395 résultats
18192110502151100336Not Available 1819. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Not Available paperback
18862092902139203211Not Available 1886. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 5 Not Available paperback
1832List3436Auburn New York 1832. Single four-page letter measuring 7 ¾ x 9 ¾ inches. Folded with very small tears at folds. Excellent to Near Fine. A letter written from the Auburn Theological Seminary in 1832 from the soon-to-be Reverend Thomas Reed Rawson 1803-1877 to his soon-to-be wife Louisa W. Dawes 1810–1849. Dawes who lived in Cummington Massachusetts was the older sister of Senator Henry Laurens Dawes best known for the 1887 Dawes Act.<br /> <br /> Rawson opens by commenting on the death of one of his students and his time spent in Oswego “visiting in the most fashionable familiesâ€; he felt this taught him a great deal about “human nature†which in Oswego is “peculiarâ€. He seems to have been particularly perplexed by the spiritual character he encountered in upstate New York a locus of the Christian revival movement now called the Second Great Awakening:<br /> <br /> “You know I expected that the spirit of the west was a more active . spirit than what was seen in the N.E. states & hoped by breathing this pure atmosphere to enjoy great spiritual health. How erroneous was the impression! How greatly have I been deceived! . I acted as though it was so – as though man was man only in certain latitudes. I acted as though face answered to face only when seen in the waters of N.E. & consequently that the heart of a N.E. man had no analogy to what beats in the bosom of one born in a more western longitude.â€<br /> <br /> Not only is Rawson nonplussed by New Yorkers’ religious qualities he is vehemently opposed to some of the new practices that arose from the religious revival there:<br /> <br /> “The state of things here I mean in all this country at the west is very peculiar. You have heard of ‘Old & New Measures’ I suppose. For myself I cannot approve of the latter. I find not a spirit in me to Fellowship them. Have been exceedingly tried by them as I have been in the midst of ‘new measures’ all winter. You can form but a faint idea of the excitement which is in this country in the religious community. In Oswego Co. the lay-men are going through the Co. holding meetings once a month in praying exhorting dispensing the duties of Clergymen &c. &c.; & it seems that the present state of things must result in a wide division in the churches. ‘A house divided against itself cannot stand.’ . As near as I can find out very sinister is the spirit that knows the new measures to that wild-pine which ran so extensively in the time of Edwards. The effects of it are seen in your town to this day.â€<br /> <br /> The “New Measures†were novel practices for American Christianity that came about during the Second Great Awakening mainly due to Presbyterian minister Charles Finney. These include very lengthy meetings public naming of sinners and public confessions of sin and were controversial with those who preferred a more orthodox and restrained service. Rawson accurately predicts that the new practices would lead to a schism; starting in 1837 the Old School-New School Controversy split the Presbyterian church along these lines. He later worries that such a division in the church would allow “Catholicism to take the advantage†and that “Satan is bringing this about as rapidly as possibleâ€. The appeal of a strong hierarchical Catholic church as opposed to a weak and divided Protestant one was a common worry among Protestants at the time.<br /> <br /> Rawson traces the “sinister spirit†of the new measures back to “the time of Edwardsâ€: Jonathan Edwards a key figure in the First Great Awakening of the 1730s and 40s. Given his reference to “your townâ€â€”Cummington Massachusetts—Rawson is probably referring to the so-called “New England theology†that arose from the First Great Awakening. Among other things New England theology proposed new views on man’s free will and responsibility; similar views would create controversy in Rawson’s time as he explains:<br /> <br /> “I see my own heart to be depraved & wicked beyond all observation but the fruits of the spirit I think I do love & hope they are sweeter & more sweet to my taste. I say taste the New measure-men are not taste-men but believe in the ‘motive scheme’ — By taste is meant the implantation of a new principle – love to God & is affected by the Holy Spirit. The ‘motive scheme’ implies that the sinner turns himself about in by motive merely.â€<br /> <br /> He is objecting to the idea that a sinner could redeem himself through an act of his own will—by his own ‘motives.’ Old School Presbyterianism holds a more orthodox Calvinist view wherein the redemption of the sinner is not up to the sinner’s will at all. Rawson makes an interesting comparison between New School views on the matter and states’ rights in the context of the then-ongoing nullification crisis:<br /> <br /> “The signs of the times declare most plainly to him who has wiped up his eyes that ‘the end has come upon the four corners of this earth’ i.e. the end of peaceful days for the present. Never was our Republic brought to a crisis like this. Nullification in the Political world is the same with Denunciation in the Religious world. This is my opinion; don’t know as have heard others say so.â€<br /> <br /> The nullification crisis arose when South Carolina declared that several import tariffs were unconstitutional and thus nullified them under the states’ rights doctrine of state nullification. Rawson seems to be drawing a parallel between the revivalists’ idea of the role of one’s motives in salvation and states’ rights advocates’ idea of the relationship between the states’ wills and the federal government’s. Of course the states’ rights issue would soon reach an apotheosis.<br /> Rawson closes with some affectionate lines for Dawes and advice about her own teaching job; the crossed text updates her on the Christian conversions within his family. Overall the letter provides detailed insights into the views of a more conservative theology student on the Presbyterian controversy that was soon to come to a head. unknown
187934705Unknown 1879. Ledger. Good. Ledger. Approx. 7.5" x 6". Marbled paper covered boards with black leather spine. Boards are shelf and edge worn. Leather is rubbed and chipped at the head and base of spine. A few pages have been torn out and one sheet torn in half. Old library label of "Perseverance S.S. Library" on the front paste down.<br /> <br /> Ledger consists of 106 lined pages used for recording student names classes teachers questions treasurer reports minutes of school meetings etc. No location of this Sunday School was provided in the records. unknown
18780008008Orillia Ontario. Good. 1878. On offer is a book containing minutes of the Board of Trustees Meetings of School Section No 4 covering the period from January 1878 to January 1897 that gives an insight of what issues the school board dealt with in those years including financial support expenses school building operation and selection of teachers. The book has 64 pages and includes minutes of 69 meetings two pages documenting payments to a school teacher for the year of 1879. The school was built in 1876 a little more than a year before this book was started and 7 years after Ryerson proposed his 1871 Education Act requiring adequate accommodation for students in every school section. The Meeting agenda usually included election of trustees and chair adoption of annual reports and approval of various expenses: "it was proposed by Mr. Brailey seconded by D. M. Kaughan that the sum of six dollars be appropriated for Prize that the Section do also procure at same time a Daily Register.that the Section be empowered to procure a copy of the amended School Law of Copp Clark and Co." More serious matters concerned repairs construction and school house insurance: ".a Petition to be sent into the council legalize the Muskoka road passing the school house." "Section will be instructed to issue tenders for digging a well at the school and also see to the repairing of the plaster at the School House". In 1880 the routine was interrupted when School's first headmaster Mr. Gardiner left his wife and eloped with an eighteen-year-old to Detroit telegraphing his resignation which made the Trustee Board urgently look for a new teacher: "Several applications for the position of teacher in the room of W. G. Gardiner who has scandalously absconded from the neighbourhood and deserted his post as Teacher were considered by the Trustees but action in the matter was deferred to the future meeting". Finding a new teacher was not an easy task: "The Trustees proceeded to examine three applications made for the position of Teacher in the Sec-n. none of which met their entire approval.proposed that the school be kept vacant till the end of the year that the Sec. 4 do insert advertisements in the Toronto papers for a male teacher at a salary of 300$ per annum". Only a month and a half later in the end of December they hired a new Master of the School at a salary of 260$. In addition to teaching schoolmaster's duties included lighting the fires and sweeping the school and also planting trees: "Mr. Smith teacher be allowed to plant shade trees in front of the school premises within the fence adjoining the Muskoka road and that he receive 50 c. per tree for planting the same with the understanding that in the event of any of the said trees dying during the year that he agrees to replace the same with fresh trees and it is understood that said trees shall be maple and balsam alternately.". The meeting of December 1882 approved 2$ contribution to the Ryerson Memorial Fund. In 1885 the Public School Inspection gave instructions on improvements and repairs to be done including "wood shed construction replastering of the school house increasing blackboard accommodation and fixing privies". The book contains names of School Board Trustees and teachers and of some local residents performing work for the school. Condition: Good regular age-related wear several pages are torn out and missing.; Manuscript; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF EARLY SCHOOL HISTORY ORILLIA HIGH SCHOOL LOCAL SCHOOLS ONTARIO SCHOOL EDUCATION SCHOOL TRUSTEES ORILLIA HISTORY 19TH CENTURY CANADIAN HISTORY HISTORY OF SCHOOL EDUCATION ONTARIO SIMCOE COUNTY SCHOOLS HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT MANUSCRIPTS SCHOOL BOARD MEETINGS MINUTES PUBLIC SCHOOLS INSPECTION SIMCOE COUNTY SCHOOL SECTORS SCHOOL SECTOR 4 ORILLIA TEACHERS TEACHER SALARIES 19TH CENTURY 1880S 1870S CANADIANA . unknown
188230734Roanoke VA: Southern Methodist Publishing House 1882. First Edition. Ledger. Fair. Quarto. 134 pages. Black cloth covered boards with black leather spine. Most pages used for hand written accounts of attendance records. Form book published by the Southern Methodist Publishing House. Binding is edge worn shaken and falling apart. Hinges are broken but boards are still attached. Spine is chipped head and base. Last leave has the upper third portion torn off. Pencil notes on the end sheets. Fair only. <br /> <br /> Written on the front paste down are the two Superintendents of the school from 1883 to 1886: "J L Gresham Supt from April 1882 to Nov 16 1883 J C Hornsby Nov 16 1883 to fall of 1918." Contents contain several student names. Southern Methodist Publishing House unknown
18952111902158405040Common trading company bookstore 1895. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 292 50p Size: 20cm Common trading company bookstore paperback
18432110502151103632Suharaya Mohei 1843. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 5 Suharaya Mohei paperback
18812091202133201037Shinshichi Okajima and others 1881. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 50 books in total Shinshichi Okajima and others paperback
183027903Canton: SunQua Studio 1830. Silk covered boards. The 12 bird images are full page finely done with grass rocks and flowers with shrubs or trees. Unusually the half page images are mounted on the verso of the sheets of bird images. The half page images include collections of shells 4; women playing musical instruments 8; men sitting a scribe man smoking butcher melon fish and vegetable sellers and a few of the punishment images. <br /> <br /> Oblong 4to 8 1/4 x 13 1/4". Leaves mounted with to paper leaves with an unusual paper border with a purple circle pattern on pale background paper. Chinese style binding opening from the back of the album. Bound in a green gold blue and red silk woven in a daisy pattern which sometimes appears with a Sunqua stamp. Without background painting. The first image with some cracking but not affecting the characters some slight browning. Most in very good condition. SunQua Studio unknown
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
1849ABC_50166Macao 1849. Painting 350 x 150 cm. Watercolour on paper on contemporary wooden roll. A massive view of Macao from above painted in watercolours sometime in the second half of the nineteenth century during the era in which much of the trade in the area was beginning to shift from the old Portuguese colony to Hong Kong. The peninsula clearly labelled with the Mandarin toponym Àomén "Bay Gate" is very much the focus of the piece: it is depicted effectively as an island with the Chinese mainland across the isthmus abstracted away into just one of many rocks in the surrounding ocean.Macao is shown as mountainous and settled mainly on the western and southern shores with groups of white blue and yellow buildings. Many are labelled in Chinese or have yellow banners with Chinese writing on them flying above. Similarly the rocks in the surrounding waters are dotted with settlements and fortresses labelled in the same way.The seventeenth-century church of St Paul's stands in ruins at the heart of the settlement indicating that this piece was painted after 1835 when the building was gutted by a fire reducing it to its impressive frontage which remains one of the emblems of Macao to this day. Furthermore the Portas do Cerco Border Gate built in 1849 clearly appears in the northern wall across the isthmus. However none of the ships depicted are motorised suggesting that this view was still painted before the founding of the Hongkong Canton & Macao Steamboat company when steamships would have become a more common sight.The centring of Macao in what looks like a vast ocean littered with menacing rocks gives this painting an almost mythological aspect but