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1907000841OCEAN LINER 'MOLTKE' EUROPE. Very Good. 1907. On offer is an original 1907 handwritten travel diary representing 60 handwritten pages of a trip to Europe on board the ocean liner "Moltke". Research has determined the diary was written by 18 year old John Vance Lauderdale Jr. while on a trip with his mother his Aunt Mary and a Mr. Lane. The diary was originally purchased at the John Vance Lauderdale famed surgeon Civil War veteran and author - bio notes to follow - estate and written references buying a present for Marjorie his sister make the son most certainly author. There is also a mention of him while there in Europe and he writes about going to the "Brooklyn Daily Eagle" newspaper office while in Paris which appears that our author was purchasing a "hometown" paper to catch up on all the local news. 1907 "Tuesday 28 May At 11:35 a.m. on the above date the Moltke of the H.A.P. A. G. which means Hug all pretty American girls started with her handsome passengers for Naples. We passed Bay Ridge and saw for the last time in a good while the boat house of the C.A.C. There are many pretty girls aboard and although I have not met any yet I expect to. I was much surprised to see the course we took on going out. We kept straight out of the harbor as if we were going to Atlantic Highlands. When we got almost to Sandy Hook we turned at right angles and then went due east. It was not very long before I had been all on the ship from stem to stern. I got talking with all the stewards who could speak English and had quite a confab with the Macaroni man. Our stateroom although an inside one is all to the good. Sitting in the steamer chairs is to slow for me. At about 11:00 p.m. I went to bed and slept bum. The sea was very smooth." Wednesday 29th I awoke and found that I could not take my first salt water bath until 9:30. I fooled around until then and when the time came I was on hand. Gee it was fine. Played shuffle board and met the Morrel Girls. One of the steerage tried to jump overboard but was prevented. Sea was choppy." "Tuesday 12th At 8 o' we took carriages and drove to the station where we took electric tramways to the foot of Mt. Vesuvius. Then by taking a drive of 10 minutes we landed at Cooks Funicular RR. This took us to the laboratory of the observatory. As there was nothing to see more from the top of the crater than what we could see so we did not ascend. Had a very nice lunch at the hotel and came down the mountain at 12:35. Drove to the station and took a tram for Pompeii. Did Pompeii and saw the dead bodies coated with lava. Arrived home at 7:00 Had dinner ." Rome Hotel Central Old Roma "Monday 18th In the morning Mr. O and I went up to the hall of St. Peters It was a long hot climb but well worth the trouble. We could see the Med. Sea and all of the surrounding country. After that went to the shops but did not buy anything Leave for Florence tomorrow." Venice "Thursday 21st At 10:40 we left Florence for Venice. On the way to the station Mr. Lane had a fainting spell but soon got over it. We had the hottest filthiest ride on the train I ever had in my life. It most did me up. At 7:20 we reached Venice and were conveyed to our Hotel Rome in gondolas. I think they are fine. After dinner we took a walk to St. Mark's Square heard the band play and then took a gondola for an hour. There is a beautiful moon and I had the time of my life. Gosh how I wished for a nice looking girl. I would like to spend my days here with the right one." Milan Geneva Montreux Palace Hotel "Thursday 27th At the Montreux. Took a trolley ride and left on the 1:11 boat for Geneva. Stayed at the Montreux Palace Hotel which cost 7000 francs. Had beautiful rooms. The sail up Lake Geneva was superb. Arrived at Geneva at 4:30. Had a swim in the lake and enjoyed it very much. After dinner went to vaudeville and saw many new sights to bed at 12:30. At 5:00 in the afternoon had a swim." Bern Interlaken Lucerne Munich "July 7th Went to church not getting there until it was almost out being unable to find it. At noon saw the soldiers drill in front to the police. Beat our own soldiers to pieces. After lunch wrote some letters and went to a place called Volks Gardens. A young Coney Island. Saw how the Germans spend their Sundays ." Vienna "Saturday 13th At 5:50 I was awakened and got dressed and my bag was packed at 6:30. Had breakfast and left the hotel and Vienna or Wein at 8:15. We had a long trip of 11 hours from 8:05 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Played cards and read the entire book Jerry Jr. It did not seem as long a trip as it might have for I found much to amuse myself with. We are at the Hotel Union and I am in my room waiting for 10:10 p.m. to come when I am due in the bath room. I do not care much about traveling in the foreign railroads. Had a rotten meal in the wagon Restaurant or dining car." Dresden Berlin Mayene Cologne Amsterdam "Thursday 25th We took the train for the Hagen and reached there about 3:15. As soon as we arrived Mrs. F. D. and I hiked out to Scheveninging the famous watering place. The water was quite cold but we had a fine time. The bathing houses are on wheels and while undressing one is pulled out into the ocean where he is to swim. No walking the beach. In the evening the whole dam party went and it was not much fun for us." The Hague Antwerp Brussels Paris "Tuesday 31st .arrived in the gayest city Paris of Europe about 5:13. All our luggage had to go through custom house and it detained us quite a little while. The hotel is very large and my room is on the 5 top floor 283 steps from the lift by actual count." "Monday 6th Awoke at 7:25 put on some of my clothes and have been making up my back notes. After breakfast went with ma and Aunt Mary and we went to the office of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. They are well situated on one of the main streets and they gave us a copy of yesterday's paper .hot as hell here under the roof." "Wednesday 8th In the morning I spent most of my time in the office of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle office. Read all about the fire down at Long Beach. Yesterday I met Florence Morrison again I believe she's also from Brooklyn " London "Monday 13th Went and bought father a rain coat. Then I went to London Tower again and the Tower Bridge. Crossed London Bridge on foot and went up on top of the Fire Monument. After lunch went to Whole Sales Leather store and brought a fine dress suit case. Bought Mr. Lane his presents a gold case and cigarette mouth piece." The entries suddenly stop on July 16th with them still being in London. After that one finds three pages of a handwritten poem that seems to be a collaboration of past experiences and also his present experiences on board the Moltke. It sounds like he is writing it for a girl back home. At one point in the poem he says "poor John" and he very well could mean himself. This is a great European travel diary even without the historical family significance. The cover is really not in good condition at all poor in fact but the pages are clean and tight to the binding. It measures about 4" x 5 ¾". There is also the original pencil that came with the diary. BIO NOTES: "John Vance Lauderdale was born in Sparta N.Y. in 1832. At 20 he went to work as a druggist's clerk in New York City. He pursued the occupation for several years in both New York and Cleveland. He completed his medical thesis in 1862 and from April to August 1862 he served as a contract surgeon in the U.S. Army's Western theatre. From August of 1862 until 1864 he served as a physician on the staff of Bellevue Hospital in New York City. In March of 1864 he accepted a contract position of Acting Assistant Surgeon Department of the Pacific. He received orders to Utah and served at Fort Bridger. He joined the regular army in 1866. He married Josephine Lane in 1880 and honeymooned in Europe. The Lauderdale's spent four years at Fort Sully in the Dakota Territory. The couples first a daughter was born there in 1885. Tragically she died a short time later. Their second child Marjorie Lane Lauderdale was born 1886 and the third John Vance Lauderdale Jr. was born in 1889. While assigned to Fort Ontario in Oswego NY Major Lauderdale was ordered to report to Pine Ridge Agency South Dakota to help care for the wounded from what is now known as the Battle of Wounded Knee. He retired in 1896. In 1897 the family moved into their new home on 84th street in Brooklyn New York. In 1913 his wife Josephine Lane died. John Vance Lauderdale died in 1932 the oldest retired officer in the U.S. Army. He was a man of many interests. He had an avid interest in Natural History. He collected fossils viewed comets conducted experiments in chemistry and lectured on anatomy. He was an ardent amateur photography and artist. His life from his letters and journals are the subject of two books; "The Wounded River The Civil War Letters of John Vance Lauderdale M.D." and "After Wounded Knee; Correspondence of Major and Surgeon John Vance Lauderdale While Serving with the Army Occupying the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation 1890-1891." VG.; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; Hand Written Personal Memoir Travel Europe Handwritten hand written autograph autographs signed letters document documents manuscript manuscripts writers writer author holograph personal 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 Civil War Veterans Surgeons Medicine Medical Ocean Liners Europe . hardcover
1907000738Glen Castle New York NY. Very Good. 1907. On offer is an interesting diary of the young Mrs. Floyd Paige nee Tyrell. Research suggests that they are new to marriage - Mrs. Paige notes that Floyd kills a chicken for dinner which she cooks and remarks with pride that this was only the third chicken she had ever dressed. A later notation marks there first anniversary. It also appears that this woman is surrounded by Floyd's family and she dutifully notes names throughout. Her Mother and brother Claude live not too faraway but mostly in touch with the telephone. Mrs Paige does a very good job relating succinctly her and her husband's days their visits births deaths and all those who enter their circle of life. She also relates work social activities and milestones. Here are snippets: "January 11th - a year ago today we went to keeping house" "Aunt Edna is 22 yrs old January 4th" "Joe the horse was sick" "February 14th Sport birthday one year old today" "February 16th Frank Ross married." "February 17th Pa is 54 years old today." "March 1st a mad dog scare" "swept the tenant house" "Hattie Palmer and Fayette Smith came here to be married. Father Paige married them Edna and I witnessed." "Witneys Point Fair" Binghamton Fair". Names mentioned include: Mary Windfield Florence Dowd Edward Browning Charlie Everetts Mr. Howard Inez Johnson The Happy Club Mr and Mrs Milo Lee Charles A. Palmer Ward Oliver Earle and Lily Ketchum Grandpa Lee Mr. MacDonald Mr. and Mrs Ousterhout Burt Bishop. A more than casual reading will provide a wealth of genealogical information. Overall VG.; Manuscript; 64mo - up to 3" tall; GLEN CASTLE NEW YORK GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY AMERICANA ARCHIVE NEW YORK DIARY DIARIES ECONOMICS NEW YORK SYRACUSE BINGHAMTON FARMING GLEN CASTLE LUMBER ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT . unknown
