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Pages 231-260. Features: Hon. Rosecrans W. Pillsbury; Concord in 1776 - article with one-page photo portrait of subject and photo of his Londonderry home; One-page illustration of the garrison of Rev. Timothy Walker; The Bell of Zamora; The Coffin Elm; Hannah Dustin - A Medley of Song; Of Such is Life; Obituaries for Horace E. Chamberlin, Hon. William H. Parker and Fred P. Virgin; Poems; Fantastic illustrated one-page ad for the Carter Twin-Engine Car, built by the Carter Motor Car Corporation of Washington, D.C. - on reverse of this ad is an informative photo-illustrated ad for shares in the Carter Motor Car Corporation; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 195-224. Features: Hon. Samuel C. Eastman - article with full-page photo portrait and photo of Mr. Eastman's Concord home; The Congregational Church at Laconia - article with several photos of the church and its personalities; Old King Saul - Giant White Pine tree at Center Harbor - article with photos; Seventy-Five Years Ago and Now; An Unintentional Scare; Will of Deacon John Blanchard of Dunstable; Obituaries for Harrison Haley, Hon. Joseph F. Wiggin, Hon. George A Wason; Thaddeus E. Sanger; Rt. Rev. John B. Delany; Prof. George A. Wentworth, Daniel Wadsworth Coe; Poems; and more. Inside back cover is a nicely illustrated ad for the Boston and Maine Railroad / Seashore Lake and Mountain Resorts. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 31-62. Features: Hon. William H. Mitchell - article with one-page photo portrait; A Notable Celebration - The American Antiquarian Society; An Interesting Event - Celebration and Dedication at South Barnstead Congregational Church; The Old Bell; Obituaries for Hon. Joseph B. Walker, Mrs. Orlando B. Douglas, Leonard D. Brown and William E. Brooks; Poems; Back cover ad for the W.A. Thompson Shoe House of Concord; and more. Average wear. Varied evidence of moisture exposure throughout. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 67-96. Features: Col. Charles H. Greenleaf - A Leading Man in a Leading State Interest - article with photos, including one-page photo portrait of Mr. Greenleaf; Sarah M. Bailey; A Concord Industry - The Page Belting Company; What Our Grandparents Read - Sketches 9f the Windham Social Library; The Warfare Against Tuberculosis; Obituaries for Capt. Henry B. Atherton, Gen. John Eaton, John Z. Bartlett and Charles Nelson Kent; Poems; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 117-146. Features: Hon. Frank Sherwin Streeter - article with photo-portrait of General Streeter plus a photo of his home; Reminiscenses of Trinidad; Dr. Henry A. Weymouth, 14 Oct, 1820 - 21 October, 1908 - written tribute and one-page photo portrait; Other Days and Now - A Reverie; Revolutionary Soldiers' Graves; Obituaries for Colonel Carroll D. Wright, Hon. Lyman D. Stevens, William B. Smart, Mrs. William H. Hill, Prof. Joseph W. Carr, and General Daniel W. Bill; Poems; Fantastic one-page illustrated ad for the Carter Motor Car Corporation's 30 H.P. Washington Roadster; Nostalgic illustrated ad for Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof Self-Healing Tires made by the J.L. Mead Cycle Company; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 161-192. Features: Hon. Benjamin Ames Kimball - article with nice one-page photo portrait; Daniel Webster; Hannah Dustin of Haverhill - her capture and famous exploit recounted; A Doubtful Claim - to whom belongs the honor of securing the abolition of flogging in the Navy?; In the Lecture Field - Flora Kendall Edmond; The Old Bow Meetinghouse - and the Baptist Church in the Town of Bow; Obituary of Maj. Henry McFarland; Poems; Fantastic back page ad for the David E. Murphy store of North Main St. in Concord, seller of reliable merchandise at reasonable prices; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 227-255. Features: Gen. Stephen H. Gale - article