408 résultats
18930002122CROTON-ON-HUDSON WESTCHESTER COUNTY NEW YORK. Good. 1893. On offer is a super original manuscript relic of late 19th Century secret societies and fraternal organizations being an 1893 - 1895 IMPROVED ORDER OF RED MEN TRIBES Minutes Book. The book proper published specifically for the Club has printed forms for the IMPROVED ORDER OF RED MEN TRIBES. Pages on the left side of the open ledger have a Printed Heading with space for filling in information by hand. The page heading reads: "HUNTING GROUNDS OF" "WIGWAM OF" "TRIBE NO" "IMP. O.R.M." "SLEEP" and "MOON G.S.D.4" then below the heading information is printed information for the TRIBE to record Minutes Activities Events the INITIATION OF NEW MEMBERS etc. Includes such titles as: "Keeper of Wampum" "Application of Paleface" "Record of Previous Council Fire read" "Twig box was opened by" "New Business" "Council Fire was then Quenched" etc. Almost all pages are filled in with various handwritten minutes and notes about the REDMEN meetings including dates 1893-1895 place Croton-on-Hudson New York events New Member Induction Bill needing Payment Committee Reports Problem members General Problems Plans Political Stands etc. Pinned-on to one of the pages is a 2 page handwritten letter on "Improved Order of Red Men Wigwam of Kitchawau Tribe No. 237" letterhead. We cannot help but note that this book and the Society it represents predates the Washington Redskins baseball team controversy declaring the team name racist yet this fraternal organization clearly honors Native Americans and stands as an homage to their tribal attributes. Please read the Wiki article after the description. The ledger is also a treasure trove of genealogical and social history of the Westchester County area with many many names of members and their activities. The book has a leather spine and corners leather edged with gilt paper title label on front cover 8.5" x 13.5" pages printed on watermarked paper "Kenilworth" approximately 200-300 unnumbered pages. The front cover is split at its spine fold and is almost disbound. Internally a couple signatures including the first are shaky; one page is loose and is pinned-on to another page otherwise the pages are quite nice - tight bright and clean with writing that is clear and fully legible. HISTORICAL NOTES: Wiki: The Improved Order of Red Men traces its origin to certain secret patriotic societies founded before the American Revolution. They were established to promote Liberty and to defy the tyranny of the English Crown. Among the early groups were: The Sons of Liberty the Sons of St. Tammany and later the Society of Red Men. Their rituals and regalia are modeled after those used by Native Americans. The organization claimed a membership of about half a million in 1935 but has declined to less than 38000. Notable members: Theodore Roosevelt Warren G. Harding and Franklin D. Roosevelt. ; Manuscript; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF RED MEN FRATERNITY IMPROVED ORDER OF THE RED MEN KITCHAWAU TRIBE CROTON-ON-HUDSON WESTCHESTER COUNTY NEW YORK WASHINGTON REDSKINS SECRET PATRIOTIC SOCIETIES AMERICAN REVOLUTION THE SONS OF LIBERTY THE SONS OF ST. TAMMANY THE SOCIETY OF RED MEN DEGREE OF POCAHONTAS KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS SOCIETIES BROTHERHOODS SECRET SOCIETIES MOUND CITY LODGE PYTHIAN CASTLES PYTHIAN SISTERS DRAMATIC ORDER KNIGHTS OF KHORASSAN THE NOMADS OF AVRUDAKA PYTHIAN SUNSHINE GIRLS AND THE JUNIOR ORDER ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR HALF CENTURY MATRONS CLUB PRINCE HALL AFFILIATION SISTERHOODS RELIGION AOKMC THE ANCIENT ORDER OF KNIGHTS OF THE MYSTIC CHAIN MASONS MASONIC FREEMASONS CHIVALRY ARCANE OCCULT AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT AUTOGRAPHED AUTHORS DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES JOURNAL LOG PRIMARY SOURCE FIRST HAND ACCOUNT SOCIAL HISTORY PERSONAL STORIES LIVING HISTORY ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN DOCUMENT MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT MANUSKRIPT PAPIER OGGETTO D'ANTIQUARIATO ATTO VELINA DOCUMENTO MANOSCRITTO CARTA ANTIGÜEDAD HECHO VITELA DOCUMENTO MANUSCRITO PAPEL . hardcover
0012221Midland Maryland: Improved Order of Red Men Tribe. Fair with no dust jacket. Hardcover. On offer are two historically significant ledger books spanning 10 years maintained by Chiefs of the Improved Order of Red Men of Tioga Tribe No. 126 in Midland Maryland. PLEASE REQUEST FULL BIO ON THE RED MEN FROM SELLER excluded due to word count restrictions. The first ledger spans 1919-1923 and the second covers 1931-1936. Each ledger contains the annual Roll of Chiefs where attendance is kept for each weekly meeting. This is followed by hundreds of pages of meeting minutes wherein the intimate detail of the tribes attendance discussions motions officer nominations elections and tribe finances are meticulously recorded. Excerpts follow to give the flavour of the