1 250 résultats
1801354337Washington 1801. 4pp. Dbd. Contemporary manuscript page inscription and early stain in upper outer corner not affecting text. Light offsetting. Else very good. 4pp. Dbd. Congressional report declaring that the Mississippi Territory in entitled to elect a delegate to Congress "with the right to debate but not to vote" and that Narsworthy Hunter has been duly elected to serve in that capacity in the Seventh Congress. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 1539. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 1539 <br/><br/> unknown
194234721Jackson Mississippi: n.p. 1942. Manuscript. Good. Unpublished typed manuscript. 242 pages typed on the rectos only. 1942 rejection letter from the publisher signed by the secretary is included. Manuscript housed in torn and chipped paper folder with author's Jackson Mississippi address on the front side. Manuscript inscription on the first page. Contents clean and in good condition. n.p. unknown
3726430<p>Raymond Mississippi October 4 1837. 1p. Partly-printed document. 6¼ x 8 inches. Contemporary docketing on verso. Folds; some ink bleed-through; very good.</p> <p>1837 legal summons addressed to the Sheriff of Hinds County Mississippi William C. Demoss. The sheriff is hereby directed to summon Maxfield Anderson William Anderson Sr. and William Anderson Jr. to give evidence in the case of David Anderson plaintiff against Frederick Miller defendant. </p> <p>The Andersons were summoned to appear on the third day of the October 1837 term by Judge George Coalter Judge of the Seventh Judicial District. The summons is signed by court clerk G.E. Beauchamp. There is docketing on the verso as well as Sheriff Demoss’ acknowledgement of receipt dated October 4 1837.</p> <p>In 1830 prior to serving as Sheriff of Hinds County William C. Demoss was appointed an Associate Justice of the county court of Hinds County and served as a member of its probate court.¹ An owner of enslaved African Americans he also served in the Mississippi legislature and was a founding trustee of Hampden Academy at Raymond.</p> <p>Of mention: Maxfield Anderson may be the progenitor of the Anderson Family of Harrison County Texas.</p> <p>Notes. 1. Journal of the Senate of the State of Mississippi… Jackson 1830 pp13 and 87. Refs. Rowland Encyclopedia of Mississippi History Volume II Madison Wis. 1907 p83. Clarion-Ledger September 24 1939 Jackson Miss. p23. TX Historical Landmark - Stephen F. Austin State University accessed online.</p> unknown
187825697Cincinnati OH: Peter G. Thomson Arcade Book Store 1878. 3 1 blank pp. folded printed in red green black and gilt. Front of invitation ornately decorated in gilt and colored ink with several fancy typesettings and decorative banners. Second page contains the list of officers printed within a gilt border in the shape of a cross. Third page contains names of committee members printed within a gilt border. Two horizontal folds very short split at edge of one fold no text loss. Very attractive and Very Good.<br /> <br /> Several members had served in the Confederate Army. E.C. Carroll was an owner of the Vicksburg Sentinel and the President of the Board of Directors of the Merchant's National Bank in Vicksburg. Frederic Speed was an officer of this Lodge. and an Honorary 33rd Degree Scottish Rite Mason. He was involved in the great explosion of the ship Sultana at the end of the Civil War which resulted in the deaths of over 1700 Union prisoners of war. The steamship had been overloaded to several times the ship's capacity in an effort to make as much money as possible from the $5 per prisoner rate paid by the government. Speed was indicted and found guilty; the verdict was reversed by Brig. Gen. Joseph Holt on the ground that Speed's involvement was remote. <br /> Officers listed: Sir Wm. A. Fairchild P.E.C. Prelate; Sir H.W. Bowen Treasurer; Sir W.G. Paxton Eminent Commander; Sir. Wm. French Generalissimo; Sir F. Speed Captain General; Sir J.W. Powell P.E.C. Recorder; Sir I. Hardy Senior Warden; Sir H. Denio Junior Warden; Sir T.J. Thompson Warder; Sir J.H. Berresford Standard Bearer; Sir. E.P. Jones Sword Bearer; Sir Wm. Murry Sentinel. Committee on Invitation: Sir C.C. Floweree Sir E.C. Carroll Sir W.M. Vosburg Sir L.C. Moore P.E.C. Sir T.G. Birchett P.E.C. Sir W.H. Andrews and Sir M.R. Payne. Reception Committee: Sir J.W. Gray Sir T.J. Harper Sir H. Wilkerson Sir Jas. H. King Sir C.A. Manlove P.E.C. Sir Wm. French Sir W.S. Harris and Sir Simes Coate. Floor Managers: Sir Geo. M. Klein Sir G.G. Manlove Sir W.M. Chamberlain Sir A.G. Russell Sir M.C. Klein Sir S.H. Childress and Sir C.H. Nathan. Peter G. Thomson, Arcade Book Store] unknown
