8 987 résultats
184874990New York: Munn & Co. 1848-49. The entire fourth volume Nos. 1-52. Folio 11 x 15 inches. 419 pp with an index at the rear. Illustrated throughout. Each number is 8 pp. Full contemporary sheepskin with green morocco gilt lettering label. Leather a bit dry some scattered foxing and toning as to be expected. Overall a very good copy.Chiefly of interest for the many references to the Gold Rush in California. The first printed announcement of the famous discovery at Sutter's Mill was published in March of 1848 in Sam Brannan's San Francisco newspaper The Californian. The news was first announced in an East Coast newspaper the New York Herald on August 19th 1848. Issue No. 1 of Vol. 4 is dated September 23 1848 and we find an article about the Gold Rush on the second page. The header is Gold Gold and it gives an early report of about six months after the event “of the discovery of an immense bed of gold one hundred miles in extent on the American Fork and Feather riversâ€."The Golden Land" found in No. 13 states - "A short time ago the most flattering accounts were received in this city from California about the mountains of gold and the valleys flowing with silver. Some believed it was a joke while others believed it to be a ‘hue and cry’ for some speculative purpose and to the latter implication we must plead guilty. We believed that the accounts received here a short time ago about vessels being deserted by their crews and houses by their inhabitants who had proceeded to the El Dorado valley were all a hoax or something worse. But it seems after all that Madam Rumor sometimes tells true tales. The golden hills of California it seems are not imaginary elevations but bona fide treasure houses.â€In "Gold and Gold Washings" in No. 15 we read that the Gold Rush extends to both side of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and as far south as the headwaters of the San Joaquin River; an area 100 miles wide and 400 miles long. There are numerous other articles about the gold rush gold mining equipment and many other aspects of the 49er Gold Rush. Munn & Co. hardcover
194052018Los Angeles: Regional Planning Commission 1940. 4to. 165 1 pp. Numerous text illustrations maps charts diagrams 1 large folding map in rear pocket. Green-ribbed publisher’s cloth gilt outline map of Los Angeles County on front cover lettering & plane illust. in black black lettering on spine slight shelfwear NF copy. First edition of this fascinating report prepared on the eve of World War II as southern California was grappling with the tremendous growth in the aviation industry and airlines in and around Los Angeles. Encouraged by the Civil Aeronautics Authority in 1938 many communities began preparing aviation master plans in order to begin building enough airports and facilities to encourage further expansion of civil aviation. This master plan incorporated many of the airports already operating in Los Angeles and their possibilities for expansion including Los Angeles Union Air Long Beach Santa Monica Lancaster and others. Of interest is the seaplane terminal which existed in Long Beach at the time and the belief by the report that over 15 feeder airports would be required including smaller airports in Compton Alhambra Lomita South Whittier Gardena Pomona Puente Palmdale Catalina and Monrovia. Regional Planning Commission, hardcover
1896225006Bosotn Raymond & Whitcomb 1896. 1896. Small oblong 8vo 5 1/2" x 4 1/4". 10 full page illustrations of hotels etc. 69 pages covers. A tight fresh copy. No signatures or bookplates. Printed by American Printing and Engraving Boston. Includes information on Mt. Lowe Pasadena Santa Barbara etc. Soft cover. Bosotn, Raymond & Whitcomb, 1896. paperback
