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17715000651London: Printed for T. Becket and P.A. De Hondt in the Strand 1771. A fine copy. Quarto; a fine copy in a Sangorski-style binding of half green morocco spine panelled in gilt between raised bands. <p><p>First edition of the earliest published account of Cook's first voyage to the Pacific: the rare first issue with the leaf of dedication to "The Right Honourable Lords of the Admiralty and to Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander" inserted by the publishers to add authenticity. This copy also has the first state of p. 90 recently identified and to be distinguished from an amended state where text begins "quantities.".</p> <p>This was the first of a series of so-called "surreptitious accounts" of Cook's various voyages to appear in print: the Admiralty found it practically impossible to enforce their ruling that no unofficial publications should pre-empt the official and lengthier accounts of the voyages naturally much slower in the press. In this case however legal action was taken against the publisher for using an unauthorised dedication forcing removal of the leaf during publication. "It is accordingly of the greatest rarity and copies of the book containing the dedication are far more valuable than those without it." Davidson. In this large copy the offending leaf has generous margins and retains its printed instruction to the binder "Place this next the title" which also interestingly indicates that the leaf was printed quite separately from the rest of the work.</p> <p>The British public's eagerness for news of the voyage needed more than newspaper accounts while the officially sanctioned narrative would be a long time coming. Published anonymously some two months after the return of the Endeavour and nearly two years before Hawkesworth's official account the Cook scholar Beaglehole demonstrated that the sailor James Magra was the author. His illicit sale of his journal to the publishers might well have confirmed Cook's opinion of him: 'one of those gentlemen frequently found on board Kings Ships that can very well be spared or to speake more planer good for nothing.'. He was a New Yorker and a loyalist. Whatever his skipper and the authorities may have thought of him it was Magra who got the first description of the voyage into print - the earliest printed account of the east coast of Australia published even before acceptance of the name Botany Bay here called Sting-ray Bay as Cook originally christened it.</p> <p>Magra later changed his name to Matra to claim a family inheritance. As Alan Frost has shown "The Precarious Life of James Mario Matra: Voyager with Cook; American Loyalist; Servant of Empire" 1995 Matra used his experiences on the east coast of Australia to draft his 1783 proposal for a penal colony at Botany Bay. Never shy in self-promotion he announced his hope of being made Governor. His plan like Sir Joseph Banks's before and George Young's after him had its effect on the planners of the First Fleet and he was called as an expert witness to the committee in charge of solving the question of transportation see Frost pp.113-122. His life has prompted a considerable literature with multiple studies of his career and importance including those by G.B. Barton George Anthony Wood James Watson who christened him the "Father of Australia" an accolade more often awarded to Joseph Banks and more recently Antonio Giordano who has him as "Australia's Spiritual Father" and Andrew Tink.</p> </p> . Printed for T. Becket and P.A. De Hondt, in the Strand unknown
17835001095Hartford Connecticut: Nathaniel Patten 1783. Small octavo lacking the map as do virtually all known copies top four lines of title-page in well prepared facsimile; as always a little browned throughout but generally in rather better condition than most copies; in the original dark calf binding. <p><p>Highly important personal account of Cook's third voyage: the first American account of Cook's third voyage and thus the very earliest American account of the discovery of the Hawaiian Islands later to become the fiftieth state of America. This rare and significant book is notoriously hard to find in good shape. </p> <p>Ledyard one of several Americans on the voyage and the only one to publish an account of the expedition sailed as a corporal of marines. It is now generally acknowledged that he got hold of a copy of Rickman's narrative which he used to help him compile this account after his return to America. He himself describes the sealing of all diaries drawings memorandums and charts of all officers and crew aboard ship at Canton. However the narrative contains considerable information not available elsewhere including the first published description of the Russian presence on Unalaska the first permanent Russian settlement in northwest America only Ledyard Samwell and Edgar visited the settlement. The chart supposed to have been issued with the book which seems to have been an almost direct copy of the Rickman map is missing in almost every copy known and in view of the erratic nature of American eighteenth-century publishing it is nowadays accepted that it was not generally issued.