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19230007012ASEA ABOARD THE S.S. MONGOLIA EUROPE. Good. 1923. On offer is a fascinating original manuscript travel journal of a young woman's ocean cruise from New York to Europe and a month-long tour of the continent. What makes this journal particularly interesting for the reader should they be researchers or historians of America's post World War I ascendancy is the specific regard the author has for America's social construct in the era of the Roaring 20s. The author is Virginia L. Montgomery writes very well though with a certain air of haughtiness or arrogance to her writing as examples below will illustrate. In some respects it is an unabashed cry of American exceptionalism exemplifying the term 'Ugly American'. In the 19th century Mark Twain wrote about The Innocents Abroad and perhaps it is no coincidence that Montgomery refers to herself and her 2 travelling companions as "the Innocents' " p. 8 Montgomery travels with her sister Maude and a girlfriend Vergue Criswell. They are referred to in the journal as M and V but are identified from the passenger manifest included within. From the very limited information available about Criswell we may suppose that they are in their mid-to-late 20's and living in the Providence RI area. In her opening 'Introduction' she maintains that they will have a right to "crow over our less fortunate neighbours". In the 2nd paragraph she states "There is more Tradition behind the rising curtain of civilization in America than in any other country in the world. . Was there not more Tradition in the valiant little band of Pilgrims . than in the mighty efforts of Alexander.' She ends the Introduction with this exclamation: Tradition backed by the principles of right and justice has made America the greatest country in the world. No wonder it will be hard to judge Europe by American eyes and morals. And so the perspective of this journal is cast. She describes in detail their journey across the Atlantic on board S.S. Mongolia. Their descriptions are colourful and include a significant amount of commentary not flattering about crew and other passengers. Our especial cabin steward a little sawed off wizened she-man named Pierre or Harry was most solicitous. p. 6 The Captain appeared today and I wasn't particularly impressed. So did the ship's doctor a broken down rummy effect and the purser a sissy looking fellow as full of conceit as the ocean is swells. Germans and English! Ye Gods What a mixture! Thank God I was born in America! With the American complex p. 13 Although her language gets rather florid in many places her descriptions of countryside in Europe are quite colourful: The fields were a riot of color. Poppies added their crimson splashes to the gold of ripened wheat . p.26 Descriptions of museums palaces cathedrals and other points of interest are well described and can leave the reader with a sense of what conditions were like there 5 years after the WWI. This is especially so when she describes the lingering destruction from that conflict. From mid-July through mid-Aug their travels took them through France Switzerland Germany Belgium The Netherlands and finally England. The exact itinerary is included in the handwritten notes. A historian would find this an excellent first-hand account of sights and scenes in the immediate postwar years. It also gives an insight into one particular aspect of the American character especially vis-avis new or unusual people incidents or experiences. There is a typed transcription secured in a 2-ring binder. The handwritten notes are 8" by 5 inches and secured by a lace. They number 142 handwritten pages. The typed notes are secured in a hard cover 2-ring binder and amount to 85 pages. The journal is in good condition although the spine is cracked. Most pages are completely attached. The pages are 100% complete.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF VIRGINIA MONTGOMERY; MAUDE MONTGOMERY; VERGUE CRISSWELL; S.S. MONGOLIA; POST WWI EUROPE; TRAVELLING THROUGH EUROPE ROARING 20S ROARING TWENTIES AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM AMERICAN ASCENDANCY ON THE WORLD STAGE POST WWI UGLY AMERICAN INNOCENTS ABROAD 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
19310008080LITTLE ROCK ARKANSAS. Good. 1931. On offer are 2 diaries of a southern businessman with clear links to his state government. Dating from the 1930's these small volumes measure 4 1/2 inches by 3 inches and 4 inches by 2 1/2 inches respectively. They each contain 52 pages plus memoranda and are 100% complete. The handwriting is small but legible. Wilbur A Smith was a businessman in Little Rock AR in the 1930's. He notes that he was born in 1866 and a Wilbur A. Smith born that year is recorded as having died in 1940. He mentions his wife Lucy and a daughter Lucille. Based on this information it can be said with surety that the author is Wilbur Andrew Smith 1866-1940 grandson of William Andrew "Uncle Billy" Smith who was a pioneer of eastern oil and helped Edwin Drake to drill the first oil well starting the oil boom. Wilbur himelf was a noted businessman prominent in Arkansas transportation business. According to "Arkansas Democrat" he was born in Titusville PA at the age of 26 he was assistant superintendant at the John Hancock Fire Insurance Company for Buffalo in 1900 he became a manager of small picture theater "Lyric" in Little Rock and by 1918 became an owner of one of the largest auto liveries in the South and of a mammoth Smith Auto Livery Garage since 1920s he owned the Smith-Arkansas Traveler Bus Lines then the largest motor coach operation in the state of Arkansas. He was married to Lucy M. King from Franklin they had a daughter Lucille and a son Harry W. Smith who served in Arkansas National Guard participated in Mexican war and WW1 and is mentioned in relation to the last lynching in Little Rock in 1927 when he was one of the officers leading Arkansas guardsmen that dispersed a rioting mob. Since January 1937 Wilbur was a superintendent of the Arkansas State Capitol. He keeps a meticulous if brief daily record of happenings in his life. He notes that he is in his office most days of the week - Saturday and Sundays included. Here he meets quite a number of people although the nature of their business is not recorded: "Office 9 to 12 noon. Lake Side Directors Mtg 12:15 to 2 P.M. Office Bal of Day Mitchell in Army Navy Club" Jan 13 1931 "At Joes office and Wilson's office. Settled claim . " Jan 21 1931. He spends a great deal of time at the State Capitol building visiting frequently: "Office 6:40 A. M. Will B and R. Kirby called . " Apr 5 1931. In October of 1931 he makes several references to canvassing for an electoral candidate. His activities at the State Capitol continued in 1934. For months he makes repeated references to a "State Cap job" where he attended from about 7:30 until 4:00 PM. Part of his role is apparently to reduce the workforce which certainly reflects the impact of the Depression: "On State Cap job to help lay off." Jan 20 1934 "Went to Cap job to stop men going to work . " Jan 26 1934. "At State Cap job 7:30 til 3:30. Let 10 painters go" Feb 14 1934/ "On job St Cap 7 AM til 5:30. 22 men laid off" Feb 22 1934 His affairs take him out of town and trips include to Brinkley Texarkana and St. Louis. On one trip to Marion he comments: "Went to Marion 10 AM till noon. Kirby and I met a bunch of hill billies ." Jan 7 1934 "In late 1934 he notes transfer of prisoners and meeting at US Marshall's office and at Governor's office. As well on at least 2 occasions he is involved in the transfer of prisoners. All-in-all these are 2 fascinating diaries that paint a picture of a man very much involved in his community. An urban or social historian would find it a valuable resource illustrating business life in the American South during the Depression. His connection to the State government would be very interesting to explore as it seems that he has a lot of influence and/or power. This would be an intriguing aspect of the state government history during the Depression to investigate as well.; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 20TH CENTURY 1930s GREAT DEPRESSION UNITED STATES PULASKI COUNTY WILBUR A. SMITH; WILBUR ANDREW SMITH LITTLE ROCK AR; ARKANSAS IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION; LITTLE ROCK BUSINESSES ARKANSAS STATE CAPITOL STATE CAPITOL SUPERINTENDENT SMITH GARAGE LITTLE ROCK AR SMITH AUTO LIVERY LITTLE ROCK AR SMITH-ARKANSAS MOTOR COACH COMPANY SMITH-ARKANSAS TRAVELER COMPANY TRANSPORTATION IN ARKANSAS LITTLE ROCK BUSINESSMEN ARKANSAS STATE GOVERNMENT ARKANSAS BUS COMPANIES 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
18930002088TANGIERS MOROCCO 1893. On offer is a fascinating nine page 1893 manuscript account of voyage handwritten by United States Navy midshipman William E. McKay aboard the flagship Franklin. McKay was made lieutenant and commanded the Inca 1898. Titled: 'Morocco Melilla and the Moors. A Boar Hunt at Tangiers by William E. McKay Boston 1893' William relates the history of the area religion war and a personal account of boar hunt in Tangiers. Here are some snippets: "Throughout Morocco all idiots and lunatics are accounted saints. When Allah withdraws the reason it is a mark of his special favour." "Above all Mohammedan countries Morocco is the land of Allah." "It is the duty of Rifs to kill to steal and to murder; it is their disgrace to die in bed." ".slavery exists but in an easy form. Even a freed slave may come to rule over Morocco." "It was as a midshipman on board the flagship Franklin that I first made acquaintance with Tangiers." He reminisces about a boar hunt in Tangiers: No boar caught but much excitement "The United States Consul invited the officers of the fleet to go on a boar-hunt. The beaters made a terrific hulla-baloo the dogs howled and we waited all the forenoon."; "I proposed that we relieve the monotony of the ride by racing across a great sandy stretch; then we began discharging our Colt revolvers in true Cow-boy style." ".many of the Rifs are easily distinguished by the odd custom of wearing a long lock of hair on one side of the head." "I saw four Riffians attack a Jew for no cause whatever.they fell upon him with sticks and stones." "The Moorish arch is a jewel of architecture." Handwritten legible ink on onionskin paper. With cover leaf. Affixed at top with two clasps. 9" x 11". Overall G. HISTORICAL NOTES: The Melilla War was a conflict between Spain and 39 of the Rif tribes of northern Morocco and later the Sultan of Morocco. It began in the Fall of 1893 and was resolved by the Treaty of Fez 1894. Good. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Manuscript. unknown
19350001877ABOARD THE S.S. WEST CACTUS BRAZIL SOUTH AMERICA. Good. 1935. On offer is a super pair 2 of manuscript 8 x 10 inch notebooks handwritten we believe by a sailor named William H. Ballou. While he does not identify himself in these books he is known though other writings to be one and the same person. The notebooks detail an extended trip from the USA to South America including the Amazon River dated February 19th 1935 - September 17th 1935 aboard the SS West Cactus of the McCormick Steamship Co. William's job title is Fireman aboard the ship but has other duties and is kept very busy but he is a dedicated diarist who details the characters aboard ship the Ports of Call including: Port Gamble Port Ludlow Coos Bay Port Townsend Amazon Delta Atlantico Beach Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo and many many more. They are carrying a load of lumber and passengers including an author only identified as Mr. Gifford who we believe could be Edward Winslow Gifford who wrote a couple of books regarding south America. William is a character as is evident from his writings. He describes ship board life and all the shore trips his mates even telling the reader 'their stories'. He begins the first book with a story of his own: 'There is a bug in the outskirts of my bunk that keeps nipping me in spite of my attempts to exterminate him. I tried strategy last night I took a fire ax turned in and covered myself entirely. Then I stuck a finger out and held the ax up ready to mash finger and bug when he rose to the bait. It didn't work due to the fact I fell asleep dropping the ax which cut my head off and the damn bug bit me anyway. I have yet to find out whether the pest was drowned in the blood that followed. Maybe my achievement was successful after all. Later I got the bug all right but he has a wife. Now it's a race whether I get here before she starts one herself. If I do it will be a case of winning a race before it started.' Droll but keen eyed and observant he does a superlative job of putting the reader aboard ship with him and along with his adventures ashore. The two books are 104 pages and 20 pages and the pages fully written. Ballou even goes back to entries and makes further notes or clarifies entries in the margins. The earlier book has a loose text block section but all are complete and overall G.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF WILLIAM H. BALLOU SS WEST CACTUS MCCORMICK STEAMSHIP CO EDWARD WINSLOW GIFFORD MARINE NAVAL NAUTICAL TRAVEL OCEAN TRAVEL STEAMSHIPS SOUTH AMERICA BRAZIL AMAZON RIVER AMAZON DELTA AMERICANA 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