ledgers: .Moved and Sec. Charles Bevidge be suspended from all rights and privileges of the order carried. Moved and Sec we porospone sic class initiation until Dec 30 on account of Indusstrial condition. Carried Oct 28 1919. .Moved and second Bill of Brother Jas Albright for one load of cal be received and paid. Carried. $4.25. Moved and second that a committee of three be appointed and work in conjunction with the other lodges to see about getting a doctor on committee Bro Harry Sulser John Laslo James Albright Motion carried March 16 1920. Brother McGee reported on Halloween social to be held between Red Men and Ladies Bible class. The committee desires that the Red Men get up an entertainment and Ice cream and all members are requested to bring a parcel post Oct 18 1921. Council fire was kindled for the purpose of burying our deceased brother William C. Muir. Sachem appointed. Bros Lindsey Baiman Leese and Sarage as pallbearers. Brother Muir died at the age of 81 years Sunday evening July 23 at 5: 30 oclock July 26 1935. This was a special meeting held in celebration of the 37th anniversary and 204 Washington birthday celebration. The orders Washington Birthday Ritual was used. The slations were filled as follows: long list of names and positions of tribe members.At the close of the Ritualistic Service brother Taylor was called on and he read a history of the Tribe after which the Tribe adjourned to partake of a Banquet prepared for the occasion. Dart Ball and the other amusements were indulged in Feb 22 1936. Committee reported having visited Black Hawk Tribe at Westerport. That an open air District meeting will be held in Westernport Sat Sept 19 carried. Carnival committee reported progress Moved and Sec Resignation of Bro Hunt be accepted and his successor elected. Moved and Sec we go into election of Jr. Sagamore carried . Moved and Sec we paint the outside of building for Carnival. Carried Aug 6 1936. The ledgers are absolutely brimming with names of Officers and Members of this Red Men tribe making them as interesting to a genealogist as they are to one who studies fraternal societies Maryland in the early 20th century or the Red Men more specifically. The ledgers measure 9x14 inches. They each contain hundreds of un-numbered pages. The pages ledgers are custom printed for the Red Men by Labor Saving Lodge Books in Cedar Rapids Iowa. They contain handwriting on most pages filling in the printed fields. There is tipped in ephemera and extra pages particularly in the second ledger. Both ledgers show signs of their age. Pages are in tact but the spines are loosening and the cloth hardcovers are beginning to crack and peel. Writing is legible. Overall Fair. Note: Ask seller for a link to the 19th Century ledger of a New York tribe of the Red Men being sold separately. ; Manuscripts; Folio 13" - 23" tall; Signed by Author . Improved Order of Red Men Tribe hardcover
1850BB.23.009<p><em><strong>Sixth-plate daguerreotype; Accompanied by the original identification slip and research notes.</strong></em></p><p>Sixth plate daguerreotype with some slight fading and scratches professionally cleaned and recased in a modern case in 1992 with receipts for the restoration provided. Accompanied by a period inked note reading: Dwiouski / Showsky for Hannah / Ischunuongwandt / Tunangwant.</p><p>A very early image of an indigenous subject in a Hudson's Bay Company blanket. A note accompanying the photograph identifies the sitter as "Dwiousky / Showsky for Hannah / Ischunuongwandt / Tunungwant." This would identify the sitter as Seneca from the area close to the Tunungwant Creek - also known as the Tuna Creek - near the Pennsylvania / New York border in the Bradford area. The image has additional significance for its portrayal of a Hudson Bay Company blanket many of which were traded to indigenous traders in in Canada as part of the company's fur trade efforts. The Seneca traded with other tribes and it is possible the blanket was procured through intertribal trade as HBC blankets were primarily traded amongst First Nations populations to the north. Overall a very uncommon image perhaps one of the earliest photographs of an indigenous subject adorned in an HBC blanket.</p>
201088769Arts Centre; Et Al. New. 2010. Hardcover. 0907738982 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- 64 pp. ; 51 ills. -- with a bonus offer-- . Arts Centre; Et Al hardcover
200161862Brasilconnects. New. 2001. Paperback. 0904454673 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- Text in English. 112 pp. With 90 ills. 86 col. . 29 x 25 cm. -- with a bonus offer-- . Brasilconnects paperback
0521211751New. Brand new and still unused unknown
