11 815 résultats
23504Headed 44 Lower Sloane Street S.W. 4 May 1912. Three pages 12mo bifolium very good condition. Text: "A line to acknowledge your stirring poem on the loss of the Titanic which I admire much. I suppose & hope that the story of the band is true but it requires some corroboration. May I make one criticism - Why 'tinselled' heroes- There is something in the pomp & circumstance of war no doubt but leaders in a forlorn hope are heroes all the same; and mere passive resignation to death in which the Chinese would surpass us is not so superior to the courage which induces a man to 'seek the bubble reputation e'en at the cannon's mouth' as you would put it- Excuse the criticism-". Note: I haven't managed to find a Poem about the sinking of the Titanic with the word "tinselled" in it. [Headed] 44 Lower Sloane Street, S.W., 4 May [1912?] unknown
22160Admiralty London. 21 August 1806. The letter is 1p 12mo and is accompanied by the covering 8vo leaf addressed to 'John Atkins Esqre Duke Street Westminster' with a second signature for franking. The covering leaf is endorsed: 'Admiralty August 21 1806 Adml. Markham concerning Miles Burn that it would be impossible to get him reinstated'. Both letter and covering leaf in good condition lightly aged and worn with fold lines. Markham could hardly be more decisive. The letter reads: 'My Dr Sir Your attempts I am sure will be in vain to get Mr Burn restored to his rank. The Evidence is very strong indeed as to his general last word underlined drunken habits and the instances render him for ever incapable last three words underlined of serving His Majesty his heirs or Successors'. At the foot of the page apparently written at a later date: 'I wrote on a scrap of paper written on the other side which I did not see when I wrote this'. Admiralty [London]. 21 August 1806. unknown
25087'Navy Office 20th March 1799.'. See Gambier’s entry in the Oxford DNB. He served during capture of Charleston during American Revolutionary War at the Glorious First of June and commanded at Battle of Copenhagen and Battle of the Basque Roads. He was First Naval Lord three times: 1795-1801 1804-6 and 1807-8. Henslow was Surveyor to the Navy 1784-1806 and Hope was Deputy Comptroller of the Navy 1795-1801. According to one source HMS Achille was ‘commissioned under Captain Sir Henry Stanhope later Admiral Sir Henry Edwyn Stanhope 1754-1814 in June 1798 while fitting out was ongoing . In April 1799 Captain Stanhope was replaced in command by Captain George Murray’. 1p folio. On brittle and lightly-browned laid paper. The document is in fair condition apart from at the head which is worn and heavily chipped with closed tears repaired with archival tape. Addressed at head from ‘Navy Office 20th March 1799.’ Folded five times into package. Written in a secretary’s hand and signed at bottom right ‘C Hope. / J Hemslow / J: Gambier’ and addressed at bottom left to ‘Captain Stanhope / late of L’Achille’. The document rather a stern letter for ‘affectionate friends’ to write reads: ‘The Officers of Portsmouth Yard having transmitted us an Account of the Articles in the Boatswain’s Expence Book of His Majesty’s Ship added here: ‘Achille late’ under your command which were thought to be an extraordinary demand in so short a time after having said to have been recently completed. We herewith transmit you a reply of the same and acquaint you it will be an objection to the passing your Accounts unless you can give us satisfactory reasons for so extraordinary an expenditure. / We are / Sir / Your affectionate friends / C Hope. / J Henslow / J: Gambier’. 'Navy Office 20th March 1799.' unknown
19472090202118103542Light company 1947. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Light company paperback
19472092902140312188Light company 1947. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Light company paperback
19472110502150308189Light company 1947. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Light company paperback
19472111902153302465Light company 1947. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Light company paperback