</p> <p>Ledyard's description of his stay at Hawaii his expedition inland and the death of Cook occupies sixty-four pages of the text. The account of New Zealand and Australia is short but includes his observation that 'the island of New-Holland for its boundaries are now ascertained is by much the largest known and most eligably sic situated on the map of nature. even the Empress of Russia might be gratified with such a portion'.</p> </p> . Nathaniel Patten unknown
18212090<p>Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown 1821. Cloth. Fair. 3rd Edition 1821; xi 320pp illustrated 5 woodcuts 2 maps 1 folding. Library bookplate on verso front cover. Half leather with marbled boards. This was the first voyage commanded by William Edward Parry Fisher was assistant surgeon aboard the Hecla they wintered at Melville Island and earned a 5000 pound reward for being the first to cross the meridian longitude 110' west. Fisher's journal is a valuable supplement to Parry's official account notably for his information on natural history and ice conditions. TPL 1194 Sabin 24453 Hill 605. Covers detached map at front worn and poorly folded NEEDS REBINDING back beginning to split at bottom on quite a few pages at hinge. Age toning slight foxing as expected. Fair. PLEASE NOTE: This book will incur extra postage and insurance charges. Please contact us for a quote. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 2 kilogram. Category: Arctic & Antarctic; Antarctic; Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 2090. .</p> Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown hardcover
186811669Boston: Ticknor & Fields. Very Good. 1868. First Edition. Hardcover. Wear at spine ends and corner tips; top of spine chipped with loss; spine faded; moderate rubbing at edges; moderate foxing to prelims frontis and title page with more pronounced foxing to tissue guard. Gift inscription second blank endpaper. ; Burgundy cloth spine lettered in gilt; frontis and 19 more woodcuts including 8 plates and 11 in the text. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 540 pages . Ticknor & Fields hardcover
1811r0121London: John Stockdale. G: in Good condition without dust jacket as issued. Covers rubbed and bumped. Some foxing. 1811. New Edition. Fawn boards with brown paper spine. 295mm x 235mm 12" x 9". 408pp. Frontis and 27 engraved sepia wash/black plates. Heavy item - shipping supplement may apply for overseas. . John Stockdale hardcover
1789e9643London: G.G.J. and J. Robinson. G : in Good condition. Respined. Cover rubbed with edge and corner wear. Map torn at fold.Dust soiling to page ends and some browning to illustrations. Heraldic book-plate on paste-down. 1789. First Edition. Brown hardback leather cover. 280mm x 220mm 11" x 9". 327pp. Frontis folding map and 6 engraved plates. Book-plate of Alex. Trotter Esq. of Dreghorn 'Festina lente'. Heavy item - shipping supplement may apply for overseas. . G.G.J. and J. Robinson hardcover
1852013145London: John Murray 1852. First edition. Illustrated including a coloured litho frontispiece a map 1 further coloured litho plate and one plain plate an extra colour title page several text engravings pp xvi 398 a little age-toned and slightly worn internally recently rebound in 1979 by Delrue in a simple brown quarter morocco and marbled boards slightly worn with part of the original decorated upper cloth laid down on the front endpaper; a modern image from a journal of Fortune with Salvia on the reverse has been bound in between the two title pages. . First Edition. Quarter leather. Good. John Murray Hardcover
1813e6020London: James Cawthorn. G: in good condition. External joints cracked. Areas of wear to boards. Heraldic bookplate to front pastedown. Title page and first leaf of contents list frayed. Archival repairs to initial folding map. Inner hinges cracked. Contemporary marginalia to pp. 143. Scattered light foxing and offsetting. 1813. First Edition. Contemporary calf hardback leather cover. 280mm x 230mm 11" x 9". xix 1152pp. Engraved frontispiece 2 folding maps 3 engraved plates 17 hand-coloured aquatint plates 7 double-page 2 engraved leaves of music in-text illustrations. Heavy book extra shipping needed for overseas. Bound without advertisement to front. . James Cawthorn hardcover
