11 490 résultats
1947050964Washington D.C.: War Department 1947. 242pp index references num bw ills. Card covers. Old sticker removal mark to front surplus parts dealer stamp on title page. Being ex-surplus supply explains the excellent condition. Originally published in 1944 this copy a 1947 reprint. Reprint. Soft Cover. Very Good. 8vo. War Department Paperback
194496460Washington: War Department 1944. Very Good. small octavo. worn wrappers 242pp. b/w plates diags. index TM 9-803. Scarce Wartime Technical Manual War Department unknown
2501120477.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
19762090502113718122Not Available 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
186713091Rock Island IL: L.M. Haverstick Printer Union Job Rooms 1867. Broadside 24 x 18 inches. Old folds minor creasing a few small chips short closed tear to left edge near the "B" in "Babcock's" faint circular dampstain in center minor scattered foxing. Withal very good condition. A visually appealing and seemingly unique surviving broadside advertising a January 18 1867 lecture by Clara Barton. At the time Barton was touring with her lecture entitled "War & Incidents of Army Life" part of a popular post-Civil War series of talks she delivered across the United States. Barton spent two years touring and recounting her battlefield experiences which helped popularize her and fund her subsequent efforts to locate missing soldiers. The present lecture was delivered at Babcock's Hall in Rock Island Illinois. In addition to the bold title containing the relevant information on the lecture and the information on obtaining tickets at the bottom the middle portion of the broadside prints a quote by noted temperance lecturer John B. Gough praising Barton's lecture: "Miss Clara Barton was at my house and read Her Lecture to us and I must say I never heard anything more touching more thrilling in my life. I want all to hear her." Below this quote is a notice that although Moline and Rock Island are only a few miles apart "An Extra Train" on the famed Rock Island Railroad will be provided to transport attendees of the lecture from Moline for a ten-cent fare. Typographically the broadside is interesting for employing several sizes and types of fonts likely wooden type which provides multiple opportunities for catching the eye of the observer. This includes a rather Gothic-style font when printing the date of the lecture.<br /> <br /> Clara Barton 1821-1912 was a noted educator and humanitarian who helped distribute needed supplies to the Union Army during the Civil War and later founded the American Red Cross. Barton garnered nationwide recognition for her efforts during the war and quickly became known as the "Angel of the Battlefield." After the war Barton's lecture tour brought her in contact with other notables of the day including Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton and also Frederick Douglass who involved her in the suffrage and civil rights movements respectively. In the Fall of 1866 Barton began to lecture on her Civil War experiences in lyceum halls churches town halls and schools. Though she never felt comfortable in front of an audience wherever she spoke Barton was well received. Her contemporary biographer Percy Epler wrote that "a tear-stained multitude thronged everywhere to hear her" as she had made it her mission to show not "the glories of conquering armies but the mischief and misery they strew in their tracks; and how while they march on.some one must follow closely in their steps crouching to the earth faces bathed in tears and hands in blood. This is the side which history never shows."<br /> <br /> From 1866 through 1868 Barton delivered over 200 lectures throughout the northeast and midwest regarding her Civil War experiences. She shared platforms with other prominent figures including the aforementioned Douglass as well as Ralph Waldo Emerson William Lloyd Garrison and Mark Twain. She often earned $75 to $100 per lecture. Original broadsides advertising her lectures are exceedingly rare to say the least. We could locate just a single result in auction records of a much smaller example and OCLC reports just one institutional holding of any Barton lecture broadside again much smaller for an 1867 event in New Haven located at the Library of Congress. L.M. Haverstick, Printer, Union Job Rooms unknown
