were also sunk. It appears that a flotilla of submarines attacked them. 21 is the first score to their submarines. Ships are not much but loss of life was heavy I believe.Ships company & officers warned by captain about spreading any information about movements of ships or anything else.Proceeding to the HMS Devonshire October 1914 ".Drove to Scabster in a motor lorry got the mail packet at 4am to go to Scapa Flow. Arrived 7am got on board at 9am The Anglia one of the LNWR steamers which is acting as a fleet .There was a big submarine scare during the day & all ships have left. Destroyers were hunting the submarines & say they got 3 but I rather doubt it.Went to a funeral in charge.Received orders to proceed on board Cyclops for passage to Devonshire in the Dryad.At 7pm the Dryad ran on to the rocks near Stromness.By 6pm I was on board the Devonshire after a week trying to get to her.I am to be tanky & prize officer & keep 4 watches.Proceeded on 24th 4pm & swept down to Heligoland way. Our aeroplanes bombed Cushaven & ships there on christmas day.Rear Admiral Pakenham hoisted his flag in Devonshire.Rendezvous with grand fleet & proceeded southward. Battle cruisers & light cruisers fought an action with German B Cruisers sinking the Blucher & severely damaging Deiflinger & Molke. We chased after them.The Lion was badly damaged by mine or torpedo as well as gun fire. The ships hit were only Lion 18 times Tiger 3 times the rest not at all.There are some dummy ships in harbour Liverpool with wooden turrets & superstructures they are very good imitations from a little distance.Left Scapa Flow & joined 3rd CS at sea. While proceeding into harbour on afternoon of 14th we passed down a whole line of submarines each one near a sailing ship painted white. We opened fire at them all but I dont think hit. They did not seem to fire at us but one cannot be sure.". Covers measure approx 7 1/4" x 4 3/4" 18cm x 12cm Cloth bound with 91 sides of entries. Covers heavily marked with some ink staining and wear some minor marking inside about fair condition. Overall G.; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: ALFRED FREDERICK BELL WOODHOUSE HMS RESEARCH HMS KING ALFRED NORWAY NORWEIGAN COAST PATROL ROYAL NAVY BRITAIN BRITISH NAVY NAVAL NAVY MARINE NAUTICAL HISTORY OF WORLD WAR I WWI THE GREAT WAR HANDWRITTEN HAND WRITTEN AUTOGRAPH AUTOGRAPHS SIGNED LETTERS DOCUMENT DOCUMENTS MANUSCRIPT MANUSCRIPTS WRITERS WRITER AUTHOR HOLOGRAPH PERSONAL AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY . hardcover
19500008067Paris France. Good. 1950. On offer is a rare group of manuscript and typed notes written by one of France's most influential art critics and exhibition organizers. The collection comprises 58 loose-leaf pages 8.5 inches by 11 inches and dates from the 1950s or 1960s. The typed manuscript is single-sided and accompanying notes are for the most part double-sided. The entire collection is in French and is in very good condition. Andre-Berne-Joffroy was born in 1915 and passed away at the age of 93 in 2007. He worked for twenty five years at the Museum of Modern Art in the city of Paris as mission manager. He was responsible for many of the important Paris exhibitions of modern art from the 1950s through the 1980s He created a number of significant exhibitions such as Lam Matta and Penalha in 1968 Kandinsky in 1972 Music in 1972-1973 Hartung in 1980. But the most important of his initiatives were presented outside his home museum: "Pierre Loeb" at the Loeb Gallery in 1979. He is also credited with the rediscovery of the Italian master artist Michelangelo Caravaggio with the publication in 1959 of the book Le Dossier Caravage. Caravaggio had a formative influence on the Baroque school of painting. The manuscript is titled La Peinture Byzantine and refers to a particular style of painting. Another page has the notation Staël Galerie Dubourg at the top of the page. This refers to the great French painter Nicholas de Staël who Berne-Joffroy knew and had written about. This is a rare collection from one of France's great art critics and writers. An art historian would find them most valuable for the insights gleaned from Berne-Joffroy's notes and drafts. Certainly they are important to anyone studying France's overwhelming importance in the world of art.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF FRANCE ANDRE BERNE-JOFFROY; MUSEUM OF MODERN ART PARIS; RENÉ HÉRON DE VILLEFOSSE CARRAVAGGIO; LOEB GALLERY; GALERIE DUBOURG; NICOLAS DE STAËL; FRENCH ART; BYZANTINE PAINTING; BYZANTINE ART; HISTORY OF ART; ART HISTORIANS; FRENCH ART CRITICS; HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19320009031WALTHAM MASSACHUSETTS MA LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA CA. Good. 1932. On offer is the 1932 travel journal kept by Anna P. Hastings a young woman travelling by Greyhound bus across the United States to tourist spots and friends homes along the way. Beginning in her home town of Waltham Massachusetts Hastings travels to California and then all the way back.This very scarce first person account of an early Greyhound cross country trip covers a mostly pleasant ride in the era before the Eisenhower Interstate System however there are times where Hastings is obviously unhappy and disappointed with the trip though they are few and far between. Along the route she stops at National Parks museums Indian Reservations roadside stops and stands but most often at the homes of friends. It may be that Hastings had once lived in Southern California as she seems to have many friends and acquaintances that she meets and stay with in Los Angeles San Francisco Berkeley and Davis California. The journal begins on June 3rd 1932. She writes Left Waltham at 11:30. Went thru beautiful country Springfield to Leonx and Dalton and Pittsfield. The streams seemed very low but the gardens and laurels were beautiful and green. Think I drove all night when I wasnt watching the stars come out. We are in Albany at one oclock then had with in Syracuse and dint stop till we got to Buffalo.; June 6 Mon. Saw acres and acres of corn and wheat growing. Coming into St. Louis we crossed the Mississippi on a very long bridge. Had a very nice diner in Ellington Ill. Had supper in station at St. Louis. Arrived at 5.15and had to wait for bus to take us on our way to Kansas City. The natives say summer has just arrived here and it is hot.; June 7 Tues. Saw miles of wide open spaces. had breakfast at the Pickwick dinner in Junction City and super in Ellis. Never felt more dirty in my life. Nothing much to see but cattle and horses and mile & mile of grain fields with once in while a village with good looking school house and churches. On the way to California Hastings comments often on the scenery and the things she sees out the window. She especially likes the landscape and scenery of the Southwest. The bus even stops at the Grand Canyon which she describes as so vast and so wonderful it seems to get you more and more as you look at it and realize it has taken millions of years to create. On June 10th a week after leaving Waltham Hastings arrives in Hollywood California and stays with her friend Miriam for a month and a half. At Miriams she sees a number of movies goes shopping with Myra Hastings bus companion and Miriam and visits the Forest Lawn Memorial Park where she sees the finest collection of statuary in the country and a stained glass window of The Last Supper I think I shall never forget. It was the most beautiful thing of its kind I ever saw. For the time at Miriams Hastings spends her time in leisure waking late enjoying the beautiful weather and visits various touristy spots including Laurel Canyon and the Huntington Memorial Library. A typical day in L.A. reads like this: July 14 Thurs. It seemed as if the sky was never more clear and blue. We left about ten oclock and drove to the San Juan Capistrano Mission arriving at noon. A guide took us there and told us how it was built in 1774 and the church was destroyed in an earthquake in 1812. The chapel was rebuilt and services have been held for 154 years. We drove home by the shore road about 190 miles in all. On July 30 the 1932 Summer Olympics Games of the X Olympiad begin in Los Angeles with a very impressive ceremony. We read about it in the papers. In early August Hastings travels up to her friend Alinas house in San Francisco. This is just for a few days and after less than a week in San Francisco she returns to Miriams. A week at Miriams and then she goes to Berkeley to stay with her friend Sadie. Aug. 2 Sn. We slept later than we intended to and got thru breakfast a little after ten. June took Sadie Alina Margaret me to Antioch where we looked up Caddies oldest sons Henry & his wife. He was very glad to see us & told us his son Harry was on a trip around the world on