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1993LFA-126724536N° 39 (Février-mars 1993) : Revue de 98 pages, format 210 x 280 mm, illustrée, brochée couverture couleurs, bon état
Third edition of First Series, first edition of Second Series, second edition of Third Series, viii, 160; viii, 153, [3]; viii, 192pp., errata leaf at end of Second Series, all in original limp cloth, slightly worn, spines faded. Provenance: Ownership signature of B. Johnes, 1870, on front flyleaf.
201005322London, Doubleday, 1989 ; in-4 oblong, 160 pp., cartonnage d'éditeur avec jaquette. En anglais - bon état.
18804504264Sydney: Turner & Henderson 1880. In remarkable original condition. Duodecimo pp. 22 ii; original wrappers preserved in a folding cloth box. <p><p>The rare catalogue of the Society's inaugural exhibition held at the Garden Palace which had been purpose-built for the Sydney International Exhibition in 1879. An impressive two hundred and twenty oils watercolours and drawings were hung: Mrs. Alfred Williams' painting Ophelia the most expensive at £75 was highly praised by the Bulletin art critic at the time. Her identification as Mrs. Florence E. Williams gives more understanding of the high price as she had exhibited under that version of her name at the Royal Academy since her teens before coming to Australia. </p> <p>Her inclusion was significant for as Joan Kerr has noted "Florence's paintings seem unique for Australia at the time when domestic genre paintings are almost unknown." Florence was a founding member of the Art Society and had been a friend and pupil of and much influenced by Millais. As one of the very few figure paintings in the exhibition Ophelia gained most attention but she also had four other oils in the exhibition. An earlier painting not in this exhibition of a crimson Rosella set against lush vegetation and Mount Wellington was sold for a record $90000 in 2015.</p> <p>As well the catalogue notes W. C. Piguenit's Sydney Harbour from North Shore priced at £52.10.0 in modern times it reached $198000 at Melbourne auction. The catalogue also records works by Collingridge Halstead and Short as well as seven New Zealand watercolours by J C Hoyte the President of the Society. The list of "Working Members" names 80 artists and the Honorary and subscribing Members 47 notably Sir Henry Parkes.</p> <p>From 1871 the New South Wales Academy of Art had held annual exhibitions and had urged the establishment of a Public Art Gallery. This had as much to do with inter colonial rivalry - Melbourne had opened its Gallery in 1861 - as it did about fine art. Once a permanent home for the collection had been found the New South Wales Academy of Art dissolved in 1880 and it was acknowledged that an "artists' society" was needed: a society of professional artists rather than the more inclusive Academy. Artists led by Arthur and George Collingridge sought to establish an Australian school of painting and the first exhibition of The Art Society of New South Wales was held in December 1880 following its formation in July of that year. </p> <p>This catalogue notes that the Society was established for the "promotion and preservation of the Fine Arts in Sydney" and to "enable professional artists to exhibit their works advantageously." Further aims of the Society were lectures on art and a sketching club. The Life Class already established will "give rise to a greater variety in the works."</p> <p>This catalogue is a rare surviving record of the Art Society's first exhibition and succinctly captures the impressive depth of Australian Art in the late nineteenth century.</p> </p> . Provenance: John Chapman collection. Turner & Henderson unknown
187621192Sydney: Thomas Richards Government Printer 1876. Good overall. Map in original printed wrappers the map printed with 8 different colors indicating the minerals found in New South Wales and a table at the top "Proclaimed Gold Fields". Printed facts on New South Wales for an American market possibly issued for the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia and printed on the verso of each fold of the map are statistics on NSW starting with "advantages of NSW as a home for the emigrant".<br /> <br /> Folding map in original wrappers engraved by G. W. Sharp compiled and drawn by J. Tayler. The map in very good condition with a very small chip at lower left corner. On the inside cover printed information concerning rail ways telegraphs banks live stock coal diamonds lead & silver kerosene shale iron ore tin gold fields copper land crops and wages. The wrappers only a bit water marked; front wrapper chipped at spine. The map unfolded 18 1/2 x 15 3/4". F13171a. OCLC: 221603221. Trove 3586681. Thomas Richards, Government Printer unknown
