558 résultats
24977One item from 1777 from Bounty Hall Estate Jamaica; three items from London 1800 and 1801; fourteen items from New York Lewis Simond & Co. 1803 and 1804. All 18 items are in very good condition with slight signs of age and wear. Items One and Eighteen are letters Eighteen being a ‘triplicate’ the other sixteen items are accounts with items Five to Eighteen relating to the firm of the New York merchant Lewis Simond. Items Seven Nine and Twelve are copies i.e. written out afresh but containing the same text of Items Six Eight and Eleven. ONE: Henry Hough overseer of the Bounty Hall estate Jamaica to ‘William Fairclough / Green Park’: Autograph Letter Signed. 22 The eighteen documents in this collection provide an interesting insight into the dealings of a substantial West Indian merchant: the owner of the extensive Jamaican sugar and rum plantation Green Park slave owner and slave trader. Green Park Estate was one of the largest and oldest sugar plantations in Trelawny Parish Jamaica dating back to a grant of land from Oliver Cromwell to James Bradshaw son of the regicide John Bradshaw. It was bequeathed to William Atherton the principal party in the present documents by William Kennion per his will of 1764. Atherton extended the estate to around over 1300 acres building a fortress and a second sugar mill so that it ranked as the third largest of the 88 estates in Trelawny Parish. The first item is a letter written from the overseer of a neighbouring estate Bounty Hall regarding the settling of a bill. In the next three items we see Atherton purchasing silver lace from a London tradesman and settling other bills through his bank Glynn’s. The last fourteen item centre on the New York firm of merchants Lewis Simond & Co who arrange the transportation of wood for the construction of casks for the rum produced at Green Park Item Five provides a current account between the firm and the Green Park Estate. Despite the fact that Atherton is estimated to have owned around eight hundred slaves in the last item we see him quibbling over eighteen cents. November 1777 Bounty Hall. Docketed: ‘Bounty Hall 22d. Novr 1777 / Henry Hough / respg Horses Captain & Doctor’. Everything having come ‘safe to hand’ Hough writes: ‘I shall do myself the Honour of waiting upon you in a Sundays in order to settle the mode of payment’. 1p small 4to. Items TWO to FOUR are attached to one another at a corner. TWO: Accounts from 1800 and 1801 addressed to ‘Wm Atherton Esqre’: ‘To Willm & Josh. Farrant’ also ‘Jas. Chalks’ and ‘Bill on Glyn & Co.’ 1p foolscap 8vo. THREE: James Chalk. Receipt with his printed letterhead: ‘Bought of James Chalk / Gold & Silver Laceman / Successor to Mr. Bullard / At His Manufactory No. 1 next door to Northumberland House Strand.’ 3 May 1800 London. ‘1 Silr. hat Lace and band 0. 16. 0 / Silr. Lace Eps. and bands - 4: 15. 6: / total £5: 9: 6’. 1p landscape 12mo. FOUR: James Chalk. ‘Rec’d 9th. Septr. 1801 of Wm. Atherton Esqre. / Five Pounds Nine Shillings & 6 by the Hand of Messrs. Wm. & J Farrant / for James Chalk’. 1p landscape 12mo. FIVE: Thomas Dixon for LS & Co. Accounts docketed ‘Ls. Simond & Co / Accot. Current with Green Park Estate / to 31 Decr 1803’. 4pp 4to. Bifolium with the two central pages the reciprocal double-entry accounts to $3803.76 dated 31 December 1803 New York. Debits for shipments including ‘Ducks & Geese’ and ‘3 bbls apples’ from the Experiment and ‘carting to three different Ships’: Ferdinand Alknomac and Ann and further shipment ‘per Friends’. Credits for ‘a tierce of rice per Experiment’ and rum per Ferdinand and Alknomac. SIX: LS & Co. ‘Invoice of Sundries shipped by Lewis Simond on board the Ship Experiment Richard Marner Master bound for Falmouth Jamaica for Account and risk of William Atherton Esqr & consigned to William Fairclough’. 16 December 1802 New York. 1p foolscap 8vo. SEVEN: Second copy of SIX. EIGHT: LS & Co. ‘Invoice of Lumber shipped by Lewis Simond & Co on board the Brig Ferdinand John Lane Master bound for Falmouth Jamaica for Account & risk of Wm Atherton Esqr & consigned to Wm. Fairclough’. 5 April 1803 New York. 1p 4to. NINE: Second copy of EIGHT. TEN: John Lane master of the Ferdinand. Printed receipt completed in manuscript by Lane and signed by him 8 April 1803 New York. 1p landscape 8vo. ‘SHIPPED in good order and well-conditioned by LEWIS SIMOND & Co on board the Brig called the Ferdinand whereof is Master for this present voyage John Lane now laying in the port of NEW-YORK and bound for Falmouth To say Four thousand six hundred one quarter & twenty Red Oak Staves’. ELEVEN: LS & Co. ‘Invoice of Lumber shipped by Lewis Simond & Co on board the ship Alknomac John Gore Master bound for Falmouth Jamaica for Account & risk of William Atherton Esqr & consigned to William Fairclough Esqr.’ 22 April 1803 New York. 1p 4to. TWELVE: Second copy of ELEVEN. THIRTEEN: John Gore master of the Alknomac. Printed receipt completed in manuscript by Gore and signed by him 25 April 1803 New York. 1p landscape 8vo. ‘SHIPPED in good order and well-conditioned by LEWIS SIMOND & Co on board the ship called the Alknomac whereof is Master for this present voyage John Gore now laying in the port of NEW-YORK and bound for Falmouth To say Two thousand six hundred Red Oak & Four thousand one hundred two quarter white Oak Staves One thousand which Oak & four hundred Ash heading’. FOURTEEN: Thomas Dixon for LS & Co. ‘Invoice of R O Staves retained by William Fairclough Esqr out of 4. 