the S. S. President Pierce and would be in port in Boston in Nov. His next port of call for mail will be Alexandria Egypt. From Berkeley Hastings goes to a friends Edmund home in Davis then she begins a trip back home. August 30 Tues. Arrived in Chicago after riding all night and were advised to spend the night. We decided to go on to Indianapolis. After supper we left for Indianapolis arriving at 2.30. Changed busses left at 3 AM for Columbus. We were late leaving missed the bus at 11.58. Had dinner then got the bus out after 5. It was a lovely ride over hill and dale past fine farming country full of fruit and grain. The trip home is a bit longer as she stays with a friend Edith in Wheeling Illinois spending much of the time talking and resting. After a week with Edith Hastings finally leaves to go back home for good. On September 9th more than three months after leaving she arrives back in Waltham. Left N.Y. at ten oclock and after many delays that seemed terrible long we arrived in Waltham and at about eight-thirty. Everybody seemed very glad to see us. Margarete phoned to Allan and he came right up and took us home. Talked awhile then took a bath and went to bed. 11 PM seemed too good to get into my own bed once more. Came home by way of Springfield Worcester Marlboro Dudley and Wayland to Waltham. Finally there are 4 pages of Cash Accounts where Hastings has written down the item purchased the date of its purchase and the cost. Her ticket across the country and back cost her $108.3. In total she spent more than $200 on her trip over the course of 3 months a very significant amount in the midst of the Great Depression. There are also 15 pages of names and addresses of friends and family mostly from Massachusetts. The diary is filled with approx 100 double sided pages full of material and each entry is fully filled out in Hastings easily read script. The writing is in pencil and is once or twice smudged but the overwhelming majority of the book is very legible. The cover shows some wear but is still in very good shape and has the word TRAVELS embossed in gold. Structurally the book is in excellent shape. It also contains a little holder with a pencil in it possibly the one Hastings used though that cannot be confirmed.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS:HISTORY OF ANNA P. HASTINGS GREYHOUND BUS TRAVEL ACROSS THE UNITED STATES PRE EISENHOWER INTERSTATE SYSTEM WALTHAM MASSACHUSETTS LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO BERKELEY DAVIS ANTIOCH CALIFORNIA YOUNG WOMAN TRAVELING FEMINISM WOMEN'S INDEPENDENCE 1932 LOS ANGELES OLYMPICS X OLYMPIAD WOMEN DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION INTERWAR PERIOD IN AMERICA HISTORY OF TRAVEL WOMENS LEISURE AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO DANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19420008001Oran Algeria. Good. 1942. On offer is a handwritten diary of Clarence Engbretson a technician of the 301st Ordnance Regiment that documents main events of his military service and provides account of his training at Fort Dix a trip to Oran Algeria in 1942 on board of the United States army transport USAT H.F. Alexander the former "Great Northern" and service in North Africa. The diary is a pocket size note pad with brown cover with personal details and military post number: Clarence Engbretson Co. B 1st Btn. 301st Ord. R. A.P.O. 600 including 14 pages describing the period from November 1942 to Spring 1943 and a two pages with the text of "A table prayer after the war". The diary is accompanied with 3 separate leaves with notes of main dates and places of his service from April 23 1942 to October 29 1944 and 3 black-and-white cards with views of Oran. Clarence M. Engebretson was probably from Minneapolis Minnesota he served in Ordnance Regiment 301 one of the five regiments established by government and the National Automobile Dealers Association NADA and consisting mainly of mechanics and technicians recruited from factories to provide skilled force to the army. He started his service and was sworn at Fort Snelling staying there for about a week was transferred to Camp Sutton which was opened in 1942 for army engineers and called "Camp Suffering" because of its harsh conditions. He stayed there from April to September spent 14 days at hospital received furlough for 12 days and on October 5 his regiment was transferred to Camp McCoy a small training camp for units preparing to enter combat. On November 21 1942 they were transferred to Fort Dix the final stop before their way overseas and that is where Engebretson starts more detailed account describing poor living conditions: "There were tents and barracks we got tents - rumour immediately of tents being lousy. Cold sleeping with small stove. All our clothes on when sleeping winter and summer underwear wool shirt - wool sweater - heavy wool socks - 3 wool blankets and overcoat.poor washing facilities". On December 11 they left Fort Dix and the next day were loaded on H.F. Alexander part of a UGF trans-Atlantic convoy to North Africa: "Marched to train at 6:00 am. Train to Jersey city - Walked to ferry - Ferry to Pier No 14 Staten Island. Waited in mist and water on docks. First time I seen ocean going vessel". It took 2 weeks to arrive in Oran and Engebretson describes being sea sick in the storm: "Chair and davenport sliding.I run for bucket.Smell in kitchen was enough - Didn't eat much for 3 or 4 days" he mentions entertainment on board sea burial deck drills and practice with machine guns. He writes about salt water and foul baths and gives some details of ship course mentioning passing Gibraltar and Canary Islands. Before arrival they had Christmas dinner on board: "Christmas dinner 24 because we expected to land on 25th - Nurse pinned up green cut out trees in mass hall Galley.Long chow lines for dinner- wonderful dinner - all and more than we could eat.Stealing boxes of icecream.". He describes first days in Africa "First morning in Africa.shots at night. First air raid - Sleep through it. Woke up in water.Bath big problem". The notes also mention some work he did: "moved to shop area. light maintenance .started motorcycle repair.started tanks." At the end of September 1944 they left Oran for Southern France on L.S.T. tank landing ship the last entry is dated October 29th 1944: "Left for road work camp Djon"; Manuscript; 48mo - over 3" - 4" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CLARENCE ENGEBRETSEN WW2 SECOND WORLD WAR NORTH AFRICA ORAN ORDNANCE REGIMENTS TRAINING CAMPS NORTH AFRICAN CAMPAIGN ORAN ALGERIA ARMY TRANSPORTS TRANSATLANTIC CONVOYS USAT H.F. ALEXANDER UGF CONVOYS WARTIME PHOTOGRAPHS HISTORY 20TH CENTURY MILITARY CAMPS AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
19100008220LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA CA. Good. 1910. On offer is a fascinating original collection of 12 manuscript diaries spanning a 19 year period of time in early 20th Century America.1910 diary measures 5.5' x 3.5' has 52 pages plus extensive memoranda and is 90% complete; 1911 diary is 5.0' x 3.5' has 122 pages and 100% complete; 1912 - 5.0' x 3.0' has 122 pages plus extensive memoranda and 100% complete; 1916 -6.0' x 3.25' has 122 pages plus extensive memoranda and 90% complete; 1918 -5.0' x 3.0' has 122 pages plus extensive memoranda and 100% complete; ; 1919 -5.0' x 3.0' has 365 pages plus extensive memoranda and 80% complete; 1920 -6.0' x 3.0' has 365 pages plus extensive memoranda and 60% complete; 1921 - 4.5' x 2.75' has 73 pages plus memoranda and 100% complete; 1922 -4.75' x 3.25' has 183 pages plus memoranda and 75% complete; 1927 - 5.5' x 3.0' has 52 pages and 75% complete; 1928 - 6.0' x 3.5' has 183 pages and 65% complete; 1929 - 6.0' x 3.0' has 365 pages and 100% complete; all diaries are in good condition the covers of the 1910 and 1918 diaries are in fair condition. These diaries belonged to Frank S. Cummings who lived most of his life in California. Cummings was born July 24th 1894. The 1910 and 1911 diaries were written when he was in high school - ages 16 and 17. It is full of the day-to-day experiences of a high school-aged boy: "School again. Aud. Call in 5th period. Prof Galey talks to boys. But tickets at . Finish riding 300 miles on my bicycle" Apr 28 1910; "Lecture on Liquid Air in Aud. the 4th period. After lesson walk to and hunt for music book. Cannot find it. Finish studying early. June 13 1910; "Rain. Aud call 4th period. Man talks on Lincoln. Excused for rest of the day. . No lesson." Feb 13 1911; "Spring vacation this week. Work on wheel. Take bath. Leave 3:00 for Mrs. Bierlich's. Home early. Go to Ms. Aston's after supper. Home 10:35." Apr 10 1911. While there are references to his mother and aunts and uncles there is no reference to his father or to siblings. He graduates in 1912 and enrolls in the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken NJ. Stevens is one of the oldest technological universities in the United States and was the first college in America solely dedicated to mechanical engineering and the diary for 1916 covers some his experiences there as a student. "Computation exercise in Elect. Labs. Study some with Boards 4:15 home go to show "Mary Page" Apr 6 1916; "Commencement 10:30 Go over early. Assemble in "P Lab" . go up to Castle stay there all afternoon ." Jun 6 1916. For some entries context suggests that while in College he enrolled in the U.S. armed forces reserves specifically the U.S. Naval Reserve Force: "Lecture by General Wood on 'Preparedness' 12:00 - 1:00. 