Sale 1097 | Books & Manuscripts including Americana

Page 231

FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 8-9 NOVEMBER 2022

FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

SALE 1097

Session I

8 November 2022

9am CT | Chicago Lots 1 - 410

Session II 9 November 2022 9am CT | Chicago Lots 411 - 717

PREVIEW BY APPOINTMENT

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FRONT COVER Selections from The Patrick Atkinson Collection of Signed Books & Manuscripts | Lots 411-512 BACK COVER Lot 704
DEN 1057930 FL AB3688 GA AU-C003121 IL 444.000521 OH 2019000131 MO STL 107286 Download the Hindman App for iOS and Android © Hindman LLC 2022
2 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

TABLE OF CONTENTS

SALE 1097 Session I 9 November 2022 Chicago

Lots 1 - 410 Fine Printed Books & Manuscripts | Lots 1-410 4

Session II 9 November 2022 Chicago Lots 411 - 717

The Patrick Atkinson Collection of Signed Books & Manuscripts | Lots 411-512 112 U. S. Presidents | Lots 411-471 112 World Leaders & Historic Figures | Lots 472-512 134 Printed & Manuscript Americana, including American Prints | Lots 513-694 148 Maps & Atlases | Lots 695-717 218 Hindman Team 228 Inquiries 229 Conditions of Sale 231 Upcoming Auctions 235

PROPERTY FROM THE TRUSTS AND ESTATES OF Estate of a Renowned Art Dealer, New York City Timothy Wehling, Seattle, Washington

PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTIONS OF Patrick Atkinson, Minneapolis, Minnesota Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois Warren Ehrlich

Dorothy and Richard Fitch Tamara Frauenfelder-Stover Pamela W. Habel Lauren W. Henry A Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois A Private Collection, Madison, Wisconsin James and Patrice Schoonmaker, Naples, Florida Liza Strauss

The Westland Library of the Frontier

PROPERTY SOLD TO BENEFIT

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

3FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM OPPOSITE Lot 560
4 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 2

Session I: Tuesday,

November

Fine Printed Books & Manuscripts

1-410

CT

1

1 [ARTISTS’ BOOKS] -- [ASPEN MAGAZINE]. JOHNSON, Phyllis, editor.  . COMPLETE RUN: Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5&6, 6A, 7, 8, 9, and 10. New York: Roaring Ford Press & Aspen Communications Inc., 1965-1971.

10 volumes, various 4to, 8vo, 12mo and 16mo or smaller sizes. Each issue with loose material laid in as issued. (Some light toning, scuffing or chipping to a few numbers.) Original boxes, envelopes or cases for each issue, including the rare unflattened boxes for nos. 1-5/6 and 7 (some light soiling or creasing to a few).

CONTENTS:

No. 1. LOIS, George et al, designers. [The Black Box]. 1965. With subscriber envelope laid-in (not mentioned in other copies). No. 2. KIRK, Frank et al, designers. [The White Box]. 1966.

No. 3. WARHOL, Andy et al. designers. [The Pop Issue]. December 1966.  No. 4. McLUHAN, Marshall et al. [The McLuhan Issue]. Spring 1967.  Nos. 5 & 6. O’DOHERTY, Brian et al, editors and designers. [The Minimalism Issue]. Fall & Winter 1967. No. 6a. HENDRICKS, Jon, editor. [The Performance Art Issue]. Winter 1968-1969. No 7. AMAYA, Mario et al. [The British Issue]. Spring-Summer 1970. Without item 15, which was printed on the box in error, as usual. No 8. GRAHAM, Dan et al. [The Fluxus Issue]. Fall-Winter [1970-1971].

No 9. MacLISE, Angus et al, editors. [The Psychedelic Issue]. Winter-Spring [1971]. (Lacking item 14 as usual.) No. 10. [The Asia Issue]. Summer [1971]. Lacking item 13 as in UbuWeb and most copies.

A SCARCE COMPLETE SET OF ASPEN MAGAZINE WITH ALL ITEMS AS ISSUED.

Beginning as a luxury lifestyle magazine focused on Aspen’s art and culture scene, Aspen Magazine quickly branched out to incorporate a wide range of artistic styles and movements. Contributors included Peter Blake, William S. Burroughs, John Cage, Marcel Duchamp, Philip Glass, David Hockney, Jasper Johns, John Lennon, Sol LeWitt, Claes Oldenberg, Yoko Ono, Robert Rauschenberg, and Carolee Schneeman. Issues include a wide variety of objects laid-in, including “flexidiscs,” flipbooks, mazes, postcards, posters, recordings, reels of super-8 film, and other ephemera. Issue number 5/6 includes first publication in English of Roland Barthes “Death of the Author.” (For a list of materials and inserts, see UbuWeb, ubu.com/aspen/). RARE: According to online records, only one other set of Aspen Magazine, presumably incomplete in only 9 volumes, has sold at auction in the last 45 years.

$3,000 - 4,000

2 [ARTIST’S BOOK]. DALI, Salvador (1904-1989), illustrator. -- DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge (“Lewis Carroll”) (1832-1898). Alice in Wonderland. New York: W.U.C.U.A. and Maecenas Press - Random House, 1969.

4to (430 x 290 mm). Etched frontispiece and 12 heliogravures BY DALI. Loose as issued in original brown cloth chemise; quarter morocco folding case gilt, bone clasps (lacking clasps, joints broken, slight chipping to spine ends).

LIMITED EDITION, number 1101 of 2500 copies SIGNED BY DALI and printed on Mandeure paper.

$6,000 - 8,000

5FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. DALI, Salvador (1904-1989). Vida Secreta de Salvador Dali. Buenos Aires: Editorial Poseidon, 1944.

8vo. Illustrated. (Some toning.) Original tan cloth, facsimile signature stamped in red to front cover, spine lettered in red (toned).

INSCRIBED IN FRENCH BY DALI: “Muller Hommage de Dali 1961.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $250 - 350

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. ERNST, Max, illustrator (1891-1976). -- PRÉVERT, Jacques (1900-1977). Les Chiens ont Soif. Paris: Au Pont Des Arts, 1964.

Folio. 2 color etched plates SIGNED BY ERNST in pencil lower right margin, 25 color lithographed plates by Ernst. Loose as issued in lithographed portfolio; original glassine; original cloth folding case.

LIMITED EDITION, number 53 of 300 copies of a total edition of 320. Beyond Illustration: The Livre d’Artiste in the Twentieth Century 46; Kornfeld & Klipstein 75.

Property from the Collection of Warren Ehrlich $1,000 - 2,000

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. LÉGER, Fernand, illustrator (1881-1955). -- RIMBAUD, Arthur (18541891). Les Illuminations. Lausanne: Grosclaude Éditions des Gaules, [1949].

Folio. 15 lithographs (13 with pochoir). Modern morocco; original wrappers bound in; morocco-tipped slipcase.

LIMITED EDITION, number 281 of 275 copies SIGNED BY LÉGER and the editor Louis Grosclaude on Papier Vélin Teinté of a total edition of 395. “Léger went even further with Les Illuminations than the final version indicates, designing a lively cover that was not used and at least two other illustrations. The omission of Léger’s cover, a hallmark of his books since the very beginning, put Les Illuminations into a conventional mold. The reason was that the editor was aiming at an audience of bibliophiles, and the classic typography, also at variance with Léger’s normal bent, reflected this aim as well. But these conditions do not diminish the effect of Léger’s fifteen illustrations” (Saphire). Saphire 24-38.

Property from the Collection of Warren Ehrlich

$2,000 - 4,000

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[ARTIST’S BOOK] -- [LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB]. JOYCE, James (1882-1941). Henri Matisse, illustrator. Ulysses. With an introduction by Stuart Gilbert. New York: Limited Editions Club, 1935.

4to. 6 etchings and 20 reproductions of preliminary drawings on colored paper. Original publisher’s brown cloth, upper cover and spine gilt-decorated; original board slipcase, printed paper label on spine; glassine dust jacket (chipped).

LIMITED EDITION, ONE OF ONLY 250 COPIES SIGNED BY BOTH MATISSE AND JOYCE, number 482 from a total edition of 1,500 copies. “One of the very few American livres de peintres issued before World War II. According to George Macy, who undertook this only American publication of Matisse’s illustrations, he asked the artist how many etchings the latter could provide for five thousand dollars. The artist chose to take six subjects from Homer’s Odyssey” (Riva Castleman, A Century of Artists Books, pp.35, 61). When asked why he did not illustrate episodes from Joyce’s novel, he responded that he hadn’t read it. The American Livre de Peintre, 32; The Artist and the Book, 197; Slocum and Calhoun A22. $8,000 - 12,000

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[ARTIST’S BOOK] -- [LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB]. NERUDA, Pablo (1904-1973). Edward Ranney, illustrator. Heights of Macchu Picchu. Edward Ranney, translator. New York: The Limited Editions Club, 1998.

Oblong 4to. 10 photogravures printed by Jon Goodman and Peter Pettengill after Edward Ranney’s photographs; original prospectus laid in. Original green cloth, leather label on spine; original slipcase.

LIMITED EDITION, number 153 of 500 copies SIGNED by Edward Ranney and John Felstiner. “Not since 1911, when...Hiram Bingham discovered and documented the ruined Inca citadel Macchu Picchu, has anybody photographed the site more carefully and sensitively than...Edward Ranney, who has been recognized internationally for his images of Inca and Mayan landscapes and architecture” (prospectus, p.3).

Property from the Collection of Forrest Fenn $800 - 1,200

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. MAX, Peter (b. 1937). The Art of Peter Max. Charles A. Riley II, editor. New York: Harry N Abrams, Inc., 2002.

4to. Numerous color illustrations from photographs after Peter Max (many full-page, some folding). Original red cloth stamped in gold; pictorial dust jacket. Provenance: Michael (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY MAX WITH AN ORIGINAL DRAWING: “For Michael Love Max 2002.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

7FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. NEWTON, Helmut (1920-2004). Sumo. New York: Taschen, 1999.

Large folio. Over 400 full-page reproductions of Newton’s photographs. Original photo-pictorial boards; photo-pictorial dust jacket; with the original chrome stand designed by Philippe Starck (lacking one screw) and the original shipping box.

LIMITED EDITION, number 9,700 of 10,000 copies SIGNED BY NEWTON on the title-page.

Property of an Estate, Beverly Hills, California $2,000 - 3,000

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. SHAKESPEARE, William (1564-1616). Roméo et Juliette, Prétexte a Mise en Scène par Jean Cocteau, d’après le Drame de William Shakespeare. Décors et Costumes de Jean Hugo. Paris: Au Sans Pareil, 1926.

4to. 12 woodcuts and 7 headpieces with hand-coloring, woodcut title vignette after Jean Hugo. Blue crushed levant with quadruple rule border, spine in 6 compartments with 5 raised bands gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut, wide turn-ins gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY VERMOREL; original wrappers bound in.

LIMITED EDITION, number 131 of 350 copies on Montgolfier d’Annonay of a total edition of 420 copies. Jean Hugo, a member of the French Surrealist movement of the 1920s, “was a part of the revolution in theater, poetry, music and dance after World War I” (John Andrew Frey). Cocteau’s Roméo et Juliette, which debuted at the Soirees de Paris du Comte Etienne de Beaumont at the Theater de la Cigale in Paris on June 2, 1924, was not strictly a ballet, was the first of of his “textes-prétextes,” a form of play which he hoped would save the French theater.  “Hugo designed a set [for Cocteau’s play] whose hangings and floor would be of black cloth with colored linear decorations, and for the actors black tights and black velvet dresses, doublets and short hose, painted with ‘embroidery’ that would be picked out by lighting… [Cocteau recalled that the] ‘Red lights framing the stage kept the audience from seeing anything else” (Steegmuller p.328).

Property from the Collection of Warren Ehrlich

$1,500 - 2,500

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. ROCKWELL, Norman (1894-1978), illustrator. -- MENDOZA, George. Norman Rockwell’s Americana ABC. New York: Dell Publishing Co., Inc., 1975.

4to. Publisher’s cream cloth; original dust jacket; cloth slipcase.

LIMITED EDITION, number 960 of 1000 copies, SIGNED BY NORMAN ROCKWELL AND GEORGE MENDOZA.

[With]: The Norman Rockwell Storybook (Told by Jan Wahl) New York: Windmill Books/Simon and Schuster, 1969. 4to. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dustjacket (rubbing, toning). -- Together, 2 works in 2 volumes, all 4to, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. VLAMINCK, Maurice de, illustrator. -- VANDERPYL, Fritz. Voyages. Paris: Éditions de la Galerie Simon, 1920.

4to. 18 in-text woodcuts by Vlaminck. (Some minor offsetting of woodcuts to text.) Contemporary vellum-backed marbled boards (some minor soiling to spine); original wrappers with a woodcut by Vlaminck bound in. Provenance: Mildred Bliss, Dumbarton Oaks (bookplate, withdrawal stamp).

LIMITED EDITION, number 48 of 90 copies on Hollande van Gelder SIGNED BY VLAMINCK AND VANDERPYL of a total edition of 107.

Property from the Collection of Liza Strauss, San Francisco, California

$1,500 - 2,500

8 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

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[ARTIST’S BOOK]. WARHOL, Andy (1928-1987). The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B and Back Again). New York and London: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, [1975].

8vo. Publisher’s cloth-backed boards; original printed dust jacket (upper corner of front flap torn away). Provenance: Danny (presentation inscription, signed Foley’s with their ticket on dust jacket).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY WARHOL WITH A DRAWING OF A CAMPBELL’S SOUP CAN: “To Danny, an appreciator of Warhol art, Andy Warhol.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $2,000 - 3,000

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[ARTIST’S BOOK] -- [WARHOL, Andy (1928-1987)]. Stephen KOCH (b. 1941). Andy Warhol Photographs. New York: Robert Miller Gallery, [1987].

4to. Illustrated. (Slight marginal toning, small stain on title-page). Original yellow cloth stamped in white and black (slight rubbing to corners); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION. SIGNED BY WARHOL on the front flyleaf.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

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[ARTIST’S BOOKS]. A group of 16 works, many signed or inscribed, comprising:

ADAMS, Ansel Easton. Yosemite and the Range of Light. Boston, 1979. FIRST ISSUE. SIGNED, WITH COLOR PHOTOGRAPH OF ADAMS TIPPED-IN. -- ADAMS. The Portfolios of Ansel Adams. Boston, 1981. Later edition. SIGNED. -- KOONS, Jeff. Jeff Koons. SF, 1992. INSCRIBED. -- MAX, Peter. The Land of Blue. NY, 1970. -- And another 2 copies. -- MAX, Peter. The Land of Yellow. NY, 1970. -- And another 4 copies. -- MAX, Peter. The Land of Red. NY, 1970. -- And another 2 copies. -- KLEE, Paul. The Inward Vision Watercolors Drawings Writings. NY, [1958]. -- [Woodstock 94 Official Concert Program]. N.p., [1994]. -- Together, 16 works in 16 volumes, various folio and 4to sizes, all in original bindings, some in dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

16 [ART AND ILLUSTRATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 7 works, comprising:

ABBEY, John Roland. Life in England in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860. Kent, UK: Dawsons of Pall Mall, 1972. -- ABBEY, John Roland. Travel in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860. London: Privately Printed at the Curwen Press, 1957. 2 volumes. -- ABBEY, John Roland. Scenery of Great Britain and Ireland 1770-1860. Kent, UK: Dawsons of Pall Mall, 1972. -- FOWBLE, E. McSherry. Two Centuries of Prints in America 1680-1880. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1987. -- GARVEY, Eleanor M. (ed.) The Artist and the Book 1860-1960. New York: Hacker Art Books, Inc., 1982. -- RAY, Gordon N. The Art of the French Illustrated Book. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982. 2 volumes. -- RAY, Gordon N. The Illustrator and the Book in England from 1790 to 1914. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. -- Together, 7 works in 9 volumes, various folio and 4to sizes, all in original publisher’s bindings with dust jackets where applicable, many FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

9FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$300 - 400 13 14

[ASTRONOMY & MATHEMATICS -- MANUSCRIPTS]. Baha’ al-Din Muhammad ibn Husain al-’Amili (1547-1622). A collection of four treatises in one volume on mathematics and astronomy.  [Persia, second half of the 17th century].

123 leaves, 8vo (247 x 145mm). Arabic manuscript on paper, 123 leaves, 19 lines to the page written in naskhi script in black ink in more than one hand, some underlinings in red; some commentaries written diagonally in outer margins. Illustrated with numerous diagrams, mostly colored, one illuminated head-piece in colors and gold. (Some minor mostly marginal dampstaining, occasional stains and small repairs.) Near-contemporary citron morocco with stamped central medallions of gilt leather onlay decorated with floral ornaments, doublures with gilt-painted central medallions incorporating intertwining floral and vegetal motifs on a dark green ground.

The author was an astronomer, mathematician and philosopher who was born in Baalbeck, Lebanon and studied in Persia. He became Sheikh alIslam under the Safavid Shah ‘Abbas I (reg. 1587–1629) in Isfahan. The first treatise is entitled Khulasat al-hisab [Essence of Arithmetic]. The Arabic text was composed circa AD 1600, and was dedicated to Prince Hamza, grandson of the Safavid Shah Tahmasp I (reg. 1524–1575).The second treatise, in Arabic, is entitled Tashrih al-aflak [Explanation of Celestial Spheres].The third treatise, in Persian, is entitled Risalah fi’l-astrulabi [Treatise on the Construction of the Astrolabe].The fourth treatise, in Arabic, is a super-commentary on Jaghmini’s Sharh al-haya’, itself a commentary on astronomy. See B. A. Rosenfeld & E. Ihsanoglu, Mathematicians, Astronomers and Other Scholars of Islamic Civilisation and their Works (7th–19th C.), Istanbul 2003, pp. 348–350, no. 1058. See also Brockelmann, GAL, II, 546 – 547; Suppl. II, 595 – 597.

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[ASTRONOMY -- MANUSCRIPT]. MUSA BIN MUHAMMAD QADI ZADEH AL-RUMI (d. 1436 AD). Al-Mulakhkhas fi ‘Ilm al-Hay’a. Gaza [A commentary on the Compendium of Cosmology]. Ottoman Palestine, AH 1279/1862-3 AD.

110 leaves, 220 x 162mm. In Arabic. 17 lines, written in naskh script in black ink within red rules; some phrases underlined in red. Illustrated with numerous diagrams in red and black. With added marginal notes. Colophon signed by scribe Muhammad Al-Tan…(?) Al-Azhari. Bound in contemporary deerskin-backed marbled boards, with folding flap.

A commentary on al-Mulukhkhas’s substantial astronomical treatise, dedicated to the Timurid ruler Ulugh Beg (d.1449 AD).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$2,000 - 3,000

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[ASTRONOMY & MATHEMATICS -- MANUSCRIPT]. A treatise on astronomy, arithmetic and the astrolabe. N.p., 1193 A.H. [1779 C.E.].

132 leaves, 8vo (158 x 101 mm). In Persian. Written in nasta’liq script black ink with rubrication. With a few marginal notes, and 6-leaf index in red, black and green ink at end. (Trimmed occasionally affecting notes in margins, some stains, a few leaves at end remargined.) Later limp red morocco decorated in blind (some wear and minor losses).

With distinct sections pertaining to astronomy and arithmetic.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200

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AUDEN, Wystan Hugh (1907-1973). A group of 4 FIRST EDITIONS, comprising:

Look, Stranger! London: Faber & Faber, 1936. Publisher’s light grey cloth. SIGNED BY W.H. AUDEN. -- Journey to a War. Christopher Isherwood, contributor. London: Faber & Faber, 1939. Publisher’s grey cloth. -- Nones. New York: Random House, 1951. Publisher’s blue and grey cloth; original dust jacket.  -- Collected Short Poems 1930-1944. London: Faber & Faber, 1950. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- Together, 4 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

21

BACON, Francis, Sir (1561-1626). The Elements of the Common Lawes of England. London: Printed by R. Young for the assigns of John More, 1639.

4to. (Some toning and spotting.) Contemporary calf, manuscript label on spine (some rubbing). Third edition, first published in 1610. ESTC S100352.[Bound with]: The Use of the Law. London: Printed by R. Young for the assigns of John More, 1639. Though both works are attributed to Bacon there is significant dispute about authorship, in particular The Use of the Law, which was first printed by Sir John Doddridge as the second part of The Lawyer’s Light. ESTC S100352.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

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BARRIE, James Matthew, Sir (1860-1937). A group of 11 works, including:

Margaret Ogilvy by her Son. L, 1896. 20th-century half  morocco gilt. -- The Little White Bird. Toronto, 1902. -- Peter and Wendy. NY, 1911. -- Courage. Toronto, 1922. -- The Plays of J.M. Barrie in One Volume. L, 1928. 20th-century morocco gilt, by Kelly & Sons. -- RACKAM, Arthur, illustrator. Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens Retold NY, 1930. In dust jacket. -- And 5 others. Together, 11 works in 11 volumes, all 8vo, most illustrated, most in original bindings, most FIRST, FIRST TRADE, FIRST ENGLISH or FIRST AMERICAN editions, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

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BAUM, L. Frank (1859-1919). The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus.  Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1902.  8vo. Tipped-in illustrations by Mary Cowles Clark. Original pictorial cloth (spine slightly darkened, rubbing, some toning, upper hinge starting, foot of spine repaired).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST STATE, with section headings as “Book First,” “Book Second,” and “Book Third”; and no textual illustrations except for the dedication leaf and first page of the Table of Contents. Schiller 80.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

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BAUM, L. Frank (1856-1919). A group of 3 works, comprising:

BAUM and Ruth Plumly THOMPSON. Kabumpo in Oz. [1922]. In later issue dust jacket with repairs. -- John Dough and the Cherub. [1906]. (Rebacked preserving original cloth.) -- BAUM and THOMPSON. The Lost King of Oz. [1925]. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all published in Chicago, all 4to, all in original pictorial cloth, ALL FIRST EDITION, condition generally good.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

11FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
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BEARDSLEY, Aubrey, illustrator. -- MALORY, Thomas, Sir (fl. 1470). [Le Morte d’Arthur]. The Birth, Life and Acts of King Arthur. [London]: J.M. Dent & Company, 1893-1894.

2 volumes, 4to. Numerous plates, illustrations, decorations, and initials by Beardsley. (Some offsetting or toning.) Original cloth gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut (some minor staining, some slight rubbing, spine slightly darkened).

LIMITED EDITION, one of 1500 unnumbered copies. $500 - 700 26

BECKETT, Samuel (1906-1989). Collected Poems in English and French. London: John Calder, 1977.

8vo. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY SAMUEL BECKETT. Beckett was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. His later works included poetry and short story collections and novellas.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600 27

[BEES]. A group of 5 works about bees, comprising:

BAZIN, Gilles Austin et al. The Natural History of Bees. L: J. and P. Knapton et al, 1744. Later calf. FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH. -- FEBURIER, M. Traite Complet Theorique et Pratique sur les Abeilles. Paris: Madame Huzard, 1810. Contemporary sprinkled calf gilt. -- LOMBARD, M. Manuel Necessaire au Villageois pour Soigner les Abeilles. Paris: L’Auteur et al, 1806.  Original plain wrappers. Third edition. -- SCHMID, Andreas. Bienen-Zeitung Organ des Vereins Deutscher Bienenwirthe. Nördlingen: C.H. Bed’schen Buchhandlung, 1858. Vol. XIV only. -- ALLEY, Henry. The Beekeeper’s Handy Book. Wenham, MA: by the author, 1885. Original cloth gilt. Third edition. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $400 - 600 28

BENET, Stephen Vincent (1898-1943). A group of 6 works, comprising:

Tiger Joy. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1925. Publisher’s patterned cloth. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: Benjamin Musser (gift inscription), St. Joseph’s Serigraphic Seminary College Library (institutional stamp). -- John Brown’s Body. Garden City: Doubleday Doran, 1928. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- A Book of Americans (with Rosemary Benet). New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc., 1933. Publisher’s olive green cloth. SIGNED BY ROSEMARY AND STEPHEN VINCENT BENET. Provenance: Ruth E. Anderson (bookplate, inscription from authors). -- Thirteen O’ Clock. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc., 1937. -- Tales Before Midnight. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc., 1939. Publisher’s black cloth; dust jacket. -- Selected Works of Stephen Vincent Benet. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc., 1942. Two volumes. Publisher’s dark blue cloth. Provenance: Eleanor E. McGarry (inscriptions on each volume). -Together, 6 works in 7 volumes, all 8vos, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

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[BIBLE, in English]. Matthew’s Version. [The Byble]. [London]: Nicolas Hyl for John Wyghte, 1551.

Folio (295 x 191 mm). 3 section titles printed within historiated woodcut borders. (Lacking 13 leaves: pi1, a6, *1-5, lacking v4 [blank], 2 2A1; a few leaves fraying or with tears affecting text, some browning, a few leaves trimmed close affecting headlines, catchwords, and shoulder notes). Later diced calf gilt (rebacked preserving original spine, joints starting, some wear). Provenance: a few 16th-century markings on final leaf; Thomas Crewdson of Kendal (letterpress bookplate); James Wilson (signature dated 1729); bookplate.

The so-called “Matthew Bible,” known for its translation of Psalms 91:5 (“Afraid of bugs by night,” using “bugs” instead of “terror”), and Jeremiah 8:22 (“Is there no treacle in Gilead,” using “treacle” instead of “balm”). “The original Matthew’s Bible of 1537 was made up partly from Tyndale’s and partly from Cloverdale’s translation. Thomas Matthew is commonly regarded as a pseudonym for John Rogers ..., but some think it more correct to consider it as meaning Tyndale ... The present edition closely agrees with Raynalde and Hyll’s Bible of 1549, which was reprinted from the Matthew’s Bible of 1537” (NUC pre-1956 imprints). ESTC S1184; STC 2085. RARE: We trace no copies of this edition at auction in the last 50 years; ESTC locates only 9 copies.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $3,000 - 4,000

30 [BIBLE -- FACSIMILE] -- [GUTENBERG BIBLE]. Biblia Sacra. Paterson, NJ: Pageant Books, 1961.

2 volumes, folio. Full pigskin decorated with images of the Annunciation with clasps (slight cocking to spine of second volume).

LIMITED EDITION, one of 1,000 sets of the “first Gutenberg facsimile ever printed in the United States and only the second in the world. The reproduction derives from the Insel Verlag edition which was based on the copy in the Koniglichen Bibliothek in Berlin and the copy in the Standischen Landesbibliothek in Fulda, considered by authorities to be the most beautifully illuminated of the 47 copies known to exist. The text pages have been printed by lithography and the illuminated pages by sheet-fed gravure. The paper used is 100 per cent rag content made especially for this book” (colophon).

$2,000 - 3,000

31

BIERCE, Ambrose (1842-1914?). Fantastic Fables. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1899.

8vo. 4pp. publisher’s advertisements [BAL’s variant 1]. (Some spotting.) Publisher’s beige cloth gilt (upper hinge starting, some soiling). FIRST EDITION. BAL 1120.

[With]: BIERCE, Ambrose. The Shadow on the Dial and Other Essays. S. O. Howes, editor. San Francisco: A.M. Robertson, 1909. 4to. Publisher’s green cloth gilt (spine sunned, some dampstaining, remnants of institutional pockets on rear board). FIRST EDITION.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

13FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
29 30

Bindings and Sets

32

[BINDING -- FUGGER BINDER]. DANTE ALIGHIERI (1265-1321). Comedia...con la Dotta & Leggiadra Spositione di Christophoro Landino. Venice: Bernardino Stagnino, 1536.

4to (210 x 154 mm). Woodcut illustrations (one full-page). (Lacking first quire comprising 12 leaves, some staining and worming).

IN A CONTEMPORARY VENITIAN BINDING of brown goatskin tooled in gilt and blind by the “FUGGER BINDER” (or “Venetian Apple Binder”); strapwork border with floral tools, foliate cornerpieces and floral and vine tools surrounding central motto within central ovate: “Ch’inte sta iltor mi morte et darmi vita,” edges gauffered and gilt (upper hinge broken, spine partially perished, worn).

A reprint of the 1512 Stagnino edition using the same woodblocks, which were based on the 1491 Venetian edition of Benalius and Capcasa. Adams D93; USTC 808785.

The “Fugger Binder,” so-called for the many commissions he completed for Johann Jacob Fugger of the Augsburg family of bankers, was active in Venice between 1540 and 1560. The British Library holds a copy of Appian’s Delle guerre civili de Romani [and] Histoira delle guerre esterne de Romani, published Florence 1526/1531 in a Fugger binding decorated to a similar style with the same central motto (see The British Library Database of Bookbindings, shelfmark Davis751). The British Library mentions an “identical binding [which] is kept in the Royal Library, Copenhagen” citing: T. de Marinis, La legatura artistica, II, n. 2161 bis, p.117, plate C 44.

$1,000 - 2,000

33

[BINDING -- LEONARD MOUNTENEY]. WILDE, Oscar (1854-1900). Salome. Aubrey Beardsley, illustrator. London: for members of the Limited Editions Club, 1938. -- WILDE. Salome. André Derain, illustrator. Paris: for members of the Limited Editions Club, 1938.

2 works bound in one volume, 4to. Numerous illustrations after Aubrey Beardsley and André Derain.  Half crushed lavender levant morocco, with cover corners square, covers with red morocco onlay rule and gilt tooling along spine, sides with central green floral onlay gilt, spine in 5 compartments with 4 raised bands gilt-lettered in 3, the remaining two in varying sizes with red, pink and green morocco floral onlays gilt, edges gilt, top edge gauffered with hand-painted floral design, lavender watered silk doublures and endleaves, STAMP-SIGNED BY LEONARD MOUNTENEY.

LIMITED EDITIONS, each number 234 of 1,500 copies, one SIGNED BY DERAIN.

$600 - 800

34

[BINDING -- CUNEO FINE BINDING STUDIO]. STERNE, Laurence (1713-1768). The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy. London and New York: John Lane Bodley Head Limited and Dodd, Mead and Company, 1928.

8vo. Illustrated plates and in-text illustrations with hand-coloring after John Austen. Half brown morocco with cover corners square over decorative paper, spine in 5 compartments with 4 raised bands gilt-lettered in 3, the remaining two in varying sizes with red, pink and green morocco floral onlays gilt, edges gilt, top edge gauffered with hand-painted floral design, floral-patterned brocade doublures, yellow watered silk endleaves.

Presumably bound by Leonard Mounteney at the Cuneo Fine Binding Studio.  Mounteney, an extra finisher at Riviere in London, emigrated to America in 1924 to work at the hand bindery at Donnelley in Chicago. Two years later, he left to establish the Fine Binding Studio at rival Cuneo Press in Chicago; after about 25 years, he was succeeded by his assistant, George Baer.

$500 - 700

14 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
Lots 32-64

35

[BINDING -- SANGORSKI & SUTCLIFFE]. LONGFELLOW, Henry Wadsworth (18071882). Poems. London: David Bogue, 1852.

8vo. Numerous in-text illustrations. Full brown crushed levant, sides with gilt interlacing borders, upper cover with elaborate all-over grape and vine leaf motif with green and purple morocco onlays surrounding a central onlaid panel with inlaid monogram against a densely-gilt pointelle field with tiny red and tan morocco floral onlays, lower cover central circular teal morocco onlay with gilt feather and bow ornaments, spine in 6 compartments with 5 raised bands, giltlettered in one, the rest with central thematic tools within interlaced borders, edges gauffered and gilt, turn-ins gilt with green silk doublures and endleaves

STAMP-SIGNED BY SANGORSKI & SUTCLIFFE (corners of spine very slightly rubbed).

$2,000 - 3,000

36

[BINDING -- SANGORSKI & SUTCLIFFE]. THACKERAY, William Makepeace (1811-1863). Vanity Fair London: Bradbury and Evans, 1848.

8vo. Engraved frontispiece, engraved title, and 38 engraved plates. 20th-century red crushed levant COSWAY STYLE BINDING BY SANGORSKI AND SUTCLIFFE with their S&S monogram for Chas. J. Sawyer, Ltd., covers with teal onlay and gilt floral cornerpieces, spine in 6 compartments with 5 raised bands, gilt-lettered in 2, the rest with blue floral onlays gilt, edges gilt, wide turn-ins gilt, blue morocco doublures gilt with floral red and green morocco onlay cornerpieces gilt, upper doublure set with an inlaid miniature portrait of Thackeray, blue watered silk endleaves (a few tiny scuffs to extremities); cloth folding case.

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, later issue without the suppressed woodcut of Lord Steyne on p. 336. Grolier English 87; Van Duzer 231.

$1,000 - 1,500

37

[BINDING] -- [VICTORIA, QUEEN OF ENGLAND (1819-1901)]. HOLMES, Richard Rivington, Sir (1835-1911). Queen Victoria. London & Paris: Boussod, Valadon & Co., 1897.

