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1777BB002<p>CLINTON George First Governor of New York State 1777-1795 1801-1804; also 4th Vice-President of the United States 1805-1812 under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.<br /></p><p>"Kingston laid in ashes by the Enemy" . <br /></p><p>8vo 7-3/4 x 6-1/2 inches 1-1/2 pages on laid paper with integral address leaf remnants of wax seal some fading to text and signature scattered minor<br /></p><p>It should be noted that Clinton was sworn in as New York's first governor on 9th July 1777 shortly after Kingston was established as its first capitol 20th April 1777. Thus the burning of Kingston and change of capitol to eventually Albany was a consequence of the War for Independence. <br /></p><p>Remarkable handwritten manuscript explaining that the British troops arrived at Kingston before his own re-enforcements whereupon 1000 men burned the town and immediately returned to their ships warning that a similar fate awaits the settlements along the shore and that forage and property should be moved from the path of the enemy reminding him to take the sleigh from the barn as it is all the personal property that remains to him after the destruction in Kingston noting that the enemy is advancing up the river to Saugerties with Tryon commanding on the east side and Vaughn on the west.<br /></p><p>Transcript</p><p><i>Head Quarters Hurley 17th October 1777</i></p><p><i>Dear Brother</i></p><p><i>"Before this can reach you you will receive the – disagreeable account of Kingston being laid in ashes by the Enemy. They landed before my troops arrived after a little opposition by the few militia Cols Pawling & Snyder could collect and marched about 1000 Men immediately up to Town - where they were told by some Tories who continued in it that my People were advancing on the Hurley Road & they immediately set it in Flames and extracted precipitately on Board their Vessels tho their Orders were to proceed to Hurley & the adjacent Neighborhoods to give them the same Fate so that tho I was not able to get my Troops Time enough to save Kingston they saved this and the other Parts of the Country near it. This will show you the Fate New Windsor & the other settlements along shore are to partake on the Enemy's Return down. Therefore the Necessity of removing the Forage &c from the Banks of the River among which remember my Slay in the Barn as it is now the only moveable Property I have left the Best being removed to Kingston shared its Fate tho indeed a great share of Property has been saved out of Town. The enemy sailed up the River this Morning as high as Saghertyes burning along Shore as they go. When they go a little higher I will follow them. They have Parties on both Sides of the River. Tryon commands those on the East & Vaughan on the West Side of the River.</i></p><p><i>Yours Sincerely</i></p><p><i>Geo Clinton</i></p><p>On Friday evening 16 October 1777 a British fleet commandeered by James Wallace and John Vaughn the latter on board the 'Friendship' which had anchored near Easopus Island the day before came into the mouth of Rondout Creek and engaged the gallery "Lady Washington". Shortly after noon the British landed on Rondout Creek and the Cove above Columbus Point. Vaughn personally led the march capturing and forcing a negro to lead them into town without meeting resistance. The troops went through the streets in parties led by Tories setting the whole place on fire in response to the occasional resistance lodged by residents from within their houses. There was looting and vandalism. Meanwhile part of the fleet went a bit up the River and creek to destroy landings and sloops. By the time George Clinton arrived into Kingston the whole town was ablaze and the British party had set out to return to their ships.</p><p>In a letter on 18 October penned at Little Britain NY in response to this letter his brother B. Genl. James Clinton writes:</p><p><i>D'r Brother</i></p><p><i>Yours of yesterday's Date I have just received. I am sorry for the Loss of Kingston &c. </i><i>Five of the Enemy's Shipping Returned Down the River last night without Doing any Damage Except fireing Some Cannon and small arms at our men and wounding one of ours on Board of a Ferry Boat…"</i></p><p>The war became personal for the governor specially after what had happened to Kingston. In a letter to William Smith @ 31 October 1777 his sentiments and commitment are laid bare:</p><p><i>"The Cruelties as well Cowardice with which this Warr has been conducted ag't us must I think be sufficient at this late Hour to convince every Man that all connection with Great Britain is at an End…"</i></p><p>Reference: <b><i>Public Paper of George Clinton</i></b> First Governor of New York War of the Revolution Series. New York: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. 1900. Volume II pp. 457-459. Our letter of 17 October 1777 appears to be unknown to the editors of the Clinton papers although they do list and transcribe the 18th October response by his brother James. Consequently our letter appears to be the only firsthand account by the governor of New York on the actual burning of Kingston an event historically reenacted locally each year within Ulster County.</p> Autograph Letter Signed, “Geo Clintonâ€, written to his brother Gen. James Clinton in New Windsor (“Dear Brotherâ€), from books