19310008035Rochester New York. Good. 1931. On offer is an interesting diary detailing the last year in the life of a 1931 Rochester NY police officer. What makes this especially interesting is that mid-way through the year as his health fails his wife takes over keeping the daily journal. The diary is a hardbound book 6 1/2 inches by 4 3/4 inches with about 210 pages. There are 180 pages of diary entries and they are 100% complete. The binding is loose but otherwise the book is in good shape. The handwriting is quite legible. The author of the diary is 'Will' a police officer in Rochester NY. His wife is always referred to as 'H' but there is an entry where she is identified as 'Harriet'. The diary chronicles the last year of Will's life. That he is ill is made clear from almost the first page. Each daily entry has a note about the weather and a reference to how he is feeling. Over the months the reader can see a slow but steady decline. Included in the entries are many references to friends. There are also references to local events in the city. There are frequent tidbits of domestic life. These entries can give a sense of the diary: "Cold and getting warmer. I did not feel as well all day but H cured her Glick and Goldman gave us a call After supper harry and Celia were up left at 10:30 PM Quiet Cold 12 above Had a bad night" Jan 24 "Cloudy 36 above No change in temp. I don't feel any to good. Renaud and Wilson were up brought Bananas and loco nuts had a poor night. Feel weak. Sick spells" Feb 21 ". H Dink and H Sander called 11 to 12:45 am After dinner Dink came back with a new Patent 5 Gal can of Beer. The Harry Goldman came instead of Glic. We had a little party. Had a bad night. My water bothering me. Hay 9:30 PM" Mar 14. There are many margin notes recording doctor visits. On April 2nd he comments about his friend: Glick had another stroke. His entry for May 1 ends with the simple statement I retired at 9:30 PM . There are references to the wider community: "Thousands of men out of work and nothing in sight" Feb 12 " . Lots of sickness about" Feb 13 "Eastman Kodak Explosion . 5 killed" Sept 11. On Feb 17 he celebrated his 34th anniversary on the Police Force: ". Renaud and Wilson called. They brought a boquet of flowers ordered by Harriet for me on my 34 th anniversary of the Police Dept & Deputy Chief H T Copenhagen sent me a beautiful basket of flowers". In June the entries change as Harriet begins to take over writing them. It is clear that his health is failing. Most daily entries have a comment about how he is feeling and they range normally from fair to poor. "Will very sick. Cecilia came at 9 PM Elmer called for her at 9:30. Called for priest in morning" Oct 23. As the days slowly spin into November he is getting weaker by the day. In one margin note she comments that 124 times Doc called in 1931. Finally this entry: My Dear sweetheart died at 10:50 PM Nov 13 He was 9 days shy of his 61st birthday. Harriet was 50. Beginning Nov 14th each day from then on was numbered - counting now the days since he had passed away. Only on Christmas Day does she refer to children: ". Thank God for the kiddies . 6 weeks Billy is dead" Dec 25. The diary ends with this poignant note: "This was an aweful year for me - losing my best pal" Dec 31. This diary is a very good look into the life of an ordinary working man as he deals with his declining health. I also gives a very good look at the web of friendships and how they sustain and support him and his wife. It is an excellent reference work for a social historian or a researcher into early 20th century Rochester NY or the Rochester Police Dept.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF 20TH CENTURY 1930S GREAT DEPRESSION POLICING UPSTATE NEW YORK DECORATED OFFICERS PATROLMEN BICYCLE COPS BEAT COPS STREET COPS PEACE OFFICERS ROCHESTER NY ROCHESTER POLICE DEPARTMENT POLICEMEN URBAN HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY EARLY 20TH CENTURY ROCHESTER DIARY WILLIAM L. SANDER HARRIET REISIG SANDER DIARY 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
In folio (mm. 385x290), 4 volumi, mz. pelle coeva (abras. alle cerniere), decoraz. e tit. oro al dorso, ca. 300 pp. cad. vol. Descrizione di 52 famiglie nobili milanesi di cui vengono dati brevi cenni storici e tavv. genealogiche. Questa importante opera è illustrata da: 32 bellissime tavole - protette da velina - litografate a colori che riproducono gli stemmi di varie famiglie; 1 pregevole tav. a colori e oro con i ritratti di Giovanni Melzi e della moglie Brigida de’ Tanzi; 8 tavv. litografate in tinta che raffigurano monumenti, ritratti, ecc., oltre a 320 tavv. genealogiche con numerosiss. stemmi in b.n. "Edizione originale". Cfr. Cat. Hoepli,498 - Cat. Famiglia Meneghina,1191: "Opera fondamentale continuata, per gli ultimi due volumi, dal solo Calvi". Il ns. esempl. presenta alcune postille a matita; picc. manc. al margine infer. della tav. 10 della famiglia Cusani e alc. lieviss. ingialliture, altrimenti ben conservato.
1376024Port-au-Prince: Imprimerie Aug. A. Héraux, 1920-1932-1933 3 vol. in-8, 1) titre, portrait, 1 f. n.ch., 3 p. (préface), XVI p. (introduction), 247 p. 2) 1 f. n. ch., 228 p., 18 ff. n. ch., 3) 239 p. Demi basane noire ("Etienne Camille relieur, rue Roux 336, Port-au-Prince Haïti"), bon état, à signaler : manque angulaire à la page V-VI du tome I avec petite perte de texte sur 5 lignes, mouillure marginale au tome 2. Rarissime édition originale éditée sur 14 ans, habillée par un relieur de Port-au-Prince. L'auteur Horace Pauléus Sannon (1870-1938) est un historien, médecin et diplomate haïtien.
18970002233ABOARD THE AMERICAN SHIP CONQUEROR. Very Good. 1897. On offer is a sensational original late 19th Century handwritten manuscript relic of the noted American Ship 'Conqueror' being a 126 page journal of a New York to Sydney New South Wales voyage from March 4th 1897 through June 22nd 1897. The unidentified writer does a super job on the narrative the first month or so but maintains course and weather information throughout the voyage and then some more personal narrative and observations a few weeks before landfall. And while the writer is unknown we can state the person was a passenger not crew but a passenger of some experience aboard a ocean going vessel with some ease at nautical terms and descriptions. The voyage was one of import to the writer and his descendents as the book was recently professionally rebound in beautiful wood covers calf on the spine and a sparkling gilt title to the spine. The approximately 9 x 7¼ x 1¼ inch book is overall VG.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF NEW YORK TO AUSTRALIA AMERICAN SHIP CONQUEROR CARGO SHIPS MERCHANT VESSELS PORT JACKSON SYDNEY HARBOUR NEW HOLLAND TERRA AUSTRALIS INCOGNITA UNKNOWN LAND OF THE SOUTH AUSSIE NEW SOUTH WALES NAUTICAL MARINE MARINERS OCEAN GOING VESSELS COMMERCE BY SEA DOWN UNDER TO THE ENDS OF THE EARTH FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD AMERICANAHANDWRITTEN 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
19100001520BROOKLYN NEW YORK CHICAGO ILLINOIS. Good. 1910. On offer is a very interesting archive of two 2 handwritten diaries and 14 early photos handwritten by Dr. Harry H. Baker of Brooklyn New York and at one time Chicago Illinois. The diaries relate specifically to his life and practice but of particular note are entries detailing his own illness from diagnosis to death. In fact he writes right up until the last week of his life. Historians researchers and collectors of medical writings of a personal and intimate nature will find this a unique perspective within the two small leather bound diaries that the doctor kept in 1910 and 1911. He lived at 480 East 19th Street Brooklyn New York. He kept careful daily recordings of his activities. Beginning in June 1910 through December he begins detailed records of his visits to the doctor and he gets a diagnosis of Mitral Stenosis. He reports frequently afterwards on symptoms and medication. He keeps up a lively social schedule through the rest of the year. The 1911 diary continues with the details of his medical condition as well as social visits. He records driving his auto and taking a doctor who was afraid to drive on his calls. In fact he seems to love taking people for a ride in his auto no matter the weather no matter how bad he feels. His condition worsens in April of 1911 and he requires a nurse at home. Perhaps the same nurse who is represented in group of photos that came with these diaries He is bedridden and the diary ends May 7th. Research suggests he died only a few days later on May 12th. He sensed his oncoming death because at the end of April he makes out and signs a new will. Here are some snippets: 1910 "June 20th Began Digalon again. 5 qts. B's d. First since 4/9. 10 weeks. Legs swollen worst since came from Ohio. Did not go down at night as formerly." "July 7th Dig. 5 qts. Demonstration of Overland with Dr. F. When talking with Mr. Silver on curb felt faint. Sat on window ledge a moment. Worse. He took me in to Cowperthwaite's where I lay down on settee. Better. Walked to 62 Ave. Worse again. Sat and cold sweat on forehead. Pulse almost imperceptible. Lay down for almost 40-45 minutes. Better." "July 13th Mr. Silver agreed to make me a special agent for Overland on 10 percent commission and sell me a car at special reduced price and give me prospect to follow up. Watch 52 seconds slow." "July 30th Called on Mrs. Krause Bismarck Hotel Chicago. "Ed" Moved. "Isn't she a luscious piece of flesh" Fannie to Mrs. Clarke music teacher about Helen. Left 1934 Sedg. About 1 mo ago. H. W. at work for Field's on wagon. Mrs. Yorke and Mr. and Mrs. Opert's came." "August 6th At Dr. Cady's 11:30-12:30. Walked over Brooklyn Bridge. Called on Clara Girrach and with her inspected Nurse's Home and several wards of Bellevue Hosp. No dig. Today. Watch 45 seconds slow ." "August 27th Downtown then to Br. Beach. Walked to Marsh Beach and Ocean Ave. car. Then to Sheepshead Race Track where I saw Ely fly and one other. First flight I have seen. Entrancing. Wonderful. Watch 42 seconds slow ." "September 26th Went to Bellevue Hosp. Poor report for Miss Brink Supt. Of training nurses. Also poor report of Mr. Wilson of Roosevelt Hosp. Exam of Cadillac Stearns and Jackson Autos." "October 2nd Slept late and well. Went in auto with Dr. and Mrs. F. to call on Dr. Barnes at Williamsburg Hosp. Still in bed over 4 weeks after operation for Apps. Chess. Pinochle in eve with Dr. and Will Raymond. No Dig." "October 4th At home all day. In eve heard Elbert Hubbard lecture on "The New Religion" at Cooper Union with Theo. Met him and Madam Adrla Maria Rique'; also Kauffman." "November 14th In bed till after 2 P.M. Headache splitting now for about 4 weeks on account of hard cough. Cough not so hard pain in and side of chest at old pneumonia spot. Heavy. Played chess with Will he 6 I 4." 1911 "January 2nd Went to E. NY and took Dr. F. on his calls. Returned to 480 E. 19th St. with Mrs. F. Took Elsie Randall through Prospect Part to Coney Island Manhattan Beach and back via Ocean Ave. First time she had seen Atlantic Ocean. She enjoyed ride immensely. After dinner music. Mr. and Mrs. Operts. Took Mrs. F. home in auto and stayed over night." "January 23rd Went with will on his calls in his auto in A.M. After 2 took him in mine on a call then down town. Played 1 game of billiards at Knick's. He 25 I 24. Then home. Went to Dinsmon's and had stop cock of radiator lowered. After dinner took Mrs. F. to hear Surette and Charles G. Soprano's on Brooklyn's 1st Symphony. Met Auntie Ida Elsie Randall and Abbie Ingram there. 3 handed pinochle after getting home with Will and Raymond." "February 2nd Drove auto downtown. Took Mr. Davis on a call. Called on Dr. Campbell. Had a talk with his wife. They bought a Cadillac. Dinner at McCann's. Took Mr. Lindon to St. Johns Hospital then went on to Archer's Hill Jamaica where heard Mrs. Gregory on "Folk Lore and Songs of the South." Drove her home. Cold N.W. wind. She had had bad news from her sister." "March 1st Went to NY with Will to Frank's office. Heard him explain why no one paid up notes. Told him I wanted everything turned back into my name. All my property. He first said he couldn't do it. I told him he had promised to do so and I now demanded that he should. Then he said he would see if he could figure out some way to protect both of us. Went to garage and got Jan. and Feb. bill receipts. Drove car to Dr. F's in garage on Penna Ave. Dig 5 qts." "March 21st About 12:30 P.M. had an attack of weak heart and poor circulation causing awful tingling and numbness in leg then foot and toes became immovable. Will gave me Puls. Cc1. In 2-3 hrs it got some better tho tingling when touched on inside of leg and foot. 2 days. Pain with this was excruciating. Auntie came over and helped Dr. and Mrs. F. Had a nurse Mrs. Evelyn at night." "April 5th Slept fairly well. Felt better during day than since taken sick this time tho very weak. Sharp pain about heart 4-5 times very severe. Up most all day 11-7 ." "April 21st Slept about 5 hrs. Very well no retarded respiration. Abd. full and feels heavy but no pain. Bad attack of shortness of breath 12-3. Auntie over all day. 35 ozs. urine 4 P.M. New will made out and books received by McD. Corrected new will. L. Thigh 23 ½". Urine 37 ozs. Dig 12 qts A.M. Dig 12 qts. P.M. Ars. 30 2h 3 only." "May 5th Slept 5 ¼ hrs. at night. None during day. Sat up most all day. Very difficult to lie down. Miss Smith sick and did not come Thursday night. Miss Arnold stayed till 11 A.M. 5". Auntie over and helped. Swells quite bad on account sitting up so much. About 5 Mr. Charles L. Thatcher over and Will and I each signed request for exam by a Reform of Ct. F. over to see Will 9-11 P.M. Miss Cunningham at night " Enhancing the narrative are related photographs showing Dr. Baker from childhood as a baby only 4 months and on into his adult years. There are 9 photos of him all have his name on the back and some even his address at the time and the date. Two are duplicates but the rest were taken during the various stages of his life. On the back of one it says "6239 Monroe Ave. Hyde Park Chicago Ill. 1st Practicing medicine." One photo states: "Nurse. Mrs. Annis. 1908 or 1909." The other photos show his father and mother: The Rev. and Mrs. Ephraim Baker. Two of the CVDs are of Rev. Ephraim Baker at different ages. Then the younger man's photo was made by J.W. Clark Mendota Illinois the older man was made by Soderberg Sutton Nebraska. His wife was Janet or Jeanette Whitney. There is a photo of her as an attractive young woman with her hair dressed with long curl on her shoulder. The photographer was J.W. Clark. The Cabinet photo shows her as an older woman and there is no photographer named. According to family research both people graduated from Oberlin College. They were the parents of Dr. H.H. Baker. The 1910 diary measures about 2 ½" x 4" and the 1911 diary measures about 2 ¾" x 5 ¼". Both the diaries and photos are in good shape. ; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF HARRY H. BAKER BROOKLYN NEW YORK CHICAGO ILLINOIS MITRAL STENOSIS HEART FAILURE HEART CONDITIONS MEDICAL MEDICINE DOCTORS GETTING ILL SICK DOCTORS HEAR FAILURE HEART CONDITIONS HANDWRITTEN 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 . hardcover
