111 résultats
197515257Berkeley: University of California Press 1975. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 172pp; 5 inserted leaves of black and white plates; includes bibliography. Removed from a non-circulating private library with ink ownership markings to front endpaper and accompanying black ink elisions from de-accession. Else an unmarked copy in a lightly worn dustwrapper. Translated by J.W.S. Judge. University of California Press unknown books
191795392London: Hodder & Stoughton 1917. Pamphlet. 8p. 4.75x7.25 inches very good in original stapled wraps. A call to denounce the actions of Germany in Belgium and the north of France during World War One where the Germans deported large numbers of Belgians and French to slave-labor sites in Germany. Hodder & Stoughton unknown books
194225070London: Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society 1942. First Edition. Octavo 24.5cm.; staplebound self-wrappers; 53-66pp. Dust-soiling edge wear from handling with very shallow separation at spine crown; about Very Good. Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society unknown books
196315364Denver: Sage Books 1963. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 218pp. Removed from a non-circulating private library with ink ownership markings to front endpaper and accompanying black ink elisions from de-accession. Moderate dusting and rubbing to jacket; else clean crisp copy in very good jacket with unmarked text. Sage Books unknown books
196942016NY: Negro Universities Press 1969. Reprint of the 1861 edition. 8vo pp. 337. Appendix index. Top edge spotted o/w a VG tight copy. Negro Universities Press unknown books
186027124Washington DC: Buell & Blanchard Printers 1860. 1st separate. Not in Dumond. Disbound. VG some soiling. 15 1 pp. Last page with printer imprint/date. 8vo. <br/><br/> Buell & Blanchard, Printers unknown books
183441625Salem MA: W & S.B. Ives 1834. 8 pp. <br /><br />"The society organized January 27 A.D. 1834.--Salem Mass." Waterstained. Bound in original printed wrappers. Front wrapper detached but present. Uncommon. W & S.B. Ives books
198315288Princeton: Princeton University Press 1983. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 515pp; illus; includes bibliography. Removed from a non-circulating private library with ink ownership markings to front endpaper and accompanying black ink elisions from de-accession. Light rubbing to boards; otherwise bright copy in near fine dustwrapper with unmarked text. Princeton University Press unknown books
186014411New-York John A. Gray Printer 1860. First edition. Some foxing; a couple of small spots of light staining; a very good copy. 16mo original printed self-wrappers 29 pages. In the wake of John Brown's Harpers Ferry raid long-time abolitionist Gerrit Smith who had been one of the covert backers of the raid--the "Secret Six" was evidently so horrified once he realized the scope of the violence the raid unleashed that he had a breakdown and entered an asylum. Smith returned from his insensibility to find that--perhaps not surprisingly--some northern Democrats had published attacks on his links to the raid. Smith responded by suing for libel and this pamphlet reproduces correspondence between his son-in-law Charles D. Miller and the subjects of the suit with extracts from Smith's writings and abolitionist polemics. Sabin 82609; LCP Afro-Americana 9498. John A. Gray, Printer unknown books
185327110Washington: C. Alexander Printer 1853. 1st thus Dumond p. 13. Disbound lacking wrappers. Overall VG occasional spot of foxing. 36 pp. 8vo. <br/><br/> C. Alexander, Printer unknown books
198115264Princeton: Princeton University Press 1981. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 262pp; Removed from a non-circulating private library with ink ownership markings to front flyleaf and accompanying black ink elisions from de-accession on front endpaper. Very mild rubbing to jacket; else clean and unmarked copy. Princeton University Press unknown books
185027010Washington: Gideon & Co. Print 1850. 1st separate. INSCRIBED by Ashmun in the top margin. Self wrappers. Gd outer leaves soiled/some staining. 16 pp. Unopened. 8vo. <br/><br/>Not in Dumond. Gideon & Co., Print unknown books
1837101441Pamphlet small 8vo removed dbd 11 pp. Removed some minor foxing normal aging and browning; otherwise very good. This pamphlet was prepared for the New York chapter of the Religious Society of Friends Quakers for their annual meeting to oppose slavery. Not surprisingly this tract encourages people to help end "this stain upon our national character." While there are religious sentiments in this work much of the discussion relates to social injustice and morality. Mahlon Day (and New York Quakers), books
191225858New York: The MacMillan Company 1912. First edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Hardbound 8vo. 219 pp plus ads at rear of volume. Gentle ex-libris copy with handsome Hartwick College Library illustrated bookplate afixed to thie inside front pastedown and a couple of tiny inked number notations to the copyright page. Otherwise a handsome very good copy. Book discusses the problems associated with "white slavery" and the treatment of young women of lesser means. The MacMillan Company hardcover books
188814044New York: Metropolitan Pub. Co 1888. First Edition. Octavo 19cm. Publisher's decorated deep mustard cloth stamped in gilt on spine; viii 431pp. First issue per Wright with no printer's statement on verso of title page. Bit of grubbiness to boards; donation bookplate and private ownership stamp to prelims; else a tight unmarked copy on the better side of VG. Thomas Manson Norwood 1830-1913 was a U.S. Senator and later a Democratic Member of the House from Georgia. In this his only novel he assails the trusts the stock market and the unequal distribution of wealth as the source of vice in America. The setting is New York City with much of the action set on Wall Street. WRIGHT III:3999. Metropolitan Pub. Co unknown books
1858660371858. Dividing Prize Money After the Capture of a Slave Ship Slavery. United States. In the Senate of the United States. February 21 1858-Ordered to Be Printed. Mr. Polk Made the Following Adverse Report To Accompany Bill S. C. of C. 108.: The Committee of Claims To Whom was Referred the Opinion of the Court of Claims in the Case of O.H. Berryman and Others Report: The Claimants in this Case are the Officers and Crew of the United States Schooner "On-Ka-Hy-E" drop-head title. Washington DC: S.n. 1858. 13 pp. Octavo 9" x 5-1/2". Disbound light rubbing to extremities some toning and light foxing. $100. 35th Congress 1st Session Senate Rep. Com. No. 33. This speech disputes the distribution of prize money between the Federal government and the crew that captured the slave ship Laurens. unknown books
191026265Chicago and Boston: The Christian Witness Company 1910. First edition. Cloth. Good . Cloth-covered ocatvo with color illustration tipped on to the front panel. 418 pp. Illustrated frontis. Written and edited by Rev. F. M. Lehman with slum data furnished by Rev. N. K. Clarkson. With illustrations and a photograph. Covers lightly worn. Pages are somewhat darkened with age. The Christian Witness Company unknown books
190415411Rochester: Office of the American 1904. Broadside extra lithographed in colors; 18" x 11". Single fold else fine. Colorful graphic depicting Princess Louise escaping from her asylum cell with the help of her illegitimate lover Geza Mattattich. The caption tempts readers with a White Slavery theme suggesting that Princess Louise has been lured to her ruin by a "Wolf of the Underworld." Unlocated. Office of the American unknown books
183945020Philadelphia: Printed for the Committee / J. Richards 1839. First Edition. 12mo 19cm.; side-stitched self-wrappers; 12pp. Some foxing faint fold lines else Very Good or better. Extracts taken chiefly from British abolitionist Thomas Fowell Buxton's larger work "The African Slave Trade" in which he argued that the African slave trade could be stamped out by other forms of trade as well as the spread of Christianity. Printed for the Committee / J. Richards unknown books
183519491Boston: James Munroe and Company 1835. First edition. Spine and portions of the rear board sunned and faded; some spotting to the cloth; some foxing and light staining; front hinge just tender; a very good copy. 8vo original embossed purple cloth printed spine label iv 167 1 pages. An important anti-slavery work from the pioneering New England Unitarian. Lib. Company. Afro-Americana 2185; American Imprints 2185. James Munroe and Company, unknown books
16453The Light. September-October 1915. La Crosse Wisconsin: World's Purity Federation 1915. The World's Purity Federation focused on fighting public vice such as prostitution and sought to ensure proper morals in society. During the Progressive period reforming public vice was a growing movement that saw victories with the passage of prohibition and other regulations on public decency. Due in part of organziations like the World'd Purity Federation in 1910 the White Slave Trade Act also known as the Mann Act passed in US Congress outlawing the transport of women typically European immigrants across state lines for the purpose of prostitution. Activists continued to meet strategize and organize tactics to ensure that the new legislation would be upheld and expanded. Photo-illustrated portrait of president of Oxford College for Women Jane Sherzer PhD in academic cap and gown. Very good condition. unknown books
1833WRCAM40207Boston 1833. 28pp. Original tan printed wrappers. Wrappers lightly soiled. Spine chipped. Front cover separating at bottom. Lightly creased down the center. Some light foxing. About very good. Untrimmed. The Massachusetts Colonization Society was a regional subdivision of the American Society for Colonizing the Free People of Colour. The Society attempted to alleviate the problem of slavery and degradation of free blacks by establishing a colony for them outside the United States preferably in Africa thereby "separating them WITH THEIR OWN CONSENT from the white race." The Society established the colony of Liberia in 1822 assisting African Americans to resettle there. The colony continued to grow for the next twenty years and Liberia declared itself an independent state in 1847. AMERICAN IMPRINTS 20051. unknown books
186539270Boston: Geo. C. Rand & Avery 1865. 8vo. 8 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches. 16pp. With the author's compliments. Disbound.<br/> <br/>This address was given to the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Dartmouth College on July 19 1865 by Alpheus Crosby. In it Crosby details the dangers of a divided country with headings titled "Our National Debt" "Increase of Southern Power in Congress" "Natural Antipathy between the Races" and "Danger in Case of Foreign War." Alpheus Crosby was a scholar and professor of mathematics and Greek. He entered Dartmouth at the young age of 13 where he was a leading scholar and tutor to fellow students. He was involved in abolition editing an abolitionist journal during the Civil War and writing on the reconstruction of the South. Following the war he edited a series of textbooks aimed at the recently freed slaves.<br/> <br/>Sabin 17626. Geo. C. Rand & Avery unknown books
1840100899Pamphlet leaflet 8vo 4 33-36 pp. Some aging and browning and a small stain at the bottom let margin; otherwise very good plus. Basically this short pamphlet provides "abridged selections" of various slave statutes from states around the country prior to the Civil War .The statutes consistently explain that a slave should be considered a thing not a person and of course has no right to own property. It also outlines various punishments such as 25 lashes for riding a horse without permission 21 lashes if more than six slaves meet together and death for striking a white person 3rd offense. The Anti-Slavery Bugle, books
192543939Portland: By the Author / Press of A.E. Kern 1925. Second edition same year as first. Octavo 19cm. Original illustrated wrappers; 127pp. Covers moderately dusted and darkened; a few faint corner-creases to text; Very Good. Written as an expose of the bootlegging and white slavery rackets of Oregon the novel chronicles the fall and rise of an innocent country girl who comes to Portland from the cheese-making village of Tillamook. The author's foreword announces that "Law enforcement is the burning topic of the hour and will continue to be while merchant princes as well as members of the United States Senate Conress public officials apologetic judges and parasitical bootleg attorneys keep stocks of fancy liquors in their homes and serve the same to their friends." Uncommon in commerce; this is a tight attractive copy. OCLC finds 15 locations nearly all in Oregon. By the Author / Press of A.E. Kern unknown books