638 résultats
1894045748New York: Longmans Green & Co 1894. First Edition. Hardcover Original Cloth. Very Good Condition. Light sheflwear scattered mild foxing. 276pp ads. This is the first US edition. Size: Octavo 8vo. Previous owner's book-plate inside front cover. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Inventory No: 045748. <br/><br/> Longmans Green & Co hardcover books
16718Women education Sports Album of female students at The Baldwin School for girls in Brywn Mawr PA from 1903-1905. Photo album with 111 cyanotype photographs of various sizes ranging from 2 in x 1 in. to 4 in x 2.5 in. Original paper boards. 40 pages. 5.5 x 7.25 in. Album records the life of young students at the all-female Baldwin School including their activities in sports such as basketball and field hockey time spent living in the dormitories and extracurricular diversions with school friends. <br/><br/>The school was founded in 1888 as "Miss Baldwin's School for Girls Preparatory for Bryn Mawr College" as there was an increasing movement to create formal education opportunities for young ladies across the country. Images of the social lives of students at the residential academy. Includes photos of a pastoral drive "View from my window 1903" and two photos of the interior with one clearly showing a banner for Harvard University. Photos of student life such as the 1904 "Freshman Cake-Walk" and a picture with a small dog the "4th class mascot". Many photos in which girls dress in overalls as if they were pioneers or farmers. "Yours-Truly" written under photo of figure in pants jacket and tie. Images from a trip to Newport Rhode Island to visit Fort Adams and a female friend called "Teddy."<br/><br/>Many photos document the sporting life and outdoor activities for students most notably of field hockey games and practices including team photoswith team members identified as "Hoot" and "Tat" among more conventional names. Photo captioned "At the 6th or 7th game" that shows a playing field which is being walked over by women in ankle-length dresses and there are other photos of hockey practice. Another photo shows a girl walking with field hockey stick in hand: "'Husky' Smith 1904". Photo of Basketball practice outside of a school building and girls holding rackets on on either side of a tennis net. Photos of the girls sledding down a snowy hill. Name of original owner handwritten in black ink on label on front cover "Mrs. Samuel J. Gummere 2 Regent Street Worcester Mass." Boards worn at extremities. Images very crisp. Very good condition. unknown books
1580045019Venice: Stamerla della Luna 1580. First Edition. Hardcover Vellum. Very Good Condition. Contemporary limp vellum soiled a few old stamps to spine lacking front endpaper and pastedown torn. A few pencil marks to table and errata otherwise clean - a nicely printed edition of Sonsovino's history of the world. It appeared a year before his celebrated history of Venice. liv 2 303pp. Size: Quarto 4to. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 045019. <br/><br/> Stamerla della Luna hardcover books
196717647New York: Free School of New York Fall 1967. First Edition. Wraps. Very good. 5.5" x 8.5" approx. saddle-stapled booklet. Touches of toning and wear at corners. Mailing information at rear wrap. Interior clean and bright. Very good. 12pp. <br/><br/>Catalog for the fall 1967 term at the Free School of New York also known as the Free University of New York. Established in 1965 as a reaction to traditional academia FUNY was in the tradition of 1960s protest movements run by committee with open enrollment and granting no degrees. This catalog which lists the school's 24 class offerings demonstrates a focus on the humanities with courses in filmmaking history fine arts and drama. Class offerings were predictably left-leaning with titles like "A Quest for Self" "The Thought of Mao Tse-Tung" and "Black Power and the "Ghetto Uprisings" and the faculty included counterculture figures such as Ed Sanders and Tuli Kupferberg. An ambitious and ephemeral offshoot of the 1960s counterculture movement FUNY closed after only a few years in operation. Free School of New York paperback books
1665045383Madrid: Pablo de Val 1665. First Edition. Hardcover Vellum. Good Condition. Full contemporary vellum with remains of ties endpapers replaced title penned to spine and old pen notation to top page edge text block loose from binding title with old ink annotations and a large repair to the right edge - it is repaired by pasting an old original drawing of a villa to the verso small tear to first page of dedication with an old repair. Foxing mostly minor browning some worming in the margins with old paper repairs touching a letter or two in the bottom margin and touching the gloss in a few spots in the inner gutter but minor and contained overall one old marginal note mostly clean. 32 372pp. Nuñez de Castro was the official chronicler of Philip IV of Spain the second to last of the Castilian kings. Size: Quarto 4to. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: History; Antiquarian & Rare. Inventory No: 045383. <br/><br/> Pablo de Val hardcover books
