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2005DADAX0742542173Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2005-11-30. paperback. New. 6.92x1.08x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers paperback
033165332X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
x-023102472XColumbia Univ Pr 1961. Hardcover. New. 273 pages. 8.66x5.84x0.99 inches. Columbia Univ Pr hardcover
A9780231024723Hardback. New. hardcover
1961556061New York: Columbia University Press 1961. Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine. First edition. Foreword by Grayson Kirk. Corners very slightly bumped else fine in lightly rubbed near fine dust jacket. Columbia University Press hardcover
645385-nnew. unknown
645385like new. unknown
19154403-75Columbia University Press. Used - Good. Former library copy. Pages intact with minimal writing/highlighting. The binding may be loose and creased. Dust jackets/supplements are not included. Includes library markings. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Columbia University Press unknown
1258191814.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
023102472X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
Q-023102472XColumbia University Press. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Columbia University Press hardcover
1014151163.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1258083213.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
SONG023102472XColumbia University Press 1960-10-15. 1st edition assumed. hardcover. Used: Good. 5.84x0.99x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Columbia University Press hardcover
DADAX023102472XColumbia University Press 1960-10-15. 1st edition assumed. hardcover. New. 5.84x0.99x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Columbia University Press hardcover
A9781258083212Hardback. New. hardcover
B9781258083212Hardback. New. hardcover
B9781258191818Paperback / softback. New. paperback
384129Hardcover. Very Good. Oblong quarto. Stiiff black leather blank album. Joints and spine eroded but sound very good internally about fine. Photo album with approximately 165 well-composed images. Various sizes mostly two three or four to a page. Circa 1945. The album consists largely of images of Washington D.C. New York City Gettysburg Philadelphia and Valley Forge with a reasonable selection of images of sailors on leave. In Washington many of the photographs are of government buildings and monuments including some taken from the Washington Monument cherry blossoms and in the other cities of various landmark buildings. Among the Washington photos are several from a homecoming parade for General Eisenhower with a couple of him waving from a jeep and another pair of close-ups of him speaking. The photographs were taken by Petty Officer Hugh W. Brannon of Atlanta. Brannon spent thirty years working for Eastman Kodak and during the War was a photographer assigned to the Staff of Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal where he screened all Navy combat footage for the Secretary and Chief of Naval Operations Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King. During the Korean War he was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet Camera Party and filmed all Developmental Weapons Tests for the Bureau of Ships. As might be expected from the photographers bona fides the images in this album are of an unusually fine quality to be found in a vernacular photo album. hardcover
1959174141959. Civil Rights Presidents. This 1959 AP Press photo depicts President Eisenhower shaking hands with the wife of civil rights leader George M. Johnson. Original photo dated June 9 1959 with inscription on verso. 9" x 7" inches. Johnson was the newest member of the Civil Rights Commission an organization created in 1957 to study and advocate for social equality for minorities in America. He was an African-American attorney and academic who was appointed to the commission and had an interracial marriage with his wife Evelyn which was quite rare and controversial in that era. Ike and the Johnsons are pictured in the White House and wear wide smiles. This photo has a 2" x 1" inch white-out patch adjacent to George Johnson's face. Has AP caption at right side margin. Overall in very good condition. unknown
1950D7442probably late 1950s. Ephemera. Very Good. Black-and-white photograph silver gelatin print 8x10 inches with thin white border; capturing Eisenhower in a squinty laugh standing amongst 3 other men. It's inscribed on the back "To Mr. Sutnar with a reminder that if you need anything -- I know big people / Lauther Carrer." Two faint pencil marks in the top border; a little faint soiling on the back. <br/><br/> unknown
