1 546 résultats
1989014848USA 1989 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1989014855USA 1989 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1986014851USA 1986 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1990014753USA 1990 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1990014856USA 1990 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1977014854USA 1977 United States Department of Agriculture Soft cover
1988LFA-126719813Un ouvrage de 296 pages, format 230 x 305 mm, illustré, broché couverture couleurs, publié en 1988, bon état
aly2002Humlebaek: 2002. 8vo. pp. 96. numerous illus. some colour. wrs [Humlebaek: 2002] unknown
185728024Philadelphia: Charles Desilver 1857. 17¼" X 13 3/4" image 16" X 12 3/4". Hand colored. Near fine. Faint age toning. Drawn by J.L. Hazzard this superb delicately hand colored map features a large ornamental border. Charles Desilver unknown
1804375007Washington D.C. 1804. 225vi pp. Uncut. 8vo. Publisher's paper-backed stiff blue sugar paper wrappers. Morocco backed clamshell box. 225vi pp. Uncut. 8vo. The first Congressional printing of the Louisiana Purchase treaty and associated conventions. This famous treaty was really three separate documents. The first was the purchase of Louisiana the second was a convention for the payment of the money due on the purchase and the third was a convention for the settlement of old claims. All were executed secretly in Paris in April 1803 ratified by the Senate on Oct. 17 and proclaimed on Oct. 21 1803. The terms were the most important in American diplomatic history after the 1783 peace treaty. They gave the United States all of the vast Louisiana Territory and made the country a continental power with territory extending to the Pacific Ocean. The text of all three documents is given in full in French and English. Also included are the texts of treaties with several Indian tribes. Not in Shaw & Shoemaker. Malloy p.508 unknown
186046890New York: S. Augustus Mitchell Jr. 1860. Folio 12¼" X 15" image area 10 3/4" X 13½". Hand colored. Very good. Light age toning only. Bold bright map of this trio of states from the 1864 edition of "Mitchell's New General Atlas Containing Maps of the Various Countries of the World Plans of Cities Etc." Handsomely colored with fine decorative border. S. Augustus Mitchell, Jr. unknown
186046940New York: S. Augustus Mitchell Jr. 1860. Folio 12¼" X 15" image area 10 3/4" X 13½". Hand colored. Very good. Minor age toning and bit of soiling mainly about edges. A bold and nicely colored map of this southern trio from the 1864 edition of "Mitchell's New General Atlas Containing Maps of the Various Countries of the World Plans of Cities Etc." Delicately colored and with handsome decorative border. S. Augustus Mitchell, Jr. unknown
1844715Washington D.C. 1844. Folio broadside. 340 x 220 mm. 13 1/3 x 8 ¾ inches. Wide geometric mourning border. Old folds. Two small pieces lacking from right hand margin but very good Bossier was of a Creole family one of the earliest to settle in Louisiana. He was a cotton and sugar plantation owner. A Calhoun democrat he served from March 4 1843 until his death on April 24 1844. He was later reinterred in Natchitoches La. His funeral service was conducted in the well of the House of Representatives and a newspaper notice about the event reads as follows: "The lighted candles the priests in their white surplices and the clouds of incense wreathing in the Hall presented a scene calculated to strike the beholder with awe. The Rev. Mr. Ryder then took his seat at the desk and delivered an eloquent sermon." Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. See History Art and Archives of the United States House of Representative "The Funeral of Pierre Bossier of Louisiana" for details on the funeral. . unknown
186629782New Orleans: J. O. Nixon State Printer 1866. 17 pp 1p blank 2 folding tables of the "Statement of the Banks in New Orleans on the 28th October 1865 30th December 1865 being the last Saturday of the Month". 1 vols. 8vo. Disbound with stitching lacking some soiling discreet library markings short tears and creasing else very good. 17 pp 1p blank 2 folding tables of the "Statement of the Banks in New Orleans on the 28th October 1865 30th December 1865 being the last Saturday of the Month". 1 vols. 8vo. Financial Status following the war. The Board of Currency issuing their financial report with the status of funds gold and cotton. J. O. Nixon, State Printer unknown
