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18730009011BOSTON MA DAMARISCOTTA NEWCASTLE BRUNSWICK MAINE. Good with no dust jacket. 1873. On offer are six 6 original handwritten diaries belonging to Edwin Flye Stetson and Mary Chapman Stetson both of Maine. Edwin Flye Stetson 1853-1924 was born in Damariscotta Maine to Abner Stetson a shipbuilder and Betsey Riggs Stetson. He was educated at preparatory schools and graduated from Lincoln Academy before entering Bowdoin College in 1874. He attended Bowdoin for his freshman and sophomore years before transferring to Harvard Medical School in the fall of 1876. In 1883 Edwin married Mary Chapman 1856-1944 of Newcastle Maine. They would have four children together: Helen 1884 Rufus Edwin 1886 Grace Lunt 1891 and Mary Elvira 1894. Edwin Flye Stetson's diaries cover 1873 1874 1875 and 1877. In 1873 Stetson is a student at we presume Lincoln Academy in Newcastle Maine. In 1874 he completes his secondary education and even comments forlornly on the end of his time as a school boy on July 1 1874: Sitting out the last time I will ever sit here as a schooler most likely good bye old house school days where are all over here. He begins his education at Bowdoin in the fall of 1874 after a false start getting left behind on his first attempt to go to Brunswick ME on September 23 he finally arrives at his dorm on the 25th. He writes of his time at Bowdoin from Sept-Dec 1874 and throughout his 1875 diary. By 1877 Stetson is living in Boston and attending Harvard Medical School. Mary Chapman's later Stetson diaries cover 1880 and 1882. She would marry Edwin in 1883. In 1873 Edwin is a 20-year old student we believe at Lincoln Academy. Some excerpts follow: February 12th Cut wood a little while today. Go over to the hall in the afternoon and helped fix it up a little for the great ball Friday night. Everite has gone to Augusta and I have got to stop in the store tonight. In June he takes a trip to St. Johns on a ship and spends a few months camping and relaxing for the summer. June 23rd and 24th Start for St. Johns this morning. I am tired of riding. Wish I was there .Arrive in St. Johns 7 oclock this morning. Go up to the Victoria Hotel to breakfast. Stay in the ship all day with Wilder. Like it. Think I shall run across to L. With them. Go up where the folks are tonight. Turn in at 10 oclock happy. July 2nd Father called me at 4 oclock this morning. Devil of a hurry as usual. Boat starts from B. At 6 oclock. Arrive in Rockland at 12 m. Get home 3 oclock.Have a gay time. I tell ye fine bedfellow. He returns to school in September 1873: Finish sawing pine wood this forenoon. Get some in. Sent ma the note tonight. Dance in the hall. Dont go. Sobered down quite an old man now. Things that I once loved I now hate and things that I once hated I now love. Whiskey &c. . 1873 is written almost entirely in pencil and there has been some serious smudging on some days entries. This is not too common but for the couple days smudged over they cannot be comprehended fully. 1874 is much the same as the previous diary recordings of his day-to-day tasks and life experiences often dealing with girls drinking school and friends. He begins school at Bowdoin College in Brunswick Maine in the fall of 1874: February 12th Our annual ball tonight. The best time I ever had. Home at 5 oclock. We go over and sit and smoke with Jones until ½ after 6. Home do my work and turn in. September 26. Got my books today and fooled around a little. Went down to Dunnings to tea tonight but dont like much . October 15. School adjourned this PM on account of the fair. Eve and I went over. Joined the Society tonight. Heard from Mother today became a member of the Zeta Psi Society tonight 2am . November 18. A new member in the freshman class. Purrington entered today or rather came today got his ticket last year. Class meeting again for election of officials as split before. In 1875 Stetson is completing his freshman year and beginning his sophomore year at Bowdoin College in Brunswick Maine: January 9th Started for school today in a snow storm. Got here all night but am everlastingly lonesome homesick for anything you please. January 12th I have studied like the very-D. Today and taken a dead for it. If it wasnt for the corks of the thing Id pack my books send them home and strike for parts unknown to man or east. Im fairly discouraged. If I had a drop of the old creature I believe Id indulge a little. In college Edwin is sometimes struggling homesick lonely and dead broke. He writes once that one Cant say that I have had a very good time outside of home In the summer his parents and his brother Abner visit him. This doesnt help too much though. July 27th & 28th Ab came down this afternoon but wouldnt stay. He has been at home now over a week and I am unable to read him. I fear he has changed mightily or else he is acting it . Picnic today. Dont care much about it but must go. Wish I hadnt gone. Never had a much poorer time. Wish I had gone when I had a good mind to Oh! Dear! Things are not just as I would have them but when will they ever be different Edwins last diary is in 1877 written in Boston Massachusetts where he is attending Harvard Medical School. He is doing better at Harvard obviously studying very hard but seeming to enjoy the struggle. January 21 1877. In the last 84 hours I have slept 6 tried to sleep today but could not. March 1 Worked in the lab until 11. After lecture in anatomy went down to the store and got my collars came home and studied on anatomy until supper time. Down to dissecting room this eve then Rob & I went down to Millers. He attends classes on Chemistry Physiology Anatomy and others. He is incredibly studious during this time: Studied till 11 - a very pleasant day - down to Chemistry - studied till after 2. The entries thin out a bit by the end of the year probably due to end of year exams. There is one entry from another time that Edwin has added in about his fathers death: November 4th 1878. Monday. Father died at 1.45 P. M. Today. I arrived on the 4 P. M. Train. Marys diaries begin in 1880. She spends much of the year in school and in the summer takes a trip out to Iselboro Maine: February 17th Pleasant. School all day. Got real tired and am fairly sick this eve. I stretched out on the sofa and was thankful that Uncle Billie did not come. Mamma is not very well either. But we are very happy at being all together in our bright little home. Saw Addie. April 28th Pleasant and warm. We began school at 8 this morning and let out at ten as to attend Mr. Frenchs funeral. The remains were placed in the Hall. He looked very natural. The Masons buried him. They looked very nice and there were a great many. Papa was among them. Luda came home to dinner with me. Went to school this P. M. Mr. Thurlow tried experiments. Went over town got my dress. Had quite a time. Mary was extremely ill during the middle of the year. She explains her illness which lead to a gap in her diary entries. By the time she begins writing again she is back to her old self: May 2nd 1880. Something did happen. I was taken sick that very eve that the last page was written and have had a long drag of six weeks been very sick with fever and been badly poisoned and salirated by Dr. Rob. No one knows what I have suffered but myself. I will pass over the next six weeks in silence since I only lay in bed. Everybody was as good as possible. July 31st Seaside House. Quite pleasant. Got up early. Had to hurry to get to the boat at 8. All came to Isleboro where we were to stop a week. We enjoyed the sail down the river. This is a pretty place about thirty regular boarders. A very good hotel cottages and tents look pretty. We spent the P. M. Tramping up on the hill. Sat on the beach this eve with Joe and Nellie. I think we will have a pleasant time here. November 1st Pleasant. Examination at school. I got very indignant at Mr. Kelley for adjourning school to go to Waterville to vote and refused to close the school for him. I could not help it. He went off in such a mean way. I am sorry tho that I did not accommodate him but I was as right as he was. November 3rd Pleasant. I opened school at half past nine and when Mr. Kelley came we had a strong discussion. I was provoked and so was he. I wish I had not meddled with him at all since he is little he cannot take an explanation or talk without arguing. Home this eve. The Republicans have got their 329. Garfield. I am sorry for the country. Marys 1882 diary is similar. She continues with her studies is very active in church and school politics and seems to be a generally pleasant young woman. Though this is the oldest diary in the archive it does not yet mention her meeting Edwin and it is uncertain when and how they would meet. Marys diaries are considerably smaller than Edwins and her handwriting can be occasionally quite small and cramped but this does not inhibit comprehension too often. These diaries would be an exceptional addition to the collection of anyone interested in Maine's history 19th century medical education 19th century Bowdoin College or Harvard or the experiences of men and women prior to settling down to form a family. Edwins 1873 diary is about 3/4 full of entries but the 1874 1875 and 1877 diaries are completely full of handwritten entries of a mostly easily comprehensible and clear script. For Marys diaries the 1880 diary has entries everyday until May 3rd and then there are blank pages until early June. After June 7th Mary is faithful to the diary and there are full entries until the end of the year. Mary's 1882 diary has steady entries up to February 20th then blank until May 4th and then after that she keeps her diary intermittently filling about 50% of the pages for the rest of the year. Most of the diaries have other papers and ephemera either stuck in between pages or in the little pouches in the front and back of the diary. These are mostly receipts for medical supplies and medicines as well as some short letters. Diaries range in size from 4x3 inches to 7.5x3.5 inches. They are overall in Good condition with some more age-worn than others. Pages and covers all appear to be intact some loosening of spines but no significant separation. Overall Fair to Good. ; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF EDWIN AND MARY STETSON FAMILY DOCTOR DAMARISCOTTA NEWCASTLE BRUNSWICK MAINE LINCOLN ACADEMY BOWDOIN COLLEGE HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS SINGLE YOUTH IN MAINE 19TH CENTURY MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS POISONING AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL; Signed by Author . unknown