19040001687Wellesley Massachusetts Mass MA. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1904. Hardcover. On offer is a remarkable 1904 manuscript diary kept by Ethel A. Morse a young Massachusetts woman in her junior year at Wellesley College. A gifted and self-aware diarist Ethel offers an extraordinary first-person account of womens higher education and same-sex emotional life at the turn of the century written decades before such affections could be safely expressed. The diary reveals the inner world of a bright privileged New England student raised in an academic household her father a teacher who struggles to reconcile intellectual ambition with forbidden desire. From a family of means Ethel writes with wit and precision but as would be expected of a young woman caught up in the throes of academia social pressures and romance her composure sometimes frays. She chronicles her daily life with a focus on her all-consuming attachment to another student named Anna. This love story which is likely largely occurring in Ethels own mind is frequently impeded by the rest of the girls social world. Particularly challenging for Ethel is her growing jealousy toward Grace who seems to be Annas roommate and a rival for her attention: Returned to college Poor mother rather sober and weepy at having me leave her Mother wanted to see Anna dear child! And also to see me off. It wasn't any more satisfactory to us though for it was lots harder for her and thus for me. Trunk had arrived when I got here Tucked myself into bed about ten under my new slumber robe that Grace gave me Jan 7 1904. Grace went home in p. M. After waiting for 4 o'clock mail for letter from Brooklyn. Wonder why Anna going to spend Sunday with me. Won't it be fun - seem so good to have her all to myself to talk to and love all I want to. Telephone to Howard. Said he couldn't come out tonight anyway Was coming out tomorrow until I asked him not to made me feel so cheeky - but what could I do Jan 23 1904. Tension between Ethel Anna and Grace are not uncommon: Called to a meeting of the Cap and Gown committee today never realized until now that being on this committee meant a free gown Evening spent mostly at Annas. Sort of puzzled in my mind. Cant decide upon somethingwhat happened between Grace and Anna when they were together a week ago Saturday. Mar. 3 1904. The rivalry soon becomes personal and wounding: What a cold reception from Grace! She evidently was overcome by pains of jealousy or something for she hardly spoke refused as near as possible to kiss me etc. Mar. 14 1904. From that moment forward the shifting loyalties between the three girls dominate Ethels emotional life. Her affection for Anna is openly romantic: Anna came over about 10 to see meshes just back from home. Sweet child! How good it seems to have her back! Shes certainly my little crush Feb. 9 1904. As the semester advances her self-reproach grows sharper: Why was I ever made with any feelings any love for anyonemuch less with such a jealous streak in me The attitude of the two girls has been as queer toward me today as if they said Poor girl! She is awfully silly but to make her feel better well baby her Apr. 27 1904. Throughout Morse documents the emotional grammar of female friendship at Wellesleydeeply affectionate coded and often indistinguishable from romantic attachment. I doubt sometimes whether Anna cares for mein fact I know she doesnt fully reciprocate all I feel Oh if only I didnt care so much for her! She is a regular spell to me. The minute I see her everything seems to be harder to say. Apr. 25 1904. In May she vows independence: In spite of everything I was going to forget about Anna and Ruth and live my life with nobility and power Perhaps this is just what I need to make me strong in my own strength. May 25 1904. Longer excerpts that take us from the summer after junior year into the autumn of senior year give further flavour to Ethels diary: .Was surprised about one o'clock by Anna. Such a good time we had! We just talked talked and talked some more! It all seemed quite like old times. She looks yet very tired though. I fear that the hard work at home wears on other more than she realizes. She's a dear girl. I can't help loving her very dearly. We simply made her stay to dinner. I went home to Dudley Street with her on the electric. Two weeks from today we have planned a day at Nantucket together. We and our two dear mothers July 11 1904. Anna here with us tonight. Arrived before I knew it.It seems too good to have the dear child here. There is something about her which I simply can't resist. When college closed I felt a little hardened toward her - I couldn't help it - but somehow I seem to have lost all that. To me she seems quite like her old self. Only I have knocked out a little of my foolishness in regard to her. I admit I was very foolish at one time. - but we all must be foolish in one way or another August 18 1904. Another beautiful day - only Anna had to go home. It seemed indeed lonely here tonight without her beside me in bed. I forgot to say anything about that heart to heart talk we had until 10 last night. We just opened right up for the first time since that little fuss this spring. We found we had both forgiven and almost forgotten as near as we could. We just discussed everything and felt better for it. She was so mad when I wrote her that last note but she never has said one word about it to her mother or any of the family. I thought once that she had and that they were a little prejudiced against me for it. How cold anyone blame them! Yet I was not the only one in the wrong. Her queer silence about all her own affairs this spring - which hurt Ruth and me so much. She explained by saying our attitude. August 23 1904. .But ever with such a happy day my mind is far from happy tonight. The same old suspense. The heart still pains the wound doesn't heal. If it weren't for Ruth I would pick up everything I possess and go home. In such an atmosphere I cannot live. Mother referred to Anna tonight. I say nothing and try to keep her from knowing how I feel at heart. If only I can keep up the role and act as if all were right between us but I fear I can't long Oct 28 1904. .And this afternoon Anna and I have been having a new experience. We were invited by Marian Berry to be rushed so the girls say. Of course we are too modest to believe them though. Haha! Imagine our being invited! Imagine the awful blow to them when they received our replies! Bust we won't worry about such . In the air when they are of such a very doubtful and terrible character Dec 2 1904. Taken together the diary stands as a rare early expression of female same-sex affection jealousy and emotional education within an elite womens college. Of special research value to scholars of Gender and Queer Studies womens higher education and the history of emotion it captures the interior life of a woman learning both to feel and to contain feeling in Edwardian America. The book is nearly full written in a page-a-day 1904 datebook measuring approx. 6.25 × 4 inches its pages densely covered in tight legible script. Only a few days are left blank and the book is about 90% complete. Two pressed four-leaf clovers remain between the pages dated May 25 1904 which Ethel noted as symbols of the day of good luck. Bound in maroon leather with gilt edges the volume is well preserved spine sound writing crisp. Overall VG condition. BIO NOTES: Ethel Almira Morse 18821966 was born in South Natick Massachusetts to Herbert Leonard Morse 18551930 a teacher and Sarah Adeline Jones 18571936. She was educated at the Girls Latin School in Boston Class of 1900 and entered Wellesley College Class of 1905. Afterward she attended a commercial school in Boston and later taught in the commercial department of the Salem Normal School Boston Evening Transcript Sept 5 1912. In 1916 she married Lyndon Blaine Tewksbury 18781947 a Yale graduate and salesman; they lived in Boston and had three children: Lyndon Jr. Frances and Hamilton. She died in 1966. We have been unable to confirm Annas identity though we know there were three students named Anna in Ethels graduating class at Wellesley all of whom hailed from Massachusetts. ; Manuscripts; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; 365 pages; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF WELLESLEY COLLEGE LESBIAN GAY STUDIES LBGT ETHEL A. MORSE GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES GIRL GIRL LOVE BROOKLINE MASSACHUSETTS SUFFRAGE TURN OF THE CENTURY DYKES LIPSTICK LESBIANS SOCIAL STUDIES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS HANDSCHRIFT HANDGESCHRIEBEN MANUSKRIPT SÜTTERLIN VON HAND GESCHRIEBEN HANDSCHRIFTLICH UNIKAT EINZELSTÜCK DOKUMENT SCHRIFTSTÜCK KURRENT KURRENTSCHRIFT DEUTSCHE SCHREIBSCHRIFT OSTPREUßEN KALININGRAD ADEL 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 Papel; Signed by Author . hardcover
19250002078SEOUL KOREA TO NEW YORK CITY. Very Good. 1925. On offer is a fascinating original 1925 - 1926 manuscript travel diary handwritten by Ontario Canada born Margaret Matilda Hardie nee Kelley 1863 - 1946 wife of Robert Alexander Hardie also born in Ontario 1865 - 1946 a renowned Southern Methodist medical missionary to Seoul Korea in the early 20th Century. The Hardie's contribution to Korea was noted in the book 'The Role of Robert Alexander Hardie in the Korean Great Revival and the Subsequent Development of Korean Protestant Christianity' by Chil-Sung Kim. Uniquely this travel diary dated December 23 1925 to June 11 1926 concerns the Hardie's 4 month furlough trip back to the USA from Korea via the western route through the Middle East and Europe and then some time in the USA. The wonderment of diaries written by the wives of important men is that the diary is in fact about Robert as much as Margaret. Historians and researchers of Christian outreach in Korea will find this book a dual treasure: an East to West travel diary and six weeks of the Hardie's work in the USA. In fact no sooner do they return than they meet at the Korea Club and after a brief rest Robert heads for Memphis on ministry work. The opening entry begins "We left Seoul on Dec. 23rd. A large crowd was at the station to see us off." The diary goes on to relate the Hardie's voyage to Hiroshima Japan and the train ride to Kobe where they board the SS Macedonia bound for Shanghai China. From there it's on to Singapore the Bay of Bengal Colombo in Ceylon Sri Lanka Aden the coast of Africa and the Red Sea the Suez Canal Port Said Egypt Jerusalem and Bethlehem in the Holy Land present-day Israel Athens Greece Naples Rome Pisa Florence Italy Paris France London England Edinburgh and Glasgow Scotland Belfast and Dublin Ireland and then back to London for the Atlantic Ocean crossing to New York where they arrive on April 28 1926 after a journey of just over four months. The remainder of the diary concerns the Hardies' travels and doings in the USA. The 6.25" x 4" diary book itself is of Japanese manufacture and comes in a slip sleeve. Overall VG. ; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF ROBERT ALEXANDER HARDIE SEOUL KOREA MISSIONARY TRAVEL MISSIONARIES SOUTHERN METHODIST MEDICAL MISSIONARY MARGARET MATILDA HARDIE KOREAN PROTESTANT CHRISTIANITY CHIL-SUNG KIM CHRISTIAN OUTREACH 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
1943000191545th Troop Carrier Squadron Beacon New York Europe. Good with no dust jacket. 1943. Hardcover. On offer is a fascinating detailed set of two World War II manuscript diaries handwritten by P. F. C. Gordon L. Kenney 1922-2019 of Beacon New York. Kenney kept these diaries while he was serving in the distinguished 45th Troop Carrier Squadron. To learn more about Kenney see BIO NOTES at the end of the listing. Kenney wrote these diaries for his future wife Esther. He refers to her as "Dear Butch" and sometimes as "sweetheart". His love for Esther knows no bounds: ".tonight looking up skies I saw my ever present 'shining star' superstitious Idol worshiper No - just a symbol - remember Esther - Shining Star - I wrote this all the way over on the boat and ever since nearly every night there is a star brighter than the rest and when I seem to feel the closest to you I look up and bless you if I don't see a misty cloudy halo around my star." May 14 1943. It is delightful to know that only six months after his final 1945 diary entry Gordon and Esther would marry in Beacon New York and live long lives together. Kenney's entries are generally long and newsy describing his daily life in the 45th Troop Carrier Squadron. Depending on the day Kenney would write news from the front lines including providing gut-wrenching insight into the reality on the ground. One other days Kenney would detail his interactions with his peers and superiors his daily work tasks on the base his thoughts on how the war effort is progressing thoughts about people and events back home and so much more. According to records as to the dates and locations of the 45th Squadron's service Kenney was stationed in the following places while keeping his two diaries: Egypt Algeria French Morocco Tunisia Sicily and England. He ends the second diary while at sea headed to the USA from England in May 1945. Some excerpts give the flavour of Kenney's diaries: "Our first real Loss in Combat.Our superb Grande Navy - our brave heroes of the deep - Some Shit! 35 planes went on a mission to Sicily last night flying time 4 hrs 15 minutes 15 minutes of God For Saken hell! The real sob is our "own" Navy was the aggressors. 