213 résultats
184015487Albany N.Y. 1840. pp 89-96 large folded folio sheet printed in triple columns. Caption title as issued scattered light foxing Very Good. <br/><br/> An Extra denominated No. 12 from the Rough-Hewer a Democratic Party campaign publication published from February - December The Address supports the Democrats' presidential candidate and New York's favorite son Martin Van Buren against the Whig candidate William Henry Harrison. The Whigs descendants of the aristocratic Federalists are "constantly struggling to create distinctions in society by legislation for the special benefit of individuals and classes thereby throwing into their hands a power and influence strong enough to control the suffrages of the people or set them at defiance." Resolutions and discussion of the issues all presented with great passion ensue. <br/>FIRST EDITION. AI 40-5891 5. Lomazow 392. Not in Mott. unknown books
184817436Boston: Eastburn's Press 1848. Stitched 11pp. Scattered foxing blank top margin of title page cut down with no text affected upper blank forecorner chewed. Good. Massachusetts Whigs put forth a valiant but unsuccessful effort in behalf of Daniel Webster's candidacy for the Whig presidential nomination in He is "A man who respecting all the 'arrangements and compromises of the Constitution' and the rights of all under them will yet never suffer them to be extended or increased to the destruction of our political equality." FIRST EDITION. 4 NUC 0070701 2. Not in Sabin Eberstadt Decker Miles. Eastburn's Press unknown books
184819495np 1848. 16pp caption title as issued. Tanned several leaves trimmed closely at the fore-edge with slight loss. Good. A rare 1848 campaign pamphlet attacking Taylor and sketching the biography of Lewis Cass a man "of the highest order of talent" who has filled "almost every grade of office from the lowest to the highest and most responsible in the service of his country. From the first start in life he has been a Democrat. He received the first office he ever held from that great apostle of Democracy Thomas Jefferson in 1807." Taylor by contrast is a "spectacle" as a candidate-- lacking any political opinions and without even a political party to which he can claim loyalty. A General in the Mexican War he nevertheless allowed himself to be the candidate of the Whigs "who have sympathised with the public enemy who have traitorously given him 'aid and comfort' who have voted for the disgrace of their country in Congress by alleging that the war was unconstitutionally commenced." FIRST EDITION. Not in Sabin Miles Eberstadt Decker. Not located in NUC or on OCLC. unknown books
185217752Washington 1852. 8pp disbound caption title as issued. Printing flaw at page 2 affecting several letters Good. An 1852 Democratic campaign pamphlet rebutting the Whigs' libel that Pierce the Democrats' presidential candidate is an abolitionist. Several Congressional votes in which Pierce participated rather slender stalks for the Whigs to stand on in any event are earnestly and thoroughly rebutted. Not in Sabin Eberstadt Decker. See LCP 3805 for the Whig publication to which this item responds. unknown books
185623950Washington 1856. 16pp disbound printed in double columns. Last leaf browned else Very Good. This is one of several variant titles-- the first two clauses appear identical in all versions-- charging Fremont the first Republican presidential candidate with financial improprieties while disbursing officer in California in the 1840's. This one also accuses him of exaggerating his military achievements which were minimal at best. Cowan 222. Rocq 16684. LCP 1239. unknown books
185619546Washington 1856. 14 2 blank pp. Disbound partly loosened. Tanned with some foxing and light wear. Good. <br/><br/> "Principally of his frauds in the purchase of horses in 1846 and 1847 while disbursing officer in California." Cowan. "Carelessness recklessness favoritism and connivance with the claimants." That's the verdict on Fremont. The pamphlet examines "the chief dealings of Colonel Fremont as a disbursing officer during the campaign in California whilst he commanded the volunteers" during 1846-1847. Tables facts figures are produced and analyzed. <br/>FIRST EDITION. Cowan 222. Rocq 16684. Not in Eberstadt Decker. unknown books
185614821np 1856. Folded old binder holes in blank inner margin. 16pp. Light wear and tan. Good to Very Good. <br/><br/> A wild anti-Fremont attack charging that Republicans have violated "the most solemn treaties of the United States with the Indians" and have sought "to stop the wheels of government stir up strife and discord in the country and produce anarchy and violence in Kansas." This Democratic pamphlet asserts "The last and only hope of the Fremont men consists in blood violence and murder in Kansas." <br/>FIRST EDITION. Sabin 68197. unknown books
