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AMERICANA
AFTER 1820
A-Ba Bb-Bz
Bibles1 Bibles2 Ca-Ch
Ci-Cz D E F G H I-J K-Le
Lf-Lz Ma-Mc
Md-Mz N-Pd Pe-Q
R-Sg Sh-Sz T U-Wd We-Z
Gaboriau & Corelli Mystery & Romance
Gaboriau, Emile. File no. 113; or, the secret of the plundered safe. Chicago: M.A. Donohue & Co, [ca. 1918]. 8vo. [2], [5]-190, 29, [7 (adv.)] pp.
$40.00
Uncommon Chicago reprint of this mystery, translated from the French;
the title work is followed by Marie Correlli's short story "The Hired Baby:
A Romance of the London Streets." In a beautifully preserved decorative cloth
binding. (What you may think is a cracked
hinge, towards the left of the picture, is actually a bit of the cream-colored
spine decoration, showing. Once you know this, it's clear! but until
you do, the eye can be well confused.)
Publisher's cloth, front cover and spine stamped in green, white, and gilt with arabesque designs; binding cocked, otherwise showing next to no wear. Owner's name, partially erased, inked on the front free endpaper. (12602)
Gallatin, Albert. Indexes to documents relative to North Carolina during the colonial existence of said state, now on file in the offices of the Board of Trade and State Paper Offices in London. Transmitted in 1827: by Mr. Gallatin, then the American minister in London. Raleigh: Pr. by T. Loring at the office of “The Independent,” 1843. 8vo (22.2 cm, 8.75"). [2], 120 pp.
$250.00

First edition: Scarce and important indexes, with summaries. There were two issues, this being the one issued without the 76-page appendix.
Click
the interior image for an enlargement.
Sabin 55624. Original printed paper front wrapper (only, and detached; back wrapper lacking); wrapper torn, with inked inscription in upper margin. Wrapper, title-page, and next four leaves gnawed by a rodent with loss to printed border of wrapper and a letter or two on the title-page — main text not affected. Pages creased, with some instances of light spotting.

Do
It Yourself!
— PAINT
a Farm Wagon or
a Drawing Room
Gardner, Franklin B. How to paint. A complete compendium of the art. Designed for the use of the tradesman, mechanic, merchant, and farmer, and to guide the professional painter ... New York: Samuel R. Wells, 1872. 16mo (15.7 cm, 6.2"). 127, [17 (adv.)] pp.;
illus.
$200.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.

First edition. The front cover proclaims “Every Man His Own Painter,” and Gardner obliges with Victorian-era how-tos (some illustrated) for “satisfactory results in plain and fancy painting of every description, including gilding, bronzing, staining, graining, marbling, varnishing, polishing, kalsomining, paper-hanging, striping, lettering, copying, and ornamenting.” The volume closes with a series of advertisements for contemporary crazes including decalcomanie goods, phrenological books and journals, and hydropathic cookbooks.
Provenance: Pencilled ownership inscriptions of W. G. Benton.
Rare in the first edition, with only one copy located via OCLC and none added by NUC Pre-1956.
Publisher's brown pebbled cloth, front cover and spine with gilt-stamped title; rubbed overall, edges darkened, spine extremities chipped. Front hinge (inside) cracked; front pastedown and free endpaper with pencilled ownership inscriptions; front fly-leaf partially excised. Light foxing variably throughout. (24377)

Civil War Narrative
Geer, John James. Beyond the lines: Or a Yankee prisoner loose in Dixie. Philadelphia: J.W. Daughaday, 1863. 12mo (17.7 cm, 7"). Frontis., 285, [3 (2 adv.)] pp.; 5 plts.
[SOLD]
Uncommon first edition: A Northern soldier captured at the Battle of Shiloh describes his sufferings while imprisoned at Andersonville, and his travels through Confederate states following his temporary escape (which ended when he was run down by bloodhounds!). The volume is illustrated with a steel-engraved frontispiece portrait of the author and with five other plates; the Rev. Alexander Clark contributed an introduction.
Click the images for enlargements.
Library Company, Afro-Americana, 4057; Sabin 26835. Contemporary half brown sheep and yellow marbled paper–covered sides, spine with gilt-stamped title and band decorations; rubbed and spine head with strip of dark cloth tape extending onto sides. Ex–social club library with its bookplate; call number on endpaper, title-page and several others rubber-stamped. Scattered spots of light staining. In fact a nice-looking and sound copy. (26397)
Acts
on the
Cusp
of Secession
Georgia.
Laws, statutes, etc. Acts of the General Assembly of the state of Georgia,
passed in Milledgeville, at the annual session in November and December, 1860.
Milledgeville: Bougton, Nisbett & Barnes, 1861. 8vo. 267, [1] pp.
$300.00


