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19285578689Methuen & Co 1928. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. In fair condition suitable as a study copy. No dust jacket. Printed between 1928-1931. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item3600grams ISBN: Methuen & Co hardcover
161999891<p>1916-1922. 1916-1922. Very good. - A fascinating archive consisting of autograph letters signed by Carolyn Perera Nana Genovese Gazzale and others typed letters signed autograph notes flyers and other ephemera including a letter about securing Arturo Toscanini to conduct a benefit concert which was to be Toscanini's Carnegie Hall debut.</p><p>Following is a detailed description of the material covering the period during and following the First World War:</p><p>1. A receipt for a donation given by Miss Genovese to the "Italian Bazaar for the Benefit of War Sufferers". The receipt is dated October 30 1916 and is signed by Arturo Di Pietro as secretary of the Italian Bazaar Committee. Di Pietro later was a contributor to "Il Nuovo Mondo" the anti-Fascist newspaper.</p><p>2. Undated circa 1916-17 Italian Red Cross flyer signed in print by its President Gian Giacomo Cavazzi Della Somaglia. Cavazzi 1869-1918 was a Senator of the Kingdom of Italy and from 1913 until the end of the war he was President of the Italian Red Cross. He actively collaborated with Tito Ricordi for the creation of the Hospital of the French Cities housed from January 1916 in a part of the Officine Ricordi. On the verso of the flyer are 2 handwritten columns of names and addresses of Italian Americans possibly members or potential donors.</p><p>3. Three items related to the Italian Red Cross: a A fund raising flyer in Italian translated: Those wounded in battle await proof of our sacred brotherhood. b A flyer in English from the American Red Cross - Italian Auxiliary requesting aid in "making surgical dressings hospital garments and knitted articles for our fighting men". c A receipt dated 1916 for a donation from Mme Genovese Gazzale signed with a stamp by Lionello Perera the Italian Delegate for the American Red Cross. Perera 1873-1942 was a prominent New York banker who had a prominent role in the creation of the Italian Welfare League.</p><p>4. A form letter addressed to "Mrs. Gazzale" asking her to become a member of the Italian Welfare League "And give it your support". "The Italian must be helped to understand America and America to understand the Italian so that he may become a self-respecting citizen and an integral part of the civic life of New York the second largest Italian city in the world." The letter is signed in ink "Luigina Littlefield / Chairman mem Com".</p><p>5. An autograph letter signed "Carolyn A. Perera" thanking Mme. Genovese for 2 tickets to a concert she was unable to use: "I should have loved to have heard you. May we make you a Director of the Italian League. I know your heart is with us." The wife of Lionello Perera Carolina Allen Perera 1883-1966 served from 1920 to 1942 as the League's first president.</p><p>6. Undated autograph letter signed "Carolyn A. Perera" thanking Mrs. Genovese for becoming "one of the Directors of the League for we need you and want you". She mentions a meeting Friday and asks her to "Bring in a list of possible members.". On the verso of the letter Genovese has written the names and addresses of 11 possible members.</p><p>7. An undated autograph letter on Italian Welfare League letterhead to Mme. Genovese signed "Carolyn A. Perera" soliciting money "to be sent thru the Italian Consulate to Italy for the earthquake sufferers." She mentions that Mrs. Wm. Guggenheim donated $500.00. The Garfagnana and Lunigiana regions were struck by a powerful earthquake on 7 September 1920.</p><p>8. A letter to Madame Genovese on Italian Welfare League letterhead dated September 22 1920. The letter signed by Margherita De Vecchi one of the founding members of the I.W.L. thanks Mme. Genovese for her contribution to the special fund for the earthquake victims.</p><p>9. A typed letter signed by Marie Di Giorgio a Vice-President of the Italian Welfare League. In the letter dated November 22 1920 she informs Mrs. Genovese that the I.W.L. "has secured Maestro Toscanini and the La Scala Orchestra for a Benefit Concert to be held at Carnegie Hall on the evening of January third." She asks for her "able assistance on the Committee of Arrangements". The January 3 1921 concert would be Toscanini's Carnegie Hall debut.</p><p>10. An undated receipt for $30.00 for three tickets from Nana Genovese. Signed probably with a stamp by Mrs. Stefano Paola Berizzi a founder and Treasurer of the I.W.L.</p><p>11. A pair of typed letters signed by the Italian baritone Ferruccio Corradetti are dated January 12 and February 4 1921. The letters in Italian concern business matters and are addressed to Signora Genovese. They are on "Lega Musicale Italiana Inc. New York" letterhead.</p><p>12. A third item signed in ink by Corradetti is a form letter inviting Nana Genovese to serve "as a member of the Honorary Dinner Committee" for Arturo Toscanini. The letter on "Lega Musicale Italiana" letterhead is subtitled "Banquet In Honor of Arturo Toscanini and La Scala Orchestra". The banquet is being planned for March 17 1921 the evening before Toscanini's second concert in Carnegie Hall.