6238HUGO PEDESCLAUX 1751-1834. Pedesclaux served as consul of Spain at Bordeaux from 1796 to 1808. DS. 10 x 12. August 27 1803. Bordeaux. A partially printed document signed Juan Estrada in Spanish; the translation states: DON HUGO DE PDESCLAUX commanding Commissary for His Catholic Majestys Royal armies and the trade of the nation of Spain in the Department of Gironde and its vicinity residing at Bordeaux. Whereas I have deemed it beneficial to the Kings service to grant free and secure passage to Don Antonio Ignacio Silva a resident of Louisiana 32 years of age 5 feet 4 inches in height eyes brown eyebrows the same hair black nose bulbous mouth regular and complexion dark; the said individual arrived in this port with the rank of second officer on the Spanish merchant frigate named La Eugenia and is returning to Spain by leave of his Captain Don Luis Dauquemenil on the chasse-mare El Santo ngel de la Guarde Don Martn de Ybarra master; having as his companion a youth named Jacinto Len a native of New Orleans and arriving on the aforesaid frigate La Eugenia; I therefore pray and beseech the Lords Governors Judges and Peace Officers in the places through which he may travel to impose no obstruction to his journey but rather to afford him whatever favor and assistance he may require to continue. To this end I have granted the present passport signed by my hand and sealed with the Royal seal of this consulate. On the version the following is written in another hand in reply and signed Antonio Argote Villalobos: Having appeared with this passport at this Consulate of Spain in Virginia it is granted him to take passage to Louisiana on the vessel that suits him Norfolk 14 December 1803. This document is a passport for Don Antonio Ignacio Silva to enter the colony of Louisiana on the orders of Don Hugo de Pedesclaux the Spanish consul in French Bordeaux. It was issued during a time of great transition for Louisiana as it had just been purchased from France by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase. In return for fifteen million dollars about eighteen dollars per square mile the United States acquired 530000000 acres from France. Napoleon had hoped to re-establish a French colonial empire in North America as they had in the 18th century. France had only reacquired some of that territory the Louisiana Territory from Spain in 1800 having lost it in the Seven Years War in 1762 and explaining how a Spanish citizen like Silva could have lived there for so long. However France's failure to suppress a revolt in Saint-Domingue now Haiti plus the prospect of European warfare prompted Napoleon to sell off Frances North American possessions. Given that this document makes no mention of American control at either date and given how slow communication was in the early 19th century it is likely that none of the parties to this document knew of the Louisiana Purchase. In fact France would not turn over New Orleans their colonial capital until December 20 1803 after both signatures; and this was only three weeks after Spanish officials had belatedly formally turned over administration of the colony to France! The intertwined early 19th century histories of France and Spain would affect Pedesclaux. When Napoleon put his brother Joseph on the Spanish throne in 1808 Pedesclaux defected and swore loyalty to Joseph. He was not pardoned by Spain for this action until 1833. The document is in very good condition with some minor stains and folds. An English-language translation is included. unknown
1888GE188681888. Ex-Library. Group of three separate publicatiosn regarding the State of Louisiana published between 1888 and 1892. The old library binding lacks the spine strip and the front board is loose. The frist piece a report by Louisiana's Commissioner of Education is 135 pp. and deals with population climate agriculture etc. The second piece is 71 pp. illustrated with full page photographs and deals mostly with agriculture mostly of sugar and was apparently isued by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The third piece is 81 pp printed in blue and is a summary of a convention called for by Louisiana in order to dispel misinformation held by midwesterners and northerners regarding the State's agriculture and development. <br/><br/> unknown