4to (316 x 250 mm). Titles printed in red and black, frontispiece, numerous plates in two states, numerous in-text illustrations. (Some toning or minor spotting.) Contemporary red crushed levant gilt, sides with the central gilt arms of Queen Victoria, top edge gilt (top portion of spine panel detaching, some slight wear and staining).

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 178 of 100 copies printed for Europe and the British Colonies of a total edition of 200, printed on Japanese paper and with plates in two states, published to commemorate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee.

Property from the Estate of a Renowned Art Dealer, New York City, New York

$300 - 500

15FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

38

[BINDING]. KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). Just So Stories for Little Children

Joseph M. GLEESON, illustrator. New York & London: Mayflower Books & Macmillan, [1980].

8vo (228 x 170 mm). Numerous illustrations by Kipling, numerous color plates by Gleeson. 20th-century gray crushed levant and tan pigskin, upper cover with sculptural elephant, lower cover with sculptural fish, black morocco onlays to lower cover and spine in a leopard pattern, silver-lettered on spine, marbled edges, signed by Chris Clain Takacs 1989; folding case.

Facsimile of the 1913 edition of Kipling’s best-known work.

$400 - 600

39

[BINDINGS & SETS]. Elegant Extracts: Being a Copious Selection of Instructive, Moral, and Entertaining Passages, from the Most Eminent Poets. London: Printed for John Sharpe, [n.d.].

8 volumes, 12mo (some offsetting). Contemporary calf gilt (light rubbing). Provenance: A few ownership inscriptions in corners of front free endpapers excised.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

40

[BINDINGS & SETS]. GABRIEL, Ralph Henry (1890-1987), editor. The Pageant of America a Pictorial History of the United States. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1925-1929.

15 volumes, 4to (253 x 187 mm). Illustrated throughout with reproductions of maps, photographs, prints and artworks, and with facsimiles. (Some light toning and occasional spotting.) Original half brown crushed levant, spines gilt-lettered-and-decorated (some minor wear, particularly to spine ends).

LIMITED EDITION, an unnumbered copy of the “Washington edition” published to commemorate the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and signed by the President of the Yale University Press.

$600 - 800 41

[BINDINGS & SETS]. GOLDSMITH, Oliver (1728-1774). The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith. Perth: R. Morison Junior, 1792.

7 volumes, 8vo. Illustrated. Contemporary calf (some rubbing, toning to endpapers). Provenance: a few ownership inscriptions in corners of front free endpapers excised.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

16 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

42

[BINDINGS & SETS]. HARTE, Bret, (1836-1902). Writings. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, & Co., [1906].

18 volumes, 8vo. Publisher’s half calf gilt (some minor wear to spine ends, rubbing).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

43

[BINDINGS & SETS]. PRESCOTT, William Hickling (1796-1859). Works. John Foster Kirk, editor. Philadelphia: J.P. Lippincott, 1874.

15 volumes, 8vo. Titles printed in red and black (some spotting). Publisher’s brown cloth, printed labels on spines; original dust jackets (some soiling and a few short tears).

LIMITED EDITION, number 130 of 250 copies. 19th-century historian William Hickling Prescott is one of the most widely translated of all American historians, and is credited as an important figure in the development of history as a serious field of study.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

44

[BINDINGS & SETS]. SABATINI, Rafael (1875-1950). Works. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1924-1933.

29 volumes (of 34, lacking vols. XXX-XXXIV), 8vo (220 x 148 mm). Numerous plates (many in color, many in multiple states). Contemporary half green crushed levant gilt , spines gilt-lettered, top edges gilt, others uncut (some spines sunned, some light wear). LIMITED EDITION, number 165 of 750 copies of the “Autograph edition,” SIGNED BY SABATINI, who is best known for his romance and adventure novels, such as The Sea Hawk and Scaramouche.

[Bound in to Volume I:] SABATINI. Autograph manuscript, a page from the manuscript of The Life of Cesare Borgia (1924). One full sheet, 8vo, containing approximately 196 words including holograph corrections and emendations, in graphite and ink, ruled in red. Describes, in part, the responses to the murder of the Duke of Gandia from the Consistory on 19 June 1497 (published as pp. [140]-141, the beginning of chapter V of vol. XI in this set). In part: “’A greater sorrow than this could not be ours, for we loved him exceedingly, and now we can hold neither the Papacy nor any other thing as of concern. Had we seven Papacies, we would give them all to restore the duke to life.’”

$300 - 500

45 [BINDINGS & SETS]. SCOTT, Walter, Sir (1771-1832). [The Waverly Novels]. Edinburgh: Archibald Constable and Co. et al, 1814-1829.

22 works in 70 volumes, 12mo (174 x 100 mm). (Some occasional spotting or soiling.) Uniformly bound in half red morocco gilt, edges gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY BAYNTUN (some very light scuffing to a few volumes, a few minor stains to sides, slight spotting or offsetting to endpapers). Provenance: Robert J.H. Wyatt (signatures); L. Nicholas (signature); Sidney Robinson (1863-1956), Liberal Party politician (armorial bookplates); J.T Williamson (armorial bookplates).

FIRST EDITIONS, comprising: Waverley. 1814. 3 volumes. FIRST ISSUE with “our” for “your” on page 136 line 1. -- Guy Mannering. 1815. 3 volumes. -- The Antiquary. 1816. 3 volumes. -- Tales of My Landlord. [First Series]. 1816. 4 volumes. -- Rob Roy. 1818. 3 volumes. -- Tales of My Landlord, Second Series. 1818. 4 volumes. -- Tales of My Landlord, Third Series. 1819. 4 volumes. -- Ivanhoe. 1820. 3 volumes. -- The Monastery. 1820. 3 volumes. -- The Abbot. 1820. 3 volumes.

The Pirate. 1822. 3 volumes.

Kenilworth. 1821. 3 volumes.

The Fortunes of Nigel. 1822. 3 volumes.

Peveril of the Peak. 1822. 4 volumes.

Quentin Durward. 1823.

volumes.

Redgauntlet. 1824. 3 volumes.

Tales of the Crusaders. 1825. 4 volumes.

St. Ronan’s Well. 1824. 3 volumes.

Woodstock. 1826. 3 volumes.

Chronicles of Canongate. [First series]. 1827. 2 volumes.

Chronicles of Canongate Second Series. 1828. 3 volumes. -- Anne of Geierstein. 1829. 3 volumes.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
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$1,500 - 2,500

46 [BINDINGS & SETS]. TARKINGTON, Booth (1869-1946). The Works. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1922.

16 volumes (of 27, lacking vols. XVII-XXVII), 8vo (213 x 130 mm). Numerous illustrations. (Some toning.) Contemporary half red morocco, spines gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut (some light chipping and rubbing to extremities, rear cover vol. XV detached). LIMITED EDITION, number 549 of 1,075 copies of the “Seawood Edition,” SIGNED BY TARKINGTON in vol. I.

[With:] TARKINGTON, Booth (1869-1946). Penrod and Sam. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1916. 8vo (186 x 120 mm). Numerous illustrations by Worth Brehm. (Some light toning.) 20th-century half brown morocco gilt, one original cloth cover bound in (some light wear, joints starting). FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY TARKINGTON on a leaf tipped-in at front regarding a meeting honoring Tarkington at the Yale Club held on 24 November 1916, and additionally signed by 13 others, including: Publisher Alexander Grosset; journalist Christopher Darlington Morley; publisher Russell Doubleday; author Edgar French Strother; and Burton J. Hendrick. $300 - 400

5 volumes, 8vo (199 x 138 mm). Portrait frontispiece. (Some toning.) Contemporary half brown crushed levant gilt, spines gilt-decorated in rose design with red morocco onlays, top edge gilt, others uncut (spines sunned, some light wear).

Collected “Memorial edition” of 5 works by American humorist Van Loan, best known for his sports writing and short stories, comprising: Score by Innings Baseball Stories; Buck Parvin and the Movies Stories of the Moving Picture Game; Fore! Golf Stories; Taking the Count Prize Ring Stories; and Old Man Curry Race Track Stories

$200 - 300

48

[BINDINGS & SETS]. WILLIAMS JACKSON, Abraham Valentine (1862-1937), editor. History of India. London: The Grolier Society, 1906-1907.

9 volumes, 4to (252 x 178 mm). Titles printed in purple and black, numerous photographic plates many in multiple states and a few with handcoloring, lettered tissue guards. (Some light toning, spotting and offsetting.) 20th-century half green crushed levant gilt, spines gilt-decorated to a leaf motif with brown morocco onlays, top edge gilt, others uncut, STAMP-SIGNED BY STERN & HESS (spines sunned, some light wear).

LIMITED EDITION, number 38 of 200 copies of the “Connoisseur edition.”

$1,000 - 1,500

[

49

[BINDINGS]. BUNYAN, John (1628-1688). The Pilgrim’s Progress. London: Routledge, Warne, and Routledge, 1861.

8vo (215 x 162 mm). Illustrated. 20th-century crushed teal levant gilt, upper cover with central onlays depicting a pilgrim, edges gilt, wide turn-ins gilt, STAMP SIGNED BY BAYNTUN (slight wear to joints and extremities, spine sunned).

With:] GOLDSMITH, Oliver (1728-1774).

The Vicar of Wakefield. London: John C. Nimmo, 1886. 8vo (245 x 160 mm). Illustrated. 20th-Century green crushed levant gilt, upper cover with central onlays depicting the vicar, edges gilt, wide turn-ins gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY BAYNTUN (slight wear to joints and extremities, spine sunned). Provenance: Eugene Field (1850-1895), American author (bookplate). -- FIELD, Eugene (1850-1895). Love Songs of Childhood. Chicago: [Lakeside Press], 1905. 4to. Facsimile text printed recto only. 20th-century tan crushed levant gilt. LIMITED EDITION, an unnumbered copy of 500 printed in Japan vellum. Inscribed by Eugene Field’s wife, Julia, and additionally signed by 5 of their children.

$800 - 1,200

18 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
47 [BINDINGS & SETS]. VAN LOAN, Charles Emmett (1876-1919). The Books of Charles E. Van Loan. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1919.

50

[BINDINGS -- 20th C. ARTS & CRAFTS]. A group of 8 works in 8 volumes, including:

BURNS, Robert. Poems. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Company, 1900. Publisher’s brown suede gilt. -- LONGFELLOW, Henry Wadsworth. Evangeline. New York: Hurst & Company, [n.d.]. Publisher’s brown suede gilt. -- MEREDITH, Owen. Lucile. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, [n.d.]. Publisher’s brown suede gilt. -- And others. Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, condition generally good.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

51

[BINDINGS]. A group of 12 works, including:

AINSWORTH, William Harrison. The Spanish Match. London: Chapman & Hall, 1865. 3 volumes. FIRST EDITION. -- BENSON, Arthur Christopher et al, editor. The Letters of Queen Victoria. London: John Murray, 1908. 3 volumes. -- FRANCE, Anatole. The Well of Santa Clara Paris, 1903. LIMITED EDITION, unnumbered one of 500. --TENNYSON, Alfred, Lord. The Lover’s Tale. London: C. Kegan Paul & Co., 1879. Later edition. -- SCOTT, Walter, Sir. Tales of my Landlord. Fourth and Last Series. Edinburgh: Robert Cadell, 1832. 4 volumes. FIRST EDITION. -- And 3 others. Together, 12 works in 22 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in contemporary full morocco or calf or in half morocco or calf, most gilt and blind-stamped, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

52

[BINDINGS]. A group of 9 works, including:

FLAUBERT, Gustave. A Simple Heart. Paris: Societe des Beaux Arts, [ca 1895]. LIMITED EDITION, number 452 of 550 copies of the “Salon Edition.” -- MILL, John Stuart. Principles of Political Economy. L, 1865. “People’s edition.” -- STANLEY, Henry M. My Kalulu. L, 1873. FIRST EDITION. -- CERVANTES SAAVEDRA, Miguel de. The History of... Don Quixote. L, 1908. 3 volumes. Reprint. -- KINGSLEY, Charles. Two Years Ago. Cambridge, 1857. 3 volumes. FIRST EDITION. -- MILL, John Stuart. Autobiography. NY, 1874. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- And 3 others. Together, 9 works in 13 volumes, all 8vo, in various morocco or calf bindings, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

53

[BINDINGS]. A group of 51 works in 52 volumes published by the Easton Press and Franklin Library, including:

ASIMOV, Isaac (1920-1992). Prelude to Foundation. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1988. SIGNED BY ISAAC ASIMOV. -- CRICHTON, Michael (19422008). Congo. Franklin Center, PA: The Franklin Library, 1980. -- KESEY, Ken (1935-2001). One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1999. SIGNED BY KEN KESEY. -- UPDIKE, John (1932-2009). Marry Me. Franklin Center, PA: The Franklin Library, 1976. -- Together, 51 works in 52 volumes, all 8vo and 4to, MANY SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR, condition generally very fine. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

54

[BINDINGS]. [FRANKLIN LIBRARY]. A group of 51 works in 52 volumes published by the Franklin Library, including:  ANGELOU, Maya (1928-2014). All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes. 1986. SIGNED BY MAYA ANGELOU. -- BALDWIN, James (1924-1987). Go Tell It on the Mountain. 1979. SIGNED BY JAMES BALDWIN. -- BARTH, John. The Sot-Weed Factor. 1980. SIGNED BY JOHN BARTH. -- JONES, James (1921-1977). Whistle. 1978. -- SARTRE, Jean-Paul (1905-1980). Five Plays. 1978. -- Together, 51 works in 52 volumes, all 8vo, many SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR, condition generally very fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

19FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$500 - 700 53

55

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTING]. COLERIDGE, Samuel Taylor (1772-1834). Aids to Reflection. London: Edward Moxon, 1854.

8vo (163 x 99 mm).19th-century dark green morocco gilt, edges gilt, concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTING of Westminster Bridge and the Houses of Parliament (slight wear or rubbing to extremities, corners lightly bumped). Provenance: Edith Coleridge, gifted to; Emily Mary Grylls (gift inscription, 1855); Audrey (gift inscription, 1916).

Seventh edition, with additional notes by the author (p. [v]).

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois $300 - 400

56

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. COWPER, William (1731-1800). Poetical Works. Edinburgh: Gall & Inglis, [n.d.].

8vo. Illustrated. Contemporary morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of a seaside town.

[With]: COWPER, William (1731-1800). The Works of William Cowper. Illustrated. London: William Tegg & Co., 1851. Contemporary morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING depicting an interpretation of Cowper’s poem, “The Diverting History of John Gilpin.”

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois $400 - 600

57

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. MACPHERSON, James (1736-1796). The Poems of Ossian. London: Published for William Miller, 1805.

3 volumes, 8vo. Contemporary straight-grain morocco gilt; edges gilt concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS of outdoor city scenes.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois $400 - 600 58

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. MATHIAS, Thomas James (ca 1754-1835). Aggiunta ai Componimenti Lirici de’ piu illustri poeti d’Italia. London et al: T. Becket et al, 1808. 3 volumes.

3 volumes, 8vo (161 x 906 mm). Engraved frontispieces. (Some minor offsetting.) Contemporary green straight-grain morocco gilt, edges marbled, concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS of St. Peters in Rome, San Pietro di Castello in Venice and Lake Como (spines darkened, slight wear to extremities, corners bumped). Provenance: unidentified C.J. of Jersey (signatures).

Set of Mathias’ accomplished work on the lyrical compositions of famous Italian poets with fore-edge paintings of Italian landmarks.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$400 - 600

20 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

59

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. MOORE, Thomas (17791852). Poetical Works. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, & Roberts, 1857.

4to. Frontispiece, illustrations. Contemporary green morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING view of Capel Street in Dublin (spine faded, some light wear).

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$300 - 500

60

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. SOUTHEY, Robert (17741843). Poetical Works. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1848-1853.

10 volumes, 8vo (163 x 99 mm). Engraved frontispieces and additional engraved vignette title-pages to each vol. Contemporary red roan gilt, a few silk bookmarks, edges gilt, concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS of Richmond Terrace, a view of St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Limehouse entrance from the Thames to the Regents Canal, St. James Park with the Palace in the background, buildings near Temple Gate, the Tower of London, Inigo Jones’ Banqueting House, Lambeth Palace, a view of the  Westminster Bridge, the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey, and a view of Hampstead (spines darkened, some wear). Later edition.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$400 - 600

61

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. SCOTT, Sir Walter (1771-1832). Tales & Romances. London: Whitaker & Co., 1828.

7 volumes, 8vo. Contemporary dark green morocco gilt; edges gilt concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS of various scenes throughout England. Provenance: E.W. Severene.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$400 - 600

62

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. TENNYSON, Alfred, Lord (18091892). Poems. London: Edward Moxon, 1850.

8vo (164 x 99 mm). Half-title. (Some minor spotting.) Contemporary dark green morocco gilt, spine gilt-lettered, edges gilt, concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of St. Paul’s Cathedral (slight wear to extremities, corners lightly bumped). Sixth edition.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$300 - 400 63

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS].  A group of 6 works in 10 volumes concealing fore-edge paintings depicting sea views, comprising:

CAMPBELL, Thomas. The Poetical Works of... London: Edward Moxon, 1858. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of a quiet seaside harbor. -- INGELOW, Jean. Poems. London: Longmans, Green & Company, 1872. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of the Pool of London. -- MACAULAY, Lord. Lays of Ancient Rome. London: Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1860. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of a seaside town. --  MILTON, John. The Poetical Works of... London: William Pickering, 1845. 3 volumes. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS of a city view from the water. -- THOMSEN, Katherine. Recollections of Literary Characters and Famous Places. London: Richard Bentley, 1854. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FOREEDGE PAINTING of a seaside scene. -- And one other. Together, 6 works in 10 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally fine.  Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

64

[BINDINGS -- FORE-EDGE PAINTINGS]. A group of 11 works in 12 volumes concealing fore-edge paintings depicting country scenes, comprising:

BLAIR, Hugh. Sermons, Vol. III. London: T. Cadell and W. Davies, 1807. Contemporary morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING depicting a country town beside water. -- PRIOR, Matthew. The Poetical Works of... Boston: Little Brown & Company, 1860. 2 volumes. Contemporary morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of a country scene. -- ROGERS, Samuel. Poems of... London: Edward Moxon, 1849. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING of a lone man sitting out in the middle of the countryside. --  SCOTT, Sir Walter. The Lay of the Last Minstrel. Edinburgh: Edward and Charles Black, 1854. Contemporary morocco gilt, edges gilt concealing a FOREEDGE PAINTING of two men hunting. -- SHAKESPEARE, William. The Works of... London and New York: Frederick Warne & Co., 1890. Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt concealing a FORE-EDGE PAINTING depicting a country town. -- Together, 11 works in 12 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally fine.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

21FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$400 - 600
$500 - 700 59 60 61 62

65

[BIOLOGY -- MANUSCRIPTS].

A group of 4 notebooks of student’s lecture notes, including:

Charles Perez’s microbiology notes: “Cours de Microbiologie III.” Paris, 1899. 68 leaves, with an additional 21 blank leaves, 8vo. In French. Written in black ink, with in-text diagrams in ink, a few of which have coloring in crayon, of cellules. Bound in contemporary cloth. Includes lectures given by DuClaux, laveran, and Metchnikoff at the Institut Pasteur. -- Dr. F. Bardial’s prescription book. Johnstown, NY, 1842. 34 leaves, with approximately 65 additional blank leaves. 8vo. Written in black ink, with several prescriptions and slips laid in. (Some fading, a few stains.) Bound in contemporary sheep-backed marbled boards (worn, rebacked). Includes a printed prescription form from J. M. Bigelow M.D., and with numerous prescription formulas. – With one additional French mateira medica manuscript, and with one additional American medical manuscript. – Together, 4 works in 4 volumes.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $600 - 800

66

[BOTANY & BEES -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 26 works, including:

[ADANSON]. The Bicentennial of Michel Adanson’s Familles des Plantes. Pittsburgh: The Hunt Botanical Library, 1963-1964. 2 volumes. -- RIX, Martyn. Art in Nature. NY, 1991. -- LEMAIRE, Charles. Iconographie Descriptive Des Cactées 1841-1847. Mill Valley, CA, 1993. FIRST FACSIMILE EDITION. -- STEARN, William T., introduction. An English Florilegium. NY, 1988. -- PAVORD, Anna. The Naming of Names. NY, 2005. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- LINDLEY, John F.R.S. Descriptive Botany. L, 1858. Provenance: Royal Gardens Kew (bookplate).  -- MARTIN, George Willard. Outline of the Fungi. Dubuque, IA, 1950. -- FUSELL, George Edwin. The Old English Farming Books. L, 1947. -- And another copy of the 1950 edition. -- JACKSON, Benjamin Daydon. Guide to the Literature of Botany. NY et al, 1964. -- And 16 others. Together, 26 works in 28 volumes, various folio, 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original bindings, many with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

65

67 [BOTANY & GARDENING -- MANUSCRIPTS]. A group of 5 manuscripts, comprising:

“Cours de M. Bonnier...+ Cours de M. Vesque.” Paris, 1894-1895. 371 leaves, with an additional 24 blank leaves, 8vo. In French. Written in purple ink with red and blue crayon headings and rules, with in-text diagrams in ink. Bound in contemporary quarter morocco. Lecture notes with detailed diagrams. -- Martha von Hirsch’s index: “Privater Botanischer=Garten.” Basel, 1959. 67 typescript leaves, printed recto only, 19 lettered tab dividers, photographic diagram laid in. Bound in contemporary cloth. An index to the plants in the private botanic garden of Martha von Hirsch. -- “Corbularia bulbocodium.” Diagram and descriptive text, on a bifolium. In French. Written in black ink. -- Autograph document signed (“Foucault”), n.p., n.d. Discussing naturalists. [With:] 5 documents and deeds relating to land, claims and decrees on Prince Edward Island. Accompanied by two manuscript plats hand-colored in wash. Prince Edward Island, 1830.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 500

68

BOWEN, Robert Sidney (1900-1977). A group of 15 Dave Dawson works, including:

Dave Dawson at Dunkirk. Akron: The Saalfield Publishing Company, 1941.

-- Dave Dawson: Flight Lieutenant. New York: Crown Publishers, 1941. -- Dave Dawson with the Commandos. New York: Crown Publishers, 1942.  --Dave Dawson at Singapore. Akron: The Saalfield Publishing Company, 1942.

-- Dave Dawson with the Eighth Air Force. New York: Crown Publishers, 1944.

-- Dave Dawson at Casablanca. Akron: The Saalfield Publishing Company, 1944. -- And 9 others. Together, 15 works in 15 volumes, all 8vos, all in original cloth, most with dust jackets, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

69

[BRONTE, Charlotte (1816-1855)]. Villette. London: Smith, Edler & Co., 1853.

3 volumes, 8vo (180 x 114 mm).  (Lacking half-titles and terminal advertisements, some occasional spotting and soiling.) 20th-century calfbacked marbled boards gilt (a touch of wear to extremities).

FIRST EDITION of Bronte’s last published novel, Villette is a reworking of The Professor, which was rejected by publishers.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$1,000 - 1,500

22 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

70

BRONTE, Charlotte (1816-1855). The Professor. A Tale. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1857.

8vo. 7pp. publisher’s advertisements (one at front). (Some spotting and soft creasing.) Original brown cloth blind-stamped, spine gilt-lettered (Some wear and soiling). Provenance: Fannie Womell (signature rear pastedown).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION of the first novel Bronte wrote, though it was published nearly two years after her death.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

71

BROWNING, Robert (1812-1889). The Ring and The Book. London: Smith, Elder, 1868-1869.

4 volumes, 8vo. 1p. publisher’s advertisements at the end of Vol. I. Publisher’s dark green cloth over beveled boards gilt and stamped in black (partial crack at front hinge on Vol. III, wear to heads and tails of spines, light foxing to page edges), half morocco slipcase (toning, soiling to bottom).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with vol. I and III lettered in roman numerals and 2 and 4 in Arabic numerals on the spines. Containing 21,000 lines of blank verse, The Ring and the Book employs the most extensive use of dramatic monologue found in any of Browning’s works. Sterling 89; Tinker 425; Wise, Browning pp. 27-28.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

72

BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett (1806-1861) and Robert BROWNING (18121889). A group of 6 works, comprising:

Aurora Leigh. New York: C.S. Francis & Co., 1857. Modern half calf. Provenance: G.A. Drummond. -- The Inn Album. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1875. Publisher’s green cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Parleyings with Certain People. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1887. Publisher’s maroon cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Red Cotton Night-Cap Country. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1873. Publisher’s green cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1900.

Contemporary royal blue morocco. Provenance: Harriet E. Burton. -- Poems of Robert Browning. London: Oxford University Press, 1920. Contemporary red morocco. Provenance: Lady Eaton. --  Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, all 8vos, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

73

BURGESS, Anthony (1917-1993). Time for a Tiger. Melbourne, London & Toronto: William Heinemann Ltd, 1956.

8vo. (Minor spotting, a few soft creases.) Original blue cloth (spine slightly sunned); dust jacket (spine darkened, some toning, some minor chipping).

FIRST EDITION of author’s first book, the first installment in the Malay trilogy.

$400 - 600

23FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
70 71 73

74

BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice (1875-1950). A group of 12 works, including:

Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co., 1918. -- Jungle Tales of Tarzan. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co., 1919.  -- The Eternal Lover. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co., 1925. Modern half calf. -- Tarzan and the Golden Lion. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co., 1925. FIRST EDITION. -- The Monster Men. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1929. -- Tarzan and the Foreign Legion. Tarzana: ERB, Inc., 1947. FIRST EDITION. -- Tarzan Triumphant. Tarzana: ERB, Inc., 1932. -- Tarzan and the Lion Man. Tarzana: ERB, Inc., 1934.  -- And 4 others. Together, 12 works in 12 volumes, all 8vos, most in publisher’s original cloth, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

75

BURROUGHS, William S. (1914-1997). Naked Lunch. New York: Grove Press Inc., 1959 [but 1962].

8vo. Original cloth-backed boards gilt, top edge stained black; dust jacket (price-clipped, some light toning, chipping, and spotting).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, one of 3,500 copies, presumably in the first issue dust jacket with no zip code in the publisher’s address on rear panel (but price-clipped). Maynard & Miles A2b.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

76

BURTON, Richard Francis, Sir (1821-1890). Vikram and the Vampire. London: Longmans, Green, & Co., 1870.

8vo. Frontispiece with illustrations by Ernest Griset (some spotting). Publisher’s green cloth gilt (lightly rubbed).

FIRST EDITION, in the third issue binding. Vikram and the Vampire was adapted from a collection of 11th century Indian legends incorporating a series of “elaborate ‘improvements’…of [Burton’s] own invention” (Penzer). Burton’s work was first published serially in Fraser’s Magazine from 1868-1869. (Penzer pp.81-82).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

77

BYRON, George Gordon Noel, Lord (1788-1824). Hours of Idleness. Newark: S. and J. Ridge, et al,1807.

8vo (181 x 108 mm). Half-title, woodcut head-and-tail-pieces. (Possibly lacking b[4], some light toning.) Contemporary calf gilt, stamped in black and blind, edges marbled (some light wear). Provenance: Elizabeth Bridget Pigot (1783-1866) friend and biographic source for Lord Byron (signature, several graphite drawings including on half-title, annotations).

FIRST EDITION. The present copy bears all the points of the first edition: the sheets are watermarked “LL 1806”; D3 has been cancelled (reset and without footnote); p.5 lines 2-3 read “where where”; p.114 has the misprint “thnnder” in line 4; and p.181 has the misprint “Thc” in the penultimate line. Hayward 218; Randolph, p.9; Wise Byron I, pp.7-8.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

24 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
76 77

78

CAPOTE, Truman (1924-1984). Breakfast at Tiffany’s. New York: Random House, 1958.

8vo. (Some minor staining.) Modern orange morocco gilt, black leather lettering-pieces gilt, edges gilt; slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, SIGNED BY CAPOTE on the half-title, with stated “First Printing” on copyright page. Capote’s novella was published along with three other short stories: “House of Flowers,” “A Diamond Guitar,” and “A Christmas Memory.” “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” was adapted to film by George Axelrod in 1961, starring Audrey Hepburn in her most memorable role as Holly Golightly. The film was released on 5 October 1961 to critical and commercial success, grossing $14 million on a $2.5 million budget.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$800 - 1,200

80

CAPOTE, Truman (1924-1984). In Cold Blood. New York: Random House, 1965.

8vo. Original burgundy cloth, stamped in gold and silver, top edge stained navy (top edge slightly sunned); dust jacket (some chipping and toning). Provenance: John Murphy; Pete Gilligan; Arthur Andersen (signatures in the same hand).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST PRINTING (stated on copyright page), of Capote’s acclaimed true crime novel. In the first-issue dust jacket, the 1/66 code on front flap and “Publishers of the American College Dictionary and the Modern Library” on rear flap.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

79

CAPOTE, Truman (1924-1984). In Cold Blood. New York: Random House, 1965.

8vo. Original publisher’s maroon cloth gilt, top edge stained blue; publisher’s dust jacket (spine panel darkened, some minor rubbing to corners, very light chipping to foot of spine); cloth folding case.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST PRINTING (stated on copyright page). SIGNED BY CAPOTE on a blank preliminary leaf.

$400 - 600

81

CAPOTE, Truman (1924-1984). A group of 4 FIRST EDITIONS, comprising: Music for Chameleons. 1980. -- The Dogs Bark Public People and Private Places. 1973. -- A Tree of Night and other Stories. 1949. FIRST ISSUE.

-- Other Voices, Other Rooms. 1948. FIRST ISSUE. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all published in New York by Random House, all 8vo, all in original cloth, most with dust jackets, ALL FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

25FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

82

CARION, Johannes (1499-1537). Chronicorum ab orbe condition ad hane usque nostram aetatem Libri III... Paris: Puteana, 1561.  16mo (117 x 76 mm). Roman and italic types. (Some light soiling and staining, a few short marginal tears.) Later vellum, tan morocco lettering-piece gilt (recased, endpapers renewed). Provenance: Collegus Societatis JEW Lucerne (inscription 1673 on title-page).

World chronicle commencing with the Creation, first published in 1537 and updated by Philipp Melanchthon and Caspar Peucer in later editions to include the Lutheran perspective. This edition ascribes the invention of printing to Fust and Schoeffer at Mainz in 1450 (p.548), and the discovery of the New World to Columbus and Vespucci in 1492 (p.560). See Alden & Landis 554/12. VERY RARE: According to online records, only one other copy of this edition has appeared on the market at auction; OCLC traces only one copy at the Biblioteca Comunale di Trento in Rome.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 500

83

CATHER, Willa (1873-1947). A group of 3 works, comprising:

My Mortal Enemy. Toronto, 1926. -- Shadows on the Rock. NY, 1931. -- Sapphira and the Slave Girl. NY, 1940. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, most published by Alfred A. Knopf, all 8vo, all in original cloth or cloth-backed boards, FIRST EDITIONS or first Canadian editions, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

84

CHANDLER, Raymond (1888-1959). The Lady in the Lake. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1943.

8vo. Half-title. Original green cloth, stamped in green (spine sunned, some light wear); dust jacket (price-clipped, some chipping and toning); folding case.

FIRST EDITION of Chandler’s fourth Philip Marlowe mystery and the first to advertise “A Philip Marlowe Mystery” on the dust jacket. Bruccoli A4.1.a.

[With]: CHANDLER. The Little Sister. Boston et al: Houghton Mifflin Company et al, 1949. 8vo. Original red cloth; dust jacket (front flap detached but present, some chipping with minor losses). FIRST AMERICAN EDITION of the fifth Philip Marlowe mystery. Bruccoli A8.2.a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $800 - 1,200

85

CHANDLER, Raymond (1888-1959). A group of 5 works, comprising:

The Little Sister. L, 1919. In facsimile dust jacket. -- Spanish Blood. Cleveland & NY, [1946]. -- Red Wind. Cleveland & NY, 1946. -- The High Window. NY, 1942. 20thcentury half morocco gilt. -- PARKER, Robert B. Poodle Springs. NY, 1989. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all 8vo, most in original cloth or cloth-backed boards, most in dust jackets, FIRST EDITIONS or FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

26 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
82

86

CHARAS, Moyse (1618-1698).  New Experiments upon Vipers. London: Printed by T. N. for J. Martyn, 1670.

8vo (180 x 110 mm). Engraved title (trimmed, soiled and frayed); 3 folding engraved plates. (Some browning, a few leaves soiled and frayed particularly at beginning and end.) Modern calf; cloth slipcase.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Moyse Charas’s Nouvelles expériences sur la vipère, in which he argues that snake saliva only becomes venomous when the snake is agitated. Charas’s view contradicted Francesco Redi’s believe that venom was always present and produced in glands behind the fangs. ESTC R11562; Wing C2037.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

87

CHARLES I, King of England (1600-1649). Eikon Basilike. The Pourtraicture of His Sacred Majestie in his Solitudes and Sufferings. [London: R. Royston], 1648.

12mo (168 x 100 mm). Engraved folding frontispiece (2-in. tear repaired). Contemporary panelled calf, spine gilt (some rubbing); cloth slipcase.