</p><p>13. A typed letter dated February 18th 1921 and signed "Vera L. Albore R.N." informs Mme. Genovese that "I have taken up the case of the Cuzzi family with Dr. and Mrs. Previtali and they do not know the exact physical condition of Mr. Cuzzi.Mrs. Previtali wishes me to thank you for the interest you have taken in this family.".</p><p>14. In a typed letter dated Oct-21 Albore asks Mme Genovese to speak to a Mr. Ely at the Rutherford Post Office on behalf of Mr. Cuzzi. She signs "Vera L. Albore R.N. / Headworker".</p><p>15. In an autograph letter signed "Vera L. Albore" she writes Mme. Genovese that Mr. Ely "will try to get Mr. Cuzzi work." She thanks Genovese for all she has done and implores "Please dont forget me and my dear people as I am anxious to help and with help from our ladies I can do more- I will do all I can for Mrs. Cuzzi". Although Albore signs with the terminal vowel "e" her name on the league's letterhead reads "Miss V. Albori R.N. Head Worker".</p><p>16. An autograph letter signed "Luigina Littlefield / Chairman mem Com" asks Mme Genovese to join the membership committee and "appeal to all the Italians you come across and to all lovers of our beautiful Italy to help us in this great work which is so much needed." On April 25 1921 Littlefield sends Genovese a thank you note "for the check and the new members".</p><p>17. In an autograph letter on her 38 West 83rd Street letterhead Carolyn Perera asks Mme. Genovese to help in the current membership campaign "by asking a few of your frinds to join. I note neither M. Scaramelli or the Antolinis are members."</p><p>18. In a response to Perera Genovese sends a draft of a letter she has written to Mrs. Antolini. "Mrs. L. Perera has kindly asked me to write you about our membership campaign.We cared for or investigated for relief over 250 Italian families last month as a part of our work". She signs "Nana Gazzale". On the verso of the letter is a draft of a note she has written to Mrs. Perera dated April 18 1921 letting her know she has written to Mrs. Antolini and to Mrs. Scaramelli. She signs the note "Nana Genovese".</p><p>19. The printed membership application for the Italian Welfare League. Annual membership dues were $5.00 and Life membership was $100.00.</p><p>20. A densely written autograph letter realized on both sides of Italian Welfare League letterhead and signed "Carolyn A. Perera". In her letter addressed to Mrs. Genovese Perera asks if she can help "a Miss Le Conte an Italian 21 years who is ambitious to become a singer." "Perhaps you could persuade someone to teach her or if you are sufficiently interested maybe you will give her some instruction.I forgot to say Miss Le Conte is one of 10 children & absolutely without means." Nana Genovese has scrawled a draft of her reply in the empty spaces on the verso of the letter. "I had promised Miss Labori ie Albori to secure her a place in the Metropolitan Opera Chorus."</p><p>21. A form letter dated April 8 1925 on Italian Welfare League letterhead. Signed in ink by Nan Ceribelli the letter is soliciting contributions to an "Emergency Fund" by having a "Renewal Membership Drive".</p><p>22. There are 3 lists of names and addresses one identified as "Life Members" with 14 names a second with 19 names identified on the verso as "For Benefit of Red Cross' and a third with 13 names and no further identification.</p><p>23 "The Christmas Work of the Italian Welfare League" an undated 4-page brochure describing the donations given "twenty families so poor that they would have had no Christmas except what we gave them" and the "Christmas party on Ellis Island" undertaken because of an appeal made by Concert Soprano Alma Simpson. The various donors and the categories of their gifts are listed.</p><p>24. An April 19 1920 receipt for a donation made by Mrs. Gazzale to the Sunshine Settlement. Sunshine Settlement was a society formed in 1900 to provide education health services and seaside visits for poor children and their mothers. The receipt is signed by the treasurer S.E. Furry with his note turning down the idea of a concert benefit proposed by the singer.</p><p>25. Three autograph letters circa February 1920 in Italian soliciting funds for discharged Italian solders. Two of the letters are on cards with black borders and the third is on "Italian Committee for Discharged Italian Soldiers" letterhead. The three letters are signed by Paola Berizzi a founding member if the Italian Welfare League. Also included is a receipt for a ten dollar donation signed by Berizzi.</p><p>26. Three letters related to a benefit concert given by Nana Genovese for the "Paterson NJ Committee Near East Relief Formerly American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief / Operating in Armenia the Caucasus Persia Syria and Greece". All three of the letters are signed "D. A. Kurk" ie Diran A. Kurkjian. A May 5 1922 autograph letter thanking Genovese for sending the program for her concert and identifying her accompanist as Alberto Bimboni. "If personal efforts mean anything this mass meeting should be a real big thing." The "Mass Meeting" with the concert took place on Mother's Day May 14 1922. A typed letter dated May 15 thanks Genovese for helping make the event a complete success. "Results secured in pledges and cash totaled nearly $1000. You had an important part in the success of this meeting and in the name of the starving children in the Near East." An autograph note on a following Tuesday sends clippings not here presentand states that the correspondent will telephone her about an upcoming meeting in Morristown.</p><p>Unique.</p> [1916-1922].
