9 268 résultats
191026981Salabert Edouard 1910
192627392Margueritat 1926 approx.
192678375Margueritat 1926 approx.
191929103Salabert 1919
192327480Eschig Max 1923
190742817Boston: Shaub Bros 1907. 1st edition. Original blank glossy wrappers small 8vo. 69 pages 20 cm. In Yiddish. Poetry. Early Boston Zionist imprint. Includes frontis photo and illustrated title page. Title translates to "Memories of Y. H. Adler." <br> Yisrael Yehuda Adler 1870-1948 was a Hebrew teacher and philanthropist who was very active in the fledgling Hebrew society of the Jewish State dying the year that very state was founded. He taught at the famous Herzliyah Gymnasium in what was then Palestine Wikipedia. OCLC: 19302365. Blank front wrapper with old tape repairs high quality glossy paper has held up very well and remains bright. Good Condition. Rare. B YID-32-20-BLXCC. Boston: Shaub Bros unknown
1313754463.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1247673715.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
75-0585Boston MA: Harold Chandler Kimball Jr. Circa 1943. Image area: 120 x 96 mm. Very Good. Small tear on left corner. Letterpress bookplate with a young boy holding a candle and a book in each hand at the center. The top reads "Ex Libris" and the bottom is "Harold Chandler Kimball Jr."Written in pencil on the bottom is "Harvey Ellis p.42 7-27-43" [Boston, MA: Harold Chandler Kimball Jr., [Circa 1943.] unknown
51349318like new. unknown
187517816<p>Boston: Prang & Company 1875 First edition. Rare in commerce. OCLC records 8 copies. . Tan paper wrappers. Bound with string. Printed on heavy drawing paper. Octavo. 21 x 15 cm. . Illustrated. Light rubbing. Clean throughout. About two thirds of the exercises are completed. Very good. Walter Smith 1836-1886 was an English art educator and author. He moved to Massachusetts in 1871 where he was first appointed to Professor of Art Education at the Massachusetts Normal School of Art. Smith later became the Massachusetts State Director of Art Education and Director of Drawing where he instructed and supervised art teachers. Smith was an important early figure in the field of industrial design. He also wrote books on art education instruction for teachers and drawing guides for students. This booklet is aimed at helping students learn to draw. It begins with definitions to help students' understanding defining words such as "quadrilateral" and "ellipse." The booklet features pages with drawing exercises printed lightly for students to trace next to blank pages which allow space for students to practice. The drawing exercises include a house a vase and abstract shapes.</p> Prang & Company,
187917817<p>Boston: L. Prang & Company 1879 Second edition. . Bound in darker tan paper wrappers. Printed on thinner paper than the earlier edition. Tape lining both joints. All exercises but the last page are completed. Signed in pencil on the cover: James Malcolm Graham 1886. Very good copy. . Octavo. 22 cm. x 15 cm. . Illustrated. Very good. Walter Smith 1836-1886 was an English art educator and author. He moved to Massachusetts in 1871 where he was first appointed to Professor of Art Education at the Massachusetts Normal School of Art. Smith later became the Massachusetts State Director of Art Education and Director of Drawing where he instructed and supervised art teachers. Smith was an important early figure in the field of industrial design. He also wrote books on art education instruction for teachers and drawing guides for students. This is the second revised edition of a booklet aimed at helping students learn to draw. This edition begins with an explanation of the book particularly explaining that the printing is light so that students can fill in the lines and that students should use soft pencils to do so. The drawing exercises are mostly for shapes and vary in complexity</p> L. Prang & Company,
