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1916ZB527654London: HMSO 1916. tall octavo paper wrappers string tied library markings else good; published as Colonial Reports -- Annual No. 899. - 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. London: HMSO unknown
2543London: Mark Baskett January 10th 1765. . Folio disbound first title still conjugate gutter showing evidence of previous binding. Second title third leaf detached; gutter showing evidence of previous binding The passage of these acts was probably spurred by an the likelihood of an outbreak of cattle plague on the British mainland which actually did occur in later in 1765. London: Mark Baskett, January 10th 1765. unknown
elala53408vo. pp. 1 p.l. xxviii 480. original blind-stamped cloth stain to upper cover lacking front flyleaf. A valuable collection of historical material relating to the Canadian North-West the Hudson's Bay Company and the Hudson's Bay Territories Saskatchewan the Red River Manitoba the North-West Territories and the frontier lands above Lake Superior. Not in Peel.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> Ottawa: Printed By Maclean, Roger & Co., 1880. hardcover
178836636London: Printed and Sold by John Nichols. 1788. Folio. Pages 831-839 1 blank. "Numb. 96." at upper left corner at head of title. Disbound light margin spotting else Very Good. <br /> <br /> The Commons addresses requests to assist planters from East Florida who have suffered from its cession to Spain. Several petitions are presented from "Persons who have suffered in their Rights and Properties during the late unhappy Dissentions in America in Consequence of their Loyalty to His Majesty and Attachment to the British Government. Printed and Sold by John Nichols... unknown
0364027746.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0656336552.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
048363901X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
191270019London: The Review Press 1912 / 1913. 8vo. 2 volumes. 165 pp & 324 pp. Brown paper covers with black lettering. From sessions February 14th - August 7th 1912 & October 7th 1912 - August 15th 1913. Some creasing to the paper and small tears at the feet of both spines. White marking to front cover of volume 2. Spoting to the fore edge of volume one. Otherwise volumes clean internally and bindings firm. . Very Good. Paper Covers. 1912. The Review Press 1912 / 1913 unknown
RGW187685 folding tables appendices; 96pp. 8vo disbound in paper wrappers Detailed accounts of income and expenditure. For example one table gives the cost of the Army including the £53502 paid to American forces. unknown
18179AE's five letters on letterheads of 30 Ennismore Gardens S.W. London 3; and Spring Bank Oldham 2; four of them from between 1905 and 1907 the other undated. GHE's letter on letterhead of 35 Grosvenor Road Claughton Birkenhead; 1903. The six items totalling 9pp. are in fair condition on lightly-aged paper George H. Emmott's letter having slight wear at head. The recipient was Charles J. Holdsworth of Sunnyside Wilmslow Cheshire. AE's first letter responds briefly to Holdsworth's congratulations on Emmott's appointment as Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee; the second letter sends what 'appears to be an old scrap book of Henry King's' Holdsworth's uncle with reference to 'old Friends' books of his'; the third no more than a note states his 'only objection' as 'publication in the newspaper' ; the fourth and longest at two full 4to pages gives his views 27 April 1907 on 'Haldane's Territorial & Reserve Forces Bill': 'I do not vote on account of my official post but I do not want to pass by this communication from the Society of Friends without acknowledgment'. He is not commenting as he is 'out of political strife for the time being' but is 'tempted to say privately that I am told the number of volunteers from boys who have been in Cadet Corps is far smaller proportionately than from the general male population. The reason stated is that military training even of that imperfect kind lessens rather than increases the military spirit. I wonder if it really is so. If it is we need not fear the moral effect of military training very much. For any danger but that of the military spirit is not to be feared & the physical results are good enough.' AE's fifth letter refers Holdsworth to his brother George who with his wife will probably know 'who took most of these books'. George H. Emmott's letter dated 12 July 1903 is 3pp. 8vo and discusses AE's school days at the Quaker School in Kendal: 'I remember however that on one occasion when his half yearly report came home it contained the remark from Henry Thompson that he combined the good qualities of both his elder brothers - meaning I believe my studiousness and love of books and our brother John's love of games & outdoor exercise. I do not know how it arose but his nickname at school where he was quite a general favourite wwas "Madam" .'. AE's five letters on letterheads of 30 Ennismore Gardens, S.W. [ London ] (3); and Spring Bank, Oldham (2); four of them from be unknown