190961847Boston: L.C. Page & Co. 1909. 8vo. x 2 280 pp. title in red & black. Double-page colour frontisp. map photo frontisp. numerous photo plates. Pictorial dark green publisher’s cloth Arts & Crafts cover art illustration of road & cottages in white & black gilt lettering t.e.g. illustrated endpapers very slight shelfwear NF bright copy from the library of former California State Librarian Gary Kurutz. First edition of this informative Brass Era automobile travelogue through Shropshire North Wales South Wales Wye Valley and the heart of Wales. Stawell 1865-1949 was an Australian-born artist book illustrator and early motorist perhaps best remembered for her compilations including Fabre’s Book of Insects featuring illustrations by Detmold and Fairies I have Met with Edmund Dulac illustrations. L.C. Page & Co., hardcover
15667Letter: Tredegar Monmouthshire Wales. 12 July 1844. Copy agreement: 29 October 1841. Copy agreement: 2pp. 4to. Letter: 1p. 4to. The two on a single bifolium with the agreement on both sides of the first leaf and the letter on the recto of the second. The reverse of the second leaf is addressed with Penny Red stamp and Newport and Tredegar postmarks to 'Henry Mostyn Esq Solr Usk'. In good condition lightly aged and worn. The agreement begins: 'Mrs Williams to let to Mr Powell and Mr William Protheroe her Coal under lands at Pen y Van Bedwellty whilst any Marketable Coal remains unworked paying 1s/- Royalty 2520 lbs to the ton weighed at Court y bella or any other public machine. . Mr Powell and Mr William Protheroe are to work the Coal belonging to Sir H. Protheroe's representatives under the undivided lands held by them with Mrs Williams as well as some other adjoining lands.' Other topics include the 'Usual covenants' 'Way leave' 'rubbish room'. In the letter signed 'R. Waters' Waters explains that he is sending 'a copy of the agreement which was entered into by Mrs. Lawrence & Messrs. Powell & Protheroe as the basis or instruction for the Coal Lease entered into between the parties'. While conceding that the agreement 'was not signed by Mrs. Lawrence' Waters explains that it was made 'with her sanction & approval & in the presence of all the parties interested therein.' Bedwellty Pits coal mine was sunk in 1850 by the Tredegar Iron & Coal Co. Letter: Tredegar [Monmouthshire, Wales]. 12 July 1844. Copy agreement: 29 October 1841. unknown
3729824<p>Sydney Australia. Batson & Company Printers. 1886–1887. Single sheet folded once to four a 4-page circular. Printed on yellow stock paper; illustrated. Two short closed tears; pale violet late 19th c. library rubber stamp Franklin Institute at bottom of final page; Very Good.</p> <p>Rare circular; notable for an excellent and large engraving showing the Technical Institute on Sussex Street Sidney. Page 1 lists all of the member of the Board of Education. Pages 2–3 lists all classes within each department Applied Mechanics Commercial Economy Chemistry Mathematics Art etc. the instructors dates and fees and other relevant information e.g. “Females may join any of the Classes.â€</p> unknown
aly11London: Trefoil Books nd. 4to. pp. 128. numerous b/w. illus. wrs. corners gentle rubbed. [London]: Trefoil Books, [nd]. unknown
1985134459Sydney: Library of Australian History 1985. Hardcover. Very Good. Sydney Library of Australian History 1985 second impression/ 1980. Large quarto 475 pages with 5 illustrations from photographs 10 facsimile documents and 2 full-page maps plus endpaper maps; loosely inserted is the slightly smaller format 24-page booklet of 'Corrigenda & Addenda'. Cloth; bottom edge and rear cover slightly marked; an excellent copy. 2 items. Library of Australian History hardcover