with full-page photo portrait and illustration of the Gale Bros. Inc. shoe factory at Exeter; A Meritorious Institution - The New Hampshire Orphans' Home - article with nice photos; New Hampshire Night at thte Exile Club; Vice-President George M. Dallas; A Natural Barometer; Obituaries for Prof. Christopher C. Langdell; Barron Shirley, Hon. Charles J. Smith; Eugene F. McQuesten, Dr. Sophronia Fletcher, Dr. Julia Wallace Russell, David M. Thompson; Poems; Nicely illustrated ad for Prescott pianos on back cover; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A quality copy of this vintage issue. Magazine
Pages 197-249. Black and white photos. Features: Nice full-page photo portrait of Major Charles S. Walker, N.H. Department Commander American Legion; For God and Country - The American Legion - A New Hampshire Asset - major article with many great photos; The Legion - Maker of Americans - an interview with Maurice F. Devine; Behind the Lines; Behind the Lines - The American Legion Auxiliary at work; State Executive Board of the American Legion Auxiliary; A Portrait Gallery of Legionnaires - excellent photos with write-ups of selected individuals; New Hampshire's Labor Commissioner; Their Son; An Anthology of One Poem Poets; Over the Top with Ayrshires - The Sawyer Herd and Farrm Buildings - article with nice photos; In the Springtime; When Claremont was called Ashley III - Two English Maps of Revolutionary Times; Current opinion in New Hampshire; Old Home Week and the Tercentenary; Books of New Hampshire Interest; The Editor Stops to Talk; New Hampshire Necrology. Average wear and soiling. A sound vintage copy of this particularly excellent issue. Magazine
New New English Original bdg. Dust wrapper. Folio. (32 x 25 cm). Edition in English. 463, [1] p., color ills. The gift to the great ones on naval campaigns. (Tuhfetü'l-kibâr fi esfâri'l-bihâr). Edited by Idris Bostan. [With a CD]. "It's a cost a joy of that the interest shown to the history and culture of sea has increased recently. If the sciencetific level of this interest is maintained, then how the Turks managed the seas in the best way will be understood better because each state grows to the extent of its interest in the seas and its power in the seas, and it takes its place among the navigator states thanks to the consciousness it develops". OTTOMANIA Ottoman history Military history Navigation Turkish naval forces Manuscript Atlas Map Collection Miniature Turkish and Islamic arts.
New English Original bdg. HC. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. [xi], 702 p. Contents:INTRODUCTION (Talat S. Halman) IFOREWORD & BIOGRAPHY (Sukru S. Aya) IV(1) HISTORICAL BACKGROUND(2) OTTOMAN TREAT OF 'MILLETS' (Religious Groups) (3) AMICABLE RELATIONS(4) LOYALTY and INNOCENCE BY REVOLUTION(5) MARVELOUS MISSIONARIES(6) DIVINITY for BIGOTRY AND ANARCHY(7) DISTORTING REALISM BRINGS ANTAGONISM(8) DI-FUSED AUTONOMY! (Goal or Pretext?) (9) ATROCITIES, VAN, etc. (10) ON THE BATTLEFIELDS (Sarikamish-Gallipoli-Suez) (11) OILFIELD FREEDOMS (or Oil fired) (12) WAGING WAR FOR MONEY WITHOUT MONEY(13) SOME REMARKS ON ARMS AND ARMIES(14) RELOCATIONS (Arrivals-Loses-Contradictions)) (15) POPULATION: CONTROVERSY OR MATHEMATICAL AVERAGE? (16) PROPAGANDA FABRICATIONS(17) PROVEN FORGERY to DISTORT HISTORY(18) ABOUT CHARITY and RELIEF ORGANIZATIONS(19) FAMINE and EPIDEMICS(20) THE ARMENIAN REPUBLIC (Short-Lived or Short-Sighted) (21) DASHNAK'S PARADOXICAL DEDICATIONS (22) WAS KATCHAZNUNI WRONG OR PROPHETIC(23) EXCERPTS FROM A.A. LALAIAN'S EDITORIAL(24) THE SUCCESS OF ARMENIAN LOBBIES and DIASPORA Org. (25) SHAM-FULL JUSTICE and TRIAL EVASIONS(26) MOMENTS OF EXTINCTION OR EXISTENCE(27) ALLIES IN PLUNDERING but ADVERSARIES in SHARING(28) INTERESTING REMARKS (About Turks, Armenians & Various) (29) MEDIA SCANNER OF OLD NEWS(30) STATUS-QUO and conclusive remarks.-Bibliography - Selected Index. ARMENIANS Genocide Deportation, 1915 Ottoman Empire International law.