2:03 home. Go down town. Concert at Women's Club East Orange. Met . Home 12:00." Feb 16 1916; "Lecture by Capt. Steward 5th Infantry on Organization of the Army ." Feb 23 1916. In Sept 1916 he returned to Stevens to both study as well as to teach as an instructor in the Electrical Department. In 1918 it is clear that he has enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve Force and has been commissioned an Ensign. Entries on what are obviously pages from a military note book indicate that he was engaged in recruiting activities: "FROM: F.S.C. Ensign USNRF TO: Lieutenant Com. F.L. Pryor SUBJECT: Report 1. The enrollment in the naval sections of the S.A.T.C. at both the Univ of Calif and Stanford was less than that desired Instead of a unit of 500 at U of C there were only about 350 enrolled on Oct 4; of these only about 100 were engineers instead of 300. At Stanford out of a desired unit of 100 engineers there were enrolled about 85 of which about 50 were engineers. ." Oct 8 1918; "Got promotion to Lieutenant j.g. ." Jan. 16 1919. On Apr 19th 1919 he received orders to report to the USS DeKalb in Newport News. USS DeKalb was a converted German navy commerce raider that had been interned by US Customs for overstaying her time in a neutral port. When the United States entered the war she was seized and turned over to the US Navy. On Apr 28th he sailed with her to France where she picked up troops to return home from the war. They returned to the United States on May 23rd. He was released from active service May 26th 1919. He immediately returned to California and began to look for work. He was successful and began working July 9th at the rate of 40¢ / hour. His diaries for the following years detail his work at various firms in the electro-mechanical field. There are many references to social activities and people he shares time with. Most diaries contain extensive lists of expenses and in the war years additional notes of his recruiting efforts. Although there is no other biographical information on Cummings the diaries paint a very good picture of his life over this 19 year period. Indeed a social historian would see they could serve as a wider picture of daily life in these early years of the 20th century. An economic researcher or an economist would appreciate the wealth of detail in his extensive records of daily expenses on a wide range of items over this near-two decade period of time; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF; UNITED STATES; CALIFORNIA; FRANK S. CUMMINGS; STEVENS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY; HOBOKEN NJ. USNRF; UNITED STATES NAVAL RESERVE FORCE; USS DEKALB; USS PANTHER; EDUCATION IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICA; SCHOOLS IN CALIFORNIA IN 1910s; TECHNOLOGICAL EDUCATION IN 1910s; 1920s; JAZZ AGE; ROARING TWENTIES; WW1; GREAT WAR; FIRST WORLD WAR; RECRUITMENT IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR; STUDENT LIFE IN 1910S AMERICA; SOCIAL LIFE IN CALIFORNIA; PRICES IN AMERICA IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY; ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS IN 1920s AMERICA; AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
18560001058LEEDS GOREHAM MAINE CAMPELLO MASS MA. Good. 1856. On offer are two mid 19th century pre Civil War handwritten manuscript diaries dated from 1856 and 1857 and both belonged to Henry Ripley Millett who was originally from Leeds and Gorham Maine. Henry had quite a distinguished background and would also come to distinguish himself as Colonel Millett of the 5th Maine Regiment during the civil war. Henry Millett was the cousin of Frank D. Millet the artist who was director of decorations for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair Columbian Exposition. Henry was born in Leeds on September 23rd 1832. He was the son of Thomas and Elmira A. Day Millet. His great-grandfather Thomas Millet was a patriot soldier in the revolution. Henry received a good education in the common schools of Palmyra and St. Albans. In 1851 when he was 19 years old he went to Campello Massachusetts and worked in a shoe factory and this is where the diaries pick up while he's in Campello. He stayed in there until about 1858 headed home to Gorham and in 1861 enlisted in Company A 5th Maine Regiment Sixth Corps Second Brigade First Division. Online resources provide: "He served with distinguished bravery in some of the most momentous engagements of the war including the first battle of Bull Run West Point Antietam Fredericksburg Salem Heights Gettysburg the Wilderness Rappahannock Station Spotsylvania Court house Cold Harbor where his brother Obed was killed the second battle of Bull Run the second engagement at Fredericksburg and Gaine's Mill ." He was wounded numerous times during some of these battles but also that he went home "loaded with honors." After the war he married in 1870 to M. Antoinette daughter of Freeman Whitney of Portland. The 1856 diary is about ½ full of handwritten entries the 1857 diary only has 300 days. Here are some snippets - and some are shocking: "Steel not this book the fear of your life. For the owner carries a great big knife." 1856 "January 21st I haven't Nig-er killed eny today." "January 22nd Today the boys have all gorne on a sleigh ride. Started about 5 o'clock p.m. They numbered 15 sleighs. Came in about 3 a.m." "February 6th This morning I have been to a fire up to the village. The colored saloon burnt. We had a pretty hard time." "February 17th I am now writing in the Quincy House Boston. I came in yesterday and have had a first rate time. Went to ___way's Hall last evening." "February 22nd This is Washington's birthday and is memory of that great man. All bells was rung this morning at sunrise." "March 25th & 26th This evening I have been down to Mrs. Watson's. I wished on Amandie's ring for 3 months Amanda I wish you a happy life and success in all your undertakings ." "March 27th Sailed today the ship Savannah bound for New Orleans. Samuel L. Millett 2nd officer." "April 7th I ame now writing with my book on Henrietter's lap. I am having a first rate time. I wish that I could always be as happy as I am now." "May 22nd Today I have started for Plymouth. I am now safely loged in the Monument House." "August 29th O how meny times in my life I have thought of what now appears to be the fact. That sometime sooner or later we must all-----" "August 30th This is a very long and lonesome evening to me. I am some times on the point of leaving Campello for sum distant land but one thing keeps me here." "September 26th I am now performing at the husking at the Widow Tibett's. I have just done justice to the supper table." "October 17th Spent the evening at L.M.W. had a good time never was happier in my life than when I am there when Henretta is pleasant." "November 1st We have had a strong S.W. wind to day. The anticipated trouble has at last arrived and I am bound to -------" "November 4th Election day. Town country and state election day. I have cast my first presidential vote today with a clear conscious." "December 26th This evening I have hurd some thing that I did not expect to hear. My mind is at changed and I shall take a different course." 