1 575 résultats
1898List319Massachusetts 1898. The 2nd Massachusetts Volunteers mustered into service in May 1898 and within a month saw significant action in Cuba at the Battle of El Caney. They were one of three volunteer units from Massachusetts to see action on the Santiago Campaign. The regiment was inexperienced - 55% were untrained recruits. The lack of experience combined with their rifles giving off a very visible black smoke led to a heavy casualties in the Battle of El Caney. After an encampment near Santiago de Cuba in which a large number of the soldiers became ill with disease - estimates are as high as 65% - the regiment returned home in August. Historians have noted that soldier demographics changed considerably from the Civil War to the Spanish American war as the smaller number of troops and the lack of a draft led to a more enthusiastic army with higher morale. <br /> <br /> The photographs in this group are interesting as a typological grouping of images of untrained soldiers and also for their historical value as most contain identifications to versos. The highlight of the group is forty-four uniformly mounted portraits of soldiers nearly all identified measuring 3 ¾ x 2 ½ inches each. Other photographs include a large portrait of Captain Frederick E. Pierce with the blindstamp of Goldsmith Studio Springfield Massachusetts and a 3 ¼ x 3 ¼ inch square card of Capt. Pierce in Camp Turner. Also included are two slightly larger photographs on similar mounts. <br /> <br /> Overall an interesting group. Good condition overall with assorted chips and wear. unknown books
18872733781887. unbound. Excellent group of four signed cards each measuring approximately 2 x 3.5 inches circa 1887 by orators who distinguished themselves as opponents of slavery during the War Between the States including George William Curtis 1824 - 1892 who in 1862 delivered his "Doctrine of Liberty" address in support of the Emancipation Proclamation; Lyman Trumbull 1813 - 1896 a U.S. Senator who co-authored the 13th Amendment forever outlawing slavery; Robert Green Ingersoll 1833 - 1899 aka "The Great Agnostic" who delivered fiery speeches as his father did condemning slavery as a filthy sin; and Edward Everett Hale 1822 - 1909 a Unitarian Minister who toured the New England States speaking in hundreds of venues disavowing "the evil institution." All items are boldly signed and in fine condition.<br/><br/> unknown books
193726237Valencia: CNT 1937. 49 tabloid issues ca.48cm with publication seqence as follows: Año II Nos. 219 224-225 227-228 233-234 241-243 245 327-329 331-332 334-340 342 347-349 351-352 356 358-363 365-378. Printed offset on newsprint ca.8pp per issue; illus. Issues show light overall wear and toning creases and small tears with underlining and marginalia in red and blue colored-pencil to most issues; overall Very Good. Substantial run of this Spanish Civil War newspaper the official organ of the anarcho-syndicalist group Confederación Nacional del Trabajo. Published in Valencia between 1936-1939 the paper provided daily coverage of the Republican struggle with articles by Jesus Muro Felix Paredes Enrique Lopez Alarcon Gaston Leval and Juan Lopez et al. Illustrated with political cartoons and caricatures throughout. Large runs extremely uncommon in the trade; OCLC shows just 5 American institutions holding any issues. [CNT] unknown books
193850549New York: Medical Bureau and North American Committee to Aid Spanish Democracy 1938. 12mo. Staple-bound pamphlet; printed paper wrappers; 13pp. Slight foxing and toning to wrappers; pencil annotation to front cover; text complete and sound - Very Good. Statement of support by the American Scottish Rite Freemasons for the Nye Resolution calling for a lifting of the embargo against Republican Spain. Signed in print at end of text by John H. Cowles Grand Commander; Walter Reed Secretary General; TJ. Wakeman Secretary and others. Uncommon. Medical Bureau and North American Committee to Aid Spanish Democracy unknown books
1916WRCLIT79120Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin 1916. xix33444pp. Large thick octavo. Gilt decorated boards gilt leather spine label fore and bottom edges untrimmed. Photographs plates and illustrations. A few stray marks to boards four patches of surface wear to lower joint ink name on endsheet trace of foxing to edges; a very good copy. First edition limited issue. One of 550 copies printed on large untrimmed handmade paper. Introduction by A. Piatt Andrew. Includes a roster of the earliest waves of members to serve photos of and commentary on members who have distinguished themselves and chapters contributed by some of their number including Hemingway's friend painter Waldo Pierce. The precursor to the much enlarged three volume work of 1920. Houghton Mifflin hardcover books
1881229921New York Charles Scribner's Sons 1881. 1881. 8vo. 3 page preface. Illustrated with 8 maps including one fold-out. One page preface by M.F. Force. Original blue cloth stamped in gilt on the spine with stamped in gilt and blind with an imprint of a rifle and sword. Very good. 204 pages 4 pages of publisher's advertisements. No dust jacket. No signatures or bookplates. Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1881. hardcover books