1800WRCAM26395Philadelphia 1800. 3pp. Dbd. Very good. The government refuses to allow land to be appropriated in Mississippi for "clergyman and seminaries of learning and such like purposes" because of the "unsettled condition of claims to lands." EVANS 38892. unknown books
191041493McComb City MS: Hays the Printer 1910. Vol. iv no. 1 January 1910. 8vo. 8 pp. Ads. Original printed tan wrappers stapled. Very good. This issue only of the 'house organ' for Hays the Printer a printing and ad-writing company in McComb City. Extensive descriptions for all of the company's services with examples of recently filled orders. Not recorded on OCLC by the NUC or in UNION LIST OF SERIALS. <br/><br/> Hays, the Printer unknown books
187825697Cincinnati OH: Peter G. Thomson Arcade Book Store 1878. 3 1 blank pp. folded printed in red green black and gilt. Front of invitation ornately decorated in gilt and colored ink with several fancy typesettings and decorative banners. Second page contains the list of officers printed within a gilt border in the shape of a cross. Third page contains names of committee members printed within a gilt border. Two horizontal folds very short split at edge of one fold no text loss. Very attractive and Very Good.<br/><br/> Several members had served in the Confederate Army. E.C. Carroll was an owner of the Vicksburg Sentinel and the President of the Board of Directors of the Merchant's National Bank in Vicksburg. Frederic Speed was an officer of this Lodge. and an Honorary 33rd Degree Scottish Rite Mason. He was involved in the great explosion of the ship Sultana at the end of the Civil War which resulted in the deaths of over 1700 Union prisoners of war. The steamship had been overloaded to several times the ship's capacity in an effort to make as much money as possible from the $5 per prisoner rate paid by the government. Speed was indicted and found guilty; the verdict was reversed by Brig. Gen. Joseph Holt on the ground that Speed's involvement was remote. <br/> Officers listed: Sir Wm. A. Fairchild P.E.C. Prelate; Sir H.W. Bowen Treasurer; Sir W.G. Paxton Eminent Commander; Sir. Wm. French Generalissimo; Sir F. Speed Captain General; Sir J.W. Powell P.E.C. Recorder; Sir I. Hardy Senior Warden; Sir H. Denio Junior Warden; Sir T.J. Thompson Warder; Sir J.H. Berresford Standard Bearer; Sir. E.P. Jones Sword Bearer; Sir Wm. Murry Sentinel. Committee on Invitation: Sir C.C. Floweree Sir E.C. Carroll Sir W.M. Vosburg Sir L.C. Moore P.E.C. Sir T.G. Birchett P.E.C. Sir W.H. Andrews and Sir M.R. Payne. Reception Committee: Sir J.W. Gray Sir T.J. Harper Sir H. Wilkerson Sir Jas. H. King Sir C.A. Manlove P.E.C. Sir Wm. French Sir W.S. Harris and Sir Simes Coate. Floor Managers: Sir Geo. M. Klein Sir G.G. Manlove Sir W.M. Chamberlain Sir A.G. Russell Sir M.C. Klein Sir S.H. Childress and Sir C.H. Nathan. Peter G. Thomson, Arcade Book Store] unknown books
1801WRCAM36255Washington 1801. 4pp. Dbd. Contemporary manuscript page inscription and early stain in upper outer corner not affecting text. Light offsetting. Else very good. Congressional report declaring that the Mississippi Territory in entitled to elect a delegate to Congress "with the right to debate but not to vote" and that Narsworthy Hunter has been duly elected to serve in that capacity in the Seventh Congress. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 1539. unknown books
194910727Meridian Mississippi: Dement Printing Company 1949. 7.5 x 5.5" green wrappers with black lettering 49 15 pp with blank pages for notes and local advertisements at the end. This edition revised and reprinted from the 1925 edition. The recipes are attributed to local women and include Prickly Porcupines a kind of meat ball Chicken Gumbo Shrimp Jambolay Cheese Balls Ireland Mold Salad Marshmallow Salad and Pepper Mangoes. A nice copy with corner creased bit of damp staining to upper edge of pages old tape residue and few paper abrasions to rear wrapper. Dement Printing Company unknown
2003Q-1893062600Quail Ridge Pr 2003. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Quail Ridge Pr hardcover
186312102Paris, Librairie L. Hachette et Cie, 1863 ; in-8, demi-chagrin maroquiné havane, dos lisse, faux nerfs dorés, titre doré, tranches mouchetées (reliure de l'époque) ; (4), 320 pp.