12 of 14 planes are missing from our own group.As the airplanes started dumping their loads the sky was suddenly illuminated.The 36th suffered the most.We have some paratroopers in our own dispensery who were wounded some bad. A good many ships did not drop their load. I'm praying that our boys bellied down and had a chance to use their Maya Wests life preservers. There was a Para Troop General who might have jumped. It is very doubtful whether any of those who jumped lived. Those below refused to acknowledge our signals and flares and radio perhaps because they were busy with landing operations and had just been bombed." July 12 1943. "Took all the outgoing mail to Group this morning. Rerouted some mail and went down to the club and cleaned up a bit.Looks like everyone one enjoyed the one year anniversary overseas party.The gasoline stove has been set up so we now have warm water.Made 50 cents in 30 minutes by rubbing St Hill's head and back.Sending home some X-Mas presents if I can get them by B. C.Bill Etchells and I went to the movie up at Group.Tail Gunner - real good show. Sgt Vang is going to to give me piano lessons - wonder when I'll get a chance to get up.Stores selling clothes and all restaurants are closed in Trapani Italy. Food shortage in one city in Sicily caused a riot and raid by civilians.No wonder many city girls have joined the red light dwellers. People have to eat." November 18 1943. "Tension is every where there always is when we hear something is going to pop even if we don't know what. While I was on a pass the boys had to put static lines on all the ships. There has been heavy air traffic all afternoon and on into tonight. Upstairs. We have a number of Bomber bases around us" March 23 1945. "It has been announced that General Patton has crossed the Rhine and is into Germany.I hope out boys make it out OK.12: 15 our planes sstarted to come in all of them were pretty bad shot up. Col Lewis our 24 year old CO was seen to go up in flames. A buzz bomb nearly broke up the formation as they took off from a field near Coldchester.Bob Milling's ship had a flat tire but made a beautiful one wheel landing.Two of our ships landed safely in Belgium and in territory near the Rhine. #83 hydratic line was shot away and she taxiedd right off the runway and cracked a wing into a radio pole crew chief Shaffer really got hit bad and he was landed at an emergency field.Box and Laine and myself had to fold all teh American static lines from the planes other outfits have suffered greater than ours. I understand Bert walker is missing too" March 24 1945." STOP PRESS. It has been announced tomorrow is to be officially VE Day Churchill will speak at 3 PM" May 7 1945. He ends the momentous day with these words: "Visited the chapel a short time ago. It was very quiet - no one was around. I got to thinking. As long as I remember I have been in a house a beautiful house uncompared anywhere so peaceful & restful--then I went outside for a walk-the door got locked from the Inside & for a time a long time I wandered around helplessly-at last I found the door beginning to open. THANKS LORD" May 7 1945. Kenney kept his 1943 diary for six full days in February including his 21st birthday! and then wrote in it consistently from mid-March through December. In 1945 Kenney kept his diary consistently from January 1 through May 19. Kenney is a thoughtful and detailed author. Most days he writes he absolutely fills the pages to the brim. The 1943 diary measures 9 x 6 inches and the 1945 diary measures 8 x 5 inches. Both diaries are hadcovered and the spine pages and covers are intact. There is some age toning present on the pages but otherwise the diaries are in very good condition. The writing is mostly in pen with some pencil and Kenney's hand is extremely legible. Overall VG. BIO NOTES: Gordon Lamont Kenney 1922-2019 was born in Beacon New York. He trained as a paratrooper and served in WWII in the Army Air Transportation Corps in North Africa Jerusalem and Sicily. He married Esther MacPherson 1923-2012 on September 9 1945. Gordon and Esther were the first couple to be married at the newly constructed Presbyterian Church in Beacon. They had three children Bruce Katharine and Richard. A musical man Gordon played clarinet and sang in the Southern Dutchess Singers community choir. He worked in trucking and then as a laboratory technician. He was a Scoutmaster for the Boy Scouts of America Troop 1 in Beacon NY and was a well-known amateur gemologist. ; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; Signed by Author . hardcover
19460009082ABOARD THE H.M.S. NELSON VANGUARD AND ANSON. Good. 1946. On offer is the exceptional post WW2 Journal For The Use Of Midshipman kept by a man in the Royal Navy named R.H. Cobb. The journal was kept from 1946 to 1947 and includes his time on three different ships the H.M.S. Nelson the H.M.S. Vanguard and the H.M.S. Anson. The journal contains detailed entries for most days beginning on October 2 1946 with Cobbs time on the Nelson and going until May 31 1947 when he is on the Anson. Each entry is roughly a page long though many go longer and a small few are short and concise. Unlike many other log books the entries are not divided much by specific times. They have a very narrative feel to them describing drills races activities and unusual observations at length. Cobb is an excellent writer describing his life in an adept and interesting way throughout the book. However on one entry December 15th his commanding officer seems to have written: Your freehand version of a journal is poor. Your descriptions of Gibraltar would be excellent if you took more care and trouble to write and to punctuate. As Cobb explains in the beginning entry the H.M.S. Nelson was the flagship of the Royal Navys Training Battleship Squadron stationed in Portland England so the ship takes part in numerous training exercises with other ships such as the H.M.S. Howe Anson Saintes King George V and many more. At the end of November Cobb joins the H.M.S. Vanguard as it sails to South Africa. The ship was to serve as part of the squadron of ships that accompanied King George VI for the first visit by a reigning monarch to South Africa. The ship leaves its port in Portsmouth sails to Gibraltar then on to South Africa. There are tremendous entries of descriptions of sailing with a huge squadron of ships accompanying the monarch on this symbolic trip. As well the Royal Family is on the ship though they are do not interact with Cobb. The ship returns to Portland England and in July Cobb joins the H.M.S. Anson. The ship remains in British waters doing many training drills repairs and peacetime upkeep. Cobb still writes very well and a number of important things occur: a tragic death soon after he joins the ship and the changing of the Rear Admiral of the ship are probably the most significant. At the very end of the book there is a section entitled Winding up of Journal: In Retrospect which retells the major points of Cobbs last year on all three ships. What makes this book so very special besides Cobb being an excellent witness to the post WW2 life on a Naval ship are the beautiful and elegantly drawn diagrams portraits maps schematics and more that Cobb seems to have drawn himself and inserted into the book. Included are: excellent pencil drawings of important political figures Vyacheslav Molotov Winston Churchill General Jan Smuts and King George VI with a quote or description included; Drawings of ships and their internal mechanisms titled things such as H.M.S. Vanguard off Eldorado Bay ; Schematics maps training maneuvers and diagrams such as Various Radar Serials Voyage from Cape Town to Simon's Bay and Away The Arrangement of Main and Auxiliary Machinery in H.M.S. Vanguard Main Wire in Anson The Royal Procession through Lines of the Fleet one of only in colour and many more. There are probably two dozen of these drawings diagrams and portraits. The skill involved in them in exceptional and a true treat for the buyer of an already exceptional midshipman journal. One photograph of the H.M.S. Nelson is also included. The book is in very good condition showing little wear on either the inside pages or outside cover. There are 191 pages of writing in the book always on the recto side never on the verso as the pen used bleeds through a good bit on the other side. Cobbs handwriting is easy to comprehend and his style is a joy to read. This is a fantastic document of post-war Royal Navy life as well as a first hand account of the first Royal trip to South Africa. There is so much more included in these pages as well. the size of the book is 34 x 21 cm. Sample Entries: H.M.S. Nelson. At Portland. October 3 1946. Repaired on board my first ship H.M.S. Nelson under the Command of Captain. C. Caston. Nelson has taken up her peacetime role of flagship of the Trainers Battleships H.M.S. Nelson Howe and Anson and flies the flag of Rear Admiral H. Hickling. H.M.S. Nelson was built by Wicker Armstrong and designed by Sir. E Tennyson D'Eyncourt; it is interesting that more attention was paid to constructing than tactical principles.In the 1939-45 War Nelson was twice severely damaged. The first occasion was in Loch Ewe in 1940 when she detonated a magnetic mine putting her out of action for several months; the second in 1941 when a torpedo from an italian aeroplane hit her and prevented her from resuming her duties with the fleet until the N. African Landings in 1943.; October 6th. On Saturday we were occupied till 11 with drill and flag duties. That afternoon I was invited to take a whaler away for a sailing race with the Howe. This allowed me about two hours in which to collect a crew from the Special Service Seaman under training and to ____ all the gear needed for the race.Before we set out I noticed we had no trails but we had delayed long enough and could not afford to spend another half hour searching for the trails. We devised another most unorthodox system for trailing up for which three hands were required. They gathered up the foot of the sail the wind having been previously split and after we had warned we set mainsail with due reverence.and so ended what should have been a most instructive afternoon for the crew especially as weather conditions were far from admirable.; Nov. 19. The Training Battleship Squadron went to Sea today with the Home Fleet and rehearsed the maneuvers that will be done at the Beginning of February with H.M.S. Vanguard on settling out for the Royal Town of South Africa. It was a most impressive sight when you could see the ships but there was a rather low lying and thick fog and ships were partly obscured.King George V left us after the maneuvers and went to Plymouth for an extensive refit. The Duke of York is coming here in her place and will fly the admiral flag.; February 17 1947. We brought the Royal Family to Cape Town after having enjoyed their companionship one might almost say so friendly and hospitable were they during the seventeen day voyage to the Cape. .In the foreground there must have been ten thousand people sitting on the tiers of benches which ___ the route which the King it had been planned would take. Apparently many of the spectators had waited there all night so as to make sure of their seats. Despite their long wait they all looked cheerful and very gay in their wildly colored costumes which provided as much variety as did the flags.We manned ship from 0940 till the Royal Family drove away. After the King had inspected the guard of honor on the quarterdeck the Royal Family said goodbye to the Captain and a few more officers before they walked slowly down the Royal bow at the bottom o f which they were met by the Governor General and Field Marshall.After some important people had been presented to the King and Queen the Royal Family departed driving down the streets of Cape Town which cried with cheering crowds thrilled and conscious of the importance of the event.; As midshipmen we have all learned a good deal and when I say that I do not mean technical knowledge so much but experience. All of us agree we have been luckier than most midshipmen and certainly more fortunate than ____ are likely to be for the next few years.; Manuscript; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF R. H. COBB JOURNAL FOR THE USE OF MIDSHIPMAN H.M.S. NELSON H.M.S. VANGUARD H.M.S. ANSON ROYAL NAVY TRAINING BATTLESHIP SQUADRON PORTLAND PORTSMOUTH ENGLAND WWII SOUTHERN AFRICA CAPE OF GOOD HOPE UNITED KINGDOM POST WORLD WAR TWO ROYAL FAMILY TRIP TO SOUTH AFRICA CAPE TOWN LIFE OF A MIDSHIPMAN POST WWII NAVY WINSTON CHURCHILL KING GEORGE VI GENERAL JAN SMUTS 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 D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19350002425S.S. NORFOLK BALTIMORE MARYLAND. Good. 1935. On offer is a fascinating eclectic archive of original mostly manuscript correspondence and some ephemera relating to Franklin J. Schofield Deck Engineer aboard the S.S. City of Norfolk. The 120 or so letters date c1935 through to 1950 present a diverse group of papers to flesh out this man's life: husband sailor engineer union representative and much more. There are letters to and from his wife in Baltimore Maryland there are letters to them both in Baltimore there are many letters sent to Schofield while aboard ship with postmarks from Cuba England Scotland and many other locations. A fair bit of the correspondence relates to his union activities and the concerns of he and his fellow seaman making for a fascinating insight to the machinations of the seafaring unions: one letter from a fellow seaman references a sit down strike in Boston that Schofield helped organize and this seems to have come back to haunt him later in life. There are several typed letters from the Seaman's Union preparing for major unrest and strikes. A particularly fascinating piece of ephemera appears to be a handwritten resolution to negotiate with the powerful ship owners which Schofield wrote while he was aboard ship in Panama. Overall G. HISTORICAL NOTES: One online source: The ship was built by the British Admiralty at Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation in Alameda California and completed as SS Independence for the War Shipping Board on November 16 1918. With the commencement of World War I the ship was acquired by the US Navy and commissioned the USS Independence on November 18 1918. After service in the War the ship was decommissioned on March 20 1919 and turned over to the United States Shipping Board for merchant service. In 1930 it was acquired by the Baltimore Mail Steamship Company rebuilt as a passenger liner renamed the SS City of Norfolk and sailed regularly to Europe. In 1940 it was then acquired by the US Navy again recommissioned the USS Neville and served in both the Asiatic-Pacific and the Europe-Africa-Middle East theaters during World War II. Decommissioned on April 30 1946 the ship was eventually towed to the James River National Defense Reserve Fleet in Lee Hall Virginia and ultimately sold for scrap on March 25 1957. The USS Neville earned 5 battle stars for World War II service.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF S.S. NORFOLK FRANKLIN J. SCHOFIELD DECK ENGINEER MARITIME NAUTICAL BALTIMORE MARYLAND UNION ACTIVITY ABOARD SHIP SAILOR'S UNIONS STRIKES STRIKERS UNION REPRESENTATIVES UNION ACTIVISTS STEAMSHIPS THE SEAMAN'S UNION 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