19180008216New England. Good. 1918. On offer is a notebook journal of a young man who would go on to become a note antiquarian and archaeologist. This journal is a small 2-ring flip-top style binder containing 134 pages. It measures 7.5 inches by 4.75 inches and is about 95% complete. It is in good condition and the handwriting is legible. Accompanying the journal is a lovely black and white photograph taken of the author when he was an infant. Eric Hyde Lord Sexton was born in 1902 in New York City in 1902. He came from a wealthy family. He studied at Princeton University initially and then earned an MA from Harvard. Travelling to England he studied at Oxford earning a BLitt. Returning to the United States he joined the faculty of Harvard and taught archaeology. He was also a noted antiquarian and was a Fellow of the British Society of Antiquarians. He wrote several books and when he passed away in 1980 he left an unfinished book on life in Saxon England. In WWII he served in the U.S. army as an Intelligence Officer having attained the rank of Major. This journal written when he was 16 appears to be both a daily journal and a class writing exercise. Some of the entries show definite signs of having been corrected or reviewed. It covers the period from Oct. 15th 1918 until Dec 13th 1918. His entries recount daily events and are written in a very stylized manner as if writing for an older audience perhaps his teacher. The following excepts will give a flavour of this journal: "Today I persued my regular course of studies. During my free time in the afternoon I secured detention for neglecting yesterday to tell the "prefect" that I had re-swept my room. Later in the afternoon I surveyed until it was time for my English class. I was very interested in hearing the excellent answer made by our President to the German note of peace proposals. I wish the war would come to a speedy and victorious finish so that my dear father could regain some of his former health and vigor. ." Oct 13; "This day I attended school chapel as usual and posted the list of library rewards. I went after the morning service to the room of H.E. Scheidt a professor at this place where I perused a good deal of the literature pertaining to Harvard University. I found this most interesting to me and remained there till about lunch time. In the afternoon I had a period at the piano with one Mr. Schenk a Jew from the violins of the New York Symphony orchestra. ." Oct 20. What is interesting is that whoever was marking his work stroked out the word Jew with a red marking pen. None-the-less it illustrates the ongoing problem of discrimination engrained in the fabric of the United States both then and extending forward over the next century. "When I awoke this morning I heard all of the church bells ringing in town and when I got up to the buildings I found that peace had been declared. This time it is no idle rumor. The whole school attended chapel. The headmaster said we could celebrate by following our usual course of study but that in the evening we would march in town in the regular battalion formation. We were excused from classes in the afternoon. ." Nov 11. For a social historian this journal offers an excellent look into the private school life of students from well-to-do families in New England. It addresses directly and indirectly the cultural norms and values of that segment of society which was the source of many of America's future leaders and social influential members of society. His entries are lively with wry observations of school life; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF; 20TH CENTURY; 1910s; UNITED STATES; NEW ENGLAND; ERIC HYDE SEXTON; ARCHAEOLOGY; SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIANS FELLOWS; HARVARD UNIVERSITY; AMERICAN ARCHEOLOGISTS; BRITISH SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIANS; PRINCETON ALUMNI; ART HISTORIANS OF THE 20TH CENTURY; ANTIQUARIANS AND COLLECTORS IN 20TH CENTURY AMERICA; AMERICAN YOUTH IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY; BOARDING SCHOOL STUDENTS IN 1910S; EDUCATION IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICA; KENT SCHOOL IN CONNECTICUT; UPPER CLASS EDUCATION IN AMERICA; LIFE IN BOARDING SCHOOLS; FOUNDERS LEAGUE SCHOOLS; COLLEGE PREPARATORY SCHOOLS IN CONNECTICUT; 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
19370008135Chicago Illinois. Good. 1937. On offer is a super group of four 4 original five 5 year diaries detailing one Chicago Illinois woman's life during the critical 20 year span of pre-World War II through to post Korea Cold War era of American and world history. Ably handwritten by Ethel Creutz she begins in 1937 and continues through 1957. Ethel likely in her early twenties at the beginning details her life in a pointed staccato whether the mundanities of day-to-day life or more significant matters with frequent references to Chicago's Loop Westinghouse where HL her husband secured a job Marshall's Department store where HL bought a pair of oxford shoes for $7.98 /$8.16 with tax June 5 1948 and Fields Department store where they bought HL a suit for $20.10 and a straw hat for $4.00 June 27 1949 a friend purchasing a new TV Oct 27 1952 - from these and so many more a reader can feel the rhythm of life. References to HL being laid off Dec13 1937 and then finding new work hint at the struggles they sometimes faced. Here are some snippets: "Walked to Alice sic Took my fur coat to the furriers. Apr 13 1937; "went to Chicago loop Got Jr gift - Fuller Hair BrushMar 31 1937 "went to 10:00 o'clock lunch at Alice - played cards in afternoon"Oct 28 1937; "Ironed and shopped went to dentist ." July 25 1944. Dec 7 1941 contains the entry: "Japanese fired on Pearl Harbor"followed by Dec 8's entry: "U States in war with Japan - went to loop the Chicago Loop. Listened and watched on TV Coronation of Queen Eliz - Good day"June 2 1953. A baseball fan she notes: "World Series opened today - Boston Braves won 1-0."Oct 7th 1948. Entries continue each day of play culminating with Cleveland won the World Series Oct 11 1948. Church played a very large role in her life and her diaries are replete with references to church attendance. On June 6 1937 she noted confirmed by Bishop Stewart Bishop George Stewart of the Episcopal Church. Creutz led a very active social life and there are many remarks about letters sent and received between her and her friends card parties and socials at the church. Included in one volume are 2 dated July 1937 and identified photographs. While the pages are intact in each volume the covers range from good to poor. Overall - good condition.; Manuscript; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF UNITED STATES CHICAGO ILLINOIS MIDVESTERN UNITED STATES COOK COUNTY ETHEL CREUTZ; MRS H L CREUTZ; CHICAGO; SOCIAL HISTORY OF CHICAGO; WOMEN IN THE MID-20TH CENTURY; WOMEN IN CHICAGO; CITY LIFE IN MID-TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICA GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES WINDY CITY SECOND CITY LATE DEPRESSION ERA 1940S PRICES IN AMERICA; 1948 WORLD SERIES BASEBALL; CONSUMPTION HABITS IN 1930S TO 1950S AMERICA; AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS DIARY DIARIES JOURNALS PERSONAL HISTORY SOCIAL HISTORY HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19230002084USA AMERICA and CANADA BY RAIL. Good. 1923. On offer is a superb original manuscript and photographic relic of cross country train travel being the travel diary photo and postcard album of a "Dr. Roy Zachariah Thomas Coast to Coast Tour on Rail" in 1923. Thomas was a noted Professor of Chemistry at Winthrop College in Rock Hill South Carolina. He also founded a travel tour company called Thomas Tours Inc. in 1920 and this large full book documents this guided trip from start to finish in superb style. The writer while unidentified in name appears in one of the photos Pike Peak Snowball photo using white ink on the black album paper in a lovely calligraphic hand describes the trip in wonderful detail: Banff Yellowstone Colorado Springs Salt lake City Portland Denver Kansas City etc. on the large 14 x 10 in pages. All told there are about 200 photos and postcards and most if not all with captions. There is an itinerary pasted in though one item removed beside it likely a brochure otherwise complete and one end screw is missing from the little pole that goes through the book otherwise G. HISTORICAL NOTES: From Winthrop College website: Dr. Roy Zachariah Thomas brought his family to Rock Hill when he assumed the position of professor of Chemistry at Winthrop College in 1914. The correspondence in the collections traces the growth of the Thomas family and the tour business Thomas Tours Inc. that Dr. Thomas founded in the 1920's.; Manuscript; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF ROCK HILL SOUTH CAROLINA DR. ROY ZACHARIAH THOMAS TRAVEL BY RAIL TRANSCONTINENTAL TRAVEL RAILROADS TRAINS WINTHROP COLLEGE TOURISM GROUP TOURS ROARING TWENTIES ROARING 20S AMERICANA PHOTO ALBUM PHOTOGRAPHS 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
19150009054LIVERPOOL ENGLAND UK BUENOS AIRES ARGENTINA. Good. 1915. On offer is a fascinating diary of a trip taken from Liverpool to Buenos Aires and back taken during the first year of World War 1. The book begins a day before Mr. George Browne the author of the diary who is seemingly a slaughterhouse owner or successful meat salesman sails for Argentina. The front cover contains the words: A Diary of a trip from Liverpool to B.A. and back. Geoffrey Browne. 1.8.15. 23.9.15. He mentions the boat he is sailing on is the passenger-cargo steam vessel the El Uruguayo. She is a big Square sturdily built boat with one large black squat funnel. Crew 100 passengers 12. A tastily decorated saloon and smoking room with wainscoting. My cabin is on the starboard side and is a deck cabin on the main deck. It is owned by the British and Argentine Steam Navigation Company Ltd and also has a number of guns for defense. He sails for Argentina beginning on August 1st 1915 and his voyage ends more than a month and a half later on September 23 1915. On the trip he mentions the people he meets: a doctor A Spaniard but he doesnt speak English and many others. Wednesday the 4th. Glorious day. Sky blue sea blue black and clear. Woke up and had a bath shaved and dressed and so to breakfast. Stayed for a bit after breakfast and read the Marconi news which was good. We had a pow-wow about the 4.7 gun and its shell also a long talk with the gunner who had been on board one of the four captured German submarines in Portsmouth Harbour. He says they are magnificent boats and now fully Commissioned in our service.Boats are rare now. We saw one high before and after and with one funnel well down on the Starboard Horizon.312 miles yesterday the sea being so calm. Browne also includes descriptions of discussions he has with fellow passengers and crewmen including a long description of a discussion about theology with the chief engineer of the boat. His entries on the way to Buenos Aires consist of mostly his daily activities and observations and occasional descriptions of discussions had. There are also occasional spots of war news from other ships that pass. Thursday. We saw another boat today probably one of the Lamport and Holts. She was Homeward Bound. Of course there is no news. Im rather anxious to hear about war so close to bound up does one get with great events.; In the morning there was excitement. Several of the officers and crew saw a number of whales and a killer. All the passengers were on deck and the others were so sure we couldnt possibly miss them that they did not tell us consequently we saw none of them. They reach Buenos Aires. When I woke I found that we were anchored. I dressed and got up. The wind was strong and very cold and all about was shipping. Browne describes the port officials he sees: All the officials smelt strongly of scent. One of them had fair long hair and a vacant face; his tie was an extremely light green his waistcoat was white with spots and he was adorned profusely with gold chains. For a couple pages Browne writes a few sentences each describing his fellow passengers. These passengers include a Mr. and Mrs. Dalton a Mr. and Mrs. and baby Summers Mrs. Williams and Thelma and a couple of others. After these pages of descriptions Browne writes of his observations of Buenos Aires with Continental store facades and arcades; methodically arranged streets and foreign looking men and women. Browne spends a number of days in Buenos Aires exploring and seeing the sights it has to offer. He even writes of a tram collision he sees and a large cattle market in the city. He mentions walking through Palermo Park the neighborhood of Florida having lunch at the Jockey Club and comments quite often on how European the city looks in his eyes. He also takes a trip to Campana Argentina remarking on the land and people he sees as rides a train through the countryside. In Compana Browne visits a slaughterhouse and writes a description of the place noting the various rooms and buildings that comprise the meat works. He also travels briefly to La Plata noting its fine buildings and that its streets are fine and broad and the main playa is very pleasant. From La Plata Browne and the other passengers leave to return home going down the La Plata river towards open water. Going down the Rio de La Plata Browne notices the lights of Montevideo the capital of Uruguay. All day we sailed down the Plata and might saw us off the bright twinkling lights of Monte Video. From Montevideo the ship enters the South Atlantic and makes towards Tenerife Island owned by Spain. The trip is fairly uneventful however the influence of a major World War is present: We are well out to the eastward for we have been warned by the Admiralty of German Submarines operating or about to operate from the Brazilian coast in company with travelers of which we are told to beware. They are not attacked on the way back. As the ship approaches Tenerife there is a gun drill that happens. We fire a shot when passed Tenerife to show that all is in working order before we meet a submarine. As they continue onwards Browne makes note that lunch followed and with it lime juice. According to the Board of Trade regulation every boat when ten days out of port has to supply the crew with lime-juice - and can fine anyone who refuses it - to prevent scurvy. During this time Browne also makes note of the Marconi Radio still a very notable and fascinating invention. At the time radio was still in its infancy and Browne is obviously quite impressed with the communication skills of the Marconi even noting that one night the Marconi heard the Eiffel Tower. referencing that the Eiffel Tower was being used as radio transmitter for the duration of World War I. The ship reaches Tenerife and Browne goes ashoregetting his hair cut and also providing a magnificent description of the island as he left the port. Finally as they come closer and closer to England there is a strong warning against German submarines after they pass the parallel of St. Vincent and enter the danger zone. We have as good a chance as any other boat perhaps better since we are armed; the whole thing is like a game of cards pure luck. Browne notes that all watches are doubled while they are travelling through this very dangerous part of the ocean close to England but not there yet. The boat is not attacked and it reaches the Bristol Channel safely anchoring in Cardiff. From Cardiff Browne departs the boat takes a train to London and then finally a train back home to Liverpool. The book is in good condition. It is 166 pages in length of which all have writing and which all but the very last pages are numbered. The book has a marbled cover with quarter leather binding of which much of it has peeled off the spine. Browne writes in pencil but there is little smudging and throughout the book his handwriting is clear and legible.