194277185Washington DC: United States War Department 1942. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Wraps. Good. Format is approximately 5.5 inches by 8.5 inches. 134 2 pages. Appendix: List of References. Index. This manual supersedes TM 9-325 May 1 1941 including C1 October 13 1941. Cover has some wear and soiling. Name rank and organization of previous owner on front cover. Page 1 bound with short right edge. This manual was published for the information and guidance of the using arms and services. In addition to a description of the 105--mm howitzer materiel M2 this manual contains technical information required for the identification use and care of the materiel. Disassembly assembly and such repairs as may be handled by using arms personnel will be undertaken only under the supervision of an officer or the chief mechanic. During the Second World War U.S. artillery regiments consisted of an HQ detachment one 155 mm artillery battalion and three 105 mm artillery battalions. Both the 155 mm and 105 mm battalions had twelve guns each divided into three batteries of four guns. The 105 mm M101A1 howitzer previously designated M2A1 was an artillery piece developed and used by the United States. It was the standard U.S. light field howitzer in World War II and saw action in both the European and Pacific theaters. Entering production in 1941 it quickly gained a reputation for accuracy and a powerful punch. The M101A1 fired 105 mm 4.1 in high explosive HE semi-fixed ammunition and had a range of 12330 yards making it suitable for supporting infantry. All of these qualities of the weapon along with its widespread production led to its adoption by many countries after the war. Its ammunition type also became the standard for many foreign countries' later models. United States, War Department paperback
1992biblio1276<p>This is copy 783 of 1000 originally printed First Editions. This is a complete sound copy but its interior text has been marked and its end-papers misused with a child's scribbles and drawings. With these clear caveat the book is priced to balance its rarity with its condition.</p><p>Photos on request.</p> H. E Howard, Inc. hardcover
1989055506<p>Lynchburg VA.: H. E. Howard 1989. 1st Edition . Hardcover. Very Good/Good. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Octavo. 210 pages. Hardcover bound in grey cloth and with a white dust jacket. The jacket shows some rubbing and wear and is soiled from handling and shows some foxing. Jacket is complete. There is a prior owner's embossed blind stamp on the front and rear flyleaves. Otherwise the book is sound and clean. Illustrated with maps and some photos. This is #571 of 1000 copies SIGNED by the author. Stated 1st Edition. <br /><br /></p> H. E. Howard hardcover
1975015108Amsterdam: Amsterdam Boek 1975 10 delen met stofomslag in goede staat complete set. Foto's kaartjes documenten afbeeldingen. Deel 1 196 pagina's; deel 2 pagina's genummerd 197 - 387; deel 3 pagina's genummerd 393 - 580; deel 4 pagina's genummerd 581 - 771; deel 5 pagina's genummerd 777 - 964; deel 6 pagina's genummerd 965 -1155; deel 7 pagina's genummerd 1161 - 1348; deel 8 pagina's genummerd 1349 - 1539; deel 9 pagina's genummerd 1545 - 1732; deel 10 pagina's genummerd 1733 - 1923. 1ste / 1st. cardboard / karton - hardcover. good / goed/good / goed. A4 formaat. Amsterdam Boek hardcover
194162511Washington DC 1941. Presumed first edition/first prinitng as a Technical Manual. Wraps. Good. No dust jacket as issued. Cover has some wear and soiling. Stamp on front cover is blacked over. 220 p. Includes: illustrations diagrams index. References. C 1 is one page. This manual supersedes TR 1305-155C March 10 1931 including C 1 January 2 1933; C 2 January 2 1934; and C 3 January 2 1936. This was updated just prior to the entry of the United States into the Second World War and as such constitutes the state of knowledge and standards of practice at the start of American participation in ground combat. This manual was published for the information and guidance of the using arms and services. It contained all the essential information of a technical character reqired by the using arms and services for the identification use and care of the particular equipment described as well as the use and care of ammunition spare parts and assessories and sighting and fire-control equipment. paperback
