85 résultats
1900000153Paris: H. E. Martin 1900. First Edition. Cloth. Very Good. Job; Jacques Drogue ornament. Folio - over 12. Book. Undated circa 1900. With 18 color illustrated plates by Job each 14 by 11 inches. Countries covered include of course France Germany USA England Austria-Hungary Belgium China Denmark Spain Greece the Netherlands Italy Russia Persia Sweden Norway Mexico Montenegro Japan Siam Abyssinia Canada Switzerland Transvaal Orange South Africa Turkey Egypt Tunisia Siam Brazil Finland Portugal Bulgaria. Pages are quite toned as inevitable with the type of paper; otherwise clean. Binding tight. <br/><br/> H. E. Martin hardcover books
194523994Bridgehampton New York: The Bridgehampton National Bank 1945. Two ink blotters printed for the bank; in color with an idyllic farm scene & the bank's contact information; with a handy ruled section at top; approx. 3 1/2" x 6" size; not dated circa 1945; printed by the Thomas D. Murphy Co. with their trademark; one blotter with a chipped corner; some edge tips wear a little soiling spotting; in good condition blotter backs do not appear used; interesting job printing for this Long Island bank circa mid-twentieth century. . Ink Blotters . Not Bound. Good. The Bridgehampton National Bank Paperback books
1800711841800. London: Printed for J. Wright 1800. London: Printed for J. Wright 1800. Intended to Expose the Brutality of the French Revolution Ayme Jean-Jacques. Narrative of the Deportation to Cayenne And Shipwreck on the Coast of Scotland Of J.J. Job Aime Written by Himself. With Observations on the Present State of that Colony And of the Negroes; And an Account of the Situation of the Deported Person at the Time of His Escape. London: Printed for J. Wright 1800. ii 282 12 pp. Lacking half-title and final publisher advertisement leaf. Octavo 8-1/2" x 5-1/4". Contemporary three-quarter calf over marbled boards lettering piece and gilt fillets to spine marbled edges. Light rubbing to boards moderate rubbing to extremities front hinge starting three early library bookplates to front pastedown. Moderate toning to text occasional light foxing. $950. Second and final English edition. First published as Deportation et Naufrage de J.J. Ayme Ex-Legislateur the first English Translation followed later that year. Ayme was a member of the Directory who was arrested after the Coup of 18 Fructidor and sent to the penal colony in Cayenne commonly known as Devil's Island. He managed to escape and eventually made his way to England. His narrative details the inhuman behavior of the colony's masters towards their prisoners and slaves. Produced to promote opposition to the Revolution in Great Britain the English translation was intended to expose the brutality of the Directory and the hollowness of its stated commitment to political freedom and human rights. The second edition was also issued in a composite volume with two other books critical of the French Revolution titled History of the Revolution of the 18th Fructidor. Sabin A Dictionary of Books Relating to America 545. English Short-Title Catalogue T87787. unknown books
200136331n.p.:: Breakwater. Near Fine. 2001. Paperback. A later paperback printing. About fine in illustrated wraps. . Breakwater, paperback books
187618618Washington D.C.: Printed and Bound at the National Republican Printing House 1876. Original printed wrappers with wrapper title and caption title as issued. Stitched 17pp. Folding map sketch of the area in question. Wrappers moderately worn Good. After his War service in the Union army Barnard settled down to a legal career in Crown Point Indiana. He took on this case after he moved himself and his practice to Washington. His Brief in this case provides a history of the surveys and land ownership of the Northwest corner of Indiana from the inception of statehood in the mid-1830's. FIRST EDITION. Not located on OCLC. Printed and Bound at the National Republican Printing House unknown books
187423871New York: Scribner Armstrong & Co. 1874. 8vo. xxvi 2 633 pp. <br><br>The "rhythmical version" is by Tayler Lewis of Union College. "A commentary by Otto Zockler. Translated from the German with additions by Prof. L. J. Evans. Together with a general introduction to the poetical books by Philip Schaff. Publisher's black embossed cloth with decorative design on boards. Spine with extremities frayed and gilt-stamped title dimmed. Binding is shaken but in generally good condition. Ex-library: call number on binding bookplate on front pastedown. Scribner, Armstrong & Co. hardcover books