19070001084TOPEKA KANSAS KS. Good. 1907. Hardcover. On offer is a terrific original 1907 handwritten diary and journal of Susie C. Staples of Topeka Kansas. This book hand dated by the author has over 300 entries for the year. The diary is a wonderful bit of western Americana as it provides a detailed inner look at this mature young 28 y/o at writing woman's life is like in early 20th century Kansas and is also a super travel diary of an extended mid-western road trip. Susie worked for the Santa Fe Railway in Topeka Kansas apparently as a senior clerk working on foreign account records passenger records training other clerks etc. but she doesn't go into great detail. She is an ideal diarist starting with mention of that day's weather and a synopsis of her day and evening mentioning names of calls and visitors and local historians and collectors will find a wealth of local history and genealogy. For transportation she still used a horse & buggy but also used the electric car and many trains to get around. At one time there is an entry that their horse got scared by an auto & fell & hurt his knees quite badly - the vet was called a day or so later and said not to use him for 10 days. They played a lot of Flinch after dinner sewed shopped went to parties Church visited relatives constantly she sometimes quotes what was served for dinner it seems someone in her family was always taking a train somewhere she mentions illness redecorating of their home attending parades and other amusements and much much more. Here are some snippets: Wed. Jan 2 - .Terrible wreck on Railroad only 43 miles west of Topeka this A.M. at 5:00. 30 persons killed. One a colored porter was killed lived just back of us. Thurs. Jan 31st. Ground one glaze of ice everything covered. Started to drive down - so slippery horse could not stand up had to get out & walk down so was 20 min. late. Told Miss Fauble the reason. Sun. Feb 3rd. Coldest day so far this winter.Gas pressure so low had to all live in kitchen not very warm there. Cousin Ivy started a wood fire up in her room and we visited up there. She came with me to depot. I left Kansas City at 4:30 arrived home between 6 & 7. Thurs. Mar. 14th. A lovely day first time the sun has shown for over a week. Mattie & I asked to get off to go to depot to see Cousin Agnes. We saw Cousin Agnes & her three children Lewis Mac & Elinor & Cousin Gertrude it was quite a satisfaction to even see them & we had a nice little visit. Just think they go from Penn. to Cal. take all their meals on the train travel in a drawing room section. C. Gertrude is not much larger than Minnie not any better looking she is so wrinkled & freckled & red hair but very pleasant.Mama Aunty & C. Anna went to a tacky party at Mrs. Shorts to sew carpet rags.Clarence went to "Alice in Wonderland" home talent play. Sun. Apr. 21. .saw Marvin at church this a.m. with his girl the preachers daughter. We had a lovely little trip to KC. Mr. Freeman knew the conductor so we got to go out on the observation car.We took trolley ride out to "Electric Park" as we had to wait till 9:00 train out. Met Mr. F at the depot. Had quite a Sunday lesson on the train. One of the girls from the office was on the train she bo't a pack of cards & asked Marvin & I to play cards with her. Oh how it made my heart ache for her & what a lesson it taught me on firmness of character. Tues. July 23rd. Hot July day. Word was rec'd in Topeka that two vessels on the Pacific Coast had collided & lots of passengers were drowned. Cora & Sadie Shull were on one of the vessels & are afraid they are among the missing - everyone is talking about it. Later entry confirms they died. Tues. Oct. 1st - .Mattie & I got off work to go to Kansas City a whole crowd from the office went. Left Topeka at 5:30. Had a jolly time going down. At Lawrence Mattie & I got a seat together "skinned" a fellow out of it. Met Geo. Rogers right inside the depot.Geo. took Mattie & I to the Telephone Office where he works he showed us through the office till Parade came along. Priests of Pallas Parade was fine only not long enough. Floats representing different objects outlined in colored electric lights. After parade went uptown to Penny Arcade.Went to depot at 11:15 found our Topeka crowd there - got in a terrible push while waiting for our train. Left KC about 12:00 on a special of 16 coaches. Our crowd all got in one car together. Haskell Indian Band on our car. Had Jolly time. Train stopped at every station. After 4:00! when Mattie & reached home. We took a hack. Vacation snippets: Sun. June 2 Sunday on Train - The sunrise was beautiful. I was not slow in getting up this Sabbath morning. We washed & ate breakfast then had nothing to do but enjoy nature & oh the different scenery we did pass today. Irrigation ditches; sage brush snow covered mts. & Mts. covered with Pines. Adobe villages & lots of Mexicans. Passed through a tunnel just before we got to Raton. Matties first experience in a tunnel. Had two extra engines to help us up Raton Mt. Our 3 young men - Buttinski - Flirt & Comic - One got off at Raton one at Las Vegas - one at Albuquerque. Trinidad Raton & Albuq. depots are so odd - Adobe style. Arrived at Albuq. on time 7:45 & cousin Will met us.left our grips at Hotel walked around business part of city then took trolley out to the casino. Am ashamed to tell the rest. Took car back to depot - not train time so wrote letter home from Albuq. Harvey house then C. cousin Will suggested we go over to Hotel & get our grips. Thurs. June 6 - Saw Mts. covered with cactus & Yucca's in bloom Mtn Goats Mexican cowboys & Horses Herds of sheep. Rode by the Rio Grande river a long ways. Saw Texas State line when we crossed into Tx. Arrived at El Paso about 2 hrs. late went to union depot & washed changed waists then went up town & got dinner stopped at The Eastern Grill had a fine dinner 40 cents. All Chinamen waiters. Friday June 7th - We are living on "Shady Side of Easy St." now so did not get up very early. Went out to a near Cafe to breakfast then took Trolley & went over to Old Mexico. A treat we little tho't of having a few wks ago. It is such an odd place so many curios shops & the buildings & people so odd. No americans over there. We walked around & saw several noted bldgs. custom house Jail Famous Bull Ring Cockfighting Pit. Bo't some pottery & postals & sent home from Old Mexico to U.S.A. We were a little cautious about buying anything to bring back as they inspect you & if you have any mdse. make you pay duty on it. But many do bring over lots of costly things we were anxious to try it so Mattie bo't a silk shawl & I a Mexican drawn work doily for mama she pinned hers to her under-skirt & I put mine in my skirt pocket. We took trolley back just at the end of the international bridge the US Inspector got on car & looked very sharp at everyone & said "Have you bro't anything over" & we said "Pottery" so we landed on Uncle Sam's land unmolested. Covers have a shallow vertical crack and the covers are rubbed and chipped but overall G.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KANSAS TURN OF THE CENTURY SUFFRAGE WOMEN'S STUDIES GENDER STUDIES PIONEER RAILROAD RR RAILWAY TRAVEL MID WEST AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT . hardcover
19070008129PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA PA. Good. 1907. On offer is a very complete diary of a young man in the early years of the 20th Century. The diary measures 7.5 inches by 5 inches and has 365 pages. It is 100% complete. The book is in good condition and all of the pages are intact. The handwriting is legible and easy to read. The author is a young man named Christian Aitken. In the diary he also wrote his first name as Crisfield but census records list the young man as "Christian H. Aitken". The census lists his birthday as August 23 1884 noted in the diary also which made him 23 years old in 1907. Aitken was single and lived with his parents. He did not specifically mention what type of work he did however context suggests that he worked at the post office mostly night shifts and it is known from other sources that he was appointed a substitute postal clerk and then promoted a postal clerk in 1903. He wrote of when he joined the "service" learning the scales and of huge volumes of mail. Aitken writes extensively about Philadelphia. His diary is replete with the common everyday details that add colour and richness to his descriptions. They paint a vivid picture of life in the city: "Quit the office at 9 A.M. stopped at H & H with macks and had a bite to eat then came home via RAC read the paper a while went out stood 23rd & Ridge Ave awhile then went to the rink and watched the performers awhile came back to the old stand and had a talk with 'Pops Cookhill'. Came home about noon and had dinner after reading an article in the Sat. Eve Post. Bought a hat at Smiths. Stopped at Eddie's house and we went to the skating rink ." Feb 16 ". we had intended to go to William Grove Park but we didn't . went downtown via 20th St. and took subway cars and went to Buckwood Park a resort beneath Woodside Park. Came home on the L to 52nd St. to Girard to 29th St. and had supper. Then went down to the O.S. and met Bill at Boyles and we went to Strawberry Mansion and heard Welsh sing a few songs then we met the girls and came in together via 20th St. and had ice cream at Mahler's sat on the step a while and then went to work." June 23. He very often went to the then Philadelphia Athletics games and kept the scores in the back of the diary. He also played baseball fished bowled skated etc. He spent a lot of time playing pool poker board games and when he wasn't busy with those pastimes he was in the movies seeing shows or just hanging out on street corners or with his friends both male and female. On his vacation he travelled to several Pennsylvania towns and to New York City. While in NYC he visited Coney Island went to the horse races the Bowery saw the "Pennsy RR Station" under construction 5th Ave and more. He noted many of the local daily events several of which he saw first hand - fires a suicide accidents a riot an embezzler at work being stopped by the police and more. ". Big Fire - Broad and Buttonwood Sts. ." Sept 8. ". On our lunch hour Thomas and I took a stroll through the deserted streets. We were doing Commerce St. When we were suddenly confronted by a couple of cops. . they inquired who we were and where we were going. They thought we were a couple of hobos ." Oct 16. For an urban historian this is a detailed and colourful description of Philadelphia at the turn of the last century. His descriptions are detailed and offer an excellent insight into the life of a young working man at that time. He mentions a number of friends and describes the popular social life of young men and women at that time. Through his words this lively social scene comes to life.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF UNITED STATES 20TH CENTURY 1900s CHRISTIAN AITKEN; PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA DELAWARE VALLEY POSTAL SERVICE IN PHILADELPHIA IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY POSTAL CLERKS IN PHILADELPHIA PHILADELPHIA POST OFFICE IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY SOCIAL LIFE IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICA YOUNG PEOPLE IN PHILADELPHIA IN 1900S YOUNG PEOPLE CONDUCT OF LIFE IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY ENTERTAINMENT IN PHILADELPHIA IN 1900s PHILADELPHIA STRAWBERRY MANSION RECREATION IN PHILADELPHIA IN 1900s PLACES OF RECREATION IN PHILADELPHIA IN THE 1900S PHILADELPHIA ATHLETICS 1907 PHILADELPHIA ATHLETICS SEASON BASEBALL IN PHILADELPHIA IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY SOCIAL LIFE IN PENNSYLVANIA IN THE EARLY 20th CENTURY URBAN AMERICA IN THE EARLY 20th CENTURY 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
19070002223ANNAPOLIS MARYLAND MD USA US NAVAL ACADEMY. Good. 1907. On offer is a super original 1907 manuscript diary handwritten by Annapolis Maryland Naval Academy student H. A. Leaphart who wrote of his studies drills classes and daily life from January through June 6th. Casual research reveals that Midshipman Leaphart died one month later at home in Missouri. As the obituary below makes clear Leaphart's diary is a record of his formidable academic improvement in achieving 13th in his class. Please see the obituary that follows. A native of Brookfield Missouri his father C.H. Leaphart a railroad engineer at times H.A. writes a line often full entries detailing fire and steam drills sword exercise dancing math and the manner of daily life amongst the other plebes and midshipmen. The 2 days to a page 2¾ x 5¾ inch leather diary about 80% full has some marks on covers some discoloration spine cracked at front pages of book but pages are intact. Overall G. OBIT. KANSAS CITY STAR: July 5. Midshipman H. A. Leapheart who died while at his home in Brookfield Mo. was a member of the last year third class at Annapolis and had just taken the examination for promotion into the second class for the coming year. Reports of the June examinations which have just reached the department from Rear Admiral Sands superintendent of the Naval academy show that on the examination Leapheart made a notable record jumping over the heads of a number of his fellow classmen and reaching thirteenth place on the list. The reports show that Leapheart by the examination was advanced several numbers which makes for him a most creditable record considering that the class number 187 at present.; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF H. A. LEAPHART ANNAPOLIS MARYLAND NAVAL CADET NAVAL ACADEMY BROOKFIELD MISSOURI MARINE MARINER PLEBE MIDSHIPMAN NAVAL TRAINING USN UNITED STATES NAVY BRIGADE OF MIDSHIPMEN MARINE CORPS COLOR PARADE COMMISSIONING WEEK AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG PRIMARY SOURCE FIRST HAND ACCOUNT SOCIAL HISTORY PERSONAL STORIES LIVING HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPELBIOGRAPHY BIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY PERSONAL NARRATIVES . hardcover
19070001607WATERVILLE ONEIDA COUNTY NEW YORK. Good. 1907. On offer is a very interesting uniquely matched pair of original 1907 husband and wife manuscript diaries handwritten by Lillie A. Waterman nee Lillie A. Harris of Earlville New York and her husband of 9 years Warren D. Waterman of Waterville New York. Lillie is the true blue diarist in the family writing nearly every day and Warren does the best he can but sputters out in May. The diaries detail a picture of a rural farming family mostly dependant on selling butter drawing wood and dealing with the dairy cattle and calves. Lillie never fails to mention the weather her daily chores visitors sales of butter etc. and the hundreds of other things a rural wife deals with. Warren while he writes does only a slightly lesser job and it is very interesting to read side by side the same day's entries. Between the two there is a great deal of commercial and economic information of the times genealogical data and a great deal of the local events including births deaths accidents etc. relative to the Oneida Utica Waterville and Graycraft New York areas. The diaries measure approx. 6" x 4" and in one case the text block has parted the other is loose but intact. Overall G.; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF LILLIE A. WATERMAN LILLIE A. HARRIS WARREN D. WATERMAN WATERVILLE NEW YORK UPSTATE NEW YORK ONEIDA COUNTY UTICA WATERVILLE GRAYCRAFT LUMBER BUSINESS DAIRY FARM RURAL ECONOMICS RURAL COMMERCE GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT 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