182511259Paris, Parmentier ; Froment, 1825 ; in-8 ; XIX, (1), 478 pp., 2 cartes dépliantes hors-texte, couverture de relai datée de 1826 par Froment et Coste ; tome quatrième des oeuvres de Volney.
Two Volumes bound in one: pp. 464; 276. Early inked ownership of N. K. Randall on title page. Damp stained. Age stained. Top edge of first few signatures chewed, without text loss. 225mm. Original full leather binding, very worn. Howes F200; Thomson 423; AI / SS 12424. "The text of the second volume had not appeared previously." - Graff 1356. Includes much useful and early infomation on Texas and Oregon. AMER BX 10
188235938Government Printing Office Washington - Mississippi River Commission 1882. 1st edition. Hardback. Cloth VG. 225712pp 26 folding b/w plates of 37 - LACKS the 10 plates corresponding to appendix D and the single plate making up appendix E. Plates to appendix F have been bound in here in error instead giving two sets of these plates spine lettering dulled cloth rubbed & worn especially to the corners text unmarked & folding plates in nice condition. 47th Congress 1st Session. Senate. Ex. Doc.; No. 10. Compehensive & detailed annual report of the Mississippi River Commission which was formed in 1879 to promote better navigation of the Mississippi & prevent flooding. The report consists mainly of hydrographic data and bore hole findings. There are 9 maps of the river mainly in the Memphis area. The 11 missing plates which were never bound in concern an appendix dealing with flow rates on the river & would seem to have shown pictorial representations of the results. Government Printing Office, Washington - Mississippi River Commission hardcover
0963610104.Gplastic_comb. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
331 p. + Frontispiece portrait, and a plate of the proposed Chisolm monument in Cedar Hill Cemetary, Clinton County, PA. XLib. Original lettered full cloth binding. Hardbound. Very Good. A famous incident during post-Civil War Reconstruction in Mississippi. William Wallace Chisolm (1830-1877), was born in Morgan County, GA. His father died in 1851, leaving him the family guardian and protector. In 1847 the Chisolm family moved to Kemper County, Mississippi. In 1856 he married Emily S. Mann, daughter of John W. Mann, a prominent Florida lawyer. Up to this time Chisolm had had very little opportunity to pursue his education, but his wife gave him much assistance and he made rapid progress. In 1858 he was elected justice of the peace, and in 1860 probate judge, which office he retained until 1867. During the civil war he was a pronounced Unionist, and notwithstanding this fact he was kept in office, though many looked upon him with suspicion. For some time after the war, Mississippi, like the other southwestern states, was politically unsettled, the negroes always taking the side of the Republicans. Chisolm was elected sheriff by the Republicans, and was frequently in danger of his life from the followers of the Democratic party. In November, 1873, he was again elected sheriff for Kemper county, and this section became a great Republican stronghold. Four years later he was nominated as a representative to Congress, but was defeated. John W. Gully, a leading Democrat, was shot and killed near Chisolm's house, and warrants were sent out for the judge's arrest. His wife, three sons and daughter accompanied him, and the party was guarded on the way to the jail by Angus McLellan, a sturdy Scotchman, and stanch friend of Chisolm. As McLellan, at the sheriff's order, left the jail to go to his own house, he was shot down, and the building, being left unguarded, was broken into by the mob. The judge's son, John, a child of thirteen, was killed while protecting his father, and then another shot mortally wounded Chisolm, who obtained a rifle and killed the murderer of his boy. His daughter Cornelia, aged eighteen, also died from wounds received at the time. The leaders of the mob were indicted, but not punished. The local papers endeavored to justify the mob on the ground that Chisolm had been a party to the murder of Gully, though no evidence was ever shown to prove that Judge Chisolm or his friends had in any way been accessory to this crime. It was generally supposed that the Democrats of the district were enraged at the friendship of Chisolm with the newly enfranchised negroes, more particularly as he had organized them in order to control the elections in favor of the Republican party. In December, 1877, a negro, Walter Riley, confessed to the murder of Gully, which completely exonerated Chisolm from any part in the affair. He died in DeKalb, Miss., May 13, 1877. W27 YORK HS
