263 résultats
26 leaves. Original mimeograph. 4to. Original plain yellow wraps. PA PAMPH 20_1 BX3
39 p. 8vo. Plan paper wraps. AI 1508. PA 61 L Stk x2
pp. (2), xlv, (6), 381, (3) [Publisher's Advertisements]. Foxed. Small 8vo. 19mm. Leather boards tooled in blind; later library cloth spine. Released duplicate from the Historical Society of Pennsylvania's Gilpin Library. Greatly expanded from the first edition. Some copies of the 3rd edition contain a frontis, but it apparently was not issued with the second. Charles Leslie was a celebrated non-juring divine. He distinguished himself in public religious controversy. When Ireland became disturbed in 1689, Leslie removed with his family to England, where he employed himself in writing political pamphlets (opposed to the existing government but zealous in support of the Church of England). About this time he entered into a controversy with the Quakers, said to have arisen from the circumstance of his lodging with a family of that persuasion. This family he converted. This is the first of the several treatises which he wrote against the Quakers. It was answered by George Whithead in a pamphlet entitled, "An Antidote to the Snake in the Grass." In this important Second Edition Mr. Leslie noticed this answer; but he was again assailed in a production called, 'Satan Dissolved from his Disguises of Light' which also appeared in 1696. To this, and several other attacks, Mr Leslie replied at great length in "A Defence of a book entitled the Snake in the Grass." This again provoked a host of answers, amongst which was one by the Quakers, entitled "A Switch for the Snake." To this Mr Leslie again replied in "A Second Defence, or the third and last part of the Snake in the Grass." Wing L1157; Smith, Anti-Quakeriana p. 267. Very Scarce. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PA 59.
pp. 86; 40. Foxed. 12mo. 190mm. Original worn full leather binding, front board very fragile, almost detached. Small loss at tail of spine. PA 59 Rt Stk
94p. + Full page wood engraved plates with original tissue guards. Top edge gilt. Uncut. Square 8vo. Original gilt decorated purple cloth binding, spine faded. Calling card of the author. A prominent Pennsylvanian's plea to England to allow the remains of Penn to be removed to Philadelphia. PA 59.
216 p. 12mo. Original cloth binding.
8vo., with photographs and illustrations pictorial wrappers, wire-stitched as issued, a fine copy.
360 pages. Index. Bibliography. Map endpapers. Black and white photographic plates. Updated version of the first edition published over 41 years earlier. "A study of a little known area of religious and social history." - from page vii. Above-average wear. Usual library markings. Spine slant. Binding intact. A worthy reading copy. Book
392 p. + Color illustrations by George Gibbs and photographic plates. Title page printed in red and black. 8vo. Slightly soiled original publisher's blue cloth binding. Gilt decorated, with a color portrait of 'The Quakeress' on front cover. ** PRICE JUST REDUCED!! PA 58 x2
1829BL4542Philadelphia:: Society of Friends 1829. 1829. Volume III only. 8vo. iii-iv 3-298 2 pp. Missing title page and pp. 1-2. Original full mottled calf red gilt-stamped spine label "Quaker"; spine damaged rubbed. Ownership signature of Fannie Comstock. As is. This serial publication survived for just four years ca.1827-1831. Contains sermons or letters written by James Cockburn Dr. John Moore Jesse Kersey Stephen Crisp Elias Hicks Edward Stabler Thomas Wetherald Amos Peaslee etc. Society of Friends, 1829]. unknown books
pp. xi, 243. 8vo. Original publisher's cloth binding. Head of spine slightly worn. Original priced dust jacket, very slightly chipped at edges. Sun faded. Quakers and modern affairs and social issues. PA 58.
319 p. + Illustrations. XLib. **PRICE JUST REDUCED!
pp. xx, 349 + Portrait frontis, full page plates and a folding genealogical chart. Ownership on front paste down inked out. Uncut. Top edge soiled. 8vo. Original full cloth binding, extremities slightly rubbed. Gilt lettering on spine faded. Especially useful in that it covers Penn's successors who are not included in other biographies and studies. PA 58.
178316713London: Printed Philadelphia: Reprinted and sold by Joseph Crukshank 1783. First American edition. 209 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary sheep. Quite rubbed surface worming on covers front free endpapers and blanks removed pencilled duplicate notation on endpaper text browned some soiling. First American edition. 209 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. First published in in London in 1773. This tract as were most of Phipps works written in defence of the Quakers and in response to Samuel Newton of Norwich. Shipton and Mooney 18139 Reprinted and sold by Joseph Crukshank unknown books
pp. (4), 230. Lacks fly leaves. Aged and damp stained. 8vo. 250mm. Original full leather, rubbed. Small loss at head of spine. Evans 21391. PA 61 L Stk. **PRICE JUST REDUCED!
