189 résultats
18806045021880. 3 3/4" x 5" on paper 6 1/2" x 9 3/4". Very good. ca. 1880. No Binding. Very Good/No Jacket. unknown books
18906045041890. 5 1/2" x 8 1/2". Very good. ca. 1890. No Binding. Very Good/No Jacket. unknown books
19002197274Dunlap Printing Company 1900. Hard Cover. Very Good/No Jacket. Lightly rubbed. 1900 Hard Cover. xxvi 227 pp. First Annual Message of Samuel H. Ashbridge Mayor of the City of Philadelphia with Annual Reports of Abraham L. English Director of the Department of Public Safety and of the Bureau of Health for the Year Ending December 31 1899. Issued by the City of Philadelphia 1900. Annual reports for the year 1899 include the following: The First Annual Message. Office of the Mayor Philadelphia April 2 1900.; Department of Public Safety.; Thirteenth Annual Report of the Department of Public Safety. Abraham L. English Director.; Bureau of Health of the City and Port of Philadelphia.; Appendix to the Report of the Bureau of Health of the City and Port of Philadelphia for the Year 1899.; Medical Inspector Division of Contagious Diseases.; Medical Inspector of the Sanitary Inspection of Public Schools.; Division of Disinfection.; Division of Bacteriology Pathology and Disinfection.; Physician-in-Charge for the Dunlap Printing Company hardcover books
18261197002Boston Philadelphia: Cummings Hilliard & Co.; Carey and Lea 1826. First American. Octavo; vg-/none; brown cloth spine with remnant white paper label and black text; near total loss; unreadable; ex libris signature title-page; shelf wear and bumping; text block clean; deckle; Part I "Northern and Central Africa" 255 pp.; Part 2 "Journal of an Excursion" 104 pp.; Part 3 "Appendix" 112 pp.; light foxing; tables maps plates split starts hinges and joints; spine crown and foot chipping and tears; spot staining; edges wear and fraying; front board with very old arithmetic study; else very good. 1197002. Rockville Non-Retail Listings. Cummings, Hilliard & Co.; Carey and Lea unknown books
183331283Philadelphia: James Kay Jun. and Brother 1833. First Thus. Large octavo 22.5cm.; full contemporary speckled calf two black gilt spine labels; 557pp. Boards a bit shelf-worn with old soil spots corners lightly bumped textblock a bit foxed and soiled numerous contemporary and later 1930s ownership inscriptions to front endpapers else a Very Good example. "University Edition" - bottom spine label. Collected lectures delivered by Blair during his tenure as the Chair of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the University of Edinburgh first published in London in 1784 shortly after the author's retirement. James Kay, Jun. and Brother unknown books
1895TB28062New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons 1895. First Edition. Very good in light green buckram cloth covered boards with gilt text on the spine and on the front board. A small octavo measuring 7 1/2 by 5 inches with very light rubbing to the cloth at the ends of the spine and foxing to the end sheets. Without a dust jacket. Written in pencil on the title page beneath the pseudonym Heclawa the following inscription appears: "From the author A. Lincoln Himmelwright" The upper edge of the title page bears the name of a previous owner in pencil. Also of interest facing page 172 is a photograph titled "The Return to Kendrick" of six horsemen surrounded by many men standing in front of a building. Someone has drawn in pencil an arrow connected to one of the horsemen to the author's name also written in pencil. Given how obscure the faces of anyone are in this photograph it would have been the author or someone with first hand knowledge to make this identification. 259 pages of text and appendices followed by a fold-out map of the "Clearwater Basin and adjoining Territory" of what is now Idaho and western Montana. Illustrated with a frontispiece eleven engravings eleven photographs and one line drawing. The author published this book using a pseudonym due to the controversy surrounding the discovery of this lost hunting party for leaving their cook George Colegate behind unable to walk and thinking he was close to death. The cook's body was located year later six miles from where he had been left to die. G. P. Putnam's Sons hardcover books