Authorship of the Eikōn basilikē was originally attributed to Charles I, but according to Madan, it was written by John Gauden, who probably included some authentic writings of the king. ESTC R41948.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

88 [CHEMISTRY -- MANUSCRIPTS]. A group of 4 notebooks of student’s lecture notes, comprising:

E. Flamant’s physics and chemistry notes for Professor Lallemant’s lectures.  Paris, 1874. 2 volumes, approximately 126 leaves, 8vo. In French. Written in black ink, with in-text diagrams in ink. Each bound in contemporary cloth-backed decorative paper-covered boards. The lectures delivered at Ecole Normale included mechanics, fluids, atmospheric pressure, and aerodynamics and include images of hot air balloons. -- Favreau’s chemistry lecture notes. [France, late 19th century]. 36 leaves, 8vo. In French. Written in black ink, with in-text diagrams in ink. Bound in contemporary decorative paper-covered wrappers. -- Student’s chemistry lecture notes. [France], 1848. 77 leaves, 8vo. In French. Written in black ink, with in-text diagrams in ink. (Some staining.) Contemporary cloth-backed boards (a few quires becoming disbound, worn).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $400 - 600

27FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

89

[CHILDREN’S LITERATURE] A group of 3 works, comprising:

[LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB]. DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Arthur RACKHAM, illustrator. The Chimes. New York: The Limited Editions Club, 1931. 4to. Illustrated. (Some toning.) Original tan cloth, stamped in black and gilt, top edge gilt (spine darkened, some soiling). LIMITED EDITION, 1,219 of 1,500 copies, SIGNED BY RACKHAM. -- BAUM, L. Frank (18561919). Babes in Birdland a Fairy Tale. Maginel Wright ENRIGHT, illustrator. Chicago: The Reilly & Britton Co., 1911. 8vo. Color frontispiece, numerous illustrations. (Slight toning and soiling.) Original cloth-backed boards (slight wear, some spotting or staining). FIRST EDITION. -- WHITE, Elwyn Brooks (“E.B. White”) (1899-1985). Stuart Little. Garth WILLIAMS, illustrator. New York & Evanston: Harper & Row, 1945. Illustrated frontispiece, numerous illustrations. Publisher’s original cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION, later issue. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally fine.

$200 - 300

91

[CHILDREN’S LITERATURE -- AMERICAN]. A group of 20 works, including:

PIPER, Watty. The Little Engine that Could. NY, 1930. Modern cloth preserving original boards. FIRST EDITION. -- Scenes of American Wealth and Industry Boston, 1833. Later calf-backed boards preserving original spine; slipcase.

-- Jack and the Bean-Stalk... Little Jane and her Mother. Boston, 1841.

-- Family Secrets Revealed. Philadelphia, 1848. Modern calf; folding case.

-- Dick’s Speeches for Tiny Tots. NY, 1895. Folding case. -- McCLOSKEY, Cardinal. Bible Stories for Little Children. NY et al, [1894]. -- Robin Ranger’s Picture Book. NY, 1865. -- WILLET, Edward. Cats Cradle Rhymes for Children NY, 1881. -- THORNDYKE, Helen Louise. Honey Bunch and Norman on Lighthouse Island. NY, 1949. -- BINGHAM, Caleb. The Columbian Orator. Boston et al, 1832. Contemporary calf (rebacked; tray and slipcase. “Stereotype edition.” -- And 10 others. Together, 20 works in 20 volumes, various 4to, 8vo, 12mo or smaller sizes, most in original bindings, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.  Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

90

[CHILDREN’S LITERATURE -- CHAPBOOKS]. Two 19th-century children’s books, comprising:

KINSMAN, N. S., Mrs. A Story of an Orphan Boy. Boston: Coolidge and Wiley, 1847. 12mo. Woodcut device at end. (Some spotting and minor toning). Original printed wrappers (soiling, repairs to spine); cloth slipcase. -- London Cries for Children. With Twenty Elegant Woodcuts. Philadelphia: Johnson & Warner, 1810. 12mo. Woodcut frontispiece and woodcuts in-text. (Some browning and spotting.) Contemporary stiff wrappers (a few repairs to spine, text block detached). Rosenbach 421. -- Together, 2 works in 2 volumes.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

92

[CHILDREN’S LITERATURE -- ENGLISH]. A group of 11 works, including:

BARRIE, James Matthew, Sir. Quality Street. [L, 1913]. In Original lidded pictorial box. -- DAY, Thomas. The History of Sandford and Merton. Derby, 1818. Contemporary calf (rebacked and recornered). -- GREENAWAY, Kate, illustrator. Mother Good, or the Old Nursery Rhymes. L et al, [1881]. FIRST EDITION. -- And other later undated copy. -- MILNE, Alan Alexander. Toad of Toad Hall. L, 1931. Third edition. -- Choice Emblems, Natural Historical, Fabulous, Moral and Divine, for the... Youth. L, 1799. Later half vellum, marbled boards. -- And 5 others. Together, 11 works in 11 volumes, various 4to, 8vo, and 12mo sizes, most in original bindings, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

28 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$500 - 700

93

CHRISTIE, Agatha (1891-1976). The Murder at the Vicarage. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1930.

8vo. Numerous illustrations. (Some light toning.) Original light green cloth, stamped in green (a touch of wear to spine ends, some minor soiling); dust jacket (some chipping, soiling and toning).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, in which Christie introduced one of her most beloved characters: amateur sleuth Miss Jane Marple.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

94

CHRISTIE, Agatha (1891-1976). A group of 13 works, comprising:

The Seven Dials Mystery. NY, 1929. -- The Mysterious Mr. Quin. NY, 1930.

-- Death in the Air. NY, 1935. -- Ordeal by Innocence. L, 1958. -- The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side. L, 1962. -- By the Pricking of my Thumbs. L, 1968.

-- Poirot’s Early Cases. L, 1974. -- And 6 others. Together, 13 works in 13 volumes, all 8vo, all in original bindings, most with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITIONS or FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

95

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). The Story of the Malakand Field Force. London et al: Longmans, Green and Co., 1898.

8vo. Frontispiece, 6 maps (2 in color and folding). (Some toning, minor loss to pp. 133-136 not affecting text, lacking errata slip and most tissue guards.) Original apple green cloth gilt (spine darkened, some soiling and light wear, upper joint starting); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE of Churchill’s first book, an account of the uprising on the North-West Frontier of India (now western Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan). With 32-page Classified Catalogue printed on thinner paper, separately numbered, and dated 12/97 on the last page. Woods A1(a).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$1,000 - 1,500

96

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). My African Journey. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1908.

8vo (186 x 119 mm). Half-title, frontispiece, numerous plates and maps (some folding), 16pp. catalogue at rear. (Some light toning and occasional spotting). 20th-century tan crushed levant gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt, spine with gilt lion emblem in 4 compartments.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. “According to the agreement between the publisher and the author’s agent, the book had to consist of about 45,000 words (hence the large type and heavy leading) of which about 35,000 would appear in the Strand, and about 10,000 be previously unpublished” (Woods A12).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

95

29FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
93

97

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). Thoughts and Adventures. London: Thornton Butterworth Limited, 1932.

8vo. Half-title, photographic frontispiece, numerous illustrations. (Some light toning.) Original olive cloth gilt-lettered, stamped and ruled in blind (some light wear and minor soiling, corners lightly bumped); tan dust jacket (some toning, chipping, splitting along spine folds); slipcase. Provenance: sold Hudson’s Bay Company (ticket at rear); John F. Swecking (inscription, 1932).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION in a variant binding. Woods A39(a) [calling for “sandy-brown cloth”].

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

99

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). Step by Step 1936-1939 London: Thornton Butterworth Ltd., 1939.

8vo. Half-title, two maps (one folding). Original green cloth gilt; dust jacket (some toning and chipping).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION in dust jacket with price “12s 6d” present of Churchill’s foreign affairs articles first published in various newspapers from 1936 to 1939. Woods A45.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

98

CHURCHILL, Winston L.S., Sir (1874-1965). Marlborough His Life and Times

London: George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd., 1933-1938.

4 volumes, 8vo (218 x 145 mm). Errata slip in vol. I, numerous plates, illustrations, and maps. (Some light toning.) Contemporary quarter red calf, spines gilt, edges gilt, stamp-signed by Asprey & Co. Ltd (some minor staining).

FIRST ENGLISH TRADE EDITION, one of 17,000 copies. The trade and the limited editions of 1933 form the first English edition. Woods A40(a).

$800 - 1,200

100

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). A Speech by the Prime Minister

The Right Honourable Winston Churchill in the House of Commons August 20th, 1940. [London: Bayard Press for the Ministry of Information, 1940].

8vo. Original stapled pale-blue card wrappers, printed in maroon (faded, some soiling and spotting, nearly separated at fold).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with publisher’s code and date (“8/40”) on last leaf. “If the Gettysburg Address is one of the most moving statements of democracy confronted by tragedy, Churchill’s historic exhortations are its equal in their ringing assertion of democracy confronting the seemingly irresistible forces of tyranny” (PMM 424). Woods A60(a).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

30 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

101

CHURCHILL, Winston L.S., Sir (1874-1965). [The War Speeches.] London et al: Cassell and Company Ltd., 1941-1946.

7 works in 7 volumes, 8vo. Frontispieces. (Some minor spotting, some light toning to a few volumes.) Original blue cloth (some light wear, minor spotting to edges); dust jackets (a few price-clipped, some chipping and toning).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, including FIRST ISSUE of Into Battle. Woods A66(a), A89, A94, A101, A107, A112, A114.

[With:] Another FIRST ENGLISH EDITION copy of The Dawn of Liberation $400 - 600

102

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). The Second World War. London, et al: Cassell and Co., Ltd., 1948-1954.

6 volumes, 8vo (207 x 134 mm). Numerous maps, charts, and facsimiles. (Some light toning and occasional spotting.) Contemporary half red morocco gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY SANGORSKI & SUTCLIFFE (some very minor scuffing).

FIRST ENGLISH TRADE EDITION of Churchill’s monumental history, with the imprint reading “London, Toronto, Melbourne, Sydney, Wellington.” The First English Edition is dated 1948-1954 (as is the present set), while the First American Edition is dated 1948-1953. Woods A123(b).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$1,000 - 1,500

103

CHURCHILL, Winston L.S., Sir (1874-1965). The Second World. London et al: Cassell & Co., Ltd., 1948-1954.

6 volumes, 8vo (210 x 136 mm). Author’s note and errata tipped-in to vol. I, numerous maps, charts, and facsimiles. (Some light toning and spotting). Modern half red morocco, spines gilt-decorated with lion emblems, top edges gilt (spotting to edges of vol. I).

FIRST ENGLISH TRADE EDITION of Churchill’s monumental history. Woods A123(b).

$800 - 1,200

104

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). A History of the EnglishSpeaking Peoples. London: Cassell and Company Ltd, 1956-1958.

4 volumes, 8vo. Numerous maps. Original red cloth (some light wear and very minor staining); dust jackets (light toning to edges, some minor chipping, short tear with old cellotape repair verso  vol. II front panel). Provenance: Allie (gift inscription from D. A.).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Churchill’s monumental history which he began in 1937 but which was delayed continuously due to the war and other projects. The work begins with Julius Caesar’s invasion of Britain (55 BCE) and concludes at the Second Boer War (1902). Woods A138(a).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

31FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

105

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). A group of 5 works published in London, comprising:  Arms and the Covenant. 1938. Woods A44(a). -- Great Contemporaries 1937. Woods A43(a). -- Into Battle. 1941. Woods A66(a). -- The Sinews of Peace Post-War Speeches. 1948. Woods A124. -- Marlborough his Life and Times. 1934. Vol. II only. Variant binding not mentioned by Woods. Woods A40(a). -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all published in London, all 8vo, all in original cloth or printed wrappers, most with dust jackets, FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

107

[CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965)]. A group of 14 works by or about Churchill, including:

GILBERT, Martin. Winston S. Churchill, Volume VII: Road to Victory 1941-1945 Boston, 1986. -- Thoughts and Adventures. NY et al, 1991. -- My Early Life a Roving Commission. L, 2007. Slipcase. -- Memoirs of the Second World War. NY, 1978. -- The Dream. Delray Beach, FL, 2005. -- MANCHESTER, William. The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Visions of Glory 18741932. Boston et al, 1983. -- The American Civil War. NY, 1961. -- And 7 others. Together, 14 works in 14 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original cloth or printed wrappers, most in dust jackets, most FIRST EDITIONS or first American editions, condition generally fine. Complete list available upon request.

$250 - 350

106

CHURCHILL, Winston L. S., Sir (1874-1965). A group of 14 works, including:

London to Ladysmith via Pretoria. Toronto, [1900]. -- Ian Hamilton’s March Toronto, [1900]. -- The Aftermath. NY, 1929. -- Churchill Talks to Congress December Twenty-Sixth, Nineteen Forty-One. [Canada]: Oneida Ltd., n.d. Original printed wrappers; folding case. -- Blood Sweat and Tears. Toronto, 1941. In dust jacket. -- Savrola a Tale of the Revolution in Laurania. 1900.

-- The Unrelenting Struggle. Toronto, 1942. In dust jacket. -- And others. Together, 14 works in 15 volumes, all 8vo, most in original cloth, most FIRST AMERICAN or first Canadian editions, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

108

CLANCY, Tom (1947-2013). The Hunt for Red October. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1984.

8vo. Original red cloth (a touch of wear to extremities, slight toning to endpapers); dust jacket (very slight creasing to edges). Provenance: United States Naval Institution (bookplate commemorating the gift of John W. Kouri).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with the 18 lines on copyright page without indication of other printings, ISBN at bottom corner rear cover IN FIRST ISSUE DUST JACKET with 6 blurbs on rear panel, with Clive Cussler the third entry and unpriced.

$100 - 200

32 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). Gilded Age. Hartford et al: American Publishing Company et al, 1873.

8vo (220 x 137 mm). Frontispiece, folding plate, 19 plates, numerous illustrations, 2pp. publisher’s advertisements at rear. (Some light spotting, toning and soiling.)

Modern calf-backed marbled boards, red and green leather lettering-pieces gilt, edges sprinkled brown.

FIRST EDITION, early issue with the following issue points: Everybody’s Friend in first state with “truex inde”; first state title-page dated to 1873 with “White” included in the list of illustrators and the electrotype’s imprint verso; the earliest printing of the heading for chapter V on p. [vii] with “Eschol Sellers”; the final illustration on p. xiv is labeled “211”; no comma after “Hallelujah” on p. 246; a period after “Dr. Jackson” on p. 280, and lacking illustration on p.403; but with the corrected states of pp. 351-353.  BAL 3357.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

110

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. New York: Charles L. Webster and Company, 1885.

Square 8vo (215 x 164 mm). Half-title, lithographic frontispiece by E. W. Kemble, photographic portrait frontispiece of the bust of Mark Twain by Karl Gerhardt (BAL state 1), numerous illustrations. (Some minor spotting and staining.) Original green pictorial cloth gilt, stamped in black (front hinge loose, some slight wear to extremities); folding case.

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, early issue, with the following issue points: the frontispiece in the first state; the title leaf in the second state; first state of p. 13 with “Him and Another Man” plate listed as being on p. 88; first state of p. 57 with “was”; third state of p. 155; third state of p. 283; with final blank 23/8. BAL 3415.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $5,000 - 7,000

111

8vo. Lithographic frontispiece by E. W. Kemble, photographic frontispiece of Twain bust by Karl Gerhardt (BAL 3415), illustrations in text. Publisher’s original sheep (some chipping and toning, hinges starting).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, early state, with the following issue points: the title leaf in the second state; the frontispiece in the first state; first state of p. 13 with “Him and Another Man” plate listed as being on p. 88; first state of p. 57 with “was” for “saw”; first state of pagination on p. 155 (without the final “5”); third state of p. 283; with final blank 23/8. The American release of The Adventures of Huckleberry Fin“ was delayed by nearly two months due to an “obnoxious” defacement on p. 283. Of the four bindings produced the sheepskin is considered to be the rarest, with only 2,500 copies produced. BAL 3415; Johnson pp. 43-50.

$1,000 - 1,500

33FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM 109
CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. New York: Charles L. Webster & Company, 1885.

113

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). Life on the Mississippi Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1883.

8vo. Frontispiece, numerous illustrations. (Some toning or minor spotting.) Original brown cloth gilt, stamped in black (some light wear, some minor staining, a few dents in rear cover, front hinge just tender). FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, Intermediate A (B?) State, with p. 441 tail piece present as in the first state, and with p. 443 with caption reading “The St. Charles Hotel.” BAL 3411.

[With:] CLEMENS. Following the Equator a Journey Around the World. Hartford, CT & NY: The American Publishing Company & Doubleday & McClure Co., 1897. 8vo. Portrait frontispiece, numerous illustrations. (Some spotting and toning.) Original cloth gilt (slight wear to extremities, light toning to edges). Provenance: gift inscription (25 December 1897). FIRST TRADE EDITION, with Hartford and New York imprints which may have been published simultaneously with the preferred first issue with only the Hartford imprint. BAL 3451.

$400 - 600

114

CLEMENS, Samuel (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). A group of 4 works, comprising:

Following the Equator a Journey Around the World. Hartford, 1897. FIRST ISSUE with Hartford imprint only and signature on p.161 [no priority]. BAL 3451. -- Life on the Mississippi. Boston, 1883. Second state without tail-piece on p.441 and p.443 caption reads “The St. Charles Hotel.” BAL 3411. -- The Innocents Abroad. Hartford et al, 1869. Second issue, with all points. BAL 3316. -- Library of Humor. NY, 1888. Second state with alphabetical index. BAL 3425. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all 8vo, all in original cloth gilt, ALL FIRST OR FIRST TRADE EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $800 - 1,200

115

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). A group of 5 volumes, comprising:

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. NY, 1890. Second edition. -- The Prince and the Pauper. Boston, 1882. BAL 3402. -- The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg. NY & L, 1900. BAL 3459. -- The Stolen White Elephant, Etc. Boston, 1882. BAL 3404. -- The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, and other Stories. L, 1867. BAL 3586.

[Bound with:] The Innocents at Home. L, [1872]. “Copyright edition.” BAL 3336. -- [Also bound with:] The Innocents Abroad a Book of Travel in Pursuit of Pleasure. The Voyage Out. L, [1870]. BAL 3590. -- Together, 7 works in 5 volumes, various 16mo,12mo, and 8vo sizes, all in 20th-century half calf or quarter morocco bindings, most FIRST AMERICAN or FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

34 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 112 NO LOT

116

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). A group of 11 works, including:

A Double Barrelled Detective Story. 1902. BAL 3471. -- Extracts from Adam’s Diary. 1904. BAL 3480. -- Eve’s Diary. 1906. BAL 3489. -- Christian Science. 1907. BAL 3497. -- The $30,000 Bequest and Other Stories. 1906. BAL 3492. -- And 5 others. Together, 10 works in 11 volumes, most published in New York or London, all 8vo, all in original red cloth, FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

117

CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne (“Mark Twain”) (1835-1910). A group of 13 works, including:

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Toronto, 1876. BAL 3609. -- A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. Toronto, [1889]. BAL 3429. -- Mark Twain’s Autobiography. NY & L, 1924. 2 volumes. BAL 3537. -- Is Shakespeare Dead? NY & L, 1909. BAL 3509. -- Old Times on the Mississippi. Toronto, 1876. Later printing. BAL 3368. -- The American Claimant. NY, 1892. -- Eye Openers. L, [1871]. Folding case. Second printing. BAL 3331. -- And 6 others. Together, 13 works in 14 volumes, all 8vo, all in original cloth, boards, or wrappers, most FIRST EDITIONS or first Canadian editions, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$800 - 1,200

35FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
118 NO LOT 119 NO LOT

121

120

COBB, Humphrey (1899-1944). Paths of Glory. New York: The Viking Press, 1935.

8vo. Publisher’s blue and salmon cloth; original dust jacket (spine panel sunned, chipping along extremities).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE of Cobb’s first work, written while he worked at an advertising agency in New York City following his service in the First World War. Paths of Glory is based on the Souain corporals affair in which four French soldiers were executed by firing squad as an example to the rest of the French Army; the book was later adapted into Stanley Kubrick’s 1957 film of the same name.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600 121

CONRAD, Joseph (1857-1924). Secret Agent. London: Methuen & Co., 1907.

8vo. 40 pp. publisher’s advertisements. Publisher’s red cloth gilt (toning); later quarter calf slipcase.

FIRST EDITION of Conrad’s work, dedicated to H.G. Wells and inspired by the 1894 death of French anarchist Martial Bourdin, who was killed when explosives he was preparing to detonate in the Greenwich Observatory detonated prematurely. Smith 13.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800 122

CONRAD, Joseph (1857-1924). A group of 7 works, comprising:

The Arrow of Gold. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1919. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION.

-- The Nature of a Crime. London: Duckworth & Co., 1924. Publisher’s orange cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Suspense. London: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1925. Publisher’s grey cloth; original dust jacket (two copies, one lacking dust jacket). -- Tales of Hearsay. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1925. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- Typhoon and Other Stories. London: William Heinemann, 1903. Publisher’s black-grey cloth gilt; modern quarter-morocco folding box. FIRST EDITION. -- [Together with]: FORD, Madox Ford. Joseph Conrad: A Personal Remembrance. London: Duckworth & Co., 1924. -- Together, 7 works in 8 volumes, all 8vos, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800 123

COOPER, James Fenimore (1789-1851). A group of 2 works, comprising:

The Deerslayer. London: Richard Bentley, 1841. Three volumes. Contemporary quarter calf.

-- The Red Rover. London: Richard Bentley, 1836. Contemporary calf. Provenance: E.L. Croucher. -- Together, 2 works in 4 volumes, 8vos, FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

124

COOPER, James Fenimore (1789-1851). A group of 5 works, comprising:

Bravo. Philadelphia: Carey & Lea, 1831. Two volumes. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. BAL 3852. -- Lionel Lincoln, or the Leaguer of Boston. New York: Charles Wiley, 1825. Two volumes. Modern cloth. FIRST EDITION. BAL 3832. --  The Monikins. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, 1835. Two volumes. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. BAL 3836.

-- The Prairie. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea, & Carey, 1827. Full calf. FIRST EDITION. BAL 3836. -- [With]: The Two Admirals: A Tale. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1842. Volume one only. Contemporary cloth. -- Together, 5 works in 8 volumes, all 8vos, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

36 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
125 NO LOT 120
123

126

CURTIUS RUFUS, Quintus. De rebus gestis Alexandri Magni, Cum Commentariis Raderi, Salmasii, Bongarsii, Gronovii, Popmae, Loccenii, & Freinshemii. Leiden: Petrus vander Aa, 1696.

8vo (186 x 116 mm). Engraved frontispiece, engraved title, title-page printed in red and black with engraved vignette; engraved folding map, engraved plates (several folding). 20th-century calf, spine gilt.

Curtius Rufus’s biography of Alexander the Great was published in numerous editions in the 16th- and 17th-centuries.  Vander Aa’s edition includes the commentaries of Rader, Freinsheim, Loccen, and Salmasius.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

127

CUVIER, Georges L. C., Baron (1769-1832). A sammelband of 16 articles originally appearing in the Annales du Museum d’Histoire Naturelle. Paris, ca 1802-1815. Comprising:

Mémoire Sur les Céphalopodes -- Mémoire Sur la Limace...et le Colimaçon -- Mémoire Sur l’Haliotide, ou Orielle de Mer... -- Mémoire Sur l’Animal de la Lingule -- Mémoire Sur le Genre Doris -- Mémoire Sur les Thalides...et sur les Biphores -- Mémoire Concernant l’animal de l’Hyale, un nouveau genre de mollusques nus... -- Mémoire Sur la Scyllée, l’Eolide et le Glaucus... -- Mémoire Sur la Dolabelle, sur la Testacelle... -- Mémoire Sur l’Onchidie, genre de Mollusques nus... -- Mémoire Sur la vivipare d’eau douce... -Mémoire Sur le grand Buccin de nos côtes...Mémoire Sur le genre thethys... -- Mémoire Sur la Janthine et sur la Phasianelle de M. Lamarck -- Mémoire Sur le Acères, ou Gastéropodes san tentacules apparens -- Mémoire Sur les animaux des Anatifes et des Balanes Lam.

Together, 16 works in one volume, 4to (257 x 204 mm). Several lithographed plates throughout. (Some light spotting, a few small pencil marks.) Contemporary morocco-backed boards (some light wear).

A collection of 16 articles by Cuvier on mollusks. Despite differences among snails, cockles, and cuttlefish in terms of shell shape and diet, Cuvier recognized a noticeable pattern in their overall appearance, and categorized them into a category he termed “molluscs” (Mollusca). He began intensive study on mollusks at Normandy, and the majority of his papers on mollusks were published in the Annales du museum d’Histoire Naturelle between 1802 and 1815.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $500 - 700

37FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

128

DARWIN, Charles (1809-1882). The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication.  London: John Murray, 1868.

2 volumes, 8vo. 43 woodblock illustrations; Vol. I with 32pp. advertisements dated April 1867 and vol. II with single advertisement leaf at end dated February 1868. Original green cloth, gilt-lettered on spine by Edwards & Remnant with their ticket (hinges repaired, some rubbing and wear). Provenance: J. A. J. Barclay (bookplates); William Barclay (signatures); Foyle’s bookseller tickets.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with 5 errata on 6 lines in Vol. I, and 9 errata on 7 lines in Vol. II. The book’s slow progress towards publication was due not only to its size but the author’s ill health. “About half of the eight years that elapsed between its commencement and completion were spent on it. The book did not escape adverse criticism: it was said, for instance, that the public had been patiently waiting for Mr. Darwin’s justificatives, and that after eight years of expectation all they got was a mass of detail about pigeons, rabbits and silkworms. But the true critics welcomed it as an expansion with unrivalled wealth of illustration of a section of the Origin” (The Autobiography of Charles Darwin and Selected Letters, F. Darwin, editor, NY, 1958, p. 281). Freeman 877; Norman 597.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,000 - 1,500

130 [DIALING -- MANUSCRIPT]. “Dialling.” [England, ca 1800].

20 leaves, 4to (283 x 183mm). Written in ink in brown cursive. Illustrated with 7 pen-and-ink drawings of dials and several tables. Modern marbled wrappers.

A practical manual on dialing with seven problems for making accurate sundials: “To draw an equinoctial dial or an horizontal dial under the poles,” “To draw a horizontal dial under the equinoctial,” “To draw a horizontal ideal for any latitude,” and how to draw direct dials in each of the four directions (South, North, East and West.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

129

DARWIN, Charles (1809-1882). The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex.  London: John Murray, 1871.

2 volumes, 8vo. 16pp. publisher’s advertisements dated January 1871 in each volume. (Some spotting.) Original green cloth, spine gilt-lettered (hinges repaired, some slight wear to extremities, small chip to head of spine Vol. I). Provenance: Thore Virgin (bookplates, signature dated 1910).

FIRST EDITION, second issue, without “transmitted” as the first word on p.297 of Vol. I, and without the printer’s note and errata on the verso of the title-leaf in Vol. II and without the leaf containing Darwin’s note tipped after p.viii in Vol. II. There were 2,500 copies of the first edition and 2,000 copies of the second edition printed of Darwin’s work, which includes the first appearance of the word “evolution” in any of Darwin’s works. See Freeman 941 & 942.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200

131

DIBDIN, Thomas Frognall (1776-1847). Typographical Antiquities: or the History of Printing in England Scotland and Ireland. London: William Miller (vols. 1-2), John Murray (vol. 3) and Longman and others, 1810-1819.

4 volumes, 4to (268 x 204 mm). Pagination: xx, [2], 96, cxxxviii, [2], 396, xiii-xx; [4], vi, 30, [2], xii, 33-400, [i]-x, 401-614; [4], iv, 616, [2]; [4], ii, [2], 624. Half-titles and title-pages printed in red and black, 4 engraved portrait frontispieces, printed advertisements in each volume, directions to the binder in vols. I, III, and IV,, indices, errata in all but vol. IV, 38 plates, numerous illustrations (some full-page, some printed in red and black). (Some spotting, staining and offsetting.) Contemporary calf gilt, edges gilt (rebacked, some wear). Provenance: Arthur Dalrymple (armorial bookplates, a few annotations).

FIRST EDITION of Dibdin’s illustrated revision of Ames’s and Herbert’s history of English printing. Windle & Pippin A15.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

38 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

132

[DICKENS, Charles, his copies]. SHAKESPEARE, William (1564-1616). The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare. London: for F. C. and J. Rivington and others, 1821.

6 volumes only (of 21), 8vo. Contemporary half morocco (worn, several covers detached, spines perished). Provenance: James W. Alexander (bookplates); Charles Dickens (bookplates).

DICKENS’S COPY OF SHAKESPEARE’S WORKS FROM THE GADSHILL LIBRARY, WITH BOTH DICKENS’S BOOKPLATE AND THE GADSHILL PLACE LABEL. Malone’s “Variorum Edition” of Shakespeare’s works, with commentary by Edmond Malone. Comprising: Vol. III, Prolegomena -- Vol. VI, Romeo and Juliet, As you Like It -- Vol. XIII, Cymbolene and Timon of Athens -- Vol. XIV, Coriolanus and Winter’s Tale -- Vol. XV, Tempest, King John, and Essay on the Origin of the Tempest -- Vol. XVI, Richard II, Henry IV Part I $800 - 1,200

133

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. London: Chapman and Hall, 1837.

8vo (212 x 130 mm). Half-title, 43 engraved plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”) and others (including engraved frontispiece, additional engraved vignette title-page). (Lacking advertisements, some spotting heavier to plates, a few short tears to plates repaired verso.) 20th-century half blue calf gilt, marbled boards (spine and edges sunned).

FIRST EDITION, BOUND FROM THE ORIGINAL PARTS, third issue with signature E on p.25 and pagination on p.26, and Hatton & Cleaver’s Variant B with “inbe-licate”and “inscriptino” on p.341 lines 1 and 5, and “S. Veller” on p.342 line 5. With most plates in Hatton & Cleaver’s second state. Lacking both suppressed plates in part 3 but with two later plates not mentioned in Hatton & Cleaver: “The fat boy awake on this occasion only” (facing p.73) and “Mr. Wardle & his friends under the influence of ‘the Salmon,’”(facing p.76). Eckel pp. [23]- 50; Gimbel A15; Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 3-88; Smith I:3.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

134 DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Oliver Twist; or, the Parish Boy’s Progress. By “Boz.” London: Richard Bentley, 1838.

3 volumes, 8vo (185 x 113 mm). 24 etched plates (including frontispieces to each volume) after George Cruikshank. (Lacking half-titles and all advertisements, some soiling and creasing, a few short tears to text and plates with occasional repairs, one plate with small portion of blank corner torn away.) 20th century brown leather gilt, stamped in black, top edges gilt, others uncut; together in slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE OF THE FIRST ENGLISH NOVEL TO FEATURE A YOUNG CHILD AS A PROTAGONIST, with “Boz” on the title-page and the “Fireside” plate and nearly all early issue points listed in Smith. When Bentley decided to publish Oliver Twist in book format before completing its completion in Bentley’s Miscellany magazine, Cruikshank had to rush to complete the illustrated plates. Dickens did not review the plates until the eve of publication, and he objected to the “Fireside” plate (present here) which depicted Oliver at Rose Maylie’s knee with Harry and Mrs. Maylie gathered around the living room fire. Cruikshank revised the illustration, using the same title (“Rose Maylie and Oliver”), to show Rose and Oliver standing before Oliver’s mother’s church memorial. The altered plate was used in later issues of Oliver Twist in book form, as well as in the conclusion of the periodical run. Eckel, p.51-[57]; Gimbel A27; Smith I:4.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

135

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Sketches by Boz... New Edition, Complete. London: Chapman and Hall, 1839.

8vo (213 x 127 mm). 40 engraved plates (including engraved title-page bound as frontispiece and frontispiece bound facing p.23) by George Cruikshank. (Lacking half-title, some occasional soiling, toning, and offsetting, a few short mostly marginal tears.) Contemporary calf decorated in gilt blind, edges marbled (slight wear to spine ends and extremities, joints starting).

FIRST OCTAVO ONE-VOLUME EDITION, early issue with title-page lacking comma after “illustrations” and the publisher’s address as “186, Strand” (Gimbel) and with first state engraved title-page bearing the publishers’ name and address with no date (Eckel, p.19). Issued by Chapman and Hall in May 1839, the present one-volume edition of both series includes 13 additional illustrations (see Smith I:2, p. 16) and, as called for by Eckel, all the plates before p.120 “Greenwich Fair” are without the publisher’s name and all after are marked “London, Chapman & Hall, 186, Strand.” Eckel, pp. 19-22; Gimbel A7.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

39FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$600 - 800

136

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Master Humphrey’s Clock. London: Chapman and Hall, 1840-1841.

