852 résultats
187029538Montgomery Alabama: John G. Stokes & Co. State Printers 1870. 7 1 blank pp. Stitched in original printed green wrappers. Light old folds wrappers lightly spotted Very Good. Contemporary inscription at head of front wrapper "Respects of G. Horton Mobile." A Bostonian who had moved to Mobile as a young man Horton was Mayor of Mobile at this time. Previously he had been an advocate of public education and had served on Mobile's school board. During the Civil War he was jailed for Unionist sympathies. During Reconstruction his advocacy of civil rights placed his life in constant danger.<br /> <br /> The Report is a chapter in Alabama's bitter Reconstruction strife. It attacks Dr. N.B. Cloud State Superintendent of Public Instruction who was regarded by unreconstructed Alabamans as a Scalawag for his support of Reconstruction and the Republican Party. The Report also attacks G.L. Putnam whom Cloud had named Mobile's superintendent of education an appointment which other Mobile educators refused to recognize. <br /> Cloud brokered a compromise-- for which he lacked authority-- by making Putnam superintendent of Emerson College known as the 'Blue School' a Negro school run by the American Missionary Association. The Report accuses Cloud and Putnam of illegally diverting public funds to the support of the Blue School.<br /> Ellison 1597. John G. Stokes & Co., State Printers unknown
187031292Montgomery 1870. 23 1 blank pp with original printed title wrappers. Text lightly dusted wrappers dirty stitched. <br /> <br /> This case is a chapter in Alabama's bitter Reconstruction history. Mobile School Commissioners claimed that George L. Putnam Superintendent of the Mobile schools had mishandled funds which were supposed to be used to support the free public schools. Putnam had been appointed Superintendent by N.B. Cloud State Superintendent of Public Instruction whom unreconstructed Alabamans considered a Scalawag. <br /> Putnam used public funds as authorized by Cloud for the support of a school for Negroes. The outcome of the case turned on whether the Commissioners were properly established under the laws and Reconstruction Constitution of Alabama. This brief reviews the history of the Mobile School System and the controversy. unknown
1846List2863New Orleans Louisiana 1846. Single letter three 8 x 10 inch pages. Torn at folds some tears repaired with archival tape; hole at location of seal; otherwise very good to excellent. John Holt Rice 1818–1878 was the son of a Presbyterian minister and nephew of Archibald Alexander founding professor of the Princeton Theological Seminary from which Rice graduated in 1845. When he wrote this letter he was working as a city missionary to the poor in New Orleans. Rice would spend his career ministering around the southern United States before his death from yellow fever. His correspondent is John Cameron Lowrie 1808–1900 a Scottish immigrant fellow Princeton graduate and a missionary in Colonial India. When his health became too precarious to remain abroad Lowrie returned to serve with the Board of Foreign Missions.<br /> <br /> The subject of missions boards was part of the Old School-New School controversy and schism in the Presbyterian Church particularly over whether missionary work should be primary the Old School view or secondary the New School view to the Church’s work.1 Those holding the latter view were satisfied with the work of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABCFM which was not a specifically Presbyterian body. Those of the former view believing that the Church’s missionary board ought to be itself Presbyterian formed the Western Foreign Missionary Society. When the Church’s second schism occurred in 1837 the Western society was <br /> renamed the Board of Foreign Missions BFM and headquartered in New York City.