323 résultats
0428575072.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
139029658X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1391185021.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19802110502150408500Not Available 1980. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
19822110502150408499Anti-aircraft artillery Tokyo 1982. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Anti-aircraft artillery (Tokyo) paperback
1959706274PN. New. 1959. soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
19302091502135709374Military Guidance Company 1930. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Military Guidance Company paperback
185930520New York: Redfield 1859. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. 12mo. 144 pages. Blind stamped brown cloth hardcover with title on spine. Cloth covers and spine are worn and faded. Top and bottom of spine patched. Hinges repaired. Light scattered foxing to pages. Previous owner inscription on the front blank end sheet. According to Howes this book is the best account by a participant of the 1858 campaign against the northwestern tribes. Includes two official reports of Colonel Wright in the appendix.<br /> <br /> Howes K 172; Field 837; Sabin 37944; Graff 2341. Redfield hardcover
a107206NY 1942 1st stated. Compiled by the Editors of the American Machinist. 4to. 244pp. illus. wraps.VG. . paperback
1020870982.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
193290559Fort Sill OK: United States Army. Field Artillery School. Department of Tactics & Communication 1932. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Single sheet printed on one side. Fair. The format is approximately 18 inches by 17 inches. RARE SURVIVING COPY. FRAGILE. Flimsy overlay paper. Tear in the lower right panel. Numerous pencil notations adjusting number printed on the overlay sheet. Several perforations noted. Short text notation at lower right corner. The United States Army Field Artillery School USAFAS trains Field Artillery Soldiers and Marines in tactics techniques and procedures for the employment of fire support systems in support of the maneuver commander. The school further develops leaders who are tactically and technically proficient develops and refines warfighting doctrine and designs units capable of winning on future battlefields. The school is currently located at Fort Sill Oklahoma. The mission of the Field Artillery is to destroy neutralize or suppress the enemy by cannon rocket or missile fire and to help integrate all fire support assets into combined arms operations. The U.S. Army Field Artillery School trains educates and develops agile adaptive and decisive Soldiers and leaders; engages collaborates and partners with other branches sister-services and other fires warfighting function proponents; and serves as the lead agent for the development of Field Artillery doctrine concepts and dissemination of that knowledge to the Field Artillery force in support of commanders operating across the full spectrum of conflict and in the joint inter-organizational and multinational JIM environment. The U.S. Army Field Artillery enables maneuver commanders to dominate in Unified Land Operations through effective targeting integration and delivery of fires. The vanguard sometimes abbreviated to van and also called the advance guard is the leading part of an advancing military formation. It has a number of functions including seeking out the enemy and securing ground in advance of the main force. The vanguard derives from the traditional division of a medieval army into three battles or wards; the Van the Main or Middle and the Rear. The term originated from the medieval French avant-garde i.e. "the advance guard". The vanguard would lead the line of march and would deploy first on the field of battle either in front of the other wards or to the right if they deployed in line. The origin of USAFAS can be traced back to the 1907 reorganization of the Artillery Corps and to the character of Fort Sill at that time. The 1907 reorganization created Coast and Field Artillery Branches. In the process of this reorganization the Field Artillery was deprived of its former home at Fort Monroe Virginia. Fort Sill was considered the best location for a Field Artillery school since its 15000-acre reservation allowed ample room for target practice and its great variety of terrain offered an excellent area for different types of tactical training. In addition the post had already