195180667NY: Scribner 1951. First edition first prnt. Signed by Jones on the title page. Lightly bumped upper board corners and a tiny soil scuff on the bottom edge; the dustjacket has two small chips on the spine topedge minimal wear at the spine bottom edge and touched corners and beginning toning on the flap edges. Tight bright and clean copy in Very Good condition in a Very Good dustjacket with an archival cover. Jones' first novel. . Signed by Author. First Edition. Hardcovers. Near Fine/Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Scribner Hardcover books
1951L0505861 pages. Octavo 8 1/2" x 6" bound in original publisher's black cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Inscribed by the author. First printing with 'A' on copyright page first issue jacket with authors photo on rear panel rather than reviews found on later issue jackets.<br /><br />Jones' first book basis for the 1953 film starring Montgomery Clift Burt Lancaster and Frank Sinatra.<br /><br />From Here to Eternity is the debut novel of American author James Jones published by Scribner's in 1951. It is loosely based on Jones' experiences in the pre-World War II Hawaiian Division's 27th Infantry and the unit in which he served Company E "The Boxing Company". Fellow company member Hal Gould said that while the novel was based on the company including some depictions of actual persons the characters are fictional and both the harsh conditions and described events are inventions. From Here to Eternity won the National Book Award and was named one of the 100 Best Novels of the 20th century by the Modern Library Board. There were three screen adaptations.<br /><br />Condition:<br /><br />Inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper. A stamp on the front free endpaper reading "Book No" with the number 1035 in holograph but this is the trade edition not the "Presentation Edition". Jacket lightly edge worn; small tears to cloth at head of spine; book and jacket very good. Charles Scribner's Sons books
192025660New York: D. Appleton & Company 1920. First edition. Cloth. Good. 8vo. 298 pp. Scarce first printing with 1 printed at bottom of rear page of text. Map endpapers. a brief history of a small part of the Three Hundred & Seventh and its role in World War I. Photo frontis. With quite a bit of rubbing and wear to spine area. Binding is lightly shaken but still holding together well. An uncommon volume in the first edition. D. Appleton & Company unknown books
185755n.p.: SMC 197-. 1 inch diameter pin mild scuffing; stylized hand giving peace sign. FTAF stands for "F#ck The Air Force. SMC unknown books
197549303Madison WI 1975. 1st Printing. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Faint horizontal fold line faint discoloration along vertical edges otherwise VG. Broadside printed in black on purple paper. With a center illustration satirical in nature of US soldiers with screws through the center of each and FUCK THE ARMY in large letters across the top. Jane Fonda's and Donald Sutherland's names bracket the center graphic. 17" x 10-7/8" <br/><br/>The FTA Show or FTA Tour or Free The Army tour a play on the common troop expression "Fuck The Army" which in turn was a play on the army slogan "Fun Travel and Adventure" was a 1971 anti-Vietnam War road show for GIs designed as a response to Bob Hope's patriotic and pro-war USO tour. The idea was first conceived by Howard Levy an ex-US Army doctor who had just been released from 26 months in Fort Leavenworth military prison for refusing orders to train Green Beret medics on their way to the Vietnam War. Levy convinced actress Jane Fonda who recruited a number of actors entertainers musicians and others including the actors Donald Sutherland Peter Boyle Garry Goodrow and Michael Alaimo comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory and soul and R&B singer Swamp Dogg Jerry Williams Jr. Alan Myerson of San Francisco improv comedy group The Committee agreed to direct while cartoonist and author Jules Feiffer and playwrights Barbara Garson and Herb Gardner wrote songs and skits for the show. Fred Gardner the originator of the antiwar GI Coffeehouse movement became the Tour's "stage manager and liaison to the coffeehouse staffs.' At various times other actors writers musicians comedians and entertainers were involved. The United States Servicemen's Fund USSF with Dr. Levy as one of its principle organizers became the official sponsor of the tour. The anti-Vietnam War USSF promoted free speech within the US military funded and supported independent GI newspapers and coffeehouses and worked to defend the legal rights of GIs. Sponsorship was later taken over by a group called the Entertainment Industry for Peace & Justice EIPJ." Wiki <br /> <br />Research indicates this broadside advertises a 1975 filming of the an FTA performance. See the Wisconsin State Journal Madison WI April 15 1975. unknown books