The acts in this volume were enacted just prior to Georgia's secession from
the Union on 19 January 1861. Some concern black slaves and free blacks, others
the state's asylums, schools, courts, and towns. Having been published following
Secession, this is one of the earliest confederate imprints published in the
Peach state.
De Renne, II, 630; Parrish & Willingham 2777. Recent blue-gray
boards. Old library stamps in some margins. A clean, tight copy.
In
Italian &
English
New York
Theater
Giacometti, Paolo. Elizabeth, Queen of England, an historical play in five acts. Written expressly...for Madame Ristori, and her dramatic company, under the management of J. Grau. New York: John A. Gray & Green, 1867. 8vo. 40 pp.
$80.00
Early American printing of this historical drama, in which Elizabeth is presented as a willful woman prone to conflicting impulses. The text is given in both Italian and English (in a translation by Thomas Williams), with a cast list.
Fair in printed paper wrappers, front cover lacking, sewing starting to go.
For more THEATER/THEATRE,
some other PROGRAMS & PLAYBILLS included,
click here.

New
York BANKING
— In Essence *&*
at Point
of Crisis
Gibbons, James Sloan. The banks of New-York, their dealers, the Clearing House, and the panic of 1857. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1858. 12mo (20.2 cm, 8"). Frontis., x, [2], [9]–399, [1], 4 (adv.) pp.; 29 plts., 1 fold. chart.
$150.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition. This authoritative, interesting overview of the banking industry in the 19th century is illustrated with
30 wood-engraved plates by Henry Herrick: expressive depictions of bank employees, customers, and their interactions. Gibbons, a financier by trade and a Quaker abolitionist, provides an excellent “picture of the banks of New York as they are” (p. v) — often by way of “you are there” conversations, including, on p. 95, a vigorous, decision-making interchange as to backing
a house “too important . . . to be allowed to go down.”
Basic banking principles, procedures, and roles are carefully and memorably explained, as are the functioning of the (new) Clearing House; the author notes that covering the latter, and
the Panic, has increased the length of his volume by a third.
Sabin 27289; not in Goldsmiths'-Kress. Publisher's blind-stamped textured cloth, spine with gilt-stamped title and pictorial vignette; binding cocked, extremities rubbed, spine sunned. Ex–social club library: call numbers on endpaper, front free endpaper excised, pressure-stamp on title-page, two other pages rubber-stamped, no other markings. Some plates with small areas of staining to margins. (26638)
What You Saw Depended on
Where You Stood
Giddings, [Joshua R.]. [drop-title] Privilege of the representative -- Privilege of the people. Speech of Mr. Giddings, of Ohio, on the trial of Preston S. Brooks, for an assault on Senator Sumner. Before the House of Representatives, July 11, 1856. [Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, 1856]. 8vo. 8 pp.
$65.00



MENU of a
Major Philadelphia Occasion
Gimbel Brothers. Dinner tendered to Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt upon the occasion of the presentation of the Gimbel Awards... Philadelphia: Gimbel Brothers, [1934]. 8vo. [16] pp.; illus.
$37.50
Click the images for enlargements.
Menu (including Lobster Thermidor and Potato Louisiana) and program for the 1934 presentation of the Gimbel Award for Outstanding Woman of the Nation to Eleanor Roosevelt. A photographic portrait of Mrs. Roosevelt is at the front, and the guest list at the back.
Stapled in original printed cardstock, with decorative silk tassel. Darkening and dust-soiling, definitely more noticeable in person than the photos suggest on some monitors here; still a worthy souvenir. (26059)