193561830San Diego CA: Shell Building San Diego Exposition 1935. One oblong atlas folio map. 32 x 22 in. Double-sided colour lithograph pictorial map with inset colour illustrations on verso of History of San Diego fold creases as issued light age toning at fore-edges very minor edgewear w/ original mailing envelope from the “Shell Building†at the CPIE toning to envelope NF/VG- copy mailed to Miss Gladys Buckman 1920-2011 in Long Beach CA from her brother Loren M. Buckman 1913-1995 who at the time was stationed on the USS Northampton CL/CA 26 US Navy Cruiser sunk later in 1942 at the Battle of Tassafaronga repelling Japanese from reinforcing troops on Guadalcanal. First edition of this scarce and beautifully rendered pictorial map celebrating the very successful California Pacific International Exposition held in San Diego over two years at the depths of the Great Depression to revive the Southern California economy which featured a number of unusual concessions and exhibits such as the Gold Gulch Lost Continent of Mu the Zoro Garden Nudist Colony and the “One Ton Mechanical Man.†Several of the exhibits used at the recently closed Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago 1933-1934 were re-used for the CPIE. This map reminiscent of the work of Jo Mora looks Eastward from a high point above the Pacific Ocean depicting San Diego from La Jolla to Oneonta and inland up to Cuyamaca Dam. Many of the buildings developed the architect Requa’s 1881-1941 “Southern California Architecture†style drawing upon the historical architecture of the Colonial Mexico the Pueblos of the Southwest and the Moorish features from Spain and North Africa and preserved the popular buildings which are still evident in Balboa Park. Bloodgood 1896-1989 was an illustrator cartoonist and map maper who produced a substantial body of pictorial maps from 1935-1968 for Shell Oil and the Pic-Tour Guide Series with this one being distributed from the Shell Building exhibit at the CPIE. Worldcat locates 6 copies SFPL U of FL Osher Map Lib. Bancroft UC San Diego Harvard. Shell Building, San Diego Exposition, unknown
192946067Los Angeles: Powell Publishing Co. 1929. Nine vols. 12 452 3 maps 1 large folding; 6 413 1; 6 349 1 3 maps 1 double-page; 10 381 1 2 maps; 10 461 1; 10 458; 10 314; 10 465 1; 10 322 pp. Numerous maps. Over 100 woodcut plates throughout. Simulated blue leatherette gilt lettering on front covers gilt lettering on spine raised bands gilt on spines gilt ruling minor soiling some bumping to corners edgewear scuffing still a VG- set w/ facsimile autographs of California pioneers printed on endpapers. First Gold Edition of the California Series filled with woodcut illustrations specially designed for these volumes by Howard Simon Franz Geritz Virginia de S. Litchfield and Aries Fayer. This set offers an invaluable resource for California history from the early years of exploration the colonization by Spain the pioneers over the Oregon & California Trail the building of the railroads the tremendous impact of the Gold Rush and more. Powell Publishing Co., hardcover
1870List3119California: Higgins & Hunt 1870. Carte de visite measuring 2 ½ x 4 inches. Fine. A portrait of a well-dressed young woman taken by Higgins & Hunt a Californian photography studio active at least in the 1870s. No date or location information is given but newspapers from the time indicate that Higgins & Hunt were based in San Francisco and worked briefly in Fresno in 1877. Higgins & Hunt unknown
188860968San Diego CA: Parker Photographers ca. 1888. Two mounted boudoir-sized albumen photographs 7.5 x 4.5 in. mounted on 10 x 12 in. gray studio board w/ captions and photographer’s imprint w/in negative ink manuscript annotations on versos slight bowing to boards very minor wear to corners still VG exemplars. These remarkable scarce albumen photographs depict the newly completed Sweet Water Dam in Spring Valley CA which at a height of 90 feet was at the time the tallest masonry arch dam in the United States; and the also newly completed and now historic Hotel Del Coronado. The Sweet Water Dam was built under the direction of civil engineer Frank E. Brown who had also overseen the Bear Valley Dam and enabled the economic development and expansion in Southern California of the National City Chula Vista and Bonita regions. The Hotel Del Coronado was a key part of the land development of Coronado by Elisha Babcock and Hampton Story who contracted with architect James Reid to prepare preliminary sketches and in 1887 the Reid Brothers of Evansville IN oversaw the construction which eventually used over a million board feet of lumber using extensive California redwood siding for termite resistance. The Hotel Del Coronado served as the perfect writing place for L. Frank Baum where he later penned Dorothy & The Wizard 1908 Road to Oz 1909 and the Emerald City 1910. Parker 1827-1920 was a Massachusetts-born photographer who initially located in San Francisco by 1871 Los Angeles from 1878-1880 and by the mid-1880’s in San Diego. Parker Photographers, hardcover