1870000916IRELAND ENGLAND FRANCE. Good. 1870. On offer is an original exciting handwritten European travel diary beginning April 30th 1870 and ending about 3 ½ months later on August 10th specifically used to record one person's adventures on board a steamer sailing to Europe. While unidentified our author was very faithful with their journaling during the 3 ½ months touring England Ireland and in particular France as she was a witness to the beginnings of the Franco-Prussian War and for all intents and purposes the beginning of the modern Era for France Germany and all of Europe. Mere days before the war begins she sees the King of Prussia gambling and she reports of the difficulties in getting money all of a sudden. Here are snippets: 1870 "April 30th Left New York in Steamer "City of Brooklyn" at 1 ½ p.m. Left Sandy Hook 5 p.m. Fine weather." "May 5th Clear and smooth. Very narrow escape last night. Dark and rather thick. Steamer attempted to cross our bow. Came within 30 ft. of her. If we had struck here would have sank us both." "May 8th Beautiful day. Nemesis close to us trying to pass us." "May 9th Clear and fine. No wind. Raced with Nemesis all day. Beat her about 2 miles loaded with very heavy with corn in bulk. Nemesis with light load of cotton. Saw land at 2 p.m. Cape Clear. Passed ______light. Arrived at Queenstown at 9:30. Took the tender to wharf. Stopped at Victoria Hotel. First acquaintance with custom's house." "May 10th Took a walk about Queenstown. Beautiful town. 2:15 took steamer for Cork up River Lee. Passed some beautiful mansions and old castles .Reached Cork at 3. Went to Imperial Hotel. Took jaunting care to Blarney Castle. Beautiful roads to Cork." "May 11th Rainy. Left Cork for Mallon at 2 ½ p.m. Staid at Mallon 3 hrs. Visited Mallon Castle on the Black water. Took cars at 7 p.m. for Killarney. Reached Killarney at 9:15. Took omni bus for Victoria Hotel 2 miles and arrived just before a very severe storm of rain and wind." "May 17th Started early for Kinstown. Took steamer for Holyhead. Nasty rainy day and the worst possible sea. Was sick about 5 minutes. Crossed the Atlantic without feeling bad. Arrived at Holyhead at 11 a.m. Rode in car through Wales to Chester. Beautiful ride by seashore on one side and mountains on the other. Saw several old castles." "May 25th Touring London Visited the British Museum. Saw the Egyptian relics Nineveh's sculptures Elgin Marbles &c. Then to regents Park and went through the Zoological Gardens. Afterward to the Watercolor Society exhibition. Saw some fine watercolors by Birket Foster Gilbert Watson Walker Calton Topham &c." Talks about seeing the Dreadnought Hospital ship Greenwich hospital observatory White Hart Hotel and more. "June 1st Paris At 9 ½ took one of the meanest boats in existence for Calais. Took a private cabin on deck and was charged 1 pound for 1 ½ hours. Took cars at Calais. Went to Boulogne and Amiens. Arrived at Paris at 6. Got trunks through all right. Went to Hotel Rivoli Rue de Rivoli. Front room looking into the Tuileries Garden." "June 12th Went up to Long Champs by Bois de Bore with carriages and then to the races. The Grand Paris. Great crowd of first class carriages. Saw the Emperor Empress and Prince Imperial on the way back down avenue Champs-Elysees. There was a fine display of turnouts and an immense crowd of lookers on." "June 22nd Went to the Allen Line to see about passage. At 1 took guide. Went to Pere Lachaise Cemetery. A queer ugly looking mixed pile of tombs ." "July 1st At Oberlahnstein. Afternoon went to Emsbad ems of Bathems. Saw the King of Prussia and gambling in the great gambling room Rouge et Noir and Roulette same as at Baden Baden. Men and women croupiers everything in regal. Went upon the heights above the town beautiful view." "July 20th Find that the war is raising particular with everything almost impossible to get gold and all other money is at discount. The French government have taken the train on the Paris RR and everything is likely to be disagreeable." "July 29th Started for London by the Dreppe Steamer. At 9:50 reached Rouen at 12. Dreppe at 2. Sea very rough no staterooms. Hired the captain's room. All sick. Got to London at 11 ½ at Morley's Hotel. Same rooms as before." "August 8th Went aboard the Batavia and found my trunk .At 5 sailed from Liverpool. Very still and quiet. Sun set in a little fog." The diary measures about 3 ½" x 6" and has a very worn cover and pulling away from the binding. G.; English; 48mo - over 3" - 4" tall; FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR PRUSSIA MILITARY MILITARIA IRELAND 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 Papel . unknown
19860001657Los Angeles California Dublin IRELAND. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1986. Hardcover. On offer is a remarkable archive of five diaries kept by a woman born in the Midwest who moved to California with dreams of becoming a singer. This woman is a musician and author who keeps these diaries from age 19 through 40 from 19862007. We follow our authors evolution through three decadesfrom a frantic teen falling in love with a musician to a middle-aged woman planning the structure of her company. She writes it all: the loss of her virginity to a man in 1986 contrasts her spiritual marriage to her female life partner and established lesbian identity in 1995. She writes of her move from Los Angeles to Dublin after a negative experience with a well-known 1990s record producer and her struggle to overcome childhood trauma and an eating disorder. Through it all one thing remains constanther passion for artistry and drive to have her music and writing resonate around the world. She sums up her drive in her first diary: Success is important to me because of my background. Small-town girl with loads of talent who had the opportunity to go to the city to begin nurturing that talent June 16 1991. Identifying details remain anonymized to protect the identity of the author and other living people. Anonymized BIO NOTES can be found at the end of the listing; a de-anonymized version will be provided to the buyer to establish provenance. Her first full entry dated August 26 1986 introduces an open chatty 19-year-old musician focused on building her career overcoming sexual abuse and finding a safe romantic relationship: .My car got repaired thanks to my daddy. He was a real sweetheart and loaned me $500 Louie is a friend of my band and he is so sweet. But he was already with this gorgeous girl named Tina My band was performing at this wedding and Louis came up 2 me .offered words of praise and encouragement. Anyway. I had a friend at the wedding.her name is Sandy Sandy told Louis. Louis told Sandy that he liked me 2. I was overjoyed He's a wonderful man and he started kissing me. My heart began beating faster and faster but so did my insecurities. I was sexually abused for 3 years by a male family member and I haven't really been with anyone since After some drama related to Louis our author true to the spirit of a teen seeking freedom moves on quickly to the man to whom she would lose her virginity and become engaged: Today I became a woman. It hurt like hell but I did it. I closed to doors to my past and made room 4 my future. Bobby is my 1st Sept 24 1986. .Everything still hurts and every1 acts sort of distant meaning Bobby . Its just human nature. The hanging on each other has ceased now My family member who committed assault wasnt a man he was a beast. And no matter how bad Mother Nature can affect us we cant help it. Not all men arent still affectionate after sex even if they arent beasts Sept 25 1986. She keeps the diary until Sept 30 returns briefly on February 4 1987 to share her and Bobbys engagement news. In March 1991 about to turn 25 she resumes regular entries. She tells her diary she and Bobby are over because she didnt want to marry a drug addicted musician. She is living with a new man named Mark together since 1989 and is focused on recording demos teaching singing lessons moving to New York and hitting her goal weight 95100 lbs. She self-identifies as bulimic. Her partner Mark supports her dreams financially and emotionally but she spends much of the diary flip-flopping on her feelings toward himdiscussing marriage one day confessing attraction to others the next. She eventually admits to cheating and the guilt that follows. She also references same-sex attraction: .Bernadette and I worked pretty well together. I really like her. I even fantacised sic a bit. It was weird. Power. Turns me on and that along w/energy in me is a deadly lethal combination April 10 1991. Alongside her relationship struggles she spends 1991 trying to get a record deal by connecting in the LA music scene writing songs and trying to get her music into the right hands at one point she asks her friend Maynard to help get her demo to his agent and contemplates giving it to Lenny Kravitz. She performs at Magic Mountain and is later fired and runs into trouble with a music manager named Mike all while making new connections. She ends her first diary in December 1991 with a plan to beat her eating disorder further her career and become more spiritually enlightened. Diary Two: We meet her again in July 1995 now 28. She is in lust with a woman name protected for privacy. Mark is a memory. She seems at peace: Happily I find myself a grown up after one of the longest childhoods of all time. I feel I have finally attained some personal wants that were long overdue. Someone who loves me the way I love them a very active productive city life July 22 1995. I want to be a famous musician This is the third and last time I have gone without music for more than a month. Once as a child when my managers and I parted ways and my uncle left Second after I began living with Mark and my Warner deal fell through and now July 27 1995. I feel kind of disappointed in some things and grateful for others I am disappointed in marriage and music. Marriage because it seems like we dont get one and music because I havent fully gotten my hands on it yet same w/marriage - so close to my reach Aug 11 1995. Later that August she writes: I am married now - but really have a best friend that I get to plunk whenever it's allowed.which I wouldn't mind as much if everything else was cool. my wife called me an asshole for writing that.While gay marriage was not yet legal in the United States or Ireland she writes .I married myself to her and committed to her for life Sept 12 1995. She and her wife struggle with being openly gay and committed in the 1990s: .My beef with my wife is she is very uptight about our relationship in public I cant understand why my wife would allow me to marry myself to her if we are something to be ashamed of We dont have sex with her daughter in the house and were not blatant as we used to be All signs point to her being ashamed of us.Tonight she was worried about a mark I had left on her neck. She was worried that her gay brother name withheld had seen it Sept 12 1995. She also struggles to coexist with her wifes teen daughter: I've had a lot of fun smoking week.It was interesting being near my wifes daughter in an altered state I would take the ultimate care of her if ever it was needed but I find her very very ridiculously arrogant and spoiled because of the constant competition for my wifes affections - I find it unbearable." Sept 18 1995. Other topics she covers at length include her musical aspirations producing a new album opening a club current events she has much to say about the O. J. Simpson verdict 1990s music songwriting earning an income at one point teaching aerobics and cleaning houses life in Dublin versus Los Angeles and her constant belief that fame and fortune will come. Her final entry is October 28 1995. Diary Three begins two days later October 30. She is seeing a woman named Monna. They visit the mountains together work on music together. This diary covers NovDec 1995 in great detail with long introspective entries about her career her father her wifes child and current events like an interview with Lady Diana. Her mood fluctuates with a bulimia relapse recorded: .my wife and I are trying this new schedule that I read about. Its based on Ayurvedic principle that the body cannot properly heal itself except in between 10-2 Nov 21; Dont know why I wound up in the bathroom last night. I was in such a good mood and really hopeful I cant even blame a lack of money upon waking - I am wearing the white sweatshirt that makes me feel like a Cathy Bates sic lookalike and I have my sweatpants too. They make me feel.fat. Nov 25. As always her belief in herself is strong: I really really want to have books in the bookstore and am looking forward to publishing books and the coolest journals through a subsidiary of Legacy I have been envisioning this huge success for my record label with my wife running record label and me running Legacy and both of us helping each other always This diary also includes lyrics she was working on: The audience gathers/awaiting the act of the night/the curtain goes up and/the opening is denied She sits in the