1994440778PN. New. 1994. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
1994440716PN. New. 1994. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
2026x-1009539582Cambridge University Press 2026. Hardcover. New. 88 pages. 6.00x0.25x9.00 inches. Cambridge University Press hardcover
443 p. illus. Folded map at p. 438 Hardcover Ex-Library in very good condition green cloth
186727753Ripley Mississippi 1867. Otherwise very good condition. If to be found in your County and them safely keep. to be held to appear at the Court House in The Town of Ripley after the 1st Monday of March 1868. for the charge of murder." A preprinted form with hand written additions.<br /> <br /> There is a David Lumley in the 1845 Mississippi census recording 2 males & 4 females in Tishomingo county. Ancestry dot com<br /> <br /> 8 x 12 1/2" laid paper with blue lines original folds official embossed stamp of the Circuit Court of Tippah County. Some splits at folds. unknown
184636784Natchez: T. A. S. Doniphan 1846. Newspaper. Fair. Newspaper. Approximately 24" x 18." 4 pages. Paper has multiple folds damp stains creases and holes at the folds. Paper restored. Holes patched and tears repaired with transparent tissue. <br /> <br /> Contents include Governor A. G. Brown biannual message regarding State finances Rail Roads State Seminary Banking; Education Militia General Jackson James Gadsen discussing the Railroads several advertisements etc. An article from the New Orleans Picayune reports "The rumors which have been for some weeks in circulation that Gen. Paredes had at last declared against the Government appear at length likely to be verified by the course he is pursuing. The revolution is now on foot or has already been consummated." Also a small notice that a "joint resolution approving the new constitution of Texas and admitting her into the Union as well as a bill for extending the laws of the United States over Texas were this day signed by the President of the Senate and then signed by the President of the United States. T. A. S. Doniphan unknown
185632182Philadelphia: Henry Carey Baird 1856. Later printing. Hardcover. Fair. 12mo. 1 133 pages 1 page blank 1 24 pages of publisher advertisements. Illustrated with 4 plates consisting of multiple figures. Brown cloth hardcover ruled in blind on the covers with blind stamped decorations and gilt title inside a circle on the front cover. Cloth binding is very worn with chipped spine and corners. Back cover is mostly detached. Light damp stains to the front and rear end papers. A small upper corner tear to the right front flyleaf. Interior contents in good condition with occasional light foxing. <br /> <br /> Previous owner of this book was David Wight a California pioneer and founder of the California Iron Works. His inscription - "David Wight Vallejo California 1863" is written on the front paste down. A later owners stamped address on the right front flyleaf. A fair copy only. Henry Carey Baird hardcover
181423532Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman 1814. 10 2 blank pp. Folded untrimmed uncut. Two pinholes in blank left margin lightly tanned and foxed. Very Good. <br /> <br /> An unsophisticated copy of this plea by landowners in the Yazoo area of Mississippi Territory for federal assistance in quieting titles to land that they purchased from Spain. Others had been granted the same land by England during the prior British ownership of the Territory. The Report explains the history of the Spanish and British claims to the area and lists the British grants of land filed with the register of the land office. <br /> AI 33474 5. Printed by Roger C. Weightman unknown
1816WRCAM34214Washington 1816. 10pp. Modern red cloth. Toned. Good. A land office report regarding how claims for lands stemming from the Spanish and British occupations of parts of the Mississippi Territory from 1763 to 1803 were to be treated. OCLC locates eight copies. OCLC 10465816. hardcover books