Published by New York, NY John Lane Co, 1918
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Signed by author on front end page. Bound in publisher's blue cloth. Gilt lettering. Hardcover. Good binding and cover. Generally clean. Light wear. Minor spotting. Bumped edge. 164 p., 20 cm. *Autographed by author.*. Signed.
Seller: Postcard Finder, Norwich, United Kingdom
Signed
Condition: As New. STB021 This is stunning RAF Coningsby collectors?official limited first day cover hand signed by CG Baxter D-Day veteran?of 83 Squadron where the signature rests perfectly accompanying the special hand commemorative franks.? This comes with full lifetime COA as the signing has been officially certified by the publishers?with full hallmarking and?authenticity of the series further detailed in absolute brand new mint condition with additional signature on reverse to fully authenticate and a large map of Coningsby?which this edition is LIMITED TO ONLY 100 and numbered 42 from the series (see image 2). You wont source better.George Baxter served as a navigator between 1944/45 in 83 Squadron (Pathfinder Force) and served in the RAF until retiring in 1956. In August 1942 No. 83 Squadron became part of the Pathfinder Force, carrying out target marking duties for the rest of the war. 83 Squadron was based at RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire from April 1944 until the end of WW2, flying Lancaster Mk.1 and Mk.III heavy bombers.In April 1944, advances in bombing tactics led to the effective independence of 5 Group, and 83 Squadron returned to its former family to perform a marking and illuminating role on permanent loan from 8 Group until war's end. There was never a time when the influence of 83 Squadron was not felt within the ranks of Bomber Command. It distinguished itself with outstanding performances and below average losses from the first day of the war to the last. Its achievements will live forever in the annals of RAF Bomber Command in WWII.
Published by 21 August 1704, Camp at Sindelfingen, Germany, 1704
Seller: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
Signed
Letter. This 21 August 1704 autograph letter is signed by John Churchill, first Duke of Marlborough and Captain-General of English and allied forces in the War of the Spanish Succession, eight days after the battle of Blenheim, from his field camp in Germany to Thomas Coningsby, later first Earl of Coningsby.The letter is written entirely in Marlborough's hand on the first panel of a single sheet of watermarked laid paper measuring 13.1 x 8.6 inches folded once to form four 8.6 x 6.6 inch panels. The letter is dated at the upper left "Camp at Sefelingben Aug. 21 1704" and addressed "My Lord". The letter reads in full: "Your Lord will excuse me that I had not time to thank you for your kind congratulation on our success at Schellinberg, before we had gain'd a second, and much greater victory, which I hope will soon make an end of the War in the Country, it is a particular pleasure to me that my friends are satisfied in my endeavors to serve the Publick, and I shall be always glad of any opertunity to assure you that I am with truth." The letter closes with the valediction "My Lord. your Lordships most obedient humbler servant" and his signature, "Marlborough".Condition is very good, the letter complete, the paper substantially clean, the ink still distinct. Evidenced by faint creases, the letter was subsequently folded three times horizontally and twice vertically. Two notations, plausibly those of the recipient, appear at the upper left corner and just below the date and location, respectively "Duke of Marlborough to Ld. Coningsby" and "after the Battle of Blenheim". It is inked on the fourth and final panel in three lines "Duke of | Marlborough | Aug 1704" with an original ink stain partially extending down from the "u" in "Duke" to blot the "l" in "Marlborough". The letter is protected within a clear, removable, archival sleeve housed within a rigid crimson cloth folder.Sindelfingen, the location of Marlborough's field camp where this letter was written, is a city in Baden-Württemberg in Germany, near Stuttgart, at the headwaters of the Schwippe.In July Marlborough captured the Franco-Bavarian garrison at Schellenberg Heights. This allowed him to cross the Danube into Bavaria, where his 52,000-man force vanquished the 56,000-man Franco-Bavarian army at Blenheim on 13 August 1704. Some 30,000 French troops were killed, wounded or captured. Even the French commander, Marshal Tallard, became a prisoner. Blenheim cemented Marlborough's place among England's greatest generals. "For a symbolic quitrent" for the lands and incomes with which he was rewarded by Queen Anne,"Marlboroughand his descendants were required to present annually to the sovereign at Windsor Castle, on the anniversary of the battle, a facsimile of the silk standard of the French royal household troops, thecorps du roi, whichMarlborough'stroops had taken during the battle."The recipient of this letter, Thomas Coningsby, first Earl of Coningsby (1657-1729) was a Whig politician, and Member of the House of Commons continuously from 1679-1710. "In the latter part ofWilliam'sreignConingsbyseems to have followedGodolphinin establishing connections withJohn Churchill,earl and later duke of Marlborough The alliance helped maintain Coningsby's position as a leader of the government side in the Commons following the accession ofQueen Annein 1702 Coningsbywas reckoned one of the foremost 'lord treasurer's whigs', working for Godolphin, Anne's lord treasurer, by managing parliamentary business." Coningsby was forced from power in 1708 and left Parliament in 1710, but "returned from the political wilderness at the accession ofGeorge I" in 1714 "and was rewarded for his services to the whig cause on 18 June 1716 when he was createdBaron Coningsby of Coningsby, Lincolnshire. He was created Earl of Coningsby in 1719. When "he published a pamphlet maligning lord chancellorMacclesfield, and as a result in January 1721 was stripped of his lieutenancies and imprisoned in the Tower of London for six months, he was visited by theMarlboroughs." After Marlborough died in 1722, Coningsby proposed marriage to the widowed duchess on 20 November, but was rejected.Sources: ODNB; Winston S Churchill: Marlborough: His Life and Times.