1849List1801Boston: Anti-Slavery Bazaar 1849. Small broadside measuring 7 ¾ x 4 ½ inches printed on green wove paper. Some creases and a small tear at margin near fine. Near Fine. The American Anti-Slavery Society hosted annual bazaars which served as fundraisers with money going to supporting the National Anti-Slavery Standard newspaper. Many women were involved with the event and sold abolitionist items. Offered here is one such piece of ephemera from the 1849 fair a poem written by an unknown author with the pen name “M.†The poem was featured in the poetry section of The Liberator January 26 1849 Vol. XIX. No. 4. with the description “The two following poetical effusions were written for the Anti-Slavery Bazaar In Faneuil Hall by friends of freedom in the old world.†<br /> It reads:<br /> <br /> Ye friends of liberty all hail!<br /> May your endeavours never fail<br /> In freedom’s sacred cause!<br /> May blessings e’er attend your course<br /> In striving to uproot all force<br /> And stern oppression’s laws!<br /> Yours is a noble task my friends!<br /> And God his gracious favor lends<br /> To speed ye on your way<br /> Until you reach the blessed goal<br /> When ev’ry dark benighted soul<br /> Shall hail bright freedom’s ray.<br /> Oh! may he speed the time when all<br /> Their fellow-men shall brethren call<br /> And the deep wrong remove<br /> When the dark chains of slavery<br /> Give place to sacred liberty<br /> And bonds of holy love!<br /> Oh! it were happiness to bind<br /> In such bright chains all human kind<br /> And set each captive free;<br /> For when oppressions all shall cease<br /> And this fair world be fill’d with peace<br /> Like Heav’n on earth ‘twill be!<br /> <br /> A very nice example of the anti-slavery movement during this period. Uncommon with one copy appearing at auction and none listed in OCLC. Anti-Slavery Bazaar unknown
1861List3000Boston Massachusetts: William Lloyd Garrison and Isaac Knapp 1861. Single sheet letterpress broadside measuring 18 x 24 ½ inches. Folded with small tears at folds and marginal damage; excellent to Near Fine. Offered here is a “phonographic report†i.e. it includes the audience’s reaction of a speech delivered by abolitionist Wendell Phillips 1811–1884 to the Twenty-Eighth Congregational Society in Boston on April 21 1861. The report was printed in an extra of William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator newspaper. Shortly following the first Battle of Fort Sumter the speech finds Phillips throwing his full support behind the cause of war. He insists to his audience:<br /> <br /> “The anti-slavery enterprise to which I belong started with peace written on its banner. We imagined that the age of bullets was over; that the age of ideas had come; that thirty millions of people were able to stake a great question and decide it by the conflict of opinions; and without letting the ship of State founder lift four millions of men into Liberty and Justice. . Our mistake if any has been that we counted too much on the intelligence of the masses on the honesty and wisdom of statesmen as a class. . The North thinks—can appreciate argument—is in the nineteenth century—hardly any struggle left in it but that between the working class and the money kings. The South dreams—it is the thirteenth and fourteenth century—baron and serf—noble and slave. . Our struggle therefore is no struggle between different ideas but between barbarism and civilization. Such can only be settled by arms. Prolonged cheering.â€<br /> <br /> We find three copies of this newspaper in OCLC. Of interest to scholars of Phillips’ work and of abolitionism especially Boston abolitionists.<br /> <br /> 1 “Wendell Phillips Dead: The Last Hours Of One Of The Apostles Of Abolition†The New York Times February 3 1884 1. William Lloyd Garrison and Isaac Knapp unknown
187012108Paris, Armand-Aubrée, sans date (circa 1870) ; in-8, demi-veau glacé havane, dos lisse, faux nerfs dorés, fleurons décoratifs, titre doré ; (2), 451, (1) pp., 1 gravure aquarellée en frontispice.