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF GEOFFREY BROWNE LIVERPOOL ENGLAND UNITED KINGDOM BUENOS AIRES ARGENTINA WORLD WAR I ERA WW1 NAUTICAL MARINE WWI WW1 WORLD WAR ONE AT SEA ABOARD SHIP EL URUGUAYO SCREW STEAMER BRITISH AND ARGENTINE STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY STEAMER SHIP TRAVEL PALERMO PARK RIO DE LA PLATA MONTEVIDEO MARCONI RADIO EARLY DAYS OF RADIO TENERIFE GERMAN SUBMARINE WATCH ATLANTIC DANGER ZONE 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 . hardcover
18420008000London England. Very Good. 1842. This super original diary written by 24-year old George Canning Backhouse gives an excellent insight into a life of a young man from the upper-middle class starting his diplomatic career and living in London during the early Victorian era. His father John Backhouse 1784-1845 was a noted British politician who served as a Permanent Under-secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and who retired the same year when the diary was written. One of the first records is a memo regarding his father's papers. In 1838 George Canning graduated from the Christ Church College in Oxford and started working at the Secretary of State's Office as a clerk at the Foreign Department. The diary contains about 50 entries some mentioning his work at the office but mostly documenting his social life consisting of parties visits balls horse rides skating in High Park and Kensington Gardens attending cricket games. He was an active theatergoer and his diary contains names of actors and mentions many cultural events - he visits Lyceum and Drury Lane theaters pantomime in Covent Garden with William Payne who was known as "the king of pantomime" Van Amburgh's performance with wild animals he mentions Bouffe a French actor extremely popular at that time: "Dined with Turner at Windham and went with him to a French play last night - Bouffe wonderful in "Le Gamin de Paris" after which he made farewell adieux in verse". Another favorite activity of his was horse riding: "Rode in the morning to Lymm with Elizabeth who lost her stirrup and fell off when near home." On February 18th he lost his dog: "Walked with Catty in the Park with Brisk whom I lost by great carelessness when near home on our return: looked for Brisk on my way to the Office but could not find him. Went to the French play having a stall alongside with Blackburn - Very good". Backhouse refers to significant events like Prince of Wales christening and also mentions many names including clerks from the Foreign Department with whom he socializes and names of notable persons of that time like Under Secretary Addington Ashburton Stopford Lady Murray. It also contains some of his expenses including rent. On July 28th George's father with other family members sailed to Europe: "My father and all sailed from Blackwall by the "Rainbow" for Antwerp." and the archive includes a letter from John Backhouse written in Berne and dated September 20th and a bill for books on Italy bought from Henry George Bohn a prominent publisher and rare books dealer from London with a letter to George asking to settle accounts with Bohn: "Bohn is a man of such perfect respectability that you will get a correct answer if you ask for a statement of my account" The diary: a pocket-size book with leather cover Peacock's Historical Almanack for 1842. Text is faded at few pages. Otherwise in very good condition. Size: 2.8'x4.1 Letter from Berne dated September 20 1942: A leaf folded into an envelope and sealed with a black seal a copy of a bill for books on Italy with a letter with explanations on the other side.; The letter has tears on creases. Size: 6.3'x8.3' 4 watercolor paintings depicting sailing ships: three of them - 7.1'x3' one - 5'x3.3' all in excellent condition.; Manuscript; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF BACKHOUSE BRITAIN ENGLAND LONDON HANS PLACE EARLY VICTORIAN ERA SECRETARY OF STATE'S OFFICE FOREIGN DEPARTMENT BRITISH POLITICIANS SOCIAL LIFE HISTORY OF ENGLAND 19TH CENTURY NINETEENTH CENTURY VICTORIAN LONDON JOHN BACKHOUSE LONDON THEATER AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL BRITANNICA 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
19050009140CAMBRIDGE COUNTY SCHOOL WATERTOWN MASS. MA. Very Good. 1905. On offer is a historically significant diary from the main founder of the British League of Unitarian and Other Liberal Christian Women commonly known as the British Unitarian Womens League Helen Brooke Herford. In addition to founding the organization Herford worked as Secretary from the League's inception in 1908 until 1929 accomplished a tremendous amount of good due to her tireless effort and enthusiasm. She helped set up the Correspondence Bureau during the First World War oversaw the publication of many pamphlets and help set up District Leagues establish the organizations Monthly Letter and the League Annual Meeting and much more. By the time of Herfords death 171 Branches 11 District Leagues and 2 Neighbourhood Leagues were in existence. This diary is from 1905 three years before she would found the organization when Herford was only 19 years living in Watertown Massachusetts and attending the Cambridge County School. It details the parties dances gossip crushes concerts church visits and many other aspects of the life of a liberal 19 year old female student. It certainly shows a different and very formative side of a woman who would go on to do so much good in her life. In addition to the normal entries of student life Herford also spends a significant amount of time traveling by train across America from Massachusetts to Portland Oregon stopping in Billings Montana for two weeks to stay with family. Helen goes to church often but does not speak too much on her personal beliefs. Like many young women her age she is more concerned with friends boys and school than she is with her religious beliefs. This diary contains approx 70 pages of handwritten entries some pages of which are full and double sided others just a few lines or paragraphs. Also included is a hand drawn floor plan of her house in Watertown Massachusetts. Her enthusiasm for the landscape of Montana would be realized when later in life she ended up owning a dude ranch near Limestone Stillwater County Montana. The book's leather cover shows some wear but is generally in good condition. All pages are intact and free of any major damage or discoloration. The diary is not full but does contain some interesting background information about her early life. TEXT: Jan 1 1905. Went to bed this morning very early after Nannies party. Nannie and L went back with Whitney & Scott to sleep at the Henderson's because there were so many to sleep at the Whitneys. We decided we would not go in the any house again until next year so as it was only 15 past eleven we walked slowly to the station sat there for awhile that went to Hs and sat on the door step unit 12 Saturday 31 was Nannies birthday.; Jan 5 1905. School begun today and most of the girls are back but Edith Stor hasn't come yet and I wish she would come. We played around after noon and at dinner I had my presents Crawford from the four Rodgers Pride and Prejudice from Alice and Patty Sense & Sensibility from miss Hays and Miss Holbrook.; Jan. 13 1905. Went to Cambridge to see Rose with Elizabeth Mabel was there and we had tea. At the square waiting for a car Mr R. Moot came up and spoke to Elizabeth. Nell Murphy was here for the dance when we got back. Dressed after dinner Helen was here for the first one she has been down to only two of all the boys.; July 19 1905. Arrived in Billings Stayed in Billings for two weeks then started West for Portland Tacoma. The scenery from Livingston is very good some places in the mountains we could see three tracks below us where we had been. The prettiest scenery at Livingston and Bozeman and along the Green River. From Livingston we had two engines in front of and one behind part of the way. Spent the night in Tacoma and then took a train to Centralia and changed there for Hoquiam where we took the boat off to West Port Had met mother Mrs. Armstrong - Brooke & Jack half way there from West Port Edina visited on going through to life saving station. Backround: Helen Brooke Herford was the main founder of the British Unitarian Women's League. Helen Brooke Herford worked as Secretary from the League's inception in 1908 until 1929 and much had been accomplished due to her tireless effort and enthusiasm - the setting up of the Correspondence Bureau during the First World War the publication of pamphlets the setting up of District Leagues establishing the Monthly Letter and the League Annual Meeting and much more. 171 Branches 11 District Leagues and 2 Neighbourhood Leagues were in existence and the Executive Committee had become the Central Committee. Members were encouraged to keep in touch with voting women who left home to take up work firstly in this country and then isolated women overseas. Work developed in many directions including the issuing of a monthly newsletter. With the advent of World War I branches rose to the special needs of the time including necessary articles made and distributed serving men welcomed into homes or visited in hospital. She was also the granddaughter of Unitarian minister and noted preacher and author who served several important churches in Great Britain and America. Her younger brother Oliver 1860-1935 a poet writer and illustrator in the USA was popularly known as the American Oscar Wilde. Her sons John Jack Herford and William Herford were sheep ranchers in New Mexico and later ran a dude ranch in Yellowstone County Montana. Beatrice Herford 18671952 a daughter became a Broadway actress. Following her education in Germany and Boston Massachusetts Helen Herford returned to Montana where she taught school in Carbon County and worked on her parents' ranch. Herford gained much of her experience in the Alliance of Unitarian Women in the USA. In 1929 she and a cousin Helen Underwood Wellington entered into a partnership to establish a dude ranch near Limestone in Stillwater County Mont. The Swinging H Ranch operated until 1937 when financial pressures forced Helen Herford to suspend operations and sell. She returned to teaching afterwards and died in Columbus Montana in 1972. Her archive of papers and correspondence is held at the Montana State University Library. OVERALL: VG.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF HELEN BROOKE HERFORD BRITISH LEAGUE OF UNITARIAN AND OTHER LIBERAL CHRISTIAN WOMEN BRITISH UNITARIAN WOMEN'S LEAGUE UNITARIANISM CAMBRIDGE COUNTY SCHOOL WATERTOWN MASSACHUSETTS GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES BILLINGS MONTANA FORMATIVE YEARS OF A TEENAGE GIRL WOMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS 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 D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