1817530301Glasgow: R. Chapman 1817. Hardcover fully bound in smooth brown leather; 5 raised bands gilt decoration and gilt lettering to spine. Full marbled page block and portrait of Johnson as frontispiece. Rear spine hinge is cracked and the rear cover is almost loose but still intact. Rubbing to board edges spine ends and spine sides. Light foxing to endpapers and prelims some foxing intermittently internally. Text is clean and unmarked throughout. AD. leather. Good. Used. R. Chapman Hardcover
180123544London: Printed at the Oriental Press by Wilson & Co. for Edward Harding 1801. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good. Quarto pp 205 217 with two folding hand-colored maps and 47 engraved plates in a contemporary full calf binding with gilt rules spine in six compartments with red and black spine labels and gilt embellisment. Some rubbing to boards especially at joints and head of spine a little worming to boards. Binding sound scattered foxing but generally clean. The maps which are in very nice condition show Pennant's route from London to Dover and then from Dover to the Isle of Wight. "Thomas Pennant was a Welsh antiquarian and naturalist whose works were very popular in the eighteenth century. His reputation was built on his important natural history survey British Zoology first printed in 1766 and his accounts of two tours of Scotland undertaken in 1769 and 1772. Pennant made further tours in Wales and in England between 1773 and 1787 and his popularity among amateur naturalists and antiquarians resulted in the development of a comprehensive network of correspondents many of whom supplied him with additional information that he added to subsequent editions of his works. Aside from his 1783 book describing the antiquities on the road between Chester and London and his immensely popular account of the antiquities of London none of Pennant’s English tours were published during his lifetime. This account of his 1787 tour to the Isle of Wight was edited by his son David and published in 1801. Rather than heading directly to the island Pennant’s tour took in much of the south-east coast of England travelling first from London to Dover before traversing the coasts of Kent and Sussex" Royal Collection Trust. Printed at the Oriental Press by Wilson & Co. for Edward Harding hardcover
1886c1772Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons. G : in Good condition without dust jacket. Heavy discolouration / dampstains to cover especially spine. Text block clean and tight. No map. 1886. Reprint. Blue hardback cloth cover. 210mm x 150mm 8" x 6". xxx 386pp. . William Blackwood and Sons hardcover
16539London: Chapman & Hall 1894. First edition. Splendid frontispiece of the Hon. Mrs Greville-Nugent anf her husband photographed "en Arabe" . and 11 plates. 8vo 9 x 5 3/4 inches 190-pages. Original green cloth blocked in dark green. Headbands rubbed spine dulled. Several leaves badly opened on fore-margin two plates detached. Some foxing. Overall sound. With a prize label of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals awarding this book to Arthur Knight for his Essay on "Man's Duty towards Animals". Mrs. Greville-Nugent writes of the frontispiece in the text that "we were photographed en Arabe .by M. Geiser who makes a speciality of this. My costume with its brocades and jewels was lovely; but the shoes pinched being clumsily made and of very coarse leather; and I envied my husband the nice red morocco gold embroidered top boots.". Algeria & Tunisia London: Chapman & Hall, 1894. hardcover
1818List2715Augusta Georgia 1818. Single letter three 9 x 16 inch pages letters with some tape repairs and stray holes at folds still quite legible. Very good. A letter written by Calvin Barnard to his friend Asa Holman of Bolton Massachusetts describing the former’s trip from Boston to Augusta South Carolina from November 25 to January 1. Barnard first traveled from Boston to Charleston South Carolina by boat from which he notes “almost a continual gagging and vomiting†from the passengers. In Charleston Barnard observes that the city is inelegant the unpaved streets “filled with mud†and views “the breastworks which were thrown up during the last warâ€. This would have been the War of 1812 of which Barnard was likely a veteran. South Carolina had engaged upwards of 5000 soldiers and had put up defenses along the coastline in anticipation of the war but it did not come to the mainland – although South Carolina was under naval blockade and the Sea Islands were targeted by the British.