1857 "January 1st Today is the first day in the year and I must try to do what is right and then I shall be happy and if I live to see the end of this year I hope I shall look upon it with pleasure and not with regret." "January 3rd Today I left Campello for Boston with a horse & sleigh accompanied by A. C. Ambrose. It has snowed all day." "January 29th Pleasant. Mother died this morning at 9 ½ o'clock." "February 26th Pleasant. Have been meditating on the idea of leaving Campello. I am lonely in this place now and think I shall leave if I can do as well in any other place." "March 25th Have been to work today but it is rather lonesome. I some times think that this world is a blank to me for I never receive any comfort from it." "March 26th I have been thinking of past times today and so judging from what I have experienced I think that the future looks dark." "April 4th I am now at the Mansion. Here I am 10 o'clock at the Mansion House just going to bed to dream if what I have seen this morning. May your dreams be pleasant." "April 28th Have been to take a short ride this evening. Went to the east. Lucy is here yet and I am in love love on love ever." "June 3rd Pleasant. I watched with the corpse last night. G. J. Kingman and ____ Davis Jr." "June 9th I left Campello today at N. for Portland on an excursion with the Enterprise Engine on No. 2." "June 24th I have been up town this afternoon. Got my ambrotype taken but it looked so bad that I smashed it before I got home." "July 28th I left Campello this morn for quarantine. Boston to asertain the perticulars in regards to the death of my brother which occurred on the 9th." "August 17th No. ___have been up to the West Sharon today. We had a siport dinner and speeches from N. B. Drake Capt. Lucas Capt. H. Capt. Clappe and others." "September 12th A sad accident happened here today. A little Irish boy got his skull broke." "September 24th Fire last night. The alarm was given between 11 & 12 o'clock. L. T. Howard's house and barn and other out buildings was completely burned." "October 4th Great excitement here today. Grease pig chase and foot rase. John Sears and Morton Copland prize." "November 4th I left Campello this morn arrived in Boston stopped there until 5 p.m. then left for Portland on board the steamer Lewiston." Much much more including handwritten expense entries in the back and then several of the pages are used like an autograph book where friends and acquaintances have signed and written some kind of sentiment. Overall G. ; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; SHOES COBBLER LEEDS GOREHAM BULL RUN ANTIETAM GETTYSBURG CIVIL WAR WAR BETWEEN THE STATES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA MAINE ME ECONOMY PIONEER PRE CIVIL WAR ; Signed by Autograph . unknown
19230002027Very Good. 1923. On offer is a super manuscript relic of one man's life spent in the Royal Navy serving in submarines for 22 years. Titled 'SHUT OFF FROM DIVING 1923-1945 The Ramblings of a Plumber' the book was written by British Warrant Engineer Leslie Honeywill who was a Chief Engine Room Artificer CERA or a plumber as he jokingly called himself on a number of submarines. Leslie writes in his intro: 'The material used in this story has been extracted from diaries written during the period covered. It is thus chronological and consequently rather disjointed in its presentation. It will have little interest except to submariners and probably not a lot for those who are or were. It contains no excitements but is an attempt to portray how one submariner enjoyed life met and overcame problems enjoyed the companionship of some wonderful friends - if the contents are mainly connected with the engine room department that of course was my particular concern but we were a team from the youngest seaman to the CO and no one could have wished for a more satisfying life.' The 463 page book on large typed paper is overall VG. We offer separately Honeywill's history of submarines - 0002026; book titled 'PERISCOPE PERSONALITIES 1901-1972' - 0002029 and another book titled 'SUBMARINE DEPOT SHIPS BASES & SUPPORT SHIPS' - 0002028.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF LESLIE HONEYWILL BRITISH ROYAL NAVY SUBMARINES ROYAL NAVY SUBMARINE SERVICE RNSS SUBMARINERS SEAMEN SAILORS NAUTICAL MARINE NAVAL COMBAT AT SEA C.E.R.A. CHIEF ENGINE ROOM ARTIFICER WARRANT OFFICERS SUBMERSIBLES U-BOAT UNDERWATER WWI WW1 WORLD WAR ONE WWII WW2 WORLD WAR TWO UNDER WATER CRAFT SUBS SUB WARFARE LIMEYS ENGLAND AT WAR CREWMAN TARS SILENT SERVICE ENGINEERS BOATS WATER CRAFT MARINE ARCHITECTURE ROYAL UNITED SERVICE INSTITUTION HMS DOLPHIN DEPOT SHIPS FLAG OFFICER SUBMARINES ENGINE ROOM ROYAL NAVY SUBMARINE SCHOOLHANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
18490002366MISHAWAKA WOLF CREEK MARSHALL COUNTY INDIANA IN. Fair. 1849. Offered is a super original manuscript diary dated August 1849 through to a final tragic entry in April 1854. The diary was handwritten by an Indiana surveyor farmer politician and engineer who worked throughout Indiana Ohio and Illinois. While the 64 page book lacks any identifying signatures or inscription a tucked in scrap of what appears to be original poetry dated 1840 bears the name of Jeremiah Gould. The final 1854 entry is signed in a different hand with the initials V.G. likely the son Vernon which we believe adds credence to Jeremiah's authorship though more research should be done. The diary is a fascinating and a superb telling of the author's personal life and times as he writes not just of what has happened but also his thoughts about the family's future. We learn that it is a hard life given his family suffered many attacks of fever and disease and a super portrait of pre Civil War America and there is so much to it: he and fellow surveyors find an old Indian Battle ground while on a survey; political commentary about the Whig Party Daniel Webster including his own ambitions in local politics as he is elected to office. His children he writes about many times - Vernon Marietta and Robert. For example one of his sons Vernon leaves to study medicine. The town of Rochester is a focus of commentary often along with Mishawaka Wolf Creek and Marshall County and the Yellow River. In fact there is a great entry about crossing the river by horse. He writes about surveying his own land under an act of Congress of Sept 25th. The author was a part time teacher rancher and elected county surveyor in August 1851 surveying for a Solomon Pontius. He mentions in great detail his cattle sheep and trying to raise crops. He also describes the political climate of the day and his own philosophical thoughts. Here is a snippet: Fri April 23 Went to Richland to attend court for Mother. I never saw so many ignorant a set of men nor so disorderly a court as I saw today the justice was entirely incompetent to fill his office. I am satisfied that magistrates ought not to be elected to office. For in a great majority of cases incompetent persons will be elected over worthy and competent men while there is no one responsible for this impromptu choice. Today I had conversations with A.F. Smith related to political affairs we concluded to call a meeting of the Whig's of the county on the 22nd of March. This close's the year 1852- a year in which I have had many bright prospects and as many disappointments but on the whole out situation is somewhat improved I have paid off some debts made some valuable improvements upon my family and in the year to come we have all been blest with health. Sept 21 I left home for the east. Arrived in South Bend in the evening took carriage 40 minutes past 11 arrived Monroe in the morning. Took passage on board steamboat about 10 min and arrived in Cleveland about 4 pm and in the morning of the 23rd arrived in Buffalo. Gould also travels for his pleasure and edification particularly when he travels east and does a super job on two and a half pages of describing his trip to The World's Fair September 1853. This was the Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations a World's Fair held in 1853 in what is now Bryant Park in New York City in the wake of the highly successful 1851 Great Exhibition in London. The New York Fair also had a Crystal Palace. He also went directly to the Mechanics Fair in Boston on September 30th and he writes a couple of short paragraphs. The tragedy contained in this diary is dramatic and saddening to read. Shortly after the author attends the World's Fair his wife suddenly gets ill and then dies of this illness. Within a year the Author perishes as well from "Typhus". In the Winter of 1851 I wrote to M.D. Smith of Ohio for a flock of sheep June 1st 1851 Vernon left home to study medicine under the instruction of Dr. Brokett July 5th I purchased 500 sheep of Smith. In the fall Vernon took a school over the river for three months. In December I commenced surveying my lands for Culua under an Act of Congress of Sept 25th. In Jan I was appointed Deputy county surveyor with the understating that I should have all the business of the county. I continued to to the County surveying until the August election. My sheep became diseased and we had a great deal of trouble with them and of the 500. I had little but 100 at shearing and all the wool was insufficient to pay the first installment of the purchase money a great disappointment. Wednesday 25th 1852 Finished the road and went across the woods to Montgomery's and thence to Barnes on the way there we passed by the remains of some shanties erected on the Indian Payment ground on the North side of Chippewa rock erected in 1836. In the afternoon surveyed a road from Barnes's to Warsaw Road. After the survey was finished as we were sitting upon