192663336San Diego CA: San Diego Trust & Savings Bank Rodney Stokes Co. June 30 1926. 8vo. 3.75 x 7 in. printed in red & blue which folds out to colour map sized 28 x 22 in. on verso in. 4 inset maps on verso of Business Section Auto Routes in and out of San Diego and Street map of Pacific and Mission Beach at margins fold creases as issued minor age toning couple spots w/ minor soiling edgewear still a VG bright copy. Second edition revised of this San Diego Trust & Savings Bank version of the Rodney Stokes San Diego automobile travel map which also includes references to the Trunk Line streets public parks San Diego Electric Railway Car Lines and the San Diego Electric Railway Bus Lines which were introduced in 1922 by the system. Rodney Stokes Co. first began issuing San Diego and Vicinity maps in 1906 and these larger versions for the 1920’s tend to be scarcer. Worldcat locates 1 copy Stanford. San Diego Trust & Savings Bank, [Rodney Stokes Co.], unknown
193162443Oakland CA: Oakland Tribune 1931. One Elephant folio map sized 22 x 34 in. printed on blue-tinted paper stock w/ scale of 1:1520000 and includes 6 different inset maps fold creases minor dustsoiling thumbing still VG bright copy. First edition thus of this well-executed and scarce automobile travel map issued by the Oakland Tribune at the onset of the Great Depression with specific mileage tables for traveling on U.S. Highways 99W 99E 99 40 & 101 with distances calculated from Oakland. Inset maps include Eastbay & Vicinity Sacramento Fresno Santa Clara & San Jose Bakersfield and Stockton CA. This automobile motoring map adapted and enhanced the 1923 and 1927 Oakland Tribune maps. Worldcat locates 2 copies CA Hist. Soc. Bancroft Oakland Tribune, unknown
198063367Yosemite & Westlake Village CA: Bill Bronstein 561 Hampshire Rd. ca. 1980-1990. Folio. 12 original silver gelatin photographs mostly only Ilford Multigrade FB MGFB.JK paper 5 sized 8 x 10 in. and 7 sized 11 x 14 in. slight rippling to fore-edges of a few images still a VG bright grouping preserved in the original Ilford box w/ MS label on white tape affixed to box lid all retaining bright strong contrast from the collection of the photographer. A very nice grouping of black & white straight photographic images shot by Bronstein sometime between 1978 and the late 1990’s when he lived between New York and Los Angeles. The sweeping opening photo depicts the beauty of Yosemite Valley with waterfall in right foreground and clouds hanging overhead followed by close-ups of the waterfall rugged snow-covered rocks river rapids and views from the valley rim of a sea of clouds. Bill Bronstein, 561 Hampshire Rd., unknown
1922List2831Sacramento California 1922. 17 ½ x 24 inches. Folded small tears at folds overall excellent. In 1922 the United States Supreme Court decided United States v. Southern Pacific Company et al. declaring the Southern Pacific Company’s ownership of a controlling part—46%—of the Central Pacific Railroad’s stock in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act and requiring that this monopoly be dissolved. Offered here is a broadside produced by the Sacramento-based California Producers & Shippers Association which presents a collection of articles and editorials from area newspapers favorable to this “unmerger.â€<br /> <br /> The broadside came in response to the Southern Pacific Company’s propaganda campaign against the dissolution; the Sacramento Tribune draws the reader’s attention to:<br /> <br /> “the efforts which have recently been made by the Southern Pacific Company to deceive their employees into protesting the separation of the Southern Pacific and Central Pacific on the ground that seniority and pension rights would be disturbedâ€. August 25<br /> <br /> Several articles present a statement by P.R. Thompson chairman of the Peninsula Bureau Chamber of Commerce’s Transportation Committee who accused Southern Pacific of having “distributed a great amount of misinformation intended to becloud the issue and create oppositionâ€. Thompson called the claim that employees would lose seniority and pension rights the “Most flagrant and most apparently manufactured out of whole cloth.