987 résultats
190931679Washington 1909. 60th Cong. 2d Sess. H.R. 25550. Light toning and wear else Very Good.<br/><br/> The Bill introduced by Congressman Rodenberg would appropriate $150000 to purchase Oldroyd's entire collection "of Lincoln relics containing three thousand pieces more or less and for the acquisition.of number five hundred and fourteen and five hundred and eighteen Tenth street northwest Washington adjoining the government property known as the house in which President Lincoln died." An outpouring of affectionate remembrance attended the hundredth anniversary of Lincoln's birth.<br/>Not in Monaghan. unknown books
1809WRCAM35310New York: Printed by Frank White & Co. 1809. xxiii105pp. Printed self-wrappers stitched. Portion of outer margin of rear wrapper a blank leaf torn away else very good untrimmed and partially unopened. A lengthy and detailed defense of the Jefferson and Madison administrations' international policies. Includes numerous pieces of correspondence and a table of commercial figures. SABIN 5982. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 17376. Printed by Frank, White & Co. unknown books
1960028466New York: Bookman Associates 1960. 284p. burgundy cloth ex libris. Bookman Associates unknown books
1731WRCLIT61268Dublin: Printed by and For Samuel Fuller 1731. 1351pp. Octavo. Extracted from bound pamphlet volume. faint old stamps of a defunct mercantile library title neatly detached at gutter with old paper mends at lower blank tips and some early ink spots early ink ownership inscription on verso of title and in blank portion of A2; somewhat tanned with occasional corner creases and small marginal chips; a fair but complete copy quite amenable to conservation and binding. First edition. Not in Bradshaw. ESTC T103086. POLLARD pp. 230-1. Printed by and For Samuel Fuller unknown books
186230007.01<p>On the front page under <i>"News from the North" </i>is the text of Abraham Lincoln's reply to <i>New York Tribune</i>editor Horace Greeley. Greeley's letter urging Lincoln to emancipate all slaves in Union-held territory was known as "The Prayer of Twenty Millions." It was first published on August 20 1862. Lincoln responded on August 22 declaring that his paramount goal is to save the Union regardless of its effect on slavery as well as his personal views that all men should be free.</p> <b>ABRAHAM LINCOLN.</b>Newspaper. <i>Richmond Whig</i> Richmond Va. August 30 1862. 2 pp. 17 x 24 in.<p><b><br /></b></p><p><b>Excerpt:</b></p><p><i>"…As to the policy I 'seem to be pursuing' as you say I have not meant to leave any one in doubt. </i></p><p><i> I would save the Union. I would save it the shortest way under the Constitution. The sooner the national authority can be restored the nearer the Union will be 'the Union as it was.' If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time </i>save<i> slavery I do not agree with them. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time </i>destroy<i> slavery I do not agree with them—My paramount object in this struggle </i>is <i>to save the Union and is </i>not<i> either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing </i>any<i> slave I would do it and if I could save it by freeing </i>all<i>the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that.—What I do about slavery and the colored race I do because I believe it helps to save this Union and what I forbear I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union. I shall do </i>less<i> whenever I shall believe what I am doing hurts the cause and I shall do </i>more<i>whenever I shall believe doing more will help the cause. I shall try to correct errors when shown to be errors; and I shall adopt new views so fast as they shall appear to be true views. </i></p><p><i> I have here stated my purpose according to my view of </i>official<i> duty; and I intend no modification of my oft-expressed </i>personal<i> wish that all men every where could be free." </i></p><p><b>Historical Background</b></p><p>Though this letter is often as proof that Lincoln did not intend to abolish slavery unknown to Greeley and most Americans Lincoln had already drafted the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation and was only waiting for a Union military victory to deliver it. Moreover Lincoln makes a "divide and conquer" rhetorical move: he splits the issue by stating that his constitutional duty as president is to keep the Union together while simultaneously expressing his personal view of universal freedom at the end.