3 volumes in one, 8vo (254 x 164 mm). Frontispieces, numerous illustrations by George Cattermole and Hablot Knight Brown (“Phiz”). (Slight toning to edges, some minor soiling.) Early 20th-century half green morocco gilt, edges marbled (some light wear). Provenance: sold Dickens’ Old Curiosity Shop, London (certificate laid in).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, with most early issue points listed in Smith I:6. Gimbel A51.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

138

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). American Notes For General Circulation London: Chapman and Hall, 1842.

2 volumes, 8vo (197 x 120 mm). 1p. Publisher’s advertisement in vol. I, half-titles. (Some occasional spotting or soiling, some minor offsetting.) Original grayish-reddish-brown horizontally-ribbed blind-stamped cloth, spines gilt-lettered (rebacked preserving original spines, extremities sunned, some rubbing); folding case.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST STATE, with nearly all early issue points listed in Smith, including the second page of the vol. I table of contents misnumbered as page xvi and 6pp. of advertisements at the end of vol. II. Dicken’s preface to American Notes was removed from the preliminary pages and the original pagination was not immediately altered, as here, in the first state, with p. x incorrectly numbered xvi. In the second state, the preliminaries were reprinted with the correct pagination. The preface was not published during Dickens’ lifetime, and first appeared in Forster’s biography of Dickens. Eckel, pp. 113-115; Gimbel A66; Smith 2:3.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

137

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Master Humphrey’s Clock. London: Chapman and Hall, 1840-1841.

3 volumes in one, 8vo (253 x 165 mm). Frontispieces, numerous illustrations by George Cattermole and Hablot K. Browne (“Phiz”). (Soft creasing down the center of most leaves, a few short martinal tears not affecting text, some occasional spotting.) 19-century half maroon polished calf gilt (some wear, repairs to joints and hinges, some staining).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, first appearing as a weekly serial from 4 April 1840 to 4 December 1841, including short stories and two novels, The Old Curiosity Shop and Barnaby Rudge. Gimbel A51; Smith I:6.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

139

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. London: Chapman & Hall, January 1843-July 1844.

20 parts in 19, 8vo (223 x 140 mm). Half-title, title, contents, preface, list of plates and errata in the final part; etched frontispiece, vignette title-page and 38 plates by Hablot K. Browne (“Phiz”). (Plates with toning as usual, some light spotting and creasing, plates loose in part XIV.) Original bluegreen pictorial printed wrappers (some light chipping and soiling); slipcase and chemise. Provenance: E.M. Freer, Esq. (signature on head of front wrapper in 5 parts).

FIRST EDITION IN ORIGINAL MONTHLY PARTS, the vignette title-page in the first state signed “Phiz fecit.” with the signpost reading “100£” and with 7 studs in the lid of the trunk, but with later 14-line errata. Parts XIX and XX in the first issue wrapper with the 2 additional lines on the back inside at foot. All plates, text, and advertisements, including “The Chuzzlewit Advertiser,” complete as called for in Hatton & Cleaver with the exception of part VII which is lacking the rare advertisement slip, as is common. Hatton & Cleaver, pp.183-212; Eckel, pp. 66-70.

$1,500 - 2,500

40 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$400 - 600

140

DICKENS, Charles (“Boz”) (1812-1870). The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. London: Chapman and Hall, 1844.

8vo (212 x 129 mm). Half-title, etched frontispiece, additional etched vignette title-page and 38 etched plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”). (Some minor spotting and staining.) 20th-century half red calf, marbled boards, spine gilt-decorated-and-lettered, calf lettering-piece gilt, edges sprinkled brown (spine lightly sunned, light soiling to extremities).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM with most early issue points listed in Smith including the signpost reading “100£,” (some claim first state, but Hatton & Cleaver argue no priority), and the 14-line errata. Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 185224; Smith I: 7.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

141

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Pictures From Italy. London: Bradbury & Evans for the Author, 1846.

8vo (175 x 110 mm). Half-title; 2 pp. publisher’s advertisements at front, wood-engraved vignette on title-page and 3 wood-engravings by Samuel Palmer, 2pp. advertisements at end. (Some spotting and soiling.) 20th-century green half calf gilt, partially unopened (some sunning and scuffing). Provenance: Susan Chatterton (gift inscription, 1846). FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM with all points listed in Smith. Eckel, p. 126; Smith II:7.

[With:] DICKENS, editor. Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi. London: Richard Bentley, 1838. 2 volumes, 8vo (196 x 120 mm). Half-titles, engraved portrait frontispiece after J. Raven, and 12 etched plates by and after George Cruikshank. (Lacking advertisements, some minor spotting.) Contemporary polished calf gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut (front flyleaves repaired, some light wear); original cloth bound in. Provenance: Frederick Cowan (bookplates). FIRST EDITION, second issue with the last plate with ornamental border and original dark brown cloth bound in. Eckel pp. 152155; Gimbel B64.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

[

142

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. London: Chapman and Hall, 1844.

8vo (213 x 130 mm). Etched frontispiece, etched title-page, 38 etched plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”). (Lacking half-title and list of plates, title-page trimmed short, some toning and spotting.) Later half calf gilt (some wear, hinges repaired); slipcase. Provenance: William Stather (bookplate). FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, text with most of the first issue points listed in Smith including the earlier 13-line errata, and the first impression of engraved titlepage with te signpost reading “100£,” 7 studs in the trunk and signed “Phiz fecit.” Eckel pp. 71-73; Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 185-224; Smith I: 7.

With:] DICKENS. Dombey and Son. London: Bradbury and Evans, 1848. 8vo (213 x 130 mm). Engraved frontispiece, engraved title, 38 engraved plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”). (Lacking half-title, some staining and spotting.) 19th-century half green calf gilt, marbled boards (repairs to joints, hinges and extremities, some light scuffing, some minor staining). FIRST EDITION, with most early issue points listed in Smith, including the first state vignette title, “Capatin” for “Captain” in last line on p. 324, “, and no period at end of last line on p. 582, but with the later 8-line errata. Includes the first example of a “so-called dark plate” facing p. 547. Gimbel A103; Smith I:8.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

143

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Personal History of David Copperfield London: Bradbury & Evans, 1850.

8vo (213 x 131 mm). 40 etched plates (including engraved frontispiece and additional engraved vignette title) after Hablot K. Browne (“Phiz”). (Lacking half-title, some pale spotting and staining.) 20th-century half green calf gilt, marbled boards (spine and edges lightly sunned, some minor scuffing). Provenance: Emily Hedges, gifted to; George H. Hedges (gift inscription, 1886), gifted to; Dora E. Gifford (gift inscription, 1922).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM with illustrated title-page dated 1850. Published on 14 November 1850, David Copperfield is considered Dickens’s most autobiographical novel and includes one of the author’s favorite characters: David Copperfield (preface to 1869 edition). Eckel, pp. 75-77; Gimbel A122; Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 251-272; Smith I:9.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

41FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$300 - 400
$400 - 600

144

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Little Dorrit. London: Bradbury & Evans, 1857.

8vo (203 x 131 mm). Frontispiece, additional pictorial title and 38 engraved plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”). (Some spotting and soiling.) Late 19th-century half black sheep gilt, marbled boards, red-stained edges (minor wear to extremities, front hinge starting).

FIRST EDITION, bound from the original monthly parts. FIRST ISSUE, with “Rigaud” for “Blandois” on pages 469, 470, 472, and 473. Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 307-330; Smith I:12.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

146

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Our Mutual Friend. London: Chapman and Hall, 1865.

2 volumes in one, 8vo (213 x 135 mm). Half-titles, 40 wood-engraved plates by Marcus Stone (including frontispieces). (Lacking advertisements and errata slip, some marginal tearing, some toning or spotting.) Later green half morocco gilt, green pebbled cloth (spine sunned, slight wear to extremities).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM with most early issue points listed in Smith of Dickens’ fourteenth, and final, completed novel. Gimbel A150; Smith 1:15.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

145

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). [The Christmas Numbers from Household Words and All the Year Round]. Household Words. London: Bradbury & Evans, 1850-1858. -- All the Year Round. London: C. Whiting & Chapman and Hall, 1859-1867.

One volume bound from 18 original parts, 8vo (230 x 153 mm). Comprising 9 issues from Household Words and 9 issues from All the Year Round. (Some soiling and spotting, light chipping to a few edges, a few leaves trimmed.) 20th-century half calf gilt, edges speckled red (joints starting, slight wear and scuffing); wrappers for a few parts bound in.

FIRST EDITION, BOUND FROM THE ORIGINAL PARTS of the Christmas numbers from Household Words and All the Year Round including the stories ‘A Christmas Tree,’ ‘What Christmas Is, As We Grow Older,’ ‘The Holly-Tree Inn,’ ‘A Message from the Sea,’ ‘Somebody’s Luggage,’ ‘Mrs. Lirriper’s Lodgings,’ and several others. Eckel, pp. 217-219, pp. 221-222; Gimbel E9-E20, E113-E118.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

147

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Works of Charles Dickens. “Household Edition.” London: Chapman and Hall, July 1871 - January 1880.

99 parts (of 101, lacking parts 49 and 51), 8vo (257 x 193 mm). Numerous illustrations. (Some spotting  and toning, a few soft creases.) Original blue pictorial printed wrappers, several parts unopened (some chipping and staining, a few covers detached or detaching, a few spines defective, a few wrappers trimmed); folding chemises. Provenance: Herr Dr. Arbenz? (signatures to front wrappers of most parts).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION IN ORIGINAL MONTHLY PARTS, lacking only two parts.’’ Chapman & Hall commissioned new illustrations for the Household Edition of Dickens’s works, begun the year after his death. The Household Edition is scarce in monthly parts: we trace only 3 records of the English parts at auction, two of which were complete. Gimbel D66.

$500 - 700

42 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

[

148

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. London: Chapman and Hall, 1839.

8vo (206 x 129 mm). Engraved portrait frontispiece and 39 engraved plates by Hablot Knight Browne (“Phiz”). (Lacking half-title, some spotting and toning.) Later brown half morocco gilt, edges marbled (some wear, joints starting). Provenance: “Lampard” (signature on p.[1]). FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, with frontispiece in second state, plates 1, 2, and 4 in the earliest states, with many of the internal flaws mentioned in Smith including with “visiter” for “sister” on p. 123 line 17, and “latter” for “letter” on p. 160 6 lines up. Gimbel A41; Hatton & Cleaver pp.131-160; Smith I:5.

With]: DICKENS. Dombey and Son. London: Bradbury & Evans, 1848. 8vo (211 x 133 mm). Half-title, 40 engraved plates by Hablot K. Browne (“Phiz”). (Some minor spotting and staining, a few short tears and captions shaved.) 20th-century half red calf gilt, edges sprinkled red (some soiling). FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, with first state vignette title with the hook on the left arm of Captain Cuttle and most early issue points listed in Smith, including “if” missing in line 9 on p. 426, and no period at end of last line on p. 582, but with the later 8-line errata leaf mentioning 6 errors following p. xvi as in most copies. Hatton & Cleaver, pp. 225-250; Smith I:8.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

149

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). A group of 10 FIRST EDITION works, including:

The Pic Nic Papers, by Various Hands. Charles Dickens, editor. London: Henry Colburn, 1841. 3 volumes. Contemporary calf gilt; slipcase. -- “Hard Times,” In: Household Words. London: [N.p.]: 1854. -- “A Tale of Two Cities.” In: All the Year Round. London: [N.p.]:1859-1860. 3 volumes. Later half calf. -- The Uncommercial Traveller. London: Chapman & Hall, 1861. Later half morocco gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY TOUT. -- The Mystery of Edwin Drood. London: Chapman &  Hall, 1870. 20th-century half calf. -- The Letters of Charles Dickens. London: Chapman & Hall, 1880. 2 volumes. 20th-century morocco gilt, original spine covers tipped-in. -- And 5 others. Together, 11 works in 15 volumes, many illustrated by George Cruikshank, all 8vo, FIRST EDITIONS or FIRST EDITIONS IN BOOK FORM, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

PARDON, William and DYCHE, Thomas. A New General English Dictionary. London: C. Ware, 1759. Contemporary calf. -- ALBERTI, Francois. Nouveau Dictionnaire Francois-Italien. Naples: Jean Gravier, 1771. Contemporary calf. -- A Dictionary of Quotations in Most Frequent Use. London: Printed for G.G. and J. Robinson, 1799. Contemporary quarter calf. -- TUKE Henry. The Principles of Religion.New York: Samuel Wood & Friends, 1819. Contemporary quarter calf. -- WATKINS, John. Biographical, Historical and Chronological Dictionary. London: Printed for Richard Philips, 1807. Contemporary calf. -- A Dictionary of the Kalispel or Flat-Head Indian Language. [Montana]: St. Ignatius Print, 1879. Later half calf. -- LANG, Hugo. A German-English Dictionary of Medical Terms. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston’s Son & Company, 1910. Contemporary calf. -- 4to, 8vo. Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, condition generally good. Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

151

DINESEN, Isak (1885-1962). A group of 3 works,, comprising:

Out of Africa. New York: Random House, 1938. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Another copy (lacking dust jacket).

-- Seven Gothic Tales. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.

Publisher’s cream-colored cloth. --  Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

43FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
150 [DICTIONARIES]. A group of 7 works, comprising:
$500 - 700

152

DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge (“Lewis Carroll”) (1832-1898). Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. John Tenniel, illustrator. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1869.

8vo (183 x 124 mm). Frontispiece and 41 illustrations after Tenniel. (Some toning, some minor spotting or soiling.) Contemporary calf gilt, red calf lettering-piece gilt, edges gilt; original cloth covers phase-board-backed and laid in (some wear); slipcase.

FIRST AUTHORIZED AMERICAN EDITION of Dodgson’s classic, first published in an edition of 2,000 copies by the Clarendon Press in 1865. Deciding the printing of that edition was inferior, John Tenniel called for the whole print run to be recalled, and another edition was printed in 1866.  The inferior sheets were sent to American so the remaining copies could be distributed with a cancelled title-page, which constituted the first American edition. This Boston edition is therefore considered the first authorized edition of Dodgson’s work printed in America.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

153

DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge (“Lewis Carroll”) (1832-1898). Sylvie and Bruno. London et al: MacMillan and Co., 1889.

8vo (183 x 121 mm). Half-title, frontispiece, numerous illustrations after Harry Furniss. (Lacking advertisements, a few short marginal tears, some minor soiling.) Contemporary half red calf gilt, marron leather letteringpiece gilt (some light wear, joints starting or reinforced). Provenance: C.J. Williamson (inscription), gifted to; Lillie Lyell (redacted inscription); George Williamson (bookplate, gift inscription). FIRST EDITION. Williams, Madan, Green and Crutch 217.

[With:] DODGSON. Sylvie and Bruno Concluded. London et al: Macmillan and Co., 1893. 8vo. Half-title, frontispiece, numerous illustrations after Harry Furniss, advertisement addressing recall of 1893 printing of Through the Looking Glass tipped in, 5pp. publisher’s advertisements at end. (Some minor toning.) Original red cloth gilt, edges gilt (a touch of wear to spine ends and corners, spine darkened, slight bubbling to rear cover cloth). FIRST EDITION. Williams, Madan, Green and Crutch, 250.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

154

DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge (“Lewis Carroll”) (1832-1898). A group of 8 works, including:

A Tangled Tale. London: MacMillan & Co., 1885. -- Alice’s Adventures Underground. London & New York: Macmillan and Co., 1886. FIRST EDITION of the facsimile of the original manuscript. Williams, Madan, Green and Crutch 194. -- The Lewis Carroll Picture Book. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1890.

-- The Rectory Umbrella and Mischmasch. London: Cassell & Co., 1932. In dust jacket. -- The Hunting of the Snark. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1903. -- The Russian Journal. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1935.

-- Useful and Instructive Poetry. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1954. -- The Wasp in a Wig. London: The MacMillan Company, 1977. -- Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, all in original cloth or boards, most FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally very good. Provenance: One book from the collection of Clarence B. Farrar, American Doctor & Chief Psychiatrist in the Canadian Army ca. 1916.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

44 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

155

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir (1859-1930). The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. London: George Newnes, Limited, 1894.

8vo. Half-title, frontispiece and illustrations by Sidney Paget. (Some light spotting as usual.) Original gilt- and black-stamped blue cloth, beveled edges, edges gilt (some wear, particularly to extremities, spine slightly leaned, some soiling).

FIRST EDITION of Doyle’s second collection of short stories about Sherlock Holmes, preceded by the first collection, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, published in 1892. “Rarely has a character so quickly established itself on the popular imagination as did Sherlock Holmes in the latter half of 1891” (Green & Gibson A14a).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

156

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir  (1859-1930). Hound of the Baskervilles. London: George Newnes, Limited, 1902.

8vo. Half-title, monochrome frontispiece and 15 monochrome plates by Sidney Paget. (Pale spots to a few leaves, some minor creasing.) 20th-century red morocco gilt, edges gilt, original red cloth front cover and spine bound in at rear.

FIRST EDITION in book form, with the misprint “you” for “your” on p.13. The Hound of the Baskervilles marked the return of Sherlock Holmes after his disappearance over Reichenbach Falls in “The Final Problem,” published 1893, which Doyle described as the “inevitable relapse after repentance.” De Waal 87; Green & Gibson A26.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 600

157

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir (1859-1930). Land of Mist. London: Hutchinson & Co., [1926].

8vo. Half-title, 1p. advertisement for Physic Books by Doyle and 24pp. publisher’s advertisements at rear. (Some spotting.) Original dark green cloth, front cover and spine stamped in light and dark green (hinges tender, some light wear, spine darkened and slanted).

FIRST EDITION, WITH DOYLE’S CLIPPED SIGNATURE tipped front flyleaf.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

45FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

158

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir (1859-1930). A group of 9 works, comprising:

The British Campaign in France and Flanders. 1916-[1920]. 5 volumes (of 6, lacking vol. II). --The Edge of the Unknown. 1930. -- The Return of Sherlock Holmes [1905]. -- Original Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. [ca 1915]. “Special Limited Edition.” -- The Valley of Fear. [1914]. -- Sir Nigel. 1906. -- The Vital Message. L et al, 1919. -- Our African Winter. 1929. -- And others. Together, 9 works in 14 volumes, most published in London and Toronto, all 8vo, all in original cloth, condition generally fine. Provenance: One book from the collection of Donald A. Redmond, author of Sherlock Holmes: A Study in Sources

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

159

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir (1859-1930). A group of 5 works, comprising:

The Stark Munro Letters. L, 1895. -- Rodney Stone. 1896. -- Uncle Bernac. NY, 1897. -- The Last Galley Impressions and Tales. 1911. -- The Maracot Deep. 1926. -Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, most published in London, all 8vo, all in original cloth gilt, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

160

DOYLE, Arthur Conan, Sir (1859-1930). A group of 8 works, comprising:

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. 1892. Second issue with “if he had” on p.65 line 4. -- The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes. 1927. Modern half calf gilt. -- The Lost World. [1912]. -- The Adventure of the Priory School... a Facsimile of the Original Manuscript. Len Deighton, introduction. Santa Barbara, 1985. Original half morocco gilt; slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, letter U of 26 lettered copies in deluxe binding, SIGNED BY DEIGHTON. -- And 4 others. Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, most published in New York, all 8vo, most in original cloth, most FIRST OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

161

[DRAMA - LIMITED EDITION]. A group of 4 works, most limited editions, comprising:

O’NEILL, Eugene. Strange Interlude. 1928. Original vellum gilt and stamped in blue. Number 302 of 775, SIGNED. -- WILLIAMS, Tennessee. One Arm and other Stories. 1948. -- WILLIAMS. Hard Candy. 1954. -- MILLER, Arthur. Arthur Miller’s Collected Plays. 1967. In dust jacket. Eighth printing. INSCRIBED. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all published in New York, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original cloth-backed boards, most in original slipcases, most LIMITED EDITION, condition generally good.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

162

DREISER, Theodore (1871-1945). A Gallery of Women. New York: Horace Liveright, 1929.

2 volumes, 8vo. Title printed in black and navy. (Some slight toning.) Original brown cloth gilt, stamped in black, top edge cut, others uncut (spine ends slightly pushed); dust jackets (clipped with price present, spines darkened, some toning or offsetting, some chipping especially along folds); original slipcase.

FIRST TRADE EDITION of Dreiser’s work, which “brings before the reader the procession of strange and lovely women who have colored one man’s life” (dust jacket).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

163

DU MAURIER, George (1834-1896). Trilby. [New York: Harper & Brothers, 1894]. As printed in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Vol. LXXXVIII, January 1894.  4to. Contemporary half calf gilt (light rubbing, toning, foxing throughout).

FIRST EDITION comprising the serialized portions which appeared in Harper’s Monthly from January to August 1894. Trilby is the most famous of du Maurier’s novels and was cited as an influence on Gaston Leroux’s 1910 novel The Phantom of the Opera.

[With]: DU MAURIER, George. Peter Ibbetson. [New York: Harper & Brothers, 1891]. As printed in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Vol. LXXXIII, June 1891. 4to. Illustrated. Contemporary half calf gilt (light rubbing, foxing throughout). FIRST EDITION comprising the serialized portions which appeared in Harper’s Monthly.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

46 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$400 - 600 159

DUGDALE, William, Sir, (1605-1686). The Baronage of England. London: Printed by Thomas Newcomb for Abel Roper, John Martin, and Henry Herringman, 1675-1676.

3 volumes in 2, folio. Titles printed in red and black; 5 folding genealogical tables, errata leaf (some staining and soilin). Vol I: Contemporary mottled calf gilt (rebacked and recornered preserving old lettering-piece); Vol. II: lacking covers and spine, backstrip present. Provenance: A few annotations in a contemporary hand; George Compton, 4th Earl of Northampton (bookplate).

FIRST EDITION. Wing D2480; ESTC R16723.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - $300

165

EDWARDS, Bryan (1743-1800). The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies. London: for John Stockdale, 1794,1801.

3 volumes, 4to (258 x 200 mm). Half-title to vol. III only; 3 engraved frontispieces, 3 engraved folding maps (some offsetting, several tears crossing image occasionally repaired verso), 16 engraved maps and plates. (Some browning and light spotting). Contemporary calf (rebacked, some light wear). Provenance: Frederick M. Gaige (1890-1976), American entomologist and herpetologist (bookplates).

Second edition of volumes I & II, FIRST EDITION of volume III. The second edition expands on the first edition of 1793 by the inclusion of engraved plates and maps; the third volume includes “An Historical Survey of the French Colony in the Island of St. Domingo.” Edwards, a wealthy West Indies merchant, opposed the War of Independence and supported free trade with America; his work includes extensive information about the slave trade. ESTC T136756; see ESTC T137074 (for Vol. III); Sabin 21901.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $1,000 - 1,500

166

ELIOT, George (“Mary Anne Evans Lewes”) (1819-1880). The Mill on the Floss. Edinburgh & London: William Blackwood and Sons, 1860.

3 volumes, 8vo. Half-titles, 16pp. publisher’s advertisements at end of vol. III. (Some spotting, toning, and staining.) Original orange-brown diagonal ripple-grain blind-stamped cloth, spine gilt-lettered (spines darkened, slight wear to extremities, some minor staining, hinges starting); each in own chemise, together in folding case. Provenance: William & Blackwood (inscription to title-page of vol. I); unidentified W.E.C. (gilt-lettered on each chemise, some annotations).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST STATE, PUBLISHER’S PRESENTATION COPY with “From the Publisher” on the title-page of vol. I. In Carter’s variant B binding, with no advertisement inserted in vol. I and 16pp. publisher’s advertisements at end of vol. III. Carter pp.110-111; Sadleir 816.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

167

ELIOT, George (“Mary Anne Evans Lewes”) (1819-1880). Romola. London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1863.

3 volumes, 8vo (190 x 115 mm). (Some occasional spotting, some light toning.) Contemporary polished calf gilt, green morocco lettering-pieces gilt, top edges gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY RIVIERE AND SON (repairs to joints and spine ends, some light wear).

FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM of the historical romance set in 15th-century Florence, originally published in 14 parks in Cornhill Magazine from July 1862 to August 1863.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

168

ELIOT, George (“Mary Anne Evans Lewes”) (1819-1880). A group of 5 works, comprising:

Felix Holt the Radical. 1866. 3 volumes. FIRST EDITION. Sadleir 814. -- The Spanish Gypsy. 1868. -- Daniel Deronda Montreal, 1876. Contemporary half calf. -- The Legend of Jubal and Other Poems. 1874. -- Impressions of Theophrastus Such. 1879. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, most published in Edinburgh and London by William Blackwood and Sons, all 8vo, most in contemporary calf STAMP-SIGNED BY RIVIERE & SON, most with original cloth covers bound in at rear, FIRST EDITIONS or first Canadian editions, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

47FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM 164
165 166 167 168

169

ELIOT, Thomas Stearns (1888-1965), translator. Anibasis a poem by St.-J. Perse. London: Faber & Faber Limited, 1930 [but 1937].

8vo. Half-title. Original cloth, spine gilt-lettered (some wear, some light soiling); folding case.

FIRST EDITION, second ordinary issue, a reissue of the first edition sheets.

SIGNED BY ELIOT. Gallup A16c.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$200 - 300

171

ELIOT, Thomas Stearns (1888-1965). A group of 7 works, comprising:

The Elder Statesman. L, 1959. In dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- The Cultivation of Christmas Trees. NY, 1956. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- The Film of Murder in the Cathedral. L, [1952]. In dust jacket. FIRST EDITION.  Sweeney Agonistes Fragments of an Aristophanic Melodrama. L, 1932.

FIRST EDITION. -- Four Quartets. NY, [1943]. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- The Cocktail Party. L, [1950]. FIRST EDITION. -- Poetry and Drama. L, [1951].

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, all 8vo, all in original cloth or boards, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

170

ELIOT, Thomas Stearns (1888-1965). Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats. London: Faber and Faber, 1939.

8vo. Half-title. Original red-stamped yellow cloth (slight soiling to extremities, some minor spotting); dust jacket (clipped, some losses at spine ends, some soiling). Provenance: Will West (signature, 1943).

FIRST EDITION, second impression (November 1939). Gallup A34a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

172

[ENTOMOLOGY & BEETLES]. A group of 47 works, comprising:

DENNY, Henry. Monographia Pselaphidarum et Scydmaenidarum Britanniae Norwich et al, 1825. 19th-century cloth-backed boards. -- HOPE, Frederick William. “Characters and Descriptions of Several New Genera and Species of Coleopterous Insects.” In: Transactions of Zoological Society of London Vol. I, part II, pp. 91-112. N.p., communicated 28 May 1833. Later quarter calf.  PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- [RECICHENBACH, Heinrich Gottleib Ludwig]. Monographia Pselaphorum. Leipzig, [1816]. 19-century pastepaper covered boards. -- REBAU, Heinrich. Häfer-Büchlein oder Beschreibung der Schönsten, Nützlichsten und Schädlichsten in-und Ausländilchen Käfer Reutlingen, ca 1850. Original cloth-backed pictorial boards. Fourth edition. -- [REITTER, Edmund]. A Sammelband of offprints on beetles published in Germany from between 1878 to 1915. 41 works bound in 3 volumes. 38pp. manuscript pages interleaved, with 4pp. manuscript folded leaf laid in to [vol. III]. Each volume bound in early 20th-century quarter red morocco. -STURM, Jacob. Catalog meiner Insecten-Sammlung. Nürnberg, 1826. Original cloth gilt. Third edition. -- SAMOUELLE, George. The Entomologist’s Useful Compendium. L, 1819. 19th-century half polished calf gilt. -- And one other. Together, 47 works in 9 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, many with engraved plates and hand-coloring, condition generally good. Provenance: one book from the collection of George Robert Waterhouse, English Naturalist (presentation inscription); three volumes from the collection of Frank C. Fletcher, American entomologist.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

48 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$700 - 900

173

[EXPLORATION -- AFRICA].  PEKE, John Hanning (1827-1864), James Augustus GRANT (1827-1892), and Daniel OLIVER, editor (1830-1916). Botany of the Speke and Grant Expedition. London: Taylor and Francis, 1872.

4to (287 x 221 mm). Color tinted lithographic folding map by W. and A. K. Johnson, 136 lithographed plates. (Some light mostly marginal spotting.) Contemporary half calf (lower hinge and portion of spine repaired, upper hinge starting, some light wear). Provenance: F. Watson (binder’s ticket); W? R? R. Cheyne Esq. (presentation inscription); lime tree and sycamore leaves tipped to front pastedown and front free endpaper captioned “Matlock Bank 1880.”

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY GRANT: “W.? R.? R. Cheyne Equ. with kind regards from J. A. Grant. 13 June 1872 late Bengal.” With plates after W. H. Fitch, who “remains the most outstanding botanical artist of his day in Europe” (Blunt, The Art of Botanical Illustration). Nissen BBI 1468; Stafleu & Cowan 7057.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200

174 [EXPLORATION -- AFRICA].  STANLEY, Henry Morton (1841-1904). Through the Dark Continent. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1879.

8vo (229 x 140 mm). 2 volumes. Portrait frontispieces with illustrations, maps, 2 large folding maps in rear pockets (Some dampstaining). Contemporary half calf gilt (rubbing to extremities).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. Stanley embarked between 1874-1877 to continue Livingstone’s researches on the Congo and Nile River systems, and to examine the findings of Speke, Burton, and Baker. He crossed the continent from east to west along the course of the Congo River, establishing its navigability.

[With]: In Darkest Africa. Toronto: Presbyterian News Company, 1890. 8vo (229 x 140 mm). 2 volumes. Portrait frontispieces with illustrations, maps. 2 large folding maps in rear pockets. Contemporary half calf gilt. First Canadian edition.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

175

[EXPLORATION -- AMERICAS]. LAET, Johannes de (1593-1649). Hispania, sive de regis Hispaniae regnis et opibus commentarius. Leiden: Elzevir, 1629.

16mo (107 x 54 mm). Engraved title; woodcut head-pieces, tail-pieces and initials. (Some minor soiling to a few leaves.) Contemporary vellum, yapp edges, manuscript title on spine, edges stained red. Provenance: P. Dupre (ex dono to an unintelligible school).

Second edition, expanding on the first edition of the same year by the addition of information on the Canary Islands. Laet’s work includes chapters on Florida, New Spain, Chile, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Panama, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Yucatan, and Brazil. Alden & Landis 629/79; Sabin 38560; Willems 313.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

49FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

176

[EXPLORATION -- AMERICAS]. HUMBOLDT, Alexander von (1769-1859) and Aime J. A. BONPLAND (1773-1858). Voyage aus regions equinoctiales du nouveau continent. Part VI: Botanique. Nova genera et species plantarum.... Paris: Librairie Grecque-Latine-Allemande, 1818.

Vol. III of part VI of the Botanique only, folio (494 x 332 mm). 109 engraved plates with hand coloring, comprising plate numbers 193-300. (Some tiny spots on a few plates, some spotting to text leaves.) Contemporary half calf (some rubbing, joints starting).

FIRST EDITION. Humboldt and Bonpland’s work, which includes descriptions of over 4,500 species of plants collected in South America and Mexico in total, was compiled by C. S. Kunth. The plates are after Turpin, who Wilfrid Blunt describes as “possibly the greatest natural genius of all the French botanical painters of his day” (The Art of Botanical Illustration, p.180). Nissen BBI 954; Stafleu & Cowan TL2 3143.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $2,000 - 3,000

177

[EXPLORATION -- AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND]. A group of 3 works, including: COLLINGRIDGE, George (1847-1931). The Discovery of Australia… Concerning the Priority of Discovery in Australasia by Europeans before the arrival of Lieut. James Cook, in the “Endeavour,” in the year 1770. Sydney: Hayes Brothers, 1895. 13 full-page maps and charts (five folding), numerous illustrations. Modern quarter calf gilt. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: Syracuse Public Library (stamps, shelfmarks). Ferguson 8465. -- KENT, William Saville (“William Saville-Kent”) (d. 1908). The Great Barrier Reef of Australia. London: W.H. Allen & Co., Limited, [1893]. Half-title, 48 photo-mezzotype plates, 16 chromolithographic plates, folding map, numerous illustrations. Original blue cloth gilt and blind-stamped. FIRST EDITION. Ferguson 11105; Nissen BBI 3609. (2 copies, one lacking map). -- THOMSON, Arthur Saunders (1816-1860). The Story of New Zealand: Past and Present - Savage and Civilized. London: John Murray, 1859.2 volumes. 20 engraved plates of maps, plans, and views (including frontispieces, 5 folding). Original purple blind-stamped cloth gilt. Provenance: G.E. Day; D.M. Colburn?; W.H. Smith & Son Library. -- Together, 3 works in 5 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 400

178

[EXPLORATION -- AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND]. BRENCHLEY, Julius (1816-1873). Jottings During the Cruise of H.M.S. Curacoa Among the South Sea Islands in 1865. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1873.