000012Washington D.C. Government Ptg Office 1941. Brown wrappers. Minor soiling. Rear cover rubbed. Name stamped on front cover. Profusely illustrated with diagrams and figures. Washington, D.C. Government Ptg Office (1941). unknown books
1916WRCLIT74523London: Printed Under the Authority of His Majesty's Stationary Office 1916. Three volumes. 2202pp; iv642pp. and iv891pp. Folio. Sewn self-wrappers. Slightly dusty but very good or better. First editions published as CD.7961 CD.8108 and CD 8235 presented to Parliament July and December 1915 and May 1916. Printed Under the Authority of His Majesty's Stationary Office unknown books
5233U.S. General. Head of all US Forces during the Vietnam War. Great content. Headed: "Gen. William Westmoreland - Commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam - CNN Interview." In part: "We had in fact replaced the French in that regard -- and we had advisers down to battalion level within the Vietnamese military structure. The problem at that time was not an invasion of the area by the North Vietnamese but it was the erosion of the effectiveness of government brought about by the so-called "VC" -- the Viet Cong. It was not open warfare . At the outset the President made the statement that he would not geographically broaden the war and that meant that military actions were confined to the territory of South Vietnam. The enemy was not operating under such restraints.That gave the enemy a sanctuary. We were winning on the battlefield but whether we were winning strategically is another matter." Signed in black ink " W. Westmoreland". Great content and in excellent condition. unknown books
1995120047Fullerton CA: Society of Hispanic Historical and Ancestral Research 1995. Two volumes8.5x11 inches very good in wraps. Vol. I: 106p. Vol. II: vi 232p. Articles on numerous genealogical topics including many on Marranos. Society of Hispanic Historical and Ancestral Research unknown books
1865WRCAM54371Vicksburg Ms 1865. 4pp. on a small bifolium. Slight chips at upper right corner two slits at gutter margin for intended binding. Faint foxing at edges. About very good. A brief report on the courts-martial of two officers in the 58th Colored Infantry in Vicksburg two months after the surrender of the Confederacy. Col. Simon M. Preston the commanding officer of the regiment was convicted of several charges relating to a false muster roll and intentionally reporting another officer as absent with leave; he was cashiered. Lieut. W.B. Brinkerhoff was found not guilty of drunkenness on duty and joining an expedition without authority. Not located in OCLC. unknown books
199825219Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1998. Hardcover. 080782450X . First printing. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. . University of North Carolina Press hardcover books
1895289761Washington NY: Government Printing Office Julius Bien & Co. Litho 1895. The general index for the Atlas and its many plates. Minor soiling chips and tears to the paper covers. Measuring about 48 x 40 cm folded. With descriptive title present. 30 pp. Government Printing Office | Julius Bien & Co. Litho unknown books
1922498701922. Naval War College. General Index to International Law Situations Topics and Discussions. Volumes I to XX 1901-1920. Washington: Government Printing Office 1922. 247 pp. Ex-library. Gilt lettered cloth some shelfwear. Label on front cover stamp to rear free endpaper. Internally clean. $5. unknown books
196326031London: Heinemann 1963. First Edition. Illustrated. 1 vols. 8vo. Green morocco spine over marbled boards t.e.g. a fine copy. First Edition. Illustrated. 1 vols. 8vo. Inscribed on flyleaf "For Dora Struart-French / from / Charles Drage / 17/viii/67". Heinemann unknown books
1865260978Montpelier: Walton's Steam Press 1865. pamphlet. good. 73 pages. 8vo original beige printed wrappers; spine ends worn scattered foxing mostly to margins several pages folded in bottom right corner margins wrappers and left margins of first two pages dampstained. Montpelier: Walton's Steam Press 1865.<br/><br/> Walton's Steam Press unknown books
18620000618<p>Charlestown Virginia: Head Quarters Banks' Division Charlestown March 5 1862. First edition. Folio 13.5" x 10" letterpress broadside printed on thin paper in black ink. Accompanied by a manuscript version of the text single sheet 2 pages which includes corrections as reflected in the published version almost certainly contemporary. Corona & Shetler/ West Virginia Imprints 805 citing this copy. </p><p>Broadside with old folds edge wear tears & a couple of old tissue repairs on the verso. Manuscript folded & foxed.<br /></p><p>General Nathaniel P. Banks via Assistant Adjutant General & Major of Volunteers R. Morris Copeland condemns the actions of troops for "<b><i>depredations on property disturbance of peaceful families and the most reprehensible infringement upon the rights of citizens"</i></b> and warns of the consequences:<br /></p><p><b><i>"To countenance excuse or tolerate such crimes is to impair and destroy the discipline of the army and injure the holy cause that we have left our homes to sustain. The citizens who are wronged suffer least from the injuries inflicted upon them. The curse returns upon the army which thus abuses its power and for that reason as well as others they must be suppressed. Men who commit such flagrant acts will meet the punishment such acts deserve and for the worst the punishment is DEATH." </i></b><br /></p><p>Major Robert Morris Copeland was dishonorably discharged from the army later in 1862.<br /></p><br /> Head Quarters, Banks’ Division, Charlestown books