164721028431647. London: n.p. 1647. Small 4to. Disbound pp. 2 6; a little toned a few stains to title light dampstaining to outer margin of A1-2 but overall a very good and crisp copy.First and only edition very rare of this denunciation of the abuses of the Parliamentarian County Committees in Wales issued at the height of the Civil War.By the summer of 1647 one surviving copy is dated in manuscript ""1 July"" the war had dragged on for nearly five years. Parliament was steadily gaining the advantage largely through the network of County Committees manned with loyal supporters. These officials collected the taxes that sustained the war effort requisitioned horses and supplies for the army and carried out Parliament's decrees. Their growing power - together with the ever-heavier burden of taxation to maintain the army - provoked widespread resentment and in turn revived support for the Royalist cause.This pamphlet sets out the grievances against the Parliamentarian committees in Glamorgan South Wales and denounces their exactions and abuses. The rising it encourages was less an expression of loyalty to Charles I than a reaction to Parliament's oppressive rule. Indeed it contains no Royalist propaganda and no expressions of loyalty to Charles. Instead it reads as a near-anarchic denunciation of arbitrary power itself of its arrogance remoteness and disregard for the people.ESTC R201640 recording only five copies BL National Library of Wales Cardiff Central Library Oxford Folger. unknown
181927669Glasgow: John Muir 1819. First printing. Ephemera - Broadside. Very good overall. A broadside issued for the court in Glasgow for the session held 27th April 1819. Not recorded on OCLC Trove National Library of Scotland but possibly held by the University of Glasgow cited on Jisc Library Hub without detail. <br /> <br /> This broadside is more abbreviated than the other report of this session. Of the two women mentioned in the other Mary Kelly & Anne Robertson only Kelly appears on this record paired with Thomas Marshall his wife. <br /> <br /> Eight of those tried at Glasgow & Renfrewshire were transported to NSW Australia on board the Eliza which sailed on 22nd September 1819. They include:<br /> James Robertson Duncan Campbell & Peter Vaughan b. 31 Dec. 1801 - sentenced 14 years for house breaking and theft.<br /> John Ballantine/Ballantyne - sentenced 14 years for house breaking and theft.<br /> John Morrison & William Maxwell - sentenced 14 years for theft & reset of theft.<br /> Matthew Gillespie b. 31 Dec. 1802house breaking and theft Occupation: coppersmith/brazier. Sentence 14 years. <br /> John Yates Yeates house breaking and theft and being habit and reputed a thief. Born 31 Dec 1803 death 31 Dec 1843. Sentence 14 years. <br /> <br /> Text 26 x 8 cm on tissue 28.5 x 11 cm backed on 38.5 x 15 cm. Evenly tanned. John Muir unknown
181928025Glasgow: John Muir 1819. First printing. Ephemera - Broadside. Very good overall. A broadside issued for the court in Dumfries & Ayr in Scotland for the session held April 19 1819 and Ayr April 22. This broadside is held by the SLNSW. It is not located on OCLC Jisc LibHub or National Library of Scotland. OCLC: 181717771 cites a slightly later "Criminal trial" in Glasgow 27th of April 1819 held by the Univ of Glasgow and the SLNSW. The date is not printed but the date "on Friday the 28th May" is a Friday in 1819. The printing is also consistent with other similar broadsides we have handled.<br /> <br /> Dumfries: Henry McNish sentence 14 years; transported 29 Mar 1820 on the Mangles to NSW; John Brown and James Brown no transportation record near 1820; Samuel Ferguson and Mary Bunton housebreaking and theft - Sentence 14 years; he is transported July 1821 on the Lord Hungerford arriving in Tasmania in July 1821; no record for Bunton; Margaret Kerr theft imprisonment for 12 months; Peter Finlay & W. Donnel theft housebreaking hanged Ayr: John McNeil Joseph McNeil housebreaking theft - hanged.<br /> <br /> Three weavers were accused of 5 acts of highway robbery. Theyt were Arthur McCan alias M. Keand John Killan alias Kelly and John Stott. There was an Arthur McCann b. 1781 weaver "Irish rebel" departed 21 Jun 1822 arrived NSW 8 Nov 1822 on the ship Mangles. John Killan alias Kelly was apprehended the other two either escaped or were never caught pled not guilty but confessed to being with the other two and brought authorities to the place where event took place and where a watch was hidden. Witnesses could not identify Killan. Though pronounced guilty because of his youth and honesty he was recommended unanimously to be given mercy. "Lord Pitmilly. pronounced in a manner awfully impressive . the sentence. the prisoner to be executed at Dumfries on Wednesday the 26th of May. The prisoner who during the trial conducted himself with great propriety now fainted and was carried out of Court in that state." However it appears his sentence was commuted to 99 years departed 29 Mar 1820 on the ship Mangles arriving 7 Aug 1820. Reference Convict Records Australia.<br /> <br /> Text 4 x 13.5" slt. soiled at bottom edge uneven margin on the lower left side. John Muir unknown