19070002567MONTANA OTTUMWA IOWA SHERIDAN COUNTY DAKOTA. Very Good. 1907. On offer is an original significant historic record of late 1800s and early 1900s pioneer and western life being the original handwritten manuscript diary of a fascinating and eclectic Montana pioneer whose many job titles included lawman judge Civil War veteran teacher miner and newspaper editor Samuel Dow Bollinger 1848 - 1917. The 3½ x 6 inch 40 page book begins in 1907 though much is retrospective with annual entries through 1917. The last two entries of 1917 seem to indicate he was ill and likely died about that time. The first page or so gives history of his parents who had come from Pennsylvania writing entries covering his birth through the rest of his life and a very interesting life and one uniquely reflective of the times in which he lived. In the early 1860s he worked for a couple newspapers in Ottumwa; The Courier and The Mercury from 1866 - 1869 Bollinger and he also served with the US Army in the Dakota Territory. After the army Bollinger headed to Missouri marries his first wife and then in 1880 he moves to Montana where he joins the Odd Fellows Lodge at Virginia City. He did some freighting work for the railroad became justice of the peace at Sheridan County. He details several accounts of criminals that he encountered. Later he became an itinerant teacher at several different locations. In 1889 he founded and published a newspaper at Pueblo Colorado called "The Pueblo Democrat" - he adds that his partner W.G. Jackson who "beat him out of his interest and then let the paper die" runs for Supt. of Schools in 1890; in 1894 he is in Cripple Creek doing some mining and also working with a newspaper and publishing the "Daily Crusher"- then back to Missouri and then back to Montana in 1898 as Justice of the Peace again in 1904 at Sheridan County and the in 1913 he goes to Arkansas where it appears his life ended. Here are some snippets: Inside front cover: After I'm dead send the book to Emolyn Bowman or Mrs S.M. Hatfield Samuel Dow Bollinger Fifth Son of Simon P Bollinger and Ruth Bollinger Davis Born at Ottawa Iowa Oct 22 1848; Earliest recollection 1852 cut off sister Mary's Finger. 1852-1862 Helped father at carpentering and furniture making educated at public schools and private college in Ottawa. 1862-66 Worked at printing "Mercury" and "Currier "offices in Oltuwna. Walked to Dallas Co Iowa 125 miles and spent summer with uncle George Hills returned in fall and had first R.R. ride for Pella to Ottuma 60 miles. 1866 Drove an Ox train from Ottawa to Hamburg 1869 Worked passage on boat from New Orleans to La Grange MO than walked to Kirksville MO. 1866 Went to Hawsburg Iowa 200 miles in company with mother and sister Susan and her husband Ehias P Day worked on first issue of "Fremont Co Times" Published by Eaton Brothers. Went to Caldwell co Mo thence to Ottawa on foot. 1866-69 Served three years in US Army CO E 10th infantry at 71 Wadsworth now in N Dakota. 1870 Broke prairie with four yoke of oxen in Adams Co Missouri built frontier shop at Shars Mill and thought school at Ball Knob district 1871 Married to Mary M Vanlaningham 1872 Bought 40 arches of brush land taught school and cleared land until 78. 1881 Man killed by lighting near Sheridan found corpse in a box just as he been pecked up took him out washed and shaved him got clothes and coffin at county expense and buried him decently. 1882 Settled in Sheridan built frontier store and shop Esther came back from MO after burying a baby boy that was born during her visit of ten months. 1882 -1885 Served several terms as Justice of the Peace at Sheridan Montana disarmed John Mitchell a murderer and committed him to jail. Defied a masked mob from Laramie who came for the prisoner in the night in face of threats of personal violence turned over the man who shot Mitchell the leader of the mob eventually sent to prison. From the Great Falls Genealogical society: MITCHELL John Laurin MT shot Daniel Kane Mitchell was killed soon after he reached Sheridan MT March 12 1885. 1888 -Bad Man of the plains rode into the post office in Stuart issued warrant constables afraid Arrested him myself and committed him to Los Amias jail for 90 days broke up gang.' Overall G.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF SAMUEL DOW BOLLINGER MONTANA PIONEER LAWMAN WILD WEST VETERAN TEACHER MINER NEWSPAPER EDITOR OTTUMWA IOWA SHERIDAN COUNTY DAKOTA TERRITORY PUEBLO COLORADO THE PUEBLO DEMOCRAT MONTANA TERRITORY WESTERN LAWMEN GENEALOGY 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
19080002359ROSWELL NEW MEXICO. Good. 1908. On offer are a super group of eight 8 original early 20th Century manuscript diaries handwritten by the young Marjorie Mabie who was born in 1895 and grew up in Roswell New Mexico in the early part of the century. Her family is well noted in local Roswell history having moved from Independence Iowa and once settled in Roswell they owned a number of well-known businesses. Marjorie's father at various times had a number of responsible public positions within the local community. Miss Mabie was an enthusiastic writer the notebook style diaries are well filled save for one about 1/3rd full dated 1908 through 1913. Six of the diaries are all about her life in Roswell but one smallish diary is specific to a 1929 trip to California. Marjorie does a super job detailing her life and times in pre War New Mexico. Life as a student in a small town for this typical 'all American girl' is filled with school friends activities family and Church. Rivalries in sports between the High School and the Institute travelling about with her gaggle of girlfriends and the simple pleasures from baseball to going to the dressmaker are detailed. Here are some snippets: "Wednesday the 25th. Ironed in the morning. The tailor shop had an explosion. Luther was burned to death. Talked to Florence and Jamie on the phone in the afternoon. Went to the library in town. Got a letter. July 1 Lilia came by before nine in the buggy and I went up to office with her. Then went and took my painting lesson. Frank was up at noon. Finished my dress in the afternoon and Mila came down and covered my buttons for me it sure looks dandy the skirt is pink and the coat is pink and white striped voile with pink cuffs and collar. Friday the 10th. Had a test in sewing. Had assembly at 11:30 and practiced yells. Bill and I went to town and got my megaphone. We went to the high school and met Lilia and Holly we went to the football game. It was a good game in the score was 0-0. The Institute always beat us before and we are going up. Bill Lomax broke his collarbone but no high school boys were hurt. We went to get them some candy at Nolans. We walked up north away until Milo came along in their car and took us all up there and us girls back after." Overall G.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF MARJORIE MABIE ROSWELL NEW MEXICO GIRL NEXT DOOR WOMENS STUDIES GENDER STUDIES FEMINISM PRE SUFFRAGE BITTER LAKE CHAVES COUNTY SOUTHWEST SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES SMALL TOWN LIVING TURN OF THE CENTURY ALL AMERICAN GIRLS GIRL NEXT DOOR LAND OF ENCHANTMENT SOUTHERN AMERICANA SOUTH WESTERN AMERICAN AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG PRIMARY SOURCE FIRST HAND ACCOUNT SOCIAL HISTORY PERSONAL STORIES LIVING HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPELBIOGRAPHY BIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY PERSONAL NARRATIVES . unknown
19080008095ERIE PENNSYLVANIA. Fair. 1908. On offer is a chatty diary covering parts of 1908 1909 1910 and 1911. No one year is complete and entries often skip days or weeks. The front cover is missing and the back cover is only very loosely attached. The pages are sewn together. The righting is clear and legible. The writer lives in Erie PA an industrial manufacturing city that was a key link in the iron and steel industry on the Great Lakes. From context the writer appears to be a woman living with her husband and family. Her second entry notes the arrival of the 8 hour work day for telegraphers. The tone is chatty and entries include references to business personal and social life events: "The Erie strike has been declared settled and this is the day the old machinists were to return to work but none of them did. Dr. Burdette's class met tonight. Paul Huff has been taking treatment for increasing his speed in running a typewriter. This is Shrove Tues. Pancake social at Christ Church parish house this evening" Mar 3 1908. The entry for Saturday Nov 20th 1909 is typical of the talkative stream-of consciousness style of writing employed: "This was a fair day but not much sunshine. Didn't work this afternoon but Charlie and Lewie went back. In the afternoon I did a little varnishing work . using FW Devoe and Co's Oil Dark Oak Stain . the gasman came and read the meter .Esther went to the matinee of the Chicago Stock 'Genesee of the Hills' . Ma got a new hat today . we had cornmeal pancakes for supper . there were no turkeys on sale at the market . Dr. William H Crawford president of Allegheny College arrived from Europe this morning to straighten out the financial affairs of the College . Mr. Crawford will return to Rome in a short while to join his family who are spending the winter in that city . James Braggs was promoted from assistant baggagemaster to baggagemaster at the Erie station .the annual bazaar of Zion Church was held . mother and Mrs. Huff went to this sale and bought some german cookies ." Nov 20 1909. And so it goes. Factual event thoughts and gossip fill the pages: "The engagement of Theodore Roosevelt Jr. to Elinor Alexander of New York was announced several days ago. Mrs. Roosevelt has left for Africa with her daughter to meet her husband and return with him to the United States. ." Feb 15 1910. "Over half of the employees of the Pennsylvania Rapid Transit Co of that city have gone out on strike and several small riots occurred . " Feb 21. The entries end as abruptly as they began with an entry in July 1911: "Mrs Glancy made her usual appearance this morning. The price or cotton and cotton fabric has risen considerable of late and the reason is that a cotton trust has been originated" July 10 1911. A social historian would find this an interesting collection of facts and bits of corroborative information for life in this small Great Lakes industrial city in the years before WWI.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF ERIE PA INDUSTRIAL STRIFE IN PRE-WWI AMERICA PENNSYLVANIA ERIE COUNTY NORTH-EAST 20TH CENTURY 1900s 1910s PROGRESSIVE ERA ERIE RAILROAD STRIKE OF 1908 PENNSYLVANIA RAPID TRANSIT CO EARLY 20TH CENTURY WOMEN AND HOUSEWORK IN 1900S ECONOMY OF THE GREAT LAKES AREA IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY SOCIAL CONDITIONS IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY AMERICA ERIE COUNTY SOCIAL HISTORY 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