<br /> <br /> Barnard reaches Savannah Georgia on the 25th of December; similarly he finds it “although a place of considerable business†“about as dissatisfactory a place I ever was in.†Augusta which he reaches by foot “is much handsomer built and situated than Savannah but not less dissipated†– he remarks that “Being the first day of the year is in this part of the country another great day for getting drunk.†After spending some time in Augusta he finishes the letter with some pointed observations about its residents:<br /> <br /> “I have had a better opportunity of becoming acquainted with the manners customs and dispositions of the citizens of Augusta . I shall not do them injustice by dividing them into three classes in which the Negroes are excepted. The first class of which are the gentry as they would expect to be called made up of men from all parts who have become rich here mostly by avaricious and unjust means . And this class we cannot expect to see drink more than once a week. The second is mostly the natives of this state and South Carolina who are men of a little property of a little education and very little of an honorable principle of any kind and these are not often seen drunk in the forenoon. The third class appears to me to be made up of the off-scouring of every bad place on earth for I never saw their equal for drunkenness lying stealing fighting swearing from morning till morning again. It is not possible that the continent of America has in any other place their equal. If it had I think the whole world soon be sunk.â€<br /> <br /> He finds Augusta’s African-American residents the only trustworthy ones despite local opinions:<br /> <br /> “If any stealing is done here it is laid to the Negroes but I had my surtout a shirt and handkerchief stolen on Friday night last but have too good an opinion of the blacks to think they have them.â€<br /> <br /> Of interest as an outsider’s views on the early Antebellum South and on drinking – another pressing social issue of the day. unknown
1928200525-MB20London: Macmillan London Limited 1928. Very Good hardcover 1928 arranged with an Introductory Essay and Notes by J.C. Squire previous owner's inscription folio illustrated with drawings and prints . First Edition. Hardback. Very Good/No Dust Jacket. Macmillan London Limited hardcover
1928170729-MYB532MacMillan London 1928. Very good Hardcover 1928 56 drawings.Color frontispiece. First Edition. Hardback. Very Good/No Dust Cover. MacMillan London hardcover
1905160266London: Ward Lock & Co Limited. Very Good. 1905. Hardcover. An edition in very good condition. The volume has some foxing throughout and a previous owner's ink signature on the front flyleaf. The covers bear normal shelfwear ; Oppenheim's account of the making of history is an engaging and informative read. He outlines the various ways in which history is created from the perspective of the historian the scholar and the writer. He also discusses the impact of history on present-day society and offers some insightful observations on the role of the historian.; B&W; 8vo; 315 pages . Ward Lock & Co Limited hardcover
1994020301Dublin: Published by the author 1994. Well illustrated octavo pp viii 181 quarter cloth and marbled boards a really fine copy. Signed by author on title page. A limited edition of only 500 copies this being A of lettered copies and presumably limited to just a handfull thus. Irish physician botanist and explorer. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy and a fellow of Trinity College Dublin where he founded the college's herbarium. After taking his medical degree in Dublin Coulter studied botany in Geneva for seventeen months under Swiss taxonomist Augustin de Candolle. Coulter then served as physician with the Real del Monte Company in Mexico during which period he collected plants in the region. He is best remembered for exploration and botanical research in Mexico Arizona and Alta California in the early 19th century. He subsequently returned to Ireland in 1834 and became curator of the herbarium at Trinity College Dublin. Signed by Author. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Privately Printed. Published by the author Paperback