</p><p>Additional content in this issue includes a front page editorial <i>"European Recognition" "The Indian Atrocities in Minnesota" "Yankee Finances" "An Order From Gen. Burnside" "The Peninsular Campaign—Gen. </i><b><i>J. Bankhead </i></b><i>Magruder's Official Report"</i> which takes over two columns with considerable detail.<br /><br />The back page has additional content with: <i>"A Brilliant Cavalry Exploit" "The Impressment of Slaves In Georgia" "Outrages in Arkansas" "From Kentucky"</i> and more. Additionally there are various reports from the <i>"Confederate Congress"</i> and numerous advertisements including a <i>"$100 Reward"</i> for a runaway slave.</p><p>The <i>Richmond Whig</i> is one of the less common—but still important—newspapers from the capital of the Confederacy.</p><p>In <i>Four Years in Rebel Capitals: An Inside View of Life in the Southern Confederacy from Birth to Death</i> journalist T. C. DeLeon wrote that the <i>Richmond</i> <i>Whig</i>was among the South's best wartime newspapers. Their pages "recorded the real and true history of public opinion during the war. In their columns is to be found the only really correct and indicative 'map of busy life its fluctuations and its vast concerns' in the South during her days of darkness and of trial."</p><p>One of the more interesting episodes in the history of the <i>Whig</i> is its alleged involvement in a terror plot against New York City during the Civil War. The <i>Whig</i>was reputed to have worked with the Confederate government to use advertisements and editorials to convey secret messages to Southern sympathizers in the North. In October 1864 the <i>Whig</i> was alleged to have run an editorial that signaled Southern supporters to embark on a terror campaign that called for widespread fires to be set in New York city and federal offices to be taken over and the capture of the city's military commander Maj. Gen. John Adams Dix.</p><p><b>Condition</b></p><p>Good. Never bound several folds with minor wear at the folds.</p> books
186322448.01New York N.Y. 1863. No binding. Fine. New York Journal of Commerce. Newspaper. New York Journal of Commerce. New York N.Y. January 3 1863. 4 pp. 24 x 32 1/2 in. An early report of the Emancipation Proclamation where the editors describe Lincoln's bold move as ""a farce coming in after a long tragedy.Most of the people regard it as a very foolish piece of business."" Historical BackgroundThe Emancipation Proclamation was the single most important act of Lincoln's presidency. Its text reveals the major themes of the Civil War: the importance of slavery to the war effort on both sides; the courting of border states; Lincoln's hopes that the rebellious states could somehow be convinced to reenter the Union; the role of black soldiers; Constitutional and popular constraints on emancipation; the place of African Americans in the United States and America's place in a worldwide movement toward the abolition of slavery. In sounding the death knell for slavery and the ""Slave power"" the President took a decisive stand on the most contentious issue in American history and the United States joined other western nations in embracing a future of free labor.In addition to the moral impact of this ""sincerely believed.act of justice"" the Proclamation aided the Union cause tangibly and decisively. Because it focused on territory still held by the Confederacy only small numbers of slaves compared to the total slave population were immediately freed. However the Proclamation deprived the South of essential labor by giving all slaves a reason to escape to Union lines. Failing that it freed slaves immediately upon the Union Army's occupation of Confederate territory. The Proclamation also encouraged the enlistment of black soldiers who made a crucial contribution to the Union war effort. Moreover England and France who had already abolished slavery were restrained from supporting the Confederacy which would have been in their own economic interests. Lincoln summed up the Proclamation's importance in 1864: ""no human power can subdue this rebellion without using the Emancipation lever as I have done.""Nonetheless the editors of the Journal of Commerce disagreed and their opinion reflects the truly controversial nature of the act for many contemporary Americans. books