187220482Washington: National Democratic Executive Resident Committee 1872. 8pp disbound with light inner margin wear else Very Good. <br/><br/> August Belmont and the Democrats pillory Grant promise not to mess with the Reconstruction Amendments to the Constitution and laud Greeley and his fellow Liberal Republicans for opposing corruption in the Grant administration. A rare pamphlet also printed at the Globe Office in Washington OCLC noting 3 copies of the Globe printing. <br/>OCLC 47184217 1- W. Res. Hist. Soc. National Democratic Executive Resident Committee unknown books
187620530Cincinnati 1876. 16pp caption title as issued. Disbound lightly tanned Good or Very Good. <br/><br/> A Democratic rally in this Republican State whose Favorite Son Rutherford B. Hayes would defeat Tilden in a very tight presidential election unmatched until the year 2000. Democrats ran on racism Republican corruption profligate public expenditures opposition to high tariffs and intrusive Radical Reconstruction and support for Jeffersonian limited government. Scarce OCLC locating copies only at the Western Reserve and Ohio Historical Societies. <br/>FIRST EDITION. OCLC 37877427 2. unknown books
186433879Indianapolis 1864. Folio 8 ½" x 14". 16 pp folded. Poll Book preprinted with introduction columns and headings names of candidates etc. First 5 pages and final 4 pages completed in neat ink manuscript. The first page contains an introduction at the top half followed by names of voters up through #279 on page 5. At page 13 is the pre-printed certification filled in and signed by three officers followed by a list of both preprinted and added names of those on the election ticket and the offices they seek with number of votes received by each in manuscript. The final page contains the docketing information. Signed by Andrew Griffin David McKee and John D. Dource and filed on October 13 1864. Quite clean. Very Good. <br /> with Tally Paper. 17" x 28". Preprinted with heading columns and names of candidates and offices they seek. Some additional candidates added in manuscript with manuscript tallies and calculations. Old folds with a few short splits at corner folds a few splits repaired with archival tape on verso some soiling of verso. At the head of the document are the signatures of Andrew Griffin David McKee and John D. Dource judges; and Benjamin F. Reeve and J.R. Hunt clerks. Tally sheet docketed on verso as filed October 13 1864 by B.F. Tingley Clerk. Very Good. <br /> <br /> During Indiana's 1864 gubernatorial election Oliver P. Morton ran on the Union ticket against Democrat Joseph McDonald. Morton had been elected Lt. Governor under Gov. Henry Lane in 1860. Lane resigned two days after being confirmed in January 1861 so that he could take a seat in the U.S. Senate; Morton succeeded to his office. Morton won the election by more than 20000 votes. <br /> Names of the 279 who voted include: Lewis Smith Bradford Z. Norris John B. Reeve Owen Reynolds John W.N. Hunt William Carney Henry Long Hiram Smith Henry Armstrong John Ryan Thomas N. Smith George W. Brown David Johnson Alexander FitzJarrell William Quail Francis M. Patterson George Gray Lorenso D. Richardson Richard W. McKee. <br /> Benjamin F. Tingley 1823-1904 served as the Clerk of Rush County from 1864 to 1872 and he was a member of the local Freemason lodge where he held the position of treasurer for a time. Others who signed off on these documents as judges and clerks were primarily farmers by occupation. unknown
186433879Indianapolis 1864. Folio 8 ½" x 14". 16 pp folded. Poll Book preprinted with introduction columns and headings names of candidates etc. First 5 pages and final 4 pages completed in neat ink manuscript. The first page contains an introduction at the top half followed by names of voters up through #279 on page 5. At page 13 is the pre-printed certification filled in and signed by three officers followed by a list of both preprinted and added names of those on the election ticket and the offices they seek with number of votes received by each in manuscript. The final page contains the docketing information. Signed by Andrew Griffin David McKee and John D. Dource and filed on October 13 1864. Quite clean. Very Good. <br/> with Tally Paper. 