19511604641951. Commemorating the American fallen A compelling album apparently made by the family of a fallen serviceman and therefore unique commemorating Eisenhower's presentation of the Roll of Honor to St Paul's Cathedral. The roll lists the 28000 American soldiers stationed in Britain who gave their lives in the Second World War. The album includes large-format photographs of the military procession to the ceremony; attendees entering the cathedral including Churchill Mountbatten Attlee the Queen Mother and Princess Elizabeth Eisenhower and Curtis LeMay; photographs of the service including the congregation singing hymns and the sermon by the Archbishop of Canterbury; and Eisenhower leaving the Cathedral. The ceremony was held on Independence Day. Eisenhower delivered a message: "Each name inscribed in this book is a story of personal tragedy and a grieving family; a story repeated endlessly in white crosses girdling the globe. The Americans whose names here appear were part of the price that free men have been forced a second time to pay in this century to defend human liberty and rights". The album includes a copy of a page from the roll listing names from Hiltabidle to Hitchings - presumably the album was made by the family of someone listed there. We could trace no other similar album. In 1958 the American Memorial Chapel was completed in a part of the cathedral that a bomb had hit in 1940. The roll now resides there and a page is turned each day to show different names. Landscape quarto album 318 x 419 mm. Four letterpress leaves partly printed in gilt comprising title excerpt from the Archbishop of Canterbury's address Eisenhower's introduction to the Roll of Honour and copy of page from roll all with acetate covers. Tan leatherette front cover lettered in blind "Commemoration Service - St. Paul's Cathedral - July 4. 1951." cord-bound cord recently renewed 33 heavy card leaves with 28 mounted black and white silver gelatin press photographs 203 x 254 cm most captioned by hand. Binding neatly restored and consolidated the photographs in sharp unblemished condition slight discolouration around letterpress leaves. In very good condition. hardcover
19531581571953. A notable portrait presented to a prominent early supporter Inscribed by the president "For Senator William A. Purtell with best wishes and warm regard from his friend Dwight D. Eisenhower"; an appealing image of a pensive Eisenhower by renowned Capitol Hill photographer George Tames taken in the White House as Eisenhower announced the truce ending the Korean War. Purtell 1897-1978 served as Republican Senator for Connecticut in 1952 and from 1953 to 1959. He was one of the earliest Connecticut Republicans to support Eisenhower's run for the presidency. In turn Purtell's success in the November 1952 Connecticut senatorial election rode on the back of the strong public support for Eisenhower in the simultaneous presidential election; Purtell allied himself closely to Eisenhower's campaign platform. "A strong supporter of President D. Eisenhower's policies Senator Purtell was also a staunch American who liked to say: 'we have the finest country the finest system of society and the finest government in the world'" New York Times obituary 1 June 1978. The photographer George Tames 1919-1994 worked for the New York Times on Capitol Hill and in Washington from 1945 to 1985 taking many shots which became iconic. He took the photograph after Eisenhower's joint radio and television address to the nation announcing the signing of the Korean Armistice 26 July 1953. Interestingly this image would have been familiar to millions of Americans through its use on the 6 cent stamp issued in 1970. Official photograph taken by George Tames 358 x 280 mm copyright notice to verso stating reproduction by the Signal Corps of the US Army. Dark oak frame with conservation acrylic glazing 427 x 351 mm. Slight cockling inscription a little faded but still clearly legible very good. unknown
264157No place nd. 1 vols. In 11 3/4" x 14 3/4" frame. Fine. Framed and glazed. 1 vols. In 11 3/4" x 14 3/4" frame. From the Estate of actor Robert Montgomery. unknown
2551The black and white glossy photograph by "The News" captures Eisenhower in academic robes when he was President of Columbia University and Bourke-White also in academic robes on the day they each received honorary degrees from Rutgers: the future U. S. President for Doctor of Laws and renown World War II photographer for Doctor of Letters. The explanation of the photograph is docketed on verso. Trim lines visible with notations on verso. Condition: Bends at corner tips cracking at lower left corner and throughout visible under light. During the Second World War he served as Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in Europe with responsibility for planning and supervising the successful invasion of France and Germany in 1944-45. After the war he served as President of Columbia University and in 1951 he became the first supreme commander of NATO. As a photographer for "Life Magazine" Margaret Bourke-White was the first female photographer to serve with the US armed forces covering World War II. She photographed Eisenhower for Life Magazine in 1942. unknown