New English Original bdg. HC. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. [xii], 523 p. The genocide of truth continues. But facts tell the real story. Sukru Server Aya has taken on a thankless but extremely valuable task. Generations of scholars, politicians, and internet bloggers will make use of his work, often not citing the source. Others those who do not want what Aya has uncovered ever to be seen will excoriate him. Heedless of both supporters and detractors, Aya has continued to collect and analyze the documents and assertions that underlie the Armenian Question. He may not ever be properly thanked for his labors, but those of us who appreciate his discoveries know their great value. -Justin A. McCarthy- Justin McCarthy is Professor of History and Distinguished University Scholar at the University of Louisville. Among his works on related subjects: Muslims and Minorities (1983), Death and Exile (1995), The Ottoman Turks (1997), The Ottoman Peoples and End of Empire (2001), The Armenian Rebellion at Van (2006), and The Turk in America (2010). Although clearly not a trained and scholarly historian, Sukru Server Aya has offered over many years a monumental service in collecting documents unmistakably illustrating the exaggerated, inconsistent statements about the treatment of the Ottoman Government, and Turks generally, of Armenians during WWI. The evidence here is of a prejudicial, one-sided and venomous anti-Turkish stance characteristic of a time when the defeated Turks were fair game. Aya's collection of the words of influential Armenian advocates cannot be ignored and yet it has been and most likely will continue to be. Yet if the world listens to the facts Aya so passionately presents, a step forward will have been taken to interrupt the continuous cycle of murderous Insatiable rage based on the events of a century ago. -Sam S. Baskett-. ARMENIANS Deportation, 1915 Ottoman Empire World War 1 Union and Progress Party (Ittihad ve Terakki Cemiyeti) Armenian question.
22p., illus. Presentation slip from The American Institute of Graphic Arts laid in. Illus. w/ relief prints. Hardcover Very good condition; in pictorial paper-covered boards
New English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo (24 x 17 cm). In English. 92 p. The Gallipoli Campaign: International perspectives 85 years on. Conference papers, 24-25 April 2000.
Fine Fine English Original bdg. Dust wrapper. Oblong 4to. (22 x 32 cm) .In English and Turkish. 87, [6] p., b/w ills. and maps. The Gallipoli Campaign in the Great War.= Büyük Harpte Çanakkale Seferi. Prep. by Murat Karatas. Translated by Elif Berfin. The Gallipoli Campaign took place in 1915 and 1916, between Ottoman empire and the Allies; and witnessed the toughest naval and land battles of World War I. The Allied Forces were aiming to capture the Dardanelles and Bosphorus straits, and then push Ottoman Empire out of the war. Whereas Turkish Army was there to defend the straits, and to stay in the war, by any means. Bursali Mehmed Nihad (participated in these battles as captain in the first year and continued as major in the next) presents an important first hand study that recites the Gallipoli Campaign, which caused hundreds thousands of casualties for both sides.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. 240 p. CONTENTS: Acknowledgements Abbreviations. Chapter 1. Introduction. Chapter 2. Avârizhânes in the Province of Karaman, 1621-1700. Chapter 3. Avâriz and Nüzul Levies in the Province of Karaman: An Assessment of Tax Burden, 1621-1700. Chapter 4. Collectors of Avâriz and Nüzul Levies in Karaman Eyâleti: 1621-1700. Chapter 5. Complaints About Avâriz Assessment and Payment in the Province of Karaman : 1618-1700. Chapter 6. Conclusion Glossary Appendices Chronology Bibliography Facsimiles.