<br /> <br /> In this letter Rev. Rice finds himself in the delicate position of being an Old School supporter of the BFM ministering to Congregationalists and New School-raised supporters of the ABCFM. He writes to Rev. Lowrie requesting that copies of the BFM’s monthly Missionary Chronicle be sent to him in a timely manner as this was “a matter of some importance to us who love our own board of foreign missionsâ€:<br /> <br /> “You are probably aware that our churches in this city are composed of very heterogeneous materials many of the members are from New England and were brought up in the congregational church and many were connected with New School churches at the north. This causes no difficulty or division All unite very cordially in support of the Old School church but the sympathies of many are with the American Board of Missions. They know nothing about ours and have some little prejudice against us for our separation. It would be very impudent to argue that question with them now or attempt to convince them that our own board ought to be patronised by those connected with one of our churches rather than the American. But I feel certain that if they knew more of our operations they would take an interest in them.â€<br /> <br /> Rice also notes that he is an editor for the New Orleans Protestant newspaper and suggests that Lowrie send “something now and then†to excite “missionary zealâ€. Of interest to scholars of Presbyterian history especially the 19th-century Old School-New School schism.<br /> <br /> 1 Rev. Dr. Michael Parker “175 Years of Presbyterian World Mission†Presbyterian Historical Society archived November 1 2023 at https://web.archive.org/web/20231101183954/http://www.history.pcusa.org/history-online/topics-note/history-world-mission. unknown
18762092902143902162Chubei Ishida Kyoto Prefecture Kamigyo 2nd 5th district and others 1876. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 2 Chubei Ishida (Kyoto Prefecture Kamigyo 2nd 5th district) and others paperback
18762092902143802198Chubei Ishida Kyoto Prefecture Kamigyo 2nd 5th district and others 1876. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 2 Chubei Ishida (Kyoto Prefecture Kamigyo 2nd 5th district) and others paperback
184021491840. Graphite and ink and wash in sepia and brown ink on two sheets of heavyweight wove paper 8 1/8 x 11 inches 207 x 280 mm the full sheet. With a hard horizontal crease along the top sheet edge approximately 2-inches from the top. A strip of non-archival tape along the center sheet edge where the two sheets were joined. Minor uniform toning throughout consistent with age. unknown
185021481850. Graphite and wash in sepia and brown ink on two sheets of heavyweight wove paper 10 1/4 x 7 inches 260 x 178 mm the full sheet. Sheets adhered at the verso with a strip of non-archival tape minor uniform toning throughout consistent with age. unknown
181729558Philadelphia: Printed for the Institution by Anderson & Meehan 1817. 12mo. 12pp. Disbound without wraps else Very Good.<br/><br/> The Association sought to educate young men privately; its evening classes suggest that many of its students were in the work force. Evidently free public education was not introduced in Pennsylvania until 1818; and that was for the education of indigent children only.<br/> Officers and members of the Association are listed on page 2. Hugh De Haven Jun. was President. The Association's purpose was to instruct "adult males in reading writing and arithmetic; and to incite them to the study of the Holy Scriptures." Maximum number of Association members was thirty; expulsion was permitted "for unchristian behaviour by the concurrence of two-thirds of the Association." The Association would sponsor schools and hire teachers for classes on Monday Tuesday Wednesday and Friday evenings.<br/>AI 41336 1- DLC. Not in Sabin. OCLC records only facsimiles as of November 2012. Printed for the Institution, by Anderson & Meehan unknown books
187029538Montgomery Alabama: John G. Stokes & Co. State Printers 1870. 7 1 blank pp. Stitched in original printed green wrappers. Light old folds wrappers lightly spotted Very Good. Contemporary inscription at head of front wrapper "Respects of G. Horton Mobile." A Bostonian who had moved to Mobile as a young man Horton was Mayor of Mobile at this time. Previously he had been an advocate of public education and had served on Mobile's school board. During the Civil War he was jailed for Unionist sympathies. During Reconstruction his advocacy of civil rights placed his life in constant danger.<br/><br/> The Report is a chapter in Alabama's bitter Reconstruction strife. It attacks Dr. N.B. Cloud State Superintendent of Public Instruction who was regarded by unreconstructed Alabamans as a Scalawag for his support of Reconstruction and the Republican Party. The Report also attacks G.L. Putnam whom Cloud had named Mobile's superintendent of education an appointment which other Mobile educators refused to recognize. Cloud brokered a compromise-- for which he lacked authority-- by making Putnam superintendent of Emerson College known as the 'Blue School' a Negro school run by the American Missionary Association. The Report accuses Cloud and Putnam of illegally diverting public funds to the support of the Blue School.<br/>Ellison 1597. OCLC locates five copies as of August 2014 under two accession numbers. John G. Stokes & Co., State Printers unknown books
