1 159 résultats
19362111902158501807Gifu Branch of Japan Seamen's Election 1936. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 82p. Size: 19cm Gifu Branch of Japan Seamen's Election paperback
186734721867 1867 Paul Dupont, Paris, 1867. 1 volume grand in-4 cartonné façon vélin, pièce de titre cerise, 518 pages, texte sur deux colonnes. Dos taché, tampon sur page de faux-titre, bon état.
0332241831.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1856WRCAM53064Suffield Ct 1856. Broadside 17 x 10 1/2 inches visible area. Matted and framed. Light dampstaining at top edge light foxing. Very good. An attractive broadside advertisement that promotes a meeting of James Buchanan supporters the "Keystone Club" in Suffield Connecticut on Sept. 27 1856. The poster promises a number of speeches against the candidate of the newly-formed Republican Party John C. Fremont that assert the complicity of his supporters in the violence roiling Kansas. The key and virulent disagreement between the Democratic party for whom Buchanan was the nominee and the Republicans was over the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the issue of popular sovereignty which would allow the residents of new states to vote on the existence of slavery within their borders. This broadside accuses anti-slavery and pro-Fremont partisans in Kansas of fomenting violence there for political gain. The text reads in full: <br> <br> "Messrs. A.G. Howard C.W. Philleo and others will address the Keystone Club at the Town Hall in Suffield on Saturday Eve'g Sept. 27 1856. We make the charge that the troubles in Kansas are encouraged and kept alive by the supporters of Freemont sic in the hope of gaining political capital. And we can prove the charge!" <br> <br> The text is headed by an American eagle gripping arrows and olive branch in the style of the Great Seal. OCLC records only two copies of this interesting broadside at the Connecticut Historical Society and Connecticut State Library. unknown books
40033Boston: Printed and Sold by Noble Printers 1818. Two folio broadsides 335 x 208 mm printed in one side only fine condition. Two letters heading printed above double-column text in verse. Not recorded by JISC. Boston: Printed and Sold by Noble, Printers, 1818 unknown
186434855New York 1864. Broadside wood engraving oblong 9-5/8" x 7-7/8". Blank verso uniformly toned Very Good.<br/><br/> "Columbia repudiates Democratic presidential candidate George Brinton McClellan's endorsement of the platform devised at the August 1864 Democratic convention in Chicago. The text below the picture provides the dialogue descriptive notes and identification of the main characters. Columbia: 'What a shame that a man who was educated at my expense and whom I have since honored and petted should have allowed himself to be allured by ambition into such company and upon such a Platform! His Letter cannot conceal his real position nor hide those odious 'planks;' neither can it reconcile me to his traitorous companions. I DISCARD BOTH HIM AND THEM FOREVER'." Reilly <br/> Onlookers include the discredited James Buchanan Fernando Wood Horatio Seymour Clement Vallandigham Franklin Pierce and other Copperheads. <br/>Reilly 1864-22. Weitenkampf 144. OCLC 299946973 2- Lib. Cong. W. Res. Hist. Soc. 881054411 1- UCSB 81099323 1- Am. Phil. Soc. as of April 2018. unknown books
187240016np. 1872. 8pp. Disbound loosened with caption title as issued. Good. <br /> <br /> An anti-Greeley presidential campaign pamphlet. Running as a Liberal Republican in 1872 against Grant Administration corruption and incompetence Greeley unfortunately had a detailed public record demonstrating a mercurial inconsistency on public issues. <br /> As this pamphlet says "Sudden changes of opinion always excite distrust unless they are accompanied by causes so adequate and apparent that the metamorphosis is at once explained." This item shows that Greeley's shifts flunk the test.<br /> Not in Sabin Miles Eberstadt Decker. Not uncommon in institutional holdings according to OCLC. unknown
19572110502150412528Hogaku no Tomosha 1957. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Hogaku no Tomosha paperback
19812091502135414764Not Available 1981. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 2 Not Available paperback
195318425Aoste, Imprimerie Valdôtaine, 1953 ; grand in-8, pleine basane havane, dos à nerfs décoré de motifs géométriques à froid, titre doré, premier plat décoré et doré, roulette dorée d'intérieur (reliure de l’éditeur) ; XXXII, 510, (6) pp., 36 illustrations dy compris le frontispice, dont 8 en couleurs.
1873557Paris, André Sagnier, 1873 in-12, 3 ff., 208 pp., pleine percaline vieux rose de l'époque à la bradel, pièce de titre sur le dos. (reliure passée)
12043Histoire de la famille Impériale-Histoire politique et populaire du Prince Louis Napoléon, sa vie, ses actes, ses écrits. Suivi de détails inédits sur les évènements du 2 décembre. Précédés de l’histoire de la famille Impériale par LEYNADIER et CHOPIN. 6 Tomes en 6 volumes in 8 demi chagrin rouge, caissons, titre, tomaison, filets dorés, filets noirs. Tome1 : Histoire du Roi de Rome. Faux-titre, frontispice gravé sur acier, sous serpente (Napoléon II .Roi de Rome, gravé par Adolphe PORTIER) 400 pages, 6 gravures hors-texte, sur acier, sous serpentes, y compris le frontispice. Tome2 : Histoire du Roi de Rome suite. Plus note et annexe sur la cour de Vienne. Faux titre, frontispice, 236 pages, 6 gravures hors-texte gravées sur acier, sous serpentes y compris le frontispice. Suivie Histoire des Maréchaux de l’Empire 168 pages. AUGEREAU.-BERNADOTTE -BERTHIER -BESSIERES -BRUNE -JOURDAN -KELLERMANN -LEVEBVRE –MARMONT- MASSENA -MURAT -NEY -OUDINOT - PERIGNON -PONITOWSKY -SOULT - GROUCHY. Tome 3 : Histoire de la famille BONAPARTE. Faux-titre, frontispice gravé sous serpente, titre, 331 pages, 11 gravures hors-texte sous serpentes . Tome 4 : histoire de NAPOLON première partie. Faux-titre, frontispice gravé sous serpente, titre, 335 pages 7 gravures hors-texte sous serpentes. Tomes 5 : histoire NAPOLEON suite. Faux-titre, frontispice gravé sur acier, sous serpente, titre, 320 pages, suivie de Notice historique sur la révolution du 2 décembre 1851 page 321 à 352. 4 gravures hors-texte sous serpentes. Tome 6 : Histoire du Prince louis Napoléon. Faux-titre, frontispice gravé sous serpente, (futur Napoléon III gravé de FERDINAND) titre, 463p, 6 gravures hors-texte sur acier, sous serpentes. Paris Rue Richelieu 1852. Rousseurs éparses, plus concentrées à certaines, pages, coins légèrement émoussés, coupes légèrement frottées. Bon ensemble. Peu courant complet.
2702Paris, Payot, 1967. In-8. br. 361p. Très bon état général.
19624190Sélection des Amis du Livre Strasbourg 1962 257 pages in8. 1962. Reliure éditeur pleine toile sous rodhoid. 257 pages.
Articles include: Reducing the Hazards of Being Born; Fort Hood - Sparta Goes Suburban; An African Student in China; My Poetic Career in Vermont Politics; Columbia's Unorthodox Seminars; What is a Jew?; J.F.K. - Portrait of a President; What Psychiatry can and cannot do; Second Thoughts on the Religious Revival; Small Rebellion in Miami; Why Nobody Can't Write no good; Los Angeles' Cultural Curcus; A Draftee's Diary from the Mississippi Front; Harold Wilson's Britain; Arms and the Big Money Men; Attack on Poverty; The Uncompleted Man; The Strange Twilight of Harry Bridges; Every Artist needs a hard-boiled patron; Italy's Forgotten City; Crime and Punishment - special supplement; Oswald in Moscow; JFK's voyage of discovery; If I were a company President; New Jersey's search for identity; Give slum children a chance; The Jews in Germany Today; Aldous Huxley in California; A New Kind of National Election; The Quickening War against Viruses; The Scotch in Canada; Miami Notebook - Cassius Clay and Malcolm X; The Psychiatrist in the Looking Glass; A Negro Governor for Massachusetts; What's to Become of Architecture; Why Labor Lost the Intellectuals. Light wear. Binding tight. Few library markings. Book
188040342New York: Copyright by Geo. H. Hanks 1880. Metamorphic card 3-1/4" x 5-3/8" fully opened. Richly colored light wear Very Good.<br /> <br /> The unopened illustration depicts a dignified serious Hancock as a rooster in elaborate feathers. But when opened Hancock has lost his feathers is emaciated and bleeding from the mouth. The caption reads "November 2nd. 1880 Hancock Hancock Boo-Hoo-Hoo." Winfield Scott Hancock a decorated Civil War general and a hero of Gettysburg was the losing Democrats' presidential candidate in 1880 opposing Republican James A. Garfield. <br /> The verso entitled 'Rhymes for Young Democrats' brilliantly skewers the overt racism of the Democratic Party. It begins: <br /> "Sing a song of shotguns Pocket full of knives Four-and- twenty black men Running for their lives; When the polls are open Shut the nigger's mouth Isn't that a bully way To make a solid South" <br /> OCLC 32320004 1- Brown as of August 2024. Copyright by Geo. H. Hanks unknown
1334599645.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
16 pages. Features: Thomson's 349 best at Sydney; Chapman and Harrison win Carousel; Pat Lesser to marry John Harbottle, Jr.; Weight shift vital; Two photos of U.S. pros abroad - Roger Peacock, W.C. Gibson, Capt. R.V. Peddiroval, W.S. MacDonald and Al Houghton; Color one-page Christmas ad for Dunlop Maxfli balls; Photo of the steel frame of Philadelphia CC's new home under construction; Photos from the Carousel; Photo of 40th anniversary of the Wethersfield CC, Hartford CT includes Jackie Farrell of the Yankees, Ray Crone of the Milwaukee Braves and others; Photo of Tamarisk CC taking delivery of 60 Autoette Golfmobiles; Nice back page photo of Pat Lesser, with details of her engagement; Obituary for Fraser M. Horn; and more. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy of this great vintage issue. Magazine
19533042836St. Louis, Pio Decimo Press (1953). 63 Seiten, 8° (22 x 14 cm), Hardcover (gebunden), Priv.-Halbleineneinband.
11 p. in-8° Musica di Michelangelo Vella, Parole di un brillante socio colombario.
0365702072.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0365702056.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
188013357np 1880. 4pp folded caption title as issued. A couple of closed margin tears expert inconspicuous repairs no loss and a few fox blotches. Good or so. <br/><br/> "Document No. 9" of the Democratic Party's 1880 campaign pieces. Hancock hero of Gettysburg accepts his Party's presidential nomination. Also printed is his 1876 letter to General Sherman demonstrating his obedience to civil authorities and constitutional processes as the chaotic election of 1876 worked itself out. unknown books
188028864Philadelphia: J.M. Armstrong & Co. Music Typographers and Printers 1880. 24pp stitched in original printed and illustrated wrappers worn at inner margin of wrappers with wrapper title as issued. Good.<br/><br/> Lots of songs with music celebrating the Republicans' Civil War achievements the life of 'Jim Garfield of the West' condemning 'The Bourbon Democracee' etc. The rear wrapper lists the number of each State's electoral votes. J.M. Armstrong & Co., Music Typographers and Printers unknown books
18775770N.p. likely Springfield Il: ca. January 8 1877. Good. Three long galley leaves each approximately 6.5 x 19 inches and printed on rectos only with numerous pencil emendations. Old folds and creases numerous chips and tears to margins pervasive wrinkling making reading a bit challenging at times but with no loss to text. Small portion of third leaf containing the last eight lines of text detached but present. Not in great shape but seemingly unique. A galley proof of a speech by General John A. McClernand in the midst of the contentious Election of 1876 which was so far as we can determine neither delivered nor published. A pencil note at top reveals his authorship and notes the speech was intended to be delivered January 8 at the “Great Citizens Convention†in Springfield Illinois almost certainly in 1877 following the recent election in the Fall of 1876. McClernand was an Illinois contemporary of Lincoln's a Democratic Congressman and War Democrat. He was also an ally of another Illinois politician and Lincoln adversary Stephen A. Douglas. He was appointed a general during the Civil War largely through political maneuvering and was generally considered incompetent. McClernand greatly resented the authority of Grant who finally relieved him of command in June 1863. Following the war McClernand became a leading critic of Congressional Reconstruction as well as the Grant Administration in general. He also chaired the 1876 Democratic National Convention which nominated Tilden for the presidency.<br /> <br /> Here McClernand bitterly attacks Grant his presidential Administration and Reconstruction. According to McClernand Grant's "tastes and habits had been acquired in the field and the camp -- in implicit obedience or absolute command. He knew no other rule of action but the military law and army regulations. As a consequence he has lamentably failed as a civil administrator." As President fraudulently and illegally Grant "joined with Kellog a political adventurer and Durell a federal judge to overthrow the will of the people of Louisiana." Law and order says McClernand "lay prostrate and panting at the feet of her remorseless tyrants." McClernand also assails Grant's highhanded tactics in the other Southern States.<br /> <br /> Now says McClernand "the president and his accomplices have now applied themselves to defeat the will of the people by a parliamentary device. They claimed for the President of the Senate the right and power to count the electoral votes and to declare the result and by implication that that right and power would be so exercised as to count Tilden out of his election and to count Hayes into one." He wasn't wrong. In one of the closest most hotly-contested and highly-controversial elections in American history to put it simply Hayes effectively stole the election by agreeing to remove northern soldiers from the South and end Reconstruction. It would be interesting to know what McClernand thought of the ultimate result -- he didn't get Tilden but he did get the end of Reconstruction.<br /> <br /> "Yet another prominent Illinoian who played a role in the Civil War John Alexander McClernand was born in Breckinridge County Kentucky before moving to Shawneetown Illinois at a young age. Similar to fellow Illinoian Abraham Lincoln McClernand was a largely self-taught lawyer who began practicing in Shawneetown in 1835. Also like Lincoln McClernand served in the Black Hawk War. However McClernand was a staunch Democrat. In 1835 he established the newspaper Shawneetown Democrat. He was active in Democratic politics at both the state and federal level serving in the Illinois House of Representatives and eventually Congress. In Congress McClernand was a stalwart Jacksonian Democrat who strongly disliked abolitionists. He strongly opposed the Wilmot Proviso which banned slavery in the territory gained after the Mexican-American War. He became a key ally of fellow Democrat and Illinoian Stephen A. Douglas helping him pass the Compromise of 1850. As tensions rose approaching the election of 1860 McClernand campaigned for Douglas’s presidency and became a Unionist. After war broke out in the following April McClernand helped raise volunteers for the Union Army. Because Lincoln needed to retain a wide base of support and retain connections with Democrats in Illinois he appointed McClernand a brigadier general on May 17 1861. McClernand’s military career would be defined by an ongoing clash with fellow Illinoian General Ulysses S. Grant. Grant a seasoned West Pointer who served in Mexico was irritated by McClernand a political general with little military experience. Further exacerbating relations was McClernand’s tendency to boast about his exploits and diminish the achievements of other commanders" - American Battlefield Trust's entry on John A. McClernand. ca. January 8 unknown