18809608Boston: Joseph Burnett & Co.; Press of Mills Knight & Co 1880. Small octavo stapled in wrappers 17.5 x 11 cm. ~80 pages. Illustrated; wrapper printed in chromolithograph. Advertising matter of local merchants interspersed throughout. Earliest issue of this New England housekeepers' almanac and promotional cookbook issued by Joseph Burnett & Co makers of flavor extracts and additionally used to promote local businesses through a drop-in box on the front wrapper panel. In this case the additional promotion goes to Butler & Laighton Fine Groceries of Rockingham County N.H. Internally clan and sound. Small closed tear to foot of chromolithograph wrappers otherwise near fine and bright. OCLC locates four copies of this 1880 issue and eleven copies of all other issues through 1884. Joseph Burnett & Co.; Press of Mills, Knight & Co unknown
17793689<b>Scarce Contemporary Stony Point Battle Plan</b><br /><br />This rather crude woodcut depicts a battle plan of General "Mad Anthony" Wayne's daring and dramatic capture of the British fortification at Stony Point about 30 miles up the Hudson River from New York City. The battle planned in detail by Washington took place around midnight on July 16 1779. <br /><br /> The lower portion of the battle plan includes a four item key: "A. The British Fortress B. Abattes abatis in front C. The Reserve D. The detached Party who stormed the Works." Nebenzahl's <i>A Bibliography of Printed Battle Plans of the American Revolution 1775-1795</i> cites only a 1784 London-printed battle plan by Faden for the Stony Point engagement #145. The offered plan is not noted by Nebenzahl was published in America and was issued five years earlier than the Faden plan. The<i> Bickerstaff's Boston Almanack</i> for 1780 would almost certainly have been published in November or December of 1779 – within six months of the actual battle. <br /><br /> A very scarce almanac in the trade. Auction records indicate the most recent copy sold at the Gutman sale in 2005 for $4800. Prior to that Swann sold an example in 1979. <br /><br /><b>References:</b> For the almanac: Evans: 16287; Drake: 3290. For the map: Cresswell: 309. <br /><br /><b>Condition: </b>Map appears on verso of title page and measures about 6 ½ x 3 ¾." Almanac is complete in 24 pp. Slight loss of road table text at upper tip of final leaf.<br /><br />ICN 7643. Printed and sold by Draper and Folsom, and John Mycall of Newbury.
18909319Boston: Robinson Engraving Co 1890. Menu in painted wooden boards bound with cord 20 x 15.2 cm. 10 gold-printed leaves each a die-cut circle printed versos only. An elaborate program of events for the eleventh annual meeting of the Hotel Men's Mutual Benefit Association held in May 1890 at Boston's great hotels the Parker House Hotel Vendome and American House. The H.M.M.B.A. was founded in 1879 to offer hotel workers insurance plans; it was later to become the Bankers Life and Casualty Company. The program and menu for the three-day meeting includes the meeting itself music speakers presentations carriage excursions etc. The painted wooden boards hold die-cut 'booklets' dedicated to the Convention headquartered at the Parker House the Eleventh Annual Banquet held at the American House and the Reception held at the Hotel Vendome. The boards are scored and textured painted in silver with gold spots and hold a hand-lettered piece of 'vellum'. Some rubbing to edges of boards otherwise very good. Robinson Engraving Co hardcover
195134687Boston: Boston Braves 1951. First Edition. Program. Fair. Tall stapled color illustrated wraps. 12 pages not including the covers. Light damp stains to the upper sections of several pages. A fair program. Illustrated with black and white photographs including a picture of the 1914 championship team. Contents also include a barely used scorecard for the July 9th 1951 Hartford Indians vs. New England Hoboes game and a "Program - Mayor's Field Day Braves Field "Under Lights" July 9 1951." The program includes a couple of concerts tug of war vaudeville a salute to armed forces in Korea etc. and the game. Fair. Boston Braves unknown
197434688Boston: Boston Red Sox 1974. Third Edition. Soft cover. Good. Tall stapled color pictorial soft cover. 54 pages. Light wear. Illustrated with black and white photographs and advertisements. Some advertisements illustrated in color. Inscribed by Hall of Famer Brooks Robinson on the front cover and signed by him on page 25 titled"Coming Attractions at Fenway." This page that has a sketch of Brooks Robinson and 5 other players. Boston Red Sox unknown
189762596Boston:: P. K. Foley September 1897- MArch 1904. publisher's printed wrappers. Some light chipping and use to wrappers. 8vo. P. K. Foley, unknown