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25086‘H M Ship America Palermo. / Septr 11. 1813.’. An excellent letter describing the state of affairs in Sicily during the period of British occupation 1806-1814. The recipient Sir Sidney Smith see Oxford DNB was second in command to Sir Edward Pellew head of the Mediterranean squadron which included Bromley’s ship HMS America a 76-gun third-rater launched only three years before in 1810. The present letter is written with the ship on the verge of a notable engagement described in the European Magazine March 1814 pp.245-247 quoting from the London Gazette. From Bromley’s entry by P. R. Eldershaw in the Australian Dictionary of Biography it would appear that he was merely incompetent and that the true embezzler of the £8388 Naval Office and Treasury funds discovered in 1824 was his convict clerk Bartholomew Broughton. Bromley certainly did all he could to pay the money back. The present item is 4pp 4to on a bifolium. In good condition lightly aged with folds for postage. Signed ‘E F. Bromley’ and with valediction addressed to ‘my Dear Sir Sidney’. Begns: ‘My dear Sir: / by the return of the Thistle to the Fleet I embrace the opportunity of giving you my little Information of what is going on here: it would seem by the precautions taken that we are a little afraid. The Sicilians are not quite so well-disposed towards us as we could wish - one Hundred Men as a Picquet from each of our Regts. mount Guard every night - the Artillery Horses are constantly kept saddled. and the troops told to hold themselves in readiness to turn out at a moments warning.’ He continues: ‘Their Parliament is now sitting - and have been extremely Violent on the Subject of Quarantine at Messina. Genl. Montreson Sir Henry Tucker Montresor had given their board of Health some cause of complaint respecting his Interference this came here officially and they noted his conduct censurable and that two of their Members should be sent to England with a Complaint to the Prince Regent this was however lost in the House of Lords.’ He reports that ‘such is their dread of the Plague’ that the Sicilians would not allow the ‘Horses lately arrived from Egypt’ to land: ‘they are gone to Spain - but to obviate the difficulty arising from the want of those Horses they voted 15000 Dollars for the purchase of others in this country’. The second half of the letter covers topics including Prince Belmonte’s departure from office the king never going ‘to the city’ the throwing open of ‘all reserves respecting. Game’ that do not have ‘a wall of a certain Height around them’ the ill effects of ‘regulations. respectingg the Necessaries of Life’: ‘Fish is hardly to be procured - and yesterday not an Egg to be found in the Markett’ a report from Naples of a renewal of the armistice ‘another from Messina Via Clabria says Austria has joined the Allies and that Hostilities have recommenced’. Bromley concludes: ‘all here looking out anxiously for the expected promotion - I am much afraid I shall loose sic my good Captain the future admiral Sir Josias Rowley 1765-1842 who most probably will be Included. This loss I shall feel in no trifling degree - for I have experienced the utmost kindness from him’. After a reference to ‘Harris’ he ends with ‘respects to Captn. Smith’. ‘H M Ship America Palermo. / Septr 11. 1813.’ unknown
1807PHO-1A Paris, Dépôt général des Cartes et Plans de la Marine et des Colonies, 1807 et De L’Imprimerie Impériale, 1808 RARE ENSEMBLE COMPLET en 3 volumes TEXTE ; 2 forts vol. in-4° ; (2)-LVI-704 pp.-32 pl. h.-t. repliées in-fine (I-XXXII)/(2)-VIII-692 pp.-1 pl. h.-t. Repliée sur papier bleuté , relié demi cuir , dos lisse avec titre et tomaison , tranches mouchetées , mouillure angulaire sur 7 planches, petites rousseurs sur les planches . ATLAS ; 1 volume grand in-folio (560x445) ,page de titre-1 fnch. (Table )-39 cartes et vues h.-t. , dont 29 à double page ,dressées par l'ingénieur hydrographe C. F. Beautemps Beaupré et gravées sur cuivre par E. Collin , relié demi cuir , dos lisse ,cachets répétés , petites rousseurs .