19080009072NATCHEZ MISSISSIPPI MI OSCEOLA ARKANSAS AK. Good. 1908. On offer is a super original diary and manuscript relic of a Mississippi man named Volney Fowler consisting of entries for the years 1908 1909 and 1916. Fowler seems to be an Surveyor working with a small company in Natchez Mississippi offering researchers and historians an interesting perspective of life in the Deep South. Throughout the diary and throughout all years of writing Fowler writes of receiving calls from many different people in town to survey various plots of land as well as reports from his boss Forest and a coworker and brother Orrick For example: April 6 1909. While at breakfast at Osceola a phone message came from Foresh for me to return home immediately to survey ____ place for Farrar. So when cars came at Lake Bruen I returned home.I did not wish to leave Osceola on Tuesday and would not have come away if Farrar had not got Mr. Ratcliffe to phone me to come to survey. In between reports of his work in Natchez Fowler writes of day-to-day occurrences and activities such as watching movies he is especially moved by Birth of a Nation by D.W. Griffith vacationing in Osceola Arkansas. As well Fowler is very interested in astrology and the diary is filled with many instances of astrological movements in the sky: Jupiter enters Leo. Mars enters Leo.; Venus enters Gemini; Venus conj. with moon in Cancer. In addition the verso and recto of the cover are filled with Fowlers writing on the stars and astrological movements in the year 1908. Precession of equinoxes has caused vernal equinox to leave Aries and become Pisces.; Mars enters Leo 13 Sept.; Mercury in Taurus Aug. 20th in Cancer.; At the end of 1909 Fowler writes of the long sickness and death of wife: Dr. Chamberlain is treating my wife for Angina Pectoris - which is inflammation of the chest.wife rested Tolerably last night. We think she is a trifle better at Sunrise.Dr. Beekman called 8 1/2 clock A.M. About 9 1/2 clock AM it began to appear that end was a matter of short time. Mrs. Baker came and was helpful and so Mr.s. Stamply. About 12 1/2 Clock Winnie began to show that she knew she was losing her best friend - Ida and children arrived after dark.Mamma his wife died at Eleven clock this night.My wifes funeral took place this evening at 4 clock. Our boys brought a lot yesterday in city cemetery. His entries for the year 1909 end after the death of his wife. The book is about 390 pages of which there is writing in 370 or so. The cover is in fair shape. The front cover is almost wholly detached. The spine and front cover show discoloration tears and signs of wear and age. The pages and writing are still in good shape. Fowlers handwriting is easy to read even when slightly faded or written in pencil. There are only a few entries in 1916 at the very beginning of the diary. They stop after the middle of the month in January. The entries for 1909 end after the death of Fowlers wife while the entries for 1908 continue throughout the year. This diary is a very interesting look into the life of a deep south surveyor living through the ups and downs of life. Excerpts of text: January 21 1908. I surveyed 2 lots for Jeter and dix for Hall-Fletcher women - all on Holden Lane - Gus Peale drove one home after dark.; August 14 1908. Race riot in Springfield Ill.; December 30 1908. Mississippi whiskey dealing stops to-night. Orrick setn map and wrote Mrs. Austin Smith. Orrick says Sleihenrock ____ him to share his office with him - but O has too good an office in ___ to quit it. Sleihenrock thinks Orrick be reelected City Engineer next Monday; January 30 1909. Harry Marks trustee ____ in default of payment by J.C. Jenkins.Spent 5 days this week surveying for Miss Johnston near Church Hill. He reported to her this morn. He found field notes in Fayette which old C. W. Babbitt failed to find. He surveyed to ____ out land he been claiming. Bt. dime tobacco Mon morn. Lasted this eve. One week less two a day.; February 8th 1909. I took my map copied for Lamar Lamberk to him and he said mine was a wonderfully good copy. Told him I charge $2.50 which he said he would collect from the Lawyer. Orrick staying out some troubles in his Clark & Miller Survey.I had a letter in my pocket then from Fulton Staling that chase was not with us.I told him I thought of writing a history of Adams Troop. J.J.L. asked me to come stay in office with Lamar tomorrow while he served as Election inspector - Told him I would.; January 1st 1909. I shall try to keep this Diary for year 1909. It has served its ___ out for 1909 - but left room for 1909 also. State-wide prohibition stopped all saloons yesterday and ____ seems in mourning.; August 14 1908. I mapped the four lots surveyed for S.L. yesterday eve. Went to his store 4 to 5 oclock ____ reported. Satisfied and paid $3.00.My cousin Rule Stamply telephoned she call her tomorrow.; May 6 1916. Birth of a Nation to be at Baker Grand to which I have a free ticket from Ladies Daughters of Confeds - Clansman by Rev. Thom Dixon - 18000 persons - 3000 persons.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF VOLNEY FOWLER NATCHEZ MISSISSIPPI OSCEOLA ARKANSAS LAND SURVEYOR CITY ENGINEER ASTROLOGY ASTROLOGICAL MOVEMENT OF THE STARS DEATH OF HIS WIFE ANGINA PECTORIS DEEP SOUTH PRE WORLD WAR 1 ERA SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT 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 MANUSCRITO PAPEL . unknown
19080002025ENGLAND UK NEW YORK CLEVELAND SCOTLAND. Good. 1908. On offer is a sensational early 20th Century manuscript travel diary notebook and scrapbook compiled and handwritten by Ian Campbell Hannah 16 December 1874 - 7 July 1944 a British academic writer and Conservative Party politician and author of such books as Christian Monasticism Eastern Asia a History The Heart of East Anglia The Story of Scotland in Stone The Sussex Coast The Berwick and Lothian Coasts. The 250 or so page diary covers the period of 1908 through 1920 and quite heavily leans to an architectural study with super descriptions of the places he visited during his travels. Adding so much more depth are letters postcards clippings and cut outs of the various places he visited making for a very over stuffed book. The book has 200 pages or so on New York Cleveland and Pennsylvania and about 64 pages cover Scotland. Interestingly tucked in is a letter from Somers Clark a noted English Egyptologist communicating about one of his writings. There is also a pen and ink drawing and some colored postcards in the book he used as illustrations. BIO NOTES: Hannah was president of University of King's College in Windsor Nova Scotia. Married the American artist Edith Brand - he was elected a Member of Parliament at the 1935 election and held that seat until he died in 1944. Overall G.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF IAN CAMPBELL HANNAH CHRISTIAN MONASTICISM EASTERN ASIA A HISTORY THE HEART OF EAST ANGLIA THE STORY OF SCOTLAND IN STONE THE SUSSEX COAST THE BERWICK AND LOTHIAN COASTS ARCHITECT ARCHITECTURE SOMERS CLARK UNIVERSITY OF KING'S COLLEGE WINDSOR NOVIA SCOTIA EDITH BRAND TRAVEL AMERICANA ENGLISHMAN IN AMERICAHANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
1908000086New York New York. Very Good. 1908. Sensational archive of six 6 diaries 1908 - 1913 in a Line A Day 5 year notebook style diary then 1914 1915 1919 1920 1923 detailing over 15 years in the the life of James Robert White; a teacher of music and choral tradition at both Columbia University and City College of New York CCNY a student taking some courses and attending lectures at Columbia and a very sociable 'man about town' who goes out nearly everyday and sometimes multiple times turing the day to catch a concert here or a show there. He is very erudite very insightful and compulsive in many of these writings. Of particular note: in the 5 year diary his entries are copious and he sometimes writes upside down to maximize the space and keep daily writings on the same page. The five year also offers up a mystery the author never answers - the diary starting in 1908 is faithfully written throughout but for some reason there is not a single word written of 1912 and no clue or hint why White would write madly hardly ever missing a day for 4 years right up until December 31st 1911 and then not another word until January 1st 1913. Otherwise White records every person he meets has lunch or dinner with a one word or line critique on the hundreds of shows he sees and concerts he attends not to mention all manner of comments on his myriad of meetings for school and social life. He has two children - boys - but never a mention of a Mrs. and it is hard to get a handle on which if any of his frequent dates are more special than the others. He does go out alot with the wives of his associates usually to artistic functions. Here are some snippets: "Am delighted to exchange alnight with Miss H. whom I consider one of my most intelligent friends. She is almost masculinely masterful in what she does." "Expected a call from Mr. Faye but he did not come. He is like many musicians unreliable and not much for working with." "Feeling fairly well used up. Did not sleep well last night. My social pleasures must be curtailed and help me in work." I could go on and on. A more detailed reading of this many hundreds of pages within this archive will I am sure reveal much more about this fascinating educated social man. The 5 year is 8vo. 1914 is 48mo and the rest in between. The 5 year is fragile with regard to the cover but interior is very fine. The others average good to VG.; Manuscript; 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 . unknown
19080001296ELMIRA NEW YORK WILLIAMSPORT PENNSYLVANIA. Very Good. 1908. On offer is a remarkable archive of thirteen 13 manuscript diaries handwritten by railroad executive George B. Ahn of Elmira New York and later Williamsport Pennsylvania. Collectors and historians of Pennsylvania and New York State railroad Americana will find a treasure trove of details in these diaries spanning forty-one years between 1908 - 1949 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1918 1920 1924 1925 1926 and 1949. The reader will see a man and his family mature before one's eyes. Most of the diaries are 80-90% full with about 4 years half full but overall George does a fantastic job relating the events of his life in specific detail except for his own age! We know from the first diary in 1908 his wife is 30 years old and then we learn they were married in 1902. It would appear since there is one child born well prior to the wedding Helen could be his second wife the first having died or been a divorce within the last ten months. Local historians and researchers will undoubtedly discover the prior events with some small effort. The books are small format diaries but George writes in tiny perfectly legible script typical of an engineer. His life breaks down into four areas: family Church politics and the Railroad. We believe P. and E. Railroad is his specific employer but he travels so many numbered trains and lines on a daily basis it is hard to be certain. Living in Elmira he often takes daily trips to Baltimore Buffalo Harrisburg Williamsport and as in the case of emergencies he would go to the far reaches of Pennsylvania as he did when the Austin Dam burst. The family is large and growing: wife Helen nee McClosky b. Jan.28.1878 married in Dec. 27th 1902 her sick mother their five kids Harold Daniel b. Feb. 3rd 1902 Georgie Bertha b. Oct. 25 1897 and baby Helen Elizabeth b. Nov.22 1907 Eloise b. Jan. 30 1913. Executive level meetings the Austin Dam disaster clean up Charlie Snyder crushed under train wheels passenger train inspections heads investigations into loss and damage claims worked on instructions for New Car Distribution Blanks and revised Loading Instructions other investigations and committees are all matters for George's attention. Then there is the Church. If George is not working or dealing with family matters he is attending Church Revival Services going to meetings for different missions appealing to 'seekers' going to lectures etc. In the 1949 diary we learn that George preaches almost exclusively most certainly long retired as he must be in his seventies by then. Lastly there is politics which George has a keen interest: he notes on a mayoralty race: "Wolfe being elected by landslide of Republican votes. Unfortunately he was backed by the base element Wolfe is a stock broker - gambler." George also gives a tremendous amount of family and area history and genealogical information noting births deaths and other local events. Online research provided this following interesting note that validates the claim further research is required to flesh out the missing years of this interesting gentleman and his family. ONLINE REFERENCE: "D. F. Ahn and wife of Williamsport spent Monday evening with Mrs. Sallie Roath in this place. Mrs. Ahn was formerly Miss Jane Billow of this place. She with her husband formerly resided in Sunbury but have moved to the above city to take charge of the orphaned children of their son Geo. B. Ahn who has been promoted to the General Superintendent's office of the P. & E. Railroad." Overall VG.; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; PENTECOSTAL TENT MEETINGS ELMIRA NEW YORK WIILIAMSPORT PENNSYLVANIA P & E RAILROAD AUSTIN DAM BREAK RELIGION EVANGELICAL EVANGELISTS REVIVAL MEETINGS REVIVALISTS TRANSPORTATION RAILROADS TRAINS RAILROADING ENGINEERS TRAIN ENGINEERS PULLMAN GENDER STUDIES SOCIAL STUDIES AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito . unknown
