106 résultats
53661Folio. 21 pages approximately 3500 words in pencil; accompanied by a letter to the editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal suggesting an effort to organize a Confederate reunion trip to Gettysburg folio two pages approximately 225 words. Poor quality paper very browned and brittle the text quite legible. An affecting personal manuscript memoir written near the turn of the 20th century by a private who served in Co. G. Camden Rifles of the 18th Mississippi Infantry a unit raised in Madison County Mississippi under the command of Col. Erasmus R. Burt mortally wounded at Leesburg in October 1861 and immediately sent to Virginia where it participated in most of the battles of the Army of Northern Virginia. Maxwell includes notes on some of the battles including Bull Run "Captain Adam McWillie was commanding our Co. and was killed. John Tucker Bishop and a number of others wounded and died at Hospital" Leesburg "We fought Gen. Baker killed him and captured all the force but we lost our Col. Burt and I lost one of my schoolmates Johnson Sutherland . H.F. Adams shot and his gun kicked he and I into a ravine close by just at that time Col. Burt was wounded and thought we were too and said boys lets get of the field if we can. He died" Malvern Hill "2 brothers dead . the bros. were Hansetts fell across each other. Baker Barnett & C. Hix was wounded and died at the hospital. we lost heavy but the victory was so complete in the main that Gen. Lee concluded to go into MD" Antietam "I put my hand on Gen. Jacksons foot in the stirrup as sat erect on his horse telling the men who had surrendered what to do. All this would have been grand to me if it had not been for the loss of another dear classmate Thompson Walker who was wounded and died at Charlestown Va." Fredericksburg "the most complete victory Gen. Lee ever won . we were well protected behind a stone fence. We never lost many but we killed dead on the field over 1000 men" Chancellorsville "Gen Hooker concluded he would go to Richmond . history will tell you how he got there" Gettysburg "a private soldier does not see of know much about a fight that he is engaged in but we had been cut to pieces . in fact there was but 8 out of 38 left of us" Chattanooga "We made a flying trip . the Yanks did not know who we were nor where we came from" Chickamauga "we did not lose heavy" and Knoxville "we kept exchanging fire . he missed me. I ran up to the pit and demanded them to surrender which they did and I captured two yanks with an empty gun" especially mentioning by name officers and school chums who were killed or wounded along the way. The manuscript ends rather abruptly at Knoxville before the unit returned to service in Virginia at the Wilderness. Along the way Maxwell records several anecdotes that bring his narrative to life an extended account of a day's trip back to an abandoned camp with Yankee troops near by to rescue the company's fiddle an account of dueling Yankee and Rebel bands finally playing and singing together at Christmas before Fredericksburg in 1862 another extended report of aid given to a young soldier who was searching for his dead brother killed at Chickamauga and an account of two young ladies met while traveling to Tennessee promising to pray for his safety and sending him a letter received while fighting at Knoxville. Maxwell closes his narrative in tragedy relating stories of one friend being shot as a deserter on orders from Gen. Longstreet in Tennessee and another at Gettysburg pleading to be "put out of misery" after having "his entrails shot all to pieces. We have not discovered any indication of publication. For the 18th Mississippi Dornbusch lists two publications both by Major Lamar Fontaine one of the Immortal 600 dealing primarily with his experiences as a prisoner of war. <br/><br/> unknown books
1720WRCAM48868Amsterdam 1720. Single-sheet map 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 inches. Minor foxing. Near fine. A scarce early map of the Mississippi River Valley depicting the American region between the Gulf of Mexico and the Great Lakes taken from HET GROOT TAFEREEL DER DWAASHEID. THE GREAT MIRROR OF FOLLY a scathing account of the speculative crashes that led to European financial disaster in 1720. The work was a chronicle of the failed attempts by John Law Controller General of Finances for the French government to open Louisiana to trade in order to help alleviate France's financial problems. This led to the creation of the Mississippi Company which created the "Mississippi Bubble" incident that destroyed the Banque Générale Privée the General Private Bank which Law founded. The map depicts the Mississippi River parts of Louisiana and Florida Lake Michigan referred to here as "Lac de Illionis" and Lake Superior the extent of French colonial explorations in the region and names of Indian tribes. It is decorated with a title cartouche incorporating the arms of John Law and depicting two Native Americans holding a cornucopia through which flows the mighty Mississippi River. unknown books