187031292Montgomery 1870. 23 1 blank pp with original printed title wrappers. Text lightly dusted wrappers dirty stitched. <br/><br/> This case is a chapter in Alabama's bitter Reconstruction history. Mobile School Commissioners claimed that George L. Putnam Superintendent of the Mobile schools had mishandled funds which were supposed to be used to support the free public schools. Putnam had been appointed Superintendent by N.B. Cloud State Superintendent of Public Instruction whom unreconstructed Alabamans considered a Scalawag. Putnam used public funds as authorized by Cloud for the support of a school for Negroes. The outcome of the case turned on whether the Commissioners were properly established under the laws and Reconstruction Constitution of Alabama. This brief reviews the history of the Mobile School System and the controversy. <br/>Not located on OCLC as of July 2014. unknown books
188869473Majesty's 1888. Fourth Edition stated. Hardcover. Fair. COver has wear soilng bumped corners and tears to cloth. Somewhat shaken. vii 1 136 p. Includes: illustrations diagrams maps. Errata slip present! Some illustrations have color. LIV plates. This reflects the state of the art knowledge and practice in the mid to late Victorian period. From Wikipedia: "Military engineering is loosely defined as the art and practice of designing and building military works and maintaining lines of military transport and communications. This discipline of engineering is regarded as the oldest form of engineering and is also the precursor of the civil engineering discipline. While both of these disciplines of engineering are responsible for building the same types of projects their environments differ. Military engineers construct and maintain facilities that serve military servicemen on war-fronts. Military engineers are also responsible for logistics behind military tactics. Modern military engineering requires more than civil engineering techniques. In the 21st Century military engineering also includes other engineering disciplines such as mechanical and electrical engineering techniques. According to NATO "Military Engineering is that engineer activity undertaken regardless of component or service to shape the physical operating environment. ' Military Engineering incorporates support to manoeuvre and to the force as a whole including military engineering functions such as engineer support to Force Protection Counter-Improvised Explosive Devices Environmental Protection Engineer Intelligence and Military Search. Military Engineering does not encompass the activities undertaken by those 'engineers' who maintain repair and operate vehicles vessels aircraft weapon systems and equipment." Majesty's hardcover
18992082402113510863Not Available 1899. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
185022821850. Watercolor on cream laid paper laid down to archival board 5 5/8 x 7 7/8 inches 142 x 199 mm the full sheet. In excellent condition with a signature in graphite in the lower right image area that remains illegible. unknown
184025121840. Ink and wash on wove paper 6 x 5 inches 152 x 128 mm the full sheet. In very good condition with uniform toning and some paper tape tabs and pencil inscriptions on the verso. unknown
184025111840. Ink and wash on wove paper 5 1/8 x 6 1/2 inches 130 x 165 mm the full sheet. In very good condition with uniform toning some minor surface soiling and with the right sheet edge creased. unknown
182014341820. Pen and sepia ink on cream laid paper 8 3/4 x 5 3/8 inches 222 x 136 mm. Scattered paper tape repairs on the verso in the area of the upper left corner and along the right sheet edge. Hard vertical crease along the bottom sheet edge approximately 1-inch from the bottom of the sheet. Pencil inscriptions on the verso. The image appears to have been trimmed in half with the left portion of the design lacking. unknown
