Publication Date: 1867
Seller: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, U.S.A.
Signed
Condition: Good. Boston 1867 1st Geo. C Rand & Avery. Octavo, 34pp., original printed wraps. **Inscribed and initialled by Clarke. Also signed by presentee, Prof. Cyrus Northrup of Yale College. Good, wraps a bit chipped, some stains.
Published by Carey and Hart, Philadelphia, 1849
Seller: Minotavros Books, ABAC ILAB, Whitby, ON, Canada
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. 12mo - over 6¾ - 7¾" tall. First edition. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author to T. [Thomas] Rockhill Ingraham, Oct. 25th, 1851 to head of Preface. Quarter brown cloth, brown paper boards. iv, 66 pp. Apparently lacking B&W folding map. Manuscript corrections to text, apparently in author's hand. Boards rubbed, discoloured, and stained. Wear to extremities, chip to spine head. Damp staining to foot of boards and text block. Oily staining to head of gutter throughout and rear endpapers, long tear to head of inner hinge at title page. Foxing to endpapers. Some sporadic chipping from opening to upper margins. Edward Duffield Ingraham (1793-1854) was an American lawyer and author, mostly famous as the author of several essays in the field of American history, this account of the events of the War of 1812 leading to the Burning of Washington being his best-known work. "This is the earliest carefully prepared monograph upon the Battle of Bladensburg and the subsequent capture of Washington, August 19--25, 1814. This event led to the resignation of General Armstrong as Secretary of War and the appointment of a committee to investigate the causes and circumstances of this disaster. In the Sketch here described General Armstrong is blamed and General Winder exonerated. The work has an extensive appendix, in which are given documentary proofs." Cole: Library of E.D. Church, p. 2553. Howes I-48. Sabin 34772. Provenance: Bookplate of Wallace Hugh Cathcart, (2 Apr. 1865-6 Sept. 1942), prominent bibliophile, best known for his association with the Western Reserve Historical Society of Cleveland, first as its president and then as its director. As a prominent member of the book trade, Cathcart was one of the founders and later vice-president of the American Booksellers & Publishers Association. Civic-mindedness and love of books attracted Cathcart to the WRHS where he acted as the organization's secretary (1894-97), president (1907-13), and finally became the society's first full-time director (1913-42). As a book collector, Cathcart concentrated his energies in developing one of the best historical libraries in the nation. [Case Western Reserve].
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. [8] unbound plates in modest gray portfolio boards. The whole is tied together with two red ribbons threaded through cover slits. 25cm. Some chipping and soiling on portfolio covers. Ribbon ragged on one end (missing the tip). Plates in nice condition with just a touch of foxing. Illustrations of African Americans. Captions in African American dialect at bottom of each print. Plates and front cover signed with a monogram which is probably "BFL" -- it could also be some other arrangement of these three letters. OCLC uses BFL as author and locates two copies (NHL and BAT) which were somehow given a publication date of 1886. We found no information about the illusrator or publisher.