1937482191937. Clyde The Rt. Hon. James Avon editor. Hope's Major Practicks 1608-1633. 2 vols. Edinburgh: Neill & Co. Ltd. 1937. Vol. I: lii 359 pp; Vol. II: x 335 pp. Original blue cloth worn with gilt lettering. Illustrated. Good. $65. The Stair Society. unknown books
190143275London: Longmans. Green and Co 1901. Fifth edition. 1 vols. 8vo. Three quarter brown morocco and cloth boards t.e.g. by Riviere & Sons for Sotherans. Fifth edition. 1 vols. 8vo. Longmans. Green, and Co unknown books
198416n.p.: the Coalition 199-. Pinback button slightly over 2 inches in diameter very good. the Coalition unknown books
1979170892San Francisco: the Coalition 1979. Single sheet folded to make 8-panel brochure 3x7.5 inches very good condition. Includes point-by-point refutation of conservative arguments against the amendment.Calls for a January 1980 rally in San Francisco in support of the ERA. the Coalition unknown books
1980204945San Francisco: Coalition for the Medial Rights of Women 1980. 61p. staplebound wraps 5.5x8.5 inches very good. Coalition for the Medial Rights of Women unknown books
182735012Ipswich: Printed and Sold by E. Shalders 1827. 1st edition NCBEL III 717; Sadleir 575; Wolff 1286. SIGNED by Robert Russell Cobbold on the half-title page. Green linen cloth spine over drab paper boards with printed paper title label to spine. Cocked. Rear joint cloth starting with evidence of an old repair attempt. Bookplate of R W Lamb. A Very Good copy. xv 1 blank 243 1 blank 241 - 244 245 - 262 pp. Errata slip tipped-in at rear. Untrimmed. Frontis 2 copperplate portraits & 101 inserted lithographic plates one folding from drawings by the author. 8vo. 9-1/4" x 5-5/8" <br/><br/>Much influenced by his late mother's interests and charitable impulses Cobbold published Valentine Verses . to benefit her favourite charities but he came to be embarrassed by the critical reception of both poems and pictures. He is best known today for his novel The History of Margaret Catchpole 1845." ODNB. Printed and Sold by E. Shalders hardcover books
195214101New York: Prentice-Hall 1952. Hardcover. 318p. very good first US edition in cloth-backed boards and edgeworn dj. Young 699. Prentice-Hall hardcover books
173522771n.p. 1735. Illustration Engraving. 1 vols. Folio 39.8 x 47.8 cm. Matted framed and glazed. Margins trimmed to plate mark; mounted on board. Illustration Engraving. 1 vols. Folio 39.8 x 47.8 cm. Mythological pantomime with accompanying fireworks staged for the entertainment of the Dauphin. The audience is in the foreground a dragon is being slain in the midground and the fireworks are in the background. Lotz pages 67 69 116; Hodgkin 87 unknown books
1957122285New York: The Noonday Press 1957. Hardcover. 132p. very good first US edition in cloth boards and lightly-worn unclipped dj. Originally published in France as "Thomas L'Imposteaur" the novel is set at the beginning of WWI and concerns the struggles of 16 year old Thomas. The Noonday Press hardcover books
195026835New York: Roy Publishers. Very Good in Good dj. c.1950. First American Edition. Hardcover. good sound copy light shelfwear minor fading to cloth along top edges of covers one-time owner's name and address in light blue ink on front pastedown; jacket lightly soiled 1.5" triangular piece missing from top right corner of front panel one more small chip at top of front panel. B&W photographs "This is a day-to-day account of how the film La Belle et la Bête Beauty and the Beast was made. Its interest however does not lie solely in the technical details of film-making but also in what is implicit in every line; how an artist goes about creating his work. The story of how Jean Cocteau mastered the giant dream-machine of the film and shaped his unit into a tool is exciting and full of a special kind of information which is only occasionally vouchsafed the casual reader." . Roy Publishers hardcover books
1926007604London: Faber and Gwyer 1926. RARE in dust wrapper and this one quite nice Near Fine a hint of toning to end pages prior owner name front end page in a Near Fine dust wrapper tiny chips at head of spine small old tape mends internally at fold edges. Written between the years 1918 and 1926 and including "Cock and Harlequin" "Professional Secrets" and other critical essays. With a frontispiece titled "A portrait of the artist by himself". . First Edition. Cloth. Near Fine/Near Fine. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Faber and Gwyer Hardcover books
195934611959. Softcover. VG. Yellow wraps. 14 pp. Gives brief biographies of Catlin Eastman A.J. Miller Ranney J.M. Stanley Bierstadt Remington and Russell. Lists works from various collections loaned for the exhibit including a large number of Russell bronzes. unknown books
54191hardcover. numerous illus. in color and b/w white. 4to boards. New York 1963. Life History of the United States.<br/><br/> unknown books
1975125709Bloomington: Indiana University Press 1975. Hardcover. 214p. foreword very good first US edition in cloth boards and unclipped dj. Autobiography of the writer remembering the years of the Paris Occupation. Indiana University Press hardcover books
197532769London: Peter Owen 1975. Hardcover. 214p. very good first UK edition in boards and unclipped dj. Autobiography of the writer remembering the years of the Paris Occupation. Peter Owen hardcover books