16586Women's College Photo album of a young woman college student including 85 Gelatin silver print photos taken from 1919-1922. Includes images of women's dormitories schoolmates and details extracurricular programs such as social dances and boating excursion. Most photos from Washington state. 7 x 10 1/2 in. Original black cloth boards. 23 pages filled with 85 black and white photos of various sizes ranging from 2.5 x 1.5 in. to 5.5 x 3.5 in. Three are loose photos. Inscribed on inside front cover: "From Papa Merrie Christmas 1921."<br/><br/>A major facet of this young woman's life was her education as she includes more photos and captions that reference this than anything else. The album owner shows great pride in her dormitory room in which she is shown reading in a chair with a Harvard pennant prominently affixed tot he wall behind her. "Taken in my room "77" 1922". Another image shows the view from window in this room: "Lookout Mt" taken from my window '77'". This time was so important for her that she even takes care to remember the room numbers of her roommates and other fellow students such as: "My old roommate of 1919 Room 44" and "Miss Fiddler Roommate "Room 28" Summer School 1920". She even notes that one former classmate who "roomed in "27" 1921-22 was "A Good Kid". Also includes one photo of four students in a Home Economics high school class.<br/><br/>Album also includes images of her friends and family and recent memories from World War I including one handsome 5 1/2 x 3 1/2 photo of two soldiers in WWI-era uniforms kneeling with their firearms. A smaller photo of a man in military uniform dated 1919 includes this caption: "In days of old 'do you remember the telephone office' and those letters Ha! Ha." The album's owner certainly had a sense of humor and often includes nicknames inside jokes and playful asides. "I looked like this the Summer of 1920. But those times are over." Next to a photo of people out boating she writes: "Out on the lake.Washington" and "Some bunch of "chickens". And in a series of photos in which she models fancy clothes she writes: "Do you think I look natural" She also includes humorous outtakes of her friends such as "W.L. asleep after the dance Ha! Ha!" and notes family members work machinery very helpful technology at the time "Malcolm's little old machine". Very good condition. unknown books
19503467Nashville 1950. Very good. Two yearbooks: 244; 208pp. The first bound in blue textured cloth the second in maroon textured cloth each front cover stamped in gilt with a mounted photograph. Some scuffing to edges. Light thumb-soiling to texts previous owner's inscription in each volume. A pair of yearbooks once belonging to Dr. James L. Hutchinson of Shreveport Louisiana while a medical student at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the mid-20th century. The yearbooks - the Meharrian for 1949 and 1950 - cover Hutchinson's last two years at the school and are chock full of photographs and information on the administration faculty students student organizations and campus life at the pioneering college. The last sections in each yearbook are comprised of advertisements from local vendors mostly medical suppliers. Meharry Medical College opened in 1876 as the first institution in the South designed to train African American doctors. At the time Hutchinson attended the school Meharry also trained dentists nurses dental technicians and medical technologists all of whom are represented in the yearbooks.<br /> <br /> Meharry remains the largest private HBCU dedicated to training healthcare professionals. Dr. James L. Hutchinson established a medical practice in San Mateo California in the 1950s becoming one of the very first African American doctors to work in the Golden State. In addition to his family practice Dr. Hutchinson was one of the founding doctors of both Planned Parenthood and Project 90. Amazingly he is still practicing medicine today in his early 90s. Editions of the Meharrian from any year are rather rare. OCLC records a smattering of yearbooks at about a dozen institutions. unknown
19395499Oxford N.C. 1939. Very good. 32 leaves illustrated with many dozens of ephemeral items mostly school-related printed materials newspaper clippings and greeting cards pasted in or laid in. Folio. Contemporary dark green cloth backstrip light green boards with floral illustration inset into front cover string tied. Moderate scuffing and edge wear to boards. An intriguing scrapbook assembled by a young Black woman named Willia Lucille Pettiford of Jamaica Long Island while attending the African-American Mary Potter Academy in Oxford North Carolina in the late-1930s. The scrapbook is populated with dozens of newspaper and magazine clippings of notable African Americans as well as famous performers a combination of Black and white stars of the stage and silver screen. Willia pasted in excerpts about W.E.B. Du Bois Ella Fitzgerald Gladys Bentley Florence R. Beatty Mary McLeod Bethune Paul Robeson and others. Willia also included several printed event programs invitations and notices from the school including a hand-made program for the Mary Potter Athletic Banquet on April 25 1938; a May 3 violin recital sponsored by the Oxford Music Lovers' Club; a May 13 1938 "Oratorical Contest" at the school; an April 17 1939 performance of the "Oxford Music Lovers' Club;" a May 13 1939 meeting of the Young People's League of the Cape Fear Presbytery; and the Mary Potter School's baccalaureate exercises for both 1938 and 1939. She also cut out portions of the school newsletter or yearbook and used them in the scrapbook.<br /> <br /> "Mary Potter Academy was launched in 1889 with George Clayton Shaw as principal a post he held until 1936. Shaw was born to slaves in Louisburg in 1863. His mother Mary Penn Shaw had been provided what he described as 'a fairly good education' and she instilled the importance of education in her six children all of whom became educators. George Shaw graduated from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania in 1886. He studied at Princeton Theological Seminary before completing studies at Auburn Theological Seminary New York in 1890. While in New York Shaw met Mary Potter secretary to the Presbyterian Freedmen's Board and benefactor of the educational improvement of freedmen. Potter provided funding to establish the first school for African Americans in Granville County Oxford where in 1888 he founded Timothy Darling Presbyterian Church. Called Timothy Darling for Shaw's teacher until 1892 the school was funded by the Board of Missions for Freedmen New York Synodical Society and Albany Presbytery. It would later serve as a private boarding school until the 1950s then as a public high school until 1969. In 1970 Mary Potter became an integrated middle school" - NC.gov. unknown