1871WRCAM52816Jackson Ms 1871. Twenty-six volumes publication details and pagination provided in the listing below. Mostly uniform 20th-century buckram gilt leather labels. A few labels chipped minor shelf wear. Small ink library stamp to titlepages some with embossed blindstamp some with contemporary ink ownership inscription. Minor foxing some tanning. Good. An interesting collection of mid-19th-century Mississippi state laws from the period between 1831 and 1870. These session laws deal with issues relevant to a growing state in the American south including slavery Mississippi River development and later legal matters related to Reconstruction among a multitude of other concerns. A complete list of the imprints is as follows: <br> <br> 1 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT THE FIFTEENTH SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Jackson: Peter Isler 1831. 172xviii pp. <br> <br> 2 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT THE SIXTEENTH SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Jackson: Peter Isler 1833. 252xxv pp. First two leaves chipped with minor loss of text. <br> <br> 3 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT THE SEVENTEENTH SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Jackson: George R. Fall 1834. 200pp. <br> <br> 4 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI; PASSED AT A REGULAR BIENNIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: G.R. & J.S. Fall 1836. 440pp. <br> <br> 5 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT AN ADJOURNED SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: G.R. & J.S. Fall 1837. 67pp. A photographic facsmile of the original work. <br> <br> 6 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI; PASSED AT A REGULAR BIENNIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: B.D. Howard 1838. 4ii-viii9-368pp. <br> <br> 7 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT AN ADJOURNED SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: B.D. Howard 1839. 491pp. Includes the text of the CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. <br> <br> 8 THE STATUTES OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI OF A PUBLIC AND GENERAL NATURE WITH THE CONSTITUTIONS OF THE UNITED STATES AND OF THIS STATE. New Orleans: E. Johns & Co. 1840. xii885pp. <br> <br> 9 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price 1840. 2xii213- 366pp. <br> <br> 10 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT AN ADJOURNED SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price 1841. 1417-302pp. <br> <br> 11 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR BIENNIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price & G.R. Fall 1842. iii-xvi17-271275-285pp. as printed. <br> <br> 12 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A CALLED SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price & G.R. Fall 1843. vii9-135pp. <br> <br> 13 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR BIENNIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price & S. Rohrer 1844. xxi25-395pp. <br> <br> 14 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR BIENNIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE. Jackson: C.M. Price & G.R. Fall 1846. 3-2833-6131pp. <br> <br> 15 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Price & Fall 1848. 584pp. <br> <br> 16 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Fall & Marshall 1850. 544pp. bound with: LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A CALLED SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Fall & Marshall 1850. 425-48pp. Lacks the CONSTITUTION pp.5-24. <br> <br> 17 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A CALLED SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Fall & Marshall 1850. 48pp. A complete copy of the latter work from the previous listing above. <br> <br> 18 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A CALLED SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Palmer & Pickett 1852. iii-xvi21-219pp. <br> <br> 19 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Palmer & Pickett 1852. xxviii537pp. <br> <br> 20 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Barksdale & Jones 1854. iii-xxvi229-613pp. Bottom portion of titlepage chipped costing most of the imprint. <br> <br> 21 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: E. Barksdale 1856. xvi455pp. <br> <br> 22 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT AN ADJOURNED SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: E. Barksdale 1857. 125pp. <br> <br> 23 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: E. Barksdale 1858. 197pp. <br> <br> 24 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: J.J. Shannon 1867. xliv800pp. <br> <br> 25 LAWS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI PASSED AT A REGULAR SESSION OF THE MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE. Jackson: Kimball Raymond & Co. 1870. lxiii704689-720i.e. 736pp. <br> <br> 26 JOURNAL OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. 1868. Jackson: E. Stafford 1871. 776pp. OWEN MISSISSIPPI pp.742-745. hardcover books