193120127Garden City NY: Doubleday Doran & Company Inc. Near Fine in Very Good dj. 1931. First American Edition. Hardcover. price-clipped minimal shelfwear light dust-soiling/spotting to top edge; jacket browned/discolored/faded at spine otherwise just lightly worn and quite attractive Novel about "the darling of the Paris music halls" miserable in her marriage to an unfaithful fop of a husband and her passionate love for "a big simple straightforward landholder from the provinces." Ah it's always the big simple straightforward ones isn't it Especially if they're landholders. The novel based on Colette's own experiences was originally published as "La Vagabonde" in France in 1910 and was adapted into a 1918 silent film "La Vagabonda." Critic James Hopkin celebrated the book's centenary in a rhapsodic 2011 article in The Guardian praising its "energy and inventiveness" and calling it "a rousing novel of love and guile of vulnerability and vituperative wit of poetry and self-empowerment a slim volume scored with little wisdoms sumptuous descriptions and the 'heroic vanity' of an unforgettable cast." Jacketed copies of the original American editions of Colette's novels are all quite scarce. . Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc. hardcover books
1931007817New Yo K: Cosmopolitan Book Corp. 1931. First published in France as "La Seconde" and "considered by most French critics to be one of Colette's two masterpieces". Fine in a Very Good Art Deco dust jacket by Jung spine evenly darkened small chips at spine ends and edges of front panel. Basis for two made-for-TV French movies in 1973 and 1990. . First American Edition. Cloth. Fine/Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Cosmopolitan Book Corp. Hardcover books
1890007971London: The Folk-Lore Society 1890. Publications of the Folk-Lore Society No. XXV. Printed in Gaelic and English on facing pages. Bookplate of the Leicestershire Archaeological Society front paste down along with small seller's label. Bookplate of noted Celtic scholar and folklorist Edgar M. Slotkin verso front end page. Very Good slight spine lean light wear to cloth at edges scant toning at end pages. SCARCE in collectible condition. . First Edition. Cloth. Very Good/No Jacket As Issued. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. The Folk-Lore Society Hardcover books
18891865New York: Pr. by Gilliss Brothers & Turnure 1889. 8vo. 1 blank 1 ff. 59 1 blank pp. <br><br>Vermilye was a well-loved and much respected pastor as this amply documented order of service testifies including addresses by Morgan Dix the rector of Trinity Church and Merill Gates president of Rutgers. Good. Bound in original printed wrappers. Front wrapper detached and chipped. Leaves untrimmed. Exhistorical society copy rubber stamp on front wrapper and title-page. Pr. by Gilliss Brothers & Turnure unknown books
19718333Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1971 Third and best printing of this classic. "This is copy number 94 of a certified Limited Edition of 300 copies especially printed and bound for the 101 Ranch Rodeo Foundation Inc.". Foreword by Glenn Shirley. Pp. xxx 255 plus 53 photographs. Map endpapers. Appendices index. Full light brown leather gilt. A very fine as new copy with pictorial dust jacket as issued fading to jacket spine as usual. Famous western author Glenn Shirley provides a stunning historical foreword for this printing. This issue is also the first to incorporate further illustrations from the original and very rare 1937 first edition the second was that same year. The 101 Ranch is considered the best history of this great Oklahoma ranch and its owners. Collings covers the founding in the 1870's to the later Wild West Show continued ranching operations and final bankruptcy in the 1930's. This special printing is super scarce. First edition: Adams Herd: 504; Adams Six-Score: 22; Rader: 870. University of Oklahoma Press hardcover books
1817WRCLIT23167Edinburgh: Printed for John Ballantyne et al 1817. viii106pp. Small octavo. Original boards spine and joints defective. Apart from some occasional slight foxing or soiling a couple short closed marginal tears and an early ink notation of the publication date at the foot of the title internally a good untrimmed copy. First edition of this relatively late collection by the prolific dramatist and versifier. The "Lamentation to Scotch Booksellers" is alone worth the price of admission. NCBEL II:830. Printed for John Ballantyne [et al] hardcover books
35932London: Thomas Hailes Lacy n. d. Ca 1850s. Modern marbled paper wrappers with printed paper title label to front wrapper. Age-toning to paper otherwise Very Good Plus. 80 pp. Frontispiece. 6-7/8" x 4-1/16" <br/><br/> Thomas Hailes Lacy unknown books
1815WRCLIT66542London: Printed by J. M'Creery for T. Cadell and W. Davies 1815. vii1128pp. Small octavo. Original boards printed spine label. Extra pictorial title. Sixth edition. Small ink name on endsheet minor foxing otherwise a very nice copy very good or better. NCBEL II:829. Printed by J. M'Creery, for T. Cadell and W. Davies hardcover books
1815135022London UK: Printed by J. M'Creery for T. Cadell and W. Davies 1815. full leather four raised bands gilt on spine. large 12mo. full leather four raised bands gilt on spine. 128 pages. Extra pictorial title. Sixth edition. Text decorated with wood cuts. Spine separated yet present. A lovely little book. Printed by J. M'Creery, for T. Cadell and W. Davies unknown books