1955List3206Washington D.C. 1955. Forty-five 8 x 10 inch photographs. Some slight damage to edges and slightly curled; excellent. The Phelps Vocational High School was founded in 1912 as a trade school for African American boys located in the historically Black neighborhood of Carver Langston. In the tradition of African American industrial education the school initially specialized in printing bricklaying and carpentry. During World War II the school trained students in airplane and auto mechanics and building construction funded by the Works Progress Administration. It began accepting girls in 1942 or 1943. Phelps is still open now as the Phelps Architecture Construction and Engineering High School. <br /> <br /> Offered here is a collection of forty-five photographs from Phelps dating from around 1945 to 1955. The collection captures school life pageants sports and the school’s ROTC program. Many of the photos show students in plays dancing and participating in gymnastic cheerleading. D.C. schools would begin to integrate in 1954 the year that both Brown and the D.C.-specific Bolling v Sharpe were decided by the US Supreme Court. unknown
18191262421819. London: Dean and Munday 1819. <br /> <br /> 12mo 35 pp. Original printed wrappers. Covers and folding color frontispiece both detached frontispiece with large chip from top left corner some offsetting but generally clean.<br /> <br /> § A rare children's puzzle book; no copies on OCLC. The publisher's catalogue on lower wrapper lists "Puzzle-all's entertaining Riddle Book" which was published the previous year and is recorded on OCLC in just a single copy at the British Library. Dean and Munday was headed by two sisters Mary Ann and Anna Maria who were born into the Bailey dynasty of publisher's. Their mother Susanna Bailey printed under her own imprint after the death of her husband and after her death in 1810 willed the company solely to her two daughters. "For whatever reason Susan left her sons only a pittance. In her will 'The whole of my business and.everything thereunto belonging' was left to her daughters. By that time both girls had married apprentices from their parent's shop Mr. Thomas Dean Sr. and Mr. William Munday. Nevertheless Susan's will stipulated adamantly that the business was 'for their own sole use and benefit absolutely not to be subject of control of any present or future husband.my two daughters will share equally any profits arising from the printing business.for their own solo use and benefit absolutely independent of any present or future husbands.' Indeed records show that the company Dean & Munday had both sisters Mary Ann Dean and Anna Maria Munday listed as its principals between 1812 and 1840. Perhaps it was because of all the babies the sisters bore or the customs of the early nineteenth century that regardless of Mother Susan's attempts to ensure the female succession of the business it would become identified primarily with the husbands." From Dean & Son Publishers - A Short History: As published by vintagepopupbooks.com in the May 2013 edition of the Movable Book Society Newsletter "Movable Stationary". unknown
196563434Buenos Aires Argentina: Asociacion Esquelas Lincoln American International School 1965. Thick folio. 12.5 x 13.75 in. 76 pp unpaginated. on thick paper stock. With 145 original silver gelatin photographs mounted enhanced with printed captions occasional annotations and numerous pieces of ephemera including ALS mimeographed material laid-in card as well as 2 silver print architectural elevations laid-in nearly all decorative tissue guards retained. Padded brown calf post-binder manuscript label on front cover ownership of Whinery on first leaf occasional scuffing minor tears to a couple of the leaves gutter margins creasing to some of the tissue guards minor chipping head & foot of spine still a VG exemplar. The souvenir/memory album opens with photos of Whinery and the early images of the Lincoln American International School in Buenos Aires the ground breaking at La Lucila the massive school addition designed by architects Alberto E. Dodds and Mario E. Cattaneo and completion November 30 1963.Two silver print photos laid-in depict the proposed new building elevation drawings from the architect and convey the full size and impact of the building when later completed. The vaulted new Mid-Century Modern auditorium with Argentine & U.S. Flag prominent on the stage also used as gymnasium with the compiler wondering how they ever survived without the new structure. Also depicted are school pageants greeting other international students the new school library along with a myriad of student events. Of additional interest are the photographs capturing the new science labs vocational training for aircraft and automobiles and finally the sports events of the “Condors.†Also featured are the school choirs bands architectural features such as the striking Mid-Century Modern atrium and finally the staff and support staff of the school. The final group of pages include photographs and tipped-in mounted letters addressed to Mr. Whinery declaring “We are very sorry that you are leaving†and “You have been a very good director†and song addressed to him from the students and staff. The closing pages include photos of the Director’s houses in Buenos Aires Commencement in 1960 several farewell parties and a laid-in card. Whinery 1918-2009 was a Kansas educator recruited after World War II for international schools for the American Embassy in Buenos Aires and he would remain the director of the Lincoln school from about 1952 through his retirement from there in 1964 and was still attending American International School reunions as late as 1995. Lincoln based in La Lucila Vicente Lopez is still considered the best English-language prep school in Buenos Aires and routinely sends graduates to the most elite universities and participates in the International Baccalaureate IB program. See: Jacob Meschke Lincoln: International Schooling in Argentina Asociacion Escuelas Lincoln Buenos Aires Times April 7 2018. Asociacion Esquelas Lincoln, American International School, unknown