a log near the Chippewa rock south of Martins Mr Montgomery picked out a bullet from a log about 4 inches from the outside of the log which had overgrown by 37 layers of wood. This circumstance gave rise from which I learned that about 50 years ago the Chippewa's and Pottawatomie had a battle at this place. Previous to that time the Chippewa occupied this county and had a town on the creek. The old town of Aubbunaublu township was also a Chippewa town. January 1st 1854 Eighteen hundred fifty three is passed away and what has it left me I have been totally successful in temporal affairs. Have diminished my debts have extended my acquaintances have visited the home of my youth and have been flattered with visions of future success but I have lost my nearest friend my family is broken up my plans for the future have been frustrated and sorrow has sent an arrow into my heart deeper that before." The 8 x 6.5 inch journal is basically disbound covers hanging by string loose pages but the text is complete and legible. Overall Fair. ; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF JEREMIAH GOULD NEW YORK CITY WORLD'S FAIR CRYSTAL PALACE FAIR EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF ALL NATIONS A WORLD'S FAIR BRYANT PARK MECHANICS FAIR BOSTON AUBBUNAUBLU TOWNSHIP CHIPPEWA ROCHESTER MISHAWAKA WOLF CREEK MARSHALL COUNTY THE YELLOW RIVER INDIANA SURVEYORS SURVEYING OLD INDIAN BURIAL GROUNDS AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG PRIMARY SOURCE FIRST HAND ACCOUNT SOCIAL HISTORY PERSONAL STORIES LIVING HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPELBIOGRAPHY BIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY PERSONAL NARRATIVES . unknown
1906000054BloOMINGBURG OHIO OH. Good. 1906. On offer is a sensational family diary lot in this collection of 16 diaries with each being completely full of handwritten entries. All of these diaries belonged to C.W. Larrimer of Bloomingburg Ohio. They start in 1906 when he's 44 and the last diary is 1921. Cursory examination reveals he's a cattle rancher an assessor at least in the month of April and a jack of all trades. He loves to travel and ends up taking several trips all over Ohio and then in 1915 takes a trip to California and another one to Cuba in 1917. He also loves his auto transporting and picking up folks all the time. In fact he makes several trips to Indianapolis for the races. Very interesting that all the diaries are full of handwritten entries even when he's sick. In fact he gets so sick he has to go in for an operation at the Battle Creek Hospital and infirmary. He's sick for many weeks and still writes "sick" in his journal not missing a day of journaling. But then in the last diary 1921 the entries stop abruptly on December 4th and on December 13th there is an entry that just said "Died Today". We assume this is our author who died or perhaps someone he loved deeply was sick and died. His entries are usually one sentence up to a small paragraph in length as you will see in the following excerpts. "Went to Chillicothe last night with Mr. Gunn. Stalled in creek at Sulfur Lick Springs all day. Went out to Chillicothe Park and National Cemetery. Rained in forenoon. Went to Missionary ridge up on Lookout Mountain all day .Carrying mail for Claude Andrews nice day but sick in the evening. Daisy died this morning out looking for the horse. In Indianapolis all day. Brother Will and Cliff hear at White City in evening. Out to see Lewis Bloomer in forenoon at Wonderland and at Park in evening .Went to Anderson's in the afternoon and also to Buffalo Bills Show .At Sulfur Lick Springs all day and up to the new hotel .Stayed all night in New Castle. Left with new auto at 2:15 got to Dayton at 6 PM. Took traveling man to Solon Out with traveling man all day at Solon .Hauled traveling man to Madisonville and Jefferson. At the place took commissioners to see bridge .Went from Anderson to Indianapolis to auto races bug crowd fine day .Went to the caves with Hoppes and Wolf At home all day Pa is getting weaker all the time .Pa died at 6 PM at W.C.H .Started for California August 25th 1915 .he then mentions going to St. Paul National Park Spokane Seattle Portland Ashland Frisco Los Angeles Mexico Redlands Salt Lake Colorado Springs and returned home on Oct. 2nd 1915 ." and much much more. As one can imagine he writes many names too many to possibly list all of them but a few I found are; Joe Eastman Huffman Jefferson Dickey Campbell Sam Marshall McDoles William Clawson Joe Kimball Jim Willis Whitmers Woodland Hershburger Harry Brown Frank McCoy Parrott Pinkerton Goddard Noah Smith Kimball Carl Shaw Henry Huffman Karl Klevers Dr. Hazzard and more. Places mentioned are just as numerous; Charleston West Virginia Watson Sulfur Lick Springs Madison Mills Delaware Magnetic Springs Columbus Cincinnati State Mills Jeffersonville Chicago Zenia and more. The diaries are in good condition with each measuring about 2 ½" x 5 ½". Some of the diaries are your typical "Standard" diary. On the front of some you'll find the advertising names of "The National Supply Company in Toledo Ohio and Pittsburg Pennsylvania" or Kanawha National Bank in Charleston West Virginia" or "Charleston Bottling Works in Charleston West Virginia." A great historical group of Ohio diaries. ; Manuscript; 64mo - up to 3" tall; OHIO INDIANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL PERSONAL HISTORY MEMOIR MEMORIAL DIARY JOURNAL DIARIES JOURNALS LOG LOGS KEEPSAKE AMERICANA Rancher Cattle Americana Cuba Havana . unknown
18880008041Yellow Springs Ohio. Good. 1888. On offer is a fascinating collection of diaries written by Professor M. Jay Flannery an educator at the turn of the 19th century in central Ohio. Born in 1857 he secured a position teaching at Antioch College in Yellow Springs OH just south of Springfield. He died in 1920. The diaries take the form of 13 notebooks measuring approximately 6 3/4 inches by 4 inches and one smaller volume measuring 5 1/4 by 3 3/4 inches. The books volumes contain about 120 pages each and are essentially 100% complete. The smaller volume is about 50% complete. The books are in very good condition and the writing is quite legible. Flannery writes extensively about everyday events commenting on school life personal and other professional matters: "Mrs Foster went away this morning. In school all day. School good. . A number of girls stayed to prepare for Democrat rally in Osborne tonight. Big Democrat torch-light procession from here to Osborne . We had a meeting at the schoolhouse tonight to organize a Teachers' Reading Circle. . we will read 4 chapters of a Guide to Health. Harry had a tooth ache tonight and broke his tooth trying to pull it" Fri Oct 19 1888. "Thanksgiving! No school as this is a holiday. Beal brought the bookcase and other things about noon and Dillinger and I worked hard the rest of the day putting it up putting the bureau upstairs changing things around in the room changing books etc. I sent my examination lists to the printer today. I used old ones. Uncle Joe died about 6 o'clock this morning. I suppose the masons will bury him ." Thurs Nov 29 1888. In October 1894 he pastes in a lengthy newspaper clipping referencing something he wrote. The article hints at the tensions that existed at Antioch College between several groups involved in the running of the College. "Got a letter from Sister today. She says that ma is not well. Took 's picture down to Miller the photographer to have a small better picture made from it . This has been a rather pleasant day" Wed Feb 5 1900. He notes political events that happening commenting on Cleveland's election as president in Nov 1888 and McKinley's assassination September 1901. He continued working in education teaching writing and publishing. At one point he was elected superintendent of the local school system: "Anne and I came tp Springfield this morning. This morning I received some copies of the New England Journal of Education for Sept 25 containing as its leading article my paper The Lure of the City. Last night I attended a meeting of The Chautauqua and was elected Secretary and Chairman of the Executive Committee ." Sat Oct 4 1919. Taken as a whole these diaries paint a picture of a man who is committed to his profession and his community. Because of the span of years they cover these diaries offer a historian or researcher an excellent longitudinal view. The diaries cover the following time periods: Oct - Dec 1888; Oct - Jan 1894-95; June - Oct 1898; Jan - Apr and Aug - Dec 1899; Dec - Mar 1899-1900; Mar - July and July - Oct 1900; Apr - June and July - Sept 1901; Oct - Jan 1901-02; Jan - May and May - Oct 1902; Aug - Sept 1918-19.