179927920Maidstone Kent: J. Blake at the King's Arms Office 1799. First printing. Ephemera. Very good overall. A list of 49 prisoners sentenced at Maidstone Kent spelled "Lent" in the title. Six prisoners were sentenced to transportation for 7 years; Joseph Pinniter Richard Reynolds William Howe Thomas Maloy Elizabeth Brown & Robert Marshall. <br /> <br /> William Howe Thomas Maloy and Robert Marshall were amongst 272 convicts transported on the Perseus and Coromandel sailed Jan 1802 arrived 14th August 1802 at New South Wales. Both Howe and Maloy were tried in 1798 yet they were not transported until 1802 spending the interim in prison or on a prison hulk. Elizabeth Brown alias Sarah Brown was transported on the Speedy a ship loaded with female convicts in October 1799. We were unable to locate records for Joseph Pinniter and Richard Reynolds. Source convict records australia dot com.<br /> <br /> Along with the charge each entry lists the prisoner's age the person who committed them and the date of arrest. For a range of crimes including theft murder counterfeiting and rape sentences included imprisonment usually of 6 or 12 months and death although most of the death sentences were reprieved. Not in the English Short-Title Catalogue. No copies listed on OCLC or Library Hub. The SLNSW holds one for March 11th 1776 but this issue not recorded there.<br /> <br /> 4pp 16-1/4" x 10" print docket to verso. Horizontal and vertical fold lines light soiling and edgewear light foxing in a few places portion of lower left margin excised brief annotation on one of the prisoners. J. Blake, at the King's Arms Office unknown
181927284Glasgow 1819. First printing. Ephemera. Very good overall. A listing of the results of the court session on 27th April 1819 but with fewer defendants than the John Muir printing of the same court session but with more detail on the crimes. Listings include the full name and description of their supposed crime some more and some less detailed obviously printed by a different unknown printer. Not recorded on LibHub; National Library of Scotland Trove OCLC. <br /> <br /> This broadside is headed by John Buchanan accused of "murder of a girl in Bridgegate-street." and Ann Robertson "vending Forged Notes on the Aberdeen Commercial Bank." Six of the tried were transported to New South Wales on board the Eliza which set out on 22nd September 1819. <br /> They include:<br /> James Robertson Duncan Campbell & Peter Vaughan b. 31 Dec 1801 theft<br /> John Ballantyne shopbreaking sentence 14 years.<br /> Matthew Gillespie shopbreaking. Born 31 Dec. 1802. Occupation:coppersmith/brazier. crime: shopbreaking and theft. Sentence: 14 years.<br /> John Yates shopbreaking and theft. Born 31 Dec. 1803 death 31 Dec 1843. Crime house breaking and theft and being habit and reputed a thief. Sentence 14 years.<br /> <br /> Ann Robertson was sentenced to 7 years transported 23 Oct. 1819 aboard the Janus arrived 3 May 1820 NSW although some of the women were then shipped to VDL aboard the Princess Charlotte.<br /> <br /> Text 24.5 x 7.5 cm on tissue 26 x 8 cm backed on 38 x 11 cm. Evenly tanned. unknown
182327894London: Pitt Printer Wholesale Toy and Marble Warehouse 1823. First printing. Ephemera. Very good overall. A broadside that reviews the sentences of several prisoners in September and October of 1823. The fate of the four men in the headline was death. In a similar style to a court calendar the broadside reviews the sentences of several prisoners some of them not guilty. <br /> Another prisoner Susan Courtney alias Elizabeth Jones born 1 January 1796 originally transported June 1817 on the "Friendship" for 14 years for the crime of "coining". She was again transported Sep. 1824 on the "Grenada" to serve a life sentence for "returning from transportation." convictrecords dot com au see the 4th paragraph. <br /> Broadside 13-1/2†x 8-3/4†text in two columns below headline and large woodcut vignette. Main text followed by six stanzas of verse titled “A Mournful Copy of Verses On the Occasion.†Slt. toned faint horizontal fold line otherwise vgc. No copies located on OCLC Library Hub or Trove. Pitt, Printer, Wholesale Toy and Marble Warehouse, unknown
Second edition, with additions, 24pp., disbound.
