Language: English
Published by Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1966
Seller: Apple Grove Books, Herts, United Kingdom
US$ 41.46
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Book measures 24x16cm, 225pp. Complete with folding map. Bound in original publishers cloth, with gilt title lettering. Binding with minor shelf wear, scuffed corners. Binding in good clean condition. Internally, pages clean, near fine. A very good clean copy.
Published by Royal Geographic Society, London, 1940
Seller: Antipodean Books, Maps & Prints, ABAA, Garrison, NY, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Very good overall. September 1940. Stephenson, A. Graham Land and the Problem of Stefansson Strait, pp 167-77 (+). Stephenson, A. Diagram relating the discoveries of Wilkins and Ellsworth to those of B.G.L.E., pp 177-180 & map; Stephenson, A. & W. Fleming. King George, the Sixth Sound, pp 153-167 & map; Champion, Ivan. The Bamu-Purari Patrol, 1936 [Part I], pp 190-206 and map. Orig. blue wrps, spine a bit ruffled and marked.
Language: English
Published by Constable Co Ltd, London, 1932
Seller: Richard Booth's Bookshop, Hereford, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 82.91
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardBack. Condition: Good. No Jacket. First edition. Constable Co Ltd. London. 1932A good, clean and sound copy in brown cloth boards, illustrated with bw photographic plates as listed, missing map, but otherwise a complete copy. A little rubbed and worn at edges, no dust jacket.
Published by Gold Coast, Pacific Press 1988., 1988
Signed
xii+308pp. large 8vo. Original boards in dustwrapper. B/w illustrations, maps. Folding map in envelope. A fine copy in slipcase. Signed limited edition.
Published by Lansdowne Press., Melbourne., 1966
Seller: Asia Bookroom ANZAAB/ILAB, Canberra, ACT, Australia
New Edition. Folding map at rear, black and white photographic illustrations, 225pp, index. A prior owner's inscription front free endpaper, lightly browned edges, endpapers and dustjacket a little foxed, a good hardback copy.
Published by Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1966
Seller: Bellcourt Books, Hamilton, VIC, Australia
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. AA Kent (illustrator). Green hardback with jacket, both good condition. Some discoloration due to age. Black and white images.
Published by Constable & Co., London, 1932
Seller: Muir Books [Robert Muir Old & Rare Books], PERTH, WA, Australia
First Edition
1st edition. Octavo, original cloth boards, frontis portrait (Karius) loose, b&w plates, folding map, pp xix, 267. Presentation copy, signed by the leader of the expedition (Charles Karius) and dated in the year of publication. Previous owner's bookplate (anthropologist D'arcy Ryan), light foxing, folded map taped at folds and tears, otherwise in very good condition. Important association copy of the record of the Karius Patrol which crossed New Guinea. Ivan Francis Champion was born in Port Moresby in 1904. He was appointed as a patrol officer in New Guinea in 1924, and in 1925 was posted to Kambisi which was run by the assistant resident magistrate Charles Henry Karius. "Impressed by Champion?s composure under difficult circumstances, Karius chose him as his assistant for the North-West patrol, an ambitious attempt to cross the island of New Guinea at its widest extent. During the first attempt, from December 1926 to July 1927, Champion?s keen sense of geography and his willingness to rely on local guides enabled him to identify a passage across the Central Range. This was the route they followed on their second, successful, expedition between September 1927 and January 1928?an exceptional patrol, among previously uncontacted communities, conducted without firing a shot in anger. Emulating earlier patrol officers, Champion published his account of the expedition, Across New Guinea (1932), a classic narrative of exploration." (Australian Dictionary of Biography.).
Seller: Berkelouw Rare Books, Berrima, NSW, Australia
The object of the North-West Patrol was "to ascertain the source of the Fly River and to find a pass across into the Mandated Territory" (p. 1). The manuscript records the unsuccessful first attempt at the south-north crossing at its widest point from December 1926 to July 1927. Led by Charles H. Karius with Ivan F. Champion as second-in-command and accompanied by a party of local police and carriers the expedition was especially significant for being a sole undertaking of the Papuan Service (and not in concert with the Mandated Territory). It was with the knowledge acquired on this first expedition that Karius and Champion were ultimately able to complete the south to north crossing on their second attempt from September 1927 to January 1928. The North-West Patrol was later described by the Lieutenant-Governor of Papua Sir Hubert Murray as "by far the most important and most difficult feat of exploration that has ever been performed in New Guinea". (Quanchi & Robson 2005 p. 86) The manuscript comprises Karius' diary on 43 single-sided foolscap leaves dated 3 December 1926 to 10 June 1927; plus Champion's diary on 64 single-sided foolscap leaves from 1 May to 14 July; plus 5 leaves of Appendix. Each leaf is individually mounted (the first and second leaves partly defective with slight loss). Hand-written manuscript corrections presumably by Champion throughout. Preserved in folio size cloth bound volume in the front of which is an original double-sided A.L.S. from a John Barnshaw dated 26 March 1954 regarding the above: "Enclosed you will find the somewhat battered remains of the Champion typescripts. After 25 years oblivion in the dim recesses of a drawer I am afraid the mice or silverfish have started their work. This is the story of how I acquired this m.s. As a young man of 20 I first went to New Guinea immediately after World War I and on returning to Sydney shortly after I conceived the youthfully romantic - but of course utterly fantastic - idea of crossing the island from south to north - alone! - and of being the first white to do so. It was not until 1927 that I had sufficient money to undertake the enterprise when to my dismay word arrived in Sydney that Karius & Champion had successfully made the journey. I immediately wrote to Champion who had just returned to Moresby and he sent me down the duplicate of his draft copy which I now enclose."Ivan Champion published an account of his explorations in Across New Guinea from the Fly to the Sepik issued in London by Constable in 1932. He was subsequently decorated by the Royal Geographical Society in 1938 for Exploration in North Eastern New Guinea. Karius was awarded the Patron's Medal of the Royal Geographical Society.