Publicado por London Eyre and Spottiswood published at the Great Seal Patent Office c, 1852
Librería: M.A. Stroh., London, Reino Unido
Original o primera edición
EUR 119,08
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritono binding. Condición: good. First Edition. Original Printed patent disbound with printed front blue wrapper present but not the back wrapper (both often lacking in early patents) About 27cm by 18cm some wear and tear due to the disbinding.
Publicado por London, Eyre and Spottiswood, published at the Great Seal Patent Office c, 1875
Librería: M.A. Stroh., London, Reino Unido
EUR 119,08
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNo Binding. Condición: Good. First Edition. Original Printed patent disbound with printed front blue wrapper present but not the back wrapper (both often lacking in early patents) About 27cm by 18 cm some wear and tear due to the disbinding.
Librería: Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Armadale, VIC, Australia
EUR 887,19
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoMelbourne: R. Quarrill & Co., Lithographers,74 Collins St. West, [1854].Lithographed billhead, 195 x 240 mm, with vignette view of the premises of John S. Cragg's Miner's Store at the Yarra end of Swanston Street; manuscript date of 12 October 1854, with entries recording the sale of a soup tureen and ladle for £1 10/- to the ship Shirley (an American merchant vessel), endorsed as 'paid' by one of Cragg's employees; a very well preserved document. An attractive and very scarce ephemeral printing from Melbourne at the height of the gold rush. Reuben Quarrill (1828-1904) was active as a lithographer in Melbourne for only a short period, in 1853-4.He is best known for a series of lithographic views of Melbourne, Williamstown and Geelong, several of which at least were drawn by Edmund Thomas. Quarrill then worked as a commission agent and later turned to journalism, ending his career as the editor of the Geelong Advertiser. Ironmonger John S. Cragg's notice appeared in The Argus, 16 February 1854, advising the Melbourne public that he was moving his business, The Miner's Store, from 21 Swanston Street to new premises at 11 Swanston Street (four doors closer to Prince's Bridge). In the illustration on this billhead, the facade of his stone building has the address 'No. 11 from No. 21' below the name Miner's Store. The American ship Shirley, out of Salem, Massachusetts, was a merchant clipper of 910 tons owned by Stone, Silsbee & Pickman. She arrived in Port Phillip on 1 October 1854, and was berthed at Nelson Place (Williamstown) until she departed Melbourne for Callao on 17 October 1854.