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 19TH CENTURY 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910S GILDED AGE PROGRESSIVE ERA UNITED STATES OHIO GREEN COUNTY YELLOW SPRINGS M. JAY FLANNERY ANTIOCH COLLEGE EDUCATION IN OHIO COLLEGE TEACHERS SCHOOL LIFE IN THE LATE 19TH- EARLY 20TH CENTURY COLLEGE TEACHERS AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19470009037TOKYO KOBE GIFU JAPAN SEOUL SOUTH KOREA. Good. 1947. On offer is a super relic of a fantastic and unique part of a United States soldier's military experience. This is the diary of a woman who traveled with an entertainment group on tours with the United Service Organization USO. The woman's name is Sandy Grant and the group she traveled with was called the "Rhythm Rockets." She performed ballet along with other forms of dancing and her diary tells all about her trip with the Rockets to Japan in 1947. The tour lasts 5 months and they perform over 70 shows. The diary has about 120 pages and 70 of those are diary entries. The rest are itinerary items purchased remarks on the customs of Japan autographs and much more. Sandy's entries are fascinating. She talks of all the many different military bases and theatres they performed at the unique and strange customs and culture of Japan and times meeting dining and seeing several different high-ranking Officers including Five-Star General and Field Marshall Douglas MacArthur. She even writes of flying on the same plane as Shirley Temple whom she refers to as "The Little Colonel." Her trip begins in the July 1947 where she leaves her home in Hoboken New Jersey taking the train west to California then boarding a plane to Hawaii and then on to Japan. Her entries are brief on the way over but get very detailed while in Asia and also detailed while sailing home on board the "Admiral Mayo" returning home after a 5 month tour. "July 20th Midnight in Reno Nevada. Wild open town. Lights galore. Very spectacular. Left 10 minutes later. California July 21st. Arrive Suisan. Fairfield Cal. 6 A.M. Waited 3 hrs. for Army Transportation to be Billeted. Processing all day. Sent 2 wires and cards."; "July 22nd. Did one show at the Suisun Fairfield Army Air Base. Went Beautifully." On July 29th the day she leaves for Japan she is meticulous with her itinerary the miles between cities and the time taken to get to each place: "July 29. Left Fairfield - Suisun. C-54 Plane California to Japan - Flew to Honolulu to Jalusta Island - to Kwajalein to Guam to Iwo Jima to Tokyo."; "August 2nd Met bus from airport. To terminal. Checked in with U. S. O. Went straight to Meiji Mee Gee Hotel. Met by Don Brynes and Norman Lessman and Miss Swanson. Showed us to the dining room immediately. To our rooms 509. Showers. Small table bed. Bar in hotel. Met other units Merle Andre Vesper and gang."; "August 4th First Show. Work tonight. First theatre date. Report. 1st show 8th Cavalry 2nd Squadron. Show excellent."; "August 5th 2nd show. Tech. Intelligence Detachment."; "August 13th. Gifu Japan. Wonderful resort place. Show tonight. No. 6. Took lots of pictures. Dining room and bar excellent. Scenery gorgeous"; "August 14th. Night fishing. Fascinating. Cormorant's birds. Bought souvenirs and postcards up the river." From August 15th to the 21st she is doing shows in Tsu and Kyoto. One of them is even a boat show. The tour keeps moving all around Japan at a fairly rapid clip. "August 26th Kobe Japan. Shurakan Theatre No. 16"; "August 27th - 28th Swimming at the Shoija Officers Club. The residence of James English man. Gorgeous spot. Best I've seen so far. Salt water. Authentic Japanese gardens. Exquisite home and surroundings."; "August 29th - 31st Arrived in Tokyo after all night trip from Kobe. Heard the sad news that China may be off our itinerary. Hope not. 30th Tokyo Army Air Base Supply Base. Show tonight. Fucho Camp No. 18. E-N-C-O-H! Club. Japanese floor show. 8 girls and principals. Very interesting.31st Drake Theatre. 1st Cavalry No. 19. And Signal Corps. Buffet dinner and after show went to officers club. Beautiful place. Bought silk at their P.X. 6 yds. $1.25. 12 yds. $2.50. 16 weave. Saw Gen. MacArthur at the Dai-ichi Bldg. 5 star. 2:30 P.M. Great thrill. Gae Mac. and I. Also Gen. Miller 2 star general." She sums up September 1st thru the 11th on one page. She does "Shows No. 20 - 26" all of which occur in Toky. One day she goes with a friend to an "International Military Tribunal Far East Court" and see trials. "October 3rd Tokyo. Shopped. Pat's slippers few cig. Cases. Gae and Mac and I took a rickshaw ride to the Imperial Hotel. No show tonight. Wardrobe left behind on another plane." In October the show moves to Korea. "October 9th Enroute to Korea. Flight C-46 Plane. Up 4:45 A.M. Truck to A. T. C. Bust to Tachikawa 25 miles. Breakfast at airport. Left 10 A.M. Arrived 11:45 at Itami Air Base. Left Itami after 45 minutes refueling. Time 12:45 left. Gorgeous views of Mt. Fuji. Flew all around it. Scenery gorgeous. Fuji half snow capped. C-46 plane. 2 motor job. Landed 4:30 P.M. "Little Colonel" on flight with us. 5 hr. and 45 min. to complete flight. 1st appearance of J. O. B. Took party to Banto. Kimpo Air Field Korea. Kwang Ha Moon Hotel. Room 22. Will live here all month."; "October 10th & 11th Seoul Korea. Played 216. Colored audience. Very good date to play. 38 parallel called the iron curtain. Beautiful scenery up there. Red Cross girls with us. Log fire bar. Went to E.M. dance. Crisp Oct. day. Show tonight for 32nd infantry 3rd Div. #42."; "November 4th 8th Calvary #61. Repeat performance. This was our first date here. Next day party at Capt. and Mrs. Matthews's home Tokyo Japan Washington Heights. Largest dependent area in the world. Cocktails. Dinner and to Peer Club. Actual room the Pearl Harbor attack was planned and executed. Beautiful place. Major Snell Major Colonel and Mrs. Doyle Dar Swaney Mac and I. Great evening." Her birthday party on Nov. 7th. On the 12th they play a show at Haneda Airfield. Says it's the first show ever played there and the last. "December 4th Gae and I in town. Took pictures of MacArthur. Took rickshaw Sent cable to mother. Bought table clasher. Linen in Marunouchi Bldg. Took pictures at Imperial Hotel. Went to post office. Came back to hotel. Changed money from script to American money. Turned in ration cards. Jackie and Lucille's house. Ate spaghetti in Japanese home. Fruit. Train out and cab home." In early December she begins the journey back to the U.S. "December 7th Sailed this morning. Left Yokohama for Seattle. Admiral Mayo left this morning 8 A.M. The Yokohama M. P. Band played at pier to see our ship off. Strange to day should be Pearl Harbor day and we left Japan a few hrs. ago. Had breakfast drills for the boat. Had lunch and dinner on deck most of day. Saw movie "Desperate". Terrible picture but first day out nice and smooth. Hope it stays this way."; "December 14th 9th day at sea. Sunday breakfast 8:30 A.M. Church services 10 A.M. Communion. On deck. To lunch. On deck all afternoon. Weather gorgeous. Took a lot of pictures. Missed movie tonight. Walked deck. Al and Norm and I. Had grand dinner. Sat in room and talked. Ronnie Mae Gae Al Norm and I. To bed."; "December 16th Awake at 5:30 A.M. Breakfast at 7 A.M. On deck. Pitch black out. First glimpse of Seattle. Lit up like a xmas tree. Went thru routine work. Checking off boat. Band played. Rained all day. Thru customs. To New Richmond Hotel Room 711. Had late lunch at hotel 2:30 P.M. Called dad at 3:30 P.M. That's 6:30 Phila. time. Called Herb. Call incomplete until 1 A.M. his time. Al Gae and I stayed in Gal's room. Then to bed. Wire from dad." She boards a train that night for Philadelphia and in the next few days rides through Montana North and South Dakota Wisconsin Chicago and then comes home on the 21st just in time for Christmas. At the end of the book there are a dozen pages or so of 'Memos' in which Sandy has listed little observations Japanese phrases and things to know. "1/ Exchange of money ¥ Yen mark 1000 Yen for 20.00. 2/ People very humble. 3/ No automobiles. Travel on foot - Jam every subway car or train - Rickshaws every where.10/ Kyoto - Former Capital of Japan. Token name for Tokyo - Kyoto - twisted around." She does the same with Korea writing down little observations and common expressions. The diary is in fair shape. The cover has pulled away from the binding in the front. It measures about 4" x 7".; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF SANDY GRANT UNITED SERVICE ORGANIZATION USO RHYTHM ROCKETS POST WORLD WAR TWO JAPAN POST-WW2 KOREA U.S. MILITARY DEPLOYMENT ADMIRAL MAYO GENERAL DOUGLAS MACARTHUR SHIRLEY TEMPLE THE LITTLE COLONEL BALLET DANCER TOKYO KOBE JAPAN SEOUL SOUTH KOREA USO AFTER THE WAR MILITARY ENTERTAINMENT KWANG HA MOON HOTEL AMERICAN IN ASIA JAPANESE CULTURE AND CUSTOMS INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL FAR EAST COURT FIRST DECADE OF THE USO MORALE BOOSTER WOMEN IN THE USO WOMEN ENTERTAINERS AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO DANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