1947243457New York: Communist Party USA 1947. Magazine. 15p. staplebound wraps horizontally creased as issued minor handling wear and soil 9.25x11.15 inches. CPUSA internal publication directed towards members. Cover piece is an interview with William Z. Foster "The Party is Everything;" among other reports on organizing there is an article titled "John Brown would be proud of his namesake club in Frisco" about multi-ethnic organizing in San Francisco pressuring local businesses to hire Black men and women. Communist Party, USA unknown books
18982508N.P. 1898. Brown paper bound composition book comprised of 43 manuscript pages and 6 original crayon drawings by a young girl. First page excised. Ownership stamp of Hattie Plegge used on sheets toward the center of the book; teacher's signature Miss Sewell on nearby middle page. A fascinating and research-rich notebook in which a young girl practiced her hand in ink and pencil by copying out popular song lyrics folk ballads and poetry. <br/><br/>While the composition book of Hattie Plegge contains no overt indication of the girl's geographical location there are signs within her work that point toward the North. Poetry about General Grant and Abraham Lincoln as well as an original crayon drawing of an eagle marked "Union Forever" suggest that her community belonged to the Union during the Civil War. Additionally though she writes no date school year or age in the book her cursive and her drawings suggest that she was under the age of 12 at the time of composition. As she strives to mature her hand Hattie selects a fascinating array of works to copy out with care; and they provide valuable information about the types of music and poetry that were available to an elementary school girl. Some of the selections come from folk songs such as Billy Boy listed in the Roud Folk Song Index. Others were more widely popular tunes of the time including In the Gloaming 1877 On the Banks of the Wabash 1897 and I Guess I'll Have to Telegraph my Baby 1898. Mixed with these are also longer poems. Though Alice Cary's Suppose is listed as a recommended copybook text in Ballads for Little Folk 1874 others take a more adult political leaning as is the case with suffragist Frances Willard's work Grant is Dead copied out twice the second being more careful and Oliver Wendell Holmes' Old Ironsides. Whether the poetic works were provided by a teacher suggested by a parent or chosen by Hattie herself that give a glimpse into the social influences surrounding her. As a reminder that she is in fact a child there are 6 simple crayon drawings interspersed throughout including a Union eagle a donkey and what appears to be a schoolgirl in a cape.<br/><br/>A rich historical document with research possibilities including but not limited to paleography geography and politics in the post-Civil War era the history of education the transmission of folk songs and folk tales the history of music literature and poetry and gender studies. <br/><br/>Roud Folk Song Index 326. Ballads for Little Folk 47. unknown books
199031994NY: Norton. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1990. Hardcover. 0393028860 . First printing. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. . Norton hardcover books
193716268London: Communist Party of Great Britain 1937. First Edition. Three 12mo volumes. Staple-bound pamphlets; printed wrappers; 161619pp. Minor external soil; Very Good. First three volumes in the official study programme of the CPGB. The first volume exposes readers to the "general crisis of Capitalism;" the second provides first lessons in the theoretical framework of Marxism; the third provides a brief course in the history of socialism from the utopians through Marxism-Leninism. The series eventualy ran to six volumes. Communist Party of Great Britain unknown books
18482532Brimfield MA 1848. Columbian Writing Book #7 Designed for Use in Schools. Blue stitched paper wraps with flag and manicule motifs to front cover and general directions for proper handwriting on rear cover. Completely filled and comprised of 20 densely written manuscript pages in ink and pencil created by Ada N. Kenney of Brimfield Mass who leaves her ownership information in pencil on the front wrap. A lovely and fascinating historical document tracing both the method by which a young woman developed her hand as well as how such lessons served the additional purpose of indoctrinating her into socially-appropriate femininity.