1819SS321-001Various: Various 1918-1955. Hardcover. Very Good. For an itemized list of the items in this lot please inquire. Condition Very Good to Good. The Courier-Journal newspaper began publication in Louisville Kentucky in 1868 - the last run of the Courier-Journal newspaper was Sunday February 28 2021; the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company printing facilities closed for good on March 4th 2021. The material offered here is dated 1918 through circa 1955 and includes technical material used by apprentices and compositors working in the composition and press rooms of the Courier-Journal Job Printing Co. Included are 6 volumes of the Typographic Technical Series For Apprentices Part VI Nos. 32-40 out of series Chicago IL: Published by the Committee on Education United Typothetae of America 1918. All copies with the bookplate "Property of Courier-Journal Job Printing Co. For EMPLOYES' sic Use Only Return to Superintendent's Office" in a handsome Art Nouveau design on the front paste-down. This educational material demonstrates that the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was unionized at least from the beginning of the twentieth-century and highlights the power and influence of typographers who were among the most educated economically mobile wage laborers in the United States and who were represented in every major urban center in the newspaper industry; the typographic unions won a 48-hour work week in 1897 and a standard wage scale throughout the newspaper industry; as an example of the power of the typographers unions in the 1930s the International Typographical Union introduced the 40-hour work week across the industry which spread to other unions and has sinse been codified across the labor sector by federal legislation; the typographers occupied an important if ambiguous place in the development of American labor history in as much as American labor was never successful in uniting all laborers together in one force but tended organize within industries. This grouping tends to focus on the tools of the trade including type specimens and catalogs of process inks issued in the 1920s and 1930s; Courier-Journal typographers left notes to themselves in these catalogs indicating material they felt needed representation in the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company's shops. Something of an outlier in this grouping is an accordion-fold volume of photographs of printing equipment available for use in the 1950s by the competing print shop The Standard Printing Company Incorporated of Louisville Kentucky. Most likely a salesman's dummy to show potential clients that The Standard Printing Company had the latest printing equipment and the most prestigious customers this undated circa 1955 without imprint accordion-fold photo-archive of printing equipment shows the most modern print shop of the 1950s. The earliest book printed by the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was issued in 1884. An interesting article by Chris Kenning in the Louisville Courier Journal March 11 2021 gave some valuable insights into the history of the newspaper the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company and the challenges to the newspaper business and printing in general in the United States with the advent of desktop computers and the rise of the internet. While the Kenning article did not touch much on the time period 1918-1955 there are still interesting stories to tell about the printing industry in America the place of printing in the American labor movement and printing technology in the first half of the twentieth century that can be told using the materials offered here as visual aids. With the sale of the Courier-Journal to the Gannett Co. Inc in 1986 the road to the shut down of the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was opened. Now the Courier-Journal newspaper will be printed in Indianapolis IN. The current print circulation of the paper is now under 60000 while the Courier Journal's digital journalism garners 4.5 million monthly visitors to their website. Media consolidation has been made possible with the internet's ability to distribute news on a minute-by-minute basis making regional newspapers printed on paper a redundancy. The Cincinnati Enquirer the Lexington Herald-Leader the Bowling Green Daily News are all regional newspapers that will no longer be produced locally after having been produced in Louisville by the presses of the Courier-Journal. This consolidation of the newspaper industry means the loss of 102 Louisville jobs including printing press operators mailroom and transportation jobs that have been lost to the relocation of the press work to Indianapolis. Various hardcover books
1979246853Ann Arbor Mich.: UMI Research Press 1979. Hardcover. vii 361p. corners bumped else very good condition. No dj. Studies in American History and Culture; no. 1. UMI Research Press hardcover books
19231333450Paris: Librairie Delagrave 1923. 3rd edition. Hardcover. Quarto; Poor; Hardcover; Spine green with unreadable text large portion of lower half torn away with exposed binding; Boards in green illustrated cloth with gold print mitred edges torn hinge on front tattered spine caps and corners surface tears stains significant shelfwear; Text block has gilt top edge torn hinges front and rear intermittent spine breaks paper is significantly tanned and brittle; Text in French; 312 pages illustrated b&w. <br /> <br /> Oversized books. Additional postage necessary for expedited/international orders. Economy International shipping unavailable due to size/weight restrictions. For international/expedited customers please inquire for rates. 1333450. FP New Rockville Stock. Librairie Delagrave hardcover books