55349The signatures are Arthur Morris Captain Alley Donaldson 12th man Fred Johnston Kissell Lindwall Lukeman Miller Moroney Pettiford Saggers and Toshack. The team featured six Test players including five future Invincibles; Alley and Pettiford played for the Services and/or later Commonwealth teams. This was Keith Miller's debut match for NSW after representing Victoria from 1937-38 to 1946-47. <p>On the verso are the pencil signatures for the Victorian team for the match against Queensland in Brisbane 14-18 November 1947 SSM 356. The signatures are Hassett Captain Baker Fitzmaurice Fothergill Freer M.R. Harvey Ray Harvey 12th man Howard Jinks Lambert Meuleman and Ring plus the manager. There are five Test players including two future Invincibles; Howard toured New Zealand in 1949-50 and Fitzmaurice and Lambert toured with the Commonwealth team in India in 1949-50. In excellent condition. unknown
24480An original vintage gelatin silver press photograph 120 × 165 mm with a typed caption mounted on the verso: 'Australians dismissed for 156 runs in their first innings against Essex at Leyton. Fairfax Australia loses his leg stump to Palmer after scoring 12 runs'. The photograph is taken from behind the wicket and includes the wicket-keeper the fieldsman at slips Alan Fairfax the cartwheeling stump and Alan Kippax the batsman at the non-striker's end. Of far greater consequence however is the signature pencilled on the verso of the image: that of Archie Jackson the New South Wales and Australian Test batsman who died of tuberculosis in 1933 at the early age of 23. Jackson and his friend and supporter Fairfax were room-mates on the 1930 tour of England which helps explain why this particular image from this tour bears his ownership signature. unknown
2011296451Norwalk CT: Easton Press Time-Life Books 2011. Full Leather. Fine binding. Quarto; in the Easton Press’s full blue leather with decorations in gilt and a pastedown of Princess Diana; 126 127 128 pages; with all edges gilt; silk moire endpapers and silk ribbon marker.~~It appears that Easton picked up the sheets of the Time Life printing and bound them up in their inimitable fashion.~A most uncommon Easton Press title. Fine binding. Easton Press | Time-Life Books unknown
190728031Sydney: New South Wales Intelligence Dept 1907. First printing. Ephemera. Very good condition. A pamphlet promoting agriculture in New South Wales. The map shows colored zones for dairying and intense cultivation mixed farming with some dairying wheat and sheep artesian areas. Uncolored areas are delineated as "Pastoral with Cultivation within Irrigation Areas." With small inset of Australia and NSW highlighted.<br /> <br /> On the verso is explanatory text outlining the agricultural potential to sustain primary industries and then promoting increased immigration and tourism including fares and regulations for assisted passages climate cost of living. This pamphlet features a tinted picture of Martin Place "The Soil of New South Wales is rich in Potential Wealth" "Lumps of Gold await the sturdy Settler who brings a fair measure of Application Pluck and Perseverance."<br /> <br /> 22 1/2 x 17 1/2" folds to 8 3/4 x 3 3/4" Libraries Australia ID 44011705. New South Wales Intelligence Dept unknown
21160HMSO London. The Major Graham document dated from the General Register Office Somerset House London 7 December 1848. The Grey circular dated from Downing Street 20 January 1849. Two printed documents: the first carrying Major Graham's 'Memorandum' of 'suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Posssessions' together with his observations on the making up of 'Statistical Abstracts' a specimen 'Form of Return' and a covering letter; the second a circular letter from Earl Grey instructing colonial governors 'to cause a Return of the Population of the Colony under your Government to be prepared'. For the background to these two documents see A. J. Christopher 'The quest for a census of the British Empire c.1840-1940' Journal of Historical Geography April 2008. No other copies of the present documents which were privately printed by Her Majesty's Stationery Office for Grey as Secretary of State for War and the Colonies have been discovered. This printing was intended for direct distribution to civil servants and MPs and certainly pre-dates the first publication of the items in for example the journals of the legislative councils of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick both in 1849. Disbound from a collection of parliamentary papers assembled by Sir Frederick Peel 1823-1906 Liberal MP for Leominster who was Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies 1851-1854; and Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies 1854-1855. No printed pagination but the volume as a whole was paginated in Peel's hand. Both items are in good condition. ONE: The 'Copy of Major Graham's Letter together with a Copy of the Memorandum to which it refers' referred to by Grey in Item Two below. 