Parley's Tales of
Good Temper & Cheerfulness
Goodrich, Samuel G. Make the best of it, or, Cheerful Cherry, and other tales. New York: Sheldon & Co., 1865. 12mo (15.7 cm, 6.2"). [5]–viii, 170, [2 (adv.)] pp.; illus.
[SOLD]

Click the images for enlargements.
First published in 1842, this entry in the hugely popular “Peter Parley” series includes “Patience prevails; or, The cottage girl,” “The pleasure boat; or, The broken promise,” “Attention; or, The two brothers,” and “Happy and unhappy; or, The warning” (a hard-eyed temperance tale), The stories are illustrated with in-text wood engravings.
Provenance: Front free endpaper with inked inscription: “Miss Alice A. Chamberlin. Presented by her Grandfather Joel Chamberlin,” dated 1865, Sennett (in New York State).
Binding: Publisher's brown cloth, covers blind-stamped with foliate decorations, spine almost fully and in fact rather gorgeously gilt-stamped with title and pictorial vignette.
Bound as above; corners rubbed, front cover with small spots of discoloration, spine gilt lightly rubbed. Front free endpaper with inscription as above. Some light spotting, foxing, and offsetting. (25804)
Hand-Colored
Floral
Frontispiece
Goodrich, Samuel
G., ed. The token, or affection's gift, a Christmas and New-Year's
present. Hartford: S. Andrus & Son, [ca. 1846]. 12mo. Frontis., 312
pp.; 4 plts.
$150.00
Reprint of the 1838 “Token” gift book, with different plates and a hand-colored floral frontispiece offering pink roses. One of the four uncolored plates is of a “Young American in the Alps,” by Healey and engraved by Cushman; another and this cataloguer's favorite, “Sun Set on the Hudson,” is by Weir, engraved by J.A. Ralph.
Binding: Publisher's red cloth, covers and spine gilt-stamped with avian and foliate designs; all edges gilt.
Faxon 786. Spine and edges moderately rubbed with front hinge cracked; spots of staining to bottom part of front cover. Front free endpaper with portion torn away, back free endpaper lacking; waterstaining in varying degrees to lower outer corners after p. 120.
One signature extruded. (12944)
Goudy, Frederic W. The story of the Village Type by its designer.... New York: Press of the Woolly Whale, 1933. 8vo (23.4 cm, 9.25"). [6], 13, [15] pp.
$125.00

No. 156 out of 200 special numbered copies (out of a total edition
of 650) containing “an extra page of supplementary information identifying
the work to which Mr. Goudy has assigned those serial numbers which are missing
from the chronological table.”
Publisher’s quarter tan cloth over black paper–covered
sides, front cover with black- and red-printed paper label, in original glassine
dustwrapper; clean and unworn.
An
elegant book.

Spanish as a
Second Language, 1835
Granja, Juan de la. Rasgos históricos de magnanimidad, valor, y nobleeza: Anecdotas, sentencias y ejemplos raros de virtud; dichos notables, cuentos, fábulas y ocurrencias graciosas, en prosa y en verso. Nueva York: Imprenta de Don Juan de la Granja, 1835. Small 8vo. 252 pp., [2 (index, ads)] ff.
$500.00
Dissident Latin American writers of the 19th century found it convenient to have their controversial writings printed in the U.S. Juan de la Granja, a native of Spain who spent time as a merchant in Mexico before being expelled following Mexican independence, was a successful printer of Spanish-language books, periodicals, and a newspaper in New York City in the 1830s, before returning to Mexico to establish the first telegraph in that nation. His press printed more than a few political hot-topic books but he also printed bread and butter books like this one, designed specifically “Para el uso de las escuelas, y particularmente dedicados á la juventud que aprende el castellano, con cuyo objecto ha procurado el editor mezclar lo útil con lo dulce.”
Click the images for enlargements.
Provenance: Early 19th-century ownership signatures on front free endpaper of Anthony Coe Ogilvie and E.H.(?) Ogilvie.
American Imprints 31923. Not in Palau. Publisher’s quarter cloth with paper-covered sides; binding waterspotted. Scattered light foxing. A good copy. (26144)