19080001530CINCINNATI OHIO OH. Good. 1908. On offer is an interesting very detailed archive of 18 original manuscript diaries handwritten by Cincinnati Ohio Reverend Charles G. Reade a man who is consumed by his visits with the poor the grieving the orphaned and needy. Educated prolific and meticulous he rarely misses a day right up until the end of his life. The 18 volumes are dated between 1908 and 1940 with 1915-1918 conspicuously absent and perhaps due to chaplain service in the military. Very detailed there are accounts of visits to the homes of those who've died from influenza and scarlet fever every visit records names and addresses and every restaurant visited. There are also travels recorded including Toronto and Detroit. The Reverend also records weather for every day but most importantly we learn of this pious dedicated man's every good deed every sermon and collector's and historians of the Cincinnati area is a detailed picture of Depression era and pre-World War II Ohio. It is apparent right from the early years that this man is unbelievably tireless in his devotion to the church and community. After the first years there is scarcely a day that passes in which he does not record going out into the community to lead sermons and teachings attend or preside at funerals marriages births and baptisms. When he writes "in office" or "at desk" one almost gets the feeling that there's a lot of guilt in it. Here are some snippets: January 31 1910: "Read Morning Prayer at 9. Taught 4th & 5th grades. Gave help to __ __. He has a job. Unpacked 100p. books & 100 hymnals belonging to city Mission Society. After lunch had funeral of Mrs Clara Hall at Central & 7th & Wesleyan Cemetery. She was probably murdered. Called on Kountz a patient from City Hospital at 3563 Colerain Ave. Paralyzed. Has wife &2 children." Excerpt from Tuesday October 22 1929: "President Hoover's visit to city. At desk in a.m. Wrote several letters. had burial services for Augeust Miller aged 53 died Sunday oct 20. Had been in Longview Hospital a long time." Finally on December 23 1940 Reverend Reade wrote his last entry: "Went to Dr Stewart Hagan's in taxi with Mrs Schreiber. Mr Henry G Mather took me -- taxi $15. Mr & Mrs Gentry & Robert called on us. They are going to Atlanta Ga. Gave $1 to colored clergyman. Talked to Lewis at Marietta O." Then on December 24 1940 Christmas Eve there is a single entry noting Eternal Rest and signed by his son Lewis Reade. Each book is a standard dated yearbook and were in different formats by years; the smallest format is about 3.5 by 6 inches and the largest is about 4.25 by 7 inches. Overall G. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES: One learns from one annual: "Rev. Chas. G. Reade" he was born September 18 1865 and he "took charge" of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Cincinnati in 1921. His family originated from the UK he was married to a woman named Nora who returned to England in her last years and had at least two younger brothers who were also reverends in England. He lived to the ripe old age of 75 and kept his journals faithfully right up to the day he passed away. EDITOR'S NOTE: We have an earlier group of four diaries of Reade's time in Dayton listed seperately Seller Id# 0001304.; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: CINCINNATI OHIO EPISCOPAL CHURCH LEWIS READE CHRISTIANITY CHRISTIAN OUTREACH COMMUNITY SERVICE SOCIAL STUDIES DEPRESSION ERA MIDWEST PRE WORLD WAR II WORLD WAR 2 WWII WW2 RELIGION ECCLESIASTICAL ECUMENICAL EPISCOPALIAN WORLD WAR I WWI BAPTIST EPHEMERA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY TRAVEL 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
19080011171Tiogo County New York United States. Good with no dust jacket. 1908. Softcover. On offer is a fine diary written at the turn of the 20th century in rural upstate New York. This 1908 diary belonged to Jerome Josephus Schoonover 1849-1926 a farmer in upstate New York. Specifically he was born and lived his entire life in Tiogo County New York. In 1890 Jerome married Lydia Van Norstran 1858-1951. Lydia worked as a school teacher in the Barton and Tiogo areas. It does not appear that Jerome and Lydia had any children. Schoonover was 59 years old when he wrote this diary. While his entries are primarily related to his farming business they are surprisingly long and newsy for a mans diary. His entries include information about his and Lydias social life community happenings and he keeps a very thorough financial ledger and list of contacts at the back of the diary. Some excerpts follow: Mellissa Wright dies. Williams wife. Charl to Dan Wiggins draw some ties from the to put them on the flats. To Charls and Dan draw load of stalks & load of oat straw from lower barn for me to bed with at home barn. Nice day for time of year. Sent a letter to J. P. Fragl today an answer to his Jan 5. Some cloudy this morning. Lydia took 3 doz eggs to Stonarts 22¢ trade them out. Report is John Holt went to California on 11 oclock train yesterday left a note for his wife that she could come if she wants 2. She was to Owego come back 12 1/2 the same day dont know what is the matter or the trouble with them. Charles draw manure and draw up some ties 10 for me Mar 11. Hitched fan to platform and Lydia & I went up to Dr. Post. He fix something for my eye and we stay to dinner up there. Charley helped Clarke stook oats we went down to lower garden to get some cucumbers. Pearl Colemans sick so Dr. Post went down with his mobile to see her Aug 18. Charley drew load of corn for me & DA Wiggins husk is 29 good and 6 poor. Cloudy & colder he draw 6 2 for himself and got me a load of corn fodder I pick up some chestnuts Oct 9. Lydia & her mother went to the funeral of Mrs. Dan Daily at Barton on morn train. Gibbs finish the price back of the hill. Ground was froze quite hard in morn cloudy all day and cold. Charls Tribe sold his farm to Charles Coleman 1500 dollars Art V went to Smithboro to take an inventory of Bailys store goods Nov 14. Sold Fred Martin 5 doz eggs at 86 cents Rode up to store with Dr. Post in his cutter. Really good sleighing cold wind dont feel very good today Dec 21. This simple plainly-written diary gives an excellent look at and sense of what life was like in those early years of the 20th century. They paint a picture of a hard but successful life in upstate New York in the years just before the beginning of some of the most momentous changes in life in the United States. Measuring 6.0 inches by 3.0 inches and contains 365 pages. The diary is approximately 80% complete. The cover and binding are in good condition as is the spine. The pages are in good condition and the handwriting is legible. Overall Good. ; Manuscripts; 16mo 6" - 7" tall; 365 pages; Signed by Author . paperback
19080009088CAMBRIDGE BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS MA. Good. 1908. On offer is the 1908 diary of Lucy Gregory a teenage German girl living in Cambridge Massachusetts with her mother for most of the year until she returns to Germany. Lucy lives with her mother for a year in Cambridge though the reason for why she lives in another country is never discussed. The way Lucy refers to her aunts and uncles means her Mother is probably American and has brought her daughter along with her for a year back. Lucy is a normal teenage girl in many respects. She likes skating in the winter dancing with friends visiting family and saying hello to the many different people in her neighborhood in Boston. She also goes to church every Sunday but her diary is mostly absent of any thoughts on God. She is also very independent going out on long walk by herself and she seems to be a tough and knowledgeable young woman with a strong penchant for playing chess one time even beating a woman twice her age. The diary first page states: Lucy Gregory from Aunt Alice & Uncle James Ropes. Xmas 1907. By Sparks St. Cambridge Massachusetts U.S.A. The book alternates between pen and pencil. The pen is written in neat script and very easy to read. The pencil writing can provide some challenges to readability but they are certainly not insurmountable. Most page entries contain at least a spelling error or two all understandable for a German girl writing in a second language. Lucy obviously falls in love with America with the zeal of a spritely teenage girl. The diary is all fairly standard up until the end of September when Lucy takes a trip back across the Atlantic to live in Germany again. She says goodbye to all her friends that she has met and her mothers family and boards a steamer ship with her mother back to Germany. Lucy notes that the trip is fairly rough but she does not get seasick. She plays chess often reads writes letters and reflects occasionally on the life she is leaving behind. Most notably on October 8 she has a particularly traumatic experience as she watches another boat have an accident and sink. .I felt a shock & got up & looked out of the window. It was very foggy but I could see a white thing with a light on it. Finally the light sank. I heard the cries for help. Life saving boats let down. We not very much hurt although we used the pumps all morning. 10 saved 14 drowned. Boat we ran down either Nippoma or Neptune. That evening Lucy finally returns home. She notices that father did not kiss mama and that in their home most things dirty. suggesting a state of disrepair for her parents marriage. She comments that her brother has not grown much since she last saw him. Later in the same entry she writes this is the end of our beautiful year in the United States. I will go there again to live even if I should change my mind I would have to go because I have promised I would. It is better so. In the mean while I will try to keep good as I can not to disgrace my chosen country. Lucy Gregory. Above this she writes I will never marry a German. Under this entry Lucy has come back two years later to write It is not right to bind yourself like this. I will do what seems right to me when the time comes. Lucy Gregory. The date this is written is July 12 1911. After returning to her home in Germany the entries in the diary stop. There is nothing written for the majority of October November and December. The last entry is on December 25th as Lucy speaks of her Christmas day and evening and the presents she received. She seems to be back in high spirits. She also writes under the October 4th entry a quick addendum to the last entry from the day before: I am writing this on the 31st of December 1908 in Leipzig. I have forgotten all about that Sunday. At the end of the book is a cute poem called Recipe for a Happy New Year which begins take each of the 365 days now coming to us along sun shining ways and put into it just as much as you may of cheery hard work & jolly good play. There is also two pages of Cash accounts where Lucy writes down money received from family and the money she spent on presents for others. Sample entries: Jan. 2 1908. First school day! Last month I got 11 stars. Begun The French & Indian Wars today. When I came home from school I found Aunt Harriet's trash there. She gave me a purse with a dime in it. My 26th Xmas present. Yesterday I got two copies of the St. Nicholas. We are going to have object drawing in school now. It was colder today but I only wish there was seating.; Jan. 20 1908. Went to school. As it was 18° in the morn. and I thought there was going to be skating on the rink but it was only in the morning. In the afternoon I went to the little pond & had a nice scate the best I had this year with year with a good many friends. We will write a compos. on Venice in school & I will have to read about it. I think I will draw the rest of the evening. Ag. came back from B.; July 29 1908. When I got the mail in the morning I got a card from Frances W. Williams asking me to come up there to play tennis to-morrow but I dont think I can go because Aunt Helen is going to pass just at that time to back back home. Sat in the hammock & sewed. Miss Earl came to see Aunt Edith. She is very deaf four her age. I think that's too bad because she is so young & pretty.; Sept. 6 1908: I went to the episcopal church in the morning with Aunt Edith. They act awfully queerly they sing in the middle of their long prayer. They courtesy when they sing of Jesus. They deacon look like a pitifully picked sparrow anybody could see he had just enough in aims to be our episcopal minister.They learn everything by heart & I should think they would not. Background: A native of Leipzig Germany Mrs. Henderson graduated from Radcliffe College in 1916 with honors in French and received a master's degree in comparative literature at Columbia University in 1918. She taught French at the former May School in Boston at the former Miss Johnson's Tutoring School in Cambridge and in the 1930s at the Buckingham School in Cambridge now Buckingham Browne & Nichols School.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF LUCY GREGORY FEMINISM WOMEN'S RIGHTS YOUNG WOMAN 20TH CENTURY TEENAGE GIRL PRE WORLD WAR I GERMAN-AMERICAN HAMBURG LEIPZIG BOSTON CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS SPARKS STREET LIFE ABROAD GERMANS IN AMERICA MIDDLE SCHOOL STEAMBOAT STEAMSHIP ATLANTIC VOYAGE AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
1908000959Cooperstown Otsego County New York. Very Good. 1908. Manuscript. On offer is an original handwritten diary dated 1908 written by an unidentified woman near Cooperstown New York. Our author details a real slice of rural Americana as she and her husband George their two children Ella and Walter 2nd birthday 1/3/1908 work at a grueling pace she works in the woods along side the men logging and cutting lumber yet have time for friends and family and enjoying the simpler farm life. Chickens lumber pigs chores and commerce at every turn as they buy trade and barter and create a life for themselves. Many many names of friends visitors and contact include John Burritts Charley Dowlers George Sprague Melvin Talbot Sidney Pratt Jack Telfer Glen Harrington Sheldon Ritters Dr. Campbell Roscoe Conkling Dr. Bishop Will Cronks Albert Mayne J.R. Neff auction Harry Sloan sawmills Frank Edmonds Wesley Harrington George Holdridge and many trips include Edmeston West Burlington New Berlin and Cooperstown. Super look at life a hundred years ago. G. ; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; Women Studies pre Suffrage Feminism Feminists Personal Memoir Handwritten hand written autograph autographs signed letters document documents manuscript manuscripts writers writer author holograph personal Americana ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT . unknown