186534970New York: Currier & Ives 152 Nassau St. 1865. Folio broadside 12" x 16". Black and white bust portrait of a well-groomed bearded Abraham Lincoln. He wears a dark jacket and vest with a white button-down collared shirt and dark bow tie. In very small print below the caption appears to be the number 205 or possibly 105. Moderately tanned small white scattered spots. Several closed tears at edges and corners several archival tape repairs on verso. Good. Currier & Ives, 152 Nassau St. unknown books
1865D11161perhaps Washington DC see below: Published Annually for the Trade 1865. Hardcover. Very Good. Black cloth over flexible boards 72 x 122 mm; unpaginated with printed dates 3 per one side of a page plus a little preliminary matter year-at-a-glance postage rates list of Sundays and some blank pages for notes at rear. Pencilled entries for most days usually a general log of hours worked but briefly mentioning Abraham Lincoln's funeral on April 19 when he would have still been in Washington DC. Cloth quite tattered; some pencil rather faint. <br/><br/> Published Annually for the Trade hardcover books
1865102324<p> Newspaper 16" x 22" six columns of text small Lincoln engraving 4 pp. Folded at center a few tears and chips at folds and extremities some loss of text at the center fold some aging and browning and a little uneven darkening; despite these faults the paper is in decent condition overall for a newspaper from this period. Dated April 26 1865 this paper provides considerable detail on Lincoln's funeral. The coverage includes an OBIT on Lincoln and a small engraving of the slain president. Most of the coverage is on the second page of the newspaper. The articles include stories on events at the capital to honor Lincoln and the impact of the event on a grieving nation.</p> books
186234963Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office 1862. First edition. Three quarter morocco over marbled boards four raised bands gilt titles all edges marbled. A very good or better copy with minor scuffing and edgewearindex penciled on rear blank. 434 pp. 8vo. 37th Congress 2 Session Ex. Doc. No. 100. In October 1861 England France and Spain signed a treaty to force Mexican reparations; the English and Spanish withdrew but the French remained unseating Benito Juarez and installing Maximilian as Emperor . This was of grave concern to Lincoln and the North and a violation of the Monroe Doctrine. Also of concern was the relations between the Confederacy and Mexico. Provenance: Library of James Torr Harmer with his bookplate on front pastedown. [U.S. Government Printing Office] hardcover books
181220444Boston: Pr. by John Eliot 1812. 8vo. 184 pp. <br><br>On angels. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Shaw & Shoemaker 25196. Contemporary quarter tan paper over light blue paper-covered boards spine with printed paper label. Front cover separated spine chipped joints cracked spine label rubbed. Boards with soiling minor discolorations and edge wear; chip at fore-edge; corners bumped. Moderate foxing inside; waterstains in upper margins of some pages. Edges untrimmed; one leaf with lower outer corner torn away. Ex-library with rubber-stamp on front pastedown penciled call number on verso of title-page and library shelf label now removed on front cover. Pr. by John Eliot hardcover books
1893831041893. JACKSON Abraham Valentine Williams. AVESTA READER FIRST SERIES EASIER TEXTS NOTES AND VOCABULARY. Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer 1893. 112 pp. 2 pp. publisher's advertisements. 8vo. brown cloth stamped in gilt and blind. Marbled edges. Boards lightly rubbed moderate shelfwear. Endpapers and text age toned. Front flyleaf detached laid in. Indo-Iranian texts followed by line-by-line annotated translation. Considered the seminal work on the subject. unknown books
186236662Washington 1862. 37th Cong. 2d Sess. SED65. Broadsheet octavo. 2pp. Disbound else Very Good.<br/><br/> Lincoln refuses to mess with the currency believing that the proposed legislation would result in "the serious injury of honest trade and honest labor."<br/>Not in Monaghan. unknown books
