Published by Nelson & Phillips
Seller: Peakirk Books, Heather Lawrence PBFA, Sheringham, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Hardcover. Condition: Good+. Illustrated by Leslie Otway ; Abbe Et Al (illustrator). Hbk in picture boards; G++; pages browned,4to , picture boards a little grubby with age; . Edges bumped. 1st story is A double Escape; 4 colour plates; ; Bumper Book for Boys; 4to 11" - 13" tall.
Language: English
Published by Naval & Military Press Ltd, Uckfield, 2006
ISBN 10: 1847341896 ISBN 13: 9781847341891
Seller: Milbury Books, New Romney, United Kingdom
US$ 25.63
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Near Fine. A highly presentable copy of this N&M Press facsimile reprint of the 1929 1st Edition. The text is pristine and there are no inscriptions. The binding is tight - the crown suggests just some light reading use. The pictorial board covers show only very modest traces of surface rubbing (light hint of wear to spine edges) and remain in pleasing condition. Please see five pictures attached for a closer look at condition.
Published by The Children's Press, London
Seller: CHARLES BOSSOM, Ely, CAMBS, United Kingdom
Hard Cover. Condition: Good. Circa 1930s. Pictorial cover showing boys playing with model areoplanes. Damaged to spine. Rubbed to corners. Previous owner's name and 1933 date on f. paste down. Colour plates and b/w illustrations. Contents Sories by Reg. G. Thomas, J K Lyons, Major J T Gorman, Malcolm Hemphrey, Gustin Aish, Wallace Grey, L B Thoburn-Clarke. Size: 4to.
Published by The Headsquarters of the Regiment., London, UK., 1929
Seller: Banfield House Booksellers, Gympie, QLD, Australia
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. 464 pages. plus xxxiv preliminaries 20 photographs and 22 folding maps, sunned spine, minor shelf wear to cover corner. Oversea buyers please obtain postage quotation.
Published by Headquarters of the Regiment, London, 1929
Seller: About Books, Henderson, NV, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good condition. No jacket. First Edition. London: Headquarters of the Regiment, 1929. Very Good condition. Light cover soil. Spine slightly faded. 7.5" wide by 10" tall. No owner's name or bookplate. Pages are bright white, fresh and crisp (no foxing, no browning). No underlining. No highlighting. No margin notes. Illustrated with 42 photographs/portraits (on 20 plates) and 28 maps (22 folding). Complete with Addenda and Corrigenda sheet. A detailed history of the Royal Fusiliers in WWI with accounts of their activities in Malta, Gallipoli, Gommecourt Salient, the Somme, Laventie Front, the battles of Arras, Bullecourt, Ypres, Cambrai, Villers Bretonneux, Amiens, Epehy, Canal du Nord, Southern Egypt, etc. Appendices include: Roll of Honour [1,345 dead]. Summary of Decorations Awarded to Officers. Summary of Decorations Awarded to Warrant Officers, NCOs, and Men. Index. Index of Arms, Formations, Units, etc. Bound in the original gilt decorated red and blue cloth. . First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good condition/No jacket. xxxiv, 464pp .
Published by Raphael Tuck & Sons Ltd., London
Seller: Valuable Volumes, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom
US$ 124.63
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Frances Brundage, Harold Copping, The Baroness Orezy, Willis Grey, Edith Scannell, Major Giles (illustrator). No date but neat inscription on end paper dated 1906. Pictorial front cover with maroon leatherette spine. End papers browned, slight foxing to title pages, o/w clean with 12 beautiful full page colour illustrations. Front binding is weak with top half pulling away but holding.
Published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office ( HMSO ), London, 1898
Seller: Dendera, London, United Kingdom
US$ 311.58
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. Two papers, cord bound in original wraps 21 x 32cm. iv + 21 + (1); (ii) + 12 + (1) containing 30 documents in English and French with translations. Very good, lightly tanned with a couple of small closed tears, hand numbered to the odd pages 863-903. These trace the Fashoda Incident from 10 Dec 1897 to 12 Oct 1898 through letters, speeches, and reports, among the remarkable exchanges between Kitchener and Captain Jean-Baptiste Marchand. Marchand had led a small force overland to claim the area for France to undermine British control in Egypt and the Sudan, whilst Kitchener was in the process of defeating the Mahdi.