AMHERST
Graves, Henry Clinton. History of the class of 1856 of Amherst college 1852–1896. Boston: C.H. Simonds & Co., 1896. 8vo. [6], 4–59, [6] pp.
$25.00
First edition.
Publisher's cloth, issued without dust jacket. Dust soiling
and one spot of discoloration on the binding. Very good condition.
Green, Beriah. Things for Northern men to do: a discourse delivered Lord's Day evening, July 17, 1836, in the Presbyterian Church, Whitesboro’, N.Y. New York: Pub. by request, 1836. 8vo (21.5 cm, 8.4"). 22, [2 (blank)] pp.
$275.00
First edition: Call to action for the abolition of slavery, by a prominent reformer who served as president of both the Oneida Institute and the American Anti-Slavery Society and who here argues that citizens of the North are as morally responsible as those of the South in addressing the issues of slavery.
The author, a pastor and educator, was one of the most determined abolition activists in the United States; the DAB notes that while his dedication to the cause led to the closing of many doors in his career, his sermons on the subject “attracted wide attention,” contributing greatly to the catalyzing of American Christian opposition to slavery.
On Green, see: Dictionary of American Biography, VII, 539–40. Sabin 28512. Recent wrappers. Foxing throughout.

A
“TEXIAN” Survivor's Narrative — 13 Maps & Plates
Green, Thomas Jefferson. Journal of the Texian expedition against Mier; subsequent imprisonment of the author; his sufferings, and final escape from the castle of Perote. With reflections upon the present political and probable future relations of Texas, Mexico, and the United States. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1845. 8vo (22.6 cm, 8.9"). Frontis., 487, [1] pp.; 10 plts., 2 maps (1 fold.).
$250.00
First edition: Important first-person account of the Texan Mier Expedition, written by a general in the Texas Army during the war for independence from Mexico, later a general in the Confederate Army. Gen. Green was the leader of one of the war's most disastrous raiding expeditions into Mexico, an ill-starred exploit which resulted in much suffering on the part of the captured troops, one out of every 10 of whom were executed in the infamous Black Bean Lottery incident. Here he describes the military events leading up to the expedition, the expedition itself, and the unfortunate aftermath.
Click the images for enlargements.
The volume is illustrated with a total of 13 steel-engraved plates, including a frontispiece and two maps, most taken from drawings done by Charles McLaughlin, “a fellow prisoner.”
Howes G371; Sabin 28562; Streeter, Texas, 1581. Publisher's speckled sheep, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label; worn and stained, spine head reinforced with dark cloth tape extending onto boards. Ex–social club library: 19th-century bookplate on front pastedown, call number on front endpapers, rubber- and pressure-stamps on title-page. Plates variously lightly waterstained; folding map of Rio Alcantra with outer half torn away and edge tattered. Pages with minor age-toning and occasional stains. (26394)

Greenaway's Lads & Lasses
Greenaway, Kate. Mother Goose or the old nursery rhymes. London & New York: George Routledge & Sons, [1881]. 12mo (17.2 cm, 6.45"). 48 pp. (with contents pr. on front free endpaper).; illus.
$100.00
First edition, second issue of this classic, charming Greenaway-illustrated work, engraved and printed by Edmund Evans.
Not in Gottlieb, Early Children's Books & Their Illustration. Publisher's quarter rose and ivory cloth, covers with title stamped in brown surrounded by green latticework, dust jacket lacking; binding darkened and spotted. Front free endpaper with small inked ownership inscription. Sewing starting to loosen; light offsetting from facing images occasionally noticeable; some pages with tears at inner margins; a good copy only — yet, still, a charming thing! (27046)