1895RLINPOL00DGScott Foresman & Company 1895. Very Good. Lincoln Abraham. Political Speeches and Debates of Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas 1854-1861. Douglas Stephen A. 1895: Scott Foresman & Company 1895. 555pp. Indexed. 8vo. Burgundy cloth with gilt titles on spine. Book condition: Very good; gentle bumping to edges; former owner's name written faintly on the front pastedown; endsheets split at hinges but hinges are sturdy and tightly bound with clean pages. Scott, Foresman & Company hardcover books
1865biblio4<p> Newspaper 18 1/2" x 25 1/2" seven columns of text 4 pp. Folded at center another more subtle middle fold probably removed some chips tears and folds mostly at extremities some aging and browning a little uneven darkening ; otherwise about very good. Dated April 21 1865 this paper has several stories on the Lincoln assassination on the second and third pages of the newspaper. The articles include stories on the courage and determination of Secretary Stanton rewards posted for the capture of Booth and a nation in mourning. There is also a short report on the condition of Secretary Seward. Some interesting coverage of a national event in a local newspaper. </p> books
1864286487Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson & Brothers 1864. Hard Cover. Good binding. The Life and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln published by Peterson and Brothers. With portrait frontispiece and publisher's adverts at the rear. 4 17-187 19 pp. Lacking endpapers. Hinges cracked but holding. Loss to the bottom corner of the final advertising leaf. Writing on the pastedown and recto of the frontispiece. Some foxing. Shelfwear and loss to the corners of the boards and extremities of the spine. Patterned brown cloth with gilt and blindstamped lettering and decoration. Good. Good binding. T. B. Peterson & Brothers unknown books
1865236784Boston: Printed by Order of the City Council 1865. 1 vols. 8vo. Original pebbled bevelled cloth. Fine. 1 vols. 8vo. Includes speeches by Mayor of Boston Lincoln Senator Charles Sumner the eulogy Charles G. Loring A.H. Rice and Richard Henry Dana Jr pp. 56-61. BAL 4465 Printed by Order of the City Council unknown books
1862WRCAM11943Washington 1862. Small broadside 5 x 7 1/2 inches. Very good. Lincoln appoints Henry Halleck as general-in- chief of all of the Union armies. unknown books
186549673Troy N. Y.: A. W. Scribner Book and Job Printer Cannon Place 1865. 1st Printing Monaghan 802. Original printed self-wrappers stiched. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Bit of age-toning & soiling to outer leaves overall VG. 47 1 blank pp. 8vo. 9" x 5-3/4" <br/><br/>"If it be that the South is avenged in his death she will find it to be a vengance that will recoil upon her own head; for in him she has lost her best friend and however little we could afford to spare him she could afford it less still." <br /> <br />One of the many such sermons that were published shortly after the tragic event of April 15th 1865; this particular one uncommon in the trade with RBH showing a 1945 Goodspeed catalogue as their most recent appearance. A. W. Scribner, Book and Job Printer, Cannon Place unknown books
1896262839Chicago: Scott Foresman 1896. hardcover. good. Plates. viii 555pp. 2pp. of publisher's ads. 8vo maroon cloth lacks front flyleaf inner hinges strengthened spine sunned top margins lightly creased on pages 51-56 page 101 lightly soiled. Chicago: Scott Foresman 1896.<br/><br/> "Historically the most important series of American political debates." Howes L-338. Later edition of Monaghan I 69.<br/><br/> Scott, Foresman unknown books
1865102321<p> Newspaper 16" x 23" uncut six columns of text 8 pp. Folded at center some tears and a little loss of text at center fold but not significant other chips tears and folds mostly at extremities some aging and browning a little uneven darkening uncut and center pages probably never read; good or better for a newspaper and still very presentable. Dated April 26 1865 this paper covers events relating to the Lincoln funeral. The Herald reports that 750000 stood in silence during the funeral procession and that there were many disappointed mourners who didn't get a chance to join the 150000 that had a chance to make it to view the body. The paper gives details about the funeral procession and the final church services for the slain president. An important piece of American History.</p> books