6. 1. 20 amounting to $255.50 shipped to him for accot of Green Park Estate but which he gave up to Wm. Green Esq’. 14 March 1803 New York. 1p lanscape 8vo. Docketed ‘Invoice of Ferdinand’. FIFTEEN: Thomas Dixon for LS & Co. ‘Invoice of sundries had by William Fairclough Esq for account of Green Park Estate from the Cargo of the Ship Friends’. 14 March 1803 New York. 1p 4to. SIXTEEN: Thomas Dixon for LS & Co. ‘Sale of 15 Puncheons rum received pr. Brig Ferdinand from Jamca. 14 July 1803 for Account of Green Park Estate to sundry Grocers at 2 3 4 & 5 months 19 July’. 19 July 1803 New York. 1p 8vo. SEVENTEEN: Thomas Dixon for LS & Co. ‘Sale of 25 Puns. rum received per Ship Alknomac Gore from Jamaica. 4 Augt. last 1803 for Account of Green Park Estate & sold to sundry Grocers 12 Augt. @ 3. 4 & 5 month’. 12 August 1803 New York. 1p 4to. EIGHTEEN: LS & Co. ‘Triplicate’ letter to ‘Wm. Atherton Esqr.’ 5 May 1803 New York. 1p 8vo. Having ‘carefully looked over the invoice of $612. 40 for Shipment by Experiment 14th. Decr.’ they are ‘unable to discover the error of 18 cents you mention’. ‘Respecting the change of firm of the house we have to observe that Mr. Alexr. Campbell remains as he was before our sole partner & that no change whatever is introduced except the addition of Company to the signature of Ls. Simond of which we have already advised you.’ One item from 1777, from Bounty Hall Estate, Jamaica; three items from London, 1800 and 1801; fourteen items from New York [Lewi unknown
114788San Francisco The Union Lithograph Co. c. 1912. . Tall 4to; 56 photogravures contents toned; original stiff cloth wrappers cream with burgundy backstrip titles gilt wrappers a little rubbed and marked a very good copy.<br /> An uncommon marketing booklet for the California Sugar & White Pine Company which was headquartered in San Francisco from at least 1902 to 1919 based on the dates of correspondence held at the Arizona Historical Society. The contents comprise 56 photogravures documenting the entire lumbering process from stands of old-growth pine through felling milling and transportation. A fantastic record of the American timber industry from the period when it was becoming highly mechanised.<br /> San Francisco, The Union Lithograph Co., [c. 1912]. hardcover
1997202480New York: Powerhouse Books 1997. First edition. Hardcover. One of only 100 specially bound copies. Features an introduction by Andy Grundberg along with an essay by Bert Randolph Sugar. A gritty and intimate collection of black and white photograph of boxers and their environs. Includes 51 duotone illustrations. A fine copy in a fine slipcase. No dust jacket as issued. Signed by Fink on the half title page. Laid in is a silver gelatin print that is signed and numbered by Fink on the verso. One of Fink's best books. Powerhouse Books unknown
1846612861New. Brand new and still unused unknown
007147739XNew. Brand new and still unused unknown
199428895Westport Connecticut U.S.A.: Bergin & Garvey. New. 1994. Hardcover. 0897893832 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - -- with a bonus offer-- . Bergin & Garvey hardcover
3729229<p>America. 1951. Illustrated Poster. 41 x 27 inches. Printed in blue and red. Fold lines numerous inexpert tape mends to verso otherwise very good.</p> <p>A Georgia native Walker Smith Jr. 1921 –1989 a.k.a. Sugar Ray Robinson is regarded by some authorities as the greatest boxer of all time. Outside of the ring Robinson was one of the first African Americans to gain stardom as a celebrity becoming a fixture of New York’s 1940s and 1950s social scene “his presence extended beyond his boxing skills to showmanship class and grace.†AAL </p> <p>This movie poster advertises a film of the boxing-rematch between Robinson and England’s Randy Turpin a.k.a. “The Leamington Licker†on September 12 1951 at the Polo Grounds in New York City. Turpin had beaten Robinson two months before. In this grudge match movie audiences watched Robinson beat Turpin as Jimmy Powers the New York Daily News sports editor narrated the film.</p> <p>The Associated Press has named Sugar Ray Robinson the fighter of the century just ahead of Muhammad Ali. Upon his retirement in 1965 in front of thousands at Madison Square Garden and to a standing ovation Robinson was lifted into the air by four of his key former competitors Turpin being one of these men.</p> <p>A large and striking poster of one of the ultimate fighters of the 20th century.</p> unknown
19432090202120200056Tokodo 1943. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Tokodo paperback