1883290160Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co 1883. First Edition. Hard Cover. Good binding. Previous owner's name on the front board and front flyleaf. Slight dusty odor. Binding is cocked with red stain on the front board some rubbing and shefwear to the edges joints and corners. Brown cloth with black decorations and gilt lettering. Good binding. J. B. Lippincott & Co unknown books
194514114Girard KS: Haldeman-Julius Publications 1945. Hardcover. VG exceptional copy but covers are off. Brown boards. 42 pp. 30 bw plates. This volume consists mostly of reproductions of the artist's work with several introductions as mentioned in the title a brief biography and a foreword by the artist. Haldeman-Julius Publications hardcover books
193549210New York: Macmillan Company 1935. 8vo pp. xxvii 1 692; 316 figures and plates original navy cloth with gilt title on spine bookplate of O. C. Lester; fine. "A thoroughly comprehensive sourcebook it deals with all the important developments in science and many of the innovations in the social sciences British and Continental philosophy and psychology." <br/><br/> Macmillan Company hardcover books
1935S12059New York:: Macmillan 1935 1939. 1935. 2 volumes. Royal 8vo. xxvii 692; 814 pp. 316 345 illus. indexes. Navy blue gilt-stamped cloth dust-jackets. Ownership mark of William B. Bjornstad Drake University Des Moines Iowa. Fine. First American edition. Unusually fine set with jackets of the original edition. Macmillan, 1935, 1939. hardcover books
1966USACHIS00AFAlfred A. Knopf 1966. Good. Sachar Abraham Leon. A History of the Jews. NY: Alfred A. Knopf 1966. 478pp. Indexed. Illustrated. Bibliography. 8vo. Cloth. Book condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good with a few closed tears fading soiling and creases. Slightly yellowed. Alfred A. Knopf hardcover books
1966USACHIS01AFAlfred A. Knopf 1966. Good. Sachar Abraham Leon. A History of the Jews. NY: Alfred A. Knopf 1966. 478pp. Indexed. Illustrated. Bibliography. 8vo. Cloth. Book condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good with a few closed tears fading soiling and creases. Slightly yellowed. Alfred A. Knopf hardcover books
1976028550Boston and Toronto: Little Brown and Company 1976. xii 308p. b/w illus. original blue cloth ex libris. Little, Brown and Company unknown books
1980018664Skokie IL: Black Cat Press. Fine with no dust jacket. 1980. Limited Edition. Hardcover. Dark blue boards with gilt design on front board and gilt lettering on spine. Blue patterned paste downs and end pages. 2 3/4" x 2 1/8". Slight soiling on front board. Abraham Lincoln's famous treatise on unity. One of only 249 copies. Gilt leather by Bela Blau. Bradbury - Black Cat Press 66.; Miniature; 51 pp . Black Cat Press hardcover books
87519New York. hardcover. very good/very good. 8vo cloth. N.Y. 1938.<br/><br/> 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
1923016743Garden City NY: Doubleday Page & Company 1923. Book. Very good condition. Hardcover. First Edition. 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. xx 142 pages of text. Original hardcover binding with cloth spine and paper-covered boards. Moderate fading to the spine and rubbing to the extremities. No dustjacket. The text is clean and unmarked. First edition. Doubleday, Page & Company Hardcover books
20151283317London: The Folio Society 2015. First Edition Thus. tall thick 8vo. 489 pp. VG-; brown cloth spine with silver lettering brown pictorial paper boards with sepia photograph of Lincoln to front board; mild bumping to head of spine slight cocking to spine; mild rubbing to corners of boards; very mild shelfwear to fore-edge of text-block; bottom corner of p. 217-218 creased; housed in black slipcase; shelved Folio Society. 1283317. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. The Folio Society unknown books
177814190London: Published by J. Watts Dealer in Prints & Drawings opposite the Mews Gate Charing Cross 1778. Mezzotints. Printed on laid watermarked paper. In excellent condition. Morning Image size: 9 1/2 x 13 7/8 inches. Plate mark: 10 x 13 7/8 inches. Sheet size: 10 5/8 x 14 7/8 inches. Evening Image size: 9 3/8 x 13 7/8. Plate mark: 9 7/8 x 13 7/8. Sheet size: 10 3/4 x 15 1/8 inches. This is a stunning pair of mezzotints of two hunting dogs catching their quarry by John Watts after paintings by Abraham Hondius.<br/> <br/>Watts was a successful printmaker and publisher who was active in London during the second half of the eighteenth century. He was famed for his rich mezzotints which he exhibited in London between 1766 and 1778. Watts scraped mezzotints after some of the most renowned artists of his day but he had a special penchant for works by the Dutch masters such as this handsome pair after Abraham Hondius the celebrated Dutch animal painter. These rich mezzotints are a superb example of Watts's luxurious style of engraving translating the energy and fluidity of Hondius's beautiful paintings into a dramatic example of superior mezzotint engraving.<br/> <br/>Benezit Dictionnaire Des Peintres Sculpteurs Dessinateurs et Graveurs. Published by J. Watts, Dealer in Prints & Drawings opposite the Mews Gate Charing Cross unknown books