†Other articles note that Southern Pacific had been sending delegates to various Chambers of Commerce around the region to push resolutions against the dissolution. The Porterville Messenger writes:<br /> <br /> “Chambers of Commerce are becoming suspicious of the sleek well mannered business like gentlemen who drop into town urge a meeting of directors make their discourse and expect to depart with a resolution in their pockets. Usually the proposed resolution will bear study— carefully. Just now the Colusa Chamber of Commerce is compelled to reverse itself on the S.P.-C.P. unmerger.†August 25<br /> <br /> The Sacramento Bee described the efforts of these delegates as an “attempt to stampede public sentiment†but claimed that Company’s “flood of propaganda†had “utterly failed of its objective†September 9.<br /> <br /> Whatever the actual public sentiment may have been in 1923 the Interstate Commerce Commission ordered that the railroads be allowed to remain merged. That year the federal government—largely influenced by famously anti-labor Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty—declined to appeal a district court decision overruling the Supreme Court in favor of the ICC. We find no record of this broadside in OCLC. Of interest to scholars of railroad business and legal history. unknown
193049887San Francisco: Carlisle & Co. Upman & Rutledge Inc. 1930. 1930. First edition. 9" x 6" in colorful pictorial wrappers. Art Deco wraparound cover art of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel & Diamond Head by W. Taylor San Francisco commercial artist. Ucommon travel brochure relating the sights and peoples to visit in Waikiki Honolulu and Hawaii. The Matson Line and Los Angeles Steam Ship Co. operated the City of Los Angeles Calawaii Malolo Matsonia Maui Manoa and other liners on routes from California to Hawaii the South Pacific Asia and Australia. Carlisle & Co., Upman & Rutledge, Inc., 1930. unknown
3730384<p>Delaware Ohio 1899 and 1901 and San Jose California 1912. 63pp. 8vos. Overall very good with original envelopes.</p> <p>A collection of 18 letters. The first 14 were written by Gladys M. Manweiler of Santa Cruz California when she was a student at San Jose’s College of the Pacific during the 1912 Spring semester. Manweiler writes to her future husband Rev. Hugh K. Hamilton a 1907 graduate of Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley and a San Francisco minister. </p> <p>Manweiler writes of girls’ college basketball; attending a concert by German-American opera singer Ernestine Schumann-Heink; women versus men “The ‘Woman’s Pacific’ weekly is out now. The boys are ‘sore’ about it. There were several jokes about athletics and they could not take a joke and are very indignant.â€â€”March 21 1912; reading Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice; and audaciously—as she describes it—registering to vote in early January 1912 women’s suffrage just having been enacted in California. She is also an officer in the college’s Sopholectia a women’s literary society at College of the Pacific and the local Y.W.C.A. </p> <p>Manweiler engages in “shocking things†beyond registering to vote:</p> <p>“I must tell you what father and I did Sunday evening. It is most shocking I admit. My older sister says she will not be surprised anymore at anything I do. There was a Mr. Eddy a Medium at the opera house. Father and I both seemed to be possessed with a great sense of curiosity so what did we do but go on Sunday night. I had my curiosity satisfied but paid for it seeing ‘spooks’ all night long. What do you think of us Mr. Metz went and had no chance to escape unseen for he was called upon the platform as one of the committee to prove that things were done OK. I have left the thing which I suppose will please you the most until last. Just be patient now and sit down if you are not already for you may not be able to stand the shock. Are you ready Well I will sum it up in just three words. They are these – Listen – now dramatically continuing at the top of the next page I have registered. Father took me down Wednesday morning. He wanted us all three to go but mother was sick and Grace would not do it. I do not know whether or not I will be home to vote but I will be able to if I am.