148392First Edition. hardcover. liii 214pp. 12mo orig. cloth; spine worn and repaired edges of corners worn light foxing to some margins. Washington: GPO 1864.<br/><br/> unknown books
1862WRCAM54585Washington D.C.: War Department Adjutant General's Office 1862. Three volumes with over 300 individual imprints. 12mo. Uniformly bound in contemporary three- quarter roan and marbled boards gilt leather labels. Wear to leather and edges boards somewhat rubbed front hinges tender. Contemporary ownership inscriptions and binder's tickets on front endpapers of second and third volumes; later bookplate on front pastedown of first volume. Light toning in places otherwise internally clean. Very good. A uniformly-bound set of General Orders issued by the Adjutant General's Office of the War Department in Washington D.C. previously owned by Brig. Gen. John Pope Cook. The orders cover 1861 and 1862 and comprise a nearly complete run of orders for the Union Army during the first two years of the Civil War. Undoubtedly the most significant General Order in this collection is a preliminary printing of the Emancipation Proclamation. <br> <br> A handful of the orders are signed in ink by the various adjutant generals. The Emancipation Proclamation bound in the third volume is as follows: <br> <br> GENERAL ORDERS No. 139. THE FOLLOWING PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT IS PUBLISHED FOR THE INFORMATION AND GOVERNMENT OF THE ARMY AND ALL CONCERNED: BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA A PROCLAMATION caption title. Washington D.C.: War Department Adjutant General's Office ca. September 24 1862. 3pp. This work is one of the earliest printings of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation issued to regimental commanders in the field during the Civil War in the week after President Lincoln's official manuscript version was finished. Here the third paragraph rings out with Lincoln's timeless words: "That on the first day of January in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty- three all persons held as slaves within any State or designated area of a State the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then thenceforward and forever free." <br> <br> Following the Seven Days Battle and Gen. McClellan's retreat from the Peninsula at the end of June 1862 President Lincoln realized that there would be no early end to the war and found himself "as inconsolable as it was possible for a human to be and yet live." Anxious for news from the army and needing to escape the constant interruptions at the White House he frequently visited the telegraph office in the War Department building to await dispatches. It was during one such visit early in July that he asked the chief of the telegraph staff Maj. Thomas Thompson Eckert for some paper to "write something special" and began the first draft of the Emancipation Proclamation completing it in a few weeks. <br> <br> Lincoln had long hoped to resolve the slavery issue through a congressional act of emancipation compensating slave owners for their loss of "property" but that approach was roundly rejected by representatives from the border states leaving the President who had decided upon the necessity of emancipation with a presidential proclamation as the only option. The extraordinary document he conceived would announce the liberation on January 1 1863 of all slaves in those states still in rebellion against the Union and promised compensation to slave owners in those states that returned to the fold before that time if they adopted "immediate or gradual abolishment of slavery." This proclamation would be followed by a final proclamation issued on the 1st of January identifying those states still in rebellion and confirming the liberation of all slaves therein. <br> <br> On Tuesday July 22 Lincoln presented his draft to the Cabinet telling them that he had resolved firmly upon the course of action it specified and asking them not for advice but suggestions. The only observation he had not anticipated came from Secretary of State Seward who proposed that it might be best to wait for a military victory before issuing the Proclamation as it could otherwise seem like "the last measure of an exhausted government." Immediately recognizing the wisdom of the suggestion Lincoln held back. On September 17 after an anxious wait of nearly two months he received the victory he needed at the bloody Battle of Antietam. Completing his final draft Lincoln presented it to his cabinet for refinement on September 22. Following the meeting Seward took the amended draft with him to the State Department where a formal manuscript copy was made then signed by Lincoln and Seward. <br> <br> The first