1724D19436London: Samuel Ballard 1724. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. 12mo. 196 pp. 19th century 1/2 leather and marbled paper. Boards detached. Text in French and English. A scarce little book. A pencil note at the front reads: "This is the same edition as that of 1719 entitled 'Foreign Tales' but with a new title page." Two armorial bookplates to front pastedown one covering the other. Pages foxed but a good copy internally. <br/><br/> Samuel Ballard hardcover
1910List2847Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania; and others 1910. Eleven photographs approximately 7 x 9 ½ inch and smaller. With stamps for Brown Brothers Illustrations Bureau and E.J. Reily verso; most with captions verso. Most with chipping and wear at edges; overall good. Open-air schools became popular in the United States in the early 20th century in response to public health crises including tuberculosis.1 Conducting lessons in open-air classrooms reduced the transmission of diseases which allowed many children to attend school despite their often chronic illnesses. Offered here are eleven photographs of open-air schools three of which are identified as the Phebe Anna Thorne Model School at Bryn Mawr.<br /> <br /> The Phebe Anna Thorne Model School opened in 1913 under the direction of the College’s president Carey Thomas using funds donated by Samuel Thorne in memory of his sister Phebe Anna.2 The Thornes were an affluent New York Quaker family; Phebe Anna 1828–1909 was the only daughter to survive to adulthood and was a philanthropist and supporter of progressive social causes.3 <br /> <br /> The school was part of Bryn Mawr’s Department of Education which trained its students in teaching younger pupils rather than those of highschool or college age – the students in most of these photos are probably in about 4th or 5th grade.3 It also allowed testing of more cutting-edge pedagogical practices: the structure of the school was quite experimental including open-air classrooms outdoor naptime a flexible curriculum and less formal assessment. <br /> <br /> Of interest to scholars of the history of education especially experimental pedagogy.<br /> <br /> 1 Sherman C. Kingsley & F.B. Dresslar “Open-Air Schools†Department of the Interior Bureau of Education Bulletin 23 1916.<br /> 2 Cornelia Meigs What Makes a College A History of Bryn Mawr The MacMillan Company 1956.<br /> 3 Olive Floyd Phebe Anna Thorne: Quakeress Privately Printed in Rye New York 1958. unknown
1889List3035California Oregon Iowa and New York 1889. Sixty-five items: sixty-two letters mainly dating from 1887 eleven letters 1888 nineteen letters and 1889 fourteen letters; and three playbills from the CMA Dramatic Club. Overall excellent. William H. Sharp 1863–deceased was born in Washington and lived in The Dalles Oregon. He attended the California Military Academy in Oakland from 1880 to 1883 and then returned to The Dalles. There he worked as a commission merchant and ran for county clerk. <br /> <br /> Offered here is a collection of letters mainly to with some from William Sharp. The letters are from friends and family—Sharp had many cousins with whom he corresponded regularly—and cover his time at the California Military Academy CMA and back in The Dalles.<br /> <br /> The CMA was founded in 1865 by Rev. David McClure and combined college preparatory education with military drills including firearm training with the aim to “give the youth of the remote West an opportunity to acquire an education such as could not otherwise be obtained.â€1 His attendance put a financial strain on the family; his mother Mary Sharp reminds him that “we have to scrach hard to keep you at school†as she scolds him for his poor performance April 8 1882. Mary Sharp also worried about conditions at the Academy:<br /> <br /> “Willie I hope you will be kind to all new comers & comfort them all you can I read of two boys being killed by ill treatment at boarding schools one they took out of a warm bed & pumped cold water on him in a cold night untill he died the other they tied a & triped him so he fell hurt his head & killed him I hope the boys do not play such tricks at your schoolâ€. November 12 1880<br /> <br /> The CMA promised not to admit any boys who were “morally bad as the institution is not designed to reform vicious boysâ€.1 However a letter from C.W. Chapman Sharp’s friend and former roommate suggests that the school’s rigorous drilling was not necessarily successful. Chapman writes from Nevada City a mining town in central California:<br /> <br /> “I’m working hard as usual; but I expect you don’t care anything about that. I’m having lots of fun too if that interests you. You don’t know one half as many girls as I go to see every evening. And they are the kind of girls that you can have fun with too. . I am making up for lost time. . I haven’t had my fingers in anybody else’s pie yet and maybe I haven’t had them in anybody’s anything else either. But that’s some more trash. . How do you fellows treat the little dears now I hope you don’t deal with them as harshly as you did when I was down there.†January 10 1883<br /> <br /> Later letters are mainly between Sharp and his wife-to-be Jennie Booth. He mentions attending a temperance meeting updates her on business which is “not overly brisk†but “good enough†October 6 1888 and describes hiring a “mongolian†cook who is “a very fair specimen of the celestial race†October 5 1887. Booth describes Oregon City on a visit there as “very picturesque†but primitive: “it has only one street that is passable the rest are so rocky that you can’t get over them with a conveyance.