1 124 résultats
1865551740Ship Island Mississippi 1865. Near Fine. Printed certificate completed in manuscript. 8†x 10â€. Two slight original horizontal folds near fine. This Union Army “Certificate to be Given to Union Volunteers at the Time of their Discharge†was issued for Robert Brown an African-American Private in Company C of the Second Regiment of the Louisiana Native Guard also known as the Corps d’Afrique. The document is Signed by Captain Hannibal Carter and the additional text was likely handwritten by him. Carter was Brown’s African-American Company Commander. He formerly had been a Private in the first Black Confederate Army unit also known as the 1st Louisiana Native Guard. When Louisiana seceded from the Union New Orleans free Black citizens and Creoles of color initially supported the Confederacy and briefly offered their volunteer service as soldiers and nurses.<br /> <br /> When Union General Benjamin Butler occupied New Orleans with regiments hailing from New England his command was inundated with enslaved Blacks from the city as well as those who had fled their plantations. Butler who feared a possible Confederate campaign to retake the city formed several regiments composed of loyal Irishmen and Germans who had settled in the city and he also interviewed former Black officers of the Confederate 1st Native Guard. After being convinced they would transfer their allegiance to the Union he established the first Black military unit to serve in the Union Army: the Louisiana Native Guard. Its first regiment included many members of the former Confederate militia unit plus two additional regiments—over 2700 men in total—were raised from other “free men of color†and former slaves. This certificate was issued to Brown at Ship Island Mississippi on 8 March 1865.<br /> <br /> Robert Brown’s unit the 2nd Regiment of the Louisiana Native Guard initially remained in New Orleans and Lafourche Parish where it guarded railroads and strategic locations while confiscating Confederate supplies. In January of 1863 Brown’s company was deployed to defend Ship Island. In April a detachment from Ship Island boarded vessels to raid East Pascagoula Mississippi becoming the second Black unit to meet Confederates in combat. The Louisiana Native Guard was eventually renamed the Corps d’ Afrique and later the 2nd Regiment was redesignated as the 74th Regiment of U.S. Colored Infantry.<br /> <br /> Hannibal Caesar Carter Brown’s Company Commander was an original member of the Confederate Army’s 1st Louisiana Native Guard. He was born in New Albany Indiana where he received his common schooling and eventually became a barber and tobacconist. He his father and his brother Edward were traveling to New Orleans on the Mississippi riverboat Vicksburg when Fort Sumner fell to the Confederates in April 1861. Sometime after their arrival both brothers joined the 1st Louisiana Native Guard. After the war Carter became a prominent Republican and served as Mississippi’s second Black Secretary of State.<br /> <br /> A scarce survival. This certificate appears to be the only identified Civil War military document signed by an African-American man who had served in both the first Black Confederate unit and the first Black Union unit. unknown
18852007Philadelphia: S.n. 1885. Leather over boards. Oblong duodecimo. 54 leaves. Near fine. Leather over thin board with gilt-stamped upper board. Professionally restored with about half of the original gilt-ornamented spine retained. Wesson's name card laid down on front pastedown. A fantastic and eclectic trove of 19th century autographs collected by one Edward Wesson apparently associated with the Continental Hotel in Philadelphia. The autographs range from military figures to actors and actresses singers diplomats explorers and more. <br /> <br /> Some of the most notable figures whose autographs appear here include Ulysses S. Grant Edwin Booth William Tecumseh Sherman P. T. Barnum King David KalÄkaua of Hawaii Henry Ward Beecher David Ross Locke aka 'Petroleum V. Nasby' and Hannibal Hamlin Vice-President under Abraham Lincoln. There are also autographs from survivors of the tragic Jeanette Expedition to the Arctic including John W. Danenhower Louis P. Noros William F. C. Nindemann and George W. Melville. Among the other entertainment figures of the day to sign Mr. Wesson's album were actresses Maggie Mitchell and Emma Abbott and several others. <br /> <br /> Of the 54 leaves only 5 are blank on both sides with the remaining 49 having autographs on one or both sides and one autograph on the recto of rear free endpaper for a total of 57 autographs in all.