the style is clear and realistic with the landmarks of the colonial settlement clearly depicted.Macao's strategic position on a peninsula connected to the mainland only by a narrow isthmus made it an attractive site for controlling trade in the Pearl River delta and in the region more broadly. Although initially founded as a commercial port by the Chinese in 1535 by 1557 the Portuguese had successfully negotiated a long-term lease of the island from the Ming dynasty and begun to settle there. Macao thus became the first enduring European colonial settlement in China and moreover was destined to become the last one as well being handed back to China in 1999.A beautiful monument to Macao's history in the days of its swansong as a Portuguese trading colony.Provenance: from an Italian private collection. The paper is brittle fragments have come away at the end some of these are gathered in a bag. A few larger tears down the painting however with minimal loss to contents. The painting is still clear and vivid. unknown
187221891Numadz i.e. Numazu Japan: Itiro W. N. & Co. Meiji 4th published by permission of the school Kaiseijo 1872. Second and last edition small 8vo approx. 7" x 4¾" pp. 2 42 plus printed pastedowns the first the title page in Japanese 3 red chopmarks on title pages one of them Shogo who amassed I am told a famous collection of language books in Tokyo text in Roman letter throughout and printed from metal type; original blue wrappers sewn in Japanese manner printed paper label on upper cover; externally worn and with some limpness to the wrappers all else very good and sound. A Critical Bibliography of Materials for English Studies in Japan. Collected by Osaka Women's University 1962 no. 97. The text contains 7 brief histories including Columbus Discovers America History of Isaac Newton Washington's Regard for his Mother and Alfred and his Mother. Harvard only in OCLC. Itiro W. N. & Co., Meiji 4th [published by permission of the school Kaiseijo] unknown
18952091202133201035Methuen & Company 1895. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Methuen & Company paperback
18762090502128300279Not Available 1876. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
1851587711851. Cambridge 1851. Cambridge 1851. "Cumulative" 1851 Harvard Law School Catalogue Harvard Law School. A Catalogue of the Students of Law in Harvard University From the Establishment of the Law School To the End of the Second Term in the Year 1851. Cambridge: Metcalf and Company Printers to the University 1851. 96 pp. Octavo 7-1/4" x 4-3/4". Stab-stitched pamphlet in printed wrappers. A few minor stains chipping to foot of spine. Light toning to text internally clean. $150. This catalogue was published for prospective and incoming students in the year when the faculty consisted of Jared Sparks Theophilus Parsons Joel Parker and Luther Stearns Cushing. It contains general information about the school regulations course outlines and lists of required and recommended texts. This catalogue is especially interesting because of its complete lists of alumni and former faculty members a distinguished group that includes Joseph Story Simon Greenleaf and Henry Wheaton. unknown
188429652Various places 1884-1958. Fine original condition. 73 letters from 43 correspondents including Lore Crewe Lord Curzon F. S. Kenyon Prince Louis of Battenberg Edward Lyttleton Lord Napier Lord Roseberry Sir Charles Trevelyan and others mostly pertaining to school events. unknown
183931245AB1839. London Longman & Co. 1839. Small Octavo 105 cm x 18 cm. XXVIII 269 3 pages. Hardcover / Original full eather with gilt ornament to spine. In protective Mylar. Very good condition with only minor signs of wear. Several manuscript entries by preowners of the William Splaine - Family in Bandon. hardcover
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
189022311890. Watercolor on heavy stock wove paper 6 1/8 x 4 3/ 8 inches 154 x 110 mm the full sheet. Scattered light areas of unobtrusive foxing otherwise in good condition. On the verso appears an illegible inscription written in pencil perhaps a signature. unknown
189022301890. Watercolor and graphite on heavy wove paper 4 3/8 x 6 1/8 inches 110 x 154 mm the full sheet. In good condition with an inky fingerprint in the upper right sheet area recto. On the verso is a painted sample color palette and the title of the work in pencil. unknown
1882111007Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co. 1882 Book. Good. Hardcover. One of the first nursing texts in America! Published under the direction of the Connecticut Training School for Nurses at the State Hospital in New Haven CT. Three major sections are on medical and surgical nursing with 8 chapters; directions for monthly nursing with 6 chapters and family hygiene. 266 pages with index. Moderate edge wear light exterior rub marks name on front endpaper. J. B. Lippincott Co. hardcover