1717AR1007London: Printed By John Baskett 1717. Original issue . paper wrappers. Fine. Folio. 331-370pp. 31cms Attractive general title-page with the Royal Crest. Decorative initial to the black letter type with a drop title to the head of the page. A fine crisp fresh and clean complete copy of the act from a nonce volume.p331-370 Dis-bound but complete.An important Act from the George 11 reign. ORIGINAL PRINTING <br/> <br/> Printed By John Baskett unknown
1716AR1006London: Printed By John Baskett 1716. Original issue . paper wrappers. Fine. Folio. 6pp. 31cms Attractive general title-page with the Royal Crest. Decorative initial to the black letter type with a drop title to the head of the page. A fine crisp fresh and clean complete copy of the act from a nonce volume.p419-423 Dis-bound but complete.AN ACT FOR REGULATING PILOTS FOR THE CONDUCT OF SHIPS AND VESSELS FROM DOVER DEAL AND THE ISLE OF THANET UP THE RIVERS OF THAMES AND MEDWAY <br/> <br/> Printed By John Baskett unknown
97316 March 1738; Paris. 12mo 5 pp. A substantial letter closely and neatly written. Very good on lightly-aged paper. A graceful and jaunty letter verging on the sycophantic. Begins 'I have as many pardons to ask of you for my long Silence as the Pope distributes in a year of Jubillee sic. In all Crimes a Confession of them is some Diminution of the Guilt'. 'All the French News I can tell you is that the Cardinal: Est un Homme Confisque . The Faubourg St Germain is vastly emptyd lately Lord Barrington Strange Mr Lewison and many more decamped last Week. Lord Berkeley is gone to Aubigny where he expected to meet Lord Bolingbroke .'.The connection between the two families came throught the first Earl of Denbigh who married Bridget Stanhope. 6 March 1738; Paris. unknown
10782'Wm. Atherton Temple 16. Octr. 1841.'. On both sides of a piece of paper 33 x 41.5 cm. 39 lines. Text clear and complete. In good condition on laid paper. The lower part of the last leaf laid down on piece of card with no loss of Atherton's text. Atherton gives his response to three queries the latter part of the second and whole of the third of which are present in another hand totalling twelve lines at the head of the first page. Atherton ends his statement: 'Until however it shall have been ascertained what course Braddick means to pursue on the 20th. and also whether Mr. Hussey persists in his refusal to arbitrate I cannot satisfactorily advise Mrs. Cox for her further guidance.' Atherton was called to the bar in 1839 'Wm. Atherton, Temple, 16. Octr. 1841.' unknown
12462London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Spottiswoode Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty. 1834. 11pp. foolscap 8vo. Stitched and unbound. Aged and worn with closted vertical 5cm cut from bottom through all six leaves. The full drophead title reads: 'CAP. LXXVII. An Act to render valid and effectual certain Articles of Agreement between the Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London Governors of the Possessions Revenues and Goods of the Hospitals of Edward King of England the Sixth of Christ Bridewell and Saint Thomas the Apostle and of the Hospitals of Henry the Eighth King of England called "The House of the Poor" in West Smithfield near London and of the House and Hospital called Bethlehem and the Presidents Treasurers and Acting Governors of the said several Hospitals.' Bearing a number of underlinings and marginal annotations in a nineteenth-century hand presumably by a member of the solicitors 'Clayton Cookson & Wainewright' whose name is written on the blank last page together with '22 Geo. 3. c. 77'. The involvement of the solicitors may result from 1860s legal action over the moving of St Thomas's Hospital from Southwark to Lambeth. Excessively scarce: no copy on COPAC. London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Spottiswoode, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty. 1834. unknown