185114311851. Pencil on smooth cream wove paper with a window pane drawn in gold ink 8 3/8 x 11 3/4 inches 213 x 298 mm. Signed illegibly and dated in ink and again in pencil within the lower margin of the image area. Scattered staining and toning throughout. On the verso of the sheet appear some inscriptions including the enigmatic phrase "excruciating but lucid. unknown
181123976London: T. Harper 1811. Hardcover. Good overall. By 1783 Halloran had had a checkered career charged with immorality and murder of a fellow midshipman. He made his way to South Africa as the English rector of a public school in Cape Town South Africa. He was charged wit libel for his satire 'Capabilities or South African Characteristics' mocking Lieutenant General H. G. Grey. Halloran was found guilty fined and banished from South Africa. He returned to England where he drifted in poverty. In 1818 he was charged with forging a tenpenny frank was found guilty and was sentenced to seven years transportation to Australia.<br /> <br /> On his arrival in Sydney he was immediately granted a ticket of leave by Gov. Macquarie. Simeon Lord and John Macarthur helped him establish a private school for "Classical Mathematical and Commercial Education" known as Sydney Grammar School which opened in 1820.<br /> <br /> 8vo 711pp. Deaccessed by the NY Association of the Bar Library with their stamp on the title page. Tan library cloth binding with leather gilt spine label and paper label. Cloth sunned at spine leather label chipped; slightly cracked inner front hinge; ffep partially detached. OCLC: 222398996 1 copy State Library of New South Wales. Trove 14295450. T. Harper hardcover
1900372178Philadelphia 1900. 1 page On Slater letterhead. Blank verso has paper residue where once mounted paper is quite tanned along left margin with creasing few short tears and small chips in blank margins else a good copy. 1 page On Slater letterhead. Dr. Simon Green Atkins the son of former slaves founded the Slater Industrial and State Normal School in 1892 in Winston-Salem North Carolina. The school became Winston-Salem Teacher's College in 1925 and it was the first African-American institute in America to offer degrees in elementary education.<br /> <br /> Reading in part: "Dear Friend- I hope we may see you and some of your friends at the meeting to which you will find and sic invitation enclosed not present.<br /> Our students will also appear in Association Hall Germantown the following evening.Your kindly interest in our cause will be greatlyt appreciated. unknown
1895106051895 reliure demi-chagrin bordeaux in-quarto à coins (binding half shagreen and corners), dos 5 nerfs (spine with raised bands) - entre-nerfs à fers spéciaux (specials blocking stamps) et titre frappé or (gilt title), mors et coins à double filet (joints and corners with double gilt line), papier imitation chagrin aux plats (paper imitation shagreen on the cover), tête dorée (top edge gilt) - gouttière rognée (fore-edge smooth), marque-page en tissu (bookmark in tissue), couverture conservée (cover preserved - library edition), exemplaire nominatif (personal specimen), illustrations de l'auteur (author's illustrations), quelques pages signalétiques de l'Ecole +XII+413 pages, 1895 à Paris Libraires-Imprimeurs Réunis,
18432110502151103632Suharaya Mohei 1843. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 5 Suharaya Mohei paperback
189225687Croyden. W.D. Hayward. 1892 1892. Hardcover. sm 4to 25cm xiv509p. photogravure frontis portrait and 6 plates including folding plan coloured in outline and another photogravure portrait plate list of subscribers indexes expertly rebacked in black cloth with black leather label original green gilt crested boards t.e.g.a fine sound copy thus rare Tgc. - Whitgift Grammar School traces its origins to the "common school" founded in Croyden by John Whitgift Archbishop of Canterbury in 1596. The school was housed in new buildings in 1871 as a day school. This history gives extensive biographies of students along with their nicknames used in the School. Croyden. W.D. Hayward. 1892 hardcover
18832111902160201166Eitaro Hirose Kizo Kajita 1883. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Eitaro Hirose Kizo Kajita paperback
18852080502106508022Not Available 1885. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Not Available paperback
1802VIEN0046Wien, Schönfeld 1802. 112 S., 1 Kupferstich, Interimsbroschur, Umschlag an zahlr. Stellen unterlegt, Schnitt etw. verstaubt, abgegriff., einige Knickspuren, innen sauber und gut. Selten!