1 528 résultats
1020783672.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1020048506.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0243025297.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0266441467.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0332572935.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0332469972.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
B9781020587801Hardback. New. hardcover
114378278X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0331570793.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1868700681868. Louisiana's Reconstruction-Era Constitution Louisiana. Constitution Adopted by the State Constitutional Convention of the State of Louisiana March 7 1868. Printed by the New Orleans Republiean sic In Accordance with a Resolution of the Constitutional Convention Adopted March 7th 1868. New Orleans: Printed at the Republican Office 1868. 22 pp. Octavo 9-1/2" x 5-1/2". Stab-stitched pamphlet in plain wrappers bound into to later library cloth. Some soiling light shelfwear. Moderate toning and light foxing to text faint dampstaining to margins of a few leaves library stamps and marks to title page and its verso. $750. Louisiana's 1868 constitution instituted the criteria necessary for readmission to the Union. It eradicated the Black Codes of 1865 removed property qualifications for holding office and disenfranchised former Confederates. Indicating support for the Fourteenth Amendment which would be ratified on July 9 1868 the constitution granted full citizenship to African-American men with equal civil and political rights. It also banned segregated public schools and segregated accommodations on public transportation. This constitution was the First in Louisiana's history to include a bill of rights. These rights were severely diminished in Louisiana's 1879 constitution which followed the end of Reconstruction. Babbitt Hand-List of Legislative Sessions and Session Laws 152. unknown books
188436123New Orleans: City Item Publishing Company 1884. Original printed wrappers stitched. 15 1 blank pp. Text clean. Wrappers loosened with a couple of old institutional stamps shallow wrapper edge wear. Good.<br/><br/> A committee of sugar planters arranged the Convention. Delegates are listed. Its purpose was "to defend the Louisiana protected interests at Washington" from the spectre of free trade. Reports are presented on the lukewarm reception they encountered from Washington politicians.<br/>OCLC 12424829 5- LSU Johns Hopkins UNC R.B. Hayes Lib. WI Hist. Soc. as of July 2019. City Item Publishing Company unknown books
191441451New Orleans 1914. 16mo. 86 pp. Original printed grey wrappers; Library of Congress duplicate with its stamp. Very good. Twelve "colored" schools are included in this annual compilation. Some of the schools were for boys or girls only. <br/><br/> unknown books
1853WRCAM31934New Orleans: J.L. Sollée 1853. 44pp. Original printed wrappers. Minute wear to wrappers. Internally clean. Very good. A rare New Orleans printing of DON JUAN. with the text printed in English and French. OCLC locates only two copies and Jumonville adds one more. JUMONVILLE 2268. OCLC 24437616. J.L. Sollée unknown books
1358953635.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
190041444Coushatta LA: Printed by Fletcher Smith Rome Georgia for S.Q. Hollingsworth 1900. Oblong 4to. 56 pp. Illustrated plates. Original printed pale yellow wrappers stapled; spine partly eroded but very good. Though styled the "Fourth Annual Catalogue" we have been unable to trace any publications for this farm and stock raiser. Full pedigrees are given for the animals along with brief text listing showing awards etc.; only a few pages are devoted to the pigs and chickens. <br/><br/> (Printed by Fletcher Smith, Rome, Georgia for) S.Q. Hollingsworth unknown books
19081418New York 1908. Very good plus. Folding map 23 x 19 inches folded to 7.5 x 3.5 inches. Original grey printed card covers. Minor wear to covers a few small spots of foxing and wear to map. Handsome map of New Orleans printed in color with the canals railroads and electric street car lines highlighted. The map depicts the city from Lake Pontchartrain to the Mississippi showing minimal settlement south of the river primarily in the neighborhood of Algiers. Audubon Park Metairie Cemetery the city park and fair grounds are all highlighted as are many other smaller squares cemeteries and green spaces including the Oakland Driving Park today the New Orleans Country Club's golf course. At the time New Orleans was a city of about 300000 people. The present map shows that most of the neighborhoods along the Mississippi were traversed by "electric railways" with one line traveling north to the lake and terminating at West End while one line operated on the south side of the river. There are also numerous railroads delineated and several ferries crossing the river. A detailed look at the streets of New Orleans at the turn of the century. We locate fewer than ten copies in OCLC. unknown books