†January 12 1911</p> <p>Manweiler recounts a campus measles outbreak and female students’ coordination in response to the college’s nursing policy:</p> <p>“I received your letter this after-noon. Now don’t worry about me please. I have not got the measles yet. I have been feeling mighty ‘bum’ the last few days but they are not measles symptoms I don’t think. I am determined not to get them. I am going home next Tuesday sick or well. So far there are only three cases of measles here in the dormitory. They are all quite bad though one of them especially so. Some of us girls became real desperate yesterday. Nothing was being done as a preventative and it seemed we were all doomed to have it. It would be dreadful to be sick with anything like that in this place. If we were going to be sick we wanted to be home where our mothers could take care of us. A delegation of about fifteen of us girls go together and went to Dr. Guth college president William W. Guth to lay our case before him. We found that he was in the city and our efforts in vain. Some precautions have been taken since and the doctor thinks that there is little danger of any more cases. I hope he knows what he is talking about. There are three others of the girls sick who haven’t the measles. Edith Dennett is getting better slowly and is able to sit up a little every day. We are running a regular hospital here. Miss Ban says she’s going to put out a sign.†March 28 1912</p> <p>The final four letters in the collection were sent to Hugh K. Hamilton see above by his mother during his time as an undergraduate and O.W.U. Cadet at Ohio Wesleyan University. These letters cover topics such as local church affairs women’s temperance canvassing activities and updates from home.</p> <p>Refs. “Methodist Minister Emeritus Dr. Hugh K. Hamilton Dies†in Santa Clara Sentinel Santa Clara Calif. Wednesday September 29 1965 p18. Also see in same Wednesday June 27 1951 p4: “After Rev. and Mrs. Hamilton were married ca. early 1910s Hamilton enrolled at the Boston university where he received an STB degree. Later Dr. Hamilton received honorary degrees of doctor of divinity from the Pacific School of Religion and the College of the Pacific. The latter also is the alma mater of Mrs. Hamilton. For a number of years he was a member of the board of trustees of both institutions. He held pastorates in San Francisco Berkeley Hughson Los Gatos and Lodi in addition to Santa Cruz and Visalia. … Dr. Hamilton also served in World War I as army YMCA secretary at Camp Kearny near San Diego and later in San Francisco. For eight years he was superintendent of the Sacramento and Nevada Districts of the Methodist church supervising about 60 churches.â€</p> unknown
1851248351San Francisco: Eugene Casserly State Printer 1851. 1865 pp. 1 vols. Thick 8vo. Modern half morocco and marbled boards spine gilt. Bookplate on front pastedown. Titlepage a bit foxed occasional tanning very good. 1865 pp. 1 vols. Thick 8vo. An absolutely massive record of the second session of the California state legislature held in the first half of 1851. A tremendous amount of legislative activity is recorded reflecting the task of creating a civic apparatus for the newly-admitted state. Thankfully there is an extensive index. Included is the annual message from California's first governor Peter Burnett who resigned just a few days later. "Of great historical value in understanding the difficulties in the formation of the state" - Norris catalogue. Norris catalogue 1907 Eugene Casserly, State Printer unknown books
1875697San Francisco: Bell & Company 1875. 4to. broadside. 275 x 115 mm. 10 7/8  x 4 inches.  Caption and verse within an ornamental border. Upper right corner and right edge ragged though with still a good margin otherwise very good.   Rare song sheet written in eight stanzas each with eight lines separated by a chorus. "There was in Eighteen seventy-five/ In Mining Stocks a panic/ The banker rushed around like mad/ Like demons quite satanic/ And holders of the 'Orphic' stock/ Had looks so pale and blank sirs/ Despair seized men with money in the California Bank sirs."  Bell & Company was a general publisher of songs and ballads as well as booksellers stationers and periodical agents. Not cited in NUC. OCLC turns up copies at UC Davis Yale UT Austin. Bell & Company unknown books
1896225006Bosotn Raymond & Whitcomb 1896. 1896. Small oblong 8vo 5 1/2" x 4 1/4". 10 full page illustrations of hotels etc. 69 pages covers. A tight fresh copy. No signatures or bookplates. Printed by American Printing and Engraving Boston. Includes information on Mt. Lowe Pasadena Santa Barbara etc. Soft cover. Bosotn, Raymond & Whitcomb, 1896. paperback books