Published by Headquarters of the Regiment, London, 1929
Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
First Edition. Foreword by Colonel Sir Charles Cheers Wakefield. Pp. [ii]+xxxiv+464, frontispiece and 19 plates, 22 folding and 6 text maps, decorated endpapers, roll of honour, summary of decorations awarded, index; cr. 4to; qr. red and blue boards, lettered, decorated and ruled in gilt, lightly worn and marked, small perforation in upper joint; top edges gilt; edges of leaves a little browned and a trifle soiled, free endpapers browned, book label of David Levine, Sydney, on verso upper free endpaper; Headquarters of the Regiment, London, 1929. First edition. White p. 201.
Published by HMSO London. The Major Graham document dated from the General Register Office Somerset House London 7 December The Grey circular dated from Downing Street 20 January 1849, 1848
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
US$ 443.13
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketTwo printed documents: the first carrying Major Graham's 'Memorandum' of 'suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Posssessions', together with his observations on the making up of 'Statistical Abstracts', a specimen 'Form of Return' and a covering letter; the second a circular letter from Earl Grey, instructing colonial governors 'to cause a Return of the Population of the Colony under your Government to be prepared'. For the background to these two documents, see A. J. Christopher, 'The quest for a census of the British Empire c.1840-1940', Journal of Historical Geography, April 2008. No other copies of the present documents, which were privately printed by Her Majesty's Stationery Office for Grey, as Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, have been discovered. This printing was intended for direct distribution to civil servants and MPs, and certainly pre-dates the first publication of the items (in, for example, the journals of the legislative councils of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, both in 1849). Disbound from a collection of parliamentary papers assembled by Sir Frederick Peel (1823-1906), Liberal MP for Leominster, who was Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, 1851-1854; and Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, 1854-1855. No printed pagination, but the volume as a whole was paginated in Peel's hand. Both items are in good condition. ONE: The 'Copy of Major Graham's Letter, together with a Copy of the Memorandum to which it refers', referred to by Grey in Item Two below. 4pp, foolscap 8vo. Paginated by Peel 163-166. Bifolium on grey paper. The first page carries a transcript, including a facsimile signature, of a letter from George Graham to 'B. Hawes, Esq., M.P.' (1797-1862, later Sir Benjamin Hawes), of the Colonial Office. Graham suggests 'that it may perhaps be expedient that steps should be taken to secure a Census being made in each of our Colonies, in 1851, on or about the same day, that Parliament may fix for its being taken in this Country', and begins his letter with reference to 'some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions', which six year before Graham 'transmitted for the use of the Secretary of State for the Colonies some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions, as requested by Lord Stanley'. Graham is now 'about to publish the Population of England and Wales', and has 'also been furnished with the latest returns of the Population in several Countries in Europe'. It occurs to Graham 'that it might be desirable also to publish the Population of our Colonial Possessions', and he asks Hawes to 'have the goodness to call the attention of Earl Grey to this subject', and to request 'that I may be furnished with Abstracts of the Population of such of our Colonies as may have made returns upon the subject, to the Colonial Office'. The letter contains two references to Graham's brother, and the man who appointed him to his post, 'Secretary Sir James Graham'. The second page, headed 'Memorandum' of what he describes in the letter to Hawes as 'some suggestions respecting the mode of taking a Census in each of our Colonial Possessions'. The third page, headed 'Statistical Abstracts', again carries a facsimile of Graham's signature, to a document dated 5 August 1842, addressed from the General Register Office, Somerset House. The communication begins: 'The enumerators should not be called upon to make the Abstract, but should transmit the Schedules in books of a convenient form to the seat of Government; where the Abstracts should be made on an uniform plan under proper supervision.' Three examples are given of 'the great variety of ways' by which 'the facts might be combined'. The final page is headed 'Form of Return', and gives the fictitious example of the return for the family of 'John Bromley', 'English, 'Farmer', who entered the colony ('COLONY. | Dist.
Seller: Herbst-Auktionen, Detmold, Germany
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
PERSÖNLICHER SCHECK (E.Original-Dokument 1 S. kl. 8° quer mit fett gedrucktem Counter Check) über US-$ 15,00 für Cash, eigenhändig signiert Los Angeles, CA. 3/7/1956.