1 314 résultats
GF15415Manuscrit sur papier (16,5 X 21,5 cm) avec cachet de cire rouge signé, situé et daté : "au camp de Neuf Brisack le 31 octobre 1699" -
GF15411Manuscrit sur papier (16,5 X 22 cm) avec cachet de cire rouge signé, situé et daté : "à Longwy le 9 mai 1699" -
GF15414Manuscrit sur papier (15,5 X 19,5 cm) avec cachet de cire rouge signé, situé et daté : "à Camby le 23 octobre 1699" -
186458358Various places including Methuen Lawrence Andover Boston and Lowell Massachusetts 1864-1865. modern calf antique with original gilt-lettered label "Company Clothing" laid down on front panel. Folio. Two pages list "Price of Clothing Camp & Garrison Equipage Year 1864." Following are 204 pages one to a soldier listing name company place and date of enlistment articles of clothing issued value itemized date of clothing issue and signature of soldier and witness. In some cases date of discharge desertion or demise is also noted. A "colored" under cook is also listed along with the soldiers. hardcover
186436373Signal Hill Virginia: n.a. 1864. Letter. Good. Letter. Approximately 8" x 10." Paper is folded with contents written on two sides of the 4 pages.<br /> <br /> Written letter from Signal Hill Virginia near Petersburg December 23 1864 a couple of days before Christmas. The writer is in Camp with the 55th Regiment likely the 55th Pennsylvania Regiment and expresses his thanks for the invitation to a Ball. He states "I am sorry I cannot participate in your company but hope you will have success and enjoy yourselves. We are present encamped at Signal Hill and in good quarters duty not heavy the weather is clear but cold."<br /> <br /> A few records for William Wennel 55th Pennsylvania Regiment Company G. were found on the internet. A listing for George V. Corl Civil War Veteran is located on find a grave dot com. n.a. unknown
186434331n.p.: n/a 1864. Ledger. Fair. Folio. Manuscript. Approx. 16" x 10.25". 192 hand numbered pages. Orangish marbled paper covered boards with leather corners and spine. A paper label with the hand written title is pasted down center on the front cover. Damp stains to the title label. Blue front and rear end sheets. Pages 106-192 blank. Dried water stains persist from the rear end sheets and back pages gradually diminishing by page 160. The rear cover is slightly warped. Front joint is split upper edge. <br /> <br /> The majority of the first 105 pages contain hand written names with rank date of commission discharge cause of vacancy for the Field Staff non commissioned staff; Captains First Lieutenants Second Lieutenants and non commissioned officers of Companies A-K. Page 6 has the written name at the top of Colonel Edward F. Jones first commander of the 26th Regiment. He was Commissioned August 1861 and discharged July 28 1862 on account of disability. Dates of records range from August of 1861 to June 1st 1864 with the majority of recorded dates in 1862 and 1863. The 26th Regiment saw action in the Gulf operations and New Orleans up until 1863. The unit later moved to Virginia and participated in Sheridan's Shenandoah Campaign. The unit mustered out in Savannah Georgia 1865. n/a unknown
190530423Harrisburg: Harrisburg Publishing Co 1905. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. Octavo. 406 pages. Frontispiece. Illustrated. Fold-out maps in front and back. Brown cloth hardcover with faded gilt title on spine. Title on spine faded. Right front corner is dented. Maps and the rest of contents are in very good condition. Harrisburg Publishing Co hardcover
206471s.l.n.d. (1790) in-8, 8 pp., broché, sous couverture d'attente orange.
GF15424Manuscrit sur papier (18,5 x 29 cm) avec cachet de cire rouge signé, situé et daté : "à Montechevou au Comté de Montbéliard le 20 février 1678"
First edition, small 4to, [8], 36pp., orig. red publishers cloth, some light staining.