4pp foolscap 8vo. Paginated by Peel 163-166. Bifolium on grey paper. The first page carries a transcript including a facsimile signature of a letter from George Graham to 'B. Hawes Esq. M.P.' 1797-1862 later Sir Benjamin Hawes of the Colonial Office. Graham suggests 'that it may perhaps be expedient that steps should be taken to secure a Census being made in each of our Colonies in 1851 on or about the same day that Parliament may fix for its being taken in this Country' and begins his letter with reference to 'some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions' which six year before Graham 'transmitted for the use of the Secretary of State for the Colonies some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions as requested by Lord Stanley'. Graham is now 'about to publish the Population of England and Wales' and has 'also been furnished with the latest returns of the Population in several Countries in Europe'. It occurs to Graham 'that it might be desirable also to publish the Population of our Colonial Possessions' and he asks Hawes to 'have the goodness to call the attention of Earl Grey to this subject' and to request 'that I may be furnished with Abstracts of the Population of such of our Colonies as may have made returns upon the subject to the Colonial Office'. The letter contains two references to Graham's brother and the man who appointed him to his post 'Secretary Sir James Graham'. The second page headed 'Memorandum' of what he describes in the letter to Hawes as 'some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions'. The third page headed 'Statistical Abstracts' again carries a facsimile of Graham's signature to a document dated 5 August 1842 addressed from the General Register Office Somerset House. The communication begins: 'The enumerators should not be called upon to make the Abstract but should transmit the Schedules in books of a convenient form to the seat of Government; where the Abstracts should be made on an uniform plan under proper supervision.' Three examples are given of 'the great variety of ways' by which 'the facts might be combined'. The final page is headed 'Form of Return' and gives the fictitious example of the return for the family of 'John Bromley' 'English 'Farmer' who entered the colony 'COLONY. District – County Town or Parish Ward' in June 1827. TWO: Transcript of 'Circular' letter from Earl Grey to the governors of colonies directing that colonial censuses should be prepared. Peel has written the word 'Census' at the head of the page. Downing Street 20 January 1849. 1p foolscap 8vo. Paginated by Peel 161. Signed by Grey: '/sd/ Grey' why Grey would himself write '/sd/' is not clear. Printed in type imitating copperplate handwriting. The letter begins: 'A Census of the Population of England and Wales will be taken in the year 1851 and the Registrar General has suggested to me that it would be desirable to publish a similar Return for all Her Majesty's Colonial Possessions.' He is transmitting Item One above in margin: '7th December. Memo. 1842. Form.'. The letter continues: 'I have to instruct you to cause a Return of the Population of the Colony under your Government to be prepared in the manner prescribed in the annexed Form as far as may be practicable without incurring expenditure which cannot be conveniently provided for.' Graham's suggestion 'that it would be desirable that a Census in each of the Colonies should if possible be taken on or about the same day as that on which it may be fixed to be taken in this Country … can of course only be acted upon in the event of the Legislature of blank space here having it in contemplation to direct such a Return to be made'. He suggests that in such cases Graham's 'recommendation' be submitted to the consideration of the legislatures. It seems see Wikipedia that Australia didn't have a NATIONAL census until 1911 though states submitted figures before Canada in 1871 etc. Clause 4 of the Memorandum sates: "It will be desirable where there is a difficulty in obtaining information respecting the Aborigines to confine the enquiry to males aged 20 years and upwards - the 'fighting men . The supposed number of females of all ages and males under the age of 20 may however be stated." [HMSO, London.] The Major Graham document, dated from the General Register Office [Somerset House, London], 7 December 1848. The unknown
001975London: Hills and Saunders Carte-de-Visite of five children of Edward Prince of Wales approximately 65mm x 105mm in size n.d. c.1872 Very slightly faded but otherwise quite bright and clean. Reverse with the printed details of Hills and Saunders. Portrait of the five surviving children of Edward VII and therefore some of Queen Victoria's grandchildren. Hills and Saunders were granted the Royal Warrant in 1867 with the Porchester Terrace address as here opening in 1868. For Hills and Saunders see Hannavy pages 662-663. Pritchard page 71. First Edition. Unbound. Good. 32mo. Carte-De-Visite. Hills and Saunders Paperback
19311070London United Kingdom: General Nursing Council for England and Wales Printed by A. & E. Walter Ltd. 1931. Originally published in 1924. Amended Edition of 1931. Stapled Wraps. Fine. pp. 4. 12mo. measuring 14 cm. Stapled card covers. A fascinating piece of medical ephemera related to rules and requirements with regard to attire and badges/insignias expected to be worn by nurses. Fine. OCLC # 1026454742. We note only one copy of this amongst institutional holdings. Scarce. <br/><br/> General Nursing Council for England and Wales | Printed by A. & E. Walter Ltd. paperback
181244634Holborn: J. Duncombe Jun 1812. Broadside approx. 36 x 22 cm; hand-colored engraving approx. 10 x 14 cm text in double column original blank spaces in the text of poem have been identified and filled in by a contemporary hand creased where previously folded occasional spots overall fine. A satire featuring Lady Hertford scantily dressed and peering over the Prince Regent as he writes a letter--presumably to The Duke of York concerning the choice of his Ministers. Lady Hertford was the alleged mistress of Prince Regent and later George IV. Her reputation for 'meddling' too much in politics resulted with her and the Prince Regent subjected to many years of ridicule by the press. British Library only in OCLC. J. Duncombe, Jun unknown