19080008190RUSSIA. Fair with no dust jacket. 1908. Unbound. On offer is a wonderful description of an American girl visiting Tsarist Russia in the years before the revolution. The author of this travel journal is Olive Whipple Peabody 1886-1969 the adopted daughter of the American lawyer and philanthropist Philip G. Peabody 1857-1934. To learn about Philip & Olive please see BIO NOTES at the conclusion of the listing. In this journal Olive describes a trip she took with her adoptive father Philip in 1908. This amazingly detailed diary is exceptional with its fascinating details of all that she saw and did in St. Petersburg and Moscow. The journal opens with them in Sweden: "Dad and I returned from Kristiania this morning. Our train left Kristiania at 6 o'clock last night and we rode without any change of cars until 7: 50 this morning when we entered the large Central Station of Stockholm ." May 17They spent several days visiting historical sites in Stockholm before sailing for Finland and Russia. They arrived in St. Petersburg on May 21st: "All the Russian churches and many of the people have a sort of unclean odor. Found St. Isaac's Cathedral more impressive than the Kazan Cathedral. This Cathedral stands in the Nevsky Prospekt - the long main street of St. Petersburg. It has an arched colonnade of 136 pillars in imitation of St. Peter's at Rome". May 22"A guide took us about St. Isaac's Cathedral and showed us the valuable stones set in the gold icons until we really believed that the wealth of Russia is in the Cathedrals. I visited twice The Memorial Church built on the exact spot where Alexander II was murdered. The stones in the pavement are left just as they were The Cathedral of Peter & Paul is an oblong building 210 feet in length and 98 in breadth. All the sovereigns of Russia since the foundation of St. Petersburg lie buried in the Cathedral except Peter II. The bodies are deposited under the floor of the church and the marble tombs above marking the sites of the graves." May 22"We asked admissions to the Winter Palace and we were sent on from one man in charge to another then another & so on till at least we were shown into a little room where we sat down on benches and waited. We did not know how long we would have to wait before someone came. No one spoke English or French. We decided to go on to another Cathedral for we had only the afternoon before we left for Moscow. We went to the bazaars but really most of them were closed for some sort of a holiday. Lots of things were very expensive. Dry goods priced in the windows of the shops were terribly high. A very large good natured cat sat in the door way of every shop. Candy and fruit were very expensive. Car fares cheap - hotels poor & expensive - cab fares moderate." May 23"Passports are compulsory in Russia. Anywhere & everywhere you go a passport is demanded. At every Russian hotel it is taken by the manager then given to the police official of the hotel. The next day it is returned to us after there has been a most careful examination. Even my age is required. We have been delighted to get permission in London of the Russian consul to enter Russia! To remain in St Petersburg and permission to remain in Moscow. Then permission to leave the country. Police officials attend to all this and a charge is made each time. Often times you need a passport even to enter a public building". May 23"We left the Hotel de France at 6 o'clock yesterday and drove to the Nicholas R. R. Station. The cab was so small we could barely get in with our luggage. My suit case had to ride outside in the pouring rain. At the station only two small settees near the door to accommodate the hundreds of people who would wait for trains. I managed to get a seat on one bench. The moment anyone moved 20 people were after that seat. Dad was standing in line 40 minutes for our tickets. Our train to Moscow was the largest one I ever saw. We walked nearly a quarter of a mile before we came to our places. Dad had to ride in a men's compartment in the car behind mine. I was put in with 3 women & a child; all Russian; all very nice. Extra fees are charged on this train for speed as it goes between St. Petersburg & Moscow in 12 hours instead of 24 hours. Also there is extra charge for use of a berth. The ride was uninteresting. We passed woods and meadows pastures and little hills. We entered Moscow station at 8: 45 this morning just on time. A very ordinary station for so many travelers" May 24; "We had good rooms in the Hotel Bazar-Slav Hotel Slaviansky Bazar; room numbers 104 & 105 - with electric lights red plush furniture & hard wood floor - no carpet but one or two rugs. The first place we visited was the Kremlin about a 10 minute walk from the hotel. The life of a Russian soldier is very hard. They must be ready any moment to go where ever ordered. Their pay is only a few cents a day. At one time they were allowed to write one letter a month free of postage but when later they were obliged to pay that postage they often had to go two months without sending a letter. They look very forlorn & dirty". May 26"We passed The Great Riding School on our way to an electric car stopping place - as we had come out of the Kremlin through the Trinity Gate. This remarkable building was built in 1817 and is one of the largest rooms in the world unsupported by pillars or props of any kind. The place was well lighted and we thought it a good opportunity to look in. The room was full of automobiles and the wealthy people of the city were evidently spending the evening at an automobile show ." May 27"I have visited the Iberian Chapel several times. It is very small and the inside is bad air. The chapel which is illuminated by silver lamps with wax candles is always beset by worshippers whose donations amount to a very large sum. The Iberian Mother is often taken out to ride in a splendid coach drawn by 6 horses with priests and servants. It goes to the houses of the sick to weddings and to new houses etc. For this honor large sums are paid sometimes the fee received amounts to 100 Rs. $58.00. While it is absent from the chapel another copy is put in its place. On visiting Moscow the Emperor always dismounts and prays at this chapel before entering the Kremlin. It is generally surrounded by nuns and other beggars". May 27. Unfortunately her diary ends here. Olive has lightly affixed 17 Real Photo Post Cards RPCC to the pages; several are written on with detailed descriptions. There are also two small pressed flowers tucked between the pages; original florets from 1908. The amount of detail in this journal is outstanding. Olive is a keen observer and writes well. This is an excellent source document for a Russia historian as it paints a vivid picture of life under the Tsars. The photo post cards that she has pasted into her journal bring her descriptions to life especially the street scenes. This is an excellent picture of a world that was soon to spiral into a very dark place for many years to come. Condition: Measuring 8.25 inches by 6.25 inches this journal has 35 pages and is 100% complete. The front and back covers are missing and the spine has been broken. All of the pages are intact. The handwriting is quite legible. BIO NOTESOlive Whipple Peabody Beardwood 1886-1969 born Hamilton Essex County Massachusetts USA. She married James Beardwood 1884-1968 of Lancashire England in 1920. They had one child Jamie W. Beardwood 1930-2003. She was the adopted daughter of Philip G. Peabody. Philip G Peabody 1857-1934 was a noted American financier and philanthropist who lived in Boston in the early years of the 20th century. He was the son of a Justice of the NY Supreme Court of the United States and was himself an attorney by profession. He also was involved with several social campaigns of his day. In particular he was active in the anti-vivisectionist movement and a supporter of a major project of the nascent NAACP. Peabody had adopted Olive in 1904 when she was 18 years old. Their friendship was somewhat unusual. They had met on a local train when she was 14. He was an avid world traveller and in his lifetime he crossed the Atlantic an astounding 145 times and visited 43 different countries. He told her stories of his adventures and a friendship ensued. Over the years he gave her gifts and money took her places and showed her the world he lived in. ; Manuscripts; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; 35 pages; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF; 1900s; EARLY 20TH CENTURY; RUSSIA; OLIVE WHIPPLE PEABODY; PHILIP G PEABODY; NAACP; TSARIST RUSSIA; TSAR NICHOLAS II; ST. PETERSBURG; MOSCOW; AMERICANS IN RUSSIAN EMPIRE; AMERICAN TRAVELERS IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY; PREREVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA; TRAVEL JOURNALS; SWEDEN; STOCKHOLM; TRAIN TRIPS IN PREREVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA; RUSSIAN HOTELS IN 1900s; THE MANEZH RIDING SCHOOL; RUSSIAN CAPITAL IN 1900s; LANDMARKS OF EARLY 20TH CENTURY RUSSIA; IBERIAN MOTHER; RUSSIAN CHURCHES; REAL PHOTO POST CARDS RPCC; SLAVIANSKY BAZAR; STREET SCENES OF MOSCOW AND ST. PETERSBURGH; URBAN LIFE IN PREREVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA; SOCIAL CONDITIONS IN TSARIST RUSSIA; RUSSIAN ECONOMY IN 1900s 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; Signed by Author . unknown
19080001866MEMPHIS TENNESSEE TN. Good. 1908. On offer is a super original 1908 manuscript diary handwritten by the extremely popular and very wild Consuelo Pollard a 17 year old girl who lived in Memphis Tennessee with her parents and older brother Thomas. Census info mentions brothers Edwin and William too. No shrinking violet she writes that she was very very popular swamped with admirers and many proposals. Mrs. Pollard had a hard time keeping her teenager in line and was not a happy parent. Here are some snippets: "I ought not put this in this book but can't help it. Mamma got mad at me indeed it is nothing new and raised the ___. Wish I was dead or away off somewhere. She always picks on me anyway. I certainly wish I was a boy. Not that I want her to care for me but so as I could get out and do what I wanted to and would try and never be near so as I would be in the way. It certainly is awful to get the ___ if you do it and if you don't do it. Thurs 12 Stayed at Bonds all day had a good time. Went home to Marias and Judge blessed her out. Then she stayed all night at our house. Dana and I played Tom and Maria at Five Hundred. Fri 13Will came down. Walked home with Maria just as Judge was leaving. We hid behind a tree and let him go. Then raked up everything cooked took magazines "Home Runs" and went to the woods and had a picnic for two.' Her steady boyfriend Leslie was away often and she didn't hesitate to take advantage by going out with other boys but Leslie was not happy with that: 'Leslie came in the evening and Maria also was here. He and I started out driving and old Maria pressed in with us so we came home. Leslie and I had an awful fuss that night asked me to marry him and run off that night. I wouldn't do it so he got mad. I came in and told mamma everything he said. I certainly was blue and didn't sleep a wink that night.' On a much more frightening note her family is devastated by a house fire: 'Retired and about 4 oclock in the morning our house caught on fire. Kate jumped out the back window with her merry widow - had not another thing the cop broke the front window and woke me up.' More trouble comes to the family later in the year: a shooting incident involving the man next door her brother and a black man: 'While he was here there was a shot and I didn't notice it very much. Five minutes later one next door and it was the carpenter shooting at a negro who was stealing lumber five minutes later I heard something and Tom got the pistol and shot at a man.' Tucked in ephemera adds more depth to the 82 page 7" x 4 1/2" diary which overall is G.; Manuscript; 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF CONSUELO POLLARD MEMPHIS TENNESSEE ROMANCE DATING WILD TEENAGERS GENDER STUDIES WOMEN'S STUDIES PRE SUFFRAGE SOCIAL STUDIES EARLY 20TH CENTURY SOCIAL HISTORY AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS AMERICANA MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel . unknown