bathroom/and counts all the cracks in the tile/She knows theres a reason The critics debate over why the main character stays/She made an incision/and felt the division inside/as she walked down the aisle A December entry recalls her step-grandfather and highlights our author's poetic writing style which becomes more eloquent as her writing matures over the years: I remember my step-grandfather fondly. Teaching me that great game of poker at the age of five and sending me home with his caddy of chips and cards to my stingy grandmothers dismay. And God how I loved to comb his hair! .I remember being in my room 3000 miles away playing with the poker chips in my hand letting one fall on top of the other and listening to the mundane sound of one plastic chip hitting another my mother asking me why I was so sad I didnt really see him that often but I knew him enough to love him after all he sat still for hours when I was five letting me comb that little bit of hair over even giving me a sip of beer while no one was looking Diaries Four and Five bring us into the 21st century. She begins Diary 4 a small red book marked Carpe Diem as an inspirational quote book in 20022003 then resumes it in March 2005 aged 38 and in the throes of mid-life crisis. She keeps it until late October 2005. She writes of her health regimenwater vitamins weightlifting affirmationsand her goal to earn my $5 million from music and film within three years. She revisits the topic of the family member who assaulted her: I let everybody in the family know. I did my best to protect female cousins.That Memorial Day Weekend was it 1985 or 1986 My god - I was brave . It was so important to let him know that I didnt fear him otherwise the predatory beast would smell it from me I didnt run away from the confrontation HE KNEW! March 23 2005. Her wifes daughter is now 21; she still has conflicting emotions toward her. Yet shes working on an album revising a business plan discovering her passion for animals and ready to leave Ireland. In the mid-2000s she writes less about sexuality more about power and ambition: Sitting here listening to my album my wife is about to meet one of the smaller investors in the record so excited about turning this record into a success and going to LA and getting an American aspect of life set up Really ready to achieve this life-long dream of having a hit record. After that.I want to be a film musician! Aug 6 2005. 3 out of 4 investors have dropped out so far which is devastating - mostly because Im ready to get out of Ireland Im just tired of living life broke and stressed . I want money to make myself famous to help people to buy a house Aug 11 2005. Her last entry October 24 2005 ends with a prayer that an investor deliver promised funds so she can return to the U. S. The final diary covers August 2006 to April 2007 ending just after her 40th birthday. Some excerpts show how she has matured in marriage and business: .we're leaving Ireland for awhile. My dreams in tact. I'm in tact.unscathed by life - only enlightened.Today got a great guitar I was thinking about getting a new Yorkee.but realistically it has to wait until after we are done working my record.I am looking forward to putting in so much work on the album Undated mid-Aug 2006. .We paid for the album yesterday and that deems it officially finished from where I am sitting. There is nothing more that I can do creatively Sept 3 2006. Well I have found my work footing and I actually finished our business plan. I think Jimmy is going to end up buying name of business venture for a million. That means my wife and I will have about a hundred grand at the end of the day. Not as much as we thought initially but we can do everything we need to Jan 17 2007. my brother-in-law and his male partner went through a final break up. I feel bad for my brother-in-law in the short term and really good for him long term He deserves to find that perfect relationship - Like my wife and I have - no nonsense - trust even in PMS! ! . March 31 2007. In her final entry April 22 2007 she and her wife are leaving Ireland for the U. S. And she has big plans: .I have been a little irritable just moving etc Today I looked at some car insurance estimate and it said Age: 40.and my heart skipped a beat it was freaky! Good news Theres time I saw the perfect El Paso house today Nice $215000. I wish we could buy it I began working on a new film script.It could be a cute tightly packaged little movie. Sebastien Bach or Bon Jovi could be good leads I also started writing a new song today Several goals Book the birds and the dog cargo flights finish move-out Move into name of neighbourhood.record Joes song Work religiously on the record and name of another neighbourhood house sort out my moms and dads present lose a little touch of weight and get a tan I have been enjoying my new life of meditation and no sugar Heres to new beginnings and striving toward my absolute best. An additional item is a photo album featuring her wifes daughter showing a young adult social life in Los Angeles in 2007. Taken together these five diaries form a rare longitudinal primary source tracing one womans passage from a 19-year-old Los Angeles striver in 1986 to a 40-year-old transatlantic artist in 2007. Across that arc the pages document the formation of lesbian identity out of early heterosexual scripts; the aftershocks of childhood sexual abuse and bulimia; the textures of queer domestic life with a female partner and step-parenting a teen; and the daily labor of songwriting gigging and independent label-building inside and against a male-dominated music economy. Because entries move from L. A. Rehearsal rooms to Dublin flats and back toward the U. S. the set uniquely supports transatlantic studies of queer migration visibility and community formation in the 1990s and early 2000sbefore marriage equality and while stigma still shaped public self-presentation. For Gender and Queer Studies the archive is immediately teachable and deeply researchable: students can follow in first person the shift from compulsory heterosexuality to a self-declared lesbian life; analyze body image and celebrity culture as gendered regimes; and read creative process alongside intimate partnership step-family dynamics and economic precarity. For methods courses it models feminist life-writing as both survival practice and cultural production; for seminars on queer modernities it anchors discussion with a dated record of language law and everyday negotiation of outness. The inclusion of original lyrics business plans and a related photo album broadens the evidentiary field beyond narrative to material culture and creative artifacts. Acquired as a unit the diaries will serve as a cornerstone teaching and research collection for courses in feminist autobiography trauma and recovery queer domesticities and the sociology of art. Identifying details are responsibly anonymized for classroom use; a de-anonymized research dossier and provenance will be provided to the purchasing institution. In short this is a sustained candid and assignable life record of a queer woman artistprecisely the kind of multi-decade cross-geography testimony that advances scholarship and sparks undergraduate engagement. ANONYMIZED BIO NOTES: The author a woman born in the American Midwest in the late 1960s was raised in a working-class family that separated during her childhood and later reconciled. By her teens she had relocated to California where she pursued a career in music and performance. A gifted vocalist and songwriter she performed with several regional bands before moving into independent production. During the 1990s she became active in the Los Angeles recording scene and collaborated with well-known industry figures. After a negative professional encounter with a prominent producer who pressured her to alter her image and sound she relocated to Dublin Ireland where she re-established her career under a stage name and co-founded an independent record label with her long-term female partner and manager. Together they produced and released her debut album in the mid-1990s later returning to California to launch a new creative enterprise and a self-funded follow-up record in the 2000s. Across her diaries she identifies as a musician writer and entrepreneur documenting the realities of life as a queer woman artist navigating two continents and multiple creative industries. Her published music and writingcredited jointly with her partnerremain accessible online. ; Manuscripts; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF IRELAND ROCK AND ROLL SINGERS MUSICIANS LATE 20TH CENTURY EARLY 21ST CENTURY GENDER ISSUES SEXUALITY LESBIANISM LGBT LESBIAN GENDER IDENTITY WOMEN'S STUDIES WOMEN'S ISSUES DRUGS ADDICTION POT MARIJUANA HOMOSEXUAL SOCIAL STUDIES POST MODERN SEXUAL ABUSE PREDATOR DREAMS DREAM STUDIES PSYCHOLOGICAL MENTAL ILLNESS CHILD ABUSE SEXUAL ADDICTION SEX ADDICTS SEX ABUSE HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AMERICANA 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; Signed by Author . hardcover
1868000714Brooklyn New York Minneapolis MN. Very Good. 1868. On offer is a Civil War era archive of five 5 books of which two are the handwritten manuscript diaries from 1868 and 1869 of M. B. Thurlow. Ms. Thurlow lived in Brooklyn New York and helped run a store on South Street New York. There are daily entries from July 24th 1868 to December 31st 1869. Very intensly written sometimes even cross-written each day begins with a weather report plus store activities. Otherwise Ms Thurlow makes personal comments tells the events of the day and identifies relatives and social activities. It appears that the store has dealing with quite a number of ships and there is an address for a Captain Masston of San Francisco prominently recorded. There are a number of trips recorded to Ithaca New York where we believe she had more family. Also there are many many dozens if not hundreds of names which will provide a treasure trove for genealogists and historians. Along with the two diaries are two ledger books that based on a casual reading appear to be business related to the store and in a different hand likely a man's handwriting. A closer reading of the diaries and the ledgers will no doubt reveal the connection between Ms. Thurlow and the man writing in the ledgers. In one of the ledgers is a section approximately 4 weeks worth of entries detailing a voyage and is of a technical nature giving longitude and latitude weather etc. etc. Lastly there is an autograph book relating to the mid 1880s with autographs and quotes signed from many individuals in New York and Minneapolis. We received these items together and are certain they relate and as such we will only sell the grouping intact.; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA ALS ARCHIVE BROOKLYN NEW YORK MINNEAPOLIS SHIPPING STEAMERS RETAIL DIARY DIARIES CIVIL WAR ERA . unknown
19450009178MANILA HARBOR PHILIPPINES. Good. 1945. On offer is a fascinating concise and exceptionally detailed history and evaluation of the Reconstruction and Development of Manila Harbor following the tremendous destruction and devastation of the population following the Battle of Manila February 3 - March 3 1945. The manuscript was created as a request sent by Civil Engineering for an article on the harbor on 5 July 1945. 2nd Lieutenant Martin M. Gross Corps of Engineers was the one who answered the call and the manuscript offered here was produced five weeks later. The report does not seem to have been published. In addition to the manuscript there is a cover page of sorts consisting of a letter sent by Mr. Don P. Reynolds ASCE 1915-2002 the Associate Editor of the journal Civil Engineering on August 26 1945 stating that An article on the rehabilitation of Manila Harbor requested in your letter of 5 July 1945 to Lt. Col. W. M. Hurley Chief of Technical Information Corps of Engineers Washington D.C. is inclosed. It has been read and approved by Col. Dean Commanding Officer of the 5202d Engineer Construction Brigade and Col. Cron Chief of Operations Office of the Chief Engineer AFWFSPAC. The letter says that it comes with the three photographs. Only one photograph seems to have survived and is included in the collection. The letter was sent by Headquarters United States Army Forces Western Pacific Public Relations Office. This is an original typescript with manuscript corrections throughout the document. Each page contains a number of pencil corrections throughout as well as instruction for a typist to make changes in the manuscript. The words Final Copy are written above the title on the first page. In regards to the accuracy of the report it cannot be said for sure just how good it is but it seems to have the detail and comprehensiveness of a good and thorough report. It is 13 pages long. Included as well are three figure spec drawings: Figure 1 - Port of Manila; Figure 2 - Pier No. 7. Showing Breaches; and Figure 3 - Repairing damaged concrete piles; The photograph included is of the rendered version of the map of the harbor Figure 1. The three drawings are expertly done. There is also a typed page describing the three different drawings. Finally a biographical sketch is included of Lt. Gross: After graduating in Civil Engineering from Columbia University Lt. Gross soon became Construction Superintendent for the H.R.H. Construction Corp. in New York City. Then Chief Engineer on the Castle Village Housing Project he supervised construction for housing projects in New York New Jersey and Delaware before entering the service. In the Army he rose to Master Sergeant.Soon after the Engineers hit the Philippines he was transferred to the Luzon Engineer District the headquarters charged with most of the rehabilitation work in the Philippines. Commissioned in the field Lt. Gross was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service. Lt. Gross plans to enter the construction business for himself in Newark N.J. his home when he returns. Gross would live in New Jersey till he died in 2015. The pages are 11 x 8.5" inches in size. There are 19 pages in total unbound. Two pages are exhibit some significant wear. The pages are the letter that makes up the cover and the page detailing the contents of the drawings. The actual typescript is on much sturdier paper and in better condition. The typing is clear throughout and the pencil corrections are easy to read and not smudged or faded. There is also a bit of pen used. The drawings and photograph are also in good condition. Provenance Note: David Katcher 1913-2002 editor at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory before World War II and later executive secretary of a theoretical physics division of the Institute for Defense Analysis founding editor in 1947 of the journal Physics Today and a senior policy analyst in the White House Office of Science and Technology policy during the Carter administration. During WWII David Katcher was Lt. Katcher serving as a correspondent/writer in the public relations office of the U.S. Army Headquarters of the Western Pacific GHQ USAFPAC and served as Public Relations Assistant to High Commissioner Paul McNutt in Manila; One good quick source on the reconstruction in the harbor facilities in Manila is: "Engineers of the Southwest Pacific 1941-1945 Volume 6: Reports of Airfield and Base Development 1951 pp 350-360. OVERALL: G; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF BATTLE OF MANILA RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT OF MANILA HARBOR PHILIPPINES END OF WORLD WAR II IMMEDIATE AFTERMATH OF THE WWII 2ND LIEUTENANT MARTIN M. GROSS ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS DON P. REYNOLDS JOURNAL CIVIL ENGINEERING 5202nd ENGINEER CONSTRUCTION BRIGADE OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ENGINEER ARMY ENGINEER REPORT PORT OF MANILA AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG 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