assumed the character of the home of artillery with a large number of artillery units assigned. The first artillery school the US Army School of Fire was organized in 1911 by Captain Dan Tyler Moore. With the exception of a brief period in 1916 when school troops were used as frontier security guards during the Mexican Revolution the School has operated and expanded continuously. Hundreds of thousands of artillerymen have been trained at Fort Sill since the inception of the School. After the United States entered World War I the school reopened in 1917 with Col. William J. Snow as commandant. The Field Artillery School as it was now known added more courses. After the war school commandants began a long-range program to improve field artillery mobility gunnery and equipment. Budget cuts during the 1920s hampered their efforts but innovative directors of the Gunnery Department with support from school commandants helped modernize the field artillery in the 1930s. Maj. Carlos Brewer director of the Gunnery Department in the late 1920s and early 1930s introduced new fire direction techniques so fire support would be more responsive. Maj. Orlando Ward the next department director developed the fire direction center to centralize command and control and to facilitate massing fire. Brewer Ward and Lt. Col. H.L.C. Jones encouraged replacing horses with motor vehicles for moving field artillery guns. During World War II to best use new long-range guns and better response times the Field Artillery School championed the use of air observation to control artillery fires. The War Department approved organic field artillery air observation in 1942. The artillery air observers adjusted massed fire and performed liaison reconnaissance and other missions during the war. Following the war the school adapted to the atomic age and the Cold War. The War Department consolidated all artillery training and developments under the U.S. Army Artillery Center at Fort Sill in 1946. At that time the center included the Artillery School the Antiaircraft and Guided Missile School at Fort Bliss Texas and the Coast Artillery School at Fort Scott Calif. United States Army. Field Artillery School. Department of Tactics & Communication unknown
1798003485London: No Publisher 1798. Single sided printed broadside approximately 205mm x 250mm in size. Light crease from old fold otherwise bright and clean. An election meeting notice to nominate and return four gentlemen from each division of the company as candidates for the Court of Assistants at the ensuing General Court also noting that the annual subscription to the Company of one guinea will be collected at the meeting. The Honourable Artillery Company was established by Henry VIII in 1537 and is the oldest regiment in the British Army. ESTC T162443 showing at four locations BL Cam Guildhall and Hon. Artillery Company. First Edition. Unbound. Good. 4to. Broadside. No Publisher Paperback
885724 February 1899; on letterhead of the Chief Staff Office Woolwich. 12mo 1 p. 6 lines. Clear and complete. Fair on aged and slightly grubby paper with strip of glue from mount on blank reverse which has laid down on it a ten-line biographical newspaper cutting referring to Slade '. one of the youngest major-generals on the Staff in the Army . His most recent appointment was that of Assistant Adjutant-General at Woolwich'. He is sending 'a missed lot of Soldiers autographs. Some that you already have may be useful in exchanging for others'. 24 February 1899; on letterhead of the Chief Staff Office, Woolwich. unknown
191259207Kjøbenhavn Copenhagen 31/3 1912. 35 x 23 cm. Indsat i protokolbind. 139 maskinskrevne sider i hvilke der er indklæbet 87 manuskript-illustrationer som tegninger i sort blæk af kanoner granater lavetter måleapparater m.v. heraf er 9 gengivet i fotografi. Manuskriptet er udført af V. Erdmann Premierløjtnant af Artilleriet sandsynligvis efter en rejse i Tyskland. unknown
14201'Ch: Town P. E. I.' 22 July 1846. 1p. 8vo. In fair condition lightly aged and creased with slight discoloration and repair on reverse. Giving his address as 'Cary Tuttyt Charlotte Town Prince Edwards Island B. N. A.' With black rectangular stamp: 'RECEIVED IN 29 AUG. 1846 MILY. DEPARTMENT.' Docketted on reverse 'Does not appear to have enlisted 1839'. The letter asks for information 'Concerning my Brother George Tuttyt Who inlisted in Her Majesty Service about the year Eighteen Hundred & Thirty Nine In the horse Artillary East India Company enlisted in the County Tipperary Clonmel Iraland a boot & shoe maker by traid'. He gives a physical description: 'His hight being on or a about sic Six feet One inch his age between Twenty Six & Twenty Seven with dark eye full face drk hair and dark brown wiskers'. 'Ch: Town P. E. I.' 22 July 1846. unknown