<br /> <br /> The album originated at Philadelphia's Continental Hotel one of the grandest and most socially prominent establishments of the 19th century. Opened in 1860 and famed for hosting presidents generals and celebrities-including Abraham Lincoln who stayed there en route to his 1861 inauguration-the Continental stood as a national landmark until its 1924 demolition to make way for the Benjamin Franklin Hotel.<br /> <br /> Apart from a single tipped‑in signature from a Mayor of Mt. Vernon NY every autograph in this volume is penned directly onto its original pages. This is of vital significance because unlike albums assembled from clipped signatures from various sources this is a continuous artifact: the very book that moved through the hands of each signer. To hold it now is to experience that unique connection with each of the historical figures who once inscribed it. <br /> <br /> A truly remarkable artifact. (S.n.) unknown
16778814Roma: Io. Jacobus de Rubeis 1677. First Edition Primera edición. 585x396mm. 23x15½". Roma Io. Jacobus de Rubeis 1677 o anterior. 13 láminas grabadas al aguafuerte incluyendo portada. Junto con: CARRACCI Anibal inventor & MITELLI M. grabador. L'Enea Vagante Pitture Dei Caracci Intagliate E Dedicate Al Serenissimo Principe Leopoldo Medici Da Gioseppe Maria Mitelli Bolognese Serma. Altezza. Gioseppe Ma. Mitelli. Roma Gio Jacomo de Rossi 1663. 16 ilustraciones sobre 14 láminas grabadas al aguafuerte incluyendo portada. 2 obras en un volumen. En gran folio 585 x 396mm. En total 29 ilustraciones sobre 27 grandes láminas grabadas sobre pinturas inventadas por Carracci para el Palacio Farnese y el Palacio Fava en Roma y Boloña respectivamente. Encuadernación en holandesa del siglo XVIII. -I: Serie completa de 13 láminas numeradas incluyendo portada. Las láminas 2-13 están todas firmadas por Annibal Carraccius y dibujadas y grabadas por Petrus Aquila. Cada una lleva el nombre del impresor estampado "Io. Jacob. de Rubeis" Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi. La segunda lámina contiene la dedicatoria del editor al Cardenal César d'Estrées. La obra salió sin fecha de publicación pero la colección se menciona en el Indice De Rossi de 1677. Las láminas muestran los frescos pintados por Annibale Carracci entre 1596 y 1597 para el Cardenal Odoardo Farnese en el techo del Camerino Farnese en el Palacio Farnese de Roma. Representan los logros de Hércules y otras escenas alegóricas. Referencias: Goldschmidt E.P.<em> Catalogue 163</em> p. 25 -II: Serie completa de 16 láminas sobre 14 hojas representando los frescos realizados por los hermanos Carracci en 1586 en el Palacio Fava de Boloña ilustrando la historia de Aeneas. Referencias: Bertarelli 1940 59; Bartsch XIX.289.46 Io. Jacobus de Rubeis hardcover
1838007896London: Paternoster Row.: Published for the Proprietor by Longman Orme Brown Green and Longmans 1838. Hardcover. Near Fine. Folio - over 12 - 15" tall. TURNER J.M.W. A beautiful example with NINETY SIX STEEL PLATES BY JMW TURNER. First edition 1838 two volumes in full calf decorative gilt tooling. Spines raised bands gilt titles to red & black calf label decorative gilt tooling. Internally Vol 1 1838 4 title page and plate list followed by 48 fine steel engravings each with a leaf of descriptive text. Vol 2 1838 4 followed by 48 engraved plates each with a leaf of descriptive text printed by J. Haddon Castle Street Finsbury. Marbled endpapers & text block edges occasional spotting and light offsetting gilt tooling to board edges and turn-ins. With previous owners pencil details to ffep 1933- also date for re-bind with some loose pencil notes about the book in the same hand plates dated 1832-1838. 297236 mm. Lowndes V p. 2723. The Picturesque Views in England and Wales was "the most ambitious" of all projects for the publication of engravings after Turner closely involving the artist himself and marking "a high point in the development of what has come to be known as the Turner school of engravers" DNB. Engraved plates by W.B. Cook G. Cook and others after Turner. A superb copy in a striking binding. <br/> <br/> Published for the Proprietor, by Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans, hardcover