†August 17 1888.<br /> <br /> Around this time Sharp runs for county clerk as a Republican; a W.T. McPhire writes from Mosier:<br /> “I am glad to know you are in the field for the clerkship which as you state is a very desirable office. Now I can and will say this much although opposing you in politics that if you receive the nomination for this office against any one in my party that is not an honest sober and industrious man I will willingly do all in my power to help elect you to the office.†March 12 1888<br /> <br /> Despite this bipartisan support Sharp lost to a man named Thompson. Sharp and Booth married and lived together in The Dalles and Sharp remained in his career as a farmer and merchant.<br /> Of interest to scholars of Oregon history and of 19th-century military education.<br /> <br /> 1 “California Military Academy†Mariposa Gazette June 30 1887 4. unknown
183488467Boston: Carter Hendee and Co 1834-37. First Edition. Five octavo volumes. Uniform plum cloth; printed paper spine labels; 317;275;291;184;262pp. Bindings spine-sunned and slightly worn; volume for 1833 more so with some external damp rippling not affecting text and a small gouge at front joint. Internally very fresh with most pages unopened. Good and sound. <br /> <br /> The 3rd through 7th volumes of the Institute's proceedings each including transcriptions of lectures on public education by such writers as Joseph Story A.A. Gould C.T. Jackson Beriah Green Warren Burton Walter Channing William A. Alcott Samuel Howe and others. The Institute was founded in 1830 and was a direct progenitor of the National Education Association. Though the vast majority of the Institute's members were from New England it was the first meaningful interstate body of public school instructors and administrators and set standards for public education into the first decades of the 20th century when it was subsumed by the NEA; writing in 1847 the Institute's President Horace Mann wrote: "The Institute may justly be considered as the source of all the improvements in education which have since 1830 been made in New England and other Northern States and its influence is slowly diffusing itself through the uncongenial regions of the South." The lectures are a particular point of interest in this series as they cover a wide variety of topics of interest to historians of education ranging from "The Importance of a Knowledge of the Principles of Physiology to Parents and Teachers" Edward Reynolds 1833 to "The Comparative Merits of Private and Public Schools" Theodore Edson 1837. A key source for early pedagogical theory in America rarely seen in commerce. Carter, Hendee, and Co unknown
1588046064Paris: Lucas Breyel 1588. Early Edition. Hardcover Full Leather. Good Condition. Full contemporary calf heavily worn hinges cracked front board nearly detached and held by one cord rear by two rear bottom corner degraded and broken. Old names inked out on title light toning to title and early pages very clean internally otherwise. With lovely early papier dominoté endpapers and pastedowns stamped "paris chez les associé" with a hard to read number - lacking original blanks with these bound in relatively early on. 4 571 4 leaves.<br /> <br /> The second edition of Belleforest's 1572 work collecting military harangues - the exhortations of commanders given to the troops before a battle. Size: Folio. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Over 3 kilos. Category: History; Military & Warfare. Inventory No: 046064. Lucas Breyel hardcover
1588046064Paris: Lucas Breyel 1588. Early Edition. Hardcover Full Leather. Good Condition. Full contemporary calf heavily worn hinges cracked front board nearly detached and held by one cord rear by two rear bottom corner degraded and broken. Old names inked out on title light toning to title and early pages very clean internally otherwise. With lovely early paste paper endpapers and pastedowns - very fine examples; lacking original blanks with these bound in relatively early on. The second edition of Belleforest's 1572 work collecting military harangues - the exhortations of commanders given to the troops before a battle Size: Folio. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Over 3 kilos. Category: History; Military & Warfare. Inventory No: 046064. <br/><br/> Lucas Breyel hardcover books
1965237c9274New York: Simon and Schuster and T.B. Harms Company 1965. Book. Good. Hardcover. First Printing. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. 849 pages including index and black and white photographic plates. ".Bernays is the pioneer who did more than anyone else to establish the principles practices and ethics of public relations. Here he describes the many national movements social beliefs trends fashions and fads that have been the result of his carefully planned public relations activities. Reveals the secrets the techniques the causes and consequences of his glamorous and crucial yet little understood profession. A fascinating inside account of the men the events and the ideas that have been at the center of America's history in the twentieth century." - from dust jacket. Unmarked. Binding sound. Average wear. A sound copy of this important work. Bibliographic references: Larson 3 Cole p.27. Simon and Schuster and T.B. Harms Company Hardcover