17" x 28". Preprinted with heading columns and names of candidates and offices they seek. Some additional candidates added in manuscript with manuscript tallies and calculations. Old folds with a few short splits at corner folds a few splits repaired with archival tape on verso some soiling of verso. At the head of the document are the signatures of Andrew Griffin David McKee and John D. Dource judges; and Benjamin F. Reeve and J.R. Hunt clerks. Tally sheet docketed on verso as filed October 13 1864 by B.F. Tingley Clerk. Very Good. <br/><br/> During Indiana's 1864 gubernatorial election Oliver P. Morton ran on the Union ticket against Democrat Joseph McDonald. Morton had been elected Lt. Governor under Gov. Henry Lane in 1860. Lane resigned two days after being confirmed in January 1861 so that he could take a seat in the U.S. Senate; Morton succeeded to his office. Morton won the election by more than 20000 votes. <br/> Names of the 279 who voted include: Lewis Smith Bradford Z. Norris John B. Reeve Owen Reynolds John W.N. Hunt William Carney Henry Long Hiram Smith Henry Armstrong John Ryan Thomas N. Smith George W. Brown David Johnson Alexander FitzJarrell William Quail Francis M. Patterson George Gray Lorenso D. Richardson Richard W. McKee. <br/> Benjamin F. Tingley 1823-1904 served as the Clerk of Rush County from 1864 to 1872 and he was a member of the local Freemason lodge where he held the position of treasurer for a time. Others who signed off on these documents as judges and clerks were primarily farmers by occupation. unknown books
1856ZB579781Washington: 1856. 71 1 16 Minority Report pp issued as 34th Congress 1st Session HR 65; extraction roughness at spine light age staining self wrappers. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. Washington: unknown
1852323680Np 1852. 16pp. 8vo. Removed with remains of later wrappers along the gutter margins of the first and last pages. 16pp. 8vo. Scarce piece of campaign ephemera relating to the election of 1852 which pitted Democrat Pierce against the Whig Winfield Scott. Pierce won in an electoral landslide. Sabin 91531 unknown
1868252282Washington: Union Republican Congressional Committee 1868. First. pamphlet. very good-. Stewart and Nye of Nevada Delivered in the United States Senate.July 9th and 10th 1868 on the bill offered by Senator Edmunds of Vermont to regulate the counting of the Electoral Vote. 8pp. in double columns. 8vo one sheet folded into 8 pages light foxing to margins otherwise very good. Washington: Union Republican Congressional Committee 1868. First Edition.<br/> <br/> Speeches that are pro-Republican and pro-Union. The speeches advocate that the Democratic Party is in favor of Southern rights and not hard enough on the South in enforcing Reconstruction. Sabin 51020<br/> <br/> Union Republican Congressional Committee unknown
1868252282Washington: Union Republican Congressional Committee 1868. First. pamphlet. very good-. Stewart and Nye of Nevada Delivered in the United States Senate.July 9th and 10th 1868 on the bill offered by Senator Edmunds of Vermont to regulate the counting of the Electoral Vote. 8pp. in double columns. 8vo one sheet folded into 8 pages light foxing to margins otherwise very good. Washington: Union Republican Congressional Committee 1868. First Edition.<br/><br/> Speeches that are pro-Republican and pro-Union. The speeches advocate that the Democratic Party is in favor of Southern rights and not hard enough on the South in enforcing Reconstruction. Sabin 51020<br/><br/> Union Republican Congressional Committee unknown books
1874004105<p>London: House of Commons 1874. Collection of papers relating to the Boston election of 1874 comprising - 1. 'Copy of the Shorthand Writer's Notes of the Evidence Taken at the Trial of the Boston Election Petition' iv 76pp; 2. 'For the Trial of Election Petitions' pp19-30; 3. 'Summons to Witness' form 1p; 4. 'Report of the Royal Commission Appointed to Inquire Into the Existence of Corrupt Practices at Parliamentary Elections in the Borough of Boston' 1876 5 vi-xiv 2 3-51pp 1; and 5. 'Minutes of Evidence Taken Before the Royal Commission Appointed to Inquire Into the Existence of Corrupt Practices at Parliamentary Elections in the Borough of Boston' 1876 3 2-268pp. Half calf and marbled paper over boards raised bands spine in six panels title label to second panel gilt thick and thin double rules either side of bands. Rubbed to extremities lightly foxed to edges and occasionally to margins a few pen lines to margins previous owners name to head of a few of the different reports but generally clean. The fourth named includes a poll book printed on blue paper. The Liberals William Ingram and Thomas Parry were initially elected but "an election petition found extensive bribery relating to Parry's votes which on the initial count totalled 1347. However 353 of these were struck off - and further may have been taken if the process had not stopped on 8 June 1874 - leading to Malcolm's election instead. A Royal Commission was established to investigate the borough. A separate petition against Ingram was dropped" Wikipedia - Boston Election page. First Edition. Hardback. Good. Folio.</p> House of Commons hardcover
1861ZB579780Washington: 1861. 161 pp issued as 37th Congress 1st Session HMD 4; extraction roughness at spine else very good in self wrappers. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. Washington: unknown