<br/><br/>Ada Kenney's copybook contains a neat and precise hand throughout which suggests that she was educated and belonged to the rising middle class. Meticulous and organized Ada breaks her book into two clear sections. The first 9 pages contain precisely copied and repeated sentences such as "Assiduity in labor produces fame and fortune" "Cherish sentiments of charity towards all men" "Discretion of speech is superior to eloquence" and "Immodest words are in all cases indefensible." As the lines get repeated 19 times each in the alphabetical order dictated by the first word it is clear that Ada is being trained in an elegant cursive. Yet the content of the lines and their repetition also serve as lessons to her about the value of female silence virtue and chastity. By the second half of the book Ada commits another 9 pages to carefully copying out poetry; and here her choices push up against the demure repetitions of the previous pages. "Long Fanny Gray" "The Troubedour" Gaily the Troubadour Touched his Guitar and "Highland Mary" are each ballads of romance and flirtation love and loss. These selections suggest a burgeoning interest in courtship and men as well as women's expressions of desire and jealousy. By the final 2 pages Ada shifts into much less organized quotations jotting down random lines of poetry in French and English alongside several names of friends and relatives. <br/><br/>A fascinating and valuable historical document with research potential including but not limited to paleography education theory and practice gender studies literature and poetry and the transmission of folk tales and folk music. unknown books
1662045440London: James Cottrel 1662. First Edition. Hardcover Full Leather. Good Condition. Small folio. 18th century full calf worn and dry corners heavily rubbed and rounded spine dry rehinged in white cloth front endpaper cracked. Modest browning and foxing top of title excised and replaced but otherwise clean internally. With neat and expertly drawn nativities of the Esson family early on dating from the early 18th century. Neat marginal notes and manicules scattered throughout and a few corrections to the text. An intersting early English work of astrology and the science of nativities. Lacking the portrait. 16 219 1 pp. Size: Folio. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: Science & Technology; History. Inventory No: 045440. <br/><br/> James Cottrel hardcover books
1940045372Madrid: Espasa-Calpe 1940. First Edition. Hardcover Quarter Leather. Very Good Condition. 9 volumes in quarter brown calf over pebbled brown cloth 1940-1946 - spines gilt in compartments. Light rubbing to spines and hinges a touch of edgewear and a few corners bumped slight dampstain to rear board and page edge of volume 3 - bright overall and unmarked internally. Illustrated. Vol. 1: El Victorial. Crónica de Pero Niño conde de Buelna por su alférez Gutierre Díez de Gámes. LXXXII 397 pp Vol. 2: Crónica de Álvaro de Luna Condestable de Castilla LXIV 484 pp Vol. 3: Hechos del condestable Miguel Lucas de Iranzo. Crónica del siglo XV LVI 507pp Vol. 4: Memorial de diversas hazañas. Crónica de Enrique IV ordenada por Mosén Diego de Valera XCII 413pp Vols. 5 y 6: Crónica de los Reyes Católicos por su secretario Fernando del Pulgar CLX 456pp 523 pp Vol. 7: Historia del Emperador Carlos V por Pedro Mexia XCV 618 pp Vol. 8: Crónica del Halconero de Juan II Pedro Carrillo de Huete XV 561 pp Vol. 9: Refundición de la Crónica del Halconero por Lope de Barrientos CCIII 328 pp Size: Octavo 8vo. 9-volume set complete. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Over 3 kilos. Category: History; Inventory No: 045372. <br/><br/> Espasa-Calpe hardcover books
1976M6732N.p.:: U.S. Department of Health Education and Welfare 1976. 1976. DHEW Publication No. NIH 76-1110. 265 x 204 mm. 4to. v 132 29 pp. Printed wrappers; spine ends torn and glued down. Good. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1976. unknown books
1946183051New York: the Party 1946. Two issues of the newsletter Nos. 1 and 2 20 and 23p. respectively stapled wraps 8.5 x 11 inches both rather worn No. 2 with cover starting to separate No. 1 with a few small stains on rear wrap else generally good condition. Entire issue 1 is devoted to Peter Wieden's "Notes on the National Question" a collection of three of his essays the most recent from 1942; includes sections on Spain and Germany. Issue 2 is devoted to Robert Thompson's "Notes on the Negro question" with questions and answers. the Party unknown books
