Publicado por Oakland: Thompson & West, 1880
Librería: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Ejemplar firmado
EUR 4.450,41
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: Good. Original morocco-backed cloth, front cover and spine lettered in gilt, custom clamshell case.Signed on the paste-down endaper: "A.B. Dibble, 1880." He and his family are mentioned 37 times in the book.vi, 11-234 pp. With 83 lithograph plates, four double page; color lithograph map of California, Utah, Arizona & Nevada. 28x36.2 cm (11x14¼").Lithographed views of the countryside, houses and numerous mines in Nevada County; includes depictions of Grass Valley, Nevada City, Donner Lake and the stranded emigrants, the Truckee Hotel with railroad, etc. Cowan p.452; Howes N60; Rocq 5957; OCLC Number / Unique Identifier:9459480.Condition:Light rubbing and wear, joints previously repaired; gutters reinforced with tape, sticker and ink marks, tears on title, contents, and map repaired with tape, no paper loss, occasional toning and smudging; very good.
Publicado por London: John and Josiah Boydell, 1802
Librería: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Ejemplar firmado
EUR 6.675,62
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: Good. Folios. 31.3 x 41.3 cm. 9 volumes. Original calf with gilt dentelles along the edges of the covers; gilt spine and edges; the heavy covers reattached with matching binding material by the artisan binder Sasha Mosalov. . Scattered foxing, mainly light.few pages with tears. Total weight about 140 pounds. Will be shipped in 3 heavy boxes.OCLC 5503043: Contents: v. 1. Prefaces of Pope and Johnson to the Dramatic works of Shakspeare. Tempest ; Two gentlemen of Verona ; Merry wives of Windsor ; Measure for measure.v. 2. Comedy of errors ; Much ado about nothing ; Love's labour's lost ; Midsummer-night's dream.v. 3. Merchant of Venice ; As you like it ; Taming of the shrew ; All's well that ends well.v. 4. Twelfth-night ; Winter's tale ; Macbeth ; King John.v. 5. King Richard II ; King Henry IV ; King Henry V.v. 6. King Henry VI ; King Richard III.v. 7. King Henry VIII ; Coriolanus ; Julius Caesar ; Antony and Cleopatra.v. 8. Timon of Athens ; Titus Adronicus ; Troilus and Cressida ; Cymbeline.v. 9. King Lear ; Romeo and Juliet ; Hamlet ; Othello.Notes:Originally issued in 18 parts in 1791 and 1802 [i.e. 1803?]The edition is based upon the 1790 Malone and 1793 Steevens editionsVolume title pages, with "volume" designation, are all dated 1802With a dedication leaf "To the King's most excellent majesty" dated June 4th, 1803, signed John Boydell, Josiah Boydell, and George Nicol; advertisement signed "G.N." in v. 1Letterpress printed.Plays are paginated separately, have no signatures, and are bound in no designated order.Each play has a colophon reading: From the Shakspeare Press, by W. Bulmer & CoNo table of contents or list of plates is given, but the plates correspond with the list given in "Boydell's Graphic illustrations of the dramatic works of Shakspeare," a separate issue of the plates, except that the latter lacks a variation of the first plate in Richard III (Gloster and the princes) while it has in addition (as frontispiece) "Shakspeare nursed by Tragedy and Comedy, " a portrait of John Boydell, a variation of Juliet's supposed death, and a second plate in Titus Adronicus (Lavinia nursing her young nephew, by T. Kirk)."Boydell's Graphic illustrations &c." must not be confused with their "Collection of prints, from pictures painted for the purpose of illustrating the dramatic works of Shakspeare," London, 1803, two large folios containing larger plates (100, including the portraits of the King and Queen prefixed, and the two title-vignettes) most of which are entirely different from these smaller platesPlates, dated 1791-1803, are mainly by R. Smirke, W. Hamilton, R. Westall, F. Wheatley, James Northcote, with a few each by Reynolds, Opie, Stothard, and others. Among the engravers who executed the greatest number of plates are James Parker, Anker Smith, and James Heath.
