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Vg/G (unclipped dj lightly faded on spine and few chips to edges with one small tear tail of spine, clean grey cloth with black titles on spine, a very good square tight bright copy with small patch light browning front free endpaper and ink gift inscription, small crease to corner of one board) quarto unpaginated. Volume 1 in a series of 10 volumes. A substantial volume profusely illustrated in b/w with contemporary photographs.
Vg/G (unclipped dj lightly faded on spine and few chips to edges with one small tear tail of spine, clean grey cloth with black titles on spine, a very good square tight bright copy with small patch light browning front free endpaper and ink gift inscription, small crease to corner of one board) quarto unpaginated. Volume 1 in a series of 10 volumes. A substantial volume profusely illustrated in b/w with contemporary photographs.
116917First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Oblong folio approximately 245 × 355 mm 12 pages the first one blank followed by five pairs of facing pages ruled paper with printed red and blue columns and black headings with printed certifications on the last page. The column headings across the double-page openings are Name Rank Age Description Married or Single Nativity Place of Residence Date of Enlistment Enlisted For Date of Muster Discharged and Remarks; only the last opening is unused. Thin plain brown paper wrappers a little undersized with a paper title-label mounted on the front cover printed with manuscript insertions; wrappers a little marked chipped and creased with a few light tidemarks affecting also the first leaf; heavy crease down the middle of the entire roll where folded in half resulting in a 50 mm split from the bottom of the crease to all six leaves; minor signs of use and age but overall this unique and fragile manuscript is in very good condition. 'Companies A and F were from the village of Kewanee in Henry county Illinois . The exigencies of the struggle and the call had wrought the enthusiasm of the village to its highest pitch when on the morning of August 7th a muster roll was opened in the office of Judge John H. Howe and a meeting called for the night. During the day 29 names were enrolled. At night the rally was immense. Speeches were made by Judge Howe James Elliott and other leading citizens and among them one by R.A. Tenney of Chicago formerly of Kewanee who proposed to enlist. The knowledge that "Ralph" as they loved to call him would go was electrifying and the enlistment was kept up till midnight to be continued the next day and furthered by liberal offers from those who could not go to aid those who could till the morning of the 9th just forty-eight hours from the time the first name was signed when 101 were enrolled. This number was subsequently increased to 111 and the second company was raised immediately. Two as noble companies as ever kept step to the music of the Union in one village raised by themselves and well officered within a week .' R.L. Howard: 'History of the 124th Regiment Illinois Infantry Volunteers' 1880 page 2. <p>Each opening of the roll contains printed columns with the particulars of enlistees added in ink in at least two hands. The details of 19 officers and NCOs and 80 privates are provided apparently in Captain Tenney's hand all but one with their date of enlistment given as 9 August 1862. A further 25 soldiers with enlistment dates from 1864 and 1865 have been added later in another hand presumably his successor Captain Edmond C. Raymond. The only black enlistees four 'under-cooks' are entered separately at the foot of the final opening. All four are described as residents of Vicksburg Mississippi and all enlisted soon after this important Confederate stronghold fell to Union forces on 4 July 1863 suggesting that they were likely freed slaves. <p>The siege also caused a change in the company's commanding officer. 'Capt. R.A. Tenney of Company A had tried to struggle through the campaign until reduced almost to a skeleton and even his life was despaired of when he felt compelled to resign. It was hard for us to lose the inimitable inspiring once jolly "Ralph" from among us but there was no alternative. His resignation bearing date July 9th and the death of Lieut. Julius A. Pratt caused the promotion of 2d Lieut. E.C. Raymond to the Captaincy' Howard page 136. The 'Remarks' column makes grim reading: almost all of the detailed entries commence with the words 'Deserted' 'Discharged' almost invariably with a disability 'Died' invariably of wounds or sickness or 'Killed' by shell musket ball . paperback
pp. xxiv, 242 + Portrait Frontis. 12mo. 180mm. Original full cloth binding. Appleton Modern Literature Series to be used as a classroom reader. LIT BX 7
8vo., First Edition, with title-vignette, headpieces and full-page illustrations in the text; original red cloth, gilt back, a near fine copy in price-clipped dustwrapper. Uncommon in this condition.
With text drawn from diaries and letters and pictures from public and private collections this book tells in detail the history of the American Civil War Small tear and creases to top edge of dust jacket. This book is extra heavy, and may involve extra shipping charges to some countries
8vo., First Edition, with 5 maps in the text and front and rear endpaper maps; original grey cloth gilt, gilt back, a very good, clean copy in price-clipped dustwrapper, the latter age-browned and frayed with loss at extremities. A standard reference, published in the Mainstream of America series edited by Lewis Gannett. The title was borrowed by Ken Burns in his acclaimed TV documentary series of 1991.
4to., First Edition, with numerous illustrations (one coloured and double-page) in the text; original pictorial wrappers, wire-stitched as issued, covers moderately dust-soiled at extremities else a near fine copy. The first Warship Profile to depart from the series' 'traditional' timescale of post-Dreadnought vessels.
30877Broadside. Circa 1860s. No publisher. Eight verses with chorus with a simple ornamental border. Measures approximately 12 x 19 cm 4.5 x 7.5". Faint pencil markings on the top edge tiny spot to the left of the last verse. Near fine. unknown
26361‘The Raven Hotel / Droitwich / Ap. 6. 87 1887’. According to Russell’s entry in the Oxford DNB while reporting on the Civil War he was described by one American newspaper as ‘the most famous newspaper correspondent the world has ever seen'. The inscription on his memorial in St Paul’s Cathedral calls him ‘'the first and greatest of War Correspondents'. He coined the phrase ‘thin red line’ was instrumental in the sending of Florence Nightingale to the Crimea and is said to have written the report that inspired Tennyson to write ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’. Like Broadley whose omission from the DNB is as scandalous as his career Russell was an active freemason. 2pp 12mo. In trimmed windowpane mount. In good condition lightly aged with slight glue staining on reverse. Folded once. Signed ‘W H Russell’. The subject is freemasonry Russell is not known to have shared Broadley’s other interests. Begins: ‘dear brother Broadley / I am pickling here in the hope that I may be fit for exportation anon & I shall not be in London till my course is over on 17th’. In consequence he will be unable to attend ‘the junction of Bros. Lawson Peters & Toole & the promotion of Brs Prince Helwig & Lord Delamere’. Broadley a distinguished autograph-collector also merited a long entry in Wikipedia for his other activities. ‘The Raven [Hotel] / Droitwich / Ap. 6. 87 [1887]’. unknown