edition of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation Eberstadt #1 a small three-page circular intended for distribution within the government and to the local press was likely printed on September 22. At the time that Charles Eberstadt published his study of the Proclamation 1950 he was able to locate only one copy which he himself owned and as nearly as we have been able to determine no other copies have come to light since then. <br> <br> Eberstadt #2 is a supposed second edition no copy of which Charles Eberstadt was able to locate whose existence he inferred from the standard State Department practice of printing a folio edition consisting solely of the text of the proclamation followed by another printing consisting of the text of a letter of transmittal from the Secretary of State as well as the text of the proclamation. While there may be a copy of Eberstadt #2 in the National Archives as he speculated it is not recorded in their online catalogue nor have we been able to find a copy in any other online catalogue including OCLC the Library of Congress and the Abraham Lincoln Library. <br> <br> Eberstadt's third printing of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation is without a doubt the earliest obtainable printing. It consists of Secretary of State Seward's one-page letter of transmittal addressed "To the Diplomatic and Consular Officers of the United States in foreign countries" and the text of the proclamation. Eberstadt located a total of only five copies in institutions at the Library of Congress the National Archives Yale the Clements Library and Brown. OCLC does not record any additional copies nor is it recorded in Monaghan. This firm sold a copy several years ago. <br> <br> The present copy of GENERAL ORDERS No. 139 is Eberstadt's fourth printing of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation dated in print on September 24. Charles Eberstadt surmises that this field order printing could have been accomplished as late as September 29 or 30 and produced in as many as 15000 copies. It is however rather uncommon in the market and this is the first copy of this printing of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation offered by this firm. <br> <br> "From the first days of the Civil War slaves had acted to secure their own liberty. The Emancipation Proclamation confirmed their insistence that the war for the Union must become a war for freedom. It added moral force to the Union cause and strengthened the Union both militarily and politically. As a milestone along the road to slavery's final destruction the Emancipation Proclamation has assumed a place among the great documents of human freedom" - National Archives. "The proclamation has been called by responsible persons one of the three great documents of world history ranking with Magna Carta and the Declaration of Independence" - Eberstadt. <br> <br> Besides including about 300 orders on all manner of Union military activity at the outset of the Civil War the present collection also contains the 1861 printing of REGULATIONS FOR THE UNIFORM AND DRESS FOR THE ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES. Set out in GENERAL ORDERS No. 6 this twenty-four-page printing of the Army dress regulations was the first to set out uniform requirements for the Union during the conflict. The first sentence of the first section requires officers to "wear a frock coat of dark blue cloth." Thus the Blue and the Gray begins. <br> <br> This set was collected and bound by John Pope Cook who began the Civil War as a colonel in command of the 7th Illinois Volunteer Regiment. He was promoted to brigadier general after his troops played a key role in the Union victory at Fort Donelson early in 1862. After his promotion he was transferred to a command in the Department of Iowa and Dakota Territory where he remained until early 1863 conducting campaigns against the Sioux from his base in Sioux City Iowa. These orders must have been bound near the end of this period since contemporary labels note the binder one William F. Kiter as being from relatively close by Council Bluffs. <br> <br> A very early printing of one of the most important political acts in the Civil War and indeed in American history contained in a set of General Orders contemporaneously assembled by a significant Union Army commander. EBERSTADT LINCOLN'S EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION 4. War Department, Adjutant General's Office hardcover books
1859WRCAM28601Washington 1859. Broadside 4 3/4 x 7 inches. Small tear in lower left corner slightly worn along left edge. Very good. The orders of Secretary of War John B. Floyd outlining how the pursuit and treatment of hostile Indians are to be administered in light of potential conflicts with other military departments. The orders allow any army unit to pursue a hostile force into another department. However if the goal is to arrest an individual from a friendly tribe who has fled the job is to be passed to the neighboring department. The orders also stipulate that any trooper who loses his Colt revolver will be charged $40. unknown books