186822863.02<p>"<i>My impression is … that Mr Wade will not offer me any place if he shall become Prest… You can hardly tell how we all feel humiliated & mortified here at home that the vote of Mr. F</i>essenden<i>. is the subject of bets on the street by gamblers.</i>"</p> <b>HANNIBAL HAMLIN.</b>Autograph Letter Signed to Sidney Perham May 9 1868 Bangor Maine. 2 pp. 5 x 8 in.<p><br /></p><p>In the midst of the impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson former Vice President Hannibal Hamlin writes to Maine Congressman Sidney Perham who had voted for Johnson's impeachment. Hamlin correctly speculates that he would not be offered a position if Johnson was removed and replaced by Benjamin Wade. The office of vice president remained vacant after Johnson became president upon the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Under the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 the president pro tempore of the Senate then Radical Republican Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio would become president if Johnson were removed from office.</p><p>Hamlin then discusses the Republican party's embarrassment over whether Maine's Senator William P. Fessenden Lincoln's Treasury Secretary from July 1864 to March 1865 would vote on impeachment. Ten former Confederate states had not yet been readmitted so 27 states were represented in the Senate with 54 members. To meet the required two-thirds majority 36 senators had to vote to convict. On May 16 1868 a week after the present letter Fessenden committed political suicide. Believing that prosecutors had manipulated the presentation of evidence and erred in basing impeachment on violation of the questionable Tenure of Office Act Fessenden joined all nine Democrats and nine other Republicans to vote for acquittal. In each of three votes the count was 35 to 19 in favor of conviction - one short of the necessary two-thirds majority.</p><p><b>Complete Transcript</b></p><p><i>Private</i></p><p> <i>Bangor May 9 1868</i></p><p><i>Friend Perham</i></p><p> <i>I have your very kind letter of the 4th and I feel truly how deeply I am indebted to you for your confidence and friendship. I shall I trust forget neither.</i></p><p> <i>I notice all you so well say on the matter of which you write. I should like much indeed to see and confer with you for I have some <u>facts</u> which I could give you and some information which I <u>cannot</u> write to any one</i> <2> <i>My impression is from what I learn and what I will explain when I see you that Mr Wade will not offer me any place if he shall become Prest. If however he shall it will be time enough then to determine what I will or ought to do and before determining one way or the other I will probably see you.</i></p><p> <i>You can hardly tell how we all feel humiliated & mortified here at home that the vote of Mr. F</i>essenden<i>. is the subject of bets on the street by gamblers. I feel too bad to express my feelings upon it.</i></p><p> <i>Yours faithfully</i></p><p> <i>H Hamlin</i></p><p><i>Hon. S. Perham / M.C.</i></p><p><b>Hannibal Hamlin</b> 1809-1891 was born in Maine then a part of Massachusetts and managed his father's farm before becoming a newspaper editor. He was admitted to the bar in 1833. Elected as a Democrat to the Maine House of Representatives in 1835 he served from 1836 to 1841. He represented Maine in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1843 to 1847 and in the U.S. Senate from 1848 to 1861. Hamlin opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 and left the Democratic Party for the newly formed Republican Party. In 1860 he was elected as Abraham Lincoln's Vice President. In 1864 to give Lincoln a southern running mate he was replaced by Andrew Johnson. Hamlin served as Collector of the Port of Boston but resigned in disagreement with Johnson over Reconstruction policies. In addition to again serving in the U.S. Senate from 1869-1881 he also served as Minister to Spain from 1881 to 1882.</p><p><b>Sidney Perham</b> 1819-1907 was born in Maine then a part of Massachusetts and briefly attended Bates College before turning to farming and raised sheep. He served as Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives in 1854 the only year he served in that body. From 1859 to 1863 he was clerk of courts in Oxford County Maine. Elected as a Republican to the U.S. House of Representatives Perham served from 1863 to 1869 and as Governor of Maine from 1871 to 1874. He served as Secretary of State of Maine in 1875 and as appraiser at the U.S. Customs House in Portland from 1877 to 1885. He also served as a member of the board of trustees of the Universalist General Convention for twenty-seven years.</p> books
199619835New York: Parthenon Publishing Group. New. 1996. Hardcover. 1850705909 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 518 pages -- Interior text is clean tight and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. Slight rubbing to one small spot of front cover; one small dent to back cover; else very fine. -- with a bonus offer--; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall . Parthenon Publishing Group hardcover
196926426New York: 0 To 9 1969. First edition. Paperback. Very Good . Tall side -stapled wrappers. The fifth issue of Acconci and Mayer's much sought after artist / poet periodical. Experimental poetry fiction and conceptual art mix in the era's most thought provoking journal. A particularly well-preserved copy. Front cover intentionally wrinkled by the publishers. Staples still holding very well. 96 pp. 0 To 9 paperback books
1969309410New York: s.n. 1969. First edition. ii 96 pp. mimeograph. 4to. Publisher's side-stapled paper wrappers front wrapper intentionally crinkled and stamped ink ink with title. Small closed tears and chips to covers internally near fine. First edition. ii 96 pp. mimeograph. 4to. The penultimate issue of "one of the most experimental of all the early mimeo magazines" Clay & Phillips A Secret Location on the Lower East Side p. 207. This issue includes writings by Bernadette Mayer Vito Acconci Sol LeWitt Jerome Rothenberg Clark Coolidge and Adrian Piper as well as "Fire Cracker" the first major time-based work of Rosemary Mayer 1943-2014 documenting the sounds of fireworks in Little Italy on the night of July 4 1968 between 9:19 pm and 1:29 am.<br/>In 2006 Ugly Duckling Presse published a reprint of the complete run of the magazine. Original issues are uncommon. [s.n.] unknown books
1969309410New York: s.n. 1969. First edition. ii 96 pp. mimeograph. 4to. Publisher's side-stapled paper wrappers front wrapper intentionally crinkled and stamped ink ink with title. Small closed tears and chips to covers internally near fine. First edition. ii 96 pp. mimeograph. 4to. The penultimate issue of "one of the most experimental of all the early mimeo magazines" Clay & Phillips A Secret Location on the Lower East Side p. 207. This issue includes writings by Bernadette Mayer Vito Acconci Sol LeWitt Jerome Rothenberg Clark Coolidge and Adrian Piper as well as "Fire Cracker" the first major time-based work of Rosemary Mayer 1943-2014 an attempt to document the sounds of firecrackers in Little Italy each minute between 9:00 PM and 1:30 AM on July 4th. The piece comprises fourteen pages of "x's" and lines each "x" representing the discrete sound of a firework and the lines representing periods when individual fireworks were indiscernible. It was a conceptual experiment but also a record of her aural experience a stretch of time while listening from her loft on Broome Street Brooklyn Rail 2016.<br /> In 2006 Ugly Duckling Presse published a reprint of the complete run of the magazine. Original issues are uncommon. [s.n.] unknown
18271411456London: Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green 1827. Hardcover. Octavo Two volumes ix 468 pages ; iv 496 pages. In Good minus condition. Spines are brown with gold print raised bands. Boards quarter bound with brown leather to spine and blue cloth to boards; wear to spine caps raised bands and corners toning to spine. Text block has marbled endpapers deckle edges; names in ink on front endpapers slightly cracked hinges stamp on title pages “Royal Geographical Society London†puckering to paper second volume front endpaper separating from binding. Illustrated: b&w frontispiece in each volume large folded b&w canvas map tipped in at front of first volume. <br /> <br /> Oversized books. Additional postage necessary for expedited/international orders. Economy International shipping unavailable due to size/weight restrictions. For international/expedited customers please inquire for rates.<br /> <br /> NOTE: Shelved in Locked Annex Area ND-HV Section. 1411456. FP New Rockville Stock. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green hardcover
1967515258New York: Acconci 1967. Mimeographed staple-bound 1st edition in very good condition. This is the 2nd of 6 issues of the literary magazine featuring contributions from Gertrude Stein and Aram Saroyan plus many more. Quite rare. There is some light foxing to front cover and page block and corners are lightly scuffed. Yellow colour from front cover has bled-through to following page. Text is clean and clear throughout. AD. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Used. Acconci Paperback
1592PHO-1814Paris, Estienne, 1592, folio, relié demi basane (19eme), dos à nerfs avec auteur et date, coins usés, frottements aux plats, petite déchirure au titre, mouillure par intermittence.
196933956New York: Vito Hannibal Acconci 1969. Very Good. New York: Vito Hannibal Acconci 1969. First Edition. Small quarto; staple bound wrappers; 96pp. printed mimeograph; black and white illustrations throughout. Front wrap wrinkled with a few scrapes; binding sound; pages unmarked; Very Good. <br /> <br /> Late issue of this experimental mimeographed magazine exploring the role and use of language and performance art. Includes "Moon in Three Sentences" by Bernadette Mayer "Sentences on Conceptual Art" by Sol LeWitt and "Firecrackers" by Rosemary Mayer an attempt to document firecrackers going off in Little Italy on July 4th 1968. . Vito Hannibal Acconci unknown
1h9011Wohl 6. vermehrte und verbesserte Auflage. Schladebach Lpz. 1834. XIV S./1 Bl./176 S. mit einem colorierten gestochenen Frontispiz gestochenem Titel mit colorierter Titelvignette 6 colorierten Tafeln und 8 ABC-Tafeln Leinen der Zeit etwas berieben/bestossen und fleckig/Titelseite mit Ausschnitt diese verklebt mit Blatt I/2 kleine Seitenausrisse/2 Seiten mit halbseitigem Textverlust/einige Blätter mit hinterlegten Einrissen. - Holzm./Boh. I95; Teistler 414.5; Wegehaupt III62/Sehr seltenes ABC-Buch das erstmals 1795 erschien. Die Tafeln mit je 3 Szenen aus der Umwelt der Kinder zeigen: Der kranke Ernst/Der böse Knabe/Lorenz und sein Lehrer/Das unvorsichtige Mädchen/Das plauderhafte Mädchen/Der kleine Jakob und sein Vetter/Die Knaben und die Frösche/Das Kind und der Hund u.v.a.; außerdem mit Leseübungen in Schreibschrift und 8 verschiedenen ABC-Tafeln - unknown
1968207861New York: 0 to 9 Books 1968. First Edition. Edges lightly toned; tear to lower part of front wrapper with some loss; last leaf detached. 4to unpag. mimeographed leaves in mimeo wrappers stapled. Early artist's book by Acconci who would soon emerge as a leading practitioner of performance and installation-art. 0 to 9 was a mimeo magazine that Acconci produced along with Bernadette Mayer. Under that imprint they also published a small number of freestanding mimeo books issued in tiny editions. This one is extremely delicate as ordinary paper was used for the covers rather than cardstock. 0 to 9 Books unknown
1995x-0849345316CRC Pr I Llc 1995. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 288 pages. 10.50x7.25x0.75 inches. CRC Pr I Llc hardcover
186028774Hannibal Mo.: Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad Office 1860. 60pp plus double-page frontis map entitled 'Railway Guide to the Hannibal & St. Joseph Rail Road Lands in Missouri' engraved on wood by W. Mackwitz St. Louis; plus 'Map of Northern Missouri Showing the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad Lands'; plus six full-page engraved illustrations including views of Grand Valley and St. Joseph. Original printed yellow wrappers spine and corner wear light contemporary ink stamp of 'General Market Office 21 State St. Boston' on front wrapper stitched. The rear wrapper describes the routes connections and transit times of the Railroad. Very Good plus. <br/><br/> The Road was one of the earliest to reach the Missouri River in northwestern Missouri at St. Joseph the starting point of the Pony Express. Taylor The Transportation Revolution page 86. It traversed Northern Missouri connecting Chicago and St. Louis with Kansas and Nebraska. <br/> The pamphlet describes the route; lands offered for sale; connecting roads; prices and terms of payment; the advantages of the "rolling and healthy" "well-watered" "well- wooded" properties. The location of the Road and lands is "unequaled by any other portion of the country." Agriculture and stock raising are the best in the Nation. Similarly advantaged are markets-- with cheap freight rates-- and cultural and educational opportunities. St. Louis St. Joseph and Hannibal are described. The State Geologist and other experts weigh in with testimonials.<br/>Bureau of Railway Economics 211. Not in Sabin Eberstadt Graff Decker Soliday. A number of institutional locations on OCLC. Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad Office unknown books
4893HANNIBAL HAMLIN 1809-1891. Hamlin was Abraham Lincoln’s first Vice President. Before and after that he was a Congressman from Maine as well as the Governor of Maine and an ambassador. ALS. 1pg. 5†x 8â€. September 20 1861. Hampden Maine. An autograph letter signed “H Hamlin†as Lincoln’s Vice President. He wrote to Secretary of War Simon Cameron: “Some two weeks since you Telegraphed. me to forward you the name of a man for a clerkship. I did so and sent you the name of John W. Brown of this town a very good man. Since then I have heard nothing from you. Can you give him a place I sincerely hope so – and you will oblige. Yours Truly H. Hamlinâ€. The letter has faint mailing folds dark writing and ink spots to the blank lower edge. unknown books
196841969New York: Vito H. Acconci 1968. Good. New York: Vito H. Acconci 1968. First Edition. Quarto; publisher's grey staple bound wrappers; 282pp. Lacking rear wrapper upper wrapper evenly toned else a Good copy essentially near fine except for the missing rear wrapper contents in clean and sound condition. <br /> <br /> Contents include poetry by Clark Coolidge Guillaume Apollinaire John Giorno Ted Berrigan Aram Saroyan as well as both editors. Vito H. Acconci unknown
ria9780849345319_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This book presents a comprehensive and coherent picture of how molecules diffuse across a liquid that is on average only two molecules thick hardcover
Volume 1 & 2: light foxing to rear endpapers and textblocks. Dust-soiling to top of textblocks. Minor shelfwear. V2 has light bump/creasing to bottom of spine. ; Xii, 643pp. + x, 752pp. , 6 maps, 2 chronological tables loose, as issued. ; 2 Volume Set COMPLETE; Volumes One and Two of Hannibal's Legacy The Hannibalic War's Effect On Roman Life Hardcover Vol 1 643 pages,Vol 2 752 pages Printed in 1965 in London by Oxford University Press
1964110991Buenos Aires: Emece Editores 1964. Hardbound. VG- slight wear or nicks to the extreme edges. Internally very fresh. 2 vols. Brown cloth with brown leather spine with gilt lettering. Volume 1: 236 pp. color frontispiece no other illustrations. Volume 2:. This is a set of two volumes lacking a slipcase which may have contained them. Volume I is the text volume describing the 202 mostly color plates contained in the 192 pages in Volume II. It contains a massive bibliography that lists over 450 references. Volume 1 also contains very detailed artist biographies and a most detailed chronology. No foxing. Ths is a substantive and important work detailing and illustrating highlights from Argentine art of the period 1536-1860. Preface by Antonio Santamarina. This set is copy No. 19. text is entirely in Spanish. Emece Editores hardcover books
186622863<p>Lincoln's first vice president discusses local Maine politics regarding the replacement of a longstanding U.S. District Court Judge.</p> <b>HANNIBAL HAMLIN.</b>Autograph Letter Signed to Sidney Perham Boston May 4 1866. 2 pp. 5 x 8 in. marked <i>"Private"</i> and docketed <i>"H Hamlin."</i><p><b><br /></b></p><p><b>Complete Transcript</b></p><p><i>May 4 1866</i></p><p> <i>My Dear Sir</i></p><p> <i>I hear that Judge Ware has sent his resignation to Washington. It is also said that the appointment of a successor probably lies between Fox and Talbot Dist Atty.</i></p><p> <i>Now my preference is for Mr. Godfrey of Bangor. He is the man whom I would be glad to see appointed. But if it is to be either Fox or Talbot then it is clear to my mind that Talbot ought to be the man. He is a whole Republican. Fox never was but half a one at most. If it comes to that I hope yourself and Mr. Rice will aid Talbot in preference to Fox as I believe T. the most deserving man. Will you show this letter to Mr. Rice.</i></p><p> <i>I sympathise with you in this day of our political afflictions and rest assured the people will sustain you.</i></p><p> <i>Yours truly</i></p><p> <i>H Hamlin</i></p><p> <i>Hon S. Perham</i></p><p><b>Sidney Perham</b> 1819-1907 was a U.S. congressman from Maine 1863-1869 and Maine governor 1871-1874.</p><p><b>Ashur Ware</b> 1782-1873 was educated at Harvard and Bowdoin receiving his law degree from the latter institution. He practiced in Boston then moved Portland Maine. He edited the <i>Eastern Argus</i>1817-1820 which advocated separation from Massachusetts and when this was accomplished via the Missouri Compromise 1820 Ware was the new state's first secretary of state. In 1822 James Monroe nominated him for a judgeship in U.S. District Court for Maine. He resigned in 1866 after serving one of the longest tenures of any U.S. federal judge.</p><p><b>George F. Talbot</b> 1819-1907 graduated from Bowdoin and became an attorney in East Machias Maine. He was twice the Free Soil Party's nominee for governor 1849-1850 and attended the 1860 convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln for president. Lincoln in 1861 appointed him U.S. attorney for Maine presumably Hamlin is referring to the federal court district of Maine when he calls Talbot the <i>"Dist Atty"</i>. Talbot was Solicitor of the Treasury 1876-1877.</p><p><b>Hannibal Hamlin</b> 1809-1891 served in the Maine state legislature before entering Congress in 1843 as a Democrat. In 1848 he was elected by the anti-slavery wing of the Democratic party to fill a vacancy in the Senate and served until 1857 when he resigned to become the Republican governor of Maine. In 1860 Hamlin was picked as Lincoln's running mate to "nationalize" the Republican party. Both Lincoln and Hamlin shared an opposition to the expansion of slavery.</p><p>In 1864 Republican convention delegates replaced him on the ticket with Andrew Johnson the Union military governor of Tennessee. As a War Democrat and Southern Unionist Johnson provided strategic and symbolic power for the Republicans that Hamlin could not. The vice president would later observe that he had been "dragged out of the Senate against my wishes – tried to do my <i>whole</i> duty and was then unceremoniously 'whistled down the wind'" Hatfield 203-209. He later accepted a position as collector of the port of Boston returning to the Senate in 1869. From 1881-82 Hamlin was U.S. minister to Spain before devoting the remainder of his life to agricultural pursuits.</p>
186622863<p>Lincoln's first vice president discusses local Maine politics regarding the replacement of a longstanding U.S. District Court Judge.</p> <b>HANNIBAL HAMLIN.</b>Autograph Letter Signed to Sidney Perham Boston May 4 1866. 2 pp. 5 x 8 in. marked <i>"Private"</i> and docketed <i>"H Hamlin."</i><p><b><br /></b></p><p><b>Complete Transcript</b></p><p><i>May 4 1866</i></p><p> <i>My Dear Sir</i></p><p> <i>I hear that Judge Ware has sent his resignation to Washington. It is also said that the appointment of a successor probably lies between Fox and Talbot Dist Atty.</i></p><p> <i>Now my preference is for Mr. Godfrey of Bangor. He is the man whom I would be glad to see appointed. But if it is to be either Fox or Talbot then it is clear to my mind that Talbot ought to be the man. He is a whole Republican. Fox never was but half a one at most. If it comes to that I hope yourself and Mr. Rice will aid Talbot in preference to Fox as I believe T. the most deserving man. Will you show this letter to Mr. Rice.</i></p><p> <i>I sympathise with you in this day of our political afflictions and rest assured the people will sustain you.</i></p><p> <i>Yours truly</i></p><p> <i>H Hamlin</i></p><p> <i>Hon S. Perham</i></p><p><b>Sidney Perham</b> 1819-1907 was a U.S. congressman from Maine 1863-1869 and Maine governor 1871-1874.</p><p><b>Ashur Ware</b> 1782-1873 was educated at Harvard and Bowdoin receiving his law degree from the latter institution. He practiced in Boston then moved Portland Maine. He edited the <i>Eastern Argus</i>1817-1820 which advocated separation from Massachusetts and when this was accomplished via the Missouri Compromise 1820 Ware was the new state's first secretary of state. In 1822 James Monroe nominated him for a judgeship in U.S. District Court for Maine. He resigned in 1866 after serving one of the longest tenures of any U.S. federal judge.</p><p><b>George F. Talbot</b> 1819-1907 graduated from Bowdoin and became an attorney in East Machias Maine. He was twice the Free Soil Party's nominee for governor 1849-1850 and attended the 1860 convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln for president. Lincoln in 1861 appointed him U.S. attorney for Maine presumably Hamlin is referring to the federal court district of Maine when he calls Talbot the <i>"Dist Atty"</i>. Talbot was Solicitor of the Treasury 1876-1877.</p><p><b>Hannibal Hamlin</b> 1809-1891 served in the Maine state legislature before entering Congress in 1843 as a Democrat. In 1848 he was elected by the anti-slavery wing of the Democratic party to fill a vacancy in the Senate and served until 1857 when he resigned to become the Republican governor of Maine. In 1860 Hamlin was picked as Lincoln's running mate to "nationalize" the Republican party. Both Lincoln and Hamlin shared an opposition to the expansion of slavery.</p><p>In 1864 Republican convention delegates replaced him on the ticket with Andrew Johnson the Union military governor of Tennessee. As a War Democrat and Southern Unionist Johnson provided strategic and symbolic power for the Republicans that Hamlin could not. The vice president would later observe that he had been "dragged out of the Senate against my wishes – tried to do my <i>whole</i> duty and was then unceremoniously 'whistled down the wind'" Hatfield 203-209. He later accepted a position as collector of the port of Boston returning to the Senate in 1869. From 1881-82 Hamlin was U.S. minister to Spain before devoting the remainder of his life to agricultural pursuits.</p> books
18557325Bourg en Bresse, Milliet-Bottier, 1855 ; in-8, broché ; VIII, 324 pp., grande carte dépliante en couleurs.