19230008212ORWIGSBURG PA. Good. 1923. On offer are two original small diaries dating from the 1920's. The first diary has 52 pages full of extensive memoranda pages and is 100% complete. The second has 365 pages plus memoranda. It too is 100% complete. The cover and pages of the first diary is in good condition but the cover has separated from the spine. The second diary is in very good condition. The handwriting in both is very very small but very neat. The diaries belong to Alan Maurer of Orwigsburg PA. He was born in 1892 was a graduate of Valparaiso Law School in Indiana and Indianapolis Law School and admitted to practice law before Indiana Supreme Court in 1917. He passed away in 1941 at the age of 49. Records show that he served in the U.S. army in WWI. Casual research has turned up no other biographical information. Maurer works in the nearby town of Palo Alto PA. Most of his brief entries concern either travelling back and forth to Palo Alto time spent with his out-of-town girlfriend and routine day-to-day tasks: "At 7 A.M. to Palo Alto. Home at 7 P.M. Out town a while. Home early and bed early. PAY TODAY Bad cold" Jan 21 1923; "At 7 A.M. to Palo Alto. Home at 7 P.M. Out town a while. Home early. Pres Wilson reported dying." Jan 22 1923; "At 7 A.M. to Palo Alto. Home at 7 P.M. Out town a while. And to movies with Mom "Enemies of Women". Home at 11:15 P.M. Wrote Anna. No letter so far since Mar 26. Partly cloudy and moderate."Apr 2 1923. The second diary offers a little more detail as his entries are not as brief: "At 7 A.M. to Palo Alto. Home at 6:30 P.M. with Tobias. Eve. Out out town a while. Mom to movies. Out town to meet her. Home at 11 P.M. . Miners ok pact at Scranton. Work tomorrow. . " Feb 17 1926 ". David L Marshall the Phila chiropractor guilty of murder in the second degree for the death of Miss Dietrich. Abraham Wernick credited with triumph in saving prisoner from the electric chair. Charles Edwin Fox was District Atty who prosecuted and Judge McDewitt presided." Mar 24 1926. Overall these two diaries paint a picture of the life of an ordinary young American working man in the years immediately prior to the Great Depression. What comes through is a person who is meticulous about recording daily events and observations. For a social historian the information is granular and helps fill in gaps in the daily experiences of people at that time.; Manuscript; 48mo - over 3" - 4" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF UNITED STATES; PENNSYLVANIA; ORWIGSBURG; SCHUYLKILL COUNTY; PALO ALTO; 20TH CENTURY; 1920s; ROARING TWENTIES; ALAN MAURER; AMERICA BEFORE THE GREAT DEPRESSION; WW1 VETERANS FROM ORWIGSBURG; 1926 COAL STRIKE IN EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA; DAVID MARSHALL TRIAL; INDIANA LAWYERS; SOCIAL LIFE IN 1920S PENNSYLVANIA; 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
19430002204JERUSALEM ISRAEL PALESTINE. Good. 1943. On offer is a super original World War II manuscript relic of one Jewish Brigade soldier's service in Britain's Royal Navy. Handwritten primarily in Hebrew by Amnon Ish-Shalom H/MX 595216 who lived at Hayeshiva Street in Jerusalem begins Monday September 18th 1944 through to September 1945 to detail his personal and service duties in the small though near full 3½ x 2½ inch book in Hebrew. Ironically we note his name Ish-Shalom translates to Man-of Peace. His personal details and his experiences as a Jewish soldier who was recruited from volunteers in the Jewish community in what was then British Mandated Palestine are herein given in this very rare personal account. Historians and researchers will find Amnon's writings filled with technical and personal details; places he served army units military courses meetings members and all manner of his experience. The text block is pulling back from the cover but still intact and overall G. BIO NOTES: One online source provides: Amnon Ish-Shalom b. 1925 who served in the Palmach and the Royal British Navy. 1940s. Ish-Shalom fought in Gush Etzion with the Jerusalem HISH companies. Ish-Shalom suffered a head injury and was taken as prisoner by the Jordanians upon the Gush Etzion surrender one day prior to the declaration of the State of Israel. He was discharged from prison on February 22 1949. Later in time Ish-Shalom founded the "Ein Bokek" hotel on the shore of the Dead Sea. ; Manuscript; 48mo - over 3" - 4" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF AMNON ISH-SHALOM JEWISH SOLDIER FROM PALESTINE SERVING IN THE BRITISH ROYAL NAVY WWII WW2 WORLD WAR II THE WAR AGAINST GERMANY ALLIES VS AXIS MIDDLE EAST THE LEVANT NORTH AFRICA HEBREW JEWS JUDAICA BRITAIN ENGLAND EIN BOKEK RACHEL GOLDMAN GUSH ETZION SURRENDER JERUSALEM HISH COMPANIES BRITISH MANDATED PALESTINE ISRAEL THE HOLY LAND JEWS FIGHTING THE NAZIS PALMACHJEWISH BRIGADE 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
19010002356ABOARD THE USTS ENTERPRISE. Good. 1901. On offer is a super original manuscript relic of US Naval history being a log book of one young 17 year old cadet's nautical training and experience on the "United States Training Ship 'Enterprise' Cadets Log Book Louis G. Ruggles" as stated in his hand. Casual research finds That Cadet Ruggles was born Jan. 21 1884 died Jun. 24 1972 and served his country as an Ensign US navy during WWI. The 60 page 8 3/8" x 13 5/8" logbook of the Barque-Rigged Screw Sloop's voyage is dated June 1 1901 to October 21 1901. During that time they visited ports in Scotland Copenhagen Denmark Saint Petersburg Kiel Germany Antwerp Belgium Gravesend England Gibraltar Funchal Madeira and back to Boston Massachusetts. The book details the usual required data of most ships at sea; courses winds weather and different chores on board ship including sails decks rigging and many other everyday chores of a 19th century sail ship and of course typical ship board occurrences are noted: "Carpenter Martin struck by a capstan bar causing a severe laceration of the scalp." ; Manuscript; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF USTS ENTERPRISE USS ENTERPRISE COMMANDER HUGHES LOUIS G. RUGGLES BARQUE-RIGGED SCREW SLOOP TRAINING SHIP CADET TRAINING SLOOP OF WAR STEAM SHIPS STEAMSHIPS STEAM TRAVEL TRAINING SHIPS NAVIGATION NAVIGATORS OFFICERS SCHOOL ACADEMY PRE-WWI WW I WORLD WAR I AMERICAN NAVAL HISTORY NAVAL NAUTICAL MARINE MARITIME ASEA SHIPBOARD LIFE USN UNITED STATES NAVY 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
19010002216MAYVILLE WISCONSIN ABOARD THE USS MASSACHUSETTS. Good. 1901. On offer is a super original 1901 - 1905 manuscript diary handwritten by a Mayville Wisconsin man who enlisted in the United States Navy. Charles Wieseke b.7/12/1879 - d.4/11/1965 who as he states in his first entry states "Oct. 30th 1901 - Enlisted in the navy in Milw for 4 years." We learn Charley served initially during the Spanish American War as a naval seaman aboard the U.S.S. Massachusetts B2 which was frequently the Flagship and Charley endured Admiral's Inspections and he observes the many ships and boats that call on the flag. He would return to his home of Maryville and serve his community as an Alderman for many years too. The diary a gift from his 'chumb Armand' has 50 pages of narrative and several regarding financials etc. Life aboard the USS Massachusetts provided lots of enviable entries for those who love the sea and being a sailor with ports of call aplenty and much of the daily life and duties aboard a battlship: Brooklyn Navy Yard and the Cruiser Columbia; beating the Alabama in a trial run; Hampton Roads; Charleston South Carolina; Matanzas Cuba; monument of 400 Cubans slain by Spaniards; Havana; San Juan; Culebra Puerto Rico; Guantanamo Bay; Santiago Bay; Cienfuegos; Colon; Port of Spain Trinidad; Martinique; Guadeloupe; St. Thomas; Torpedo Boat Porter; Admiral Dewey; Admiral Sampson; St Pierre Mount Pelee volcano eruption; New York; Newport; New London; Rockport; Block Island; Castries St Lucia; Basseterre St Kitts; Galveston; Boston; Azores; Bar Harbor; Horta Fayal; Oyster Bay; Missouri - Illinois collision; Annapolis Solomon Island; Philadelphia; Provincetown; and much much more. Other miscellaneous content details what the author paid out "Oyster Shells - $0.80"; safety valve rules; addresses; clothing list with prices!; money owed; small stores; money received; etc. The book proper has leather covers which are detached but present but the text block is overall G.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF USS MASSACHUSETTS BATTLESHIP NO. 2 INDIANA-CLASS CHARLES WIESEKE MAYVILLE WISCONSIN SPANISH AMERICAN WAR USN UNITED STATES NAVY NAVAL MARINERS MARINES SAILORS NAUTICAL SEA FARING SEAMEN AMERICANAHANDWRITTEN 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 . hardcover
1858000889GETTYSBURG PENNSYLVANIA PA. Good. 1858. On offer is a sensational Civil War era handwritten journal of medical cures home remedies salve recipes paint recipes ointments tanning instructions medicinal powders and much much more once owned by David Young born 1838 son of William Young of Two Taverns Pennsylvania and husband of Adeline Plank Young daughter of George and Hester Plank and sister of Sarah Plank Spangler. The Spangler's were a noted Pennsylvania family whose property was part of the Gettysburg battle. This 6 5/8 x 8 1/8 inch book has 190 hand numbered pages and is filled with writings and littered with ephemera letters notes and clippings. While the book begins in Mr. Young's hand identifying his purchase of the book for 3 cents from A.D. Buehlers whom it seems David clerked for in 1858 when the book begins. Most of the writings are within a few years of 1858 but there are later notes and updates in other hands up to 1905. Here is the Table of Contents Mr. Young created: "Miscellaneous - Ague; Rattlesnake; Cure for Cough; Cure for Piles; Cure for Corns; Purify Rooms; Physic for Children; Dysentery; Antibilous Pills; Eye Water; Godfreys Cordial; Itch Ointment; Drink for Sick; Ague Pills; Hiera Piera; Hulls Physic; Hoopers Pills; Thompson's Powder; Thompson's Cough Syrup; Hair Oil; Hair Restorative; Diarrhea; Head Ache; Albetic Pills; Aloes & Ginger Pills; Aloes & Assafortida Pills; Aloes & Collocynth; Aloes & Myrrh; Assemic & Opium; Compound Assafortida; Compound Gallamum; Ammoniuret of Copper; Mercurial Pills; Opium Pills; Storax Pills; Compound of Rheubarb; Squills; Rheubarb; Compound Antimonial; Removing Stains; Cure for the bite of a Mad Dog; Cholera Mixture; Diarrhea Mixture; Ague Pills; Cholera Remedy; Take out grease spots" "Powders -- Aloes with Camilla; Aloes & Guaiacum; Aloes & ; Aloetic; Compound Asarabacca; Compound Carbonate of Lime; Chalk & Opium; Compound Ceruse; Compund Contrayerra; Ipecacium & Opium; Gallap Compound; Myrrh Compund; Opiate Compound; Scammony Compound; Scammony & Aloes Compound; Scammony & Calomel; Senna Compound; Sulphate of Alumina Compound; Pragacanth Compound; Over Heated Horses; in horses; Whooping Cough; Cancer; Scrofula; For Cough; Ointments -- Accitate of Lead; Nitrous Acid; Hogs Lard; Simple; Wax; Spermaceti; Spanish Flies; Infusion of Cantharides; Powdered Spanish Flies; Elemi Compound; White Hellebore; Quicksolver of Blue Ointment; Milder Mercurial; White of Quicksilver; Red Precipitate; Red Oxyd of Quicksilver; of Quicksilver; White Oxyd of Lead; Impure Oxyd of Zinc; Black Pepper; Tar; Resinous; Savine; Sub Acetite of Copper; Ammoniated Submuriate of Quicksilver; Sulphur." The Table Continues without title: "Med. for the afflictions of the mind; Soap; Cure for Smallpox & Scarlet Fever; Green Mountain Salve; Conklins Celebrated Salve; Balm of Gilead Salve; Adhesive Plaster; For Fever Sores; Kitridge Salve; Black Salve; Red Salve; Hydrophobia & snake bites; To Make Vinegar; Butter to Preserve; Fruit to Keep; Ink Black Red & Indelible; Honey four kinds French Honey; Baking Powder; Cider without Apples; Uterine Hemmorage Cure; Salve for Burns & Frost Bite; Warts & Corns to Cure; Good Samaritan Liniment; German Rheumatic Lininment or fluid; Cooks Electro Magnetic; Spinal Afflictions; Colds & Consumption; Judkins Ointment; Sissons & Green; Meads Salt Rheum. & Itch & Simpson Ointment; Asthma Alteratives; Alteratives Very Strong Powders Tonic; Dis to Scatter Swellings; Tanning Calf Kip Harness; Tanning Deer Skins for Gloves; Tanning Sheep for Mittens Mats & Robes; Tanning Fur & Other Skins; Diuret Pills & Drops & Decoction; Dropsy Syrup & Pills; Liver Pills Improved; Liver drops for Obstinate Cases; Ointment for Ulcerated Liver; Nervous Pills; Pills to Sugar Coat; Anodyne Pills; Harlem Oil; Oil of Spike; Black Oil two kinds; Magic Tooth Cordial & Pain Killer; Homeopathic Tooth Cordial; Neuralgia Internal Remedy; Essences to Make; Artificial Skin; Discontents to Scatter Swellings; White Wash & Cheap Paint; White Paint. Black & Green Paint; Milk Paint for Barns; Glues Liquid & Imitation of Spalding Blue; Glue & Water Proof Glue; Fire Kindlers & Kinds; Bed Room Carpet". G.; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; CIVIL WAR ERA MEDICINE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY REMEDIES RECIPES CURES CANCER 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 Pennsylvania . unknown
