8 résultats
185667610New York: D. Appleton and Company. Good. 1856. Hardcover. 274 pages plus ads. 7.75x5 inches. Brown pictorial cloth with gilt stamping. The covers are soiled and rubbed and the contents show some foxing and toning. Otherwise bright complete. Good. . D. Appleton and Company hardcover books
18843276New York: Appleton and Company 1884. Twelfth edition. Very good. 8vo. Frontispiece engraved by Bobbett-Hooper 274 pp. 2 pp. advertisements. Original publisher's brown cloth gilt decorated endpapers. Cloth covers with some minor blemishes lower corner of back cover inexplicably abraided. Overall in excellent condition the gilding glowingly bright without any cracks to the inner hinges or inscriptions or markings of any kind. NOT ex-library! "Phoenixiana" is one of the earliest collections of California humor. However to be perfectly honest we don't really care much about the contents: we know that humor ages very badly whereas tragedy transcends the ages. Physically the present volume has not aged badly at all. We are naturally attracted to it for the following admittedly shallow reasons: <br/><br/>1. the condition is really quite good; 2. the weird demonic figure on the frontispiece reappears on the front cover and the spine features an elaborate design of a demon dipping a quilled pen into an anthropomorphic ink-well which we absolutely ADORE.<br/><br/>We cannot identify the artist with certainty. The frontispiece is signed "Bobbett-Hooper" who were extremely prolific engravers and color printeres in New York City and Brooklyn during the second half of the 19th century. Alfred "Albert" Bobbett was born in London in 1824 and died at his NYC work desk in 1888. His partner Edward Hooper 1829-1870 predeceased him but the firm continued and prospered as Bobbett-Hooper. Appleton and Company unknown books
188527883Boston: Forbes Lith. Mfg. Co. Boston & New York 1885. Business card 3" x 5" printed on white card stock on both sides using several different typesettings. Front of card has detailed engraving of the Phenix Iron Foundry buildings with people and carriages along the streets surrounding the foundry and water and ships in the background. Quite clean. Very attractive Near Fine.<br/><br/> The Forbes Lithograph Manufacturing Company moved to Chelsea Mass. in the early 1880s. This business card was probably engraved and printed within the several years preceding that move. The Phenix Iron Company was established in 1830 and incorporated as a stock company in 1832. The foundry produced some of the earliest American textile-printing machines including the first American-made calico printing machine. Forbes Lith. Mfg. Co., Boston & New York unknown books
1856212652New York: Appleton 1856. First. hardcover. very good. Frontispiece woodcut. 274 pages 14 pages of advertisements. 12mo blind stamped blue cloth with a heavily gilt spine and front cover extremities of spine chipped. New York: Appleton 1856. First Edition. Very Good.<br/><br/> Appleton unknown books
18657544New York: Carleton 1865 First edition first issue. With comic illustrations by the author. Pp. 247 6 ads. Frontispiece 11 plates 17 text illustrations. Publisher's brown cloth. Slight wear to foot of spine corners lightly worn fading to spine. Overall a fine copy internally fine with very little of the usual heavy foxing. Another comic title by the author of "Phoenixiana". John Phoenix or John Squibob were the pen names of U.S. Lieutenant George H. Derby. This work was edited by the author's widow. Signed on end by the late Wells Fargo historian Bob Chandler. BAL: 4651 state A; Cowan: p. 167;. Carleton hardcover books
1856228902New York D. Appleton 1856. 1856. First edition. 8vo. Engraved frontispiece portrait of Derby with facsimile signature. 1/14 page preface by John Phoenix. Original brown cloth stamped in gilt on the spine and stamped in gilt and blind on the covers with gilt vignette on the front cover; brown coated endpapers gilt faded; rubbed; spine ends frayed; foxing; one signature starting; small stain top edge of several pages at end. Good. 274 pages 14 pages of publisher's advertisements at end. No bookplates. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Good/No Jacket. New York, D. Appleton, 1856. hardcover books
185613819New York: D. Appleton and Company 1856. First Edition. Very Good. 7.75x5.5in; 274 pp. 14 advertisements frontispiece illustration of John P. Squibob; Publisher original Brown cloth covers with blind stamped borders designs and gilted illustration of Squibob gilt lettering and designs on spine all edges trimmed light blue end papers; Some self wear to covers edges and corners with rubbing and several spots on covers gilt tarnished corners bumped and fraying on bottom top and bottom of spine frayed two worn spots near top of rear joint minor fox spots and age toned text. Wheat Books 63. George Horatio Derby 1823-1861 also known as John Phoenix or John P. Squibob or just Squibob was an 1846 West Point graduate. As a Lt. in the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers he participated in the Mexican-American war and was assigned to California in 1849. Under General Riley Military Governor he explored and mapped of California and Oregon during the early years of the Gold Rush. To supplement his army income he wrote humorous articles and this book on the irreverent side of California life. This book contains Derby's pieces as "Professor John Phoenixiana" and "Squibob" poking fun at such topics as military surveyors and explorers; contemporary travel accounts of the Mission Dolores Benecia Sonoma San Francisco and San Diego; literary societies and women's clubs; astronomy; and Army life. Derby is described in Wheat Books "The lighter side of the Gold Rush by "father of the native American school of Humor" who was also an eminent topographical engineer. Derby also wrote "The Squibob Papers" and prepared several notable early maps of California areas. D. Appleton and Company unknown books
1804WRCAM37730London 1804. Bifolium consisting of one unaccomplished broadside form and one broadside advertisement 19 1/2 x 12 inches. Copper- engraved scene 5 3/4 x 7 inches at head of form. Woodcut emblem 3 x 4 1/2 inches at head of advertisement. Two vertical and three horizontal folds. Contemporary manuscript inscription "June 1804" in left margin beside engraving in first leaf; contemporary manuscript inscriptions dated November 8 1804 on blank verso of first leaf referring to policy rates in Charleston. Half-inch tear at gutter of first leaf repaired with tape on verso. Portion of upper corner at fore-edge and portion of margin at gutter lacking from second leaf supplied in later paper. Second leaf somewhat faded. Else near fine. Bifolium of two broadsides for the Phoenix fire insurance company of London at the time of the opening of its first agency in New York. The Phoenix Assurance Company still operating today as Phoenix Life Ltd. was founded in 1782 by a consortium of sugar refiners in London seeking more reasonable rates for the insurance of their risky holdings against fire. By the mid-1780s Phoenix had established itself as a successful fire insurer across the whole of Great Britain for a wide array of businesses and homes. In 1785 the Phoenix Company sold its first North American policy at Charleston and the first policy in New York was accepted two years later. It was not until 1804 however that Phoenix began establishing actual agencies in the New World breaking ground in New York with the appointment of Theophylact and Andrew Bache as agents there. <br> <br> The first leaf is a printed policy form for the Phoenix Company in New York never filled in. The second leaf is an advertising broadside for the company containing a table of rates for New York subscribers and a detailed list of conditions for new policies. The handsome copper engraving at the top of the form leaf depicts a helmeted goddess presumably Athena on a pedestal bearing a shield stamped with the word "PROTECTION" and the image of a phoenix rising from ashes. Behind the figure is a nighttime scene of the burning remains of a building and a family of victims spilling onto the street. A team of firefighters is extinguishing the flames with a pump-operated hose and behind them is a scaffolded building under repair. The engraved caption reads: "PHOENIX FIRE OFFICE LOMBARD STREET and CHARING CROSS." A similar illustration in woodcut is included at the head of the "Proposals" broadside. Here the goddess is the only figure depicted. On her left are both the burning building and the new construction; on her right is a ship at sea engulfed in flames. The hooks and axes of the firefighter adorn the sides of the cut. <br> <br> The Goldsmiths'-Kress Library of Economic Literature at Harvard lists a copy of the Boston variant of the advertising broadside. The only located institutional holding of this New York issue however is at the Connecticut Historical Society. No records of the printed form in any issue have been located. A rare and interesting pair of documents from the early history of international insurance. KRESS B4839 variant. Clive Trebilcock PHOENIX ASSURANCE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF BRITISH INSURANCE VOLUME I 1782-1870 Cambridge University Press 1985 pp.184-201. unknown books