130p. Small 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, worn. First American edition. Professor Brogan argues that Germans have never formed a free state and never will. Coldwar/Economics 7
New English Paperback. Pbo. Large roy. 8vo. (22 x 20 cm). In English and Turkish. 210 p., color and b/w postcards and photographs. The four-legged municipality: Street dogs of Istanbul.= Dört ayakli belediye: Istanbul'un sokak köpekleri. The Four-Legged Municipality: Street Dogs of Istanbul exhibition focuses on street dogs that were regarded as the inhabitants of the city from the conquest through early nineteenth century, and on the transformation of their status in the Tanzimat Period as a result of the changing political and social conditions. In the exhibition catalogue, it is possible to find first the adventure of street dogs in the late Ottoman period, and then the story of their purging to Hayirsizada (Sivriada) in 1910. The catalogue also features articles by curator Ekrem I¿¿n and counsellor Catherine Pinguet presenting a general overview of the subject alongside a selection of photographs, engravings, books, and journals from the Photography Collection of Suna and ¿nan K¿raç Foundation, Pierre de Gigord Collection, Galeri Alfa Collection.
Very Good English Paperback. Pbo. 4to. (32 x 23 cm). In English. 159 p., color and b/w ills. The food culture of the Ottoman Palace.
New English Original bdg. HC. Large 8vo. (25 x 25 cm). 227, [1] p., color and b/w ills. The fleet of the Republic, 1923-2000.= Cumhuriyet donanmasi, 1923-2000. Enlarged Second Edition.
New New English Original bdg. Dust wrapper. 4to. (30 x 21 cm). In English, Turkish, and Arabic. 384 p., ills. and documents. The First World War in the Red Crescent archive documents.= Kizilay Arsivi belgelerinde Birinci Dünya Savasi.
New English Original bdg. HC. 4to. (31 x 22 cm). In English and Turkish. 2 volumes set: ([xxiv], 343 p.; 303 p.). The First World War in Ottoman documents.= Osmanli belgelerinde Birinci Dünya Harbi. 2 volumes set. A very heavy set. OTTOMANIA Ottolman history World War 1 Gallipoli, 1915 Iraq Caucasus Military history Archival documents International relations Last period of the Ottoman State Palestine Galicia Egypt.
New English Original bdg. HC. 4to. (32 x 23 cm). In English and Turkish. 183 p. Color and b/w ills. The first Turkish admiral Chaka Bey and the naval battles in his era.= Türklerin ilk amirali Çaka Bey ve dönemin deniz savaslari. It is known that the Turcoman Bey Chaka who started the Maritime Chapter in the history of Turks integrating to Anatolia a thousand year ago, conquered Smyrna, and shook the Byzantine Empire was the same person as Chavuldur Chaka Bey from the Danishmend Bey's retinue, a member of left branch tribes of Oghuzes. He was a wellread Turcomen Bey who had full command of Greek and read Homer's poem "The Night is Falling" aloud during a conversation he had made with Byzantine Commander Dalassenos. The beginning of Crusades is directly associated with Turcoman's attacks to Anatolia led by commanders such as Suleiman Shah, Emir Chaka Bey and Abu'l Qasim.