1910606130Haines Glendale California 1910. Photograph is by "Haines" Glendale California with the photographer's blindstamped on the lower right corner and is on heavy weight stock; 12" x 5". Very good. ca. 1910-1915. Camp Cajon 1847 and 1857-58 is 15 miles from Cajon Pass on the Devore cutoff on the north and east of San Bernardino Valley. Company C of the Mormon Battalion was first stationed there in 1847. With a view of the Mojave desert in the distance. No Binding. Very Good. Haines, Glendale, California unknown books
188939154San Francisco: Henry K. Knapp Publisher 1889. Printed stiff card stock covers with cord tie. 1st printing Rocq 850. Cf. BAL 13870 "Not Seen" for Miller's poem where BAL states "Text not found elsewhere save as a song.". Later paper reinforcement added along spine. A VG copy of this quite uncommon view book of Oakland. 5 ll of text printed recto only the last leaf a poem on Oakland by Joaquin Miller first published in the Oakland Tribune. 47 captioned b/w photographic images of divers Oakland scenes buildings etc. Oblong format: 5-7/8" x 9-1/4" <br/><br/>OCLC records just 6 holding institutions. Henry K. Knapp, Publisher unknown books
188441011copies made in Seville: Establecimiento Tipografico y Litografico "El Porvenir 1884. Folio 31 cm 12.5". 1 2 3 pp. <br><br>Each facsimile has this note on it: "Photographed from the original preserved in the 'Archivo General de Indias' de Sevilla under Royal Order dated Madrid December 26th 1883 for Aldoph Sutro Esq. of San Francisco California" and the typographic imprint above.<br>Â Â Â Â One is a letter of Junipero Serra dated Monterey 7 October 1779 reporting that he has made a copy of Fr. Crespi's diary and is sending it via the ship that has just arrived; a second Serra letter dated Monterey 9 September 1779 reports on the various missions and states that he hopes to establish one in San Francisco. The third letter is by Sebastian Vizcaino dated Monterey 8 December 1602 reporting on his voyage of discovery along the California coast.<br>Â Â Â Â The facsimiles are on laid paper and in sepia ink and are great replicas of the originals with a great backstory as to their creation.<br>Â Â Â Â Provenance: Adolph Sutro; later for sale by E. B. Sterling Historical Print Seller Trenton NJ 18511925. Overall very good: Some age stains one corner repaired some dust-soiling. In a light paper folder with E.B. Sterling's faint rubber-stamp. Establecimiento Tipografico y Litografico "El Porvenir unknown books
187754196Sacramento CA: State Office F.P. Thompson Supt. State Printing for the University of California Berkeley 1877. First edition. 8vo. 80 pp. Errata slip tipped in. Includes a 63-page report from Professor Eugene Hilgard Prof. of Agriculture. OCLC locates six copies Huntington Stanford Harvard Miss. State Oregon State Library Company of Phila. Orig. printed light green wrappers soiled. A little foxing and interior soiling but a good solid copy. 1240. <br/><br/> State Office, F.P. Thompson, Supt. State Printing (for the University of California, Berkeley) unknown books
52107681like new. unknown
2026x-1009542699Cambridge University Press 2026. Hardcover. New. 2nd revised edition edition. 454 pages. 7.00x1.00x10.00 inches. Cambridge University Press hardcover
pp. 483, (1)[Publisher's list]. Inked ownership of Benarah on title page. Badly damp stained and foxed. 12mo. Original full publisher's cloth binding. Spine gold lettered and decorated. Front joint cracked. Extremities worn. Hardbound. The Family Library No. 106. Very early reprint of the first edition of 1840. One of the earliest faithful accounts of California. See: BAL 4434; Howes D49; Johnson: American High Spots pp. 26-27. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! NAVAL/1
Discoloration to heavy-textured ivory colored cloth boards and to page ends. Signed by David Douglas Duncan on half-title page. Large format: 10 1/4"w x 12"h. 272 pages. Over one hundred tipped-in color plates. 60 page chronological review of Picasso's private work held at his villa La Californie.
1958ZB369677San Francisco 1958. volumes 1-10 12-15 1958-1973 partly bound ex library very good PRICE IS FOR THE LOT!!. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. San Francisco unknown