18020009162BETHEL TOWNSHIP LEBANON COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA. Good. 1802. On offer is an interesting document of early 19th century education an original handwritten note book covering a myriad of subjects related to mathematics. The owner and creator of this book was a man named Henry Snevely also written as Snavely and the book dates from 1802 - 1803. It seems Snevely was born in the United States and lived his whole life in Southeastern Pennsylvania. At the time of the creation of the book Snevely was almost 50 years old an established land owner in Bethel Township Lebanon County. Why he had a book of mathematics is unknown however I have found records of a Henry Snavely who taught at a school in Bethel Township from 1797 onwards. It may be likely that this book is actual not for Henry himself but for the instruction of his students. Either way the book presents a fantastic overview of early 18th century knowledge. The book covers a very large range of topics however Math pertaining to financial matters is dominant throughout. As well there are conversions of Irish and British currency. The primary immigrants to the area at the time of the book were indeed Scotch-Irish so teaching Irish and British currency conversions wouldnt be too far off. Currency exchange in particular is a primary focus owing to the large amount of immigrants to the area. Individual page headings in the book include Exchange many pages Exchange of Arbitrations Barter Profit and Loss Fellowship Fellowship with Time Allegation Media Alternate Partial and Total Square Root Cube Root Arithmetical and Geometric Progression Compound Interest Single and Double Position Reduction Addition Subtraction Multiplication and Division of Fractions and Vulgar Fractions Rule of Three in Fractions and Questions for Exercise. There is a later manuscript memorandum on rear endpaper dated 1829 bearing the names of additional members of the Pennsylvania Snavely clan Molly George and John. The name Martin Rupp also appears in memorandum and our research confirms various Martin Rupps residing in southeastern Pennsylvania during this time. The book is in fair to good condition. The volume is bound in the original stiff paper wraps. The cover is very worn and the spine is torn and partially detached. There is mild age-toning and occasional staining but the internal pages are generally clean. The black ink is still bold and easily legible throughout. The book contains about 85 pages of manuscript entries and the book itself is approximately 90 pages. It measures 12.5 x 8 inches. Biography: Henry Snavely was born on August 2 1755 in Bethel Township Lebanon County Pennsylvania. .Henry Snavely was a Lutheran. At that time he was considered a good scholar and is said to have been a hard student obtaining his knowledge principally by his own exertion. He taught the school from 1797 to 1807.; A report from 1773 shows his farm had 150 acres 5 horses 4 cattle and no servants. OVERALL: G; Manuscript; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF HENRY SNEVELY HENRY SNAVELY EARLY 19TH CENTURY KNOWLEDGE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION MATHEMATICS GEOMETRY TRIGONOMETRY FINANCIAL CALCULATIONS BARTERING INTEREST TEACHER'S BOOK BETHEL TOWNSHIP LEBANON COUNTY SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA COMPLEX MATHEMATICS ALGEBRA MARTIN RUPP PRACTICAL MATH FOR FARMERS 19TH CENTURY AMERICA EARLY 1800S IN THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES CYPHER BOOK 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 D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . paperback
17860002231STRATFORD CONNECTICUT. Good. 1786. On offer is a super original naïve 18th Century manuscript diary handwritten by James Blakeman sometimes Blackman of Stratford Connecticut and as inscribed on the title page: "My Journal for the year 1786 James Blakeman's Journal for the year 1786" a 4 x 6¼ inch 13 page monthly account one title page and then one month to a page of besides his numerous farming activities including cutting carting plowing making cider mending fences transporting hay flax he tells much local history in his direct terse notes: "I was at Fairfield on the jury. Came home dressed flax. I went to sawmill. I was abord the Brig Lucretia and saw Brig to Millford. I went to Ripton." And much much more. One page has been creases on the edge but overall G. ; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF JAMES BLAKEMAN BLACKMAN CURTISS-CURTIS FAMILY STRATFORD CONNECTICUT 18TH CENTURY RURAL LIFE FARMING LUMBERMAN MILLFORD RIPTON FARMER BRIDGEPORT LONG ISLAND SOUND BRIG LUCRETIA SARAH HAWLEY 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
18500009062KINGSTON CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS MA HARVARD. Good. 1850. On offer is the diary of Joseph Holmes an 18 year old boy who leaves his home in Kingston Massachusetts in 1850 to be tutored for the college examination in Cambridge Mass. presumably for entrance into Harvard University. On the first page Holmes writes: The Intention of this Journal is as well and faithfully as I am able to carry out my purpose to contain a description of all my actions of my advancement in study of my pastimes of my expenditures and all such other matters as may be interesting for myself parents and other friends to whom it shall always be open in after time to review neatly written down each day at an appointed period set especially apart for the purpose. He begins his journal as follows: "This morning for the first time I left the place of my Nativity the Home of Eighteen years the Friends of my infancy and Youth the Companions of a happy Boyhood the scenes of a brief but gladsome experience and more than all the immediate presence and supervision of my Parents for a long absence but I trust not separation. He writes of his farewells to his family and takes the train to school with his father: "Having seated myself in the cars I was soon beyond Kingston and summoning all my courage I tried to appear cheerful. The Hon Daniel Webster occupied a seat directly in front of me. Upon leaving the cars I perceived Capt A Baker. After our arrival we proceeded directly to the Fitchburg Station and took the Harvard Branch for Cambridge about to be my dwelling place. Holmes finds a boarding house to live in Cambridge. He becomes homesick very soon and to add to his misery the weather is very poor with constant rain. He writes: "My room is dark disagreeable and cold. I am obliged to wrap a coverlet about me to keep comfortable. I never before have seen so dusty and muddy a place as this is it is difficult to decide which is the worst - one day you are covered with dust the next splattered with mud which resembles ashes and water." However he does take to his studies with his tutor very well: I went to my Tutor an hour earlier instead of my appointed one for other days. My lesson being well acquired and ____ I happily began to prepare myself for my first walk into Boston and later I spent most of the morning in study preparing my lesson. Mr. Lowe seems to be very well satisfied with my advancement - I told him this morning he must scold if I was not smart enough. In spite of the poor weather Holmes does walk quite often to Boston and around the area. He visits Mount Auburn and writes of the beautiful monuments and the simple beauty of the chapel. He also visits Harvard Hall: "we went over to Harvard Hall and viewed all the paintings and portraits. Some of them are splendid pictures. The principal room is the place where the students practice forensics. Shall I ever tremble on that stage myself thought I as I saw it and after that came this encouragement.Shall I ever make those before me in this Hall to tremble." Holmes is an excellent and mellifluous writer: Here we have another dull rainy homesick day. The clouds seemed to be overloaded with water and are pouring forth their liquid contents plentifully and continually. Holmess father must have done business in Boston as Holmes meets him quite often at the depot. His father keeps his son updated on the news from home as well as with letters and the diary contains mentions of deaths marriages and family news. There are no entries from May 27 until Oct 20 the last entry in the journal. In this last entry he summarizes what he had done since May. Most importantly to him he passed the "dreaded college examination". He writes I studied very steadily during the month of June and a fortnight of July preparing.July myself the pleasure of a few visits home. He also wrote of the Fourth of July Celebration in Boston and the great Quarter Celebration of the June 17th: "I spent the day with Mrs. Barker having just returned from Kingston. Mr. Everett delivered the Oration in one of the Ship Houses of the Navy Yard which was beautifully decorated and arranged for the occasion." Edward Everett was a US Representative a US Senator Governor of Massachusetts and Secretary of State. He was also President of Harvard from 1846 to 1849. In this same long entry the Holmes mentions another historical event that occurred in July 1850: "On the 10th of July I went home with my tutor Mr. Lowe to spend a day with Father and Mother before the examination. We carried with us the sad news of the death of President Z Taylor. He finishes the entry by stating: I returned to Cambridge and entered upon my Collegiate Course when I should have also returned to any Journal but for various reasons I have delayed this long. At the very end of the book There are two pages of the Account of Joseph A. Holmes in which Holmes writes down his various expenses for the month of May such as Carriage to convey Trunk - $.25 1/2 Lb. Confectionary - $.10 1 pr. Congress Gaiters - $3.00 1 Pr. Pants - $5.00 and a number of others. The final page of the book is titled Memoranda of Correspondence of J. A. H. and contains a column of Correspondents alongside columns of Letters written and Letters recd with the amount written next to each name. The diaries duration is from May 7-26 and an entry on October 20 1850. There are 28 handwritten pages in total in the book which is roughly 70 pages in length. It is bound in brown marbled paper with a piece of black cloth on the spine; Both covers are detached from the text block. Holmes writes in black ink and his script is very neat and legible fitting for a young man studying higher education in the 1850s.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF JOSEPH HOLMES HARVARD UNIVERSITY CAMBRIDGE KINGSTON MASSACHUSETTS HARVARD HALL MOUNT AUBURN 19TH CENTURY HIGHER EDUCATION ELITE EASTERN COLLEGES HIGHER EDUCATION IN NEW ENGLAND COLLEGE EXAMINATION TUTORING MATURATION OF A YOUNG MAN FLANEUR ELITE YOUNG MEN MID-19TH CENTURY MALE EDUCATION AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO DANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
19430002111SOUTH PACIFIC PHILIPPINES. Good. 1943. On offer is a super original World War II diary dated November 1943 to November 1944 handwritten by Lieutenant Claude A. Ashley. Claude proves to be a dedicated diarist rarely missing a day reporting all his activities from hunting for beers or seeking to bomb the enemy. Covering 52 missions this young personable officer and true American hero serves his country with distinction rarely griping always ready for the next mission but never with drama in fact the Lieutenant proves to be one cool customer. Here are some snippets: "April 3rd B-24 and B-25 lost this morning. 24 lost engine and hit 25. Both blew up and burned having a lot of bad luck lately. April 8 30th Mission finally made it. Really hit Hollandia hard. Little weather but not to bad. April 10 31st Mission Hit Hansa Bay today. Nice and leisurely trip but they still shoot close. Shrapnel came through window about a foot from my head. One plane from 321st got knocked down. May 1 Left wonderful Sydney this morning . next day Well we didn't leave suits me as I can use some more of the milk shakes and steak. next day we get another go at streak and milk shakes .next day .Finally we got off Worse luck we got stuck in Morsby boy what a hole Morsby is." Then: "52nd and LAST Mission" until Nov 23rd he writes with such obvious relief after arrival in San Francisco "End of Journey. Mission Completed." There are 53 pages with 6 days to a page which is 318 days. The diary measures 8¼ x 5½ inches. Overall G. HISTORICAL NOTES: One online source: "The "Jolly Rogers" self-styled "The Best D - - n Heavy Bomb Group in the World" have been operating in the southwest Pacific for the last II months. In this time they have sunk more enemy shipping shot down more planes and have flown more successful missions than any other heavy group in the southwest. The group insignia proudly displayed on all their planes are the skull and crossed bones."; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF BATTLE OF THE BISMARCK SEA WWII HANSA BAY 320TH BOMBER SQUADRON 90TH BOMB GROUP JOLLY ROGERS LIEUTENANT CLAUDE A. ASHLEY WORLD WAR II WW2 PACIFIC THEATRE SOUTH PACIFIC WAR IN THE PACIFIC 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 PAPEL . unknown