1833PHO-1811Paris,1833, in-folio, demi-reliure basane rouge, dos lisse, muet (rel. mod.), illustré avec 1 portrait en frontispice, lithographié par Lemercier d'après A. Maurin, [1] f. (titre gravé avec vignette), 20 planches disparates (8 cartes gravées sur acier dont 6 doubles, 11 vues reliées (dont 5 coloriées) et 15 planches en feuilles, papier des plats gondolé, quelques rousseurs aux planches libres avec défauts en marges.Recueil réunissant : 1 carte générale ; 1 carte de Nouvelle-Zélande (côte partielle); 1 carte du Pacifique; 1 de Nouvelle-Guinée; 1 de l'Archipel des îles Viti; 1 de l'île Tonga-Tabou; 1 des îles Vanikoro; 1 de Nouvelle-Zélande (nord); des vues de paysages; de personnages locaux (dont 7 coloriées).
1808PHO-1626Paris, Imprimerie impériale, 1808. 2 grands et forts volumes in-4 (32x24), lvi, 704 p., 33 pl. ; viii, 692 p., relié demi basane et coins moderne, dos avec auteur, titre, tomaison, lieu et date, exlibris en page de garde, non rogné, tome 2 non coupé, petite mouillure au tome 2, petites rousseurs aux illustrations du tome 1. Exemplaire sur papier bleuté, complet de son illustration mais sans son atlas de cartes
5928depuis 1791 jusqu’à nos jours.In 12 cartonnage romantique à décor doré, gaufré.Frontispice gravé par PISAN,sous serpente,titre, 87 pages,1 page de titre,Vancouver,Ile Chatam,Iles Taïti,Iles Sandwich, Iles Salomon, Iles Moluques, Tasmanie,Nouvelle Zélande,Tonga…Tours Mame & Cie 1853 édition originale, très bon état
18521133811852 A Tours, Ad Mame et Cie, imprimeurs-libraires - 1852 - Petit in-8, cartonnage de l'éditeur, décor à froid et dorures sur les plats et le dos,titre en doré au dos - 187 p.
1950GIT009e3Bordeaux Imprimerie Delmas 1950. In-8 broché 152pp. Illustré de 30 photographies dans le texte et 5 cartes à pleine page.
9313Paris, Librairie Ch. Delagrave, 1883. 1 volume in-4, 459 pp., reliure demi-chagrin, plats cartonnés marbrés légèrement frottés, intérieur propre et frais, ouvrage richement illustré d'après les photographies rapportées par l'auteur (52 illustrations dont 38 hors texte) et enrichi de cartes géographiques, très bon état.
1795900161AG[Weimar]:, Friedrich Johann Justin Bertuch, [um 1795]. Kupferstich, Blattmaß: 25,5 x 20 cm.
1870171471Hobart: Alfred Winter c.1870. An icon of a vanished race These compelling studio portraits of Truganini c.1812-1876 and William Lanne 1834-1869 issued in the 1870s by Hobart photographer Alfred Winter have long been burdened by the colonial myth of "the last of the Tasmanians". Truganini a Nuennone woman and daughter of Mangana endured the killings of close family members forced relocation to Oyster Cove and the continual intrusions of settler violence. Although repeatedly described as the final Tasmanian Aborigine this was a racist fiction disproved by the many descendants of her contemporaries. Lanne often named as Truganini's third partner was seized with his family in 1842 confined on Flinders Island later moved to Oyster Cove and into a Hobart orphanage and eventually went to sea as a whaler. Labelled the "last male" of his community he died in 1869 of disease exacerbated by these conditions. Their portraits must be read within the 19th-century "salvage" ethnography that treated Indigenous peoples as vanishing subjects and sought to record them before their supposed extinction. From Bishop Francis Nixon's 1858 photographs of the tiny imprisoned Oyster Cove community to Charles Woolley's 1866 studio images for the Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition photography served a pseudo-scientific narrative of disappearance. Woolley's vignetted portrait of Truganini became an icon of this myth even as it misrepresented a living and surviving people. The belief in extinction proved tenacious: Truganini's death was taken as definitive despite later corrections - including Robert Hughes's reminder that the last full-blood Tasmanian Aborigine was Suke who died in 1888. Sir J. W. Agnew's 1888 paper "The Last of the Tasmanians" included in this volume typifies the period's primitivist and racist assumptions attributing the community's collapse not to colonial violence but to the supposed nature of these "children of the forest" and their mistreatment by "all kinds of whites". Two albumen print photographs each approximately 150 x 100 mm both blind-stamped at lower left "A". Report with numerous folding plates and tables. Winter Photo. "Hobart Town"; laid down on their original mount of thick card 190 x 247 mm with respective captions in ink in the lower margin: "Trucanini last of Tasmanians a woman" and "Billy or William Lannie the last native Man of Tasmania". Report: original dark greyish green sand-grain cloth gilt-lettered spine. Both prints in very good condition; the mount free from foxing. Report a little shaken opaque tape repair to rear inner hinge otherwise very good. Mourouf Hasian Jr Debates on Colonial Genocide in the 21st Century 2020; Robert Hughes The Fatal Shore: A History of the Transportation of Convicts to Australia 1787-1868 2003; Lyndall Ryan The Aboriginal Tasmanians 1996: James R. Ryan Picturing Empire: Photography and the Visualization of the British Empire 1997. hardcover
405 p. Hardcover Very good condition; drk. green w/ gilt & blk. decorations
Profusely illustrated with black and white photos and illustrations. Features: The Jogi's Curse - An Indian government official is cursed by a wondering jogi (priest) and the prophecy is tragically fulfilled; An Underground Wonderland - Fantastic photo-illustrated article on the Carlsbad Cavern of New Mexico; Adrift in the China Seas - Sent off to fetch help for their crippled steamer, H.W. Millard, G. Grant Simmons and their companions are blown off course and suffer an eight-day ordeal; "Watu Wa Miti" - R. St. Barbe Baker founded the "Men of the Trees" in Equatorial Africa to preserve trees which were continually being burned to secure land for cultivation - with photos; The Man Who Wanted a Change - A factory hand seeking escape travels to the South Seas, only to return sadder and wiser; Two Years in Borneo - Part I - Oscar Cook spent eight years there, the last two of which were quite strenuous - with photos; "The Man With the Buried Head" - photo of alms-seekers in India; The Promotion of Private Smith - The inside facts of an affair involving Private Smith, a young soldier in the American Army, stationed in the Philippines; The Last of the Bushrangers - Mrs. Mary J. Nichols reflects on the old pioneer days in Tasmania and the 'sticking-up' of an isolated station by the last gang of bushrangers that operated in the island - with photos; Forbidden Nepal - Hugh Walter had unusual opportunities to visit this closed state and provides interesting glimpses of the manners, customs, and principal religious festivals of the Nepalese - with photos; White Man's Magic - While exploring the interior of New Zealand the author and his companion fell afoul of a rascally Maori tohunga, or medicine man; Where Cannibals Roam - Part II - An eventful journey into the unknown interior of Papua, with photos; "Old Peter" - C.N.C. Hayter, formerly of the Royal North-West Mounted Police, describes instances of 'second sight' he witnessed among Eskimos, thus providing independent corroboration of a story about apparent Eskimo telepathy in this publication a few months ago; What Happened to Spott - A funny story about a miserly old South African storekeeper and a black mamba snake; The World's Largest Goldfish Farm - founded by Eugene Shireman of Martinsville, Indiana - with photo. 88 pages plus 16 pages of nostalgic ads. Clean and unmarked with light wear. A nice copy of this great vintage issue. Book
1980012691Hobart : Melanie Publications 1980. Facsimile . Half Calf and Marbled Boards. Fine/No Jacket as Issued. Fine Pp 80 Tasmanian Facsimile Editions No. 4 No. 193 Of A Limited Edition Of 200 Copies <br/> <br/> Melanie Publications hardcover
1911MC6-868Hobart, John Vail, Govt. Printer, 1911. original Broschur, 8?, iv, 63 p., [7] leaves of plates : ill., maps, plans (some col. and folded), berieben
0267436653.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
133060850X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
8vo, [2], 15, [3], xvi, 496, 30 [ads]pp., orig. red patterned cloth, head and foot of spine lightly chipped, small hole to base of spine.