188076162Washington:: Government Printing Office 1880. Second Edition -- With Charts. publisher's lettered cloth. Cloth worn at the spine and extremities but tight and sound; contents apart from the vertical splits mentioned above fine. . Folio. Four charts in pocket at rear of volume. Printed "Compliments" slip of Sheldon Jackson U. S. General Agent of Education in Alaska tipped onto the title page. The collectors of the materials recorded in the Schedules were E. S. Smith assisted by William J. McDonnell Winter 1892 and 1893. There are Aleutian words and phrases recorded in ms. on dozens of pages; and in addition illustrations of a side view and ground plan of a native Western Alaskan house with detailed description; drawings of characteristic features of Eastern and Western Alaskan natives snowshoes boats paddles etc. Two of these illustrated descriptive pages have neat vertical splits not affecting legibility. Government Printing Office, hardcover
2016Manohar-9781138650930Routledge 2016. Hardcover. New. Routledge hardcover
2016Manohar-9781138650930Routledge 2016. Hardcover. New. Routledge hardcover
2011L3 box661 a13cd<p>Pedro Páez's History of Ethiopia 1622 Volumes I & II The Hakluyt Society Third Series Volumes 23 & 24. Edited by Isabel Boavida Hervé Pennec Manuel João Ramos; Translated by Christopher J. Tribe. Published by Ashgate for The Hakluyt Society 2011. Hardcover.</p> The Hakluyt Society by Ashgate Publishing Limited. hardcover
183236785Washington DC: Gales & Seaton 1832. Newspaper. Good. Newspaper. Approx. 21" x 18." 4 pages. Two folds. Sheets are detached. Newspaper has light toning. Name of R. J. Ingersoll New Haven Con" written top of issue. Possibly the same Ingersoll that served 4 terms in Congress from 1825-1833. <br /> <br /> Entire contents of page 2 concern "The Cherokee Case. Opinion of the Supreme Court delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall January Term 1832. Samuel A. Worcester vs. The State of Georgia." The case is also printed on the first column of page 3. Supreme Court case of Samuel Worcester. From the Brittannica website: <br /> <br /> Worcester v. Georgia involved a group of white Christian missionaries including Samuel A. Worcester who were living in Cherokee territory in Georgia. In addition to their missionary work the men were advising the Cherokee about resisting Georgia's attempts to impose state laws on the Cherokee Nation a self-governing nation whose independence and right to its land had been guaranteed in treaties with the United States government. In an effort to stop the missionaries the state in 1830 passed an act that forbade "white persons" from living on Cherokee lands unless they obtained a license from the governor of Georgia and swore an oath of loyalty to the state. Worcester and the other missionaries had been invited by the Cherokee and were serving as missionaries under the authority of the U.S. federal government. They did not however have a license from Georgia nor did they swear a loyalty oath to that state. Georgia state authorities arrested Worcester and several other missionaries. After they were convicted at trial in 1831 and sentenced to four years of hard labour in prison Worcester appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.<br /> <br /> Worcester argued that Georgia had no right to extend its laws to Cherokee territory. He contended that the act under which he had been convicted violated the U.S. Constitution which gives to the U.S. Congress the authority to regulate commerce with Native Americans. The Constitution also bars the states from passing laws that alter the obligations of contracts-in this case treaties. Several treaties between the Cherokee and the U.S. government recognized the independence and sovereignty of the Cherokee Nation. Furthermore Worcester argued that the Georgia laws violated an 1802 act of Congress that regulated trade and relations between the United States and the Indian tribes.<br /> <br /> The Supreme Court agreed with Worcester ruling 5 to 1 on March 3 1832 that all the Georgia laws regarding the Cherokee Nation were unconstitutional and thus void. Writing for the court Chief Justice John Marshall held that "the Indian nations had always been considered as distinct independent political communities retaining their original natural rights as the undisputed possessors of the soil." Even though Native Americans were now under the protection of the United States he wrote that "protection does not imply the destruction of the protected." Marshall concluded:<br /> The Cherokee Nation then is a distinct community occupying its own territory.in which the laws of Georgia can have no force and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter but with the assent of the Cherokees themselves or in conformity with treaties and with the acts of Congress. The whole intercourse between the United States and this Nation is by our Constitution and laws vested in the Government of the United States.