1802264638Paris: Dentu 1802. First edition. With folding engraved map by L. Collin at front with a fanciful depiction of the American west. viii 382 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Quarter contemporary calf and boards speckled edges. Handsome copy. Blue bookseller ticket of Ch. Chadenat Librairie Américaine et Coloniale Paris. Very good plus. First edition. With folding engraved map by L. Collin at front with a fanciful depiction of the American west. viii 382 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Howes B-243; Clark II 76; Dionne II 915; Field 99; Sabin 3979; Streeter III 1571; Wagner-Camp 1a Dentu unknown
1847470121New-Orleans; Nouvelle-Orleans: Printed by Gaux & David; Imprimerie de Gaux & David 1847. Softcover. Very Good. First edition. Two separate issues. Octavos 5 ½†x 8 ½â€. In English: 10 2 2pp. final leaf is blank; In French: 10 3 3pp. final three pages are blank. Both are bound in the same tan plain paper wrapper with an early manuscript ink notation on front cover with inventory number and name of a Masonic Lodge. Neatly removed from a bound volume with spine slightly notched the wrapper is lightly dust soiled both are very good bright copies. An early report detailing a dispute between the freemasons of Louisiana and freemasons of Mississippi as reported by members of the Louisiana Grand Lodge and attested by Francois Verrier a New Orleans merchant and Grand Secretary of the Lodge. In response to the dispute the freemasons of Louisiana draw attention to the diversity of its members in their appeal for unity:<br /> <br /> “What we have done here is this: we have drawn closer … by uniting the whole Brotherhood of Louisiana of the three first degrees under one head … Laws must be suited to the community for which they are made and some Masonic regulations might be well adapted to Meridian of Louisiana; and especially to that of the City of New Orleans where we have daily intercourse with the Brethren of all nations . In New Orleans there are Lodges working in our different Languages. The fraternity here is composed of men of various nations habits and opinions and every measure which intends to unite us all into one band of Brothers is a blessing .â€. A scarce pair of early New Orleans imprints rarely found together. OCLC locates only two copies of the English language edition and only one copy of the edition in French. Printed by Gaux & David; Imprimerie de Gaux & David unknown
191992189Partitions sur l'Amérique du Nord Feist Leo 1919
B9781418129439Hardback. New. hardcover
B9781418129989Hardback. New. hardcover
1997LFA011c3Un bulletin de 28 pages, format 210 x 135 mm, Académie Delphinale (Grenoble) fondée en 1772
19764649Shreveport La 1976. Good. 34pp. Original pictorial cream wrappers stapled. Moderate staining and noticeable insect damage to wrappers some pen notations on covers. A few ink notations and underlinings in the text but mostly clean with center gathering detached. An unrecorded pamphlet containing numerous "historical sketches" of the various groups within the 13th District Baptist Association Women's Auxiliary in Shreveport Louisiana. The work contains a history of the Antioch Baptist Church Missionary Society which began in 1889 and sketches on the women of the Broadway Missionary Church Mission Band the Lakeside Baptist Church the Little Union Missionary Baptist Church Mission Society and Woman's Missionary Union and many many more groups from area churches. The text is illustrated throughout with dozens of photographs of notable officers members and other figures within the groups various churches and more. An excellent snapshot of Shreveport-area women's church groups with no copies in OCLC. unknown
19384099Baton Rouge La: January 1938. Very good. 32pp. Original green printed wrappers stapled. Minor wear and dust-soiling. Pencil notations to a few pages otherwise internally clean. The rare first issue of the bulletin of Southern University in Baton Rouge. The issue was devoted to the Southern University Rally and printed rules and regulations for the tournaments of the Louisiana Interscholastic Athletic and Literary Association. These events included the state football championship basketball games music and literary contests the state dramatic festival and the state track meet. The work also includes the "Aims and Purposes of the Association" which are "adapted from the Texas Interscholastic League for Colored Schools" a history of interscholastic activities "among Negro Schools in Louisiana" and lists of the officers of the organization. The previous owner of the present copy of the bulletin had a keen interest in the section on the rules for music contests with numerous light pencil notes written in the outer margins of the first two pages of that section. January unknown