0428440118.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1330923251.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
186223052301021st Maine Light Artillery; Union Army 1862. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. Union Army Order Book Large folio. 75 pages. Written by a fine hand 1862-1864. Also includes original typed orders from General Butler etc. Includes orders received by the unit from January 16 1862 through July 14 1864. Much of this period the battery was assigned to Louisiana Mississippi the Gulf of Mexico. <br> The battery was attached to 3rd Brigade Department of the Gulf until September 1862. It was attached to Weitzel's Reserve Brigade Department of the Gulf until January 1863. It was attached to Artillery 1st Division XIX Corps Department of the Gulf until January 1864 and the 2nd Division until April 1864. It then served at Camp Barry Defenses of Washington XXII Corps until July 1864. <br> The Battery notably served in the following engagements: Siege of Port Hudson; Battle of Fort Stevens; Third Battle of Winchester; Battle of Fisher's Hill; Battle of Cedar Creek. 1st Maine Light Artillery; Union Army hardcover
194840162United States Coast Artillery Association Washington DC 1948. 6 numbers in I vol. roy. 8vo. First Edition titles and text in red and black and numerous photographs and illustrations throughout; strongly bound in black boards red cloth back lettered in gilt ALL ORIGINAL WRAPPERS PRESERVED a very good bright clean copy. This copy was formerly in the library of the National War College and carries its stamps on titles together with Library of Congress accession and withdrawal stamps on endpapers. BOUND VOLUMES ARE EXTREMELY SCARCE. United States Coast Artillery Association, Washington DC, hardcover
1981763809PN. New. 1981. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
187925603Joliet: Joliet Republican Steam Printing House 1879. 3 3/4" x 5 1/2" in original printed wrappers blank lower forecorner chipped. Stitched. 16pp illustration of Lady Liberty at page 2. Very Good.<br /> <br /> J.C. Porter C. Tunnicliff and G.W. Horton were the honchos in this semi-social semi-military organization.<br /> Not located on OCLC or in NUC. Joliet Republican Steam Printing House unknown
1998034576Rio Piedras PR: Editorial Edil 1998. Softcover. Very Good/no dustcover. no signs of cover wear clean glossy pages clean bright and unmarked spine tight. index and appendix in rear IllustratedI ship Worldwide from Puerto Rico USA. Listing Includes Books Image . Please email me if you need to see more pictures! The orders are processed promptly carefully packaged and shipped within 1 day of purchase. PLEASE NOTE! if you need the book quickly please Purchase Priority Shipping. Media will not show updates in mail confirmation till reaches continental U.S. Editorial Edil paperback
1934285701Tradition Wilhelm Kolk Berlin 1934. Hardcover Leinen ohne Schutzumschlag mit Schuber Zustand: Keine Beschädigungen keine Eintragungen. Rücken Ecken Kanten gut. Tradition Wilhelm Kolk, Berlin, hardcover
193249303Fort Sill OK: Field Artillery School 1932. fair to good. 33 wraps fold-out charts text has darkened small tears/chips on edges of front cover. A listing of general courses officers' courses enlisted men's courses and extension courses. The description of each course includes length scope subjects and texts. Field Artillery School paperback
188235741Richmond: Carlton McCarthy and Company 1882. First edition. Hardcover. Good. 12mo. vi 224 pages. Illustrations by William Sheppard Lieutenant Second Company Richmond Howitzers A.N.V. Light green cloth hardcover with title and decorated illustration on the front cover and spine. Slight lean to the binding. Light toning and scattered foxing to the contents. Front hinge lightly cracked. Previous owner inscription on the right front flyleaf - J H Andrews Vicksburg Miss."<br /> <br /> Tall Cotton 117; Nevins I page 124 - This Confederate narrative is deserving of its reputation as "the most interesting and the most informative of all memoirs written by privates"; McCarthy served with the Richmond Howitzers; Dornbusch II 1222. Carlton McCarthy and Company hardcover