Book shows light wear only to oversize covers: two marks at spine on front cover, a little bit of corner wear, back upper corner is turned out slightly, covers show scuffing. Binding is solid and square, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. 80 pages with usually four captioned b&w photos per oversize page, with chapter introductions, usually one page. Chapters include: Voyage of the North Star, Arrival of the Colonists, Drawing for the Land, Permanent program of construction, Colonial life, Farming, Personalities and personnel, Transient camp life. Signed by the author on the title page. Rare. In 1935, the Federal Emergency Relief Administration created an experimental farming community known as the Matanuska Valley Colony as part of the New Deal resettlement plan.[1] Situated in the Matanuska Valley, about 45 miles northeast of Anchorage, Alaska, the colony was settled by 203 families from Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. The Matanuska Colony was part of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal plan to help move the United States out of the Great Depression. It was one of many rural rehabilitation colonies to be established by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA). Others included Cherry Lake Farms in Florida, Dyess Colony in Arkansas, and the Pine Mountain Valley Rural Community in Georgia. In 1935, Americans in rural areas of northern states were among the worst sufferers of the Great Depression. In order to alleviate some of the pressures upon these areas, the FERA commissioned applicants from the northern states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan to colonize a tract of land in the Territory of Alaska. The administration chose these three northern states because of their climate and belief that representatives would be well suited to survive harsh elements of subarctic winters. The hope was that the colony candidates would be good farmers with the necessary skills and hardiness required for self-sufficiency in the harsh Alaskan environment. Each family was to receive a 40-acre plot to turn into farmland. From conception to realization, the project progressed rapidly. A survey was made of the Matanuska Valley in June 1934 to ascertain its agricultural viability. Some of the information that would have proven to be useful in planning the colony was not even available until after colonization had begun. Nonetheless, the following January, FERA and Department of the Interior agreed to undertake the project. A few weeks later, 80,000 acres of land was set aside for the project and, by April, the first construction workers and colonists left for the valley. According to historian Orlando W. Miller, a total of 241,332 acres were initially set aside for the colony, with an additional 7,780 acres added later on to provide more continuity between the farms. After all, it was supposed to be a colony with startup assistance from the government. In effect, they wanted to keep the farms together in a single area as opposed to being spread out across the vast region reserved by President Roosevelt?s Executive Order 6957 of 4 February 1935. Colonists began to arrive to their new home in early May 1935. There was very little ready for them as far as housing and supplies. Colonists were forced to stay on the train until transient workers could complete their temporary tent housing. Plots of land were given out through a draw, with the majority of the plots still forested. The colonists quickly got to work clearing their land in order to comply with the government contracts they signed. The Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation (ARRC) was the governing body of the colony. The ARRC regulated the commissary, what was planted, as well as the activities of the colonists. It was also in charge of removing colonists who did not continue to meet expectations. Colonists who were in poor health, broke major rules, or were bad farmers could be asked to leave. There were many major issues within this administration. Rules and regulations as well as administrators were constantly changing. Within a month of their arrival, the colonists were extremely unhappy with their conditions. Currently, the town of Palmer, Alaska, which descended from the Matanuska Valley colonists, is home to many of the children of the settlers. Some of the original structures from the colony, including a church and barn, have been moved to the Alaska State Fairgrounds. Other remnants of the colony include the lush crops of the valley. Although the colony was not a booming success, it did become stable enough to provide dairy and farming. It did not significantly increase the population of the area, but it did develop the Matanuska Valley as the primary agriculturally productive region within Alaska. During the latter part of the twentieth century, the Matanuska Valley saw continued success with dairies and farming for local consumption. However, a number of factors limited their commercial success. With the decline of air and refrigerated freight costs, milk and other dairy products from the Pacific Northwest could be obtained for less than locally produced products. In addition, as the population of Anchorage grew to make it the largest city in Alaska, residents began to look towards the Matanuska Valley to build homes. Farm land became more expensive and taxes increased. As a result, many farmers sold their land to developers. (from Wikipedia)
New English Original bdg. HC. Oblong large 8vo. (22 x 24 cm). In English. 202 p., b/w ills. The first Ottoman capital Bursa. Translated by Priscilla Mary Isin.
New New English Original bdg. Dust wrapper. 4to. (32 x 25 cm). Proceedings in English and Turkish. 648 p., color and b/w ills. The First International Symposium on Culture and Art of the Ahlat - Avrasya.= I. Uluslararasi Ahlat - Avrasya Kültür ve Sanat Sempozyumu. 23-25 Agustos 2012, Ahlat-Bitlis.