37 résultats
1867M10587Albany:: Charles van Benthuysen & Sons 1867. 1867. 4to. cxxvi 743 pp. Original half maroon morocco over marbled boards raised bands gilt-stamped spine title; joints cracked and extremities rubbed. Inscription on ffep.: "Presented by the Hon EP More Esq to John Service Jr July 21 1869. Bought at the Service auction by George Holmes and presented to HK Smith by George Holmes." Very good. RARE. This massive census was conducted during the Civil War published just 2 years after. "The immense expenditures of the war brought the burden of a heavy debt upon the country which could only be met by taxes upon property and productive incomes and novel schemes were devised by Congress for raising these revenues. As the Census makes inquiries concerning the amount of capital invested in manufactures the cost of materials and labor and the value of products it incidentally discloses the profits of businesses and the amount of incomes. The utmost difficulty was therefore found in many cases in arriving at a correct return upon these several subjects. Men otherwise intelligent would often fail to discern or profess to disbelieve that the Census was not in some way connected with taxation. . ." – Preface. Franklin B. Hough 1822-1885 scientist physician practicing in Somerville in St. Lawrence County New York one-time mineralogist writer and historian. He was most important becoming the first chief of the United States Division of Forestry the predecessor of the United States Forest Service. He was among the first in the US to call attention to the depletion of our forests becoming known as the "father of American forestry". "In 1854 Hough was appointed as superintendent of the 1855 New York State census the first complete census of the state. He returned to Lewis County in 1860 to settle in Lowville New York. The same year he published A history of Lewis County in the state of New York. In 1862 he started a periodical The American Journal of Forestry. Due to a lack of subscribers he retired it after only a year. <br /><br /> In 1861 with the advent of the American Civil War Hough worked as an inspector for the United States Sanitary Commission. . . Ten years after supervising the 1855 New York State census Hough returned to the job of overseeing the 1865 state census. Reviewing the returns he noted with alarm a declining trend in the availability of timber. Finding additional evidence in the federal census of 1870 which he also supervised he presented a paper entitled On the Duty of Governments in the Preservation of Forests to the 1873 meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Portland Maine." Hough then went on to produce the official 1877 Report on Forestry. When the Division of Forestry was established in 1881 he became its first chief. See: "Franklin B. Hough 1822-1885". U.S. Forest Service History. Forest History Society. KPZ Charles van Benthuysen & Sons, 1867. hardcover books
1865M10588Albany:: Weed & Parsons Co. 1865. 1865. Lithographed onionskin sheet 558 x 468 mm; short closed tear. Blind-stamped red covers gilt-stamped cover title; extremities rubbed covers soiled. Very good. Weed & Parsons Co., 1865. unknown books
195047402Port-Au-Prince: Imprimerie de L'Etat 1950. Ocavo. Staple-bound pamphlet; printed card wrappers; 22pp. Mild external toning and wear; Very Good. Instructions for census-takers in the 1950 Haitian general census. Imprimerie de L'Etat unknown books
200272115Addis Ababa 2002. Paperback. Very Good. 2 vols labeled Part I and Part II. folding forms viii 200 iv 502p. Green wrappers. 30cm. <br/><br/> paperback books
190122214Washington: Printed for the use of the Committee 1901. 41 3 blank pp. Original printed wrappers disbound loose. Institutional rubberstamps Good. OCLC 58605918 1-Cornell Univ. Printed for the use of the Committee unknown books
180234659Washington: The Apollo Press by Wm. Duane & Son 1802. 8vo. 5-88pp. plus folding table. Contemporary marbled paper covered boards rebacked with calf<br/> <br/>The second American Census.<br/> <br/>The octavo edition of the complete returns of the second American census the first to be printed by official order following the very rare folio edition of the previous year. When the delegates of the Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia in 1787 the population of America was a great unknown. Aside from the expected reduction in the male population due to the recent war hoards of Loyalists had fled to Canada while throughout the 1780s large numbers of families sought new opportunities in the frontier along the Ohio. These dramatic shifts combined with a known but unquantified increase in the number of births per annum created a definite need for some sort of official count. Under Madison's leadership six categories were determined for the first American census of 1790: heads of family free white males over sixteen free white males under sixteen free white females other free persons and slaves. Despite the usual hesitancy of the people to offer such personal information to government officials the effort was a resounding success; but due to rapid growth and increased contact with Indians it was clear that the next census would require even more statistical enumeration. In early 1800 Congress passed an act mandating a new census. The present effort contains a new layer of schedules including places of residence new age group brackets for free white males and females and most importantly the qualification that untaxed Indians be left off the roll of "other free persons." All of the states are represented as well as the aforementioned territories and other regions such as the eastern and western districts of Pennsylvania and Virginia and the District of Columbia here noted as part of Virginia. Such luminaries as Thomas Jefferson and Timothy Dwight of Yale called for even more specific information such as economic standing occupation and distinctions between immigrant and natural-born free people; but Congress for now ignored their appeals. The total population with corrections is given as just over 5.3 million. A most important record of the growth of the United States at a key moment in the history of American demography.<br/> <br/>Howes R221; Sabin 70147; Evans 3442; Sowerby Jefferson's Library 3289; Anderson The American Census pp.14-23; Cassedy Demography in Early America pp.206-42; Reese Federal Hundred 88. The Apollo Press, by Wm. Duane & Son unknown books
1841100110Folio leather spine and tips with paper board covers paper label with hind written title on front cover 379 pp. Top cover almost detached and front endpaper loose library label on front pastedown a good deal of edge and extremity wear foxing throughout. The sixth census has population presented by county and principal town showing wealth and resources as well as population. There are excellent summary tables on economic and business statistics according to type of industry crops grown etc. Southern populations are divided into free white free black and slave. Thomas Allen, hardcover books
1839175031839. 26th Cong. 1st Sess. SD13. 1839. 43 1 blank pp disbound. Scattered foxing. Spotting of top margins Good. unknown books
190869191Washington: Government Printing Office. Good. 1908. Hardcover. This is an ex-library copy with usual library marks. The contents are complete with folding map at the front. Good. . Government Printing Office hardcover books
190869192Washington: Government Printing Office. Good. 1908. Hardcover. This is an ex-library copy with usual library marks. Contents are complete with folding map at the front. Good. . Government Printing Office hardcover books
190769178Washington: Government Printing Office. Good. 1907. Hardcover. This is an ex-library copy with usual marks. The library binding is soiled and rubbed new endpages. The contents are bright and complete with a folding map. A Good copy. . Government Printing Office hardcover books
19531312941Washington: United States Government Printing Office 1953. Hardcover. Folio; VG- hardcover; black spiral binding with no text; boards have moderate shelf wear with marks and residual stains in front and to the rear otherwise boards are in tact; text block is moderately age toned with tanning on the top and bottom of the title page and slight discoloration of pages otherwise clean; 28p.<br /> <br /> <p>Shelved in Netdesk office just above the leather-bound African game hunting books on the Ephemera bookshelf. 1312941. FP New Rockville Stock. United States Government Printing Office hardcover books