8vo (255 x 185 mm). Partially colored folding map, 2 chromolithographed plates (one folding), 8 wood engravings, and 50 engraved natural history plates (40 hand-colored). Original green cloth, gilt-decorated with a vignette of a canoe on front cover, spine gilt (rebacked preserving original spine). Provenance: Mr. James Clifford (bookplate); Frank S. Streeter (bookplate, his sale Christie’s New York, 16 April 2007, Lot 69.

FIRST EDITION, describing the voyage of the Curacoa, which sailed from Sydney to the archipelagoes of the western Pacific under the command of Sir William Wiseman, notable for the natural historical data collected.  The expedition made stops at Lord Howe Island, Norfolk Island, Samoa, Tonga, and Fiji.  THE FRANK S. STREETER COPY. Ferguson 7376; Hill 181.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $800 - 1,200

179 [EXPLORATION -- AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND]. MAIDEN, Joseph Henry (1859-1925) and Walter Scott CAMPBELL (1844-1935). The Flowering Plants and Ferns of New South Wales. Sydney: Charles Potter, April 1895- November 1898.

7 parts, 4to (245 x 184 mm). 28 chromolithograph plates. (Some light toning, some minor soiling and staining, a few short tears some affecting text or plates.) Original printed wrappers (some soiling and staining, some chipping with a few repairs); together in folding case. Provenance: Percy R. Gaunt (signatures).

FIRST EDITION IN ORIGINAL PARTS. As a botanist, Maiden made significant contributions to the knowledge of Austrian flora, as shown in the present work. Ferguson 12183.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $300 - 400

50 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

180

[EXPLORATION -- AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND]. HAMILTON, Augustus (18531913). Maori Art. [The Art Workmanship of the Maori Race in New Zealand]. Dunedin & Wellington, New Zealand: The Governors of the New Zealand Institute, 1896-1901.

5 original parts in one volume, 4to (303 x 246 mm). Portrait frontispiece, facsimile title-page from 1896 edition, numerous illustrations (some doublepage), 3pp. notices bound-in. Original black art canvas gilt, decoratively stained edges, by Fergusson & Mitchell with their ticket (light rubbing, a few corners bumped); original printed wrappers bound in.

Second edition of Hamilton’s work. New Zealand Parliament passed the Maori Antiquities act in 1901, arousing interest in the preservation of Maori relics. Hamilton was named director of the Colonial (later Dominion) Museum in 1903 after they decided they needed to emphasize the preservation of Maori material.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $400 - 600

182

[EXPLORATION -- CHINA]. SMITH, Frederick Porter (1833-1888). Contributions Towards the Materia Medica & Natural History of China. Shanghai and London: American Presbyterian Mission Press, Trubner & Co., 1871.

8vo (234 x 159 mm). A few headings and phrases printed in Chinese throughout. (Some mostly marginal worming to a few leaves with a few leaves repaired, some staining.) Modern half blue calf gilt. Provenance: Biblioteca da reparticao do Expediente Sinco (stamp on title-page); Alfredo Guimaraes (bookseller’s label on verso of front flyleaf); a few manuscript annotations.

FIRST EDITION. Frederick Porter Smith, one of the first British medical missionaries to China, was sent to Hankow China by the Wesleyan Missionary Committee in 1863; he wrote many works on China during his time in that country.  Cordier Sinica 1477. RARE: According to online records, only three copies of Smith’s work have sold at auction in the last 45 years.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500 - 700

[EXPLORATION -- AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND] -- [FACSIMILES]. A group of 3 facsimiles of lithographed works about New Zealand, comprising:

ANGAS, George French. New Zealanders Illustrated. [Wellington, 1966]. 60 facsimile reproductions of chromolithographed plates, facsimile reproductions of the front and rear wrappers for 10 original parts.

Original half morocco. LIMITED EDITION, number 460 of 750 copies.

-- BARRAUD, Charles Decimus and William Thomas Locke TRAVERS. New Zealand Graphic and Descriptive. [New Zealand, 1973]. 31 facsimile reproductions of chromolithographed plates. Original half morocco (fore-edge bumped). LIMITED EDITION, number 330 of 1,000 copies.

-- WAKEFIELD, Edward Jerningham (1820-1879). Illustrations to “Adventure in New Zealand.” [Wellington, 1966]. 15 facsimile reproductions of chromolithographed plates. Original half morocco. LIMITED EDITION, number 189 of 500 copies. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, folio, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

183

[EXPLORATION -- CHINA]. WILSON, Ernest Henry (1876-1930). A Naturalist in Western China with Vasculum, Camera and Gun. Being some account of eleven years’ travel, exploration, and observation in the more remote parts of the Flowery Kingdom. London: Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1913.

2 volumes, 8vo. Folding map and a profusion of photographic plates. (Some pale spotting to a few leaves). Original red cloth gilt (some light rubbing to extremities, some minor darkening to spine and board edges). Provenance: George Forrest (1873-1932), Scottish botanist (signatures indicating his purchase of the book in 1913); gift inscription from Mr. J. C. Williams on a card laid in.

FIRST EDITION. Wilson’s “travels in Western China began early in 1899, and had for their object the collecting of botanical specimens and the introducing of new plants into the gardens of Europe and North America” (Preface, p. vii). From the library of botanist George Forrest, who was one of the first Western explorers to China’s southwestern province of Yunnan, widely considered to be one of the most biodiverse provinces in the country.  Forrest made his first expedition to Yunnan in 1904, and in 1921, he was awarded the Royal Horticultural Society’s Victoria Medal of Honour in 1921 and the Veitch Memorial Medal in 1927. He was elected a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1924. Czech Asia p.229.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

51FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

184 [EXPLORATION -- MIDDLE EAST]. ELPHINSTONE, Mountstuart (17791859). An Account of the Kingdom of Caubul, and its Dependencies, in Persia, Tartary, and India. London: Richard Bentley, 1839.

2 volumes, 8vo (216 x 133 mm). Hand-colored lithograph frontispieces, folding map, one plate. (Some offsetting, some light toning or staining, map detached with tears.) Later half calf gilt, red and green leather letteringpieces gilt, edges marbled (some light wear).

“New and revised edition” of the report from 1808-1809, containing many details related to Afghan history, culture, Pashto words, geography and memoirs.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$400 - 600

185

[EXPLORATION -- PACIFIC]. COOK, Capt. James (1728-1779), and Capt. James KING (1750-1784). [Third voyage]. Troisieme voyage de Cook, ou voyage a l’ocean Pacifique... pour faire des decouvertes dans l’hemisphre nord, pour determiner la position & le’tendue de la cote ouest de l’Amerique Septentrionale, sa distance de l’Asie, & resoudre la question du passage au nord. Execute sous la direction des Capitaines Cook, Clerke & Gore, sur les vaisseaux la Resolution & la Decouverte, en 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779 & 1780. Translated from English into French by Jean Nicholas Demunier. Paris: Hotel de Thou, 1785.

4 volumes, 4to (248 x 190 mm). 88 engraved maps, charts and plates, most folding, including the un-numbered “Mort de Cook” plate (with plate 51 misnumbered 52). Contemporary calf-backed boards, smooth spines gilt (discreet repairs to hinges and joints, some light rubbing). Provenance: Old ownership evidence excised, with leaves repaired and stamped “Removed.”

FIRST EDITION IN FRENCH of Jean Nicholas Demeunier’s translation of A Voyage to the Pacific Ocean, first published in 1784. This translation was published in both quarto and octavo formats. Cook’s third voyage was, in part, an attempt to find the Northwest passage, and thus traversed North Pacific and the west coast of North America in addition to other parts of the Pacific. Cox I, p.65; Sabin 16261.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $600 - 800

186

[EXPLORATION -- PACIFIC]. FLEURIEU, Charles Pierre Claret de, Comte (17381810). Discoveries of the French in 1768 and 1769, to the South-East of New Guinea … Translated from the French. London: John Stockdale, 1791.

4to (290 x 230 mm). Half-title, 13 engraved folding charts or maps. (Some offsetting and spotting, short tears to folds of a few maps). Contemporary marbled calf, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (front cover detached, rear joints starting, some wear). Provenance: W.F. Charters (bookplate); Butler University Library Indianapolis (embossed stamp to H[1], shelf marks).

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH. Originally published in French in 1790, Fleurieu’s work showcases the author’s desire to defend French claims to the “discoveries” of the islands near New Guinea. Cox II, p. 304; Ferguson I: 105.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$1,000 - 1,500

52 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

187

[EXPLORATION -- POLAR]. ERMAN, Georg Adolph (1806-1877). Travels in Siberia: including excursions northwards, down the Obi, to the Polar Circle, and southwards, to the Chinese Frontier. London: Longman, Brown, et al, 1848.

2 volumes, 8vo. With folding engraved route map outlined in color. Contemporary calf gilt (spines and portions of covers sunned). Provenance: Inigo Richmund Jones, British Army Officer (gift inscription on his leaving Eton from Nevyl Graves Russell, 1864); Steve Fossett (bookplate).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. Erman was part of a Norwegian-sponsored German expedition across Siberia for magnetical, geological and ethnological observations, led by Christophe Hansteen, Director of the Christiana Observatory. In 1828 they crossed from Berlin to St. Petersburg and into Siberia. Arctic Bibliography 4662; Sabin 22771.

$300 - 400

188

[EXPLORATION -- POLAR]. A group of 6 works, comprising:

ALEXANDER, Caroline. The Endurance Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1998. (2 copies, one later edition in paperback) -- AMUNDSEN, Roald and ELLSWORTH, Lincoln. The First Flight Across the Polar Sea. London: Hutchinson & Co., Ltd., [1927]. 20th-century half red morocco gilt. -- HUNTFORD, Roland. Shackleton. New York: Ballantine Books, 1987. -- LANSING, Alfred. Endurance Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage. Purdys, NY: The Adventure Library, 1994. -- PEARY, Robert Edwin. The North Pole. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1910. Introduction by Theodore Roosevelt. Arctic Bib. 13230.  -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original cloth, cloth-backed boards, or wrappers, most FIRST OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, condition generally fine.

$200 - 300

189 [EXPLORATION -- POLAR] -- [AUSTRALASIAN ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION, 19111914]. MAWSON, Sir Douglas A. (1882-1958), and others. Australian Antarctic Expedition 1911-14. Under the leadership of Sir Douglas Mawson... Scientific Reports. Adelaide and Sydney: [various printers], 1916-1947.

22 volumes in 91 original parts, 4to. A profusion of plates, maps and illustrations. Original wrappers (some with light wear, a few volumes clothbacked).

A COMPLETE SET IN ORIIGNAL WRAPPERS OF THE REPORTS FROM “ONE OF THE GREAT SCIENTIFIC EXPEDITIONS OF THE HISTORIC ERA” (Rosove)

The reports of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition were published from 1916 to 1947 (except for a hiatus from 1931-1937), with parts appearing fairly regularly. The 91 separately-published parts were arranged in three series spanning 22 volumes.  “The cost of production was considerable; J. Gordon Hayes estimated it in 1932 at £8,000, with a substantial number of reports pending. Mawson struggled to obtain funding and finally surrendered the bulk of the scientific specimens and records to the Australian Museum and the Mitchell Library in Sydney in exchange for financing...The reports themselves are attractively prepared, with photographs and charts of high quality” (Rosove). Rosove 218-1.A1 to 218-91.A1 (“Complete sets of the reports are uncommon”).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$2,000 - 3,000

53FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

190

[EXPLORATION -- POLAR]. BYRD, Richard Evelyn, Jr. (1888-1957). Little America: Aerial Exploration in the Antarctic. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1930. 8vo. Illustrated with maps. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt; original dust jacket (losses, creases).

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED ON HALF TITLE BY ADMIRAL RICHARD E. BYRD. Admiral Richard E. Byrd was a pioneering aviator and polar explorer whose discoveries enthralled the nation; in 1926 he claimed to have been the first man to fly to the North Pole, and the following year would become the second pilot to fly non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean.

[With]: Discovery. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1935. 8vo. Publisher’s pale blue cloth gilt (toning to spine). FIRST EDITION. Provenance: J.S. Breckinridge.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

191

[EXPLORATION -- POLAR]. A group of 11 works, including:

BYRD, Richard Evelyn. Discovery the Story of the Second Byrd Antarctic Expedition. NY, 1935. In dust jacket. -- CLIFTON, Violet. Islands of Queen Wilhelmina. L, 1927. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. --  CUNNINGHAM, Robert Oliver. Notes on the Natural History of the Strait of Magellan and the West Coast of Patagonia. Edinburgh, 1871. (Rebacked preserving original spine). -- HOOKER, Joseph Dalton, Sir. Himalayan Journals. L, 1855. 2 volumes. (Rebacked). Second edition. -- SHACKLETON, Ernest Henry, Sir. South the Story of Shackleton’s Last Expedition 1914-1917. NY,1920. -- SWINHOE, Robert. Narrative of the North China Campaign of 1860. L, 1861. -- And others. Together, 11 works in 12 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original cloth, most FIRST OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500 - 700

192

[EXPLORATION -- MOUNTAINEERING]. A group of 6 works, comprising:

ULLMAN, James Ramsey et al. Americans on Everest. Philadelphia et al, 1964. SIGNED NORMAN G. DYHRENFURTH AND JIM WHITAKER. -- HILLARY, Edmund, Sir. View from the Summit. Norwalk, CT, 1999. Original leather gilt. SIGNED. -- BASS, Dick et al. Seven Summits. NY, 1986. FIRST ISSUE. -- WHITTAKER, Jim. A Life on the Edge. Seattle, 1999. -- HILLARY. High Adventure. Norwalk, CT, 2003. Original leather gilt. SIGNED. -- BONINGTON, Chris. Everest the Hard Way. NY, 1976. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, all 8vo, most in original cloth or cloth-backed boards in dust jackets, ALL FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine.

$400 - 600

193

[EXPLORATION]. A group of 9 travel & exploration works, comprising:

BALDWIN, William Charles. African Hunting, from Natal to the Zambesi. 1863. Second edition. -- COGGESHALL, George. Second Series of Voyages to Various Parts of the World, Made Between the Years 1802 and 1841. NY, 1852. PRESENTATION COPY, SIGNED BY COGGESHALL. -- Economical Route for a Railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean Washington, 1856, 1856, 1857, 1859. 4 volumes (vols. IV, C, CI, and X only). Modern quarter calf. Sabin 69946. -- STREZELECKI, Paul Edmund de, Sir. Physical Description of New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land. 1845. Modern quarter calf. -- SCOTT, C. Rochfort. Rambles in Egypt and Candia. 1837. 2 volumes. Contemporary half calf (rebacked). -- [YOUNG, Arthur]. A Six Weeks Tour through the Southern Counties of England and Wales. 1772. Contemporary treed calf gilt. Third edition. -- And others. Together, 9 works in 13 volumes, most published in London, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original cloth, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

- 800

54 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$600
190 191

194

[EXPLORATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 14 works relating to Arctic and Antarctic exploration, including:

HOWGEGO, Raymond John. Encyclopedia of Exploration. Potts Point, Australia, 2003-2008. 4 volumes. Vol. 1850 to 1940: PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- Voyages & Travel. L, 1968. (Vol. I only.) -- CONRAD, L.J. Bibliography of Antarctic Exploration Expedition Accounts from 1768 to 1960. Washougal, WA, 1999. -- BERTRAND, Kenneth J. Americans in Antarctica 1775-1948. NY, 1971. -- RENARD, Julien G.R. Major Collections of Antarctica. Collingwood, Australia, 1994. -- Arctic Bibliography. Washington, D.C., 1953-1955. 5 volumes. -- HEADLAND, Robert Keith. A Chronology of Antarctic Exploration. L, 2009. -- ROSOVE, Michael H. Antarctica, 1772-1922 Freestanding Publications through 1999. Santa Monica, CA, 2001. -- And 7 others. Together, 14 works in 21 volumes, various folio, 4to and 8vo sizes, all in original bindings, many with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

195

[EXPLORATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 5 works relating to Arctic exploration, comprising:

[DALL, William H. and BAKER, Marcus]. Partial List of Charts, Maps, and Publications Relating to Alaska and the Adjacent Region. [Washington: Government Printing Office, 1879]. Modern brown cloth.  -- EAVENSON, Howard Nicholas. Map Maker and Indian Traders. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1949. Publisher’s dark orange cloth. -- HAYES, Derek. Historical Atlas of the Arctic. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre Ltd., 2003. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. INSCRIBED AND SIGNED BY DEREK HAYES. -- LADA-MOCARSKI, Valerian. Bibliography of Books on Alaska Published Before 1868. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1969. --  Arctic Bibliography. [Washington]: Department of Defense, 1953. 3 volumes. Publisher’s dark blue cloth. -- Together, 5 works in 7 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally good.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $200 - 300 196

[EXPLORATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 19 works relating to exploration in the Americas, including:

FORREST, George. George Forrest… Explorer and Botanist… 1873-1932. Edinburgh, 1935. -- Scenery of Great Britain and Ireland in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860 from the Library of J.R. Abbey. SF, 1991. Reprint. -- Travel in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860 from the Library of J.R. Abbey. SF, 1991. 2 volumes. Reprint. -- Life in England in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860 from the Library of J.R. Abbey SF, 1991. Reprint. -- CUMMING, W.P. et al. The Exploration of North America 1630-1776. NY, 1974. -- MILLER, Robert Ryal. For Science and National Glory the Spanish Scientific Expedition to America, 1862-1866. Norman, OK, 1968. FIRST EDITION. -HASKELL, Daniel C. The United States Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842 and its Publications 1844-1874. NY, 1942. -- CONZEN, Michael P., editor. Chicago Mapmakers Essays on the Rise of the City’s Map Trade. Chicago, 1984. -- RICKETT, Harold William. The Royal Botanical Expedition to New Spain. Volume 11, number 1. Waltham, Summer 1947. -- And 10 others. Together, 19 works in 23 volumes, various Folio, 4to, and 8vo sizes, all in original bindings, many with dust jackets, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

- 400

-- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 13 works relating to exploration in Asia and Europe, including:

CORDIER, Henri. Bibliotheca Indosinica Dictionnaire Bibliographique des Ouvrages Relatifs Á La Péninsule Indochinoise. NY, 1967. 5 parts in 3 volumes. Later edition. -- CORDIER, Henri. Bibliotheca Sinica Dictionnaire Bibliographique des Ouvrages Relatifs Á La L’Empire Chinois. NY, 1968. 6 parts in 5 volumes. Reprint. -- CORDIER, Henri. Bibliotheca Japanoica. Hildesheim, Germany, 1969. Reprint. -FANNING, Edmund, Captain. Voyages & Discoveries in the South Seas 1792-1832. Salem, MA, 1924. -- The Celebrated Library of Boies Penrose. NY et al, 1971. 2 volumes. --  TREVOR-ROPER, Hugh, editor. The Age of Expansion Europe and the World 1559-1660. NY, 1986. -- ATKINSON, Geoffroy. La Littérature Géographique Francaise de la Renaissance. Paris, 1927. FIRST EDITION, LIMITED EDITION on “Papier alfa Vergé,” number 508 of 500 copies numbered 51 to 550. -- And 6 others. Together, 13 works in 21 volumes, various Folio, 4to and 8vo sizes, most illustrated, most in original bindings, condition generally very good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

198

[EXPLORATION -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 8 works relating to exploration in the Pacific and Australia, comprising:

FERGUSON, John Alexander. Bibliography of Australia. Canberra, 1975-1977, 1986. 8 volumes. 7 vols. facsimile edition. -- WANTRUP, Jonathan. Australian Rare Books 1788-1900. Sydney, 1987. -- SERLE, Percival. Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney et al, 1949. 2 volumes. -- TAYLOR, C.R.H. A Pacific Bibliography. Oxford, 1965. Second edition. -- BRAGANZA, Ronald Louis Silveira de, editor, et al. The Hill Collection of Pacific Voyages. San Diego, 1974-1983. 3 volumes. --  And 3 others. Together, 8 works in 22 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, all in original bindings, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

55FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$300
197 [EXPLORATION

199

FAIRHOLT, Frederick William (1814-1866). Tobacco: Its History and Associations. London: Chatto and Windus, 1876, 1888.

2 volumes, 4to (330 x 249 mm). Half-title in Vol. I, illustrated. EXTRA ILLUSTRATED BY THE ADDITION OF APPROXIMATELY 280 PLATES OF PORTRAITS, VIEWS, AND MAPS and 9 MANUSCRIPTS AND DRAWINGS (see below). (Some minor toning, spotting, or offsetting.) 20th-century half brown morocco gilt, top edges gilt, stamp-signed by Bradstreet’s (slight wear to extremities). Provenance: David McNeely Stauffer (18451913), American civil engineer and editor (bookplates).

EXTRA-ILLUSTRATED BY THE ADDITION OF WOODCUT, MEZZOTINT, ENGRAVED OR LITHOGRAPHED PLATES, MAPS, AND VIEWS, AND MANUSCRIPTS, including: Autographed letter signed from Charles Roach Smith to an unnamed recipient regarding Fairholt’s work -- Autographed letter signed from Fairholt to an unnamed recipient. -- 6 original drawings by David McNeely Stauffer -- OGILBY/MONTANUS. Insulae Americanae in Oceano Septentrionali cum terris adiacentibus. [London: John Ogilby, ca 1671]. Engraved map. – Advertising circulars for J. A. & H. J. Jenkins, Grocers & Tobacconists High Street, St. Albans, with woodcut devices – plates after William Hogarth, Giovanni Battista Cipriani, Bernard Picart, Arthur Pond, Francesco Bartolozzi and others, all depicting historic or artistic figures, or scenes depicting tobacco use by various cultures across the globe.

A later edition of Fairholt’s principal work on tobacco, first published in 1859. Fairholt, whose father was a tobacco manufacturer, started working in the family business before working as an artist; he was later employed by Charles Knight.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$800 - 1,200

200

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). The Wild Palms. New York: Random House, 1939.

8vo. Original red cloth-backed wood-grained patterned boards, gilt-lettered, top edge gilt; later quarter morocco slipcase (spine slightly faded, small along top edge of front board).

LIMITED EDITION, number 200 of 250 copies SIGNED BY WILLIAM FAULKNER. Faulkner’s Random House publishers selected the title over Faulkner’s objections. Subsequent editions have been printed under the title If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem Petersen A19a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

201

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). Go Down Moses and Other Stories. New York: Random House, 1942.

8vo. Publisher’s maroon cloth stamped in green; original dust jacket (some creasing and a few closed tears, small loss to one corner).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, IN VARIANT MAROON BINDING. Published in the early months of World War II, demand for materials for the war effort resulted in Random House using any cloth on hand to bind the first printings of Faulkner’s work. The black cloth binding was by far the more common than any of the variant bindings by a ration of 20 to 1, thought eight variant cloth bindings were produced. Peterson A23.2f. RARE: We do not trace any example of this binding variant at auction in the last 40 years.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

56 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

202

202

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). A Fable. New York: Random House, 1954.

8vo. Publisher’s dark grey binding; original grey slipcase (rubbing).

LIMITED EDITION, number 686 of 1,000 copies SIGNED BY WILLIAM FAULKNER. A Fable was the first of Faulkner’s novels to win the Pulitzer Prize. Though it was received with mixed reviews, Faulkner considered it his masterpiece, and it can be seen as a precursor to Joseph Heller’s Catch-22. Petersen A37a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

203

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). The Town. New York: Random House, 1957.

8vo. Publisher’s salmon cloth; original dust jacket (rubbing, some creasing to ends of spine panel, old price sticker remnants).

FIRST TRADE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE of the second entry in Faulkner’s Snopes trilogy. Petersen A34a.

[With]: The Mansion. New York: Random House, 1959. Publisher’s dark blue cloth (some old tape residue); original dust jacket (some creasing at edges, minor chipping). FIRST EDITION. Petersen A36c.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

204

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). A group of 5 FIRST EDITIONS, comprising:

Intruder in the Dust. New York: Random House, 1948.  -- Requiem for a Nun. New York: Random House, 1951. -- Big Woods. New York: Random House, 1955. -- Flags in the Dust. New York: Random House, 1973.  -- The Reivers. New York: Random House, 1962. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all 8vos, all in publisher’s cloth with original dust jackets, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

205

FAULKNER, William (1897-1962). A group of 5 works, comprising:

Light in August. [New York]: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas, 1932. Publisher’s tan cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Mosquitoes. New York: Boni & Liveright, 1927. Modern half calf with original cover bound-in. -- Pylon. New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas, 1935. Modern half calf with original cover bound-in. FIRST EDITION. -- Sanctuary. New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith, 1931. Publisher’s cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- The Unvanquished. New York: Random House, 1938. Publisher’s gray cloth. Illustrations by Edward Shenton. FIRST TRADE EDITION. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

57FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

206

FERBER, Edna (1885-1968). A group of 5 works, comprising:

American Beauty. Toronto: Doubleday, Doran, & Gundy, Ltd., 1931. Publisher’s red cloth gilt; original dust jacket. -- Giant. Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1952. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Ice Palace. Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1958. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Roast Beef Medium. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1913. Publisher’s green cloth. -- Saratoga Trunk. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1941. Publisher’s blue cloth. LIMITED FIRST EDITION, number 259 of 545 copies for sale SIGNED BY EDNA FERBER. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 500

207

FEYNMAN, Richard P. (1918-1988). Typed letter signed (“R. P. Feynman”), to Mr. Jay Rothstein. Pasadena, California, 5 December 1966.

1 page, 4to, on California Institute of Technology stationery, creased and with staple-holes upper left corner, slight toning.

Feynman responds to Jay Rothstein’s invitation to attend the Feynman Lecture Series at his alma mater, Far Rockaway High School, in Far Rockaway New York. He sends his regrets that he cannot attend, and remarks on the subject of the lecture, which “seems fine -- there need be no reason to limit it to physical science.” He continues: “all the sciences are related and are as interesting as one another because they are descriptions of nature. The main problem to keep in view when struggling to get speakers is not so much the subject matter, but the scientific quality of the speaker. A good man interested in his work, and not a quack trying to sound important is what you need.”

Feynman spoke at his alma mater, Far Rockaway High School, in January of 1965, at which point the school passed a resolution calling for a series of lectures in the social and natural sciences to honor Feynman and his work.  [With:] A small archive of material relating to the 1966-1967 lecture series, including a poster advertising a lecture on Dinosaurs, a typed letter signed to Rothstein from the chairs of the Feynman Lecture Series Committee, a 3-page carbon copy of the Committee’s introduction to one of the 1967 lectures, various newspaper clippings from the school’s newspaper about the lectures, 4 black and white photographs of lecturers from the 1966-1967 series, and 3 tickets the lectures in that series.

$800 - 1,200

208 FIELDING, Henry (1707-1754).

The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. London: for A. Millar, 1749.

6 volumes, 12mo (160 x 95 mm). Contemporary calf gilt, red and green morocco lettering-pieces gilt (some slight wear to extremities); cloth slipcase. Provenance: Sold 1935 (pencil annotation recording the Whitebarn Sale); C. H. Wilkinson (armorial bookplate).

Second edition of Fielding’s masterpiece, which was rushed to publication in 1749. The first edition of the same year contains a number of errors due to both compositor and author error. The work was immediately revised after the publication of the first edition, and the errors are addressed in subsequent editions which also omit the errata leaf (present in this copy). According to early bibliographer Frederick S. Dickson, the second edition was likely begun while the sixth volume of the first edition went to press in February 1749. ESTC T89901; Grolier English 48; Rothschild 850.

Property from the Collection of Forrest Fenn

- 800

58 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$600
207 208

209

FITZGERALD, Francis Scott (1896-1944). The Beautiful and the Damned. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1922.

8vo. Publisher’s green cloth (front hinge cracked).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, without the Scribner’s seal on copyright page of Fitzgerald’s second novel, believed to be based on his relationship with Zelda. The Beautiful and the Damned was first serialized in Metropolitan Magazine from September 1921 to March 1922. Bruccoli A8.1.a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400 210

FITZGERALD, F. Scott (1896-1940). The Great Gatsby. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1925.

8vo. (Some light toning or staining.) Original green cloth, spine lettered in gilt (spine darkened and slightly cocked, some staining, slight wear to extremities).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with Scribner seal on copyright page and no subsequent printing statements, “chatter” for “echolalia” on p. 60 line 16, “northern” for “southern” on p. 119 line 22, “sick in tired” for “sickantired” on p. 205 lines 9-10, and “Union Street station” for “Union Station” on p. 211 lines 7-8, and “it’s” on p. 165 line 16. Bruccoli A11.1.a; Connolly The Modern Movement 48.

$1,000 - 1,500 211

FITZGERALD, Francis Scott (1896-1940). Taps at Reveille. New York: Scribner’s, 1935.

8vo. Original green cloth, spine gilt-lettered (a touch of wear to spine ends and corners); dust jacket (some chipping and browning); folding case.

FIRST EDITION, second state with cancellation of pp. 349-352 with three revisions on p.350 lines 5-7, and on p.351 lines 15 and 30. The fourth and largest collection of Fitzgerald’s short stories, and the last work to be published during his lifetime, Taps at Reveille includes “The Freshest Boy,” “Crazy Sunday,” and “Babylon Revisited.” Bruccoli A18.1.a.2.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$1,000 - 1,500 212

FITZGERALD, Francis Scott (1896-1940). A group of 3 FIRST EDITIONS, comprising:

All the Sad Young Men. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1926. Publisher’s green cloth; facsimile dust jacket. FIRST ISSUE. Bruccoli A13.1.a. -- Tales of the Jazz Age. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1922. Modern half calf gilt. Bruccoli A9.1.a. -- The Vegetable. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1923. Publisher’s green cloth; facsimile dust jacket. FIRST ISSUE. Bruccoli A10.1.a. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

59FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
209 210 211

213

FLEMING, Ian (1908-1964). The Spy Who Loved Me. London: Jonathan Cape, 1962.

214

8vo. Original black cloth decorated in blind and silver (spine ends slightly pushed); dust jacket (corners clipped with price intact, some minor chipping or soiling).

FIRST EDITION, without quad mark between “E” and “M” of “Fleming” on title page (no priority established). Gilbert A10a(1.2).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

214

FLEMING, Ian (1908-1964). The Man with the Golden Gun. London: Johnathan Cape, 1965.

8vo. Original black boards, spine gilt-lettered (one corner slightly bumped); dust jacket (price-clipped, slight soiling to front panel flap fold, some minor chipping).

FIRST EDITION, second state without the gun stamped in gilt on the upper cover. Fleming wrote The Man with the Golden Gun, which was published posthumously, during the last stages of illness before his death on 11 August 1964. Gilbert A13a(1.2).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 500

215

FLEMING, Ian (1908-1964). A group of 6 works, comprising:

For Your Eyes Only. [1960]. -- Casino Royale. NY, 1954. FIRST PRINTING. -- Diamonds Are Forever. 1956. Original boards, rebacked in leather. -- Thunderball. [1961]. Modern half morocco gilt. -- Octopussy and the Living Daylights. 1966. -- On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. [1963]. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, most published in London, all 8vo, most in original bindings, most in dust jackets, FIRST EDITIONS or FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

216 [BOND] --  [GARDNER, John (1933-1982)]. A group of 5 James Bond novels by Gardner, comprising:

Licence Renewed. L, [1981]. -- And another copy. -- No Deals, Mr. Bond. 1987. -- For Special Services. 1982. -- Icebreaker. 1983. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all published in London by Jonathan Cape and Hodder & Stoughton, all 8vo, all in original black boards, all in dust jackets, FIRST EDITIONS or FIRST ENGLISH EDITIONS, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $200 - 300

60 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

217

[FOREIGN FIELD SPORTS]. Foreign Field Sports, Fisheries, Sporting Anecdotes, &c. &c. From Drawings... with a Supplement of New South Wales. London: Edward Orme, n.d., plates watermarked 1823?.

4to (342 x 239 mm). Half-title, frontispiece, 110 handcolored aquatint plates (dated 1813 in plate imprints). (Some offsetting, spotting, and staining.) Original half straight-grain maroon morocco, spines gilt-lettered (some light soiling and wear, spine sunned). Provenance: Sir Alfred Chester Beatty (1875-1968) American-British mining magnate and philanthropist (bookplate).

Undated edition, likely later than the second edition of 1819, which is “the same as the preceding [1819] edition with certain modifications in the text” including the titlepage imprint as “London: Published by Edward Orme, Printseller to His Majesty, New Bond Street” (Abbey). Contains illustrations depicting sport around the world, including depictions of whale hunting and bull fighting. Plates watermarked to 1823? and prints dated to 1813. Abbey Travel 2 JA1164 (note, undated edition).

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $1,000 - 1,500

218

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A Boy’s Will. London: David Nutt, 1913.

8vo. Publisher’s dark brown-bronze pebbled cloth gilt (rubbed, some slight bubbling). Provenance: Joseph Frost (letter tipped in).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, Binding “A (2)” variant, OF FROST’S FIRST BOOK OF POEMS WITH LETTER SIGNED FROM ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost: “I seem to have set out to find you in your barley shades on an unlucky evening. I will try for you again in the fall when I come back from farming. My summer address will be Ripton, Vermont in case you would want to call on me.” Approximately 350 copies of this binding variant were issued by Nutt. Crane A2. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $2,000 - 4,000

219

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). North of Boston. London: David Nutt, 1914.