18560002237HMSS TRITON. Good. 1856. On offer is a super very interesting April 1856 - December 1858 manuscript diary and relic of the post Crimean War travels and duties of the Royal Wiltshire Regiment handwritten by Lieutenant Thomas Edward Pinkett. Lt. Pinkett he makes captain in 1862 does a super job as a diarist providing 242 pages of personal narrative and a significant historical record with many references: named soldiers visitors daily duties and for example lists of destinations over the 3 year period of troop and ship movements; there is even a list tucked in from 1857 - 1860 of Regiments who dined with the Royal Wilts including the 4th Light Dragoons the Middlesex 2nd Cheshire North Lincoln The Roscommon The 12th and the Stafford. Here are some snippets: 21st April 1856: "Embarked at Corfu for Santa Maura 1 Cpt 2 Subs 6 Sergeants 1 Drummer 109 Rank & File on board HMSS Triton.to relieve Liet Black of ours at Paxo who was to proceed to Zante.detachment of our own men to proceed to Cerigo. 29th November 1857: Last night there were some signs of a disturbance and the Middlesex Warwick & Roscommon were in the morning. There was a great row at Aldershot between the 4th Lancashire & the 3rd West Yorkshire. The latter were driven out of all Public Houses and hunted home to their barracks. On 1st February 1858 they moved from Aldershot to Portsmouth this appears to have been the base up until the end of the Diary in December of 1858 although in the list at the front of the book there are journeys to Boulogne Barnstaple Southsea Mauritius Zante Malta Gibraltar and Vigo." "Arrived back in Plymouth on 13th September 1856; On to Portsmouth 15th September 1856; Salisbury Billets 16th September 1856; Devizes Castle Inn 17th Sept 1856; London Great Western Hotel Paddington 30th September 1856; mid October 1856 France Paris; April 1857 Germany right through to August 1857; returned to London 25th Sept 1857; 1st October 1857 to Barracks at Aldershot" etc etc. We list his 1859 Regimental Payroll journal separately Seller Id: #0002238. Overall G.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF THOMAS EDWARD PINKETT ROYAL WILTSHIRES ROYAL WILTSHIRE MILITIA 4TH LIGHT DRAGOONS THE MIDDLESEX 2ND CHESHIRE NORTH LINCOLN THE ROSCOMMON THE 12TH THE STAFFORD CRIMEAN WAR SEBASTOPOL BLACK SEA ROYAL MARINES SOLDIERS SOLDIERING BRITISH ARMY BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCES TURKEY RUSSIA HMSS TRITON BRITANNICA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG PRIMARY SOURCE FIRST HAND ACCOUNT SOCIAL HISTORY PERSONAL STORIES LIVING HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPELBIOGRAPHY BIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY PERSONAL NARRATIVES . unknown
19180008140MCMINNVILLE OREGON. Good. 1918. On offer is a delightful diary dating to WWI. Coming from the American west this diary measures 5.75 inches by 4 inches and contains 365 pages. It is 90% complete. The cover and the pages are in good condition and all pages are intact. The back cover and the spine have separated from the binding but the front cover remains attached. The handwriting is legible. Also included with the diary are three black and white photographs. They depict 2 couples and a single picture of a woman. There is no annotation or identification with them. The diary is written by an unknown woman from the area around McMinnville Oregon. She is never identified. However she does live with another woman Anna who appears to be her sister. References crop up about someone named Peter and context would suggest that he is a boy although the relationship is never explained. This is a story of these two single women living in a small community in 1918 as WWI is coming to an end. Rationing is something they live with daily and their financial circumstances are tight. Anna in particular is continually looking for work. Jobs are hard to come by and often short-lived. But they manage. There are some entries that talk about selling personal items to raise some money. In April our author falls and suffers a serious leg fracture ending up in the hospital. Despite a long recovery she is remarkably cheerful and a warm quiet humour comes through in some of her entries. "The dickens of a day! I did a washing but did not hang out the clothes for it was stormy and cold. Anna went to work for Sealy; but don't know how long it will last. Bernard was in in the evening. The typewriter came up and I copied several recipes." Mar 4; ". had dinner upstairs to save wood . but . proved not good as it was burnt. Crisco for butter canned and a wonderful pudding made of coco flour and water. War menu! The conservation people can't teach us anything." Feb 15; ". We read and knit all day except long enough to get dinner and eat it. Things taste much alike though I don't know just why. Lack of milk meat butter and sugar I suppose. We truly are doing our share toward food conservation. In the evening Anna wrote to Ida and I made a valentine for Peter to give to Mrs. Ball." Feb 10; "Did about the usual things. Ruth was over in the evening to show us Nell's pictures. Finished Esther's little dress. The Ball children & their chums had a great deal of fun throwing ashes and mud and rocks on to our front porch and writing with soap on our front windows such remarks as "Wanted -a man". Helen is such a fool for a 17 yr. girl and Frances is growing to be a rowdy but as Mrs. Ward says "What can you expect when you consider their mother" Oct 31. You can almost hear the exuberance in her entry for Nov 11th: "Peace! Peace! Peace! The news came about midnight ."Nov 11. Notwithstanding a year filled with a bad accident financial worries and daily hard work her last entry for the year is really inspiring: ".This year has been good to us in many ways. We are all in usual health none of us missing our soldiers are well and safe and the world at peace and in spite of my accident I can walk." Dec 31. This is a delightful diary to read. It gives a very intimate look at the day to day struggles of two women in fairly difficult economic times. Notwithstanding their challenges they get on with their daily lives with determination and good humour. For a social historian it is an excellent look into the daily lives of very ordinary people struggling with the circumstances thrust on them by the demands of a wartime economy; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 20TH CENTURY 1910s MCMINNVILLE OR; YAMHILL COUNTY OREGON UNITED STATES WWI; RATIONING; FIRST WORLD WAR AMERICAN WEST EARLY 20TH CENTURY BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOS; AMERICAN WOMEN IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY ; WORKING WOMEN IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY; AMERICAN DIETARY PATTERNS AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 20TH CENTURY; "HOOVERIZING"; FOOD CONSERVATION EFFORTS DURING WW1; WARTIME MENU; LIFE IN AMERICA DURING THE WW1; WARTIME ECONOMY; AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
19620001450KOREA. Very Good. 1962. Manuscript. On offer is a super manuscript relic of Canada's Korean War participation being a handwritten day book diary pages of a soldier with the famed French Canadian regiment the 'Van Doos'. The 2-ring 6 x 4 inch pages record terse fact filled sometimes intimate personal notations of this soldier's duties and life in the Korean Theatre. Some pages are missing but from April 2nd 1952 through November 3rd 1952 he notes 216 days in Korea at this point this serviceman provides an intimate picture of a support soldier laying cables building rafts laying out minefields and many times under attack. June July August and September are the most filled months and in roughly 137 pages one reads the day to day mundane and of course the definitely not mundane entries - how he was driving a jeep with a Sergeant and a military officer and the jeep was under mortar fire and it rolled over down an embankment. Other entries include: May 17th 1952 29 years old; check Vandoos reg. 2000 mine A/P minefield. Got shelled in the valley. 