Publicado por 'Venezia. Apresso Cristoforo Zane. Con Licenza de' Superiori, e Privilegio. MDCCXXVIII' (1728)., 1728
Librería: C O - L I B R I , Bremen - Berlin ; Deutschland / Germany ., Berlin, Alemania
EUR 280,00
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoxl, 454 pages, 1 blank sheet. - Strong italian vellum binding of the period over 5 slightly raised bands with blank endpapers, all edges sparkled red; 8vo.(ca. 18 x 12 x 3 cm). *** COMPLETE ZANE-EDITION IN A ORIGINAL VELLUM-BINDUNG OF THE PERIOD; inner frontpanel with old (18th or 19th century) engraved holograph-augmented typographic Exlibris >BIBLIOTECA RICCARDI / in Modena / S. ''VII'' F. ''5'' N. ''61.''< --- Binding somewhat spotty, rearpanel slightly darker; endpapers vertically cut off at foredge (front ca. 4 cm, rear ca. 2 cm), interior frontjoint slightly split between front flyleaf and titlepage not affecting the tight binding; both sides of the woodblock-vignette at titlepage with ca. 2x2 cm cutouts, apparently to remove manuscript ownership inscriptions of the period (minimal rest - old ink - still visible); bottom of titlepage with 2 green round censorhip-stamps of the period 'Diocesa di Modena'; lower outer corner with shallow old humidity-stain from page 300-, upper outer corner with even smaller one from page 380 onwards. - A GOOD COPY.
Publicado por Oakland, CA: Oakland Enquirer; January. 1888., 1888
Librería: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 1.068,10
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: Good. 4to. 23.5 x 30cm. Front cover with lithograph partially detached. 76pp. with numerous wood-engravings and ads. Loosely inserted is a contemporary flyer on Oakland by the M.J. Laymance & Co., whose stamp also appear on several pages.OCLC Number / Unique Identifier:20603565: Notes:Includes many drawings of residences, buildings, and street scenes of 1880s Oakland. Includes index of advertisers at back.Frank A. Leach founded and edited the Oakland Enquirer. He was the superintendent of the SF Mint in 1897 and in 1907 was named director of the US mints in Washington DC. Superintendent of S.F. Mint; 1897 - 1907; Director of the Mint, Washingon D.C. 1907.After 1914 he managed the People's Water Co. of Oakland. .OBITUARY From the OAKLAND TRIBUNE, Thursday Evening, June 20 1929:.Funeral services for Frank A. Leach, California pioneer newspaper publisher and political figure, who died yesterday at the age of 82 years, will be held tomorrow from the Masonic cathedral, Fifteenth and Madison Streets.The services will be conducted by Naval lodge, No. 87 of Vallejo, with which Leach had been affiliated for 58 years. Following the service, which will start at 3 P. M., Burial will take place at Mountain View cemetery.Leach died at Merritt hospital yesterday morning after a sudden breakdown in health two months ago.For more than a half-century he was a prominent figure in California. Born in Auburn, N. Y., of a pioneer American family, he was brought to California as an infant by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Leach. The family lived successively in San Francisco, Sacramento, Napa, Vallejo, and Oakland.Leach attended private school in Sacramento until the first public school was opened there and completed his education at the age of 17 in Napa. He became an apprentice printer and there gained the experience which enabled him to found first the Napa Daily Reporter, then the Vallejo Chronicle and finally with A. B. Nye and W. F. Burbank the Oakland Enquirer.Named To Legislature.His political career was launched in Vallejo in 1879 when he was elected to the state legislature as representative for Solano County. He served two terms and from 1882 to 1884 was postmaster of Vallejo.In 1897 he was appointed by President McKinley as superintendent of the mint in San Francisco and held that position for 10 years.During the fire which struck San Francisco in 1906, Leach achieved national recognition by providing an emergency financial system for the stricken city. The mint was the only financial institution which remained intact and bank officials turned to Leach for aid. He recommended that, through their eastern credits, they secure telegraphic transfer of funds by United States treasury orders on the San Francisco mint and use such funds in establishing a temporary central bank representing all the banks of the city.Local bankers supplied tellers and bookkeepers and the emergency financial institution was established in the mint and performed invaluable in restoring order out of the chaos of disaster.Named Fund Treasurer.When the magnitude of the disaster became known in Washington, Leach was asked to report on the situation and recommend relief measure to the treasury Department. He suggested free telegraphic transfer of funds from the east, payable in orders on the mint. President Roosevelt named Leach treasurer and through the system he received and disbursed more than $40,000,000 in 6 weeks' time without a single loss.Leach's work following the disaster is credited with having influenced his appointment, in 1907, as director-general of United States mints with headquarters in Washington, a post he held until 1909.He resigned then to become president and manager of the People's Water Company of Oakland, serving in that capacity until October 1911 when he retired. In July 1912, however, he was called out of retirement to again become Superintendent of the San Francisco mint following the death of Judge Sweeney. He resigned in August 1913.Surviving him are four sons, Frank A. Leach, Jr. vice-president and general manager of the Pacific Gas & Electric company: Abe P. and Harry E. Leach, Oakland Attorneys and Edwin R. Leach and an uncle, H. J. E. Roffee of Seattle Washington.From the collection of Frederick Ruffner, the founder of Gale Research, Detroit.