8vo (191 x 145 mm). Publisher’s green cloth gilt with top edge trimmed, other edges uncut (toning to endpapers). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription on flyleaf).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, BINDING “A,” with “Printed in Great Britain” stamped on title verso, one of 350 copies - INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost: “Belated felicitations for turning this up, 1959.” Frost’s second published work, North of Boston includes the first appearance of one of his most beloved poems, “Mending Wall.” Crane A3. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $3,000 - 5,000

61FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

220

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1921.

8vo. Publisher’s green cloth gilt (light rubbing and toning). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

Second edition. PRESENTATION COPY INSCRIBED BY FROST WITH FOUR-LINE VERSE FROM “BIRCHES”, Frost concludes the verse with two lines at the end differing from the published poem, “When I see birches bend to left and right / Across the lines of straighter darker trees / I know I’m looking at the smaller birches / Of seacoast Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.” Crane A4.1. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $500 - 700

221

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1916.

8vo. Half-title. Original blue cloth gilt (rubbing, toning, damp stains). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with the repeating lines on p.88 and with “Come” instead of “Gone” on p.93, PRESENTATION COPY ANNOTATED BY ROBERT FROST on p. 88, repeating two lines from his poem “Snow.” The first of Frost’s books to be published first in America, Mountain Interval includes the first appearance of two of Frost’s best-known poems: “The Road Not Taken” and “Birches.” Crane A4. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $1,000 - 1,500

222

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1916.

8vo. Half-title. Original blue cloth gilt (very slight rubbing to spine ends, toning). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with the repeating lines on p.88 and with “Come” instead of “Gone” on p.93, PRESENTATION COPY INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin, “Corrected by R. Frost for Joseph Frost,” ADDITIONALLY ANNOTATED BY FROST, and with his holograph correction of line on p. 88. The first of Frost’s books to be published first in America, Mountain Interval includes the first appearance of two of Frost’s best-known poems: “The Road Not Taken” and “Birches.” Crane A4. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$1,000 - 1,500

62 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

223

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). North of Boston. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1922.

8vo. Publisher’s green cloth (slightly rubbed). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

PRESENTATION COPY INSCRIBED BY FROST WITH THREE-LINES OF VERSE from “Cousins.” ADDITIONALLY SIGNED BY FROST with a corresponding checkmark on p. 86 marking the corresponding verse from the printed poem “Cousins”: “One ought not to be thrown into confusion / By a plain statement or relationship / But I own what you say makes my head spin.” Crane A3.3. A SUPERB ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$500 - 700

224

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). West-Running Brook. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1928.

8vo. Woodcuts by J.J. Lankes. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket (closed tears, some chipping). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION. INSCRIBED ‘BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost: “In New England it is always ‘We all must eat our heck of dirt.’ In California it might well be ‘We must all eat our heck of gold.’ I only contrast the sayings for what may be got out of the contrast.” Crane A10. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$400 - 600

225

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Birches [Bread Loaf Folder No. 3]. Middlebury, VT: Bread Loaf School of English, [1929].

8vo (95 x 140 mm). Single folding sheet comprising 8pp. Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST SEPARATE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost: [transcribe the inscription]. Birches was first published in The Atlantic Monthly in August, 1915, and was included in Mountain Interval the following year. Not in Crane.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$500 - 700

63FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

226

[FROST, Robert (1874-1963)]. THOMAS, Robert W. The Old Farmer’s Almanack 1942. Dublin, NH: Yankee, Inc., 1941.

8vo. Publisher’s printed wraps (some rubbing and light chipping).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, including the FIRST APPEARANCE“ OF ROBERT FROST’S POEM, “RICH IN STONES,” LATER PUBLISHED IN THE WITNESS TREE (1942) AS “OF THE STONES OF THE PLACE.” RARE: OCLC locates only one copy at the Rauner Special Collections Library; we trace no copies at auction. Not in Crane.

[With]: MONROE, Harriet (ed.) Poetry:’A Magazine of Verse, Vol III No. V. Chicago: Harriet Moore, February 1914. 8vo. Publisher’s printed wraps (toning)” FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, including the FIRST APPEARANCE OF “THE CODE - HEROICS,” - FROST’S FIRST APPEARANCE IN POETRY. The poem would later appear in North of Boston in slightly modified form. Not in Crane.

Provenance: Joseph Frost.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $400 - 600

228

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Come In and Other Poems. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1943.

8vo. Illustrations by John O’Hara Cosgrave II with commentary by Louis Untermeyer. Publisher’s beige cloth; original dust jacket (toning, ink stain to front panel). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST WITH FOUR LINES OF VERSE, a slightly altered form of his poem “Our Singing Strength”: “As it was in Hanover, New Hampshire where Joseph visited me April 20 1947 / It snowed in spring on earth so dry and warm / The snow could find no landing place to form / Hordes asked themselves to make it wet and cold / And still they failed of any lasting hold.”

ADDITIONALLY INSCRIBED BY EDITOR LOUIS UNTERMEYER: “&, in memoriam.” Crane A26. A SUPERB ASSOCATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$1,000 - 1,500

227

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A Witness Tree. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1942.

8vo. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket (toning). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST TRADE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST WITH FOUR LINES OF POETRY FROM “THE NEED OF BEING VERSED IN COUNTRY THINGS”: “For them there was really nothing sad / But though they rejoiced in the nest they kept / One had to be versed in country things / Not to believe the phoebes wept / Ripton Vermont all summer.” Crane A25.1. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$300 - 500

229

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Come In. London: Jonathan Cape, 1944.

8vo. Introduction and commentary by Louis Untermeyer. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT F“OST WITH 5 LINES OF VERSE from “Ghost House”: “I dwell in a lonely house I know / That vanished many a summer ago / And left no trace but the cellar walls ” And a cellar in which the daylight falls / And the purple-stemmed wild raspberries grow.” ADDITIONALLY INSCRIBED BY EDITOR LOUIS UNTERMEYER paraphrasing lines from Frost’s “Vastness I Should Steal Away”: “They would not find him / changed from him they knew / Only more sure of all he / thought was true.” Crane A26.1. A SUPERB ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $600 - 800

64 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

230

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A Masque of Mercy. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1947.

8vo. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket (toning, stains, front free endpaper clipped to accompany inscription). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

FIRST TRADE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST WITH A COUPLET, “The Secret Sits,”: ””We dance round in a ring and suppose / But the secret sits in the middle and knows.” Crane A31.1.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $300 - 500

231

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A Sermon. New York: The Spiral Press, 1947.

8vo. Publisher’s burgundy wove paper wraps with paper label (first page of Frost text partially disbound but present). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

LIMITED EDITION, one of 500 copies, RARE EXAMPLE OF AN UNCORRECTED COPY, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT

FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost: “To Joseph Frost from his cousin Robert Frost / Cambridge Mass November 3 1954.” Frost delivered his sermon at the request of Rabbi Dr. Victor E. Reichert at the Rockdale Avenue Temple in Cincinnati on 10 October 1946. Though Crane claims that the publication was not authorized by Frost, Joseph Blumenthal states in Robert Frost and His Printers that copies were evenly distributed between Frost, Reichert, and Blumenthal, but that Frost requested that the edition be suppressed as “something in the sermon as printed would offend someone then still living.” Crane A33. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY OF THIS FROST RARITY: We trace no copy of A Sermon at auction in at least 45 years.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $400 - 600

231A

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A Sermon. New York: The Spiral Press, 1947.

8vo. With castle watermark as issued, “worry” crossed out and replaced with “mercy” on pg.14 as is common. Publisher’s burgundy wove paper wraps with paper label. Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

LIMITED EDITION, one of 500 copies, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST, “J.F. from R.F.” (See lot 231). Crane A33. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY OF THIS FROST RARITY: We trace no copy of A Sermon at auction in at least 45 years.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $400 - 600 232

[LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB]. FROST, Robert (1874-1963). The Complete Poems of Robert Frost. New York: The Limited Editions Club, 1950.

2 volumes, 8vo. Numerous wood-engravings by Thomas W. Nason with monthly newsletter laidin. Original blue cloth, (some light toning, a few minor stains); original marbled slipcase (some wear). Provenance: Joseph Frost (inscriptions).

LIMITED EDITION, number 1,161 of 1,500 copies. SIGNED BY FROST, NASON, AND BRUCE ROGERS. ADDITIONALLY INSCRIBED IN EACH VOLUME BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $800 - 1,000

65FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

233

[KENNEDY, John Fitzgerald (1917-1963)]. -- FROST, Robert (1874-1963). Dedication. The Gift Outright... Presented on the Steps of the Nation’s Capitol in Washington, D.C. as Part of the Inaugural Ceremonies January the Twentieth, 1961. New York: The Spiral Press, 1961.

4to. Presidential seal by Fritz Kredel with typography by Joseph Blumenthal. Publisher’s grey boards; original glassine jacket (losses, closed tears). Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscription).

LIMITED EDITION, number 122 of 300 copies. INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost and his wife Rebecca: “To Joseph and Rebecca”. Robert Frost composed “Dedication” the evening before President-Elect John F. Kennedy’s inauguration, intending to read this new work instead of “The Gift Outright” as originally requested. The sun’s glare upon the freshly fallen snow blinded the elderly poet, however, and Frost opted to recite “The Gift Outright” from memory. Crane A40. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $400 - 600

234

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 25 signed Christmas cards INSCRIBED BY FROST and featuring poems by him, including:

Closed For Good.  1948. Wood engravings by Thomas W. Nason. One of 2,325. -- Does No One But Me At All Feel This Way in the Least.1953. Drawings by Howard Cook; includes original envelope and laid-in slip. One of 3,523. --Doom to Bloom. 1950. Wood engravings by Fritz Eichenberg. One of 3,350. -- The Falls (Season’s Greetings from Earle J. Berheimer). Los Angeles: The Ward Ritchie Press, 1947. LIMITED EDITION, number 43 of 60 copies. -- My Objection to Being Stepped On. 1957. Wood engravings by Leonard Baskin. -- One of 7,765. Neither Out Far or in Deep. 1935. Woodcut by J.J. Lankes; with original envelope. One of 1,235. -- The Gift Outright. 1942. Illustration by John O’Hara Cosgrave II. One of 1,250. -- To A Young Wretch. 1937. Woodcuts by J.J. Lankes. One of 820. -- Two Tramps in Mud Time. 1934. One of 775.  -- A Young Birch. -- Together, 25 works in 39 volumes, most printed in New York by the Spiral Press unless otherwise noted, all in original wrappers, some with original envelopes and including unsigned duplicates, MOST INSCRIBED TO JOSEPH FROST FROM ROBERT FROST, condition generally very fine. INCLUDES THE SCARCE “CHRISTMAS GREETINGS FROM HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY” CARD, presumably issued in 1929. Complete list available upon request. Provenance: Joseph Frost (inscriptions).

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $1,000 - 2,000

235

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 7 signed works, comprising:

A Boy’s Will. London: David Nutt, 1913. Publisher’s cream-colored wraps. -- A Further Range. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1936. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. -- A Masque of Reason. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1945. Publisher’s black cloth. -- New Hampshire. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1924. Publisher’s green cloth. -- North of Boston. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1915. Publisher’s green cloth. -- Steeple Bush. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1947. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket. --  A Way Out. New York: The Harbor Press, 1929. Publisher’s black cloth; glassine jacket. LIMITED EDITION, number 258 0f 485 copies. -- Together, 3 works in 5 volumes, all 8vos, MANY WITH PRESENTATION INSCRIPTIONS FROM ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$500 - 700

236

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 9 signed limited edition works by Robert Frost, including:

Aforesaid. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1954. Publisher’s green cloth gilt; original slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 295 of 650 copies. Crane A37. -- A Further Range. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1936. Original beige linen; original glassine; original slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 612 of 803 copies. Crane A21. -- Hard Not to Be King. New York: House of Books, Ltd., 1951. Publisher’s dark blue cloth. LIMITED EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY SIGNED TO DAUGHTER LESLEY FROST. -- In the Clearing. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1962. Publisher’s brown cloth; original slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 1,289 of 1,500 copies. Crane A41. -- And 4 others. Together, 8 works in 9 volumes, all 8vos, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$500 - 700

66 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
233

237

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 10 collected signed works in 11 volumes, including:

Collected Poems. New York: Random House, 1930. -- Complete Poems of Robert Frost. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1949. FIRST EDITION. -- The Poems of Robert Frost. New York: The Modern Library, 1946. -- Selected Poems. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1929. -- You Come Too: Favorite Poems for Young Readers. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1957. Wood engravings by Thomas Nason. FIRST EDITION. -- And 5 others. Together, 10 works in 11 volumes, all 8vos, MANY WITH PERSONAL INSCRIPTIONS FROM ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost, all in publisher’s cloth and some with dust jackets, condition generally fine. Provenance: Joseph Frost (presentation inscriptions).

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$500 - 700

238

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 20 works of poetry, including:

Birches. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1988. Illustrations by Ed Young. FIRST EDITION. -- A Further Range. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1936.  -- From Snow to Snow. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1936. --  The Masque of Reason. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1945. FIRST EDITION. -- New Hampshire. London: Grant Richards, Ltd., 1924. FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. Crane A6.1. --  Selected Poems. London: Jonathan Cape, 1936. -- Stopping by Woods On a Snowy Evening. New York: Dutton Children’s Books, 1969. Illustrations by Susan Jeffers.  --  A Swinger of Birches: Poems of Robert Frost for Young People. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1982. Illustrations by Peter Koeppen. -- West-Running Brook. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1933.  -- And others. Together, 19 works in 20 volumes, various 8vo and 4to sizes, all in publisher’s original cloth, many with dust jackets, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$300 - 500 239

FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 15 works by Frost and others, many signed, including:

ADLER, Elmer (ed.) The Colophon: A Book Collector’s Quarterly, Part Two. [New York: Pynson Printers], 1930. Publisher’s printed boards. WITH SIGNED PRINTS BY STEPHEN GOODEN AND INSCRIBED PHOTOGRAPH OF EDGAR A. GUEST. -- CLYMER, W.B. Shubrick and GREEN, Charles R. Robert Frost: A Bibliography. Amherst: The Jones Library, 1937. Publisher’s quarter calf. LIMITED EDITION, number 110 of 150 copies, ALS TO JOSEPH FROST FROM CHARLES R. GREEN tipped-in. -- HILLYER, Robert. A Letter to Robert Frost and Others. New York and London: Alfred A. Knopf, 1942. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. ALS FROM EDITH HAMILTON laid-in. -- MUNSON, Gorham. Robert Frost. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1927. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Amphora Second Collection. Portland, ME: Thomas Bird Mosher, 1926. Publisher’s blue boards; glassine jacket. -- And 10 others. Together, 15 works in 17 volumes, all 8vo, MOST WITH PERSONAL INSCRIPTIONS FROM ROBERT FROST to his cousin Joseph Frost, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $1,000 - 2,000 240 FROST, Robert (1874-1963). A group of 44 association copies, including:

CIARDI, John. An Alphabesitary. Philadelphia and New York: The J.P. Lippincott Company, 1966. Illustrations by Milton Hebalt. Publisher’s olive green cloth; original slipcase. -- FROST, Lesley. New Hampshire’s Child. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1969. Publisher’s buff cloth; original dust jacket. INSCRIBED BY LESLEY FROST to Joseph and Rebecca Frost. -- SMYTHE, Daniel. Robert Frost Speaks. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1964. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket. INSCRIBED TO JOSEPH FROST BY DANIEL SMYTHE WITH SEVEN TLS BY DANIEL SMYTHE T’PPED-IN. -- UNTERMEYER, Louis. These Times. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1917. Publisher’s olive green cloth gilt. INSCRIBED TO JOSEPH FROST BY LOUIS UNTERMEYER, “ A mixed selection of poems not worthy of the one to whom it was dedicated.” -- And others. Together, 44 works in 46 volumes, 8vos and 4tos, MANY INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR TO JOSEPH FROST, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$400 - 600

241

[FROST, Robert (1874-1963)]. A group of 42 works about Robert Frost, including:

BLUMENTHAL, Joseph. Robert Frost and His Printers. Austin, TX: W. Thomas Taylor, 1985. Publisher›s brown cloth; original brown cloth slipcase. FIRST EDITION. BURNSHAW, Stanley. Robert Frost, Himself. New York: George Braziller, 1986. FIRST EDITION. -- FABER, Doris. Robert Frost: America’s Poet. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1964. Publisher’s pictorial cloth; original dust jacket. -- GRADE, Arnold (ed.) Family Letters of Robert and Elinor Frost. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1972. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket. -- LATHEM, Edward Connery and THOMPSON, Lawrence (eds.) Robert Frost: FarmPoultryman. Hanover, NH: Dartmouth Publications, 1963. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket. -- LENTRICCHIA, Frank. Robert Frost: Modern Poetics and the Landscape of Self. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1975. -- And others. Together, 42 works in 44 volumes, 8vos and 4tos, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$200 - 300

242 [FROST, Robert (1874-1963)]. A large archive of materials relating to the life and work of Robert Frost as collected by his cousin, Joseph W.P.  Frost.

An archive of approximately 100 items including newspaper articles about Robert Frost, pamphlets with addresses by President John F. Kennedy about Frost, auction catalogs, book catalogs, and issues of The New England Quarterly, The Robert Frost Review, The Yale Review which featured Frost›s poetry, with numerous pamphlets and broadsides SIGNED BY ROBERT FROST including:

An Anniversary. 1940. --  The Four Beliefs. 1944. -- From Snow to Snow. 1936. -- The Library of Congress Presents Robert Frost Reading His Poems. 1960. -- The New Hampshire Troubadour. 1946. -- Octet for a Printer. 1955. -- Robert Frost. Middlebury College, 1954. -- Robert Frost in A Tribute to Tagore. 1961. -- Several Short Poems. 1924.

This collection was created by Joseph William Pepperrell Frost, cousin of the poet Robert Frost. Though nearly four decades apart in age, the two formed a close bond, with Frost sending his young cousin books, magazines, and Christmas cards that the younger Frost would use as the basis of a book collection that would continue to grow long after Robert Frost had passed away. Provenance: Joseph Frost.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$700

67FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
- 900

243

[FRUIT TREES]. A group of 4 works, comprising:

FORSYTH, William. A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit-Trees L, 1806. Fourth edition. -- FULLER, Andrew S. The Small Fruit Culturalist. NY, [1867]. FIRST EDITION. -- FIELD, Thomas W. Pear Culture. NY: A.O. Moore, 1859. -- HUME, Harold H. Citrus Fruits and Their Culture. NY, 1915. Sixth edition. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all 8vo, all in original boards or cloth, condition generally very good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

245

[FURNITURE]. SHERATON, Thomas (1751-1806).  The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer›s Drawing-Book. London: for the author by T. Bensley, 1794.

3 parts in one volume (of 4, lacking part 4), 4to (264 x 207 mm). 22 engraved plates (of 124) [including frontispiece bound in after p. 72, 2 folding. Comprising plates 3-7, 9-19, and 21-23 only, and with plates labeled II and A]. (Lacking all text after Zz4, several leaves detached, some toning and staining, a few short marginal short tears.) Lacking covers. Second edition. ESTC T215129.

[With:] SHERATON. [The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Drawing-Book, N.p.: n.p., n.d.] 4to (259 x 207 mm). Engraved frontispiece (mounted to size) and 98 engraved plates only (10 folding, 4 double-page folding). (Lacking all text, some toning and spotting, some marginal chipping and creasing.)

Contemporary half black sheep (worn, front cover detached,  leaves loose). Plates depict bed frames, chairs, desks, and other household furnishings. Sold as a collection of plates not subject to return.

$400 - 600

244

[FUNGUS]. BADHAM, Charles David (1805-1857). A Treatise on the Esculent Funguses of England. Frederick Currey, editor. London: Lovell Reeve & Co., 1863.

8vo (260 x 136 mm). 12 colored plates. (Some spotting and light toning.) Original black leather gilt (slight wear to extremities). Provenance: Joseph Blandell (bookplate). Second edition.

[With:] COOKE, Mordecai Cubitt. Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mould. An Introduction to the Study of Microscopic Fungi. J.E. SOWERBY, illustrator. London: Hardwicke and Bogue, 1878. 8vo (170 x 115 mm). 16 colored plates. (Some light spotting and staining.) Original brown cloth, stamped in gold and black (slight wear to extremities, hinges tender). Provenance: Alex Agassiz (bookplate); Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard College (bookplate). Fourth Edition.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$200 - 300

246

GALTON, Francis, Sir (1822-1911). Finger Prints. London and New York: Macmillan and Co., 1892.

8vo. 16 plates (one color double-page, 2 others colored). Original maroon cloth gilt (soiling, spine sunned, some light wear). Provenance: J.S. Mundoert (signature, 1896).

FIRST EDITION of Galton’s work on fingerprints, showcasing his classification system of fingerprints. Galton was integral to application of fingerprints to forensic science as a means of identifications; he determined that the likelihood of two people having the same fingerprints was one in 64 billion. His cousin, Charles Darwin, encouraged his interest in the field by sharing articles written by Dr. Henry Fauld. Norman 867; PMM 376.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 300

68 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

247

[GEOGRAPHY].

A group of 3 works, including:

GOLDSMITH, Oliver (1728-1774). A History of the Earth and Animated Nature… with Numerous Notes and Illustrations. London et al: Blackie & Son, 1879. 6 volumes. “Revised edition.” Color lithograph frontispieces, lithographic title-page in vol. I, numerous plates (some double-page, some hand-colored), numerous illustrations. Original cloth gilt and stamped in black, edges gilt. -- GRÉGOIRE, Louis (1819-1897). Géographie Générale Physique, Politique et Économique. Paris: Garnier Freres, 1883. Half-title, frontispiece, pictorial title-page, numerous plates (some folding, some with hand-coloring or in color), numerous illustrations. Contemporary pictorial red leather gilt and stamped in black. -- MURRAY, Hugh (1779-1846). The Encyclopedia of Geography: Comprising a Complete Description of the Earth, Physical, Statistical, Civil, and Political Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1839. 3 volumes. “Revised” edition with additions by Thomas G. Bradford. Numerous maps, wood engravings. Contemporary sheepskin. --  Together, 3 works in 10 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally very fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $400 - 600 248 [GEOMETRY]. TUSI, Nasir al-Din (1201-1274). [Commentary on Euclid’s Elements]. Fes, Alawi Morocco, 12 Shawwal AH 1293/1 November 1876 A.D.

2 volumes, 8vo (217 x 171 mm). Lithographed facsimile throughout, replicating 19 ll. of maghribi script and diagrams within double rule border throughout. (Some worming, heaviest at beginning and end, some toning and spotting.) Contemporary blind-ruled wallet-style goatskin, Arabic script along bottom edge (some wear and staining).

Facsimile printing of Nasir al-Din Tusi’s 13th-century commentary on Euclid’s elements. His recension is arranged in 15 books, or maqalas, and is based on the translations of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf and Thabit ibn Qurra, both of which were completed in the 9th century. The first lithographic press in Morocco was created in 1865 in Meknes and was transferred to Fes, presumably in the same year. The use of lithography allowed maghribi script to be used in North Africa and to retain its character against the saskh script which was more widely used in that region.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$2,000 - 3,000

249

GRAHAM, Greene (1904-1991). A Visit to Morin. London: Heinemann, 1959.

8vo. Publisher’s olive green cloth with silk ribbon; original dust jacket (losses to ends of spine panel, toning).

LIMITED EDITION of 250 copies, INSCRIBED BY GRAHAM GREENE. A Visit to Morin was first published in the January 1957 issue of London Magazine; Green would later have 250 copies privately printed to be distributed to friends and family. Wobbe, A40.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

250

GREENE, Graham (1904-1991). A group of 12 works, including signed limited editions, comprising:

A Burnt-Out Case. London: Heinemann, 1961. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. -- Doctor Fischer of Geneva or the Bomb Party. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1980. Publisher’s black cloth; original black slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 65 of 500 copies SIGNED BY GRAHAM GREENE. -- The Comedians. London: The Bodley Head, 1966. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket.  -- The End of the Affair. London: William Heinemann, 1951. Publisher’s grey cloth; original dust jacket. -- In Search of a Character. London: The Bodley Head, 1961. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket. -- It’s a Battlefield. London: William Heinemann, 1934. Modern half calf.  -- May We Borrow Your Husband? London: The Bodley Head, 1967. Publisher’s green cloth; original green slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 342 of 500 copies SIGNED BY GRAHAM GREENE. -- Our Man in Havana. London: William Heinemann, 1958. Publisher’s royal blue cloth. -- Ways of Escape. [Toronto]: Lester & Orpen Dennys, 1980. Publisher’s green cloth; original green slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, 86 of 150 copies SIGNED BY GRAHAM GREENE. -- And others. Together, 12 works in 12 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

251 HALLIBURTON, Thomas Chandler (1796-1865). A group of 11 works, comprising:

The Attache, or Sam Slick in England. London: Richard Bentley, 1844. Two volumes. Contemporary half calf gilt. -- The Bubbles of Canada. Philadelphia: Lea & Blanchard, 1839. Contemporary quarter calf. Provenance: B.H. Foy. -- The Clockmaker, or the Sayings and Doings of Samuel Slick of Slickville. London: Richard Bentley, 1837. Contemporary quarter calf. Provenance: Margaret F. Murray, Robert Aitschison. -- Letter Bag of the Great Western or, Life in a Steamer. London: Richard Bentley, 1840. Contemporary calf. -- Nature and Human Nature. London: Hurst & Blackett, 1855. Two volumes. Contemporary half calf. -- Nova Scotia. Halifax: Joseph Howe, 1829. Two volumes. With map and illustrations. Later cloth. -- The Season Ticket. London: Richard Bentley, 1860. Contemporary half calf. -- And others. Together, 11 works in 14 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

-

69FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$400
600 248 249

254 256

252

HARDY, Thomas (1840-1928). Dynasts. London: MacMillan & Co., 1927.

3 volumes, 4to. Portrait frontis by Francis Dodd. Publisher’s quarter vellum over patterned boards (toning).

LIMITED EDITION of 525 copies SIGNED BY THOMAS HARDY AND FRANCIS DODD of Hardy’s epic-drama in verse and prose in three parts, nineteen acts, and 130 scenes.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$200 - 300

253

HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel (1804-1864).

The Scarlet Letter, A Romance. Boston: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1850.

8vo (178 x 110 mm). Title printed in red and black; 4-page publisher’s advertisements dated 1 March 1850 bound in at front. Original blind-stamped cloth (text block detached from binding and cracked, portion of spine detached but present, some wear); slipcase. Provenance: Gordon Robins, Jr. (bookplate); old bookseller’s handwritten note tipped to advertisement leaf; Eugene Field (bookplate, gift inscription from Charles L. Williams, 1844, note from Eugene Field II on final blank).

EUGENE FIELD’S COPY with his bookplate, and with a note from Eugene Field II: “This copy was given to my father, Eugene Field, by his publisher Geo. H. Yenowine, and it is a first edition of the Scarlet Letter and was highly prized by him.”

FIRST EDITION with 4-page publisher’s ads dated 1 March 1850. Hawthorne’s work was an immediate success, selling 2,500 copies in its first week of publication, giving Hawthorne his first literary success.  BAL 7600; Grolier American 59.

$1,000 - 1,500

254

HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel (1804-1864).

The House of the Seven Gables. Boston: Ticknor, Reed and Fields, 1851.

8vo. 4 pp. publisher’s advertisements [BAL’s printing A, no priority]. (First leaf of adverts adhered to front pastedown, obscuring date, small strip excised from front blank flyleaf, some browning and spotting.) Original brown blind-embossed cloth [BAL’s binding A] (leaned, a few minor tears or losses to spine, some staining). Provenance: bookplate.

FIRST EDITION of Hawthorne’s Gothic novel, inspired by the Turner-Ingersoll Mansion in Salem, Massachusetts, which belonged to Hawthorne’s cousin Susanna Ingersoll, and by Hawthorne’s ancestors who were involved with the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. BAL 7604.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $300 - 400 255

HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel (1804-1864). A group of 3 works, comprising:

The Blithedale Romance. Boston: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1852. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Our Old Home. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1863. Modern half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- The Scarlet Letter. Boston: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1850. Publisher’s brown cloth. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400 256

HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel (1804-1864). Printed document accomplished in holograph signed (“Nath. Hawthorne”), as surveyor. 9 November 1846.

1 page, oblong 4to, visible area 16.5 x 21.8 cm, creased, minor soiling, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). Provenance: acquired Goodspeed’s Book Shop, Boston.

Customs declaration for James Upton’s ship, the Br. Huntross? arriving from Montevideo to the Port of Salem.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $500 - 700

70 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
253

257

HEMINGWAY, Ernest (1899-1961). The Sun Also Rises. New York: Scribner’s 1926.

8vo. Original black cloth, gold printed labels on upper cover and spine (rubbed, portion of spine label lacking, repairs to spine ends); facsimile dust jacket. Provenance: The Johnsons (spurious inscription, see below); gift inscription on flyleaf.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with the word “stopped” spelled “stoppped” on p. 181. With a spurious inscription not in Hemingway’s hand: “To The Johnson’s [sic] with sincere best wishes Ernest Hemingway.” Connolly, The Modern Movement 50; Hanneman A6a.

$500 - 700

258

HEMINGWAY, Ernest (1899-1961). Winner Take Nothing. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1933.

8vo. Original black cloth, gold labels to upper cover and spine, upper edge red-stained (a few minor bumps to edges, labels with rubbing or creasing); dust jacket (some chipping, tears and creasing, with tissue repairs to verso).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with the capital “A” on the copyright leaf, and with the dropped “t” in “two hundred twenty-five pounds” on p. 159. In the FIRST STATE DUST JACKET with Stallings’ review on the rear panel. Hanneman A12a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

259

HEMINGWAY, Ernest (1899-1961). To Have and Have Not. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1937.

8vo. Original black cloth gilt, spine blocked in green and gilt (slight rubbing and minor staining); dust jacket (some chipping, toning, and mild creasing).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST PRINTING with the Scribner’s seal, and the capital “A” on the copyright page. Written between 1935 and 1937, Hemingway’s work follows Harry Morgan, a fishing boat captain in Key West. Hanneman A14a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

260

HEMINGWAY, Ernest (1899-1961). A group of 5 works, comprising:

For Whom the Bell Tolls. 1940. Modern half morocco gilt; original cloth bound in at rear. Hanneman A18a. -- A Moveable Feast. [1964]. Hanneman A31.a. -- Across the River and into the Trees. 1950. Hanneman A23.a. -- Islands in the Stream. [1970]. -- The Nick Adams Stories. 1972. With Hemingway 25 cent stamp tipped-in to front flyleaf. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all published in New York by Charles Scribner’s Sons, all 8vo, most in original cloth, most in dust jackets, ALL FIRST OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

261

HEMINGWAY, Ernest (1899-1961). A group of 8 works, comprising:

Death in the Afternoon. NY & L, 1932. Hanneman A10.a. -- The Sun Also Rises. 1927. Third or later issue with omitted vanity verse on p.[viii]. Hanneman A6.a. -- For Whom the Bell Tolls. 1942. Second or later printing. Not listed in Hanneman A18. -- The Old Man and the Sea. 1952. Hanneman A24.a. -- The Garden of Eden. 1986. -- Dateline: Toronto the Complete Toronto Star Dispatches, 1920-1924. 1985. -- The Dangerous Summer. 1985. -- True at First Light. 1999. -- Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, all published in New York by Charles Scribner’s Sons, all 8vo, all in original cloth or clothbacked boards, some in dust jackets, ALL FIRST EDITION OR FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

71FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
257 258 259

264 265

262

[HERPETOLOGY]. A group of 3 works, comprising:

GLOYD, Howard. Publications by H.K. Gloyd, 1941-1958. Chicago: Academy of Sciences, 1942-1958. Illustrated. 15 publications bound in one volume. Later red cloth gilt. -- STEJNEGER, Leonard. Herpetology of Japan and Adjacent Territory. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1907. Illustrated. Contemporary burgundy cloth. -- WRIGHT, Albert Hazen. Life Histories of the Frogs of Okefinokee Swamp, Georgia. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1932. Illustrated. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally very good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

263

[HISTORY -- ENGLISH]. A group of 8 works, including:

LIMBORCH, Philippus van. The History of the Inquisition. 1731. 2 volumes in one. Contemporary calf (rebacked). -- CAMDEN, William. Remaines Concerning Britaine. 1637. Modern half calf. Fifth edition. -- LEYBOURNE, William. The Line of Proportion or Numbers, Commonly Called Gunters Line, Made Easie 1667. Later calf; slipcase. -- [WARD, Edward]. The Secret History of the Calves-Head Club. 1706. Modern boards; slipcase. Sixth edition. -- [CHARLES I, King]. Reliquiae Sacrae Carolinae, or the Works of that Great Monarch. The Hague, 1651. Modern calf backed boards. -- SMITH, Samuel. An Account, of the Behaviour of the Fourteen Late Popish Malefactors. 1679. Later vellum; tray and slipcase. -- And 2 others. Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, most published in London, various folio, 4to, 8vo, and 12mo sizes, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

264

HOWE, Julia Ward (1819-1910). From Sunset Ridge Poems Old and New. Boston & New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1899.