1720322009Nuremberg 1720. Broadsheet printed in three columns recto and verso. Folio 14-1/2 x 17 inches. Folded. Very minor staining trimmed close but without loss small expert repair at the lower left corner. Housed in a quarter morocco case. Broadsheet printed in three columns recto and verso. Folio 14-1/2 x 17 inches. Promoting John Law's Mississippi Bubble in Germany. ;"This very rare German tract was issued to encourage sales in Germany of shares in Mr Law's Mississippi Company" Streeter. The concluding paragraph confirms that the broadsheet was issued in connection with the promotion of Law's Mississippi bubble and its contents would occupy over 20 pages if printed in pamphlet form. Although published separately the broadside is sometimes found with the first state of Christopher Weigel's Nuremberg-printed version of Delisle's map of North America titled Novissima Tabula Regionis Ludovicianae Gallice dictae La Louisiane. Alden 720/102; Streeter sale 116 unknown books
172136880London 1721. Together 9 works in one volume octavo. Collations as below. Contemporary panelled calf spine with raised bands red morocco lettering piece.<br/> <br/>Provenance: Nathaniel Thorn engraved bookseller's label; Robert Warner signature dated 1727<br/> <br/>Sammelband of early 18th-century English poetry including works relating to the South Sea Company and the Mississippi Bubble.<br/> <br/>GAY John. The Shepherd's Week. In Six Pastorals. Jacob Thompson 1721. 14 60 4pp. Engraved frontispiece and six plates included in pagination. Without the half-title. Foxon G74; ESTC T13918. GAY John. Two Epistles; One to the Right Honourable Richard Earl of Burlington; the other to a Lady. Bernard Lintott 1715. 36pp. Without the final ad leaves. Foxon G88; ESTC T13938. GAY John. The What D'Ye Call It: a Tragi-Comi-Pastoral Farce. Bernard Lintott 1715. 12 41 1pp. Engraved frontispiece. ESTC T13939. GAY John. Trivia: Or the Art of Walking the Streets of London. Bernard Lintott 1716. 4 80 12pp. Title with engraved vignette. Foxon G81; ESTC T13930. RAMSAY Allan. Wealth or the Woody: A Poem on the South-Sea . second edition corrected. T. Jauncy 1720. 18 11-23 1pp. Foxon R107; ESTC T140396. AMHURST Nicholas. An Epistle with a Petition in it to Sir John Blunt Bart. one of the Directors of the South-Sea Company . The second edition. R. Francklin 1720. 18 2pp. Half-title. With only one of three ad leaves in the rear. Foxon A197; ESTC T94046; Goldsmiths' 5715. RAMSAY Allan. Patie and Roger: A Pastoral in the Scots Dialect. J. Pemberton 1720. vii 1 23 1pp. Foxon R77; ESTC N11180. BOCKETT Elias. Yea and Nay Stock-Jobbers or the 'Change-Alley Quakers Anatomiz'd. In a Burlesque Epistle to a Friend at Sea. J. Roberts A. Dodd & J. Billingsly 1720. 32pp. Half-title. Foxon B308; ESTC T109160; Kress S.2846. CENTLIVRE Susanna. A Woman's Case: in a Epistle to Charles Joye Esq. Deputy-Governor of the South-Sea by Mrs Cent-Livre. E. Curll 1720. 4 13 1 2pp. Half-title and a final advertisement leaf. Foxon C97; ESTC N24952; Kress S.2857. unknown books
1720WRCAM51443Amsterdam 1720. Title-leaf 25152311810pp. plus seventy-five plates forty-seven double page sixteen folding including frontispiece and three maps. Large folio. Contemporary paneled calf ornate gilt covers and spine black gilt morocco label. Remarkably clean and bright. Bookseller's label pasted to front free endpaper. An excellent copy with additional engraved plate laid in. One of the great satirical plate books of the 18th century directing its invective at the Mississippi Company of John Law and the wild speculation and financial collapse engendered by the pioneering stock issuance of the company. The Netherlands was a particular hotbed of speculation with over 350 million guilders invested in the scheme before its collapse. The plates and their accompanying text in prose and poetry begin with a portrait of John Law and follow the course of the speculation in ludicrous and sometimes obscene images. It is a remarkable final chapter to the literature of Law and the Mississippi speculation. <br> <br> "The book is divided into six sections with no general table of contents. The first part contains the articles of various Dutch companies. The second section consists of comedies and farces; the third part poems often containing street language; the fourth part descriptions of playing cards satirizing speculators; the fifth part four letters to 'N.N.'; and the sixth section chiefly pictures although pictures appear elsewhere in the book as well" - BOUND TO PLEASE. <br> <br> This book has always been a bibliographically perplexing one with no two copies seeming to collate alike. Sabin states that copies have anywhere from sixty to seventy-four plates but ignores the supplementary series. Even Cole the most diligent student of the book notes: "Rarely does a single volume combine in itself so much economic interest and so many bibliographical puzzles." BOUND TO PLEASE 5. SABIN 28932. Cole THE GREAT MIRROR OF FOLLY. EUROPEAN AMERICANA 720/114. GOLDSMITH 5879. HOWES G442. MULLER AMERICA 1503. unknown books