24676None with year although one item with 1911 postmark and others certainly from between 1913 and 1924. From England and France including the Garrick Club and Author’s Club in London and hotels in Manchester and St Cyr-sur-Mer. Macready's entry in the Oxford DNB states that he destroyed his diary and personal papers after the publication of his memoirs in 1924 and that of his father notes that he dealt with William Charles Macready's ‘copious and uninhibited diaries’ in similar fashion in 1914 - two years after the appearance of Toynbee’s edition. The present collection of eighteen items is in good condition lightly aged and folded for postage. All signed 'C F N Macready' and addressed to 'My dear Toynbee'. The text of the letters totals 35pp compising 1p 8vo; 25pp 12mo; 9pp 16mo. No dates are given but a card from the Victoria Hotel Manchester is in its envelope postmarked 6 July 1911 and addressed to ‘W. Toynbee Esq / 30. South Eaton Place / London S.W.’ In it Macready complains that he has been ‘bundled off here to stop the strikers at two hours untill sic last night’. In November of 1910 according to the Oxford DNB he had been ‘sent to command troops in support of police dealing with possible disorders arising from a miners’ strike’. The three longest and most interesting letters from 16 22 and 28 November 1924 with the letterhead of the Grand Hotel des Lecques Plage des Lecques St Cyr-sur-Mer all refer to the recent publication of his autobiography. In the first he writes that ‘The agents say it is well turned out. Personally I think the price to high for a big sale but that of course is Hutchinson’s the publisher affair.’ He was ‘rather amused at the review in Times of 14th. The writer I should say is rather more of a purely litterary sic stamp than of military habits.’ As ‘the galley proofs are destroyed’ he asks Toynbee’s advice on the charge of £14 from ‘King Hall & Arbuthnot’ ‘for the alterations you & I made apart from printers’ errors’. He complains that his hotel has been invaded by a ‘party of Americans’ and comments on his recent reading: ‘He mauls Randolph Churchill badly & legitimacy in royal & upper circles seems rather the exception than the rule!’ In the second of the three he comments on reviews and complains of printers’ errors. ‘Your praise of the work is very gratifying as from “one who knows†& you have made a friend for life of the lady who slaved at the typing who I always tell her is prejudiced.’ There is reference to a wed. ding at St Maur and ‘Letty’ and there are further complaints about Americans at the hotel. He concludes with reference to a London scandal known as the ‘Robinson Cheque Case’: ‘That Robinson case is pretty lurid - I presume the potentate is the Shah of Persia - It should make a good plot for the next Empire Review. Lady Diana Duff Cooper Manners in the role of Mrs. Robinson and Angela Forbes as Mrs. Bevan!’ He returns to the scandal in the third letter: ‘I am wondering if the “Rajah†in the Robinson case could be Rhanjitsinghi - the cricketer. It looked at first rather like the Shah. No doubt he followed the practices of “the cities of the plainâ€. Elsewhere in the letter he expresses satisfaction with Hutchinson’s advertising and the reviews he is receiving: ‘I am having all the Press notices suck in my m.ss. books’. Regarding the printing costs ‘Arbuthnot wrote me that he had received your note & was fighting H. whom he had got the better of on a former occasion for an extortionate charge.’ Regarding ‘Dougherty’s effusion yesterday’ he writes: ‘No I am quite sure I had not confused him with anyone else - I can see him before me now “screaming†& waving his arms. My difficulty is that I am away from all my notes especially the Royal Commission. proceedings on the Howth incident which I had written for.’ In an earlier letter evidently written after the 1912 publication of his father’s diaries he refers to a ‘Miss Hogarth’ who ‘mentions one slip probably the result of the handwriting in the diaries’. In another letter with a reference to the recent death of the actor Laurence Irving which dates it to 1914 Macready announces his return to London from Ireland ‘for how long - only Providence & the Cabinet know! & I doubt they do. I am fairly tired of it all & the impossibility of seeing a yard ahead. . I was quite shaken by the news of poor Laurence Irving’s death - a very great loss to the stage.’ Just before Christmas of 1913 he expresses a fear of ‘what - politically - 1914 may bring us so let us hope we may find compensation in our private lives!’ In the same letter he suggests that the Marquis Cornwallis’s correspondence ‘throws a shadow before on what may happen though I still maintain that means will be found to prick the bladder & let the noxious gas out before an explosion occurs’. A letter of 7 October 1923 begins with a reference to his autobiography: ‘Here I am having done the last paged proof & handed in the Index wh. Hutchinson the book’s publisher is screaming for. Directly I get the proof of it I will send you a wire in case you may be able to run up & have a look at it. It has been a Tough job but I think it pretty full though I had absolutely refused to check the pages again. Someone else can do that!’ He concludes with the query: ‘I wonder who the next lot of political place warmers will be There is not much change between any of them.’ On 8 March 1927 he thanks Toynbee for the gift of his book ‘Phases of the Thirties’. None with year, although one item with 1911 postmark, and others certainly from between 1913 and 1924. From England and France, unknown