19130001400Buffalo New York NY. Fair. 1913. On offer is an extraordinary original manuscript journal detailing the beginning and up to the almost ending of a young 13 year old girl whose life turns so tragically with the death of her mother in early 1913 the loss of her father's love and the steady and not too slow descent into drugs and all manners of criminality. Using a 14.5 x 10.5 inch scrapbook our author Mae McLouth b. April 25th 1899 who inscribes the book with instructions for its delivery after her death to a friend. In all there 47 or so pages fully written with her story plus a few pages of genealogical notes and other writings pertinent to her family. The story of her life is all too tragic and certain: a mother's untimely death a father unable to recover older siblings with no care a treacherous aunt who delivers her to a convent an escape and then joining a carnival she escapes further. Soon after she is taking cocaine 'dope' discussing needles 'hypos' and within a few pages she is in prison. She does a short essay on the differences between cocaine and morphine and paints a real picture of early 20th Century drug culture and drug abuse and of course the consequences. Life continues along the same vein many years but then in the last entry dated 1940 written 3-4 years since the entry before she was not great dating entries where we read with some relief that she and her husband Joe are now settled have a trucking and moving business and rent out rooms. She seems to have made up with some of her siblings too. A happy ending but very unexpected given the depth of her self abuse. The large folio book has covers detached front cover present back cover absent. The pages are brittle on the edges but so far there is no loss. Overall Fair.; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: DRUGS DRUG ABUSE ADDICTION ADDICTS ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR GETTING CLEAN GOING COLD TURKEY DRYING OUT GOING STRAIGHT SELF MEDICATION MORPHINE COCAINE WOMEN'S STUDIES GENDER STUDIES SOCIAL STUDIES HEROIN HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA Als antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
18690008010TARA BRUCE COUNTY OWEN SOUND SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO. Fair. 1869. On offer is a remarkable diary handwritten in 1869 by Mary Ann Richards who lived in south-western Ontario. Mary Ann aged 28 at that time was a daughter of Henry Nicholas Matthias Richards who arrived in Canada from Wales with his brothers in 1830s built many stone buildings in Kingston and Toronto and in 1850s moved to Tara a small village located between Owen Sound and Southampton where he founded a saw mill which became Tara's first manufacturing business and who also was Worthy Chief of the Independent Order of Good Templars and a member of the first Public School Board of Trustees. Mary Ann Richard's diary covers the year of 1869 and though most entries are very brief and businesslike they create a picture that is far from common stereotypes showing a young woman who is actively involved in the family business keeping accounts and business correspondence. Though she makes weather records and mentions sewing quilting dying yarn and learning to make lace and paying social visits the main part of her diary are thorough records of business operations payments debts settlement expenses work done by employees purchases and prices. According to the diary Henry Richards was a very active businessman who travelled a lot in the county making several transactions almost every day varying from as little as 50 cents to several hundred dollars. Here are some typical entries: "McDonald here he paid Mr. Allen $100. Mr. Allen gave us $100 we gave him back $10 on act. Thompson had $3.00 worth of butter. Charley had 6 ½ lbs of pork at 10c." "Father bought a span of horses harness and sleigh and gave eighty five dollars for them"; "Mr. Grey rented our house for $36 per year and he is to pay taxes and insurance". Another often subject of her entries are Order of Good Templers lodge meetings that took place at their home and sermons they attended in church she often records the number of chapter and verse that were the subject of the sermon: "We all went to meeting in the evening. Father and I went to the English church. Text - "You cannot serve two masters"" "Hiscocks preached text Ephesians 4: 20-21". The diary mentions many names of the first settlers and business owners in Tara Owen Sound and Port Elgin including Donald Sutherland Chesterfield Armstrong Vandusen and many others which may be of interest to local historians and genealogists and also portrays local economy of the time giving details of labor cost and prices including prices for clothing and food horses and cattle and even for dentist's work: "Me and Alley got some teeth filled cost $2.00. I went out to Couches and got my cap fixed". At the end of the diary there is a list of bills and checks with numbers and dates. Condition: the diary is rather fragile many pages are getting loose the cover and bottom edge are chipping the spine is partly detached; the text is clear and not damaged.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CANADA SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO BRUCE COUNTY PORT ELGIN TARA INVERMAY OWEN SOUND FARMERS FIRST SETTLERS LOCAL BUSINESSES SAW MILL AGRICULTURE ECONOMY METHODIST CHURCH IN TARA INDEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS LEDGER BOOK OF ACCOUNTS BRUCE COUNTY GENEALOGY 19TH CENTURY HISTORY 1860S CANADIANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
19390009134PORTAGE CITY SPRING LAKE WISCONSIN WI. Very Good. 1939. On offer is an fascinating diary chronicling in fantastic detail and comprehensiveness the entire life of a Mrs. Carrie Cecilia Cole Frye. The diary was begun in 1908 but it begins all the way back from her birth in 1864. She details her childhood family life parents brothers and sisters notable births deaths marriages her marriage to Robert John Frye the first time she was able to vote for President her family being quarantined for a Smallpox outbreak and so much more all the way up to 1939. This is a tremendously unique document covering a persons entire life in unprecedented detail. From reading this diary it is easy to see that Mrs. Cole had an exceptional and truly fulfilled life. Born on February 18 1864 in Portage City Wisconsin to a family with ten other children she writes about moving around the state often. A child of strict parents she began working at 10 years old for her room board and education. In 1882 she met Robert John Fry a 34-year-old Civil War veteran whom she would later marry on July 2 1884. She and Robert Fry had five children one passed away in her infancy and homesteaded on a 40-acre ranch just north of Lakewood Wisconsin. She talks about numerous positions she held as housekeeper caregiver and cook always returning however to the homestead in the spring and summer. In 1909 Robert Fry became quite ill and moved into the Wisconsin Veteran's home. Shortly after her husband moved in Mrs. Cole followed first rooming in Marston Hall. At this point she became the primary bread winner for the family and began working as a telephone operator for the Veteran's home making $15.00 per month. She quickly ascended the ranks and earned the title of Chief Telephone Operator along with a pay increase to $25.00 per month. On March 11 1914 her husband and true love Robert John Fry passed away from "prolonged paralysis of the limbs and a heart seizure." She ended up selling the family farm netting $800.00 and on September 1 1914 left her post as Chief Telephone Operator and began working for the post office as Assistant Postmistress for $20.00 per hour. Again she ascended through the ranks through sheer hard work and determination ultimately achieving position as the Head Postmistress. Interestingly she also tells of the first time she was able to vote in the first election after Women's Suffrage the 19th Amendment had been passed into law. She notes on September 22 1923 that she received a telegram from Washington D.C. saying that she will be receiving pension pay as soon as she submits the appropriate paperwork as the President had signed the Omnibus Bill into law. She sees the beginning of World War I with one of her sons volunteering to serve. She celebrates his safe return and the first Armistice Day Celebration on November 11 1921. She also sees the Great Depression and the start of World War II. By the last few years of the book she is a fairly old woman and her diary notes mostly weather visits from friends and family births and deaths. A life this fully detailed and chronicled is so very rarely found to be read and appreciated. This is an exceptionally interesting document of a life lived through so much love happiness tragedy and war spanning 74 years of life. Though the text ends in 1939 Carrie C. Frye would live a few more year until 1946. The diary is 98 pages long and each page is almost completely filled with writing sometimes from the very top to the very bottom. On only two pages is there an instance of the whole page not being devoted to writing. On these two pages Carrie has pasted cloth on the page that reads To The One I Love and writes around it. The book is in very good condition. The front and back cover and spine are in good shape. It is a half-leather binding. The pages within are in good condition as well exhibiting very little wear rips tears or discoloration. For the most part the journal is easy to read with Carries script in black ink. Beginning in 1929 around page 80 the days between entries begin to shrink and the handwriting gets smaller and more cramped making comprehension of the content more difficult. From 1933 on especially the handwriting is small cramped and can be somewhat difficult to decipher at points. The black and blue ink used throughout the book shows only minimal signs of fading and is almost entirely confined to the first few pages. OVERALL: VG Background: Caroline Cecilia Carrie Cole Frye was born on February 18 1864 in Portage City Columbia County Wisconsin. She lived all 82 years of her life in Wisconsin and died on March 22 1946 in King Waupaca County. TEXT: Feb. 18 1864 - Born Portage City Columbia Co. Wisconsin. Wednesday at 5 P.M.; 1867 - Fall of this year moved with my Father Vernon Cole and mother Sarah Hay Cole to Spring Lake Waushara Co. Wisconsin onto a farm of fifty acres called the Bailey Place; May 16 1913 - John and I went home to Lakewood and Mountain for two weeks visit. John said I would never go with him again for he felt so miserable he did not think he would ever be able to go again.; February 3 1914 - John Fry sustained second stroke of paralysis. I laid off working office and took care of him up to Feb. 17. When I went to work again. Laid off work again March 8. John Fry left this work of sorrow March 11 - 3:30 P.M. on Wednesday.; January 1 1920 - I am entering on the New Year with good health and am trying to serve my God to the best of my ability. We are having our old fashioned winter with about one foot of new snow and up to the present date the coldest has been 30 below zero.; February 18 1920 - I am 56 years old today. Still continues to be cold."; November 2 1920 - I voted the first time for President as the U.S. Woman's Suffrage became a law!"; November 7 1920 - Harry Hines took his wife May and Sarah and Annie Mulligan and me for a ride by auto over the Columbia Highway; saw some grand sights and returned at his home at 9 p.m. and he took Sarah and Annie and me into Portland about ten miles from his home. Sarah and I stayed over night at the Y.W.C.A."; November 11 1921 - Armistice Day Celebration at Wis. Vets. Home in the evening at the Bryant Hall. I C. C. Frye spoke the following piece holding our glorious flag in my hand . . ."; December 1 1921 - Robert J. Frye my son started from Heppner Oregon where he is living to go to Portland Oregon 200 miles by train and at Celilo Ore the train he was on and another passenger train came head on together. There was 10 killed and 60 injured including him. He was taken to hospital at Portland Ore and placed in hospital. His sister Mrs. George Raney visited him. He was hurt in his side but not serious and was out of the hospital Dec 4 and to his sister's home and went home to Heppner Dec 5; The R.R. Co. paid all expenses and gave him $75.00."; Sept. 151926 - This cloth was a sofa pillow that my son Vernon Frye sent me the fall of 1918 from Camp McClellan Alabama while he was in the service for Uncle Sam in the World War. I wore it on my bed in Wisc. Vets home until it got worse full of holes. I took it and cut it out and pasted it in this book to keep - Carrie C. Frye. ; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CARRIE CECILIA COLE FRYE ROBERT JOHN FRYE LIFE CHRONOLOGY PORTAGE CITY SPRING LAKE WISCONSIN 19TH CENTURY WISCONSIN WISCONSIN VETERANS HOME CHIEF TELEPHONE OPERATOR POSTMISTRESS GREAT DEPRESSION WORLD WAR 1 WORLD WAR 2 CRADLE TO GRAVE RETROSPECTIVE 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 . hardcover
