Pamphlet. Condition: Used - Very Good. No date, ca 1927 (text). (20) pages. Illustrated: ships, lobby, lounge, deck chairs, dining salon, music, smoking & tea rooms, bedrooms, dancing deck, orchestra. 4 x 6", pictorial wrapper. VG.
ca. 1920 USA, softcover map with large folding-out map of Florida with all her details.
Published by Arthur W. Pye, Passenger Traffic Manager, Clyde Steamship Line, 1914]., [New York, 1914
Seller: BUCKINGHAM BOOKS, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, GREENCASTLE, PA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First edition. 8vo. 9" X 8" attractive, color pictorial wrappers, folded to 9" x 4," n. p. (28 pp. including covers), illustrated, maps. The Clyde Steamship Company operated year-round between Boston and New York and Jacksonville, Florida. They operated 22 steamers with all but two named for Indian tribes, and with an aggregated tonnage of 56,826 tons. Single panel color maps of the interior of Florida showing the inlet from the Atlantic Ocean to Jacksonville and the St. John River, and a color map of the whole of Florida. There is also a two-panel color map of the Clyde Line routes showing their routes along the eastern seaboard of the U. S. Photographs of some of the steamers and many of the passenger comforts provided including cabins, dining rooms, entertainment areas, etc. Light soiling to wrappers along with light wear to the extremities and edge. Very good. An attractive copy of an elusive booklet.
Published by Arthur W. Pye, Passenger Traffic Manager, Clyde Steamship Line, 1914]., [New York, 1914
Seller: BUCKINGHAM BOOKS, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, GREENCASTLE, PA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First edition. 8vo. 9" X 8" attractive, color pictorial wrappers, folded to 9" x 4," n. p. (28 pp. including covers), illustrated, maps. The Clyde Steamship Company operated year-round between Boston and New York and Jacksonville, Florida. They operated 22 steamers with all but two named for Indian tribes, and with an aggregated tonnage of 56,826 tons. Single panel color maps of the interior of Florida showing the inlet from the Atlantic Ocean to Jacksonville and the St. John River, and a color map of the whole of Florida. There is also a two-panel color map of the Clyde Line routes showing their routes along the eastern seaboard of the U. S. Photographs of some of the steamers and many of the passenger comforts provided including cabins, dining rooms, entertainment areas, etc. An attractive, near fine copy of an elusive booklet.
1911 New York, softcover 48 pages, with photos of the ss Mohawk and her interior. The Clyde Steamship Company was operatingÂon the Eas-coast of the USA to connecy New York with Cuba, Boston, The Keas, New Orleans, Charlestone etc. Also photos of the destinations and a small fleetlist. In very good condition.Â.
Publication Date: 1903
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Fair. Verso repairs to separations at fold intersections. Area of reinstatement along left border between 'G' and 'H' within the inset. Close left margin. Location index on verso. Size 22.25 x 16.25 Inches. This is a 1903 Clyde Steamship Company map of Florida. Overprinted red dashed lines mark the Clyde Steamship Company's routes out of Jacksonville north to Charleston, New York, and Boston, as well as the St. John's River Line from the coast inland south along the river to Sanford. An inset map along the left border traces the company's many routes from their terminal in Florida to destinations along the coast. A second inset map, in the lower left, details the Florida panhandle from the Alabama border to Washington County. The Clyde Steamship Company William P. Clyde (October 11, 1839 - November 18, 1923) founded the Clyde Steamship Company in 1874. By 1882, it operated routes between New York and Florida, Key West, Havana, and New Orleans. By 1899, its network had expanded to include routes south from Boston, Providence, New York, and Philadelphia, as well as a St. John River line to Jacksonville, Florida. By 1902, Clyde Steamship Company operated tri-weekly departures from Jacksonville to New York. Charles W. Morse's Consolidated Steamship Lines purchased the Clyde Steamship Company in 1907, but that company collapsed in 1908. The Atlantic, Gulf, and West Indies Steamship Lines took over the Clyde Line in 1911, but the Clyde Line name and flag continued to be used until 1932, when the Clyde Line was merged with the Mallory Line to form the Clyde-Mallory Line. Publication History and Census This map was created by C.S. Hammond and Company and published by the Clyde Steamship Company in 1903. An example is part of the Touchton Map Library at the Tampa Bay History Center. Five examples are cataloged in OCLC and are part of the institutional collections at Yale University, the University of Georgia, the Newberry Library, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and the Kansas State Historical Society. References: Tampa Bay History Center, Touchton Map Library, M1164. OCLC 38987295.