25083‘Wasp Portsmouth 1st. Decr. 1775.’. Bligh’s entry in the Oxford DNB does not note his service on HMS Wasp to which he was appointed in October 1774. According to one authority the ship ‘saw service out of Passage County Cork Ireland from November 1774. In October 1775 Bligh brought sixty volunteers from Ireland into Plymouth and in June 1776 sailed from Portsmouth to Plymouth with money for the dockyard artificers. Towards the end of August the Wasp arrived off the Devonshire port with ten transports bound for North America and she then sailed for Ireland.’ Built in 1749 the 8-gun sloop the Wasp was sold off by the Royal Navy in 1781. In 1784 under the name Mentor she was a slave ship. Good bold signature on letter of 1p 4to. In fair condition on aged and discoloured paper with wear to corners and closed tear along the two postage folds. Addressed to ‘The Honourable The Principal Officers & Commissrs. of His Majesty’s Navy’ parts of last two word chipped away. Docketed ‘1: Decembr. 1775. / Wasp / Captn: Bligh / Book sent’ and ‘Recd. the above Muster Book / TM / 12 Decr. 1775’. The letter reads: ‘Gentlemen / Yesterday I Lodged at the Clerk of the Checks Office at this Port to be forwarded to your Board One Monthly Book for September & October 1775 for His Majesty’s Sloop the Wasp under my Command which please to Acknowledge the receipt off to Waterford in Ireland as I shall sail for that place in a day or two. I am with great respect / Gentlemen / Your most Obedient / Humble Servant R R Bligh’. ‘Wasp, Portsmouth 1st. Decr. 1775.’ unknown
20217From Guadeloupe 'this Country' . 15 August 1815 . No place. 4pp. 12mo. Bifolium. In fair condition on lightly aged and worn paper. Docketed on reverse of second leaf: '15 Augt. 1815. Sir P. C. Durham'. According to the DNB Durham having 'cleared the West Indies of American cruisers' 'in June and August 1815 co-operated in the reduction of Martinique and Guadeloupe at which place the last French flag was struck to Durham as the first had been'. The letter begins: 'My Lord I feel no exertion has been wanting on the part of the Navy in the joint capture of Guadeloupe – and did flatter myself <> had given his Nephew the best Situation and provided for most of his friends the admiral might have been offered something but to my surprize on my return from Pointe a Pitre in the <> where I had been in the Public Service all was disposed of – it has been generally in point of Captures the practice to give the admiral the nomanation sic of the Naval officer which is all I request for my Nephew Mr Thomas Calderwood Durham 1797-1842 and have requested Lord Bathurst would be pleased to give it to him – may I hope for your Lordships support'. He complains that in the meantime 'it has been given to Mr King a Gentleman well known to hae thought and acted in opposition to Government which is not paying the Navy nor Army any compliment for their exertions in this Country.' [ From Guadeloupe ('this Country') .] 15 August [ 1815 ]. No place. unknown
919616 April 1832; United Services Club London. 4to 3 pp. Bifolium. Twenty-two lines. Text clear and complete. Fair on aged paper with minor damage repaired with archival tape. Franked with broken red wax seal and two postmarks to 'Captain Saml Brown R.N.' at Inverleith House Edinburgh. Despite the fact that Martin has 'given <Leppings> the Credit of every improvement in the Service' Napier happens to know 'that other people are deserving of more credit than him' and he wishes to 'bring forward some great names like yours' to 'the Lords & the Country' at the second reading of the Navy Officer Bill. Asks Brown if he introduced 'the Iron Tanks for water now used in the ships Holds'. Asks 'What reward did you ever get for the Cables & how long have you been allowed to supply the Navy & to what extent' Postscript relating to 'Dundonald' Lord Cochrane the Sea Wolf who "is to be restored immediately>" Apparently he was dismissed in 1814 "following a conviction of fraud" but restored in 1832 as per this letter. 16 April 1832; United Services Club, London. unknown