19440009015Pacific Theatre WW2 Eniwetok Pearl Harbor. Good. 1944. On offer is a unique firsthand document of the 2nd World War from the Engineering Department of the USS Caliente AO-53. The USS Caliente a Cimarron-class fleet oiler in the U.S. Navy was one of the most highly decorated ships in the WW2 for carrying fuel into battle areas. In early 1944 the ship took part in refueling missions in support of the Marshall Islands invasion refueling carriers such as the Yorktown Saratoga and Enterprise as well as the battleships Mississippi and South Dakota. In June and July of 1944 the ship supported the invasion of Saipan taking part in Operation Forager refueling carriers involved in that campaign. The Captain's Log contains the daily details of the ship's position and actions from December 10 1943 to August 11 1944 a time that the ship would be awarded 5 battle stars for its bravery. The book follows the ship as it sails throughout the Pacific to support and refuel numerous Navy vessels. "When specific orders are included in this book please read them carefully make sure you thoroughly understand them before attempting to carry them out." At the end of each message is written "Do not hesitate to call me at any time. Respectfully P.Barry." P. Barry is most likely the chief engineer or his second and is writing all the orders and observations of the night crew. Every day contains the numerous signatures of fellow shipmates who have read the message. Entries consist primarily of documentation of problems and potential problems with the engines as well as routine maintenance and other operations expected of the crew. With admonitions for the crew to be ready to wear life vests etc. Barry gives his expectations of the crew in a rather no nonsense manner while keeping a level-head about the potential deathly and seriousness of their mission/operation. Some pages even contain the details as to who exactly was on watch and on standby at exact times. There is a very funny idiosyncrasy in mid-April 1944: In this entry P. Barry signs off 'sincerely' instead of 'respectfully' and it appears another crew member notes this inconsistency with a penciled question mark next to the word. P. Barry's notes are always written in the same blue ink while the night crew's initials and occasional notes are written in pencil. Thankfully throughout the book both the ink and the pencil writing are fantastically well preserved. No smudging or difficulty reading the writing throughout the whole book. Some specifics to their mission are hinted at with locations such as Panama transiting the Canal around Dec. 21st Pearl Harbor Seeadler Harbor Majuro Eniwetok and the Marianas Islands mentioned as well as the names of tankers Cimarron Platte and Kinnebago. There is an olive green cloth cover with writing in red on the front cover. References to steaming in convoy are throughout with instructions to be prepared for varying speeds etc. alluding to the complexities encountered behind the scenes of large naval operations. 70 page or so of the book have writing in them as log entries. That leaves about half the book blank. This book is an incredible look into the daily operations of a decorated ship in WW2. Examples of log entries: "15 April 1944: Please note that this is the fifteenth of April & that we have skipped the fourteenth. All logs should indicate this fact & be dated 15 April. At 2000 tonight start purifying the lube oil commencing with the port side & running 24 hours on each system. Pay particular attention to maintaining constant oil temperature at the heater discharge. Do not neglect to have the messenger sweep down the operating platform at least once a watch before the watch is relieved. Wipe off the top of the reduction gear casings as necessary. Do not hesitate to call me at any time. Respectfully P. Barry."; "15 June 1944: Steaming Westward in convoy in the immediate vacinity of enemy held territory. Stand on alert watch & be sure personnel in machine shop evaporator flat & generator flat are promptly notified in the event of a G.Q. Also make sure the bridge talker notifies you of G.Q. since there is some chance that the engine room alarm is out of order. At G.Q. the fire pump is to be started immediately & the pressure in the fire main brought to 90 lbs. Standby generator feed pump fuel oil service steam & lube oil steam pumps are to be made ready for instant starting but not put on the line. We will have condition II all night with the standby officer stepping in the machine shop as follows: Watch: 20-24 Ens. Brown; 00-04 Lt. Whittaker; 04-08 Ens. O'Dell; Standby: 20-24 Ens. O'Dell 00-04 Ens. Suneson 04-08 Ens. Brown."; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF WORLD WAR 2 WW2 PACIFIC THEATRE UNITED STATES SHIP CIMARRON PLATT KINNEBAGO NAVAL FLEET OILERS IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR UNITED STATES NAVY USS CALIENTED CAPTAIN'S LOG SHIP CAPTAIN LEDGER TANKER NAVY IN THE LAST YEARS OF WW2 P. BARRY AO-53 NIGHT ORDER BOOK ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT OF USS POT SEEADLER MANUS ISLAND ADMIRALTY ISLANDS PAPUA NEW GUINEA ASIATIC-PACIFIC THEATRE E.G. GENTHNER USNR UNITED STATES NAVAL RESERVE USS YORKTOWN USS SARATOGA USS ENTERPRISE REFUELER OF BATTLESHIPS INVASION OF SAIPAN OPERATION FORAGER ALLIED POWERS CHESTER NIMITZ DOUGLAS MACARTHUR AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL AMERICANA ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
18890009126COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK NYC NY. Good. 1889. On offer is a fascinating piece of American scientific history. The handwritten book is a rare and unique notebook from a Chemistry course taught by the renowned scientist and Professor Dr. Charles Avery Doremus in 1889. The book is approximately 150 pages of which all but one are filled with notes. Beginning in October and ending in December the course deals overwhelming with various elements of Chemistry composition reactions stoichiometry solutions etc. but also with a variety of scientific topics such as electricity astronomy radiation and others. The book contains a tremendous amount of information all given by Professor Doremus to the young author. The book also contains some small drawings scattered throughout the book usually of simple diagrams of chemistry lab equipment e.g. bunsen burner bell jars volumetric flasks etc. The students name appears to be written under the Professor Doremuss name on the front cover. It is very faded but appears to be R. G. Hurlbut. This has not been verified however. The binding has some interior cracks but the binding is still holding well. The last few pages in the book were started on the opposite side of the book and are therefore upside down. The handwriting is occasionally sloppy but is overall quite legible and readable throughout. The book was bought at the Harvard Co-operative Society bookstore in Boston Massachusetts. Charles Avery Doremus was never known to have taught a course in Boston so it is more likely that the book was bought in Boston and brought down to the College of the City of New York where Doremus taught. This is an excellent and unique antique science notebook. Overall: G. Background: Charles Avery Doremus 6 September 1851 in New York City 2 December 1925 in New York City was a United States chemist. He was the son of chemist and physician Robert Ogden Doremus. He graduated from the College of the City of New York in 1870 and subsequently studied in the universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg receiving the degree of Ph.D. from Heidelberg in 1872. In 1877 he became professor of chemistry and toxicology in the medical department of the University at Buffalo which office he held until 1882 when he became assistant to the chair of chemistry and physics in the College of the City of New York. Meanwhile he had received the appointments in New York City of lecturer on practical chemistry and toxicology in Bellevue Hospital Medical College and professor of chemistry in the American Veterinary College. The chemical laboratories in these institutions excepting Bellevue were organized under his direction. Doremus made a specialty of medical chemistry and toxicology and was frequently called into courts as an expert in such matters. He was chemist to the Medico-Legal Society and a member of the chemical societies of Berlin Paris and New York City and for some time edited the journal of the latter society. He wrote frequent papers on sanitary chemistry and methods of analysis which appeared in the proceedings of the societies to which he belonged and he is the author of a Report on Photography contributed to the U. S. government reports on the Exhibition held in Vienna in 1873. He was a holder of patents for a process for softening water for a gas furnace for producing hydrofluoric acid for extracting alumina from clay and for the extraction of potash from feldspar.; Manuscript; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF DOCTOR CHARLES AVERY DOREMUS VICTORIAN SCIENTISTS PIONEERS OF CHEMISTRY COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY COURSE NOTEBOOK UNITED STATES CHEMIST EDUCATION IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY GAY NINETIES 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