0484740644.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1333189311.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
184321541Hobart Town Van Diemen's Land: Gilbert Robertson 1843. Very good condition. A long article in the January 17 1843 issue with detailed description of the poor planning and administration of the Probation System in Van Diemen's Land an experiment in penal discipline instituted in 1839 and finally abandoned in 1853 after much waste and misery both for the convicts and the colonists. <br /> <br /> A specific example of the station at Flinder's Bay is cited: "About 18 months ago there was a station formed at Flinder's Bay -- with a youth of the name of Smith about 19 years of age without any experience or capacity for such an office as superintendent: his qualification was that he was the son of an ex-Police Magistrate. . The gang was composed of 350 men . we have in 18 months 10500 pounds for the expenses of this gang. We enquire what was the value of their labours Nothing! What have they been doing Nothing! p3.<br /> <br /> The writer appeals to Sir John Franklin Lord Stanley and Mr. Hume to make a thorough enquiry into the system and into the "accounts and returns that go from this colony". Also with an article "The Season and the Crops" describing the excellent season with oats barley corn and wheat flourishing. Includes discussion of the Governor and the Caveat Board and "the decisions of the judges subverting titles improperly granted . having made the monied men suspicious and afraid to lend their money.". p3. With postscript describing the failure of the wheat crop in New South Wales.<br /> <br /> Newspaper approx. 17.5 x 22" 4pp 24 column inches Probation System; 19 col. inches The Season & the Crops. Vol. XI No. 32. Very good condition. Gilbert Robertson unknown
AQ24164Hobart: J. Walch & Sons s.d. c.1910s 24pp. With a title page and 31 photographic illustrations depicting the landscapes of Tasmania Australia. Sewn as issued in original publisher's gilt-tooled red paper boards. Rubbed and marked with small losses to head and foot of spine. Light scuffing to title. An attractive early twentieth century souvenir album comprised of photographic landscape views of Tasmania including Hobart Mount Wellington MacQuarie Harbour and Cataract Gorge. . First edition. Oblong octavo. [J. Walch & Sons], [s.d., c.1910s] hardcover
AQ24163Hobart: J. Walch & Sons s.d. c. 1900 14 leaves. Original publisher’s green cloth lettered in gilt. A trifle rubbed. Contemporary inked gift inscription to FEP four leaves detached. An attractive early twentieth century souvenir album comprised of photographic landscape views of Tasmania. . First edition. Oblong quarto. [J. Walch & Sons], [s.d., c. 1900] hardcover
1913MC6-870Hobart, John Vail, Govt. Printer, 1913. original Broschur, 8?, iv, 131 p., [6] folded leaves of plates : ill., maps, plans (some col.) berieben
First Edition, xii, 556, 12pp., portrait, ownership inscription of on upper blank margin of title, original brown blind-stamped cloth, lettered in gilt on spine, a nice copy. "In 1827 Walker joined the Society of Friends, his diaries contain extracts of his remarkable journeys with James Backhouse, visiting the convict settlements in Van Dieman's Land, South Wales (including, at that time, Moreton Bay), and Norfolk Island. His wife was a member of Lady Franklin's committee to visit the female prisoners. In 1843 he was appointed to a board of inquiry into conditions at the Female Factory, built by Lieutenant-Governor Arthur in 1827 in accord with Elizabeth Fry's recommendations. Worried over the growing number of prostitutes, he formed a committee to 'suppress vice' by finding employment for destitute women. In 1848 Lieutenant-Governor Denison asked him to share in the task of providing an asylum for these women, and noted in his journal: 'the very personification of a mild, benevolent, and excellent Quaker' A respected founder with Backhouse of the Society of Friends in Hobart, Walker was always ready to plead for any convict under punishment by solitary confinement or treadmill for refusing in Quaker custom to remove his hat in respect to authority, to explain to judges the Quaker aversion to oaths, or to reason against state aid to religion. Although unable to repeat his missionary journeys, he managed to visit Friends around the island and encouraged others to travel 'in the ministry' to help new Meetings on the mainland". - Australian Dictionary of Biography. Ferguson, 6473.
1883Nd102452Tasmania: Tasmanian Government 1883. 1st edition. Very Good. folio. wrappers c30pp. Tuesday January 30. No 5503. Includes Valuation Roll George Town Tasmanian Government unknown