19080001842ABOARD THE USS MISSISSIPPI. Fair. 1908. On offer is a fascinating manuscript relic of one man's service in the United States Navy from pre World War I with notes to 1942 handwritten by Lieutenant Commander William G. Conrad USN Nov 1889 - 29 May 1966. The diary served the author in two ways: The 102 page diary/journal portion of this notebook details the years of 1908 through his final entry of 16 Sept. 1919. Beyond the diary Conrad lists his ships and their movements 8 August 1908 to 20 October 1942. We learn that he enlisted in the Navy on March 11 1908 and on March 19 they "arrived at Newport R.I." "8/1 received actg' app as Yeo 2 Cl"; "8/8 transferred from Newport to U.S.S. Mississippi arrived at Boston 11:30 pm." Very detailed he included arrival and departure dates and the locations were varied - including not all listed Cuba England France Panama Portugal Spain Gibraltar Azores Nicaragua Puerto Rico Honolulu Pearl Harbor Balboa Bermuda Scotland and many ports within the USA. Other entries include men lost sea dates names and causes of death. Still other entries included more historical information. Here are some snippets: "12/5/1908 - marines were transferred from all ships of the navy by an act of congress." "1/25/1909 - up anchor at 2:00 am for Havana Cuba & steamed into harbor about 11:00 am o'clock just as the Maine did 11 years ago." "11/11/1918 - word received today that the armistice with Germany was signed at 5:00 am which of course concludes the war. The receipt of the word at 1 pm was the cause of much rejoicing and blowing of whistles by all ships in the harbor." "5/17/1919 - navy seaplanes nc1 and 4 landed on Fayal Azores island on attempted cross-Atlantic flight. The nc3 which started with impedition was lost. L. Hawker British Navy started yesterday from St Johns for an aerial flight to Ireland." Note: Harry George Hawker was a pioneering aviator. In 1919 hawker with McKenzie grieve attempted to cross the Atlantic in a flight to win a 10000 pound prize offered by the "daily mail". "5/19/1919 - today at about 4:18 pm we suddenly received word that the nc3 was about 7 miles outside of the harbor of Ponti Delgada." The ships and other duties include: U.S.S. MISSISSIPPI BATTLESHIP; U.S.S. CHARLESTON; U.S.S. CHEYENNE; U.S.S. OREGON; NAVY YARD MARE ISLAND; U.S.S. BUFFALO; U.S.S. CHAUMONT; MINE SQUADRON; U.S.S. NEW YORK; U.S.S. ARKANSAS. The 4" x 6 1/2" is well worn the leather cover is ripped and the cover is loose with a page or two also loose but is complete and legible and overall Fair.; Manuscript; 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF WILLIAM G. CONRAD WORLD WAR I WWI WW1 UNITED STATES NAVY USN NAUTICAL MARINE MARINER NAVAL AMERICANA AMERICAN SERVICEMEN NAVAL WARFARE 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 . hardcover
0012286Kossuth County Iowa Anderson Swea City Grant Township. Good with no dust jacket. Softcover. On offer is the diary of a rural Iowa seamstress turned wife and mother covering the year she was 21 and the year she was 26 allowing a peek at her life as the eldest daughter of a pioneering farming family and then her equally challenging life as a doting wife and mother. This diary was kept by Nola Grace Thackrey Mayne 1888-1926. Nola was the oldest of six children born to William Salathiel Thackrey 1864-1924 and Margaret Hockett Thackeray 1869-1965. The Thackreys were pioneering farmers of Swea City Iowa. When Margaret and William settled on a farm in Grant Township north of Swea City in 1892 Margaret was one of only three women in the entire township. The Thackreys moved slightly west to the Armstrong Iowa area in 1913. Nola married Howard Dwight Mayne on Feb 18 1913 in Martin Minnesota. They had three children together at their home near Ledyard Kossuth County: Laurence Dale Mayne 1913-1977 Evelyn Fay Mayne later Rose 1919-2014 and Deloris Fern Mayne later Anderson 1926-1997. Tragically Nola died of childbirth complications at age 37 one month after Deloris birth. Deloris and Evelyn would be raised not by Howard but by Nolas sister Inez Ellen Thackrey Kelly 1891-1981 and her husband Frank Thomas Kelly 1888-1955. Howard would remarry twice. His son Wallace 1932-2008 was born during his second marriage. Nola keeps her diary from July-December 1908 February-June 1909 and then from November 1914-November 1915. In 1908-1909 Nola is 20-21 years old. She is living at home with her parents and siblings working unbelievably hard both on her tasks in the household and as a seamstress hired by endless Kossuth community members. She keeps careful track of her siblings her peers and her neighbours activities. Some excerpts: Made two waists Archer and Howard Two dresses for Deva and a mother hubbard for Sarah all but putting in sleeves and braid July 28 1908. Mama phoned to me this eve that Grandpa Thackrey was awful sick she got a card from Jessie. I talked with Inez this evening Aug 17 1908. Mr. And Mrs. And the children went away this morning. Clinton took them to the train. I churned. Moped the floor and got dinner Cora came up in after-noon to stay with me. All four went down the bus tonight us girls all sped down home Aug 20 1908. Morning work. Mixed the bread stiff. I churned. Meda and Clinton cleaned ducks. Meda and I was dressing the ducks when she got a telegram that her father was dead. We baked the bread got us a bit to eat. She and the children went down to Bells. Howard came and we went down home Papa was fishing had 14 fish. Inez walked over home we fooled around and came back got home at eleven Oct 11 1908. .I went home with Mrs. Powell on Fri eve helped her paper the front room Annie brought me home Sun morn. Art and Bell came in evening stayed for supper. Papa broke out with small pox Oct 21 1908. .Got it over to the school house to the basket supper. Howard Roscoe and Ruth got it but us girls didnt take it. Been sewing this week and helping with scrubbed the upstairs Oct 22 1908. The big day. The day we was guaranteed for small pox Haent written in this book for a long time. Have all had the small pox. But had it light Has been the same old thing the past four weeks. Had a Xmas dinner at home. We all got a Xmas present Charles Kelly came home Xmas Nothing doing now days on account of small pox Smallpox announcement written Nov 30 1908 and then further writing undated but likely January 1909. I came down to Woolstock to work for Mrs. Wallen Jan 19 1909. Went home Feb 16th for Joe and Leonas wedding the 18th on Wednesday night at eight oclock. 68 people there Feb 1909. I sailed for the sunny south. Joe Leona and Mr Mayne come as far as Algona Howard came to Bancroft. I got back to Woolstock all OK. Mr. Wallen meet me at the corner store Feb 22 1909. Nola returns to her diary following her transition to independence. We meet her again when her firstborn Laurence is about to turn one. She records many of his milestones and paints a tremendously clear picture of the challenges of raising a baby in the early 20th century. She writes of a terrible couple weeks of illness. First Howard gets sick and the doctor thinks it is appendicitis then baby Laurence gets sick and Nola keeps close track of his condition calls to the doctors treatments support received from friends and family and more. While Laurence likely had a simple virus the complexity of assessing and caring for an ill infant without the benefits of todays technology is truly remarkable. Nolas pages of record keeping really give credence to the term It takes a village to raise a child. Some excerpts: Washed in forenoon Joes came in after noon. I helped Lenona with her dress. Laurence is 1 year old today. He can walk a few steps alone Took his first steps alone last Tues He weighs 26 pounds Nov 2 1914. Baby had fever and Tues didnt get any better Wed was better until noon then begins to get worse at 6-30 his fever was 104 2/10 we phoned for Doctor Devine but couldnt get him so Howard went over to Bert Kellys and phoned for Mattison he got in about two hours . Roy come over and Emma and I set up with him all night Jan 28 1915. .Howard and I get up at 3-30 his mother is lots worse can hardly hear her breathe and breath is short and missed a breathe now and then. Keeps getting worse and passes away at 430. Howard calls his Father and Roscoe but she is gone when they get down stairs I phone to Joes just after we call the rest. We stay till about 7 oclock. Emma comes just before we leave faints away when she looks at her Mother we go back after breakfast I fix Joes coller sic on his shirt. Aunt Esther and I got to Ledyard. Howard and his father go to Bancroft with the undertaker Roscoe and Joe take the nurse to the train. I start to fix Howards Mothers dress but dont get it quite finished Mr. And Mrs John Miller Mr. And Mrs. Harry Curtis sit up tonight Sept 10 1915 though it seems Nola wrote this as a summary of events of the day after the fact. My twenty seventh Birthday Howard goes to Ledy and sent order to Sears sends for dishes for my birthday. I make Baby dresses and have sick headache Oct 18 1915. This diary is interesting for many reasons. It is an in-depth exploration of rural Iowa specifically Kossuth county as well as a treasure trove of information about the Mayne and Thackrey farming families both with deep roots in the region. They provide a detailed look at the role of a young woman raised in a farming family who then begins raising her own farming family. This diary would be of interest to specialists in womens studies Iowa pioneering farmers and early 20th century Americana. This diary measures approximately 7.5x11.5 inches. The cloth-covered notebook contains 50 pages filled on both sides for a total of 100 pages completely packed with diary entries. There are some marks on the covers and some rips on the label. The spine is in-tact though coming loose in places. Overall Good. NOTE: Nola does not record her name in the diary. Extensive research and context clues confirm authorship. ; Manuscripts; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 100 pages . paperback
0012263Atchison Kansas. Good with no dust jacket. Softcover. On offer is a fascinating ledger kept by a Kansas Civil War captain who farmed became a dry goods dealer and served in the Kansas legislature. The ledger mostly relates to his work marketing and distributing his own autobiography which is still available for sale. The ledger was kept intermittently from Sept 1908 through June 1918 by Captain William Stephen W. S. Cain 1836-1920. Cain was a white officer in the U. S. Colored Troops USCT during the Civil War. Born in the Isle of Man he settled in the USA in 1855. He lived in Wisconsin before purchasing 160 acres of land which he farmed near Atchison Kansas. Following the war Cain was elected to the Kansas legislature. In 1875 he moved into Atchison and established a dry goods business. Cain was married twice first to Anne Cowley and later to Susan Crouch. Cain and Susan had two children both of whom tragically died young CONTACT SELLER FOR FULL BIO NOTES. In his ledger Cain records his efforts to market and distribute his book titled Autobiography of Captain W. S. Cain which he published in 1908. Over the course of the 10 years he keeps this ledger it transitions into a record of all his correspondence related to both his book and his other life events. This ledger book is both a fascinating look at the world of marketing a small-scale niche book in the early 20th century and a goldmine of genealogical information given the hundreds of names Cain has noted. The ledger opens with Cains title Record of my Book Sent out from Atchison followed by a long list of names the number of copies they received and whether or not the recipient has paid. A selection of a few names on the list follow: Arthur Miss Jenny Aunt Sophia Editor Globe Editor Champion Wm S Washer Gov Crawford Judge Gill Patrick Rev F. S. White Father Girard Jessie A DeMuth Mrs. WA McKelvey The President of the US Throughout 1908 and 1909 there are many such entries. Cain writes the date and lists the people who received copies of the book. As news articles are written about Cain and his book he notes the date of publication and to whom he is sending copies of articles. He also writes of sending news articles about his other endeavors and other pieces of personal interest to his contacts the news articles he references are all available to view online. He later records more personal correspondences such as holiday cards he sent. He sometimes includes addresses of his recipients. Some excerpts from the ledger follow: Sept 30-08 1 - The Miss Cloyess 1 President Midland College 1 Addie Montague 1 Col Conovor - Ka City 1 M Blanche McPruhe 1 Editor Kansas Times-Star 1 Editor Kansas City Journal Sept 30 1908. Feb 18 wrote letter to Major General DE Sickles and sent copy of Auto as thanks for his Open Letter to Congress and the President in favour of the Volunteer Officers Retirement bill Feb 18 1911. 1 Vol autobiography to John Zimitore Rectors assistant on his leaving for Virginia Feb 20 1911. Globe news article to Bertha March 18 Letter to Bertha March 20 Letter to Lizzie M Metcalf March 21 Letter to Mrs. Fleming April 4 Tribune news article parts to Daniel Mychreest April 20 Bertha M the Miss Mychreests Short letter to Bertha April 23 Letter to Ralph 1 page April 30. March-April 1914. 2 Globes with mill sale xc to Lizzie M. Metcalf Globe with Primary election to Lizzie M. Metcalf Letter to Miss Eliza Teare on receiving news of her mothers death Aug 14 Cousin Betty Alister Globe of Oct 28 Eulogy of Cara to James Cooper Castletown Mrs. Anna Fleming Hillside Douglas Miss Elase Teare West Longham East Jurby Isle of Man Giles Metcalf Esq. Holmersest Lyndurst Road Hallasey Chesire . July-Sept 1916. This ledger provides insight into the last several years of the accomplished W. S. Cains life his books publication and his efforts to market and distribute the book his politics and the many people who were in his life in the US and overseas. It measures approx 6.0x3.5 inches and contains 80 pages. It is 75% complete. The binding is sewn and has loosened. The first page has come loose but is present. The handwriting is legible. The ledger comes in its own hard cover case made out of heavy cardboard and bound by a red leatherette binding. For a military historian this is a superb record of a very successful Civil War officer legislator and businessman. The connection to the U. S. Colored Troops and the celebrated Buffalo Soldiers makes this an exceptional connection to American history. For a genealogist this autobiography and accompanying ledger offer a gold mine of information about this singular individual who in many ways is a representative of the type of people who built the post-Civil War America. ; Manuscripts; 16mo 6" - 7" tall; 80 pages; Signed by Author . paperback