1930234181930. African American family photo album documenting Black education childhood and family life likely Cleveland Ohio from 1930 through the early 1940s. During the 1930s Cleveland's Black population grew with families who had come north through the Great Migration seeking industrial work schools churches and opportunities unavailable or highly restricted in much of the South. In northern cities Black children often entered public schools that were not segregated by state law but were still subject to housing discrimination neighborhood boundaries and unequal municipal investment. This album records a Black family's schooling as a visible marker of progress respectability and aspiration during the Depression and early wartime years.<br /> <br /> Album of 55 silver gelatin photographs ranging from small portrait prints to larger mounted school class photos. Cleveland Ohio and surrounding area 1930s-early 1940s. Children and teenagers appear in formal school portraits with printed or handwritten "School Days" captions including a boy seated at a desk behind a 1930 marker young men in ties and suit jackets dated 1936 and girls in patterned dresses with white collars dated 1939-40 and 1940-41. A large class portrait gathers several dozen Black schoolchildren against a brick wall with boys in suits and ties standing beside girls in dresses blouses and school stockings. Family and community scenes expand the educational record into domestic life: siblings pose close together in a studio portrait children stand in yards and fields women pose near houses and fences young men appear in sharp double-breasted suits and brimmed hats and an adult man leans against a polished 1930s automobile. Outdoor scenes include well-dressed family members at rocky overlooks roadside paths and residential yards suggesting weekend travel neighborhood visiting and leisure alongside the formal school record.<br /> <br /> The album presents school portraits as part of a larger Black family chronology that follows children from infancy through adolescence and early adulthood. The repeated school-year dating gives the album unusual clarity as a record of Black educational aspiration in Depression-era Cleveland where families used dress portraiture and school milestones to mark social mobility despite employment discrimination and redlining. Album leaves show chipping adhesive staining losses where prints have been removed fading toning and handling wear; mounted images generally remain legible with several strong portraits. Overall in good condition. A strong collection of images documenting African American education Great Migration family life childhood and Black urban experience in Ohio. unknown
1940103G3571New York: Columbia University Press 1940. Book. Fair. Hardcover. First Edition. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. 1148 833 pages. Index. "Extremely interesting story of the origins of reparations leaving the impression that the French were unreasonable and the Americans unrealistic in their hopes." - Edward N. Peterson from bibliography of his work 'Hjalmar Schacht - For And Against Hitler". Moderate quantity of neat ink underlining in each volume. Usual library markings. Above-average but not excessive wear. Quarter-inch opening in binding at half-title page of volume I. A worthy reference copy of this important work. Columbia University Press Hardcover
2007165h2060Canada: Trafford Publishing. Good. 2007. First Edition. Paperback. 1425150136 . "Following the hypothesis proffered in God Star the prequel to this work Flare Star sets out to show that Earth's last Ice Age came suddenly to an end due to the cosmic catastrophe that was caused by the proto-Saturnian system's entry into the present Sun's domain of influence." - back cover. Dwardu Cardona 1937-2016 "dedicated his life to discovering the role of Saturn and the Saturnian configuration of planets and the effect these had upon our ancestors and the residual influence we live under to this day." - Ken Moss. "Cardona can be credited in large part along with Velikovsky for the Electric Universe - a paradign shift that dwarfs the Copernican revolution." - Wal Thornhill. xii 547 pp. Index. Illustrated in color and black in white. Unmarked with average wear. A sound first edition copy of this glowingly reviewed work.; Cover Art; Sm4to . Trafford Publishing paperback
1918143h5680London: The Illustrated London News and Sketch Ltd. 1918. Magazine. Illus. by Begg S. Good. Stapled. First Edition. Elephant Folio - over 15 - 23" tall. Features: Cover photo of the submarine that breached Zeebrugge Mole being towed behind a destroyer; The St. George's Day Raids - article by Archibald Hurd which includes map showing where the block-ships were sunk and the viaduct was breached; Page of photos of the heroes who led the naval raid at Zeebrugge includes Commander R.S. Sneyd Capt. H.C. Halahan Lieut. R. Bourke Lieut. Stuart Bonham-carter Wing-Commander Frank A. Brock Leiut R.D. Sandford Commander Hamilton Benn Vice-Admiral Sir roger Keyes Capt. A.F.B. Carpenter and Admiral Sir R. Y. Tyrwhitt; Two pages of illustrations show how fog screens and star-shells were used at Zeebrugge; Superb two-page aerial photo of Zeebrugge with an inset diagram of the harbour indicates the positions of the sunk ships; G.K. Chesterton article includes two photos of the military funeral for celebrated German Airman Captain Baron Von Richthofen; One-page photo of the heavily damaged funnels of H.M.S. "Vindictive" after the Zeebrugge mole attack; Two pages of illustrations and text explain the objectives and results of the naval raid - Zeebrugge mole and harbour - and the submarine explosion; Half-page photo looking aft from the forecastle of H.M.S. "Vindictive" shows mantleted bridge etc.; Great half-page photo shows dozens of the cheering crew of H.M.S. "Vindictive" cheering as their ship returns safely to port with Captain Carpenter visible with his arm in a sling; Two more half-page photos of the heavily-damaged H.M.S. "Vindictive" back in port; Six photos crew members of the H.M.S. "Vindictive" and their damaged vessel; Centrefold illustration of landing on the mole from "Vindictive"; Two-page illustration of Marines from the "Vindictive" charging along the mole; Page of photos of "Vindictive" "Iris" and "Daffodil" after the Zeebrugge attack; One-page illustration of the wounded being rescued under fire on Zeebrugge mole; Five photos of last honours for the Zeebrugge heroes - The Dover Funeral; Wonderful illustrated back cover ad for Gentlemen's Spring Suits offered by Chas. Baker & Co's; and more. 36 pages including several pages of marvelous vintage ads most of which are illustrated. Unmarked with average wear. Binding intact. A sound copy of this excellent WWI-era issue. The Illustrated London News and Sketch, Ltd. Paperback