189125493<p>"<i>.neither have the right to inflict punishment or impose restrictions that will maim or injure the health of the children. As to the particular case under consideration I cannot believe that you are unduly severe or that your restrictions and exactions will hurt a robust stubborn pupil.</i>"</p> <b>EDUCATION. GEORGE N. SHEPARD.</b>Autograph Letter Signed as Chairman of the School Board to Mary D. Webster October 5 1891 West Epping New Hampshire. 2 pp. and envelope.<p><b><br /></b></p><p><b>Complete Transcript</b></p><p> <i>West Epping N.H.</i></p><p> <i>Oct. 5 1891</i></p><p><i>Dear Miss Webster</i></p><p> <i>Yours of the 3d inst. is at hand.</i></p><p> <i>Your school supplies as ordered are sent by mail this morning. We have no Swinton's Second Readers now on hand therefore I put in for you a McGuffy's Second Reader which I hope will serve your purpose.</i></p><p> <i>In relation to authority of teachers you perhaps already understand that they have the same as parents while the children are under their care and that neither have the right to inflict punishment or impose restrictions that will maim or injure the health of the children.</i></p><p> <i>As to the particular case under consideration I cannot believe that you are unduly severe or that your restrictions and exactions will hurt a robust stubborn pupil.</i> <2> <i>Of course you will be expected to discriminate so as to properly modify your discipline to suit each particular case and be especially tender with such as are weak and frail physically or mentally. Try to place yourself in the same relation to the children under your care and instruction as that of a faithful conscientious mother possessed of good sound common sense who while she loves her children with a true and motherly love is profoundly impressed with the importance and necessity of restraining them and of training them in habits of studiousness and industry as well as all the other useful activities and you will have a guiding principle that will never lead you very far in wrong methods.</i></p><p> <i>My decision then is this you have a right in general to deprive a pupil of part of the regular noonday intermission and mid-session recesses to make up delinquencies provided that you substitute a sufficient number of recesses by himself alone. This is indeed a most fitting discipline to apply to a pupil who stubbornly and persistently wastes in idleness the time regularly assigned for study.</i></p><p> <i>Yours truly</i></p><p> <i>G. N. Shepard</i></p><p> <i>Ch. Sch. Bd. of Epping.</i></p><p><b>George N. Shepard</b> 1824-1903 was born in Epping New Hampshire and educated in the public schools and at Hampton Academy. He married Rowena Lawrence Thyng 1823-1911 in 1845. He taught school was a land surveyor and served as a justice of the peace. By 1860 he was listed as a farmer living with his wife and four children. He represented West Epping in the state legislature from 1860 to 1862. During the Civil War he rose to the rank of captain in Company I of the 11th New Hampshire Infantry from 1862 to 1865. He was wounded at both the Battle of Fredericksburg and the Battle of Cold Harbor. Afterwards he returned to farming then engaged in the mercantile and lumber business. He was postmaster of West Epping from 1876 to at least 1895 and chairman of the school board from 1886 to at least 1895.</p><p><b>Mary D. Webster</b> 1854-1935 was born in New Hampshire. By 1870 both she and her older sister Sarah 1848-1929 were school teachers still living with their parents in West Epping Chester township southeastern New Hampshire. By 1910 the two unmarried sisters still lived together in Chester township but Mary listed her occupation as farming at home.</p> books
189241503Mecklenburg VA 1892. Sewn gatherings disbound with remanants of perished leather spine. Wear and soiling throughout; some chips occasionally causing minimal textual loss; last leaf quite ragged to inner margin significantly affecting final third of text. Writing in general legible and neat. Good condition withal. 29 leaves of lined wove paper including 4 half-leaves. Lacking first leaf pp 1 - 2 of lecture notes; 4 stubs. Inconsistently hand-numbered throughout.Manuscript notes in ink and/or pencil to recto and verso of leaves with varying amounts of writing per pg. ~1500 words. Some intratextual hand-drawn illustrations and graphs to lecture notes. 11-1/2" x 7-1/2" <br/><br/>A notebook that appears to have been intended for lecture notes kept by Presley Llewellyn Hinton Jr. during a science class at Randolph-Macon College from 1858 - 59 but that was employed for several different purposes by other members of his family during the same period and throughout the Civil War. The Hintons were slaveholders owning at least 13 slaves according to the 1860 slave schedule and longtime prominent members of the community. The lecture notes which comprise hand-numbered pp 3 - 30 and 51 - 55 are from lectures taught by B. Puryear Professor of Chemistry and Natural Philosophy; subjects covered include fairly introductory material regarding dew evaporation electricity elements of chemistry hydrogen and nitrogen gas carbon etc. and the like. Following the first section of lecture notes three pages by one of the Hinton parents we speculate Mrs. Hinton detail Presley’s service in the Confederate Army Company A 3rd Virginia Cavalry as well as that of his brother William from 1861 - 63 largely their leave-taking and visits home: “My Son William Emmet Hinton joind the Confederate Army and left home on the 14th day May 1861 to join his company Mecklinburg