18 - 75 mm came in on us in ½ hour. No casualties; received letters from patootie. Wrote letter to patootie; started booby trap MF mine field; Sgt. Jackson went to battle school in Japan; attended class pontoon raft demonstration at Widgeon bridge; June 25th 7th Wedding Anniversary; mention of Operations Buster and Buckingham Noahs Ark; went over to Sgt's mess a HQ. Tied one on; constructed & operated close 50/60 raft all day; buffet lunch @ Vandoos HQs; took 5 L/Cpls up to Black Watch; almost got clobbered by a heavy mortar which landed 25' behind jeep and much more. One online source provides: BACKGROUND NOTES: The Royal 22e Régiment is an infantry regiment and the most famous francophone organization of the Canadian Forces. The regiment comprises three Regular Force battalions two Primary Reserve battalions and a band making it the largest regiment in the Canadian Army. The ceremonial home of the regiment is La Citadelle in Quebec City where the regimental museum is housed. The regiment is nicknamed the Van Doos an anglicized mispronunciation of vingt-deux "twenty-two" in French. The regiment's regimental headquarters is located in Quebec City with all three of its regular battalions stationed at various bases in the province of Quebec. The regiment serves as the "local" infantry regiment for Quebec. During the Korean War 1951-1953 the regiment expanded to three battalions each serving in turn as part of the Canadian brigade in the 1st Commonwealth Division. Thus the "Van Doos" represented one-third of Canada's infantry contingent throughout the war. Overall in very good condition save for one page chewed as noted by 'Kibbles'.; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: CANADIANA FRENCH CANADIAN REGIMENTS VAN DOOS VANDOOS 22ND REGIMENT KOREAN WAR SEOUL PYONG YANG OPERATION NOAHS ARK OPERATION BUCKINGHAM MINE FIELDS BLACK WATCH CANADA Personal Memoir Handwritten hand written autograph autographs signed letters document documents manuscript manuscripts writers writer author holograph personal ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT . unknown
19410001623Japan. Very Good. 1941. On offer is a super original unique manuscript relic of WWII Japanese war effort being a handwritten diary of Japanese newsman for the period from December 8 Japan time 1941 to the spring and summer of 1942 noting the major events including Pearl Harbor Midway Guadalcanal the Eastern Solomon Islands the beginnings of New Guinea campaign naval engagements with the USS Saratoga Yorktown North Carolina and more. The entries seem to end around late summer of 1942 and there is an interesting postmark in the volume for December 8th 1942 one year after Pearl Harbor. Since this was written during wartime in order to conserve paper the writer used inverted pages from an old office ledger. The 97 page book measures 6¼ x 9 inches and has it's original covers and title slip contents complete and overall G. ; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF PEARL HARBOR GUADALCANAL SOLOMONS NEW GUINEA MIDWAY WORLD WAR 2 WWII WORLD WAR II JAPAN JAPANESE JAPANESE WAR EFFORT RISING SUN NIPPON NIPPONESE PACIFIC THEATER PACIFIC THEATRE USS SARATOGA YORKTOWN NORTH CAROLINA REPORTER NEWSMAN WAR REPORTER JOURNALIST JOURNALISM HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORYantiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito papel. . unknown
19400009060CAIRO KHARTOUM DURBAN SOUTH AFRICA EAST AFRICA. Good. 1940. On offer is a short and fascinating travel journey through East Africa undertaken in the 1940s. It is a detailed account of four Englishmen John James Peter Dawson Harry Davies and the unnamed author and two Ethiopian servants brothers named Datchee and Bouwee who take a journey from Cairo Egypt to Durban South Africa travelling by horseback punts canoes and aeroplane. Chances are that the trip was undertaken during the second half of the 1940s as there is no mention of the war that consumed the world in the first half of the decade. The first page of the book contains an index which shows that the diary consists of six chapters: 1- Preparation for the journey; 2 - From Cairo to Wadi; 3 - From Wadi to Khartoum; 4 - From Khartoum to Lake Rudolf; 5 - Through the jungle; 6 - Back to the world. The index also shows on which page in the book these chapters begin. The first chapter begins: John James Peter Dawson Harry Davies and myself had been working on the Persian oil field for six years and we wanted a holiday. Peter Dawson proposed to go on a travel holiday from Cairo to the Zambesi and we all agreed. We set off by boat on May 16th and arrived at Cairo on May 17th. The preparation for the journey consists of their trouble in finding suitable servants in Cairo. They eventually find Datchee and Bouwee. They also buy their tents sheets and other assorted travelling gear. It had taken us five days to get everything ready but we had enjoyed every one of them. We went to our hotel for the last night for in the morning we were going to start our journey. The second chapter consists of their travel to Wadi in what is now Sudan. They cross through Giza travel on a punt down the Nile river where they meet and exchange food with the natives. They travel down the Nile for a few days having great difficulty crossing the Aswan Low Dam having to carry their punts quite a while to come to the other side. In Wadi they get in touch with a British officer who warned us of the hard work that was coming & entreated us to trek across land but we decided to carry on as we were. We started out from Wadi alright but soon `struck the second cataract. Here the punts had to be carried round & the provision boat unloaded. This was a great waste of time & we were able to sail fifteen miles that day. It takes twenty days to reach Khartoum. One day we had quite a thrill when a hungry lion stepped in our path. We quickly got our rifles all had a shot & all missed. This made the lion more furious & had not Jack intervened and shot it through the heart we should not have been alive to tell the tale. We each took some of its skin as a memento. They rest for three days in Khartoum. And from there they abandon their boats and begin the trek to Lake Rudolf. They follow a caravan route along the Blue Nile. the authors friend John James sprains his ankle but they managed to find a French doctor who rubbed it with oils and bandaged it up tightly. Going forward our greatest handicap.was the tributaries that had to be crossed. Not long after we were over the first tributary we encountered linos. But horses had been trained for this and when they say the lions they laid down that for us to shoot over them. One lion dashed at Tommy and we all shot at it. We killed it all right but it fell on Tommys back legs and were three hours before we could get it off. When they reach Lake Rudolf the author writes our first job was to make friends with the natives which we easily did by giving them a few beads. We were very fortunate in being able to speak to them through Bouwee and Datchee . Bouwee and Datchee asked them to make us six canoes and one raft for the horses and the food. They all worked like horses for the next few days and at last got them finished. Three of them came with us to propel the raft. Crossing Lake Rudolf proves difficult especially at night. We had a watch as usual but had a very uncomfortable night. Frequently during the night we were awakened by shots from the rifles which had to be fired to scare some animals that were coming too near the camp. They cross the lake in twenty days and reach Port Victoria and continue on foot through the jungle of present-day Tanzania. We arrived at the source of the Luangwa River thirty days after we had set out from Mwanza and decided to make that our destination. On their journey back to the world they decide to sell their horses and return by boat through rivers and tributaries back to Cairo. They sell the horses to an English missionary. It was very good going on the river. WE were sailing with the current and with wind at our backs. In this manner were able to do forty miles per day. They then part with their trusted partners. It took us nine days to reach Chinde where we had to part with Bouwee & Datchee. We offered them five pounds each but they would not take it all they wanted was the canoes which we gladly gave them and said goodbye. We waited a day at Chinde for a boat to Durban. At Durban we took an aeroplane to Khartoum where we reclaimed the punts and sailed down the river. We visited the Pyramids and then returned to work. The cover of the book is a light brown patterned paper. It is in good condition showing very little age or wear. The authors handwriting is in an easily legible script written in black ink. The author of the diary is not stated. No precise dates provided but the trip took several months. The book is 26 pages long in which 23 have writing in them as well as numbered pages.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF JOHN JAMES PETER DAWSON HARRY DAVIES DATCHEE BOUWEE ENGLAND UNITED KINGDOM ENGLISH TRAVEL WORLD WAR TWO ERA POST WW2 CAIRO EGYPT KHARTOUM SUDAN LAKE RUDOLF LAKE TURKANA KENYA ASWAN LOW DAM BLUE NILE DURBAN SOUTH AFRICA PUNT TRAVEL PYRAMIDS OF GIZA PORT VICTORIA TANZANIA LUANGWA RIVER JUNGLE BUSHWACKING THE ENGLISH IN EAST AFRICA MWANZA ENGLISH COLONIALISM BRITANNICA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO DANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown