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1777BB002<p>CLINTON George First Governor of New York State 1777-1795 1801-1804; also 4th Vice-President of the United States 1805-1812 under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.<br /></p><p>"Kingston laid in ashes by the Enemy" . <br /></p><p>8vo 7-3/4 x 6-1/2 inches 1-1/2 pages on laid paper with integral address leaf remnants of wax seal some fading to text and signature scattered minor<br /></p><p>It should be noted that Clinton was sworn in as New York's first governor on 9th July 1777 shortly after Kingston was established as its first capitol 20th April 1777. Thus the burning of Kingston and change of capitol to eventually Albany was a consequence of the War for Independence. <br /></p><p>Remarkable handwritten manuscript explaining that the British troops arrived at Kingston before his own re-enforcements whereupon 1000 men burned the town and immediately returned to their ships warning that a similar fate awaits the settlements along the shore and that forage and property should be moved from the path of the enemy reminding him to take the sleigh from the barn as it is all the personal property that remains to him after the destruction in Kingston noting that the enemy is advancing up the river to Saugerties with Tryon commanding on the east side and Vaughn on the west.<br /></p><p>Transcript</p><p><i>Head Quarters Hurley 17th October 1777</i></p><p><i>Dear Brother</i></p><p><i>"Before this can reach you you will receive the – disagreeable account of Kingston being laid in ashes by the Enemy. They landed before my troops arrived after a little opposition by the few militia Cols Pawling & Snyder could collect and marched about 1000 Men immediately up to Town - where they were told by some Tories who continued in it that my People were advancing on the Hurley Road & they immediately set it in Flames and extracted precipitately on Board their Vessels tho their Orders were to proceed to Hurley & the adjacent Neighborhoods to give them the same Fate so that tho I was not able to get my Troops Time enough to save Kingston they saved this and the other Parts of the Country near it. This will show you the Fate New Windsor & the other settlements along shore are to partake on the Enemy's Return down. Therefore the Necessity of removing the Forage &c from the Banks of the River among which remember my Slay in the Barn as it is now the only moveable Property I have left the Best being removed to Kingston shared its Fate tho indeed a great share of Property has been saved out of Town. The enemy sailed up the River this Morning as high as Saghertyes burning along Shore as they go. When they go a little higher I will follow them. They have Parties on both Sides of the River. Tryon commands those on the East & Vaughan on the West Side of the River.</i></p><p><i>Yours Sincerely</i></p><p><i>Geo Clinton</i></p><p>On Friday evening 16 October 1777 a British fleet commandeered by James Wallace and John Vaughn the latter on board the 'Friendship' which had anchored near Easopus Island the day before came into the mouth of Rondout Creek and engaged the gallery "Lady Washington". Shortly after noon the British landed on Rondout Creek and the Cove above Columbus Point. Vaughn personally led the march capturing and forcing a negro to lead them into town without meeting resistance. The troops went through the streets in parties led by Tories setting the whole place on fire in response to the occasional resistance lodged by residents from within their houses. There was looting and vandalism. Meanwhile part of the fleet went a bit up the River and creek to destroy landings and sloops. By the time George Clinton arrived into Kingston the whole town was ablaze and the British party had set out to return to their ships.</p><p>In a letter on 18 October penned at Little Britain NY in response to this letter his brother B. Genl. James Clinton writes:</p><p><i>D'r Brother</i></p><p><i>Yours of yesterday's Date I have just received. I am sorry for the Loss of Kingston &c. </i><i>Five of the Enemy's Shipping Returned Down the River last night without Doing any Damage Except fireing Some Cannon and small arms at our men and wounding one of ours on Board of a Ferry Boat…"</i></p><p>The war became personal for the governor specially after what had happened to Kingston. In a letter to William Smith @ 31 October 1777 his sentiments and commitment are laid bare:</p><p><i>"The Cruelties as well Cowardice with which this Warr has been conducted ag't us must I think be sufficient at this late Hour to convince every Man that all connection with Great Britain is at an End…"</i></p><p>Reference: <b><i>Public Paper of George Clinton</i></b> First Governor of New York War of the Revolution Series. New York: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. 1900. Volume II pp. 457-459. Our letter of 17 October 1777 appears to be unknown to the editors of the Clinton papers although they do list and transcribe the 18th October response by his brother James. Consequently our letter appears to be the only firsthand account by the governor of New York on the actual burning of Kingston an event historically reenacted locally each year within Ulster County.</p> Autograph Letter Signed, “Geo Clintonâ€, written to his brother Gen. James Clinton in New Windsor (“Dear Brotherâ€), from books
1935006562New York: Columbia University Press 1935. RARE extract. Paginated 389-515. Very Good Plus from the collection of noted anthropologist linguist and ethnomusicologist George Herzog his signature last name in ink top edge front cover sticker shadow front cover wrappers toned at edges. Printed on cover and title page as coming from Vol. IV pencil corrected to Vol. III. . First Edition Thus. Printed Wrappers. Very Good Plus/No Jacket As Issued. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Columbia University Press Paperback books
1977005833San Francisco: Rip Off Press 1977. Near Fine corner crease bottom corner front cover. "Featuring the Picaresque Pinhead Ticket to Mars Toadette Traits Griffith Observatory and Alfred Jarry". A Classic !. First Edition. Comic. Near Fine/No Jacket As Issued. Rip Off Press Paperback books
198527951985. Wraps. Fair. Published around 1985 by the State Art and Architecture Museum. 32 pages. Color illustrations. paperback books
189930932New York: Francis E. Fitch 1899. First edition. Cloth. A very good copy faint soiling to the spine small book plate of the Oregon Commandery M.O.L.L.U.S. Library on front paste down contents bright and unmarked. 690 pp. Illus. with b/w plates and drawings. Sm. 4to. Francis E. Fitch hardcover books
196611905Perth Amboy NJ: Yukon Press 1966. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Very Good. "Rollicking Ballads of the Last Frontier." 232 pp. Tight binding minimal wear. Warmly inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper. Dust jacket has some chipping and short tears. Swerdloff worked and traveled in Alaska in the 1920s. This work is entirely a collection of ballads many about gold mining and the life of the prospector. Tourville 4430. Yukon Press hardcover books
191540287East Syracuse: News Printery 1915. 1st edition presumed. Yellow printed paper wrappers. Modest wear to wrappers light age-toning creasing. Paper age-toned. Withal a VG example. 24 pp. 6-1/8" x 4-1/4" <br/><br/>"These songs have been prepared for use in the local Branches. The first twelve songs were submitted to the Musical Director for the musical contest. The remainder were selected from various compilations and are especially adapted for use in our meetings. The song contest will be continued the coming year. Let each Branch submit a song to be published before the 1916 convention. These songs should be sent to the Musical Director whose name appears among the Department Superintendents in the State Report and in the columns of Woman's Temperance Work." No institutional holdings located on OCLC. Rare in the trade. News Printery unknown books
71938Casper WYoming: S. E. Boyer and Company. Very Good. N.D. Pamphlet. We are offering WYOMING WORTH KNOWING; Published By State Department of Commerce and Industry. Soft-bound in blue wrappers with gilt printing and a pictorial window front cover. Covers soiled. Contents are bright and clean with numerous illustrations and Wyoming Views. Overall Very Good condition. . S. E. Boyer and Company unknown books
189639211No place Albany: No publisher/printer 1896. 8vo 22 cm 9". 48 pp. <br><br>Actually written in layman's terms and with sensible definitions of terms used.<br>Â Â Â Â WorldCat locates only two U.S. libraries reporting ownership University of Michigan and the Houston Academy of Medicine. Stapled in self-wrappers as issued. Staples rusted. Some dust-soiling. No publisher/printer unknown books
1927008511New York: Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation 1927. First Edition First Issue Total Issue 10000 1927. Publisher's green cloth with gilt lettering. 8vo 74 63 19 28 144 26 47 37 Tables 20 Index 4 pp. Profusely illustrated with tables and 2 fold-out charts. Near Fine prior owner name and city front paste down. Together with laid-in "Trade Standards in the Pump Industry" Recommended by The Hydraulic Society 1921 published by Worthington Machinery Company 8vo printed brown stapled wrappers 18 pages. Near Fine. Henry R. Worthington 1817-1880 was the inventor of the direct acting steam pump and one of the founding members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He started the Worthington Pump Works in 1845 which in 1899 became the Steam Pump Company. That was followed in 1916 by the Worthington Pump and Machinery Corp. which from 1952-1967 was the Worthington Corporation and in 1967 merged into Studebaker. While the Handbook is not limited in institutional holdings it is SCARCE in today's market. No records at OCLC for Trade Standards in the Pump Industry. Contents: 1 Worthington Pump Works 18451899 2 International Steam Pump Company 18991916 3 Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation 19161952 4 Worthington Corporation 19521967 5 Merger with Studebaker 1967. First Edition. Cloth. Near Fine/No Jacket As Issued. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation Hardcover books
193431872Garden City: Doubleday Doran 1934. First edition 8vo pp. 8 452; a very good copy in a slightly chipped unclipped dust-jacket. <br/><br/> Doubleday, Doran unknown books
1943167719Albany NY: State of New York Department of Labor 1943. 8p 8.5x11 inches stapled in left top corner wraps unevenly toned staple rusted else very good condition. Report on women's wages generally not just defense workers. Created to dispel the myth that female defense workers make enough to afford luxuries; also to promote the fact that women need equal wages merely to survive. State of New York, Department of Labor unknown books
16759Women's Education Movement. Pamphlet/ Volume 14 of 17: Acts for the State of Massachusetts January 12th Session 1804 Incorporation of Bradford Academy Containing the original incorporation of Bradford Academy. Bradford opened as the first coeducational institution in Massachusetts but due to overwhelming interest from parents of girls with no other option for education Bradford soon transitioned to become the first all-female academy in Massachusetts and among the first in the United States in 1836. Only three examples of these early Incorporation Acts could not be found among Institutional Collections according to OCLC Worldcat. <br/><br/>Women's colleges proliferated in the mid- to late- 19th century to fill the void created by their exclusion from most institutions of higher education. The prevailing notion that women were too delicate for a rigorous academic education was openly challenged when Elizabeth Cady Stanton spoke at the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 "Man's intellectual superiority cannot be a question until woman has had a fair trial.When we shall have had our colleges our professions our trades for a century a comparison then may be justly instituted." Young women were quick to step up to the challenge; as quickly as female colleges opened they filled up. But this document predates Seneca Falls by 40 years and Bradford was among the very first institutions to educate women in the United States. unknown books
200032202000. Hardcover. Very Good. University of San Diego Master's Thesis. 8.5 x 11 inches bound in blue buckram vii 141 pp notes with maps illustrations bibliography. A few pencil annotations all else very good. Includes chapters on the Historiography of Women and Power in Alta California California Indian Women Pioneer Women Concepcion Arguello Josefa Carillo and Maria Amparo Ruiz. Per the Introduction this study "will analyze romanticized versions of these women's stories and correct misrepresentations of their roles in California history.and will show how prominent women's conflicts represented struggles with power faced by all women regardless of their socio-economic status." hardcover books
1910006519New York: The Crowell Publishing Co. 1910. Very Good marginal stains the first few pages rubbing to rear cover at spine prior owner name in ink top edge rear cover. chip at bottom corner rear cover. Features "Dotty Darling and the Kewpies; The First of a Series of Delightsome Kewpie Stories with Verses and Pictures by Rose Cecil O'Neill". Rose Cecil O'Neill was the first published female cartoonist in the United States her Kewpie cartoons having made their debut appearance a year earlier in an issue of Ladies' Home Journal Also features a full-page color illustration of a charming Jessie Willcox Smith painting titled " Little drops of water". . First Edition. Magazine. Very Good/No Jacket As Issued. Elephant Folio - over 15" - 23" tall. The Crowell Publishing Co. Paperback books
199650600Minneapolis: James C. Hillegass 1996. First edition 8vo pp. 8 32 4; photographic endpapers photoreproductive illustrations throughout by John Ratzloff; original full grey cloth over boards front cover stamped in silver. This copy inscribed by the author to Greg Campbell Campbell-Logan Bindery: "For Greg and the binders thanks for making it happen. Jim Hillegass." Fine copy. <br/><br/> James C. Hillegass hardcover books
197350240Falmouth MA 1973. 8vo pp. v 71; fine in pictorial paper wrappers. Inscribed by Elliott to the poet Ron Gower and his wife Anne. <br/><br/> unknown books
196648558Minneapolis: James D. Thueson 1966. First edition limited to 250 signed copies this no. 164 pp. 78 2; illustrated frontispiece; brown cloth boards backed in black; a fine copy. Mulder and Timmerman A13a. <br/><br/> James D. Thueson hardcover books
198750883Minneapolis: James D. Thueson 1987. First edition limited to 300 signed and numbered copies this no. 10 8vo pp.56; fine in original quarter black morocco over maroon cloth lettered in gilt on upper cover and spine. Inscribed by the author "Hello to Gregor Campbell from Frederick Manfred 1-8-1988." Mulder and Timmerman A13a. <br/><br/> James D. Thueson hardcover books
198748559Minneapolis: James D. Thueson 1987. First edition limited to 300 signed and numbered copies this no. 51 8vo pp.56; small imperfection on the cloth of the back cover else fine in original quarter black morocco over maroon cloth lettered in gilt on upper cover and spine. Mulder and Timmerman A13a. <br/><br/> James D. Thueson hardcover books
199558005Minneapolis: Minnesota Center for Book Arts 1995. Deluxe edition limited to 50 copies this no. 20; translucent patterned inserts text printed in red green and black text illustrations green paper boards backed in art vellum fine. Accompanied by an original print signed by Rose all in original clamshell box. The Winter Books series is an annual project of the Minnesota Center for Book arts in which students artists designers and volunteers come together to produce a limited edition book by a Minnesota author. Letterpress by Chax Press handmade covers by Bridget O'Malley binding by Wilber Schilling. <br/><br/> Minnesota Center for Book Arts hardcover books
197773211977. Softcover. VG. Wraps. 14 pp. 18 bw plates. Catalogue lists 43 works all of which are illustrated. unknown books
196520159Glendale CA: Arthur H. Clark 1965. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine. Western Frontiersmen Series XII. 268 pp with frontispiece illustrations appendix bibliography index. Fine copy in original plain paper dust jacket inscribed on the front free endpaper "For Bill Mason with best wishes and deep appreciation for your help Sincerely Iris H.W. Engstrand." As described in the publisher's prospectus not present here William Wolfskill was a Missouri fur trapper and Santa Fe trader who explored uncharted areas of the Southwest before settling in Los Angeles where he pioneered in numerous agricultural economic and cultural projects. Arthur H. Clark hardcover books
193347102Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 1933. First edition 8vo pp. 14 287; illustrated with seven prints of photos; original brown cloth with embossed University of Minnesota stamp and gilt lettering on spine; fine. <br/><br/> University of Minnesota Press hardcover books
1981299451981. Softcover. VG light scuffing to cover. White ill. stapled wraps. 37 pp. Profuse bw and color plates. paperback books