2002LFA-126730010Publication de 52 pages, format 215 x 300 mm, illustrée, brochée, bon état
1922299991922 Gap, Imprimerie Brun et Piallat, 1922, in 8° broché, 118 pages ; couverture défraichie.
192048301920 Paris Imprimerie R. Hermieu 1920 In-8° broché, couverture illustrée.
192353891923 Lyon - Paris B. Arnaud imp. c. 1923 In-4° demi-chagrin rouge, dos à nerfs orné, titre doré en plein, couvertures conservées. Reproductions photographiques in-texte.
1944List2436Hattiesburg: Earl M. Finch 1944. Sheet music measuring 12 x 9 inches 4 pp. Signature of a Nabuko Hayashida on front cover. Slight tears at fold some toning two small pinholes very good overall quite attractive. Very Good. In Hawaii in May 1942 a battalion of Nisei volunteers was assembled for service in World War Two despite earlier failures of efforts to recruit Japanese-Americans due to the Army’s labeling of Nisei recruits as 4-C enemy aliens. Designated as the 100th Infantry Battalion they were deployed to North Africa in June 1943 integrating with the 34th Division in active combat. Their subsequent deployment to Italy in September 1943 exposed them to intense warfare earning them the moniker of the "Purple Heart Battalion" due to their notably high casualty rate.<br /> <br /> In January 1943 the U.S. War Department officially declared the establishment of the segregated 442nd Regimental Combat Team RCT which was comprised of Nisei volunteers originating from Hawaii and the mainland. The culmination of this initiative transpired in June 1944 when the 442nd RCT merged forces with the 100th Infantry Battalion in Europe subsequently absorbing the latter into its structure. The notable achievements of Nisei soldiers in combat operations prompted the reinstatement of the draft in January 1944 specifically targeting Nisei detainees to augment the ranks of the 442nd. Over time the 442nd RCT expanded to encompass the 2nd 3rd and 100th Battalions; the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion; the 232nd Engineering Company; the 206th Army Band; Anti-Tank Company; Cannon Company; and Service Company. <br /> <br /> Offered here is a very scarce piece of sheet music entitled “Go For Broke†which was written by the Hawaiian musician Harry Hamada reflecting the slogan of the 442nd and performed by Shelby and others during the war as part of efforts to boost morale. Hamada would feature in the 1951 movie “Go For Broke†as Masami alongside several other veterans of the 442nd. This publication of “Go For Broke†is from 1944 seven years before the movie’s release. The piece is dedicated to Colonel C.W. Pence. Hamada was a Hawaiian musician who performed with a band called the Shelby Hawaiians or the Shelby Serenaders. They performed as early as 1943. The Hattiesburg Mississippi merchant Earl M. Finch who ran an Army and Navy store close to Camp Shelby befriended Hamada and other members of the 442nd and acted as a sponsor for the group and eventually published this version despite his business being a dry goods merchant house and not a publishing house. The group with the support of Finch performed throughout the country to lift morale. At some point Hamada penned this composition likely in 1944 as we find no reference to it in 1943 articles and Finch published it - Hamada’s composition would become the theme song of the 442nd and Hamada would perform at the Halloran General Hospital in New York and the Walter Reed Hospital in Washington D.C. in 1944 likely performing this composition. Another composition called “Go For Broke†exists as well and it is unclear to what degree Hamada’s work caught on among the regiment. <br /> <br /> We find two records of Finch’s published version of the composition one listed as part of an online remembrance of the 442nd by the Smithsonian Institution https://americanhistory.si.edu/explore/stories/day-remembrance-70-years-after-executive-order-9066 which appears to have been on loan from the National Japanese American Historical Society and another copy held at Stanford though not listed in OCLC. Finch’s story is also interesting and is the subject of a remembrance on a 100th Battalion History page online https://www.100thbattalion.org/history/stories/earl-finch/. We find no copies listed in OCLC. Overall a very scarce piece of Japanese-American wartime history. Earl M. Finch unknown
4382Imprimé sur les Presses "Képi Blanc", 1957. Tirage à 2500 exemplaires. 1 plaquette agrafée, in-8, 30 pp., couvertures souples illustrées, enrichie d'une carte en couleurs des combats en Algérie, en 1956. Bon état.