2444918 January 1865. 23 Prince’s Terrace Hyde Park London. 3pp 12mo. Bifolium with mourning border. In good condition lightly aged. Folded for postage. Large signature ‘Charles Eden’; addressed to ‘My dear Fanny’. Year and month added in pencil in another hand. He thanks her for her kind letter ‘and its enclosure from my dear kind old friend Mrs Quilter’. He will visit her later but at present he has ‘several melancholy duties to attend to which prevent my leaving London’. He is also ‘wanted at the Admiralty next week - altho’! - I am not much fit for work!!’ Returning to Mrs Quilter he asks the recipient to ‘tell her that I do not forget all her kindness to me as a Boy - & the kind way she used to try to get me out of scrapes’. He ends with remembrances to her and her husband. 18 [January 1865]. 23 Prince’s Terrace, Hyde Park [London]. unknown
18273Cosham near Portsmouth . 9 December 1862. 1p. 12mo. In fair condition on aged paper. Newspaper cutting of obituary laid-down at foot. He asks to be sent 'some Printed cards for the Election of Poor Brother Moss' Son'. These are wanted 'to send to a friend in Warwickshire as also to one in Surrey - for them to Distribute.' Cosham [ near Portsmouth ]. 9 December 1862. unknown
254412 December 1872. On letterhead of Moorhill Shedfield Fareham Hants. See his entry in the Oxford DNB. 1p 12mo. With thin mourning border. Extraction from an album has resulted in some wear to the border at the right of the page: otherwise in good condition lightly aged. Addressed to ‘My dear Major’ and signed ‘Thos Sabine Pasley’. He is sorry the recipient ‘can’t come on Wednesday’ but he has ‘the best possible reason for not doing so’. He asks to be remembered ‘very kindly to your father on that day’. He asks if he can ‘come on Wednesday week’ as he has engaged a family illegible to meet him that day. 2 December 1872. On letterhead of Moorhill, Shedfield, Fareham, Hants. unknown
2589117 September 1944. On letterhead of 22 Draycott Place S.W.3 London. See the entry on Admiral Tupper in the Oxford DNB: ‘After the death of his first wife he married second on 24 June 1933 Caroline Maud Abadie 1863-1948 the widow of General Sir Henry Richard Abadie; she was the daughter of Colonel Fanshawe Gostling of the Royal Berkshire regiment.’ 4pp 12mo. On two leaves of blue paper in stamped and postmarked envelope addressed to ‘Mrs. Henderson / c/o Lady Edwina Lewin / Salthrop House / Wroughton / Wilts.’ A long letter in a not entirely straightforward hand. She begins by discussing the recipient’s husband’s improving health she appears to say the handwriting makes the entire transcription doubtful that she ‘has had a dreadful “night mare†time’ over her husband’s health: ‘he began working again at “The Chelsea Reserve W†with Colonel Boyes-Lyon and did too much & had heart attack on July 29th. when I had to take him into the Royal Masonic Hospital for a specialist to attend’. This takes us around half-way through the letter. The second half is no less opaque. 17 September 1944. On letterhead of 22 Draycott Place, S.W.3 [London] unknown
25825‘Navl Hospl Naval Hospital Plymouth / June 21st. 1834’. See his entry and that of his son in the Oxford DNB. Hornby served as Superintendent of the Royal Naval Hospital and Victualling Yard at Plymouth between 1832 and 1838. This item is 2pp 12mo. Bifolium with thin mourning border. Fifty lines neatly and closely written. In fair condition lightly aged and worn with slight damage and a few closed tears around gutter. Folded for postage. Signed ‘Phipps Hornby’ and with recipient ‘My dear Sir’ unnamed. Pencil note giving note by recipient at head of first page giving prices for butter and cheese ‘for the Year 1834’. A naval hero oversees victualling: ‘I have been giving the best consideration in my power as to the price that should be fixed as a compensation for the Butter and Cheese now served to the Ordinary in the event of its being discontinued and am of opinion that if six pencec Pr. Pound for Butter and five pence for Cheese were allowed it would be as fair a price as could be put upon articles which must necessarily vary so much in value.’ That price ‘would not be opposed by the Ordinary here’ and ‘If there should be any grumbling it will arise from the Prices I have named not putting the Men in the Ordinary quite upon the same footing with the Men in the Dock Yard & Victualling craft the Three halpence a day allowed to these latter being an excess over what I propse to give to the former.’ He thinks that it is ‘very desireable to get rid of this species of Provisions altogether it being a Nuisance and a loss in all ways.’ After a reference to ‘Fresh Beef’ he discusses the cheese he ‘proposed to sell at our late sale’ which ‘tho at present sound and good I should not get 20 shillings per Cat. bid at so that it remains on hand but if a private offer is made to this amount I will take upon myself to let it go.’ He ends with a reference to ‘Mr McIntosh’ not ‘settling his accounts: it is truly vexatious’. ‘Navl Hospl [Naval Hospital, Plymouth] / June 21st. [1834]’. unknown