1964229519London Butterworths 1964. 1964. Second edition so stated. 8vo. 1 page preface by both authors. Dust jacket unclipped. Very good. 241 pages. No signatures or bookplates. 2nd Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. London, Butterworths, 1964. hardcover books
196547896New York: Basic Books 1965. First Edition. Octavo. Cloth boards; dustjacket; 406pp. Clean tight and unmarked; Very Good or better in original dustwrapper unclipped but lightly soiled; Very Good. Basic Books unknown books
184829488Cincinnati: Robinson & Jones 1848. Original printed wrappers light wear spine reinforced with archival tape three rubberstamps on blank portions with ornamental borders stitched. 49 3 blanks pp. Very Good. <br/><br/> This scarce pamphlet is the address of 'An Israelite to the Christian World' asserting "that Israelites view with as much concern and regret as devout Christians the lamentable attempts to instil disbelief in a Divine revelation." Lindo argues that God's Covenant with the Jews "has never been intermitted but has always been and still continues to be in operation." Through the revelation they received at Sinai "the world is indebted for the civilization it now enjoys and will continue to be indebted for the preservation of that civilization." Christianity he says was "originally a Jewish sect adhering strictly to the monotheism of the Old Testament" but it has "gradually become so perverted as to remove it from what it was originally." <br/>FIRST EDITION. Rosenbach 637. Singerman 1026. Not in Sabin Thomson Eberstadt Decker. Robinson & Jones unknown books
20077410El Cajon California: Nineteen Hundred Press 2007 First edition. One of 115 numbered copies. Edited by Gale W. Sheldon. 50pp. plus ten page appendix. Foreword by Gary F. Kurutz. Illustrated with four wood engravings by James Horton. Map ends. Bound by John Robinson at the Tortoise Press in half Nigerian goatskin marbled boards. A very fine copy. Includes three letters sent by Goodrich from the California gold fields in 1857 to his wife and family back East enhanced by 4 woodcuts of mining scenes. A lovely production. Nineteen Hundred Press hardcover books
5190ABRAHAM LINCOLN ASSASSINATION. Newspaper. 4pg. 10 ¼†x 13 ¾â€. Sunday April 16 1865. San Francisco. A The Flag’s Evening Dispatch from San Francisco detailing the death of President Lincoln. It is printed in four columns with mourning borders with front-page coverage of the assassination and its aftermath. The left column has headlines including Booth being the killer and that Johnson is the new President. There is an announcement by the San Francisco mayor that there will be a funeral for the President and news from the country’s interior. An editorial argues that the assassination argues “Let the fires of retribution sweep across the land accursed by treason. Let the sacrificial fires be lighted and the bodies of the hellish monsters who originated and took part in the conspiracy be offered up as a partial though tardy atonement for the destruction of the nation's peace.†There are the usual folds and a few minor edge tears and repaired fold separations. Extremely rare with only a few institutional holdings. unknown books
195624803New York: Cameron Associates. Very Good in Good dj. 1956. First Edition. Hardcover. solid book with a bit of wear at both ends of spine pages browned as typical with this cheaply-manufactured book; jacket has a few small edge-tears small chip and some associated creasing at bottom of front panel some paper loss to upper spine extremities. SIGNED by the author on the ffep. Polonsky's second novel published like his first during the period of his blacklisting by the Hollywood studios is about a California civil engineer "a typical American who signed a loyalty oath with hardly a second thought" only to discover that this simple act in fact has a profound effect on his life. Signed by Author . Cameron Associates hardcover books