5117Imprimé sur les Presses "Képi Blanc", 1958. Tirage à 2500 exemplaires. 1 plaquette agrafée in-8, 39 pp., couvertures souples illustrées, bon état.
178135765Wien, Joseph von Kurzbeck, 1781. 8°. Mit einigen Holzschn.-Vignetten. 4 nn. Bll. (das letzte weiß), Mod. Brosch.
24992P., Téqui, 1916, in 12 broché, VI-66pp. ; portrait en frontispice ; couverture fanée.
2004769602004 Lyon, Editions BGA Permezel, 2004, in 8° broché, 285 pages ; couverture illustrée.
2009826462009 Les Auteurs, (2009), in 8° broché, 520 pages ; couetrure illustrée.
018193[Militaria] Jacques [de] Guérin des Arènes (1646-1722), lieutenant colonel du régiment de Vermandois, originaire de Millau. P.A.S., 23 mai 1695, 1p in-8. Certificat pour un nommé Desgrandes, capitaine au premier bataillon du régiment. Document contresigné par un autre militaire. Joli document avec cachet de cire armorié. [420]
018194[Militaria] Paul-François de Béthune (1682-1759), marquis d'Ancenis, 4e duc de Charost, brigadier et mestres de camp du régiment de cavalerie de Bretagne (futur Royal Bourgogne). P.A.S. « D'Ancenis », Paris, 30 octobre 1714, 1p in-4. Certificats de bons services pour un cavalier, Saint Maurice, ayant servi depuis 1688 dans la compagnie de Béthune, afin qu'il puisse entrer à l'hôtel des Invalides. Document contresigné avec note par Morand (non identifié) avec un cachet de cire armorié. Une note au dos indique « Philippe Gallice de St Maurice ». Beau document. [420]
174027294Nantes [s.n.] 1740 une affichette, imprimée en noir sur papier vergé ligné et illustrée en tête des "Armes Royales de France" gravées sur bois en noir + une lettrine historiée gravée sur bois en noir, format : 28,5 x 18 cm, AFFICHETTE DE RECRUTEMENT AUX ARMES ROYALES POUR LE SERVICE DE SA MAJESTÉ (LOUIS XIV) AU RÉGIMENT DE NAVARRE, DANS LA COMPAGNIE DE MONSIEUR DU BIGNON GERVIER (E. GERVIER, SEIGNEUR DU BIGNON ET DES BOUTEILLES), NANTES (1740 ENVIRON), l'affichette a une grande tache brune en partie droite mais trés claire et ne genant à aucun moment la lecture du texte, SANS NOM D'ÉDITEUR (IMPRIMERIE ROYALE PARIS)
1901129531Sydney: Angus and Robertson 1901. First Edition. Hardcover. Fair. Sydney Angus and Robertson 1901. Quarto x 64 pages with an illustration plus 8 plates but lacking the colour frontispiece called for by Dornbusch. Modern binder's cloth with the front panel of the original green wrapper printed in red mounted on the front board; text block tide-marked near the head of the spine with the plates a little stained; some discolouration and foxing heavy in places; minor signs of age and use; a decent copy of an absolute rarity. This history of these two cavalry units from their foundation through to the end of the Boer War is 'undoubtedly a regimental record but it is something more - it is an attempt to explain and to some extent combat the unreasoning prejudice which has grown up as a result of the South African campaign against the cavalry arm of the service. On this point Mr. Wilkinson says:- "It is my purpose to show not only that cavalry regiments like the New South Wales Lancers have done equal yeoman service to the Empire in the South African struggle with their comrades in the other branches of the service but that they have done infinitely more as the pioneers of the cavalry movement in Australia to enhance the value of our defence force and to shew the world of what fighting stuff our men are made"' from a review in the 'Daily Telegraph' 12 October 1901. The last 18 pages contain numerous appendices including nominal and casualty rolls. <p>Dornbusch 126; Fielding and O'Neill page 126. Angus and Robertson hardcover