1827304622London: Published by the Author No. 40 Castle Street East 1827. First edition with errata. 12 engraved portraits. 52 4 pp. with tipped-in erratum at end. 1 vols. 8vo. Original drab boards. Rebacked preserving printed spine label chipped and worn extremities worn light foxing some chipping to text at margins. First edition with errata. 12 engraved portraits. 52 4 pp. with tipped-in erratum at end. 1 vols. 8vo. Supplement to Abraham Wivell's Inquiry into the Authenticity of various Pictures and Prints which from the decease of the poet to our own times have been offered to the public as Portraits of Shakespeare London 1824. The portrait painter Abraham Wivell 1786-1849 illustrated editions of Shakespeare's works published in 1833 1846 & 1850. Jaggard p. 695 Published by the Author, No. 40, Castle Street, East unknown books
18616230New York: Privately Printed for the Association 1861. Very Good/A selection from the "Tomlinson Collection" manuscripts gathered by Abraham Tomlinson of New York and purchased by the Mercantile Library Association. The historical notes are with few exceptions by H.B. Dawson. Includes bibliographical references and index. Contents: New York city in 1767 by H.B. Dawson--The Stamp act riot: A letter written the day following Nov. 2 1765.--New York in 1770: The "Sons of liberty" extract from a letter by B.Y. Prime--Col. Marinus Willett's narrative: Seizure of arms from the British troops ordered to Boston 1775.--The Hickey plot: Letters from P.T. Curtenius John Varick jr. and Solomon Drowne M.D.--New York correspondence: Extracts from letters . 1775 and 1776.--The battle of Harlem Plains: A letter written by Gen. George Clinton.--New York loyalists of 1776: Addresses to Lord and General Howe and to Sir William Tryon with the names of nearly one thousand signers.--Preparations for evacuation: Letters from Lieut.-Col. Smith . in 1783.--Statement of William Butler esq.: Account of the occupation of New York city by the British from 1776 to 1783.--Sir Henry Clinton's defence: Reasons for not attacking Washington . near King's Bridge . 1781. 28 cm; 194 2 pages and 1 folding frontispiece map of the city of New York 1766-67. Illustrations and maps in text. Title page printed in red and black. This copy sound and entire in original purple ribbed cloth. Slight blemish to title page otherwise clean bright no sign of foxing and no stains. Upper hing a bit worn apparently treated with an amateur's remedy which has left a white residue. Some other discoloration to cloth and title on spine faded. Yet survives in very good condition! Privately Printed for the Association hardcover books
1801WRCAM50592New Haven 1801. 1111pp. Dbd. Ink institutional stamp on titlepage light toning a few leaves foxed. Good. A laudatory speech praising the recent election of Thomas Jefferson to the presidency. The author is mainly concerned even consumed by the separation of church and state which he obviously expects from the Jefferson administration. He writes "Church and State always contaminate each other so far as their union extends. The clerical politician is an useless preacher; the political christian is a dangerous statesman. We feel daily the dreadful effects of this union." He then goes on to praise Republicanism as "the form of government for the support of which you once pledged your lives your fortunes and your sacred honor." A scarce book in the market. SABIN 5595. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 199. GOODSPEED 342:168. MIDLAND NOTES 34:27. OCLC 1596438. unknown books
182126063New York: Published by James Eastburn Literary Rooms 1821 1821. First edition. BAL 8512. Boards somewhat stained and slightly worn; very good copy. 8vo original drab boards and printed paper label. ¶ A vision poem about the final day of retribution read by James Hillhouse 1789-1841 at the anniversary of the Phi Beta Kappa Society in 1812. This was an early work by the New York poet predating his first book by several years but it was not published until this edition in 1821. <br/><br/> New York: Published by James Eastburn, Literary Rooms, 1821 hardcover books