184738728Providence: Charles Burnett Jr. 1847. First edition. Stitched paper wrappers. Very good wrappers foxed small chip to bottom fore edge corner. 32 pp. 8vo. Freedom of religion. The Hon. Job Durfee was the Chief Justice of Rhode-Island; he had previously been a member of the U.S. House Representatives for Rhode Island. A second issue was published which included a poem by Sarah Helen Whitman. Charles Burnett, Jr. unknown books
184234680Bristol 1842. 16pp caption title as issued. Disbound else Very Good<br/><br/> Chief Justice Durfee says that the Dorr rebels are traitors. "The first duty which every person residing within the jurisdiction of this State owes to it is that of allegiance." The Dorr Constitution "can find no justification in law." Durfee explains with references to Rhode Island's original Charter of 1643 that sovereignty is "found in the body politic and corporate and no where else.No one within this jurisdiction can lawfully renounce this allegiance and transfer it to another sovereignty." The Chief Justice denounces "this principle of revolution by an unauthorized and irresponsible movement of masses."<br/> Dorrites must have trembled when not long after giving this Charge they learned that Durfee would preside at the trial for treason of Thomas Dorr. <br/>FIRST EDITION. Cohen 3298. Bartlett RI page 115. unknown books
184956158Providence: Gladding and Proud 1849. First edition 8vo pp. xxvi 523 1; contemporary half brown morocco over marbled boards; binding scuffed ex-Brown University with an Ives Collection bookplate withdrawn call slip on the rear pastedown; no external markings; good and sound. Durfee was the jurist who first called the Dorr Rebellion illegal and treasonable. Includes two lectures "History of the Subjection and Extermination of the Narragansetts" and "The Idea of the Supernatural among the Indians." Bartlett p. 115. <br/><br/> Gladding and Proud hardcover books
184355252Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. First edition 8vo pp. 52; removed from binding wrappers wanting; very good. Durfee here propounds the theory that "the recent revolutionary development of steam power was not merely an instance of man making progress it was a revelation of the divine 'law of progress' and of a 'higher destiny' planned by God himself for the new age" Schneider History of American Philosophy. These ideas were adumbrated by Durfee in The Panidea; Or An Omnipresent Reason Considered as the Creative and Sustaining Logos 1846 "a pretentious work that nobody read" DAB. More charitable comments are made by Joseph Blau in his collection of American Philosophic Addresses 1700 to 1900 page 381 ff where the Oration is reprinted in full. An important aspect of Durfee's deterministic theory of history is that "there is no absolute undefinable popular sovereignty which can in a manner its own and at any moment carry a certain supposed natural equality into social and political life and thereby elevate poor human nature however rude and degraded in condition at once as by a sort of magic into a state of supreme and absolute perfection" quoted by Blau. This is because the advances of science and technology impose conditions upon society which democracy cannot control and to which it must adapt. Blau notes that Durfee's views were influenced by German transcendentalism as mediated by Coleridge and Cousin. Not surprisingly given his skepticism on the efficacy of popular sovereignty Durfee as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court played a prominent role in opposition to the Dorr forces. Not in American Imprints Bartlett or Parks; Sabin 21427 note. <br/><br/> B. Cranston and Company unknown books
184385836Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. Paperback. Very Good. 52p. pamphlet. 22 cm. Disbound removed from a bound volume. Stitch marks along left side. Wrapper not preserved. Durfee served as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court for the last 12 years of his life 1835-1847. <br/><br/> B. Cranston and Company paperback books
184740377Providence: Charles Burnett jr. 1847. 8vo 22.5 cm 9". 42 5 1 pp. <br><br>Durfee 17901847 Chief Justice of Rhode Island expounds on "the Rhode-Island Idea of Government" p. 40 and his words were "Published at the request of the Society" title-page. This was first printed in the Journal of the Rhode Island Institute of Instruction Providence: Charles Burnett Jr. 1847 vol. II no. 1.<br>Â Â Â Â But for many of far more interest is the "Poem by Sarah Helen Whitman. Recited before the Rhode-Island Historical Society on the evening of January 13 1847; previous to the delivery of Judge Durfee's discourse" sectional title at rear. Whitman 180378 was variously a poet essayist Transcendentalist spiritualist and romantic interest of Edgar Allan Poe! The author of her page on the Poetry Foundation website characterizes her as "intelligent gifted witty and warm" and says "She was widely read." The fact is she is one of few women given space in the Bibliography of American Literature that bastion of white male authors.<br>Â Â Â Â Provenance: Gift inscription on front wrapper "Jno. McClellan Esq. with the respects of E. Dyer Jr. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â BAL 21359B; Sabin 21425. Yellow printed wrappers. Very good. Charles Burnett, jr. unknown books