19090001445CEYLON SRI LANKA MALAYA MALAYSIA SUMATRA JAVA. Good. 1909. On offer is an original sensational October 14th 1909 through April 2nd 1910 manuscript diary detailing a six month visit to Ceylon Sri Lanka Malaya Malaysia Sumatra Java Singapore and Calcutta India. Of great significance are detailed reports on twenty-nine tea rubber and sugar plantations handwritten by the author Alfred William Lafone b. 1853 wherein he writes on 68 pp of the 85 pp folio notebook. The first sixteen pages consist of a businesslike diary of the trip starting at Charing Cross Station London on 14 October 1909 and ending with Lafone's return 'home' on 2 April 1910 to be 'met by Father' i.e. the one-time Conservative MP for Bermondsey Alfred Lafone 1821-1911 of Hanworth Park Hounslow. It would appear that the younger Lafone has been sent out to report on plantations with a view to the purchase of one by his father. He writes on May 25th 1910: 'Handed cable from home by Huttenbacks "If Title Good labour sufficient 500 yearly 1000 if required on good properties."' Lafone records his travels from place to place by boat train motor car and on horseback. He notes down the names of fellow travellers for example on 14 November 1909: 'Mr & Mrs Tate of Tate and Lyle also on board. Also Douglas Osborne tin miner who put me down for the Club. Davie Bishop of Singapore Davison who stopped at E & Ott with me. Josselyn.' He swims plays tennis and golf at the course of the Grand Hotel Newra Elya Nuwara Eliya and at Penang. At a tobacco factory at Paya Djamboe he sees 'the Chinese stapling & sorting the leaf'. The references to India and Singapore are brief and the main body of the item is devoted to the plantations. Each of the thirty estates has its own entry the whole covering forty-nine pages. Those visited are as follows. In Ceylon: Troy Estate Ceylon Proprietary Co.; Sunnycroft Sunnygama Tea & Rubber Cos.; Kiribatgalla; Ambadeniya; Edinborough sic Tea Estate; Culloden Rubber Estate; R. P. K. Kalubara district. In Malaya: Caledonia Penang Sugar Co.; Prye rubber sugar coconut; Batukawan; Straits Bertams; Jebong Perak; Linggi Plantations Bukit Nanas Estate; Sungei Buloh; Ledbury Co. Estate Sione; Batu Caves; Consolidated Malay; Lallang Estate; Mallacca Estates. In Sumatra: Simpang Sumatra Rubber Estate; Mr. Pinckneys Estate private rubber only; Lang Kat Sumatra Rubber Co.; Deli Sumatra Laut Tador; Tandjong Kassau. In Malaya again: United Serdang; United Langkat Tobacco Co.; Late British Deli & Langkat; Sealing Rubber Estates Tebbi Tingi. In Java: Tjiseroe Estate. In India: Bokel Estate tea. With each entry Lafone notes the proprietor of the estate its manager and location as well as salient facts such as altitude acreage drainage nature and price of labour rainfall altitude tapping. Each entry has a final paragraph summing up his view. Of the Late British Deli & Langkat: 'Placing an Englishman in charge when all the assistants were Dutch was a mistake'. Of the Batu Kawan: 'The policy to follow on this Estate is to either plant cocoa nuts only This is a safe or sound investment. The alternative is to reconstruct the factory & utilise say 2000 acres for cane & the rest for cocoanuts but no rubber the following added in pencil To put it briefly this is a wretched estate - signed A. W. Lafone 23/11/09'. Following an account with brief chronology and statistics of the way in which on the Bokel Tea Estate India the 'old tea is being abandoned & new tea being put out at rate of about 25 acres per acre': 'The mistake in the past has been to take everything out of the garden & put nothing into it. There should be at least 10% renewals or additional clearances every year'. The entry for the Linggi Plantations contains a diagram headed '1/4 of tree' showing the process of tapping. The last three pages carry names and addresses. A few entries in another hand; perhaps Lafone's son 32 x 20 cm. 36 lines to the page. Text clear and complete. Internally tight and sound on lightly spotted and aged paper. Worn marbled boards and enpapers with loss and splitting to red leather spine. Overall ; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: RUBBER PLANTATIONS EARLY HISTORY OF RUBBER TEA PLANTATIONS FARMING ASIA SUB CONTINENT ALFRED LAFONE TRAVEL HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY TRAVEL 20TH CENTURY antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito Papel Ceylon Sri Lanka Malaya Malaysia Sumatra Java Singapore Calcutta India . hardcover
19090001737SAN RAFAEL SAN FRANCISCO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA 1909. On offer is a charming 72 page manuscript relic of early 20th Century northern California school memories being the handwritten journal of the young Robert Wormser 1900 - 1971 a student at the San Rafael Grammar School who detailed many of his school activities trips and some personal travels in this 1909 - 1912 notebook who adds more depth and charm including a number of black and white photos. The index Robert provides includes chapters: Public Schools and Business; Diary for 1909 and Thought Book for 1910; My Birthday Party; Notes on Our Tahoe trip; Snow!!; The Last Term and The Candy Sale. The 7.5 x 9 inch book save for some general ageing rubbing and bumps to the cover and some yellowing to the pages is otherwise G. BIO NOTES: Robert Wormser: Born in San Francisco California USA on 14 Sep 1900 to Samuel Isaac Wormser and Blanche Wertheimer. He passed away on 1971 in Pasadena California USA. Nominated to the Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table Hall of Fame by Bob Wakefield Nominee's History; School: Santa Barbara High School Sports Coached: Tennis Years Coached: 1938-1955; Outstanding Achievements or Honors. Research indicates that Robert Wormser was the only child of one of the co-founders of S&W Fine Foods in San Francisco and conceivably did not have to work a day in his life. However after graduating from Lowell HS in SF he completed a BA at Harvard in 1922 enrolled as a student teacher at Santa Barbara State Teachers College in 1924 became a faculty member there in 1926 and served four years as a junior supervisor in the campus training school. He then completed work for an MA in Education at Stanford in 1932. After six months in Europe he came to SB and taught English and dramatics at SB Junior High School before transferring to SBHS in 1938. In his first year at the Home of the Dons Wormser assisted the boys' tennis program as Tom Kruger won a CIF Southern Section Singles Championship. Beginning in 1939 Wormser was head coach and achieved CIF SS Team Championships in 1939 1941 and 1942. He was briefly out of coaching during World War II. He was already 41 years old when the war began but he served briefly as Assistant Field Director for the American Red Cross. Then as he reported to the Harvard University Alumni Office ".when my request for overseas service was denied I decided to return to my work at the high school. I find this work as enjoyable and satisfying as on the day I began to teach." In 1947 the SBHS boys' tennis program produced a CIF SS Doubles Championship by juniors Stan Green and Jim Herd who defeated a South Pasadena 11th grade duo in the finals. The same four players met again in the finals in 1948 with South Pasadena prevailing. Wormser retired from teaching and coaching in 1955 citing health reasons and moved to Pasadena where for the next several years he gave "free tennis lessons to the youth of Pasadena." For the next decade or more he was in medical facilities. He died in 1971. . Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Manuscript. unknown
19090007000SAN DIEGO CALIFORNIA. Good. 1909. On offer is a super group of four 4 original manuscript diaries with entries dated 1909 - 1927 handwritten by a recent British immigrant to San Diego California. While the first three books are lesser and sporadically written they along with the full 4th book covering 1918 - 1927 make for an excellent detailed account of life San Diego in the early 20th Century. From references to community happenings such as a new post office opening to prices for various goods and services to one of the many earth tremors that afflict this area it offers a social historian a valuable window into the city's early life. Chock full of details of the writer's daily life casual research suggests that the writer is John Shippam who along with some family members emigrated from England in 1904 or 1905. This is supported by entries that refer to 'Cecil' his brother and 'Delia' his sister who accompanied him to The United States. There is also a reference to sending pictures back to England. Death records in San Diego CA record the burial of John E. Shippam born 1851 and deceased 1927 Included in the 1914 diary is a typed note to "Mr. Shippam". Three diaries are by North British Mercantile Insurance Company of the type printed for use by their sales people. The 4th diary is a generic diary with blank pages. The 1909 diary has only a few entries. The longest is a cash account entry detailing the seeding and planting of potatoes and beans. The diary measures 5 1/2 in by 3 in. It is in very good condition. It contains only 3 or 4 entries - some in a form of shorthand. The 1913 diary contains many more entries. Most revolve around daily work - farming in some cases and general labour in others. His June 1st entry possibly situates his brother: Cecil and I walk to San Miquel. Total of 8 miles . June 1 1914. Sold Cockerels as fryers June 3 2014. P 1914planted 4 rows of Kentucky Wonder beans . June 4. Mending fences at June 5 1914. An interesting entry is Aug 7th where he notes . Posted photos to England Aug 7 1914 A curious entry describes an altercation with police: Myself and Delia taken to the Detective's office by Detective Burwell. Delia snatched from me in the room taking me unawares into another room and cross-questioned most illegally and cruelly room being locked by a little mite of an apology for a 'woman' unfit for any other post . All because of complaint that our children draw a handcart Oct 1st 1914. The 1914 diary is about 50% completed. Entries continue around farming and general labour with entries also noting other pertinent events - Paid County Tax 2nd instalment $6.30 Mar 12 1914 It is in this volume we first encounter Jane Shippam who research shows is John Shippam's wife. Jane at Farnhams local dentist to have cast of palate taken Teeth to be made for $14.50 Apr 10 Included in the diary are 21 clipping from death notices in the local paper. They are variously dated in the early 1920's. Many of these people emigrated from the United Kingdom and once could surmise that they were known to each other. The 4th diary is 100% complete. It spans the years 1918 until 1927. The pages are bland and entries are dated as they are made. The book measures 4 1/2 in by 3 in and is in reasonable condition all pages are intact. Although densely packed with entries there is not necessarily an entry for each day. Much more detail about day-to-day life is included Delia took car out for first time. She toured the neighbourhood running 4 miles. I was in car with her. She managed well June 26 1921 This morning took our goat Goldie up to Mr. Fevros buck and paid $1.00 leaving her there. Took her away - no effect . Goldie crying so took her up to Fevros again - she mated Sept 26 - Oct 3 1921 Jane and Delia visited Dr. Wilship in consultation of Jane's illness. Diagnosis - neuritis. Bottle of and advice to keep quiet Mar 22 1922 New directory for 1923 just out. Gives estimated population of San Diego as 116876 being 8 124 short of a quarter million Aug 30 1923 A couple of minutes before 11pm was awakened by quite a heavy lurch of the house by earthquake tremor Sept 29 1924 ; Manuscript; 32mo - over 4" - 5" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF JOHN ELLIS SHIPPAM SAN DIEGO CALIFORNIA SOUTHWESTERN USA WEST COAST BRITISH IMMIGRANTS WHO SETTLED IN SAN DIEGO ENGLISH IMMIGRANTS WWI WW1 WORLD WAR ONE ERA 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