“The Great Problem of Hieroglyphics”:
Champollion Explained to
English Speakers
Greppo, J.-G.-Honoré. Essay on the hieroglyphic system of M. Champollion, Jun. and on the advantages which it offers to sacred criticism. Boston: Perkins & Marvin, 1830. 12mo (20.4 cm, 8"). xii, 276 pp.; 2 plts.
$250.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition in English, translated from the French by Isaac Stuart
and here with an introduction from the Rev. Moses Stuart, a prominent biblical
scholar as well as the translator's father. Greppo here expounds on Champollion's
groundbreaking discoveries in the history and translation of hieroglyphics,
with additional notes and content provided by Stuart.
Two
plates at the back of the volume depict hieroglyphics and compare the “pure,”
hieratic, and demotic forms.
American Imprints 1679; Allibone 2292. Publisher's
red cloth, faded and discolored, recently rebacked preserving original spine
label and as much of original spine cloth as possible; spine label darkened
with chip. Ex–social club library: 19th-century bookplate, pressure-stamp
on title-page, no other markings. Page edges untrimmed; pages moderately age-toned,
otherwise clean. In fact quite a decent copy. (26382)
Phyllis
Wheatley Anne
Bradstreet & “Others”
Representing the
“Female
Genius” of Their
Days
Griswold, Rufus Willmot, ed. The female poets of America.
Philadelphia: Carey & Hart, 1849. 8vo (23.7 cm, 9.3"). Frontis., add. engr. t.-p., 400 pp.; 4 plts.
$240.00

Second edition: Selections from 95 American women poets, with brief biographies and
critical notices. Contributors include Anne Bradstreet, Mercy Warren, Phillis Wheatley, Susannah
Rowson, Sarah Josepha Hale, Lydia Huntley Sigourney, Lucy Larcom, both Careys, and others, many
famed in their days and now poignantly forgotten. Griswold was the editor of The Poets and Poetry
of America, The Prose Authors of America, and The Poets and Poetry of England; Edgar Allan Poe,
in his review of the present work, commended Griswold's taste and courage in promoting “numerous
lady-poets . . . many of whom he now first introduces to the public,” including several Southern
women.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
The volume is illustrated with five steel-engraved plates and an additional engraved title-page.
Binding: Contemporary maroon
morocco, covers framed in gilt single fillet and blind-stamped with arabesque
designs, spine with gilt-stamped title and gilt-stamped raised bands, board
edges gilt-tooled, all edges gilt.
Provenance:
Front cover with gilt supra-libros of A.M. Pratt.
BAL 6681; Sabin 28893;
Library Company, Afro-Americana, 4386 (for a much later edition); Allibone p. 745; Poe, “The
Female Poets of America,” Southern Literary Messenger, Feb. 1849; . Bound as
above, spine and edges gently sunned; edges lightly rubbed. Front cover gilt-stamped as above. Pages
slightly age-toned, with offsetting around plates and scattered spotting; plates with spots of foxing.
A very nice copy. (25126)
A
Radical
Republican's
CONTROVERSIAL
Civil War
Critique
Gurowski, Adam,
count. Diary, from March 4, 1861, to November 12, 1862 [and]
from November 18,1862, to October 18, 1863. Boston: Lee & Shepard; & New York: Carleton, 1862–64.
8vo (19.5 cm, 7.7"). 2 vols. I: [4], 315, [1 (blank)] pp. II: [4], [7]–348
pp.
$275.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition: The first two volumes of Count Gurowski's widely
read, influential political journal, later continued in one additional volume.
This is an important first-person account of the U.S. Civil War written by a
sharp-tongued, Polish-born journalist, abolitionist, and early member of the
Republican Party, known for both his radical politics and his eccentric personality.
The bluntly critical opinions of many prominent Republican figures, including
Lincoln, Seward, and Gen. Scott, that appeared in this Diary got Gurowski
fired from his job at the State Department. Harper's Weekly (5 March
1864) responded to the “criticism of an inflexible, unreasonable, brave,
fanatical, sincere European republican and revolutionaire upon the conduct of
a constitutional Government” by acknowledging that it was simply “an
extravagant expression of opinions frequently expressed in many circles,”
whose “value may be more readily apprehended when they are thus gravely
set forth in print.”
Sabin 29319; Howes G465. Publishers' brown cloth very close in color but Boston's textured while New York's is smooth; covers framed in blind, spines with gilt-stamped author, title, and variant place information in parallel places and in typestyles not exactly matching but very close; corners rubbed, spine extremities chipped, spine heads with small strip of brown cloth tape, vol. I with binding very slightly cocked and cloth starting to split at front joint. Ex–social club library: call number on endpapers, rubber-stamp on title-pages and two others, no other markings. Front free endpaper of vol. I lacking. Pages slightly age-toned, otherwise clean and paper good. (26252)
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