8vo. (Some light toning.) Original navy cloth-backed boards gilt(slight wear to extremities, some minor soiling); folding case. Provenance: Mr. W.E. Ambler, judge (inscription). Early Reprint. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED

BY HOWE: “At the request of Mr. W.E. Ambler, I with my name in this volume, belonging to him. Julia Ward Howe Jan. 4th 1903.”

[Tipped in to the front pastedown:] HOWE. Autograph quotation signed (“Julia Ward Howe”): “The steady spheres of God outvie The fitful meteors of the brain; These may be wanting to our need, To those we never look in vain. Julia Ward Howe Boston. Dec. 31st 1888.”

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

265

HUGO, Victor (1802-1885). Les Misérables. New York: Carleton, 1862.

8vo. Five volumes bound in one. Contemporary half calf in gilt (rubbing, toning, foxing). Provenance: Mrs. J. Thompson (signature); Gertrude A. Bell (signature); R.A. Bell (signature).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. A close friend of Victor Hugo, Charles E. Wilbour began his translation of Les Misérables shortly before the book was published in France; his quick work allowed it to appear in the United States within a few months of the French release and the fierce advertising campaign Wilbour waged on the book’s behalf resulted in it becoming one of the most popular bestsellers of the nineteenth century.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

266

[HUSBANDRY & MAMMALS]. A group of 12 works, including:

BRADLEY, R. Dictionarium Botanicum. L: T. Woodward et al, 1728. 2 volumes. Contemporary mottled calf. -- BRODIE, Peter Bellinger. A History of the Fossil Insects in the Secondary Rocks of England. L, 1845. -DROWN, William et al. Compendium of Agriculture or the Farmer’s Guide. Providence: Printed by Field & Maxcy, 1824. Later brown cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- HEWITT, Charles Gordon. The House-Fly… Its Structure, Habits, Development, Relation to Disease and Control. Cambridge, 1914. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- MARSH, Othniel Charles. Dinocerata a Monograph of an Extinct Order of Gigantic Mammals. Washington, 1886. -- PLINIUS SECUNDUS, Caius. Histoire de L’Agriculture Ancienne. Paris: G. Desprez, 1765. Contemporary mottled calf gilt. -- And 6 others. Together, 12 works in 13 volumes, various 4to, 8vo, and 12mo sizes, most in original or contemporary bindings, a few rebacked preserving original spine, many FIRST OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, condition generally good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500 - 700

72 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
262

267

HUXLEY, Aldous (1894-1963). On the Margin. London: Chatto & Windus, 1923.

8vo. Publisher’s olive green cloth (darkening to spine, toning to endpapers).

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY ALDOUS HUXLEY of his collection of essays.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

268

HUXLEY, Aldous (1894-1963). A group of 5 works. comprising:

Brave New World. London: Chatto & Windus, 1932. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: Vincent and Alice Massen. -- Island. Toronto: Clarke, Irwin & Co. Ltd., 1962. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. First Canadian edition. -- The Olive Tree. London: Chatto & Windus, 1936. Publisher’s olive green cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Those Barren Leaves. London: Chatto & Windus, 1925. Publisher’s orange cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: W. MacDonald MacKay. -- Vulgarity in Literature. London: Chatto & Windus, 1930. Publisher’s beige cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITIONS. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

269

[ILLUSTRATED LITERATURE]. A group of 3 illustrated works, comprising:

DULAC, Edmund, illustrator. The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. L, n.d. Printed from Edward Fitzgerald’s second translated edition. -- [Albert I of Belgium]. King Albert’s Book. L, [1914]. -SHAKESPEARE, William. The Tempest. Paul WOODROFFE, illustrator. L & NY, 1908. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 4to, all in original cloth gilt or stamped in dark green, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good.

$250 - 350 270

[ILLUSTRATED LITERATURE -- AMERICAN]. A group of 3 works, comprising:

KENT, Rockwell, illustrator (1882-1971). Herman MELVILLE (1819-1891). Moby Dick or the Whale New York: Random House, 1930. Later half navy morocco gilt, top edge gilt. FIRST TRADE EDITION of one of the greatest American illustrated books of the 20th-century. -- [PENNYROYAL PRESS]. CRANE, Stephen (1871-1900). The Red Badge of Courage. Barry MOSER, illustrator. West Hatfield, MA: The Pennyroyal Press, 1984. Frontispiece and numerous illustrations by Moser. Original cloth; slipcase. -- POE, Edgar Allan (1809-1849). Tales. Chicago: The Lakeside Press, 1930. Illustrations by W.A. Dwiggins. Original black cloth-backed boards gilt, top edge gilt; glassine; original slipcase. Provenance: Harry Owens, executive at R.R. Donnelly from 1945-1962, gifted to; William Embree, Chicago businessperson and civil leader (gift inscription, 1955). FIRST WIGGINSILLUSTRATED EDITION, LIMITED EDITION, one of 1,000 copies. The Artist and the Book 130; Caxton Chicago by the Book 53. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, various folio and 8vo sizes, condition generally very fine.

- 300

[LITERATURE -- ENGLISH].

BACON, Francis, Sir (1561-1626). The Essays. Mount Vernon: The Peter Pauper Press, [n.d.] Publisher’s full calf. LIMITED EDITION. -- Essays of Francis Bacon, Paraphrased. Montreal: Privately printed, 1945. Publisher’s marbled cloth. LIMITED EDITION. -- Together, 2 works in 2 volumes, 4tos, condition generally fine. [With:] BULWER-LYTTON, Edward (1803-1873).  A group of 8 works, including: England and the English. London: Richard Bentley, 1833. Two volumes. Contemporary half calf. -- The Last Days of Pompeii. London: Richard Bentley, 1834. Three volumes. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Pilgrims of the Rhine. London: Saunders and Otley, 1834. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Siege of Granada. London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1838. Contemporary full morocco gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- And 4 others, together, 8 works in 14 volumes, 8vos, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

73FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$200
271 No Lot 272
$400 - 600 269 270

273

IRVING, Washington (1783-1859). Bracebridge Hall. London: John Murray, 1822.

2 volumes, 8vo (210 x 127 mm). Contemporary half calf (foxing, toning, dampstains).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. Originally published under Irving’s pseudonym, “Geoffrey Crayon,” Bracebridge Hall was the author’s follow-up to The Sketch-Book and follows roughly the same format and was a great success upon publication, cementing his reputation in Europe in addition to America. BAL 10109.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

274

IRVING, Washington (1783-1859). A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. London: John Murray, 1828.

4 volumes, 8vo. 2 folding maps. Contemporary half calf with marbled edges (rubbing, ink stains on pg. 361364 not affecting text).

FIRST BRITISH EDITION, preceding the first American edition of the same year. One of the first modern biographies of Christopher Columbus, considered to be one of the first examples of American historical fiction. Irving was invited to Madrid to translate Spanish-language source material on Columbus into English, and decided to write his biography instead. He worked closely with Alexander von Humboldt, who had recently returned from his South American voyage and could provide deep knowledge of the geography of the Americas. This was also the first of Irving’s works to be published under his own name. See lot 276. Provost 122.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700

275

IRVING, Washington. The Adventures of Captain Bonneville. London: Richard Bentley, 1837.

3 volumes, 8vo (235 x 121 mm). Half title. Contemporary half calf gilt (rubbing, front hinge on vol. 1 detached but present). Provenance: John Wynford, Baron St. Davids.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION, preceding the first American by two months. BAL 10150; Sabin 35125.

[With]: A History of New York. London: John Murray, 1821. 2 volumes, 8vo (191 x 114 mm). Later full calf gilt.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

74 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

276

IRVING, Washington (1783-1859). Autograph manuscript fragment from Book XV, Chapter VII of A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, published New York, 1828.

1 page, 25 lines with a few excisions and additions, 8vo, tipped to a larger sheet, matted and framed with a portrait of Irving (unexamined out of frame). Provenance: sold Goodspeed’s Book Shop, 19 December 1888 (label on back of frame).

‘IN THE MEANTIME QUIBIAN BEHELD WITH SECRET INDIGNATION THESE STRANGERS INTENDING THEMSELVES IN HIS DOMINIONS”

A fine Irving fragment describing Columbus’s planned departure from Santa Maria de Belén and Quibían’s response. The Columbian expedition reached Quibían’s domains in 1503, and Columbus decided to found a settlement near the mouth of the river. A flood had made travel up the river for exploration possible, but by the time Columbus was ready to leave, the water “had subsided to such a degree that there was not above half a fathom of water on the bar....[Columbus] was obliged therefore to wait until the rains should again swell the river.” In the meantime, Quibían grew suspicious of the Columbus brothers, whos friendship Columbus had tried to secure with “various presents but in vain. The cacique...sent messengers around and ordered all his fighting men to assemble at his residence under a pretext of making war upon a neighboring province.”  Ultimately, Quibían defeated the Spanish. RARE: Only two other fragment’s from Irving’s Life of Columbus have appeared at auction in the last 45 years.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $2,000 - 3,000

277

[ITŌ Jakuchū] (1716-1800), artist.  [KONDŌ Tokutarō], editor. [Jakuchū Gafu, Jakuchū Picture Book/Album]. Kyoto: [Unsodō], Meiji 41 [1908].

4 volumes, folio (341 x 267 mm). Illustrated throughout. Original printed wrappers, stab-sewn; cloth folding portfolio.

A reprint edition of two Ishizuri-e volumes: “Soken Sekisatsu” and “Genpo Yoka” (both 1768). Illustrations depicting flowers by the mid-Edo period painter from Kyoto, Itō, who trained in the Kano school.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $600 - 800

278

JAMES, Henry (1843-1916). A group of 9 works, comprising:

The Ambassadors. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1903. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- The Art of the Novel. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1934. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: Vyvyan Edwards. -- Guy Domville. Philadelphia: J.P. Lippincott, 1960. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- In the Cage. Chicago: Herbert S. Stone & Company, 1898. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- The Middle Years. London: W. Collins Sons & Co., Ltd., 1917. Publisher’s blue cloth. REVIEW COPY WITH REVIEW SLIP LAID IN. -- The Outcry. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1911. Publisher’s grey cloth gilt. -- The Reverberator. London: MacMillan & Co., 1888. Publisher’s dark blue cloth gilt.

The Sense of the Past. London: W. Collins Sons & Co., Ltd., 1917. Publisher’s dark blue cloth gilt. Provenance: Jan R. McWhinney.

Views and Reviews. Boston: The Ball Publishing Company, 1908. -- Together, 9 works in 9 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600 279 JOHNSON, Samuel (1709-1784). A Dictionary of the English Language. London: J.F. & C. Rivington et al, 1792.  8vo (210 x 131 mm). Headings and text in 2 columns. (Light toning to margins, some soiling or staining.) Contemporary speckled sheep, red leather lettering-piece gilt (rebacked preserving lettering-piece, slight wear to extremities). Provenance: J.C. Hippen (stamp to rear pastedown).

Tenth edition of Johnson’s “most amazing, enduring and endearing one-man feat in the field of lexicography” (PM). ESTC T116651 for earlier edition.  $300 - 400

75FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
--
--

280

JONES, James (1921-1977). From Here to Eternity. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1951.

8vo. Publisher’s black cloth (joints starting); original dust jacket (cracking at spine tail, minor losses to spine panel).

LIMITED PRESENTATION EDITION, number 878 of 1,500 copies SIGNED BY JAMES JONES. From Here to Eternity was the winner of the 1952 National Book Award for Fiction. In 1953, Fred Zinnemann adapted the novel into a major motion picture starring Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr, Donna Reed, Frank Sinatra, and Ernest Borgnine, which went on to win eight Academy Awards the following year.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

282

JOYCE, James (1882-1941). Ulysses. London: John Lane The Bodley Head, 1936.

4to. Original green linen buckram, gilt-decorated with Homeric bow on front cover by Eric Gill, top edge gilt, others uncut (spine sunned, some bubbling to sides, some wear).

FIRST EDITION PRINTED IN ENGLAND, LIMITED ISSUE, number 695 of 900 printed on japon vellum of an edition of 1,000 copies. Slocum & Cahoon A23.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

JOSENHANS, Joseph Friedrich (1812-1884). Bilder aus der Missionswelt. Für Die Deutsche Jugend. [First and Second Series]. Mainz: Joseph Scholz, [ca 1858].

2 parts in one volume, oblong 4to (200 x 322 mm). 40 hand-colored lithographic plates. (Browned, some soiling and spotting, light chipping, lacking pp. 21-24.) Contemporary half sheep gilt (worn).

Presumed first German edition of both the first and second series. While the primary audience for the present work was children, violent depictions of beheadings, infanticide, and war throughout this work portray disturbing conditions missionaries encountered and caused in areas such as West Africa, China, India, and New Zealand. Both series were issued around the same time by Josenhans, who was the inspector of the Basel Mission from 1850 to 1879.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$600 - 800

283

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). The Courting of Dinah Shadd. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1890.

8vo. Portrait frontispiece.1 leaf of advertisements. Contemporary morocco gilt STAMP SIGNED BY RIVIERE & SON.

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. The six stories included in The Courting of Dinah Shadd had previously appeared in various magazines including MacMillan’s Magazine and Harper›s Weekly. Stewart 76; Livingston 57.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

76 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

284

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). Captains Courageous. London: MacMillan & Company,1897.

8vo. Half title, illustrations by Isaac Walton Taber. 1 leaf of advertisements. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION, preceded by the American edition by one month. Captains Courageous was serialized in McClure’s Magazine from November1896 to May 1896 and was an immediate success, with President Theodore Roosevelt writing three years later that Kipling had described “in the liveliest way just what a boy should be and do.” Livingston 137; Richards A103; Stewart 163.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

285

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). The Seven Seas. London: Methuen & Co., 1896.

8vo. Half title; 39 pp. of advertisements. Publisher’s red cloth gilt (toning to spine). Provenance: Evelyn Cochrane.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION, WITH UNSIGNED POEM ENTITLED “THE FAITHFUL LITTLE BEGGAR” LAID IN, PRESUMABLY IN THE HAND OF RUDYARD KIPLING. Livingston, 131.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

286

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). Puck of Pook’s Hill. London: MacMillan & Co.,1906.

8vo. Half title; 5 leaves of publisher’s advertisements. Publisher’s red cloth gilt with elephant medallion (toning to spine, light foxing at endpapers).

FIRST EDITION of Kipling’s work of fantasy, containing a series of short stories set in different periods of English history. Livingston 299.  [Tipped in:] TYPED LETTER SIGNED BY KIPLING: “Dear Madam, I am in receipt of yours of October 14 in which you do me the honour of asking me to speak for the Richmond Branch of the League at a public meeting. I heard from Sir Henry Prendergast by the same post and have written him that I am sorry that I am unable to do this. I can only express to you my regret that I am not able to avail myself of your invitation.”

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$200 - 300

287

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). Limits and Renewals. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons,1932.

8vo. Photographic frontispiece. Modern half calf gilt.

LIMITED EDITION, number 26 of 204 copies, SIGNED BY RUDYARD KIPLING of Kipling’s last collection of stories and poems.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

288

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). A group of 15 works in 16 volumes, comprising:

Ballads and Barrack Room Ballads. New York: MacMillan & Company, 1892. Publisher’s dark blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- The Five Nations. New York: Doubleday, Page, & Co., 1903. Contemporary half calf gilt. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- The Fringes of the Fleet. Garden City: Doubleday, Page, & Company, 1915. Publisher’s beige cloth. FIRST EDITION. --  The Irish Guards in the Great War. Garden City: Doubleday, Page, & Company, 1923. Two volumes. Publisher’s dark blue cloth gilt. -- Kim. Toronto: George N. Morang & Co., Ltd., 1901. First Canadian edition. -- The Second Jungle Book. London: MacMillan & Co., 1895. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- With the Night Mail. New York: Doubleday, Page, & Co., 1909. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. -- Kipling’s Indian Tales. New York and Boston: H.M. Caldwell Company, 1899. Publisher’s grey cloth gilt. --  And 7 others. Together, 15 works in 16 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $800 - 1,200

289

KIPLING, Rudyard (1865-1936). A group of 13 works, including:

The Brushwood Boy. London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd., 1907. Publisher’s light blue cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- The Day’s Work. London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd., 1898. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- A Song of the English. London: Hodder & Stoughton, [1909].

Life’s Handicap. London: MacMillan & Co., 1891. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- Sea Warfare. London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd., 1916. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION.  -- The Maltese Cat. London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd., 1955. Publisher’s creamcolored cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- The Second Jungle Book. New York: The Century Company, 1895. Publisher’s light red cloth. -- Thy Servant a Dog. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran & Company, 1930. Publisher’s beige cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- And 5 others. Together, 13 works in 14 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

77FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
--
$500 - 700 285 286 287

294

290

[LAKESIDE CLASSICS]. A non-consecutive run of 68 volumes published in R.R. Donnelley’s Lakeside Classics series by The Lakeside Press in Chicago, comprising:

Green Lakeside Press Classics. 13 volumes, 1903, 1915-1918, 1920-1927. With duplicates of 1917 and 1922. -- Red Lakeside Press Classics. 25 volumes, 1928-1952. -- Blue Lakeside Press Classics. 25 volumes, 1953-1977. With duplicate of 1954. -- Brown Lakeside Press Classics. 2 volumes, 1978-1979. -- Together, 68 works in 68 volumes including duplicates, all 8vo, many with plates and maps (some folding), all in original cloth gilt, 3 with glassines, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

The Lakeside Classics are “understood to be a uniquely Chicago product...In his preface to the 1928 volume Donnelley, reflecting on the commitment to continue the series for another twenty-five years, wrote, ‘If the traditions of a press in America will continue for this length of time, we believe those of the Lakeside Press will.’ The history of this venerable company and its annual Lakeside Classics is inextricably linked to, and closely interwoven with, the history of Chicago an its reputation as a place where commercial printing and the allied arts were pioneered and flourished” (Coventry, Chicago by the Book 101 Publications that Shaped the City and its Image, p. 63).  Caxton Chicago 101, 24.

From the Collection of Pamela W. Habel

$1,000 - 1,500

291

[LATIN AMERICANA]. A group of 4 works, comprising:

PERON, Maria Eva Duarte. La Razon de Mi Vida. Buenos Aires, [1951]. Original boards gilt. FIRST EDITION. SIGNED.

-- Discusion del Proyecto de Decreto Sobre el Tribunal de la Inquisicion. Cadiz, 1813. Contemporary calf-backed boards. -- OVIEDO, Juan Antonio de. Vida de Nuestra Señora, Repartida en Quinze Principales Mysterios. Mexico: Joseph Bernardo de Hogal, 1726. Contemporary limp vellum with ties; folding case. -- POLANCO, Rafael Vicente Alvarez. Prosa de Antigua. [Lima, Peru], 2012. Original half calf; slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 5 of 125 copies. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally good.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

292

LAVATER, Johann Kaspar (1741-1801). Essays on Physiognomy. Henry HUNTER, translator. London: John Murray et al, 1789-1798.

3 volumes in 5, 4to (342 x 270). Half-titles, 172 engraved plates (of 173), numerous illustrations, list of subscribers. (Some soiling and spotting, occasional offsetting, a few short marginal tears.) Modern calf-backed contemporary russia, black leather lettering-pieces gilt, edges marbled (rebacked with hinges reinforced, some light wear, some scuffing). Provenance: Harry Arnold Arnbarrow (bookplates); T. Harrison Surgeon (redacted signatures, 1834); Thomas Gough (signatures, 1863).

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH IN BOOK FORM of this treatise on the pseudo-science of Physiognomy related to the assessment of character or personality from an individual’s outer appearance, including depictions of notable figures such as Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, and Seneca.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $400 - 600

293

[LAW & GOVERNMENT]. Cabala, Sive Scrinia Sacra, Mysteries of State and Government in Letters. London: Printed for G. Bedel and T. Collins, 1654.

8vo. 2 works in 1 volume. Printer’s device, head and tail pieces, woodcut initials. Later half calf with marbled boards (rubbing, soiling).

[With]: HYDE, Robert. A Treatise of Feme Coverts; or, The Lady’s Law. London: Printed by E. and R. Nutt and R. Gosling, 1732. Later full calf (losses to front free endpaper and title page, toning). Provenance: “L. Janes.”

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois $300 - 500 294

LAWRENCE, Thomas Edward (1888-1935). Seven Pillars of Wisdom. London & Toronto: Jonathan Cape, 1935. 4to. Frontispiece, numerous illustrations. Original brown cloth gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut and unopened (spine sunned, slight wear to extremities).

FIRST TRADE EDITION of Lawrence’s epic account of his war experiences, including the Arab Revolt. After several mishaps (including leaving the first manuscript at the Reading Railway Station), this work was first published in 1926. Lawrence was played by Peter Seamus O’Toole the 1962 film, Lawrence of Arabia.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 500

78 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
290 292

295

LAWRENCE, Thomas Edward (1888-1935). A group of 5 works, comprising:

The Letters of T.E. Lawrence. London: Jonathan Cape, 1938. Publisher’s brown cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Minorities. London: Jonathan Cape, 1971. Publisher’s dark blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- The Mint. London: Jonathan Cape, 1955. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Oriental Assembly. London: Williams and Northgate, Ltd., 1939. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Revolt in the Desert. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1927. Publisher’s violet cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST AMERICAN PRINTING. Provenance: E.R.M. Brecken. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

296

LE SAGE, Alain Rene (1668-1747). The Adventures of Gil Blas. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1809.

4 volumes, 4to. Illustrated with 24 engraved plates. Translated by Benjamin Heath Malkin. Contemporary vellum in gilt (foxing, toning to text block, scattered damp stains throughout).

Later edition of Gil Blas, which was originally printed in parts from 1715 to 1735 and saw numerous translations from the original French into English over the course of the next century, with one of its best-known translations done by the Scottish author Tobias Smollett.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

297

[LEAVES—ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS]. Leaf from a French Book of Hours in Latin. [Paris?, second half 15th century].

One leaf, 155 x 116mm (sight size), on vellum. Illuminated with a large miniature depicting the Annunciation to the Shepherds in colors and gold within an arch-topped compartment above 4 lines of text and a three-line initial, surrounded by a full floral border in colors and gold; one- and two-line initials within text in gold on blue or red grounds. Verso with 17 lines of text. Double-glazed & framed. (Unexamined out of frame).

$600 - 800

297A

[LEAVES—ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS]. Leaf from a French Book of Hours in Latin. [Paris?, second half 15th century].

One leaf, 172 x 122mm (sight size), on vellum. Illuminated with a large miniature depicting St. John on Patmos in colors and gold within an arch-topped compartment above 5 lines of text and a four-line initial, surrounded by a full floral border in colors and gold. Verso with 4 lines of text (visible in mat). Double-glazed & framed. (Unexamined out of frame).

$400 - 600

298

[LEAVES -- INCUNABULA] -- [SCHEDEL, Hartmann]. Two Incunabula leaves with handcoloring from the Liber Chonicarum, or Nuremberg Chronicle. [Nuremberg, 1493].

2 leaves, folio (visible area 388/415 x 236/242 mm), on laid paper, woodcuts with hand-coloring depicting [Noah’s Ark] (Ff. XI[v]), [The Rainbow] (upper portion only, lower portion torn away) (Ff. XI[v]), [Anglie Provincia] (left page of double-page image only) (Ff. XXXXVI[v]) and [Portraits of the Lineage of David, including Solomon and 7 others] (Ff. XXXXVI[r]), XI[r] printed in two columns, numbered on rectos XI and XXXXVI, each leaf with several large closed tears most with repairs occasionally just affecting images or text, leaf XI with tear with loss to lower left XI[v] affecting text and most of the rainbow woodcut with repairs recto, some minor spotting or staining, each matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).

$200 - 400

79FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
297 298 296
297A

299

300

299

LEE, Harper (1926-2016). To Kill a Mockingbird. London et al: Heinemann, 1960.

8vo. Original burgundy cloth, spine lettered in silver; dust jacket (some very minor chipping or rubbing to extremities, some slight soiling).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Lee’s celebrated first novel and winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1961. SIGNED BY LEE on illustrated card tipped in. $600 - 800

300

LEROUX, Gaston (1868-1927). The Phantom of the Opera. New York & Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1911.

8vo. Half-title, colored frontispiece and 4 double-page colored plates by André Castaigne. (Some light toning.) Original red cloth stamped in white and blind (slight wear to extremities, minor soiling to edges); in facsimile dust jacket.

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with the imprint “Press of Braunworth & Co. Bookbinders and Printers Brooklyn, N.Y.” at the foot of the copyright page.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

301

LEVER, Charles (1806-1872). A group of 8 works in 9 volumes, comprising:

Barrington. London: Chapman and Hall, 1863. Contemporary half calf. -- The Daltons. London: Chapman and Hall, 1852. 2 volumes. Contemporary half calf. -- The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer. Dublin: William Curry, Jun., and Company, 1839. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Davenport Dunn. London: Chapman and Hall, 1859. Contemporary half calf. -- The Knight of Gwynn. London: Chapman and Hall, 1847. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- The O’Donoghue. Dublin: William Curry, Jun., and Company, 1845. Contemporary half calf. --   One of Them. London: Chapman and Hall, 1861. Contemporary half calf. -- Roland Cashel. London: Chapman and Hall, 1850. Contemporary full calf. -- Together, 8 works in 9 volumes, all 8vo condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

302

LEWIS, Sinclair (1885-1951). Arrowsmith. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Company, 1925.

8vo (225 x 159). Title-page printed in red and black. Original buckram backed boards, printed paper label on spine, top edge gilt, others uncut (chipping to label).

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 197 of 500 copies SIGNED BY LEWIS with extra spine label laid in at rear. In 1926, Lewis was offered the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction for this work but refused stating other authors were more worthy. Only four years later, he accepted the 1930 Nobel Prize in Literature “for his vigorous and graphic art of description and his ability to create, with wit and humour, new types of characters.”

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

303 LEWIS, Sinclair (1885-1951). A group of 7 works, comprising:  Arrowsmith. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1925. Publisher’s blue cloth. -- Cass Timberlane. New York: Random House, 1945. Publisher’s beige cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Doddsworth. Toronto: George J. McLeod, 1929. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST CANADIAN PRINTING. -- Gideon Planish. New York: Random House, 1943. Publisher’s cream-colored cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. Provenance: Hilda Cotnam. -- The God-Seeker. New York: Random House, 1949. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- The Innocents. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1917. Publisher’s cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Mantrap. Toronto: George J. McLeod Limited, 1926. Publisher’s blue cloth. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

80 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

304

LEWIS, Wyndham (1882-1957). The Apes of God. London: The Arthur Press, 1930.  4to. Publisher’s cream-colored cloth; dust jacket (spine darkened, rubbing).

LIMITED EDITION, number 725 of 750 copies SIGNED BY WYNDHAM LEWIS. A biting satire of London’s literary scene in the 1920s, with James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, and Virginia Woolf among the figures targeted by Lewis within its pages, with the Sitwells in particular taking great offense to Lewis’s portrayal of them.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

305

[LITERATURE -- AMERICAN]. A group of 8 works, including:

LONGFELLOW, Henry Wadsworth. Kavanagh, a Tale. Boston, 1849. BAL 12096. -- LEE, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird. Philadelphia et al, 1960. In dust jacket. Seventh issue. -- CLEMENS, Samuel Langhorne. The American Claimant. NY, 1892. BAL 3434. -- LEWIS, Sinclair. Babbitt. NY, 1922. -- CAPOTE, Truman. In Cold Blood. NY, [1965]. FIRST ISSUE. -- MARCH, Joseph Moncure. The Wild Party. N.p.: Privately printed, 1929. LIMITED EDITION, 276 of 1,000 copies. -- And 2 others. Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, all 8vo, most in original cloth or cloth-backed boards, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

306

[LITERATURE -- AMERICAN]. A group of 13 first edition works by Bellow, Caldwell, and Doctorow, comprising:

BELLOW, Saul. The Dean’s December. New York: Harper & Row, 1982. -- CALDWELL, Erskine. Jenny by Nature. NY: Farrar, Strauss, & Cudahy, 1961. FIRST EDITION. -- CALDWELL. Kneel to the Rising Sun. L, 1936. FIRST EDITION. -- CALDWELL. A House in the Uplands. NY, 1946. FIRST EDITION. -- CALDWELL. All Night Long. NY, 1942. FIRST EDITION. -- CALDWELL. This Very Earth. NY, 1948. FIRST EDITION. -- CALDWELL. Jenny by Nature. NY, 1961. FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE. -- DOCTOROW, Edgar Lawrence. Billy Bathgate. New York: Random House, 1989. FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY E.L. DOCTOROW. -- DOCTOROW. Loon Lake. New York: Random House, 1980. Publisher’s blue cloth; original slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 325 of 350 copies SIGNED BY E.L. DOCTOROW. -- And 4 others. Together, 13 works in 13 volumes, many FIRST EDITIONS, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

307

[LITERATURE -- ENGLISH]. A group of 3 works, comprising:

RABELAIS, Francois. Works. L, 1784. 4 volumes. ESTC T13267. -- SPENSER, Edmund. The Fairy Queen. L, 1784. 2 volumes. -- SCOTT, Walter, Sir. The Pirate Edinburgh et al, 1822. 3 volumes. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. --Together, 3 works in 9 volumes, various 4to, 8vo and 12mo sizes, most with engraved plates, most in contemporary calf or sheep, condition generally good.

$300 - 400

308

[LITERATURE -- ENGLISH]. A group of 8 works by John Galsworthy and D.H. Lawrence, comprising:

Carmen. London: Elkin Matthews and Marrot, 1932. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. LIMITED EDITION, number 47 of 600 copies SIGNED BY JOHN AND ADA GALSWORTHY. -- Fantasia of the Unconscious. New York: Thomas Seltzer, 1922. Publisher’s blue cloth. Provenance: Mary E. Scratch. -- Kangaroo. New York: Thomas Seltzer, 1923. Publisher’s blue cloth. -- The Man Who Died. London: Martin Secker, 1931. Publisher’s olive green cloth. LIMITED EDITION. Provenance: “Archie”. -- St. Mawr. London: Martin Secker, 1925. Publisher’s brown cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- Verses New and Old. London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1926. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- The Virgin and the Gipsy. London: Martin Secker, 1930. Publisher’s brown cloth; lacking dust jacket as issued. -- [With]: BURGESS, Anthony. Flame Into Being: The Life and Work of D.H. Lawrence. London: Heinemann, 1985. Publisher’s orange cloth; dust jacket. FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY ANTHONY BURGESS. -- Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

81FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$400 - 600 302 304

311

309

[LITERATURE & HISTORY -- ENGLISH]. A group of 8 works, including:

MILTON, John. A Defence of the People of England. [L or Amsterdam?],1692. Modern vellum gilt; slipcase. FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH. -- [SWIFT, Jonathan]. A Tale of a Tub N.p., 1711. Contemporary calf. -- DUPPA, Richard. The Life and Literary Works of Michel Angelo Buonarroti. L et al,1806. Later quarter calf, vellum gilt; folding case. -- MAGNUS, Albertus. De Secretis Mulierum. Amsterdam, 1669. Later half calf. -- The Guardian. L, 1714. Volume I only. Contemporary calf (rebacked); slipcase. FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM. -- And 3 others. Together, 8 works in 9 volumes, various folio, 8vo, and 12mo sizes, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

310

[LITERATURE & HISTORY]. A group of 12 works, including:

[Godey’s Lady’s Book. Philadelphia, June 1859.] (Title-page lacking.) Modern wrappers. -- TROWBRIDGE, John Townsend. Cudjo’s Cave. Boston, 1864. FIRST EDITION. -- GARLAND, Hamlin. The Moccasin Ranch. NY et al, 1909. FIRST EDITION. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- BINGLEY, William. Travels in Northern Europe. L, 1820-1822. 6 volumes. -- [YOUNG, Edward]. The Centaur not Fabulous. Philadelphia, 1806. Contemporary calf (repaired); slipcase. “Johnson’s edition.” -- WIGGIN, Kate Douglas. Timothy’s Quest. NY, [1894]. -- [TOURGEE, Albion W.]. A Fool’s Errand. By One of the Fools. NY, [1879]. FIRST EDITION. -- And anther copy. -- And other copy of the 1880 edition. -- TOURGEE. Bricks without Straw. NY, [1880]. FIRST EDITION. -- And 2 others. Together, 12 works in 17 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, most in original cloth, boards or wrappers, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

311

LONDON, Jack (1876-1916). White Fang. New York & London: The Macmillan  Company, 1906.