1994020425Dublin: Published by the author 1994. Well illustrated octavo pp viii 181 paperback the slightest signs of use but really a very good copy. Signed by author on title page and inscribed to the botanist and conservationist Gren Lucas - "for Gren at the Linnean Society 15th October 1998". A numbered limited edition of only 500 copies this being number 394. Coulter was an Irish physician botanist and explorer. He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy and a fellow of Trinity College Dublin where he founded the college's herbarium. After taking his medical degree in Dublin Coulter studied botany in Geneva for seventeen months under Swiss taxonomist Augustin de Candolle. Coulter then served as physician with the Real del Monte Company in Mexico during which period he collected plants in the region. He is best remembered for exploration and botanical research in Mexico Arizona and Alta California in the early 19th century. He subsequently returned to Ireland in 1834 and became curator of the herbarium at Trinity College Dublin. Signed by Author. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Privately Printed. Published by the author Paperback
1859615178London: John Murray 1859. Third edition hardcover without dust jacket in very good condition. Strong modern rebind internally. Includes two fold-out maps. Minor age related tanning and discolouration within. Boards are clean binding is sound and pages are clear. LW. Third Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Dust Jacket. Used. John Murray Hardcover
1852180552London.: Longman Brown Green & Longmans. Second Edition. 1852. 5 folding mathematical projections at the rear. v 143pp plus 5 pages of publisher's adverts. Original cloth lettered in gilt on the spine and ruled in blind title page slightly browned head & tail of spine slightly chipped else a lovely clean copy. A presentation copy "With the Author's Cordial Regards' dated July 6th" 1854. 17.5x 10.5cm Born in Westminster London in 1818 William Hughes was a prolific mapmaker geographer engraver printer and publisher. . Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans. hardcover
18303958<p>Henry Teesdale & Co London 1830. Early Edition. Linen. Good/Slipcase. Large engraved folding map hand-coloured in hundreds with an engraved inset view of the New Custom House Liverpool. Published by Henry Teesdale & Co. May 1. 1830. Dissected and mounted on linen edged in green cloth With original pull-off slipcase marbled edges spine label still intact. 1160mm x 1640mm. A fine map of the county in a scale of 3/4 inch to 1 mile engraved by J. Bingley. Previous owner name to slip case and rear of map. Slipcase worn cloth edging slightly worn and loosening in a couple of places colours still nice and bright. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 2 kilogram. Category: Geography & Maps; History. Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 3958. . This map weighs over 1Kg and may involve extra shipping charges to some countries.</p> Henry Teesdale & Co
17914033Longman & Co. Literary-Press London 1791. Early Edition. Map. Good Condition/No Dust Jacket. Uncoloured; light signs of old folds possibly from how it was folded in the book. Trimmed close to neatline at bottom with loss of engraver's imprint. The map is 19cm in diameter. A map of the Arctic Circle to just over 60 degrees south. The northern coast of North America and Greenland is very sketchy. Engraved by Samuel Neele. Undated but Longman & Co. published a similar but slightly more detailed map in 1808. "The Copper Indians" are mentioned and at 80 degrees a note stating "Boundary of Ice 1773". Greenland is shown connected to the continent across Baffin's Bay. Possibly the map came from Part 1 of the book "The habitable world described: or the present state of the people in all parts of the globe.With a great variety of maps and copper-plates" by the Rev. Dr. John Trusler. Publication date 1791. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilogram. Category: Geography & Maps; Exploration. Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 4033. . Longman & Co. Literary-Press ? unknown
2008321101Woolloomooloo Sydney: Focus 2008. First Edition. . Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. 416pp index many photos. Inscribed to prev. owners by Michael Larmer Size: Square 4to <br/> <br/> Focus hardcover
195628411Association of Agriculture 1956. Folio portfolio containing 24 loose sheets of plates maps and text a number double-page; printed wrappers portfolio split at backstrip else a very good bright clean copy. Produced by the Association of Agriculture in collaboration with the Ontario Agricultural College Guelph Ontario. Sold from an institution with its neat press-mark. IN THIS CONDITION A SCARCE SURVIVAL. Association of Agriculture, unknown
1882126801Washington DC: Government Printing Office 1882. Revised Edition. Hardcover. Good/No Dj. 4to. pp. 176 US Commission of Fish and Fisheries Special Bulletin #176 2 fold-out maps gloassary contents good to very good in green/gilt cloth Government Printing Office hardcover