2483212 January 1716. His Majesty's Exchequer London. See his entries in the Oxford DNB and History of Parliament the former of which notes his ‘high reputation for courage’ and his presence ‘at Neerwinden and Landen in 1693 covering the retreat on 19 July and saving William III from capture by the enemy’. 1p 8vo. On aged and worn paper with chipping to edges and pitting along a horizontal central line but with both signatures clear and unblemished. The customary printed document completed in manuscript. Records in a secretarial hand the receipt of £25 by ‘Hen: Lumley Esqr. attor to the Rt. Honble Rd Lord Lumley Rd Hill & John Wiseman’. Signed towards bottom right ‘H Lumley’ and towards bottom left ‘Witness / John Letton’. See Image. 12 January 1716. [His Majesty's Exchequer, London.] unknown
12132Enniskillen. 16 August 1924. 1p. 4to. Eighteen lines. On creased and lightly-aged paper. On 21 February 1924 in the House of Commons Lansbury 'asked the Secretary of State for War if his attention has been called to the fact that the Officers' Association have sent in a claim to the Army Council for compensation on behalf of Lieutenant C. H. Glendinning 3rd Battalion Royal Irish Rifles on the grounds of the false imprisonment conspiracy and persecution to which this officer was subjected whilst serving in India during 1917'. Giving the recipient's name as 'Glendining' twice Healy considers that if Lansbury would put a 'further question' to the Secretary for War on his behalf 'perhaps he will do something'. He continues: 'Did Mr. L. let you see the dossier they sent him - a sort of precise sic of your case. It was I think the Sec of State for War's summary to his Majesty. It was dead against you and rather unfair I thought. It was marked "private" and Lord Bentinck and I got other copies. The non-delivery of papers is not much help to your case I fear - I mean letters dealing with that aspect.' He concludes by saying that he is 'surprised at the result of the Welsh inquiry for I thought he meant to do justice to you. Evidently the forces within his department were stronger than he.' Enniskillen. 16 August 1924. unknown
20505'Oxford & Cam Club' London . 16 July no year . 3pp 12mo. Bifolium with mourning border. In good condition lightly aged with reverse of second leaf laid down on leaf removed from album. Valentia's father had been like Neate a Member of Parliament for Oxford. The letter begins: 'Dear Lord Valentia. I am sorry it so happens that I was away and shall be till next Monday - when I return home <> to <> street for the next six Weeks'. He would have been 'very glad to meet even a Yankee at your <> - though I dont like those northerns especially those that stay in England just now.' If 'the Yankee' should be with Valentia or in the neighbourhood the following week he will be 'happy to show him Oxford'. 'Oxford & Cam Club' [ London ]. 16 July [ no year ]. unknown
14135Ombersley Worcestershire. 14 September 1758. 2pp. small 4to. In fair condition on aged paper with slight loss to one edge. He begins: 'Sr! I wrote to you a Post or two ago to desire you to send me Voyage de M. Condamine sur la Riviere des Amazons impr. a Paris en 1745. If you have it not in your Shop Pray enquire for it & send it to me at Ombersley near Worcester: and I wish you would inform me if M. Condamine or any of his company that went with him to Peru have publish'd any other account of any part of their Expedition I have read Don Ant. Ulloa's Voyage to those parts but desire to know whether any voyage was publish'd by the French excepting the Voy. sur la R. des Am. above-mentioned' He concludes by enquiring about another book and 'the old Mathematical Books I desir'd you to enquire after for me'. Ombersley [Worcestershire]. 14 September 1758. unknown
2557031 January 1794. ‘No. 370.’. See his long entry in the Oxford DNB. On one side of a 12.5 x 6.5 cm piece of laid paper embossed with a tax stamp. In fair condition lightly aged and discoloured. Very neatly written and set out: ‘Jan 31 . 1794 / No. 370. / Received of Wm. Phillips / fourteen shillings for the third volume of / EPEA PTEROENTA or The Diversions / of Purley. John Horne Tooke / £2. 2. 0’. See Image 31 January 1794. ‘No. 370.’ unknown