19350008204BROOKLYN NY. Good. 1935. On offer is a diary of a man living in the midst of the Great Depression in New York City. Measuring 6 inches by 4 inches the diary contains 365 pages plus memoranda. It is about 55% complete. The cover binding and pages are all in good condition. The handwriting is small but neat and readable. The author of the diary was George E. Applegate. He was born in New Mexico in 1913. His father Morrow Applegate was a sales representative for auto parts firms. Applegate passed away in 1980 at the age of 67. He had worked for 27 years at Bankers Trust Company in New York and moved to Santa Fe in 1972. He was actively involved in cultural and civic life of the city and in 1978 with his daughter Nancy purchased the oldest Santa Fe's bookstore Villagra. He was a president and treasurer for 30 years of Gilbert and Sullivan society of New York and a member of D'Oyly Carte Opera Trust. At the time of writing he was 21 years old living at home with his parents in New York City. Applegate was working at the Kings County Savings Bank in Brooklyn. The bank is long gone but its 4 story French Second Empire-style building remains having been designated a New York City landmark and been added to the National Register of Historic Places. His entries are filled with comments about his work and about his new role as a member of a Freemason Lodge. In fact the year opens with him involved in some controversy at the Lodge: ". Dad phoned Mr. Bowers to have me go to Anglo-Saxon Lodge which I did. Henry C. Turner installed their officers. Considered the offence" an act of subversion to the principals of Freemasonry". Jan 2; "Expected to work late tonight but had to get home to put on my tux for my first Lodge meeting as an officer. Left bank about 7 and Eppers objected saying I will have to bring tux in and dress there in the future. ." Jan3. He is very close to his grandmother and is quite affected when she passes away: "Rain! Stopped at grandma's on my way home. She's in bed for the first time quite sick. Was up yesterday. Asked if I got my raise yet and if I had come "for the last look". I couldn't keep smiling tears came into my eyes instead when she said she hopes I'll be a fine man. I am a "fine young man." She asked ma "Did the doctor tell you the time" "What time mother" "When I'm going to go" was her reply! I said "goodnight grandma" on leaving and she said "Goodnight George goodnight." Mother staying there again with them. Uncle George and Aunt Ella drove me home said tonight Anna is improving. I prayed as I have so often done that grandma may be spared much suffering if she actually has cancer which we all doubt. She has had no pain yet and hasn't lost much weight" Jan 14; "Right home for supper mother not here. To grandma's a little before 8. Met Uncle George and Aunt Ella coming out. "Well it's all over" they said. "She died at quarter past six." Went upstairs and saw her her jaw tied up her hands folded. Had been awake all night last night had a tough time and knew she was dying. Some of her remarks were heartbreaking. "So many nice things to do but it's too late now." "You're not afraid of death are you" She kissed mother Nan and Uncle G. and said "Goodbye" "forever" she added to Nan. They sat with her and held her hand right up until the end. Uncle George came back said Tanta Anna is worse and will not live through the night!." Jan 15; ". Eve. The funeral services I was alone there for a while when the others went out to supper. Stood at Grandma's coffin and gazed at her in an attitude which I shall probably always remember " Jan 17. His maternal grandmother Elizabeth Corlett Craigen and another family member Anna Stratmann Thomas died with one day difference. Elizabeth Craigen was a wife of George J. Craigen a president of Lennox and Craigen brick companies and an assistant chief clerk of the New York Tax Department. Anna was a daughter of a surgical instruments importer Ernst Stratmann a noted resident of Flatbush. George often expresses dislike for his job and is critical of some of his co-workers: "Mulreany phoned told me the details of the proposed trip. I decided to ask Mr. Klinck the idea was so wonderful! I did. He said I should ask Schmann's on the quiet. He has heard nothing further and said I should let dad and Koppff take care of matters. Asked Charlie while down in the vault and received a horribly cold answer. If there was a chance of any one having a Saturday off he'd ask for himself first! Others haven't had any vacation etc. Was thoroughly disgusted. After all the hours they make us work in this dump they act insulted if we want a Saturday morning off! Pouring out. Walked all the way to Lenox Road before getting a trolley so I was thoroughly drenched as well as being some damned disgusted" Feb 14. He notes outside events as these entries show: "Shortly after noon word came in that Wiley Post and Will Rogers had both been killed in an airplane crash in Alaska. Will Rogers will probably be remembered as a "typical" American who could poke fun at Statesmen and get away with it. His brief articles in the New York Times and his radio program and movies were always full of good clean humor and philosophy. ." Aug 10; "War Begins is the daily news headlines today. Now that the Ethiopian rainy season is over Italy is going ahead with her plans that may upset the entire world before she is finished. The threats of war have been in the air for several months and now it's on. I hope and pray we may never become involved in it ." Oct 3. What George probably never thinks about is that in a few short years he will be enlisted in the U.S. Army fighting in the largest war ever seen. This is a fine diary of a young man struggling to find his place in the world in the midst of a terrible depression. For social historian it is an excellent window into the world of a young New Yorker at this time.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF; MID-20TH CENTURY; 1930s; GREAT DEPRESSION; NEW YORK; BROOKLYN; UNITED STATES; GEORGE APPLEGATE; KINGS COUNTY SAVINGS BANK; LIFE IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION; WILL ROGERS; ITALIAN INVASION OF ETHIOPIA; ANGLO-SAXON LODGE; ATTITUDE TO DEATH IN 20TH CENTURY AMERICA; FAMILY RELATIONS; YOUNG AMERICANS IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION; BANK EMPLOYEES; GEORGE J CRAIGEN; ELIZABETH CORLETT CRAIGEN; SANTA FE; VILLAGRA BOOKSHOP; GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY OF NEW YORK; 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
19480008058St. LOUIS MISSOURI. Good. 1948. On offer is a fabulous archive of a trip through Europe in the immediate aftermath of WWII. The archive comprises hundreds of letters notes photographs and ephemera. The centre-piece is a folio size scrapbook measuring about 15 inches by 10.5 inches. The scrapbook cover has separated from the binding. There are 100 pages and it is about 20% complete. There are two diaries which are used to record the trip experiences only. The first diary measures about 5 inches by 3 inches. It contains about 180 pages and is about 40% complete. The cover and binding are intact and the handwriting is dense but readable. The second diary measures 6 inches by 4.5 inches and contains 365 pages. It is about 13% complete. The spine is broken and the front cover attached at the back of the binding has separated from the body of the text. The handwriting is dense but readable. There is a packet of over 5 dozen letters. A second package contains over 100 items including numerous black and white photographs cards notes etc. In 1948 Gloria Lee Bigewet was able to participate in an American Youth Hostel cycling trip in Europe - specifically France Italy and Switzerland. This was a tumultuous time in Europe. The most devastating war in history had just ended with death and destruction on an almost unimaginable scale; the Iron Curtain was descending over eastern Europe; the Berlin Airlift was underway. Casual research has found almost no biographical information for the author beyond the fact that she married Harold J. Becker in 1950 had 2 daughters and was later divorced. She left St. Louis May 31st 1948 for New York City to board her ship - S.S. Marine Tiger which sailed June 3rd. The scrapbook contains numerous black and white photographs of varying sizes depicting the students who went on the trip. They include a large photo of the Roman Colosseum and numerous other locations in Europe. There is the American Youth Hostel flag which she flew from her bicycle boarding pass packing guides itineraries a list of all participants on the trip and cards and letters: "You can see over the whole city and it's a beautiful but sad sight. Sad because the houses are almost completely destroyed. Piza was one of the hardest hit cities during the bombing raids and you can sure tell it. By the way I managed to take a very effective picture this morning of the ruins or rather just part of them . " letter home from Piza June 29 1948. There is a complete copy of the on-board ship's daily newspaper - the Tiger Rag. There is also a lengthy newspaper article Workings of the Black Market in Paris explaining the how of the black market operates in practice. There are also quite a number of items such as tickets program descriptions etc that are tucked into the pages of the scrapbook. The first diary covers the months leading up to the trip. It is full of the typical events in the life of a busy teenager. It also contains references to the man she will eventually marry: "Bill called. Becker came over at 4:30 and fixed my bicycle put lights on and stayed for dinner. After dinner we walked out to the park and rode the electric boats and talked a long time. He told me how much he'll miss me. Oh! I think he is so wonderful and nice - I really like him so much!" May 25. This diary ends on May 30th with her saying goodbye to friends before she leaves. Included in the diary are 2 postcards from France showing a hotel in Artenay Loire and the great Chateau of Chenonceaux. The second diary deals specifically with the 16 days of her trip. It is well-written with a very good eye for detail. she comments on daily 50 mile bike rides the scenery and surrounding countryside train rides hotels hostels cute boys she met the food she ate and places that she visited. ". From there we met Goodie Betty W and Marge at the Academy of Fine Arts and saw Michelangelo's statue of David. It's magnificent. And then we visited the church across the street which also has a museum. . Went window shopping. . After dinner soup and some meat sauce and some fish concoction Jack and I walked to Diurno Square ." July 9. Awoke at 8:30 and washed dressed etc. Getting ready for church. I'm going to Notre Dame Cathedral for services this morning ." Aug 1. There are over 5 dozen letters in one packet including letters from her to her family letters from her parents and friends such as Harold. There is a delightful letter dated June 3rd to her from her mother and father: "My Darling Babe . When I arrived home from Council this afternoon . there was a slip of paper from the post office stating that there was a letter there awaiting me with five cents due. .I was so thrilled when I read your interesting letter that I had to re-read it three times ." her mother's comments. It is lonesome now but your mother and I are more than happy that you are able to get a world wide experience and first-hand knowledge of the other side of our big world. As you know you are our pride and joy ." her father's comments. The letters provide other glimpses into what is happening at that time. For instance the letter from Harold dated June 12th notes that the Freedom Train came in to St. Louis. This train crisscrossed the United States in an effort to celebrate America and her ideals. At each stop it displayed Americana and related historical artifacts. The remaining packet contains over 100 additional photographs postcards notes and other ephemera. Quite a number of the photographs are annotated. For example one picture has the notation: "Gloria Lee - sitting at a cafe in front of the gallery del Lanzi - Florence Italy July 1948". A note records the following observation: "Fields of scarlet poppies right up to the track; lots of farmland in all different shades of green with poppies intertwined. . faces all weather-beaten. Women manage to buy rouge & lipstick .". This is a superb collection of material. It is a treasure trove for a historian researching the years immediately following WWII. From a European perspective it gives first hand observations of life as they cycle through these countries. For a researcher studying post-war America the letters provide a wealth of detail in the letters between Gloria and her family and friends and the society in which they lived.; Document Archive; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF GLORIA LEE BIGEWET 20TH CENTURY 1940s POSTWAR EUROPE POSTWAR FRANCE ITALY SWITZERLAND UNITED STATES MISSOURI ST. LOUIS GLORIA LEE BIGEWET; AMERICAN YOUTH HOSTEL; EUROPE AFTER WWII; AMERICA AFTER WWII; BICYCLING THROUGH EUROPE BICYCLE JOURNEY CYCLING TRIP BERLIN AIRLIFT; FREEDOM TRAIN; LETTERS BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPHS POSTCARDS EPHEMERA SCRAPBOOKS SOCIAL STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES 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