Cavalry at Lockets Store near Lombardy Grove. Many relatives and friends met . . . to take leave of their dear sons relations & friends who consented with cheerfulness to leave their quiet and happy homes to battle against our enemy the Yankee who are worse than Indian savages Yea to go through all the hardships privations difficulties and attending a camp life. . . . My Son Presley Lewellyn Hinton joind the Confederate Army and left home on the 26th day May 1861 . . . He would have gone on with his brother William but he was not prepared as he had just returned from the University of Virginia . . .” Approximately 15 remaining pages interrupted by the last section of Presley’s lecture notes are filled with a detailed account record of tuition charged for teaching the daughters and some sons of local families which we speculate was kept by the boys’ sister primarily because of the type of lessons taught. These included piano lessons worsted work and samplers grammar arithmetic geography the history of England and philosophy; fees for ink copy books and other supplies are also included. Another account record follows for bonds of some sort in the same hand as other and a love letter from Presley to a Miss Annie fills both recto and verso of the final leaf. Interspersed with these and sometimes written over top in pencil are the youthful scribblings and pencilled math work of James H. Palmer also of Mecklinberg dated 1892; he appears to have used the manuscript for scrap paper. All in all a uniquely faceted manuscript illustrating many aspects of the life of one Virginia family during the Civil War as well as the paper shortages that likely occasioned such thrift. hardcover books
181820200395New York NY: E. Conrad. 1818. Wraps. A circular that was distributed by the New York Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and its full title is: "Circular of President and Directors of the Institution for the Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb and the Petition to the Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty of the City of New York with their Favorable Report and Patronage &c." It's purpose is to promote and inform the citizens of New York of both its needs and what had already been done for the school by its Board of Directors and the New York City Legislator. Not a public appeal for donation but encourages generosity. It begins with the accomplish that was written by Silvanus Miller Esq. stating that the directors of the school were "impelled by a sense of duty and a desire to promote the welfare of those unfortunate persons committed to their superintending care to make this appeal to a charitable and benevolent public. deprived of their sense of hearing and the power of speech they posses all those sensibilities and affections . and without the fostering care of benevolent instruction and the steady and kind supervision of endearing friends these children must languish in ignorance remain the monuments of negligence of inattention and oftentimes of wretchedness." It continues on to describe some of the education these children will receive such as "the two handed alphabet" sign language and " the knowledge of connexion sic and the significance of the letters to their uses in spelling and reading and the power of arithmetical numbers combinations and actual calculations" along with the belief that these instructions "must be taught early in life." The next part of the circular is the written petition from the school to the legislators of New York City. It draws comparison between London who had recently funded a school for the Deaf and Dumb and New York often calling New York the "London of America". It includes some information on the founding of the school in the prior year 1817 the current amount of pupils and their needs. At the end there is a listing of the resolved items on the petition in which the legislators agreed to fund $500 towards the school as well as to fund ten students' tuition costs not to exceed $40 per student per year and paid the rent on the school room. It concludes with Board minutes thanking the legislators for the funding as well as detail the cost of schooling and tuition at the school. OCLC-0 Aug 2020 16 pgs. Measures 8" x 5" The school is still in existence today and is in fact known as the second oldest school for the deaf in America. It was renamed at some point to The New York School for the Deaf and is currently located in White Plains NY. Disbound from presumably a larger accumulation of circulars covers lacking. E. Conrad. paperback books
195023773U.S.A.: No Photographer Noted 1950. Black and white image; classroom studio students preparing a portrait students observe; approx. 8" x 10" size; not dated circa 1950 or so; no photographic studio or place noted; light wear back rubbed in a few spots; in very good condition. Photography. Not Bound. Very Good. No Photographer Noted Paperback books