179133Pasted or mounted in a modern scrapbook. Most images are 2 inches x 3 inches not including wide margins; many have light browning to margins 3 are torn in margins.<br/> <br/> Most of the images are patriotic allegories some with pro-Union sayings. Other images are political cartoons that are anti-Confederate and/or pro-Union. In addition there are several larger images of state seals from some Northern states. Most of the images do not state a printer. Some of printers stated include: Charles Magnus of New York Magee of Philadelphia S.C. Rickards of New York William Ridenburgh of New York and Reagles of New York.<br/> <br/> unknown
194561658Manila P.I.: 25th Infantry Division 1945. Folio. 9 x 13 in. 92 pp unpaginated. consisting of illustrated title introduction leaf and then 176 numbered illustrated panels 2 to a page tracking the campaign. Blue publisher’s cloth colour plate title mounted on front cover w/ 25th Division “Tropic Lightning†badge minor dustsoiling slight fraying a little thumbing still a VG bright copy. First edition of this fascinating and well-illustrated graphic novel regimental history executed by the artist while serving with the 3rd Brigade 25th Infantry Division and filled with drawings depicting the life of a doughboy fighting the Japanese across Luzon. The book covers the 35th “Cacti†27th “Wolfhounds†and 161st Infantry Regiments the famous Battle of Balete Pass offering an essential first-hand visual record while they set the combat record of 165 consecutive days. The record would not be broken until later when the 3rd Brigade of the 25th Division went 235 consecutive days in combat operations during the Vietnam War in 1966. Rutherfoord 1919-2001 was a commercial artist from Roanoke VA who served from 1942-1946 in the 25th Infantry Division and later as commercial artist in New York who also illustrated a number of titles in the popular Little Golden Books series as well as later a successful painting career in and around Roanoke. 25th Infantry Division, hardcover
1776List3149Knaresborough England 1776. Single three page letter measuring 6 ¼ x 7 ¾ inches. Normal wear; Near Fine. A letter from Nathaniel Sharpe in Knaresborough to Edmund Green a merchant in London addressed to Green at the Jamaica Coffee House. This café the first of its kind in London was established in the mid-17th century; in 17th and 18th century Britain coffee houses were popular meeting places particularly for conducting business. Sharpe writes to Green:<br /> <br /> “Your Esteem’d favour of the 22d is before me and the picture you have drawn of the situation of publick affairs are truly very alarming and have no doubt but the Representation is a very just and real one. . But to the following Fact place yourself in my situation and give me your Candid opinion Wether I am safe in letting £2200 lay any longer or whether I ought to call it in and place it out on a Security in this Country.â€<br /> <br /> He describes his investments and states that:<br /> <br /> “I have not one shilling in Trade since 1760 and in Decemr. 1762 Retir’d to this place and found myself in possession of a Happiness that I could ill brook to part with. And which I would wish to preserve. Should this sum be in no danger I can live as usual.â€<br /> <br /> The American Revolutionary War had a significant impact on the British economy; at the time Sharpe was writing although the conflict had been ongoing for some time the war itself was in its early days and uncertainty was high.<br /> <br /> Other than asking for financial advice Sharpe tells Green that Green’s “Brother Tommy had . taken a Cup of Liquor rather too freely and had been drawn into Cards†alarming their mother who had requested that Sharpe inform Green about the event; asks Green to visit her; and sends his good wishes to a mutual friend. unknown
ria9781843429852_inpPaperback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A paperback
B9781843429852Paperback / softback. New. paperback
B9781847344748Hardback. New. hardcover
2006x-1847344747Naval & Military Pr 2006. Hardcover. New. 784 pages. 9.21x6.14x0.39 inches. Naval & Military Pr hardcover
1847344747.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
4815950like new. unknown
ria9781847344748_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A hardcover
1843429853.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2003x-1843429853Naval & Military Pr 2003. Paperback. New. 784 pages. 9.21x6.22x1.73 inches. Naval & Military Pr paperback
0666205140.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback