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1994R100082031Ronsel editorial. 1994. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 240 pages - couverture contrepliée - livre en espagnol.. . . . Classification Dewey : 460-Langues espagnole et portugaise
0332616053.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0332765989.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2010DADAX1161017801Kessinger Publishing 2010-04-18. paperback. New. 6.00x1.28x9.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kessinger Publishing paperback
1168492238.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1161017801.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1996LFA-126746932N° 324 (Juin 1996) : revue de 78 pages, format 215 x 285 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
20231-8417137599Vegueta Ediciones 2023. Hardcover. New. 544 pages. Spanish language. 7.75x5.50x1.75 inches. Vegueta Ediciones hardcover
50614México D.F: Casa del Tiempo Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana UAM 22 de octubre al 30 de noviembre 1998. 32p color and b/w plates bio./chron. cat. fldg. color pict. and b/w port. wrps. Exhibition of driftwood sculptures and acrylic paintings by artist from Baja California Sur b.La Paz BC 1943 . LIMITED EDITION OF 1000 Casa del Tiempo, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, UAM unknown books
0912JC251<p>Coronel de Artelharia e antigo Alferes do G. A. G. 5. Colecção «Correio Elvense». 2.ª serie n.º 2. Tipografia Progresso. Elvas. 1933. De 19x13 cm. Com 158 pags. Brochado.</p> I-109-D-18 unknown
0366804561.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0366804324.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
6205743752.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
6206654826.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
147162899X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2007LFA-126721547N° 53 (Juin 2007) : 82 pages, format 210 x 295 mm, illustré, broché, bon état
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
186841355Bangor 1868. Single leaf folded to 4 pp written in Hamlin's hand on first page. Other pages blank. Very Good.<br /> <br /> Hamlin responds to Kilton's "note of the 24th inst." explaining that "We have no such officer as Lieut Governor in Maine. The President of the Senate becomes Governor in case of a vacancy in that office. Hon. Josiah Crosby is President of the Senate and his residence is at Dexter Penobscot County. Yours Truly H. Hamlin."<br /> Hannibal Hamlin of Maine was Lincoln's first Vice President. unknown
352395" x 8". Laid into a crude mat. Recto is glued to the mat which is cut to expose the areas of text and to cover the blank areas. Some light glue stains not affecting legibility. Except for the choice of matting Very Good. <br /> <br /> Vice President Hamlin's Letter suggests the impotence of his office. Writing from his home or law office in Hampden he appeals for help from his fellow Maine politician E.B. French. French had just completed his term in Congress; President Lincoln appointed him Second Auditor of the Treasury on August 3 1861. Hamlin is anxious to correct the bureaucratic snafu for which at least in part he seems to blame himself. These efforts would prove successful: Executive Proceedings of the Senate show J.C. Peterson's name on a list proposed by the Secretary of War for appointment as Captain of the Fifteenth Regiment of infantry as of August 5 1861; Lincoln officially nominated all those on the list on December 6 1861; and Peterson was among the appointees receiving the Senate's blessing. Executive Journal of the Senate 37th Congress 2d Session Dec. 12 1861. <br /> Originally a Democrat and a long-time political fixture in Maine Hamlin left his Party as an opponent of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. He was elected Maine's Republican Governor in 1857; in 1860 Lincoln picked him as his running mate in an effort to unite northern Unionists.<br /> John C. Peterson 1831-1867 a homeopathic physician and surgeon is listed in the 1850 Federal Census as a 19-years-old physician. He enlisted on April 15 1861; and served as Captain in the 15th U.S. Infantry Regiment from August 1861 to August 1864. By early 1863 he was attached to Gen. Rosecrans' staff as Assistant Inspector General Army of the Cumberland. His death is listed in the Coroner's Inquest Reports of Seneca County New York as suicide by self inflicted gunshot wound on October 7 1867. THE NEW-ENGLAND MEDICAL GAZETTE. VOLUME V. Boston: 1870 pp.260-263; THE WAR OF THE REBELLION. SERIES 1 VOL. XXIII IN TWO PARTS. PART II. Washington: 1889 pp. 77-78; 'Furlough" posted March 15 2013 at website of Blue Gray Review. unknown
188236689Maine 1882. 2 pp plus integral blank leaf. Old hinges from prior mounting on blank last page. Very Good.<br /> <br /> Writing to "Hon. F. Haines" Hamlin explains that he has "no time to look over files of letters to see what I can find that you would want." He's "very busy in getting our house in order." He will take a look when he finishes that task but advises "I have parted with all that I could spare of Prest. Lincoln and have none from Hayes."<br /> He promises to review his "many letters from such persons as you name but the difficulty will be in finding just such as I would deem proper to make public. But I will see what I can do. I do not think it necessary at all for you to come here. Yours truly H. Hamlin."<br /> Haines 1840-1925 was a successful businessman and developed an impressive side business in coins and other collectibles. The Library of Congress owns a few of the correspondence between the two men. Hamlin of course was Abraham Lincoln's first Vice President and an early Republican. He was dumped from the 1864 ticket in favor of Andrew Johnson. unknown
11376Boston; 5 December 1848. 1p. 4to. 25 lines.Very good on lightly-aged paper. Sheppard writes that he called on Dearborn the previous day but found him confined to his room by indisposition. He proposes his friend 'George Kent Esq of this city a Counsellor at Law' for the appointment of 'Messenger to carry on the electoral votes to Washington'. He describes Kent as 'a man of talents a brother of Ex-Gov Kent of Maine' who has 'been very active with his able pen in helping in this section of the country to promote the election of Gen Taylor'. Kent is a prolific writer and 'a decided Whig'. Sheppard concludes nostalgically that he has presumed upon 'the long past & happy days of my and our earlier life where the friendship of yourself & of your honored connexionns were so dear to me'. Boston; 5 December 1848. unknown
188236689Maine 1882. 2 pp plus integral blank leaf. Old hinges from prior mounting on blank last page. Very Good.<br/><br/> Writing to "Hon. F. Haines" Hamlin explains that he has "no time to look over files of letters to see what I can find that you would want." He's "very busy in getting our house in order." He will take a look when he finishes that task but advises "I have parted with all that I could spare of Prest. Lincoln and have none from Hayes."<br/> He promises to review his "many letters from such persons as you name but the difficulty will be in finding just such as I would deem proper to make public. But I will see what I can do. I do not think it necessary at all for you to come here. Yours truly H. Hamlin."<br/> Haines 1840-1925 was a successful businessman and developed an impressive side business in coins and other collectibles. The Library of Congress owns a few of the correspondence between the two men. Hamlin of course was Abraham Lincoln's first Vice President and an early Republican. He was dumped from the 1864 ticket in favor of Andrew Johnson. unknown books
352395" x 8". Laid into a crude mat. Recto is glued to the mat which is cut to expose the areas of text and to cover the blank areas. Some light glue stains not affecting legibility. Except for the choice of matting Very Good. <br/><br/> Vice President Hamlin's Letter suggests the impotence of his office. Writing from his home or law office in Hampden he appeals for help from his fellow Maine politician E.B. French. French had just completed his term in Congress; President Lincoln appointed him Second Auditor of the Treasury on August 3 1861. Hamlin is anxious to correct the bureaucratic snafu for which at least in part he seems to blame himself. These efforts would prove successful: Executive Proceedings of the Senate show J.C. Peterson's name on a list proposed by the Secretary of War for appointment as Captain of the Fifteenth Regiment of infantry as of August 5 1861; Lincoln officially nominated all those on the list on December 6 1861; and Peterson was among the appointees receiving the Senate's blessing. Executive Journal of the Senate 37th Congress 2d Session Dec. 12 1861. <br/> Originally a Democrat and a long-time political fixture in Maine Hamlin left his Party as an opponent of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. He was elected Maine's Republican Governor in 1857; in 1860 Lincoln picked him as his running mate in an effort to unite northern Unionists.<br/> John C. Peterson 1831-1867 a homeopathic physician and surgeon is listed in the 1850 Federal Census as a 19-years-old physician. He enlisted on April 15 1861; and served as Captain in the 15th U.S. Infantry Regiment from August 1861 to August 1864. By early 1863 he was attached to Gen. Rosecrans' staff as Assistant Inspector General Army of the Cumberland. His death is listed in the Coroner's Inquest Reports of Seneca County New York as suicide by self inflicted gunshot wound on October 7 1867. THE NEW-ENGLAND MEDICAL GAZETTE. VOLUME V. Boston: 1870 pp.260-263; THE WAR OF THE REBELLION. SERIES 1 VOL. XXIII IN TWO PARTS. PART II. Washington: 1889 pp. 77-78; 'Furlough" posted March 15 2013 at website of Blue Gray Review. unknown books
1998x-1852330368Springer Verlag 1998. Paperback. New. 275 pages. 9.50x6.25x0.75 inches. Springer Verlag paperback
1998DADAX1852330368Springer 1998-05-26. First Edition. paperback. New. 6.25x0.65x9.50. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Springer paperback