191524850United States of America: No Publisher Noted 1915. Sepia-toned image taken in front of a school building; an integrated class group girls & boys with one girl wearing a Girl Scout hat with "GS" visible on the crown. Photo measures approx. 6" x 8" ; on cardstock mount 10" x 12" size. Image faded a bit still fairly clear mount with a little edge tips wear and rubbing. No photographic studio date or school is identified; circa 1915; in good condition. Photograph. Not Bound. Good. No Publisher Noted paperback books
24458New York N.Y.: Not Published 1910. Group includes: Photography: C. 1915 6 ½" x 8 ¼" grammar school class photograph with very large flag back-drop. Evidence of the gradually changing demographic in New York City as black migration took place from the south and whites left for the suburbs. Edges chipped soiled; plate numbers at lower left; in good condition. Young Jewish man standing portrait; 6" x 9" overall size; H.Smith 109 Second Avenue N.Y. backstamp edges chipped a bit; in good condition. Group of well-dressed Jewish men in a meeting hall; some religious furnishings are visible candelabra lecturn cabinet. Approx. 7 ¼" x 9 ½" size; no photographer or studio identifiers. Group of 9 snapshots mounted on black paper album pages a couple identified of women at various locations circa 1920s. A circa 1915 photo-both strips; one having 2 poses the other four of a young Bertha Levy. The larger strip with the back stamp of Tarr 164 W. 126th St. A real-photo postcard of a larger photograph group-shot of a group of young girls between infant and young teen ages accompanied by 4 women. With the studio identifier of L.I. Harris The Pioneer Photographer of South Beach S.I. A group of 9 loose snapshots and a trimmed real-photo postcard. One identified on back as "Grandstand B.H.P. Sept. 30 1914" and another as taken at Garnerville Labor Day 1913. Ephemera: 13 Individual Rating Report Principal's Report on Teacher's Service for Bertha Liebovitz Levy at P.S. 68 and P.S. 70 1925 - 1943. Approx. 5 ¼" x 7 ¼" size. A couple of typed letters signed by Morris Scherer principal of P.S. 70 one regarding an award to be present to Ms. Levy the other a letter of condolence upon Ms. Levy's death. With 6 handwritten letters 1921 - 1941 complimenting Ms. Levy's kindness & teaching skills and also a request for information for details on a mutual friend's life. Condition: Some of the photographs with edge-wear creases others very good. Paper ephemera with old fold lines some ageing and wear. Overall the group in good condition. . Photgraphy. Not Bound. Good. Not Published Paperback books
1614045460Frankfurt: Avbriana 1614. First Edition. Hardcover Vellum. Very Good Condition. 2 volumes in contemporary vellum titles penned to spines. Modest soiling and wear one hinge just starting to crack but quite sound overall. Moderate mostly even browning to pages. The title of the second volume is Chronici Chronicorum Politici. 14 1432 10pp; 14 1336 21pp. Size: Octavo 8vo. 2-volume set complete. Previous owner's name ink-stamped. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 2-3 kilos. Category: History; Inventory No: 045460. <br/><br/> Avbriana hardcover books
1893042302New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons 1893. Revised Edition. Hardcover Original Cloth. Near Fine Condition. 2 volumes in cloth decorated to look like vellum with gilt green and rose decorations to boards. A lovely edition. Size: Octavo 8vo. 2-volume set complete. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Inventory No: 042302. <br/><br/> G.P. Putnam's Sons hardcover books
17181African American Education Frank W. Padelford. "Christian Schools for Negroes."New York: Board of Education of the Northern Baptist Convention 1938. 23 pages. With 10 photo-illustrated images of HBCU campuses. Original illustrated wraps. 9 x 5.5 inches. "The intelligence of the Negro race has often been called in question but their rapid response to the educational opportunities which have been given to them refutes any such groundless assertions." Includes brief histories and writeups on Morehouse College Atlanta University Spelman College Virginia Union University Bishop College Storer College Shaw University Benedict College Jackson College Leland College Florida Normal and Industrial Institute The Mather School and The Ministers Institutes. In very good condition. Only 2 copies in an institutional or university collection according to OCLC Worldcat. unknown books
199376323San Francisco: the Department 1993. 185p. 8.5x11 inches slightly rubbed wraps. The Curruculum Guide Committee that put this book together was composed of Chinese American educators. the Department unknown books
1926043736New York: Oxford Univ Pr 1926. Cloth. Very Good. Withdrawn from Harvard University Library with usual marks Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Sociology & Politics; Inventory No: 043736. <br/><br/> Oxford Univ Pr hardcover books