15903060561590. Manuscript pen and ink on paper pot watermark in neat secretary hand. 9 1 blank recto with docketing on verso ff. Folio 12-1/4 x 8 inches. Disbound first two leaves loose some light soiling and edgwear. Manuscript pen and ink on paper pot watermark in neat secretary hand. 9 1 blank recto with docketing on verso ff. Folio 12-1/4 x 8 inches. A late 16th-century manuscript listing of Admirals and Lord High Admirals of the British fleet from the reigns of Edward II to Elizabeth I. <br /> The manuscript comprises 115 entries each 6-10 lines in length with transcriptions of the letters patent associated with each appointment. It was compiled during the reorganization of the admiralty office by John Hawkins just 2 years after the English victory over the Spanish Armada. We locate three other copies of this document: two at the British Library in the Harliean collection 6843.30 and the Cottonian manuscripts collection and a third in the National Maritime Museum the latter two copies were extended at a later date into the early 17th century.<br /> Despite its title the manuscript opens with the appointments of Thomas de Coleton in 1264 during the reign of Henry III and William de Leiburn in 1286 during the reign of Edward I. The final entry is for Charles Howard appointed by Elizabeth I in 1585 and who several years later led the English to victory against the Spanish Armada. Provenance: Sir Thomas Phillipps; H.P. Kraus unknown
1998111990Great Britain: The Hydrographer of the Navy. Paperback. Admiralty List of Radio Signals. Volume 31. 1998/99. ALRS 3 1 1998/99. Radio Weather Services and Navigational Warnings. Illustrated. 430 pp. We carry a wide selection of titles in The Arts Theology History Politics Social and Physical Sciences. academic and scholarly books and Modern First Editions and all types of Academic Literature. . Very Good. Paperback. 1st Paperback Edition. 1998. The Hydrographer of the Navy
1998111989Great Britain: The Hydrographer of the Navy. Paperback. Admiralty List of Radio Signals. Volume 32 1998/99. ALRS 3 21998/99. Radio Weather Services and Navigational Warnings. Illustrated. 276 pp. We carry a wide selection of titles in The Arts Theology History Politics Social and Physical Sciences. academic and scholarly books and Modern First Editions and all types of Academic Literature. . Very Good. Paperback. 1st Paperback Edition. 1998. The Hydrographer of the Navy
0117709735.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1943244660London : HMSO 1943. First Edition. Hardcover. Good copy in the original publisher's gilt-blocked and blind-bordered cloth edges very slightly toned. Some wear and tear as with age. Corners sharp with an overall tight bright and clean impression. Physical description; ix 446 p. 58 p. of plates some fold. and col. : ill. figs. frontis. maps ; 25 cm. Notes; Includes index. Admiralty Fleet Order A.F.O. 1874/41 attached. Subjects; science. Great Britain. UK. Second World War. pure and applied science. astronomy. navigation. London : HMSO hardcover
3030000923.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2018x-3030000923Palgrave Macmillan 2018. Hardcover. New. 272 pages. 8.50x5.50x1.00 inches. Palgrave Macmillan hardcover
2018384334-UE11Palgrave Macmillan 2018. Hardcover. Good. Original pictorial boards 8vo. Palgrave Macmillan hardcover
2019x-3030130835Palgrave Macmillan 2019. Paperback. New. reprint edition. 292 pages. 9.25x6.10x0.61 inches. Palgrave Macmillan paperback
20111-3846558141LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing 2011. Paperback. New. 200 pages. Russian language. 8.66x5.91x0.46 inches. LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing paperback