1895j7381Philadelphia: J B Lippincott Co. G : in good condition without dust jacket. Ex Royal College of Surgeons Ireland Library. 1895. Reprint. Brown hardback cloth cover. 190mm x 140mm 7" x 6". 266pp. Early reprint of a seminal work on nursing. . J B Lippincott Co hardcover
1852168836New York : M. W. Dodd 1852. First Edition. Hardback. Near fine copy in the original gilt-blocked cloth. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the panel edges. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong; 8vo 8"" - 9"" tall; 278 pages; Description: 278 p. ; 20 cm. Subjects: Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. --History --Schism 1837-1870 New York : M. W. Dodd hardcover
1816271<p>New York: J. Seymour American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions Agents Appointed to Establish a School for Heathen Youth 1816. first edition. modern 1/4 niger morocco. Good. Inspiration for the First Mission to Hawaii. <br /><br />Rare in commerce most copies have been acquired by American institutions. Few copies have come to documented auction in the past 100 years. Of those made available about half are decommissioned library copies including a copy that sold for over $15000 at a 2006 Sotheby's auction.<br /><br />Condition: Very Good<br /><br />IMPORTANCE & BACKGROUND<br /><br />A biographical account of the lives of five Hawaiian youths who would come to form a core of initial students enrolled at the new Foreign Mission School established at Cornwall Connecticut in 1816. The vivid accounts of Captain Cook's and others explorers' voyages to the Sandwich Islands Hawaii and other Pacific islands generated interest in the U.S. to properly educative Hawaiians in both academic and Christian teachings. The school formed under the direction of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABCFM would serve to educate foreign students in preparation for missionary work in their native lands and elsewhere. <br /><br />A Narrative of Five Youth from the Sandwich Islands was the first of many publications intended to raise funds and stir up popular support for the new school as well as for the first Christian mission sent to the Hawaiian Islands three years later. The publications were a great success leading to the significant funding and public support critical to early efforts to fold Hawaii within the cultural and commercial influence of the United States.<br /><br />BOOK INFO<br /><br />Published in 1816 in New York by J. Seymour under the direction of ".agents appointed to establish a school for heathen youth" e.g. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. First edition first printing. Bound in modern 1/4 green niger morocco with gilt spine lettering over finely woven green cloth backed boards. Refreshed endpapers. Thin Octavo 8 1/2" x 5 1/8". Collated and complete: 3 4-44 p. <br /><br />ABOUT THE WORK & HISTORICAL CONTEXT<br /><br />By the early 1800s Hawaii had become a key aspect of America's growing trade with China. It was a critical resupply port for American ships on the trade route to China and a lucrative source for sandalwood. American merchants saw commercial possibilities that could be expanded. Protestant missionaries saw heathens in need of salvation via Christian conversion.<br /><br />This is a biographical account of and strong bit of fundraising propaganda on how five Hawaiian youths were saved from their heathen ways and savage pasts through a civilized education and Christian conversion. While the backgrounds of the youth vary - one was the son of a chief and another the survivor of brutal inter-tribal warfare for example-- the stories of these five youths share a number of common elements. All had spent time as sailors on American trade ships. Three had served at sea in the War of 1812. Most had experienced periods of extreme hardship after reaching New England. All found sponsors teachers and spiritual guides who helped them on their path to converting to Protestantism.<br /><br />CONDITION INFO<br /><br />The book is Good to Very Good by early 19th century American imprint standards.<br /><br />Binding is tight. Leather is supple. Areas of dust and light soiling to cloth. Lightly toned pages overall with light foxing. Some abrasion to paper along gutter margins of first few pages. Browning to first and last page with some brittleness and chipping. The paper used by the printer was quite thin so the text block background is darkened a bit by opposing page text on the same leaf as in all copies. No writing ex libris marks or library markings. Slight loosening at the head of the first few leaves where binding cords are exposed. A few smudges marginal paper nicks and other signs of light handling.<br /><br />.</p> J. Seymour, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (Agents Appointed to Establish a School for Heathen Youth)