1871090316United Kingdom: HMSO. Correspondence respecting the negotiations preliminary to the war between France and Prussia. 1870. c-167 77 pages. : Further correspondence .C-189 10 pages : Further Correspondence.C-210 98 pages : Further Correspondence in continuation of July 29 1870.c-244 269 pagessome french text and pencil annotations : This is a bound collection of Government Papers consisiting of the following : Correspondence with Lord Lyons Respecting his departure from Paris.1871 13 pages: also 6 more papers dealing with Pecuniary demands : sinking of British Vessels Passports Imprisonment of Mr. Worth.etc. Leather spine and corners with some cracking and wear esp. cover corners etc but sound. Marbled boards with some of the marbled sheet missing from rear cover exposing a section of hard card cover. See image from winghale books. Bookplate of Bishop of Llandaff Alfred Ollivant0 on end paper. Original government papers bound together in a large size 33 cm x 21 cm hardback. . Good. Hardcover. 1871. HMSO hardcover
2590717 January no year on paper watermarked ‘JOYNSON 1860’; on Berkeley Castle letterhead. See the two men’s entries in the Oxford DNB. For the context see the 1863 pamphlet ‘Clare versus the Queen’ in the slug to which John Clare 1820-1885 is described as ‘THE KING OF METAL SHIP BUILDERS’. 3pp 12mo. Bifolium. In fair condition lightly aged and worn with folds. Docketed ‘Fitzhardinge / Lord -’. Signed ‘Fitzhardinge’ sic. In a difficult hand. Begins: ‘My Dear Romaine / I have to appear as a Witness on behalf of the Admiralty in the case of “Clare’s Petition of Right to the Queen†in which I am suitor.’ He denies the claim that he has ‘infringed Patents’ with regard to ‘Gun Boats’ ‘and I do not even remember having ever seen the Man or any body on his behalf’. He asks Romaine to help him refresh his memory with regard to communications ‘in which my name appears either at White Hall or Somerset House’: ‘at present I am prepared to swear total ignorance of the Man and his Gun Boats’. He ends by giving an address to which Romaine should write if ‘any thing can be traced to me’. 17 January [no year, on paper watermarked ‘JOYNSON | 1860’]; on Berkeley Castle letterhead. unknown
119789 Pall Mall London. 21 June 1861. 3pp. 12mo. 52 lines. Fair on lightly-aged paper. He thanks him for sending for his 'inspection the old watch which is a nice specimen' but would have been of more interest had it been left in its original condition'. He describes the alterations and his reasons for believing that they were 'done by a French man & I should think prior to the time of your late Brother'. Morgan possesses a watch by Sayller and he 'once saw an extremely curious & beautiful clock of his in a case of silver'. The latter 'has gone through the process of "Restoration" that is removal of all the old curious works & insertion of modern ones to suit the present day - & I think now belongs to one of the Rothschilds'. He returns to the recipient's watch describing it in detail including the comment: 'the ornaments of the dial are in a state which was introduced by Theodor de Bry in the XVI century filled in with black in imitation of niello'. He concludes: 'The date of the watch judging from the stile I consider to be from 1600 to 1625'. 9 Pall Mall [London]. 21 June 1861. unknown
15663Bromesberrow Place Tewkesbury. 4 January post 1842. 3pp. 12mo. Bifolium. On paper with the 1842 watermark of R. Turner of Chafford Mills.In fair condition aged and with a central spike hole. He has received the ten books and is returning them 'by the night mail' and will return 'the box of books' later 'as unfortunately a courier only passes here but on certain days in the week'. Changing tone he continues: 'I beg that my name may not be put down as a subscriber this year to the library; for I feel after the number of years we have been subscribers that we might have had the 5th Vol of Mad. D'Arblay before now and that greater attention might have been paid to us.' Bromesberrow Place, Tewkesbury. 4 January [post 1842]. unknown
1908092496London England: Wyman and Sons Limited Under Contract with His Majesty's Stationary Office. Hardback. First Edition. Slight foxing to end inside covers and edge. Corners bumped. Brown cloth with gilt lettering. The Parliamentaty Debates Authorised Edition. Fourth Series. Third Session of the Twenty-Eighth Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 8. Edward VII. Volume CXCIII Comprising Period From Wednesday Twenty-Second Day of July 1908 to Saturday First Day of August 1908. Eleventh Volume of Session. 1908. 2107 pp. We carry a wide selection of titles in The Arts Theology History Politics Social and Physical Sciences. academic and scholarly books and Modern First Editions and all types of Academic Literature. . Very Good. Cloth. First Edition. 1908. Wyman and Sons Limited Under Contract with His Majesty's Stationary Office