19120008106PROVIDENCE RI. Good. 1912. On offer is an interesting group of diaries and student handbooks dating from the early 20th century. Written by a student at one of America's oldest universities this is an eclectic collection of books. There are 5 altogether. The first measures 7 inches by 5 inches and contains 176 unlined undated pages. It covers the period 1912 to 1916. It is about 10% complete. The 2nd and 3rd are student handbooks measuring 6.5 inches by 3 inches containing 78 page of both diary entries and extensive information pages. The first is 100% complete while the 2nd is about 50% complete. The 4th book measures 6.5 inches by 4.5 inches and contains 22 pages. It is a pre-printed "Class Day" program. The 5th book is a 7 inch by 4 inch 10 page pre-printed "Ivy Day" program. The first book covers the 5 years 1912-1916. However there are only a few entries from 1912. The pages are neither dated or numbered. On the first page she writes that she moved from Scotland in April of 1909. The entries in the diary are very sparse - many times just a couple of words where any entries were made at all: "Went to debate with Herbert Brown at Hope. Hope lost." Feb 2 1912; "Had first game of tennis. Supper at Roots" May 17 1912; "Today we went to Concord via Lexington to have lunch with Miss Genie Barrette. We left 11:00 and arrived 12:30 fine drive In Lexington we saw the battlefield. After we had lunch we went for a drive around the town and saw all points of interest. We left Concord at 6:00 nearly loosing the car. We arrived home at 7:30. Carl came over in the evening."July 10 1912. In 1913 she is accepted at Brown University in Providence RI. Brown University is the 7th oldest university in the United States and one of the 9 that were chartered before the American Revolution. It is a private Ivy League university with a good reputation for research. Its alumni number many successful graduates in a wide range of fields. The 2nd diary details her daily routine in her first year at Brown. It is pre-printed with Brown University's seal on the cover. In it she describes her academic work friends and acquaintances and social life. The book also has an extensive information section about Brown University. "College at last! I am a really true freshman in Brown" Sept 24 1913. "This noon I walked up Creighton St. With Jesse. We took the math prize exams. . It was terrific ." Oct 11 1913. Bessie and I studied Math all morning and this afternoon had our famous math final. It was a scream." Jan 29 1914. "Ivy Day. I went in all morning. At night I went and tool Harold. We went for a long walk before and were very late in returning home." June 16 1914. The last pages record her grades for the year and the steps to the "Hesitation Waltz". The 3rd diary covers her academic year 1916-1917. Like the previous academic handbook it is preprinted with the university seal and contains an extensive information section as well as space for daily entries over the course of the academic year. As in the previous one this contains descriptions of her academic work friends and acquaintances and social life. "First morning in cap and gown" Sept 27 1916. In October she went out and secured a part-time job at Arnold Co. "Went downtown to see about a position in Arnolds. Will know later. Got position" Oct 12-3 1916. Arnold Co might likely be associated with descendents of Rhode Island's wealthiest settler family. She graduated in the spring of 1917: "Baccalaureate ." June 17 1917. The remaining 2 books are a pre-printed "Class Day" program from 1915 and a pre-printed "Ivy Day" program for 1917. Both contain details of these university events. The Class Day program has photographs of class officers as well as senior class rolls. Also included is a certificate from the Department of Public Schools Providence RI appointing her as a student teacher in the school system for September 1917. Dated June 18th she makes no reference to it in her diary. Casual research suggests that she did in fact work as a teacher in Providence but there is not conclusive evidence. No other biographical information was found. The Brown University documents provide an excellent look at what Brown felt was necessary for students to know and have at their fingertips as they followed their studies. It lists various regulations student organizations and details of campus life. For a researcher or historian of Brown University or indeed any Ivy League school it provides an excellent benchmark for comparisons a century later.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF EARLY 20TH CENTURY 1910s UNITED STATES NEW ENGLAND RHODE ISLAND RUTH YOUNG; UNIVERSITY EDUCATION IN AMERICA IN 1910s BROWN UNIVERSITY; IVY LEAGUE SCHOOLS; PROVIDENCE RI 1917 "IVY DAY" PROGRAM "CLASS DAY" PROGRAM AT BROWN BROWN UNIVERSITY EVENTS IN 1910S BROWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNAE EARLY FEMALE STUDENTS AT THE BROWN UNIVERSITY AMERICAN WOMEN EDUCATION IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY COLLEGE LIFE IN 1910s BROWN STUDENT DIARIES HISTORY OF WOMEN AT THE BROWN UNIVERSITY CAMPUS LIFE AT BROWN UNIVERSITY WOMEN SOCIAL LIFE IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY WOMEN'S STUDIES SOCIAL 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
19370002126GREECE HELLAS CHIOS. Good. 1937. On offer is an interesting group of letters journals note books and documents relating to Greek Royal Navy sailor Sotirios Mandra b.1905 son of Isidoros and Maria. He started from Chios Island but his background seems to be from Mikrassiatis. The group deals with his naval career from 1937 through 1943 but we learn from the materials that he began serving in the Greek Navy in 1920 and that he served on SS Theofano Livanos and the "William H. Point". The group includes: handwritten notes on the ship SS Theofano Livanos from random observations and personal comments notes from various reading materials some rules from the sea and cargo expenditures; a book of Mathematics Geometry Trigonometry notes relating to navigation; technical notes for the "William H. Point" including tonnage fuel consumption sizes of masts hatches no. of lifeboats etc.; nautical information for learning about sailing navigating by the stars and sun geographical symbols in Greek and English; his Greek passport; GENERAL INFORMATION for Officers on Warships; General Calendar of distances and trip observations; photographs of William H. Point and others. HISTORICAL NOTES: WIKI: In 1938 Greece ordered four modern Greyhound class destroyers in English shipyards making a serious step towards modernization. The outbreak of war in Europe however allowed only two to be delivered. Greece entered World War II with a weak navy consisting of 10 destroyers two outdated battleships two light cruisers and six submarines. On the eve of the Italian invasion in 1940 the RHN consisted of 34 ships and 6500 men. The Hellenic Navy suffered its first loss of the war on 15 August 1940 two months before the formal outbreak of hostilities when the cruiser Helli was sunk apparently by an Italian submarine. During the Greco-Italian War the Navy took over convoy escort missions in the Aegean and the Ionian Sea and undertook three raids against the Italian supply convoys in the Strait of Otranto. The most important role was given to the submarines which although obsolete managed to sink several Italian cargo ships in the Adriatic. When Nazi Germany attacked Greece the RHN was decimated by the Luftwaffe suffered the loss of 25 ships within a few days during April 1941. It was then decided to shift the remaining fleet one cruiser - the famous Averof - six destroyers five submarines 3 torpedo boats and a number of auxiliary vessels to Alexandria in Egypt. Here the ships were repaired and equipped with modern anti-aircraft weapons. For the remainder of the war the RHN fought alongside the Allies from bases in the Middle East. As the war progressed the number of Hellenic Royal Navy vessels increased after the concession of several destroyers and submarines by the British Royal Navy reaching a peak of 44 ships and 8500 men in early 1944. The most notable aspects of the Hellenic Royal Navy's participation in World War II include the operations of the destroyer Vassilissa Olga which until sunk in Leros on September 23 1943 was the most successful Allied destroyer in the Mediterranean Sea; the participation of two destroyers in Operation Overlord; and the story of the destroyer Adrias which while operating close to the coast of Kalymnos in October 1943 hit a mine resulting in the loss of the vessel's prow while blowing the two-gun forward turret over the bridge. After some minor repairs at Gümüslük Bay in Turkey the Adrias managed to return to Alexandria in a 400-mile trip even though all the forepart of the ship up to the bridge was missing. Six Greek warships participated in the Sicilian landings and in the subsequent Italian campaign. In April 1944 a mutiny arising from political causes broke out on 5 Greek warships berthed in Alexandria and spread to a number of other Greek naval and merchant vessels. It was put down by Greek Marines who suffered 50 casualties.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF SOTIRIOS MANDRA NAVAL MARINE GREEK NAVY GREECE WWII WW2 WORLD WAR II NAUTICAL GREEK SAILOR MARINER SEAMAN GREEKS FIGHTING GERMANY GREEK RESISTANCE MEDITERRANEAN THE LEVANT HELLENIC NAVY HELLAS HELLI RHN GRECO-ITALIAN WAR AVEROF HELLENIC ROYAL NAVY VASSILISSA OLGA LEROS OPERATION OVERLORD ADRIAS KALYMNOS GÜMÜSLÜK BAY ADRIAS STRAIT OF OTRANTO 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 PAPEL . unknown
18650002206QUEBEC CITY LORETTE BEAUMONT LOWER CANADA 1865. On offer is a fascinating original 1865 - 1866 manuscript diary handwritten by a young early 20s we estimate unidentified woman living in what was the heart of Lower Canada in or very near Quebec City. While the writer is unidentified there are many clues which local historians and researchers should find handy to identify this young pious and Church going but still cheeky enough to admit her flirtations very socially active Anglo woman living undoubtedly in or around Beaumont on the lower shore and Quebec City. She writes of going to the Island likely Ile d'Orleans Levis and many times to Lorette for as long as a week undoubtedly L'Ancienne-Lorette just west of Quebec City. Obviously of some means and at leisure filling her days with short trips visits social activities and of course the ever present Church is always either in the foreground or background. The woman uses a very plain beige paper cover notebook dating entries as written oft times short notes many times when something of particular interest has occurred a couple of lines. The book is dated as 'Journal Continued August 1st 1865' but any other volumes are absent lost to history making this volume all the more unique as a personal expression of a clearly Anglo woman's life pre-Confederation in a decidedly 'New France' locale. The 6 x 7¾ inch soft cover has 32 or so pages and is overall G. Good. 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. Manuscript. paperback
19700002184PLAYA VISTA CALIFORNIA 1970. On offer is a fascinating original three page manuscript diary handwritten by an unidentified man an employee of Latisteel who worked on Howard Hughes' legendary 'Spruce Goose' Hughes H-4 Hercules: registration NX37602 a massive heavy transport prototype developed by Hughes Aircraft Company originally intended for World War II but not completed in time. The aircraft made only one brief flight on November 2nd 1947. The author writing retrospectively likely late 1960s - 1970s he describes a short stay in three pages with not a wasted word describes the processes he went through including monumental moving tasks nearly single handed or his being in the rafters attaching a lock when he was able to see into a secret part of the Hughes Defence Plant where the first P-38 was housed before it was first unveiled. He reveals a number of stunning insider observations from Hughes employees filling every single bathroom stall in the massive complex but nobody's pants were down as they were hiding waiting for the day to end. He mentions the attempt to hire him away from Latisteel because he actually worked. Fascinating read of a fabled project. The 8½ x 11 inch yellow lined paper has some wear soft creases slight crinkle bent corners but overall G. Good. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Manuscript. unknown