<br /> <br /> Georgia however ignored the decision keeping Worcester and the other missionaries in prison. Eventually they were granted a pardon and were released in 1833. Pres. Andrew Jackson declined to enforce the Supreme Court's decision thus allowing states to enact further legislation damaging to the tribes. The U.S. government began forcing the Cherokee off their land in 1838. In what became known as the Trail of Tears some 15000 Cherokee were driven from their land and were marched westward on a grueling journey that caused the deaths of some 4000 of their people.<br /> <br /> The Supreme Court agreed with Worcester ruling 5 to 1 on March 3 1832 that all the Georgia laws regarding the Cherokee Nation were unconstitutional and thus void. Writing for the court Chief Justice John Marshall held that "the Indian nations had always been considered as distinct independent political communities retaining their original natural rights as the undisputed possessors of the soil." Even though Native Americans were now under the protection of the United States he wrote that "protection does not imply the destruction of the protected." Marshall concluded:<br /> The Cherokee Nation then is a distinct community occupying its own territory.in which the laws of Georgia can have no force and which the citizens of Georgia have no right to enter but with the assent of the Cherokees themselves or in conformity with treaties and with the acts of Congress. The whole intercourse between the United States and this Nation is by our Constitution and laws vested in the Government of the United States.<br /> <br /> Georgia however ignored the decision keeping Worcester and the other missionaries in prison. Eventually they were granted a pardon and were released in 1833. Pres. Andrew Jackson declined to enforce the Supreme Court's decision thus allowing states to enact further legislation damaging to the tribes. The U.S. government began forcing the Cherokee off their land in 1838. In what became known as the Trail of Tears some 15000 Cherokee were driven from their land and were marched westward on a grueling journey that caused the deaths of some 4000 of their people. Gales & Seaton unknown
197321784Nez Perce Indian Tribe of Idaho 1973. Cloth. Near Fine/Near Fine. SIGNED BY ALLEN SLICKPOO SR. --THE PROJECT DIRECTOR OF THE NEZ PERCE TRIBE-- across the title page. A very solid copy to boot of the 1973 stated 1st edition which was limited to 2000 copies. Clean and Near Fine in a crisp Near Fine dustjacket. Octavo dozens of black-and-white photos throughout complementing the text. Nez Perce Indian Tribe of Idaho unknown
2026x-0198932774Oxford University Press 2026. Hardcover. New. 610 pages. 6.89x1.58x9.84 inches. Oxford University Press hardcover
191137502Bruxelles: Publiées par le Ministere des Colonies 1911. First edition. Aqurelles par Norman-H. Hardy. 403 photographs and drawings 2 fold-out maps and 29 full- page folio-size plates containing 20 color drawings 15 color plates of raffia designs 53 photographs of carved figures and objects and 14 photographs of 18th century Bombala embroidery. 1 vols. Large 4to. Original tan printed portfilo. Book loose in fasicules. Fine. wrappers slightly worn. First edition. Aqurelles par Norman-H. Hardy. 403 photographs and drawings 2 fold-out maps and 29 full- page folio-size plates containing 20 color drawings 15 color plates of raffia designs 53 photographs of carved figures and objects and 14 photographs of 18th century Bombala embroidery. 1 vols. Large 4to. Publiées par le Ministere des Colonies unknown
2016x-1138650935Routledge 2016. Hardcover. New. 432 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.25 inches. Routledge hardcover
2010x-041545039XRoutledge 2010. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 320 pages. 9.49x6.46x0.75 inches. Routledge hardcover
1992x-041503874XRoutledge 1992. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 272 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.00 inches. Routledge hardcover
2005x-0080446671Elsevier Science Ltd 2005. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 538 pages. 9.50x6.75x1.50 inches. Elsevier Science Ltd hardcover
2020x-036723081XTaylor & Francis 2020. Hardcover. New. 6th edition. 478 pages. 9.75x7.50x1.25 inches. Taylor & Francis hardcover
25623820-nnew. unknown
2020x-0367228289Routledge 2020. Hardcover. New. 264 pages. 9.21x6.14x0.75 inches. Routledge hardcover
2011x-0415571782Routledge 2011. Hardcover. New. 2nd edition. 384 pages. 9.21x6.46x0.83 inches. Routledge hardcover
MA 9781138650930USA Edition . New. Brand New! Fast Delivery US Edition and ship within 24-48 hours. Deliver by FedEx and Dhl & Aramex UPS & USPS and we do accept APO and PO BOX Addresses. Order can be delivered worldwide within 6-10 days and we do have flat rate for up to 2LB. Extra shipping charges will be requested if the Book weight is more than 5 LB. This Item May be shipped from India United states & United Kingdom. Depending on your location and availability. unknown
2024x-1032397829Routledge 2024. Hardcover. New. 304 pages. 9.00x6.00x9.00 inches. Routledge hardcover
1998x-0415147085Routledge 1998. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 242 pages. 9.50x6.25x1.00 inches. Routledge hardcover