184411033New-York 1844. 16mo. 152 28 adv. pp. Sewn lacks wraps. A bit of chipping at edges. Good to Good. <br /> <br /> An attack on the turncoat John Tyler who was the Whig Harrison's Vice President but betrayed the Whig cause after his own accession to the Presidency upon Harrison's death in 1841. The author supports Henry Clay for President. <br /> BAL 11051. AI 44-3548 5. unknown
184820489Washington 1848. 8pp printed in double columns caption title as issued. Disbound else Very Good. <br /> <br /> A scarce 1848 campaign pamphlet attacking Whig presidential candidate Zachary Taylor who "has no political principles and is perfectly ignorant upon political matters." On the burning issue of the Wilmot Proviso-- whether slavery ought to exist in the territories acquired from Mexico-- Taylor is a hypocrite: "At the North he is represented to be in favor of the Wilmot Proviso." But "at the South his advocates contend that he is opposed.because he is a southern man and a slaveholder and therefore identified with southern interests." <br /> A Louisiana slaveholder Taylor surprised everyone after his election when he supported immediate statehood for California with its anti-slavery Constitution. <br /> Wise & Cronin 44 Taylor. Not in Sabin Miles Eberstadt Decker LCP. unknown
184014460Washington: Gideon 1840. Caption title as issued disbound. 16pp. Scattered foxing pinhole knocks out one letter. Good. A very scarce Whig campaign document producing official messages and correspondence exposing the militaristic tendencies of the incumbent Martin Van Buren. Joel Poinsett was Secretary of War at the time. Another issue is entitled 'Plan of the Standing Army.' Not in AI Sabin Eberstadt Decker. 624 NUC 0263455 1. Gideon unknown
185226314Boston: Beals Greene & Co. 1852. Disbound 24pp printed in double columns. Light wear Very Good. <br /> <br /> The 1852 presidential campaign pitting the Democrat Pierce against the Whig Scott featured an unseemly competition for the votes of Irish Catholic immigrants. Whigs who were at a disadvantage in this contest charged Pierce with being an anti-Catholic bigot. "The object of the Scott politicians in making the charge of intolerance at this time against General Pierce is to obtain the Catholic vote. It is an appeal to a SECT IN RELIGION to get its members to vote a certain way in POLITICS." <br /> This pamphlet rebuts the charge demonstrating that Pierce supported extending equal rights to Catholics in New Hampshire via constitutional amendment. <br /> Not in Sabin Miles Eberstadt Decker. OCLC lists a number of institutional copies. Beals, Greene & Co. unknown
185218550np. 1852. Disbound with some loosening 8pp. Printed in double columns. Caption title as issued. Light tan and wear Good. <br /> <br /> An attempt to tar General Winfield Scott the Whigs' 1852 presidential candidate with abolitionism; and to promote Franklin Pierce who by contrast is "devoted to the constitution and defended the rights guarantied by that sacred instrument." <br /> The Whigs have pandered to the extreme abolitionists the Liberty Party crew and seek to "absorb the friends and followers of James G. Birney and Wendall sic Phillips into the bosom of the whig party which is now under the leadership of Wm. H. Seward who will be the controlling spirit of the government should General Scott be elected." Birney Phillips and Seward were of course anathema to southerners and indeed to many northern Whigs and Democrats who did not wish the slavery issue to threaten the maintenance of the Union. <br /> FIRST EDITION. LCP 11125. Not in Sabin Miles Eberstadt Decker. unknown
184014460Washington: Gideon 1840. Caption title as issued disbound. 16pp. Scattered foxing pinhole knocks out one letter. Good. A very scarce Whig campaign document producing official messages and correspondence exposing the militaristic tendencies of the incumbent Martin Van Buren. Joel Poinsett was Secretary of War at the time. Another issue is entitled 'Plan of the Standing Army.' Not in AI Sabin Eberstadt Decker. 624 NUC 0263455 1. Gideon unknown books
184020469Troy 1840. Elephant folio. Broadside 26.5" x 21". Caption title as issued top margin trimmed closely but not into text. Printed in seven columns with large chart. Light foxing along folds. Very Good. <br/><br/> Texts and tables votes for 1840 presidential electors by County. unknown books
184434342Baltimore 1844. Folio printed sheet folded to 8" x 10". Caption title as issued. 1 3 blanks pp. Last page addressed to a man in Westminster Maryland and postmarked Baltimore Oct. 21. Old folds from mailing red seal remnant on last page. Very Good.<br/><br/> Members of the Maryland Democratic State Central Committee pledge "that we are determined in Baltimore to do" all that is necessary for the Polk-Dallas ticket. This includes "the presence of Vigilance Committees at the opening of the Polls and their continuance there until after the counting of the votes." Baltimore was the scene of many riots in the first half of the 19th century political and otherwise.<br/>Not located on OCLC as of December 2017. unknown books