178324871London printed: Philadelphia: Re-Printed: and sold by Joseph Cruikshank 1783. First American edition. 4 206 pp missing 207-209. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary sheep. Signed on half-title "Rachael Peason Solebury Pa.". First American edition. 4 206 pp missing 207-209. 1 vols. 8vo. <br/><br/> and sold by Joseph Cruikshank unknown
178316713London: Printed Philadelphia: Reprinted and sold by Joseph Crukshank 1783. First American edition. 209 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary sheep. Quite rubbed surface worming on covers front free endpapers and blanks removed pencilled duplicate notation on endpaper text browned some soiling. First American edition. 209 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. First published in in London in 1773. This tract as were most of Phipps works written in defence of the Quakers and in response to Samuel Newton of Norwich. Shipton and Mooney 18139 Reprinted and sold by Joseph Crukshank unknown
1788013273NY: William Ross 1788. Second American Edition. Hardcover. Fair. Second American edition re-printed by William Ross in NY. Original or old calf front cover detached detached ffe heavily inscribed in old script: "Thomas Clapp's book. Don't steal this book for fear of shame for here to see the owner's name from one borrows this book . and take the sense therein and then return it to the owner again. Hannah Clapp William Clapp William Ross hardcover
pp. 208, 27-100 [Reflections and Maxims of William Penn]. Lacks rear fly leaf. Discreet perforated XLib stamp on title page. Embossed bookseller label on first fly leaf of Hiram Young, York, PA. (Hiram Young went on to become a newspaper publisher in York). 12mo. Original full publisher's cloth binding, decorated and embossed in blind. Gilt lettered and decorated spine. Library call marks on spine. Extremities worn with slight loss. Hardbound. Very Good. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PA 60 Mid Stk
First Edition, xii, 556, 12pp., portrait, ownership inscription of on upper blank margin of title, original brown blind-stamped cloth, lettered in gilt on spine, a nice copy. "In 1827 Walker joined the Society of Friends, his diaries contain extracts of his remarkable journeys with James Backhouse, visiting the convict settlements in Van Dieman's Land, South Wales (including, at that time, Moreton Bay), and Norfolk Island. His wife was a member of Lady Franklin's committee to visit the female prisoners. In 1843 he was appointed to a board of inquiry into conditions at the Female Factory, built by Lieutenant-Governor Arthur in 1827 in accord with Elizabeth Fry's recommendations. Worried over the growing number of prostitutes, he formed a committee to 'suppress vice' by finding employment for destitute women. In 1848 Lieutenant-Governor Denison asked him to share in the task of providing an asylum for these women, and noted in his journal: 'the very personification of a mild, benevolent, and excellent Quaker' A respected founder with Backhouse of the Society of Friends in Hobart, Walker was always ready to plead for any convict under punishment by solitary confinement or treadmill for refusing in Quaker custom to remove his hat in respect to authority, to explain to judges the Quaker aversion to oaths, or to reason against state aid to religion. Although unable to repeat his missionary journeys, he managed to visit Friends around the island and encouraged others to travel 'in the ministry' to help new Meetings on the mainland". - Australian Dictionary of Biography. Ferguson, 6473.
12mo (160 x 95 mm), iv, 108pp., disbound. Smith, J. Friends' Books, II 164.
242 p. + Portrait frontis and full page illustrations. Text slightly foxed. 8vo. Original publisher's cloth binding. Rubbed. Library call marks on spine. XLib. (Barrett Friendly Library, Mountainhome, PA). Introduction by Elisabeth Powell Bond. PA 58.
315p. Lightly XLib. 16mo. Original red gilt decorated cloth binding. Library call marks on spine. PA 61 L Stk.
pp. viii, 315. 16mo. Lightly foxed. Original green publisher's cloth binding, rubbed. Manuscript New Year's (1882/3) presentation from Walter Morris to Karl Schor. PA 61 L Stk.
pp. xii, 812 p. Folio. 32 cm. Age stained. Worn contemporary full leather binding. Front board detached. Evans 13607. This is the principal work of the Dutch Quaker historian, William Sewel. Written to correct the misrepresentations of Gerard Croese's 'Historia Quakeriana' Sewel spent 25 years in its preparation. It was first published in Dutch in 1717 and in 1722 the first edition in English appeared. "Its accuracy has never been impugned, and it remains a classical authority." DNB SCARCE. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PA62