192934333Paris November 1929. 1929. Fair. - A 7-1/2 inch high by 4-7/8 inch wide color portrait of Georges Clemenceau mounted into an 11 inch high by 7-1/8 inch wide mat. The portrait depicts the French Prime Minister from the shoulders up a period hat above his heavy white eyebrows and mustache. Signed "Clemenceau" in ink on the mat below the image. The portrait mounted with glue from the verso is scratched heavily creased and subsequently waxed to protect it. The crude mat's backing is stained and the keyhole mat itself is cracked at the bottom and top edges. <p>An autograph letter accompanying the signed portrait attests that Clemenceau signed the portrait on his deathbed. The letter dated November 29 1929 reads as follows: "Monsieur Monsieur Clemenceau ayant signe cette photographie que vous lui avez envoyee la veille de sa mort je me fais le devoir de vous l'envoyer. Bien respectueusement." Clemenceau died 5 days earlier on November 24th. This letter has been folded for mailing.<p>The leader of the Radical Party Georges Clemenceau played a central role during France's Third Republic serving as it's Prime Minister from 1906 to 1909 and subsequently leading the nation in the First World War. He again served as his nation's Prime Minister from 1917 to 1920. One of the principal architects of the Treaty of Versailles he pushed for the restitution of Alsace-Lorraine to France.<p>Provenance: From the autograph collection of Seymour Halpern.<p>The Queens New York Republican Congressman Seymour Halpern 1913-1997 started his political career as a campaign aide to New York's powerful mayor Fiorella La Guardia and first served in New York's State Senate for 14 years before seeking a seat in the U.S. Congress. In Albany Halpern sponsored 279 bills that became law including measures on schools housing civil rights nutrition and mental health. A Liberal he was something of an anomaly as the lone Republican representative from New York City and generally garnered support from Labor Unions and endorsement from the Liberal Party. Yet he never even considered switching parties as he considered membership in the Republican Party a family tradition and commitment. While he found ample time for his private pursuits including painting and collecting autographs he took his legislative duties very seriously. Of these he was proudest of his co-sponsorship of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and of the original 1965 Medicare legislation. Paris, November, 1929. unknown
1985643H4765Stanford CA USA: Hoover Institution Press 1985. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. Signed by Authors. First Edition. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Signed and inscribed by Robert Conquest upon front free endpaper to Walter Jajko Brig Gen USAF Ret. "Essentially a work of investigation into the internal struggle within an organisation some of whose deeds were conducted in a blaze of publicity but others kept as secret as was compatible with mass terror. The secrecy was indeed such that for many years important circles in the West and particularly intellectual circles specially concerned with presenting the truth about the Soviet Union were either grossly deceived or were to one degree or another accomplices in that gross deception." - Preface. vi vii-ix 1 222 pages. Index bibliography and footnotes. Margaret Thatcher described Conquest as "our greatest living historian." - online reference. Clean bright and unmarked with negligible wear. Dust jacket preserved in mylar. An excellent copy. Hoover Institution Press Hardcover
1889739H2716Rochester NY: W.H. Stewart 1889. Book. Illus. by Cram Geo. F. Good. Map. First Edition Thus. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Vintage map with states individually colored. Of interest modern day Oklohoma indicated as Indian Territory and names such as Miami Los Angeles and Seattle do not appear. Outer dimensions: 21.75" x 14.5". Unmarked with moderate wear. Center fold. 5" opening along top edge mended with archival tape. W.H. Stewart unknown
1673045461Helmstedt: Henningum Mullerum 1673. First Edition. Hardcover Vellum. Very Good Condition. Full contemporary vellum a bit soiled but sound and attractive. Light browning internally but a clean crisp copy; lacking the front blanks. 2 volumes in 1. 16 824 104 43pp.<br /> <br /> First edition of Clasen's work on the Sibylline oracles which also adds Sébastien Castellion and Onofrio Panvino's important 16th century works on the same topic. Clasen had a Lutheran but nebulous view of the oracles - he desired to retain the religiosity of the oracles in order to retain the force of spirituality in general without acting as if they were true. He maintained that after Christ the oracles gradually disappeared. Size: Quarto 4to. Previous owner's book-plate inside front cover. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: History; Religion & Theology. Inventory No: 045461. Henningum Mullerum hardcover
1591CAT0004521591. Good Condition. Hand colored engraving modest foxing and soiling paper thinned in upper margin from prior mounting small tape marks. <br/><br/>A famous plate depicting the cannibals Staden described in Brazil. In the foreground a butcher is working on a partially butchered body a tribesman is dragged off to be bludgeoned a small child works cleaning a head and arms and legs are barbecuing on a traditional stick barbecue. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Cooking Wine & Dining; History. Inventory No: CAT000452. unknown books
17063144N.P. London 1706 The octavo edition WITH the engraved frontispiece portrait and with no gap in pagination in Book III. "By the Author of the True-Born-Englishman" Daniel Defoe. No printer/publisher listed on title page. Contemporary full leather five raised spine bands. 7 5/8 x 4 3/4 inches 8 i-xxviii xxviii xxx-xlii 2 i-ii i-v 1 1-8 7-23 1 1-24 1-19 68-93 1-26 1-15 135-278. Good moderate wear boards; binding sound; modest browning/foxing. "To The Most Serene Most Invincible and Most Illustrious Lady / Reason: First Monarch of the World".3214030. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Good. N.P., London hardcover