19390002021Germany Poland Europe. Very Good with no dust jacket. 1939. On offer is an absolutely superb photo record of the work and travels of a German soldier across war torn Europe. The person who put this album together is a German soldier. He was a member of the Heer or Army one of the 3 elements of the Wehrmacht or National Defence Force. A separate element of the German military was the Shultzstaffel or Nazi Party paramilitary force. They were known and recognized by the abbreviation SS usually depicted as the distinctive lightening runes. They in turn had a combat force known as the Waffen SS. We know that he was an army soldier vs SS soldier by the insignia seen in all of the pictures. The standard badge of the Heer is the national tri-color cockade with a concentric black and white circles and a red central dot. And a red center dot This is present throughout the photos on many of his subjects. The Waffen SS deaths head badge or totenkopf is not found in any picture. Further he most likely was a member of an army engineering unit as one picture depicts the presentation of a Pioneer Engineering Battalion flag. The pictures were taken in widely different locations in Europe which also suggests an Engineering Unit as they were present in every theatre of war and area of occupation. The pictures provide a fascinating look at daily life in a combat. The pictures are almost exclusively of enlisted men. The pictures capture soldiers in a variety of circumstances. Many are engaged in parades or marches. Others are doing agricultural work. This is not an anomaly as the German government recognized that food production was a critical weakness and sought to remedy this. Other pictures showing the transfer of wounded soldiers onto hospital trains. Many show soldiers at rest or in casual circumstances several sitting at a table having a cup of coffee enjoying a beer with fellow soldiers group pictures of soldiers out in the streets. Some pictures can be geo-located. There are pictures taken in France as several show the Verdun Monument located in the north-eastern department of Meuse very close to the ruined village of Fleurydevant Douaumont. Another picture shows the evocative sculpture known as the Wounded Lion also in Fleury-devant Douaumont. Still another 32/1 shows the Douaumony Ossuary which contains the skeletal remains of at least 130000 unidentified combatants of both France and Germany. There is a picture of the Church of St. Elizabeth in the city of Marburg located in central Germany. There is a visible reference on the back of one photograph to the city of Wroclaw Poland. This city was originally in Germany and was known as Breslau. During World War II Breslau witnessed significant persecution of its Polish and Jewish population including deportations to forced labour and Nazi concentration camps Also tens of thousands of forced labourers and prisoners of war of various nationalities were imprisoned in multiple German labour camps and prisons throughout the city which would necessitate the presence of Engineering units. Another group of pictures are geo-located to Poland. Specifically there is a photograph of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa as well as other pictures taken in Czestochowa. Another picture is geolocated to the Polish city of Krakow. For a military historian this is a superb collection of authentic photographs that document aspects of the daily life of ordinary soldiers caught up in the greatest conflagration of modern history. This album measures 7.0 inches by 11.5. The covers are a black pebbled leather and are in good condition as is the binding. The binding is a white cord in good condition. Embossed on the front cover in white is the distinctive stahlhelm or steel helmet commonly referred to as the coal scuttle helmet The helmet bears the crest of the German army a German eagle holding a swastika in its talons known as the Reichsadler . The pages are in good condition. The album contains 154 black and white photographs that measure on average x by y inches. The pictures are mounted in the album. Some of the photos that have come loose from the mountings do have notations on the back but it is not possible to remove the photos that are not loose without damaging the album. Overall VG. ; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF WWII WORLD WAR II OCCUPATION OF POLAND WW2 NAZIS ADOLF HITLER INVASION OF POLAND THE START OF WORLD WAR II DANZIG GERMANY INVADES POLAND POLSKI WEHRMACHT GERMAN NAZI THIRD REICH DRUGA WOJNA SWIATOWA II WOJNA SWIATOWA OKUPACJA POLSKI WW2 NAZISCI ADOLF HITLER NA POLSKE NA POCZATKU II WOJNY SWIATOWEJ DANZIG NIEMCY PRZEMYCANIE POLSKI ENGLISH WEHRMACHTU NIEMIECKI NAZISCI III RZESZY HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . hardcover
1974085697Delacorte Press 1974. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Collectible: Very Good/Dust Jacket Included. 13x10x0. Signed. Inscribed "best" and signed "Jackie" on publication page. This is the trade edition stated first printing with $7.95 DJ price. Rare in non-limited edition. Like new hardback with jacket! Downgraded condition because of moderate storage odor. Dust jacket has a clear protective cover. Appears unread. No owners' names/labels. Text is clean unmarked. Photos available on request. Shelf: F6 Books are carefully sealed in waterproof poly and boxed to prevent damage during transit. Delacorte Press hardcover
6279<p>Randburg South Africa: Macdonald Purnell Ltd. 1994 later ptg. SIGNED half-title p. by Nelson Mandela and dated 18-7-95. 630pp. illus. hardback sm 4to: near Fine in a Fine dj in poly cover red remainder dot on fore edge; some light age darkening of top & fore edges; else nrF A very nice signature by Nelson Mandela 1918-2013 signed during his administration as South Africa’s first black president.</p> Randburg, South Africa: Macdonald Purnell Ltd. hardcover
18240009038MANCHESTER UK ROTTERDAM HAGUE NETHERLANDS HOLLAND. Good. 1824. On offer is a short but fascinating travel book of one wealthy young Englishmans journey to Rotterdam and The Hague Holland in 1824. It is a unique and rare look at the travel of English aristocracy in the first half of the 19th century the last great age of the English landed gentry. The book is 30 pages in length of which writing is on every single page. Every page is filled with excursions observations and examples of lavish living for William Money his father and his cousin as they travel first to Rotterdam and then spend over a month in The Hague living at quite a fancy hotel exploring the city itself and taking day trips to landmarks around the country. The little book also includes descriptions of lavish dinners and days being waited on driven and doted on by servants and friends. It begins in the Summer 1824: June 25 1824. To commence my narrative I will give a short account of the two last days before our embarkation to Holland. I went to bed rather late on Sunday and was very tired. I had been running about Town the whole day had my teeth filed By the abominable dentist which is one of the Miserries of human life. My head was distracted in short I was a picture of misery.; June 26. The servants awoke me rather early this morning about five OClock however I was much refreshed and went to work like one who had done nothing but I forgot to state that I went to dine at a Gentlemans house on Friday and after all when I came home I had to prepare my things for Holland. Well to go on with my story we get off from No. 9 Manchester Street Manchester Square at 6 oclock this was Saturday morning June 26th 1824 our Party consisted of three my precious Father my cousin and myself. We had a gentleman's carriage to take us about town and a hackney coach to carry our luggage to the Tower that place which has executed French of the greatest and has been destroyed with Royal blood by the hoards of unnatural rebellion. The next day they are on a sailboat going from the East Coast of England and then landing in the Netherlands the next day: June 27th. Went on deck. I was expecting to see nothing but blue skies and the watery ocean but was pleasantly astonished at seeing land all around. This was lacey land I Know it by that name because the Dutch gobble so. We soon got into the river Maas after a fine voyage. We then eat our hearty breakfast.We here took up a pistol and tacked along at a fine rate saw plenty of Tony-legged bison which they called Storks. We got to Rotterdam at 12. From the instant of arrival Money is taken aback by how clean and orderly the Dutch cities are and how kind and lovely the Dutch people are as well. The layout of the cities with the canals and bridges also is commented on quite frequently. June 28th1824. We took Breakfast at Home. we went out with with and enjoyed the town. It is an elegant clean looking place. Trees shaded the walk from the burning sun and canals divide the Principal Streets. However we saw nothing no hous as they call it but came home to dinner at 4. Here we had a bottle of Mousel for dinner we went out again so that I was very tired we then came home and had tea at Mr. Mackplats where we had another Prayer and a delightful conversation. He accompanied us home where I soon got to bed and fast asleep.; After two days in Rotterdam it is off to the Hague where Money and his father and cousin will spend the rest of their time in Holland. Drove off to the Hague with which Place we are most highly delighted. I the beauty of it. It far surpassed my places that I have seen. We walked everywhere the People the PLace and all are so clean. We came to the Hotel de Belle where we have so very nice rooms that had attendance the man who drove us here cheated as that. We were not long here before . Of the gentleman who got these rooms for Papa he took us out to Table d`ote d`hotewhere we dined . This was 4 oclock and had an excellent dinner and a bottle of vin ordinaire called Bordeau.after dinner we went to Mr. Ls house to get him to show us the Place. He showed us everything in the wood.` The `wood` is most probably the Haagse Bos a rectangular neighbourhood and forest in the Haagse Hout district of The Hague Netherlands. This was simply called Die Hout The Woods Mr. L.made a capital bargain with the man only one Golden to go to that sweet Ducking Place the old man of the Place has fishing boats to go over to England for something or other. We came back after a good bathe.We then came home and prepared for dinner and went to Table Doht d`hote and after that we came back and then went to the Wood where we had tea.; After early June there are no entries until late July. July 23 1824. We got up at seven and had breakfast. We set off at 8 in a caravan with Mr. London and Mr. Tosc. We reached Leyden at 9 very much interested.We first went to the University where we saw all of plenty Indians what from all parts of the globe. We saw there a tree which was brought from Egypt in 1573 just about the time when Leyden was besieged. It was made a present by William the first and planted there We then went to the museum and saw curious specimens of all types. Mr. London went to the Anatomy Hall to gut us to see a Head. He came back saying we could only see one which was most beautiful all the views of the Head Neck and parts of the body it was very interesting.; Money also has a deep regard for the engineering works of the day and has a special fascination for the canals and waterways of Holland. We had dinner and then went to to see the sluis the most Beautiful work I ever saw. It was begun in 1784 and finished in 1787. The whole country was inundated by the overflowing of the Bacchus of the Nile. It was like a sea but now these are houses where there was formerly nothing but water. This formed so when the sea is very boisterous there's a good deal of sand connected to the side of the gate so that it is had to clear away as it is on the sea side. The way they do it is the precipe overflows then they lift the gates all of a sudden which goes with such force that it forces the sand away.`` This is accompanied by a page-length drawing of the canal with it`s locks and steps and houses on each sides. The drawing is amateur but well done. The book is in very good shape structurally. The writing is clear and concise script done in black ink. A few pages have some smudging and one page in particular has a good bit of ink fading but which impedes legibility but does not make it impossible. The front cover of the journal states: `Short account of a holiday spent in The Hague by William Money later Rev. William in the summer of 1824 when he was 22 years old.` This is not in Money`s handwriting and was added later by an unknown person.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF REVEREND WILLIAM MONEY ENGLISH GENTLEMAN LANDED GENTRY 19TH CENTURY ROTTERDAM MANCHESTER ENGLAND UNITED KINGDOM THE HAGUE DEN HAAG DIE HOUT LEYDEN LEIDEN THE NETHERLANDS HOLLAND CANALS IN THE NETHERLANDS FLOOD CONTROL EXTRAVAGANT TRAVEL TABLE DHOTE SLUICE GATE AGE OF BRITISH NOBILITY COLONIAL ERA ENGLAND BRITANNICA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO DANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
198216070389Vantage Press USA 1982. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Fine. Hardcover. 220 pages. PUBLISHING DETAILS: Vantage Press USA 1982. First Edition. CONDITION: The book itself is in very good condition and comes in fine dust jacket. More specifically: Edges of boards have superficial wear. Dust jacket is in excellent condtion. Dust jacket is unclipped. Dust jacket is protected in clear plastic sleeve. Edges of pages are lightly browned. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Biography & Autobiography; Music. ISBN: 0533048028. ISBN/EAN: 9780533048021. Inventory No: 16070389. 9780533048021 Vantage Press hardcover