184654235Boston: Thomas H. Webb & Co 1846. First edition 8vo pp. 176; original printed wrappers backed with red cloth at an early date manuscript paper label on spine; wrappers lightly soiled and worn with minor loss to back wrap; a few corners creased and curled but text generally clean. A good sound copy. A work of Emersonian pantheism by the Chief Judge of the Rhode Island Supreme Court who presided over the Dorr trials. In an earlier work The Influence of Scientific Discovery and Invention on Social and Political Progress 1843 Durfee believed that he had found in the advent of steam power a sign of divine intervention indicating a "law of progress" in man's development. Panidea adumbrates this theme: all is eventually assimilated into the "Theanthropoid" Durfee's term for the Divine Mind. See Schneider History of American Philosophy. DAB offers a concise assessment: "a somewhat pretentious philosophical work which nobody read." American Imprints 2262. <br/><br/> Thomas H. Webb & Co hardcover books
1832bas27Providence RI: Cranston & Hammond 1832. First Edition. Octavo tan cloth hardcover paper label 200 pp. Fair with edgewear that includes chipping to spine; foxing age darkening throughout. Cranston & Hammond, 1832. First Edition. hardcover books
198816251NY: Howell Book House. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1988. Hardcover. 0876055439 . Illustrated. First printing. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. . Howell Book House hardcover books
182253342Sharon CT 1822. Broadside approx. 9" square; docketed on the verso in ink with 7 apparently unrelated names; very good. An act to incorporate the New York and Sharon Canal Company was passed April 19 1823. Not found in OCLC. <br/><br/> unknown books
1895139390Paris: Librairie D' Education De La Jeunesse 1895. First Edition. First Edition. Portfolio. Very Good plus. Unbound signatures interspersed with 40 color chromolithograph illustrations by classic French illustrator Jacques Marie Gaston Onfroy de Breville credited here as "Job". <br/><br/>Light dampstain to the top of the title page light toning to the leaves and owner bookplate on front pastedown. A bright presentable book. Librairie D' Education De La Jeunesse unknown books
1897139389Paris: Boivin and Cie 1897. First Edition. First Edition. Portfolio. Very Good plus. Unbound signatures interspersed with color illustrations by classic French illustrator Jacques Marie Gaston Onfroy de Breville credited here as "Job". <br/><br/>Light rubbing to the front board owner bookplate on the front pastedown and leaves lightly toned. A bright presentable book. Boivin and Cie unknown books
139391Paris: Charavay Martin N.p. First Edition. First Edition. Very Good plus with no dust jacket as issued. Unbound signatures interspersed with color illustrations by classic French illustrator Jacques Marie Gaston Onfroy de Breville credited here as "Job". <br/><br/>Light dampstain along top page edge of interior leaves light foxing to the front board and owner bookplate on front pastedown. A bright presentable book. Charavay, Martin unknown books
201248386Yonkers: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press 2012. Paperback. Very good. 313pp. Very good in publisher's wraps. <br/><br/> St. Vladimir's Seminary Press paperback books
188328019Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office 1883. First edition. Removed. A very good copy. xviii 185 pp. 8vo. 47th Congress 2d Session. House of Representatives. Report No. 1863. Examines the false claims of Thomas J. Majors of Nemaha county who was nominated as a contingent representative from Nebraska which claimed that it was underrepresented because there were serious faults with the census of 1870. Majors presented an 1874 census as an 1872 census thus deceiving Congress. Scarce. OCLC shows only a single copy at Georgetown. [Government Printing Office] unknown books
183648178Philadelphia: M'Carty & Davis 1836. First Edition. Octavo ca. 22cm.; removed; 24pp. Light foxing and dust-soil blue paper remnants along spine else Very Good and sound. Short biographical address on the life and career of Thomas C. James 1766-1835 leader in scientific obstetrics in the United States who in 1810 presented a paper describing the first successful case of premature labor artificially induced. AMERICAN IMPRINTS 40622a; SABIN 97649. M'Carty & Davis unknown books