189034055New Orleans 1890. First Edition. 12pp.i 16mo folder disbound corners chipped with small pieces missing no text affected.Illus. On first leaf: trade mark of woman with longish hair holding a bottle of the ":cure". The second is of the Manufacturing plant A fragile and scarce brochure for the "cure" with many testimonials included unknown books
185236379New Orleans: Printed at the Crescent Office 1852. 100pp. Toned with some foxing light rubberstamp on title page. Upper blank corners of last two leaves renewed couple of small holes in last leaf affecting about five letters. Good in modern boards.<br/><br/> The new Constitution mandated that "the Legislature shall apportion the representation among the several parishes and election districts on the basis of the total population. A representative number shall be fixed and each parish and election district shall have as many Representatives as its aggregate population shall entitle it to." This meant that in apportioning representatives slaves would be counted in determining the "total population" even though the franchise was limited to adult white males. The legislative deck was thus stacked in favor of election districts with large slaveholding plantations; and the interests of that segment of the State would dominate governmental councils.<br/> This provision created significant opposition to the proposed Constitution which was adopted by the narrowest of margins. Many called it "anti-republican" arguing that it reflected "a calculated effort to reduce the political power of regions where the black population remained sparse" Hyde Pistols and Politics 70 LSU Press: 1996.<br/> The Journal records the Convention's daily proceedings during July 1852 and prints the proposed Constitution. <br/>Jumonville 2151. Thompson 1300. Cohen 3106. Not in Harv. Law Cat. or Marke. Printed at the Crescent Office unknown books
1818WRCAM17691Washington 1818. 15pp. Dbd. Foxed and tanned but good. Straightening out land titles in Louisiana. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 46352. unknown books
1875170781875. 43rd Cong. 2nd Sess. SED17. 1875. 75 1 blank pp disbound. Very Good. unknown books
192413429Baton Rouge: Department of Agriculture and Immigration 1924. 206 2 pp loose in original colored pictorial wrappers. Faint tan many photographs Good. Department of Agriculture and Immigration unknown books
1810WRCAM40148Washington City 1810. 9pp. Dbd. Bright and clean. Very good. An appeal by the Territory of Orleans for statehood. The MEMORIAL describes reasons for the territory's entry into the Union. Two years later in 1812 the Territory of Orleans would become the state of Louisiana. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 21724. unknown books
1812WRCAM40147Washington City 1812. 32pp. Dbd. Lightly foxed some chipping along spine- edge. Slight tanning to text. Good. The constitution of the State of Louisiana as accepted by the United States for entry into the Union. Louisiana's 1812 constitution was modeled after that of Kentucky providing for a two-house legislature and extensive executive powers. Only adult white males who paid taxes could vote which instantly disqualified two-thirds of the adult white male population and of course all nonwhites and women. The appeal for statehood was particularly urgent as the War of 1812 was unfolding. The Orleans Convention writes in January "Motives of peculiar urgency connected with the repose and security of the people of this territory have induced them to solicit of the executive that the constitution herewith transmitted may be immediately laid before Congress so as to be acted on without delay at their present session." Louisiana was the eighteenth state to enter the Union. SHAW & SHOEMAKER 27252. unknown books
1850WRCAM16808Washington 1850. 163pp. Dbd. Bit soiled else very good. Communications regarding the abduction and transportation to Cuba of Don Juan Garcia alias Juan Francisco Rey by the Spanish Consul Don Carlos de Espana. This incident served as a pretext for the abortive Lopez filibuster. unknown books
191541454New Orleans: Garcia Stationery Co. printers 1915. 16mo. 31 1 pp. Original printed tan wrappers soiled; Lib. of Congress duplicate with its stamp. Very good. Reports on the association's activities and finances by its president Paul Capdevielle and other officers; includes six pages of rules for the government of the New Orleans City Park e.g. "Bathing in the lake is strictly prohibited.". Scarce; catalogued as a serial on OCLC there are no holdings indicated for this annual issue. <br/><br/> Garcia Stationery Co., printers) unknown books