8vo. Half-title, color frontispiece and numerous color plates. (Marginal chip to E[7], slight toning to edges). Original grey pictorial cloth stamped in white and black, spine gilt-lettered (slight wear to extremities and lower left front cover image).

FIRST PUBLISHED EDITION, with the title-leaf a cancel printed on laid paper, identified by BAL and Woodridge as the second issue, but Merle Johnson locates no copies of the presumed first issue with integral title-page. BAL 11896 [calling for cancel title-page on either laid or wove paper, no priority]; Woodbridge 46.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

312

LONDON, Jack (1876-1916). A group of 11 first edition works, comprising:

The Call of the Wild. Toronto: George N. Morang, 1903. Publisher’s green cloth. First Canadian edition. -- Before Adam. Toronto: The MacMillan Company of Canada, Inc., 1907. Publisher’s brown cloth. First Canadian edition. -- Adventure. London: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1911. Publisher’s green cloth. -- John Barleycorn. New York: The Century Co., 1913. Publisher’s brown cloth. -- The Strength of the Strong. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1914. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- [With]: STONE, Irving. Jack London: Sailor on Horseback and 28 Selected Jack London Stories. Garden City: Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1977. Publisher’s creamcolored cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- And 5 others. Together, 11 works in 11 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$500 - 700

313 LONGFELLOW, Henry Wadsworth (1807-1882). A group of 6 works, comprising:

The Courtship of Miles Standish and Other Poems. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1858. Publisher’s brown cloth. FIRST EDITION. BAL 12122. -- Evangeline. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., 1899. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. -- The Masque of Pandora. Boston: James R. Osgood & Company, 1875. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- The Song of Hiawatha. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1855. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. --  The Wayside Inn. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1863. Modern half calf. -- The Prose Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. London: George Routledge & Company, 1853. --  Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

82 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

314

LOWRY, Malcolm (1909-1957). Under the Volcano. New York: Reynal and Hitchcock,1947.

8vo. Publisher’s cream-colored cloth; original dust jacket (creases,).

FIRST EDITION. The earliest version of Under the Volcano was completed in 1940 and for the next four years Lowry shopped it around to various publishers, while he continually edited the work. The manuscript was nearly lost in a fire in 1944; immediately afterwards Lowry inserted numerous references to infernos throughout the story, which was finally published in 1947.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

315

MAILER, Norman (1923-2007). Marilyn. A Biography. [New York]: Grosset & Dunlap, Inc., 1973.

4to. Illustrated with color and black-and-white reproductions of photographs of Monroe by Avedon, Capa, Newman, Arnold, and others. Publisher’s white blind-stamped cloth, navy blue lettering on spine, publisher’s clamshell case with mounted photographic reproduction (a few minor scuffs).

FIRST EDITION, second printing. LIMITED ISSUE, SIGNED BY MAILER AND SCHILLER, the producer.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

316

MARQUEZ, Gabriel Garcia (1927-2014). One Hundred Years of Solitude. New York and Evanston: Harper & Row, 1970.

8vo. Original gilt-stamped green cloth (slight wear to extremities); dust jacket (price-clipped, some chipping and creasing).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, without the publisher’s numerical code on p.422. In the second issue dust jacket without exclamation mark at the end of the first paragraph on the front flap. García Márquez’s novel about the mulit-generational Buendía family earned him international fame as a novelist of the magical realism movement within Latin American literature.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$200 - 300

83FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

317 [MATHEMATICS -- MANUSCRIPTS]. Compendium of mathematical and scientific texts presumably prepared by a Jesuit scholar. [Italy?, ca early 18th century].

5 volumes, ca 1200 pages, with numerous blank leaves, 8vo (195 x 132mm).  In Latin. Written in a neat cursive hand in dark brown ink. With two engraved inserted frontispieces, the first (Vol. I) a devotional image of the Virgin Mary; the second (Vol. V) a portrait of the Italian Jesuit Aloysius de Gonzaga. Illustrated throughout with numerous full-page plates and numerous diagrams within the text (some spaces left blank for diagrams). Bound in contemporary Italian vellum with morocco spine labels (one label worn away, slight bowing to covers).

The wide-range of subjects include: physics, astronomy, hydrology, horology, meteorology and large sections devoted to mathematics, particularly algebra and Euclidian geometry. Contains a section at the end of the first volume In quatuor Libros metereologicorum Aristotelis, Quaestiones Selectae, dated 1707. Internally fine.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,500 - 2,000

318 [MATHEMATICS -- MANUSCRIPT]. KRAITCHIK, Maurice (1882-1957). Number theory notes and offprints. N.p., ca 1930 or later.

32 leaves, 4to or smaller (270 x 210 or smaller). In French. In black ink, pencil, and red crayon on graph-ruled sheets, with a few smaller slips. All loosely laid in to folding portfolio.

The notes deal with quadratic forms as presented by Leonard Dickson’s Studies in the theory of numbers. Other notes relate to equations from Euler’s “Continuous la table,” and a set of equations from Landar Backman.  Kraitchik’s main interests were the theory of numbers and recreational mathematics, and he wrote several books on number theory from 1922-1930. He emigrated to the United States during the Second World War, where he taught a course at the New School for Social research in New York City on the topic of recreational mathematics.  [Laid in:] Three offprints relating to the theory of numbers: “Théorie des Nombres. Sur les nombres de Fermat”; “Sur les Nombres de Fermat”; and “Sur le Nombre N=1/9 (10^23-1).”

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$600 - 800

319 [MATHEMATICS -- MANUSCRIPTS]. Two notebooks containing examples of practical arithmetic and arithmetical exercises, comprising:

[America, 1813]. 34 leaves, 4to. Written in cursive in brown ink; a few embellishments and diagrams. (Some browning and spotting.) Modern cloth. Provenance: John Lapp (signature). Includes content relating to simple addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, long division, federal money, liquid and cloth measures, and land measures.

– [England, ca 1800]. 19 leaves, 4to. Written in cursive in black ink; a few diagrams. (Some browning and staining.) Contemporary marbled wrappers (light wear). Includes content relating to the Double rule of Three and Geometry. – Together, 2 work in 2 volumes.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

84 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

320

MARTIN, Robert Montgomery (1803?-1868). The Indian Empire: Its History, Topography, Government, Finance, Commerce, and Staple Products. London: The London Printing and Publishing Company (Limited), [ca 1858].

3 volumes in 8, 4to. Additional title-page printed in red and black in vol. I, 3 additional engraved titles, 120 steel-engraved plates, 2 double-page maps hand-colored in outline. (Some minor soiling or spotting, some toning, some occasional creasing.) Original light orange cloth gilt and blind-stamped, uncut and unopened (spines darkened, hinges tender, some soiling, some light wear). Provenance: Mrs. T. Winears Psaltinar (signature).

FIRST EDITION of this thoroughly illustrated account of the British colonialist life in India with emphasis on the “Indian Mutiny,” better known as the Indian Rebellion of 1857.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$600 - 800

321

MAUGHAM, William Somerset (1874-1965). Razor’s Edge. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran & Co., Inc., 1944.

8vo. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket (closed tears, losses, chipping along extremities).

FIRST EDITION WITH MAUGHAM SYMBOL BLINDSTAMP. The novel, which follows protagonist Larry Darrell after his return from World War I, takes its name from the epigraph: “The sharp edge of a razor is difficult to pass over; thus the wise say the path to Salvation is hard.”

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

322 MAUGHAM, William Somerset (1874-1965). A group of 3 works, comprising:

Ashenden, or The British Agent. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1928. Modern half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Of Human Bondage. London: William Heinemann, 1915. Contemporary full calf. FIRST EDITION. -- A Writer’s Notebook. London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1949. Publisher’s blue cloth. LIMITED EDITION, number 927 of 1,000 copies SIGNED BY W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

85FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE of the 1986  Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, with “none” (later changed to “done”) on p.621, line 16. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY McMURTRY to an unknown recipient: “To my Texas Friends, L. McMurtry.”

$500 - 700

324

MCMURTRY, Larry (1936-2021). A group of 7 works, comprising:

The Last Picture Show. 1966. -- Anything for Billy. 1988. -- Buffalo Girls. 1990. -- Streets of Laredo. 1993. -- Pretty Boy Floyd. 1994. -- Dead Man’s Walk 1995. -- Comanche Moon. 1997. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, most published in New York et al by Simon and Schuster, all 8vo, all in original cloth or cloth-backed boards, all in dust jackets, ALL FIRST EDITION, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

325 [McSWEENEY’S]. Timothy McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern. Numbers 1-50. Dave EGGERS, editor. [COMPLETE RUN WITH ALL VARIANTS]. San Francisco: McSweeney’s Books, Autumn 1998 - Summer 2017.

50 numbers in 75 volumes, various sizes as issued. Most with illustrations (many in color, many folding). All in original bindings as issued, with dust jackets or original boxes where issued, condition generally fine (a few numbers with a touch of soiling or staining); many as issued in original shrinkwrap.

:] 21 additional volumes comprising all variant copies: 3 copies of no. 5; 1 copy of no. 6; 3 copies of no. 11; 7 copies of no. 21; another copy of the 3-volume set of no. 26; 2 copies of no. 29; and 2 copies of no. 38.

COMPLETE RUN OF NUMBERS 1-50 WITH ALL VARIANTS, FIRST EDITIONS (of all but part 10) of the American Literary Journal founded in 1998 as a successor to editor Dave Egger’s earlier magazine Might McSweeney’s features the work of some of hte most important authors of the 20th- and 21stcentury, including Sherman Alexie, Michael Chabon, Stephen King, Joyce Carol Oates, Sarah Vowell, and David Foster Wallace. All issues are complete with all ephemera as issued, with the following exceptions: no. 20 is lacking a booklet attached rear pastedown containing the first part of The Children’s Hospital, a novel by Chris Adrian; no. 24 is lacking a booklet, attached to the verso of the front free flyleaf of “Trouble,” containing the first part of Bowl of Cherries, a novel by Millard Kaufman; and no. 40 is lacking In My Home There Is No More Sorrow by Rick Bass, with paperboard cutout wraparound band. RARE as we trace no records for the complete set of the first 50 numbers of McSweeney’s at auction. Complete list available upon request.  $2,000 - 3,000

86 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
[With
325

326

[MEDICINE -- MANUSCRIPT]. Collection of lecture notebooks from courses taken in anatomy, materia medica and other medical subjects at the Kyoto Imperial University. [Kyoto, 1900].

4 volumes, 8vo (230 x 147mm). In Japanese. Written in black ink on rice paper. Illustrated with numerous anatomical drawings and drawings of plants in ink and colored pencil. Contemporary Japanese wrappers sewn, with manuscript cover labels (some rubbing to covers).

The books are organized according to four series of lectures: I. Medicinal plants by Prof. Katahira; II. Anatomy of brain, nerve and nerve irritation by Prof. Adachi Buntarô; III. Anatomy of blood vessels shared by Prof. Adachi and Prof. Yoshi Sugano; IV. Anatomy and histology of the five organs of sense by Prof. B. Adachi. The family name of Fujiki is written in one of the volumes, suggesting the name of the student who attended these courses. Professor Adachi Buntarô was a noted Japanese anatomist and anthropologist. He received his training in anatomy in Germany, and also conducted anthropological research on comparative cranial structure of the Japanese race to that of European races.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200

327

MELVILLE, Herbert (1819-1891). Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life... New York: Wiley & Putnam, 1846.

2 volumes bound as one, 8vo. Frontispiece map (toning, spotting). Modern half calf gilt (light rubbing).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, FIRST ISSUE. Typee was based on Melville’s experiences in the South Pacific in 1842, and was the most popular of Melville’s works to be published in his lifetime. BAL 13653.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

328

MELVILLE, Herman (1819-1891). Omoo: A Narrative of Adventure in the South Seas. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1847.

8vo. Frontispiece, title printed in black and red, “Round Robin” illustration on p. 104; 24 pp. advertisements at end (spotting, a few leaves becoming disbound). Later half calf gilt (rubbing).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, FIRST ISSUE of Omoo, written as the sequel to Melville’s Typee, based on the author›s own experiences as a sailor in the South Pacific. BAL 13656.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

87FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

329

MILNE, Alan Alexander (1882-1956). Winnie-the-Pooh. Ernest H. Shepard, illustrator. [New York]: E.P. Dutton & Company, 1926.

8vo. Original green cloth gilt (spine darkened, some slight wear). Provenance: Joseph N. Du Barry (signatures).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION of Milne’s story based on a set of stuffed animals his son Christopher Robin owned.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

330

A suite of 24 mezzotints, small 4to (sheets approximately 182 x 268 mm, matted.

Martin’s illustrations for Milton’s Paradise Lost, produced ca 18241827, were first published by Septimus Prowett in 1827.  These slightly reworked plates were publised in Charles Tilt’s edition of Milton’s work in 1833.  Of the Prowett edition, a writer for The Literary Gazette remarked: “We know no artist, whose genius so perfectly fitted him being the illustrator of the mighty Milton; and in what we have seen of his conceptions he has more than realised the highest of our hopes. There is a wildness, a grandeur, and a mystery about his designs which are indescribably fine... the painter is also a poet...we look upon these engravings to belong to the foremost order of true genius: beyond this there is no praise.” [The Literary Gazette, April 2nd 1825].

$400 - 600

331

MITCHELL, Margaret (1900-1949). Gone with the Wind. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1936.

8vo. (Some creasing.)

Original grey cloth (corners bumped, some wear and warping); in dust jacket (chipping to edges with losses, some soiling and staining, a few cellotape repairs verso).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with the May 1936 date. In a later issue dust jacket with 8 reviews of Gone with the Wind on rear panel rather than Macmillan’s publications in two columns. Mitchell’s epic Civil War novel was a huge success; it won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, has sold more than 8 million copies, and has been translated into at least 18 languages.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

88 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
[MILTON, John]. MARTIN, John, illustrator (1789-1854). [The Paradise Lost of Milton with Illustrations by John Martin]. [London: Charles Tilt, 1833].
$500 - 700

332

MITCHELL, Margaret (1900-1949). Gone with the Wind. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1938.

8vo. (Some toning.) Original grey cloth (slight wear to extremities); dust jacket (price-clipped, some losses and repairs).

FIRST EDITION, LATER ISSUE, October 1938 printing, in a third (or later) dust jacket with critical reviews of the book and no mention of Macmillan publications. SIGNED BY MITCHELL. Mitchell’s epic Civil War novel was an enormous success; it won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, has sold more than 8 million copies, and has been translated into at least 18 languages.

$600 - 800

333

[MINIATURE BOOKS]. A group of 5 works, comprising:

WALCOTT, Paul & Betty, and Marion SOLIDAY. Chats about Miniature Books. [N.p.:] Privately Printed, 1932. Slipcase. number 8 of 250 copies. -- VIRGILIUS MARO, Publius. Bucolica. L: W. Pickering, 1821. Frontispiece. Contemporary calf. -- The Means of Doing Good. Stourport: G. Nicholson, 1820. Contemporary quarter morocco. Rare provincial printing; not in Welsh. -- WEBER, Msgr. Francis J. C. E. D. “The Lady.” San Fernando, CA: Junipero Serra Press, 1988. With morocco bookplate of Carrie Estelle Doheny mounted as frontispiece. one of 300 copies. -- WEBER. The Immortal Little Willie San Fernando, CA: Junipero Serra Press, 1990. With 20¢ US postage stamp tipped-in as frontispiece. one of 200 copies. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, various 48mo and 64mo sizes or smaller (38/87 x 32/52 mm), most in original bindings, most LIMITED EDITION, condition generally good.

$300 - 400

334 MOORE, Thomas (1779-1852). Lalla Rookh. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1817.

4to (some minor toning). Contemporary half calf gilt.

Second edition. Lalla Rookh set a record for the highest price ever paid for a poem at the time of its publication and became so popular that throughout the 19th century numerous ships were named after it; it was also adapted into numerous stage performances.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

89FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

335

MORALES, Italo Hidalgo (b. 1939). U Cayibal Atziak. Antigua: Libros San Cristobal, 1992.

4to. Quarter calf with handwoven Guatemalan cloth; full leather slipcase (light rubbing).

LIMITED EDITION, number 81 of 200 copies with binding executed by Laura Rosales Garcia and Guatemalan cloth handwoven by Maria Hernandez de Lopez, Elva Marina Lopez, and Aldea Santiago Zamora.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

336

NABOKOV, Vladimir (1899-1977). A group of 3 works, comprising:

Lolita. L, 1969. Juliar A28.3. -- Pale Fire. NY, 1962. “First impression.”

-- Transparent Things. NY et al, 1972. Juliar A42.1. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, all in original black cloth, all in dust jackets, ALL FIRST OR FIRST ENGLISH OR FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

337

[NATURAL HISTORY -- MANUSCRIPTS]. 2 student’s manuscripts, comprising:

“Mammals of N-E. United States. Western New York: ‘A Key to the land mammals.’” Albany, NY, ca 1920. 37 leaves, 8vo. Written in black ink with rubrication throughout. With 10 pages of drawings of butterflies in wash, and 3 pp. ink illustrations of ducks. (Sheets brittle and browned with some staining.) Disbound. Provenance: James Butler (stamp). The manuscript presumably after Gerrit Smith Miller’s work with further embellishments, including sections on mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, butterflied, and mushrooms with a particular emphasis on species found in New York State. -- “Geology.” London, 1931. Approximately 50 leaves, with approximately 35 additional blank leaves, 8vo. With printed or mimeographed slips tipped in throughout, facing either printed diagrams with hand-coloring or ink-drawn diagrams with hand coloring (some folding), depicting crystals and minerals.

Herbert E. G. Emmett’s student notebook, kept during his Geology course at Imperial College, London.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

90 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

338 [NATURAL HISTORY -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 18 works, including:

CAJORI, Florian. A History of the Conceptions of Limits and Fluxions in Great Britain. Chicago et al, 1919. -- SARTON, George. A History of Science. Cambridge, MA, 1959. -- BEEKMAN, E.M., editor. The Poison Tree Selected Writings and Rumphius on the Natural History of the Indies. Amherst, MA, 1981. -- MEDAWAR, P.B. the Limits of Science. NY, 1984. -- MONTAGU, Ashley, editor. Studies and Essays in the History of Science and Learning Offered in Homage to George Sarton. NY, ca 1944. -- SINGER, Charles. A Short History of Scientific Ideas to 1900. NY et al, 1959. -- And another copy. -- D’ABRO, A. The Evolution of Scientific Thought from Newton to Einstein. NY, 1927. -- SMITH, Alan G.R. Science and Society in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. NY, 1972. -- And 9 others. Together, 18 works in 20 volumes, various folio, 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original bindings, most with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$250 - 350

339 [NAVAL -- MANUSCRIPTS]. WREY, R. “Logs of HMS ‘Duke of Wellington’ Captain G. Hancock / ‘Inconstant’ Captain C. L. D. Waddilove. / ‘Doris’ Captain W. H. Edye… kept by R. Wrey [signed], Midshipman.” [1870-1876].

Approximately 500 pages bound in one volume, folio (ca 307 x 205mm). Written in cursive in brown ink on blue paper. With inserted plates in pen-and-ink (most on heavy paper), including 4 decorative title-pages (2 with watercolor), 18 maps or charts (some folding), 4 ship diagrams (one with watercolor), and one watercolor view of Carthagena.  (Some leaves frayed or brittle at edges, possibly missing leaves, one folding map separated into pieces, some staining, usual dust-staining and signs of wear.) Bound in contemporary half calf (rubbed and worn, text block cracked with many quires or leaves becoming loose). Provenance: Juha Nurminen (bookplate).

Bound volume of logbooks kept by Midshipman R. Wrey serving briefly (July to August 1870) on HMS Wellington (then a training ship at Portsmouth Harbour); from 11 December 1871 on HMS Inconstant, sailing from Madeira to Rio, then to the Cape, Simon’s Bay, Bombay, Mauritius, Simon’s Bay, St Helena, Ascension Island, Fayal, returning to Portsmouth on 11 October 1872; the remaining sequence of logs recording service on HMS Doris between 16 October 1872 and 17 January 1876, cruising off the coast of Spain, from Funchal to Barbados, in the West Indies, from Halifax to Gibraltar and Gibraltar to Halifax, off the Cape de Gatte, in the Mediterranean, from Malta to Corfu, Navarino to Salamis, St Vincent to Monte Video via Stanley and back via the Falklands and the Cape, from Gibraltar to the Cape, and from there to India.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,000 - 1,500

340 [NAVIGATION -- MANUSCRIPT]. Navigational studies and exercise logbook for an aspiring seaman. N.p., n.d.

4to (315 x 195 mm). 87 ll. Manuscript in English, written in black ink. With several diagrams throughout, including one color drawing of a sailing ship. Original roan-backed marbled boards (losses to spine, worn, hinges broken, a few gatherings becoming loose).

With a manuscript map of the Atlantic ocean. Includes sections on plane trigonometry, plane sailing, traverse sailing, parallel sailing, middle latitude sailing, Mercator’s sailing, the manner of surveying, coasts and harbors, the calculation of latitude and time using the moon and stars, lunar observations, methods for keeping a ship’s journal at sea, and great circle sailing.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$400 - 600

91FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

341 NESBIT, Edith (1858-1924). Railway Children. London: Wells Gardner, Darlton, & Co., 1906.

8vo. Illustrations by Charles Edmund Brock. Publisher’s pictorial cloth gilt (rubbing, foxing throughout). Provenance: “Gerald” (inscription on front free endpaper).

FIRST EDITION. The Railway Children was originally serialized in The London Magazine in 1905 and saw its first publication in book form the following year. It was later adapted into the classic 1970 motion picture of the same name starring Sinah Sheridan.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

342

NEVIN, Ethelbert (1862-1901). Autograph musical manuscript, titled “Every Night.” Signed below title (“Ethelbert Nevin”), and inscribed by Nevin’s wife, Anne Paul Nevin.

2 pages, 4to, on a single sheet of 12-stave printed music paper, slightly toned, matted and framed Comprising 18 measures representing treble, alto, and bass clefs. With the tempo marking “Allegretto” and with a few additional annotations in pencil.

Nevin’s Op. 20 A Book of Songs was published in 1893, and “Every Night” (sometimes alternatively “Ev’ry Night”), was the third of 10 songs in the collection.  Nevin sets to music Robert Louis Stevenson’s poem “System,” which was first published in A Child’s Garden of Verses in 1885.  The lyrics, in full: “Every night my prayers I say | And learn my lessons every day; | And every day that I am good, | I have an orange after food. | The boy that is not clean and neat, | With lots of toys and things to eat, | He is a naughty boy , I’m sure -- | Or else his dear papa is poor.” The lyrics differ slightly from Stevenson’s poem, most notably in the second line which reads “And eat my dinner every day” in the second line.

Inscribed verso by Ethelbert Nevin’s wife, Anne Paul Nevin, to Colonel and Mrs. Schoonmaker. Col. Schoonmaker, presumably James Martinus Schoonmaker, was commissioned Colonel of the 14th Pennsylvania Cavalry in 1862, and in 1864, he was again promoted to command the First Brigade, First Cavalry Division of the Army of the Shenandoah, a position he retained through the end of the war.  Schoonmaker and Nevin both hailed from the Pittsburgh area.

Property from the Collection of James and Patrice Schoonmaker, Naples, Florida $300 - 400

343

NEWTON, Alfred Edward (1863-1940). A group of 3 works, comprising:

The Amenities of Book-Collecting. Boston, 1918. With original dust jacket; slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE. -- The Book-Collecting Game. Boston, 1928. With slipcase.

LIMITED LARGE PAPER EDITION, number 738 of 990 copies, SIGNED BY NEWTON. -Another copy of the FIRST TRADE EDITION. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, all in original cloth-backed boards, condition generally very good. Provenance: two books from the collection of Mary Pinkerton Carlisle, daughter of Robert Allan Pinkerton, founder of Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency (morocco bookplate).

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

92 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

344

NEWTON, Isaac, Sir (1642-1727). The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended. London: J. Tonson et al, 1728.

4to (233 x 177 mm). 3 folding plates. (Some offsetting or toning, fore-edge of Bbb2 burned not affecting text, front fly-leaf detached.) Contemporary calf gilt, tan leather lettering-piece gilt, edges sprinkled red (some wear, front joint worn with sewing visible but holding, some minor staining or soiling).

FIRST EDITION, large paper issue on thick paper, of Newton’s attempts to verify historical accounts of ancient civilizations through astronomical principles. Babson 214.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$300 - 500

345 ORWELL, George (1903-1950). A group of 5 works, comprising:

Animal Farm. NY, 1946. -- Nineteen Eighty-Four. L & Toronto, 1946. -- The Lion and the Unicorn. L, 1941. -- Shooting an Elephant L, 1950. -- The English People. L, 1947. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, all in original cloth or boards, most in dust jackets, ALL FIRST, FIRST AMERICAN or first Canadian editions, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

346

PARKER, Dorothy (1893-1967). Here Lies: The Collected Stories of Dorothy Parker. New York: The Literary Guild of America, 1939.

8vo. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket (rubbing to spine, toning). Provenance: Rosemary Alexander (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, INSCRIBED BY DOROTHY PARKER to Rosemary Alexander: “With best wishes.” Dorothy Parker, one of the great social satirists of early 20th century America, worked later in her life as a screenwriter in Hollywood, where she would receive two Academy Award nominations, one of which was for her work on the 1937 film, A Star is Born.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

93FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

347

PEPYS, Samuel (1633-1703). Memoires Relating to the State of the Royal Navy of England... [London]: [N.p.], 1690.

8vo. Title printed in red and black, folding letterpress table (some toning). Contemporary calf (front hinge starting, toning, front free endpaper partially disbound but present, lacking portrait frontispiece). Provenance: Ownership inscriptions on front free endpaper.

FIRST EDITION, with the imprint “Printed Anno MDCXC” intended for private distribution. With the usual manuscript corrections (pages 11, 33, 39, 40, 42, 57, 70, 90, 92, 103) which, if not by Pepys himself, were likely done at his direction. Pepys was forced to resign from the Admiralty following the Revolution in 1688; his Memoires highlight “a side of Pepys’s life which is apt to be ignored” (Pforzheimer). ESTC R13464; Pforzheimer 793; Wing P1449.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois $600 - 800

348

PEROTTUS, Nicolaus (1430-1480). Cornucopiae linguae latinae Pyrrhus Perottus and Ludovicus Odaxius, editors. Venice: Paganinus de Paganinis, May 14, 1489.

Folio (306 x 212 mm). Collation: a8 b10 2a-2b8 c-z8 &8 98 x8 A-R8 S-T6. 373 leaves (of 374, lacking T6, blank), 59 lines. Types: 82 R; 82 Gk. With initial spaces and a few guide-letters, woodcut capital on 19a. (Some spotting and staining, a few mostly marginal tears repaired, some minor worming to first and last few leaves.) Contemporary blind-tooled vellum with central arabesque, tan morocco lettering-pieces; quarter morocco slipcase and chemise (upper joint starting, some soiling, a few tiny wormholes). Provenance: a few early annotations in ink; S. N. S. (old in initials on first text leaf); C. C. K. (morocco booklabel).

EDITIO PRINCEPS of Perottus’s commentary on the epigrams of Martial. The Cornucopiae was edited by the author’s nephew; Aldus would later edit the work himself for an edition he published in 1499.  BMC V 455; BSB-Ink P-215; Goff P-288; ISTC ip00288000.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$3,000 - 4,000

94 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

349

POE, Edgar Allan (1809-1849). “The Imp of the Perverse.” In: The May-Flower. [Boston: Saxton & Kelt, 1846].

8vo. Illustrated (lacking one engraved plate, toning, lacking pp. 178-201). Later red buckram gilt (rubbing).

Revised issue, preceded by the first appearance in Graham’s Magazine in July 1845. In his short story «The Imp of the Perverse,» Poe discusses his self-destructive impulses describing the «Imp» as the spirit that tempts a person do to things «merely because we feel we should not.” Not in BAL.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

350

[POE, Edgar Allan (1809-1849)]. [Review of “Fairyland”] pp. 168. -- [Review of “Al Aaraaf” and “Tamerlane”] pp. 295-298. In: The Yankee; and Boston Literary Gazette. No. 79. New Series. John NEAL, editor. N.p.: N.p., July 1829 - November 1829.

6 issues in one volume, 8vo (218 x 138 mm). Frontispiece of Jeremy Bentham. (Some toning and soiling, marginal chipping to a few leaves.) Contemporary half black sheep, spine gilt-lettered (some wear and soiling). Provenance: William C. McDonald (signature); John Macdonald (signature); Charles Rathay (signature).

EARLY POE PERIODICAL APPEARANCES, INCLUDING A REVIEW OF AL AARAAF, TAMERLANE, AND MINOR POEMS

Poe’s self-published Tamerlane and Other Poems (1827) attracted no attention; he reprinted the poem in his second book Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems in 1829. In that edition, he dedicated the poem to John Neal, the editor and publisher of The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette.  In the December 1829 issue, Neal printed a positive review under the heading “Unpublished poetry,” and included long extracts of “Tamerlane,” “Al Aaraaff,” and “To Ann” from Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems. The book was published shortly after in December 1829.

The September issue “contains the first reference to Poe in print and was the first encouragement he received as a poet” (Heartman and Canny). In that issue, Neal reprinted parts of Poe’s “Fairyland,” attributed to “E. A. P. of Baltimore,” remarking:  “If E.A.P. of Baltimore...would but do himself justice, might make a beautiful and perhaps a magnificent poem. There is a good deal here to justify such a hope” (p.168). See BAL 16124.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $600 - 800

351 [PRINTING HISTORY -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 48 works, including:

BRASSINGTON, W. Salt. A History of the Art of Bookbinding. L, 1894. LIMITED EDITION, number 3 of 50. -- CARTER, John et al. Printing and the Mind of Man. L et al, 1967. -- DAVIES, Hugh William. Devices of the Early Printers 1457-1560. L, 1935. -- GAEBELEIN, Frank E. Down through the Ages the Story of the King James Bible NY, 1936. Reprint. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- LOWNDES, William Thomas et al. The Bibliographer’s Manual of English Literature. L, 1864. 6 volumes. Contemporary half morocco gilt. -- MAUPIN, Olivier. Identifiez Conservez vos Papiers Anciens. 2006. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- A Glossary of Terms Used in Grecian, Roman, Italian, and Gothic Architecture. Oxford et al, 1850. 3 volumes. Later quarter morocco. Fifth edition. -- Printing and the Mind of Man. Great Britain, 1963. -- And others. Together, 48 works in 56 volumes, various folio, 4to and 8vo sizes, most illustrated, most in original bindings, some with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally very good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

352

[PRINTING HISTORY -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 44 works, including:

BEARMAN, Frederick A. et al. Fine and Historic Bookbindings from the Folger Shakespeare Library. Washington D.C, 1992. -- CASTLE, Egerton. English BookPlates Ancient and Modern. L et al, 1893. -- CURL, Peter. Designing a Book Jacket. L et al, 1956. --  CLAIRE, Colin. A History of Printing in Britain. L, 1965. -- GRAY, Victoria. Bookmen: London 250 Years of Sotheran Bookselling. L, 2011. Folding case. LIMITED EDITION, 123 of 250, SIGNED BY GRAY, LEO MAGGS, CHRIS SAUNDERS, and 2 others. -- HUNTER, Dard. Papermaking the History and technique of an Ancient Craft. NY, 1947. Second edition. -- KEYNES, Geoffrey. John Evelyn a Study in Bibliophily with a Bibliography of his Writings. Oxford, 1968. Second edition. -- KORN, Eric. Remainders. Manchester, 1989. SIGNED. -- REESE, William S. Stamped with a National Character: Nineteenth Century American Color Plate Books an Exhibition. NY: The Grolier Club, 1999. FIRST EDITION, SIGNED. -- TWYMAN, Michael. Printing 1770-1970. L, 1970. -- UZANNE, Octave. The French Bookbinders of the Eighteenth Century. Chicago: The Caxton Club, 1904. -- And others. Together, 44 works in 49 volumes, various folio, 4to, and 8vo sizes, most illustrated, all in original bindings, most with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally very good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

95FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
350 349

353

RACKHAM, Arthur (1867-1939), illustrator. -- WAGNER, Richard (1813-1883). [The Ring of the Niblung]. The Rhinegold & the Valkyrie. -- Siegfried & the Twilight of the Gods. London & New York: William Heinemann and Doubleday Page & Co., 1910, 1911.

2 volumes, 4to. Each with tipped-in color plates, printed tissue guards, numerous illustrations. (Some toning and light spotting.) Original vellum with pictorial gilt design by Rackham, top edge gilt, others uncut (lacking all ties but one, some minor soiling or minor wear, hinges tender in vol. I). Provenance: S.H. Winterbottom, gifted to; H.W. Winterbottom (gift inscription, 1911).

LIMITED EDITIONS, numbers 553 and 769 of 1,150 copies, BOTH SIGNED BY RACKHAM.

$600 - 800

355

RACKHAM, Arthur (1867-1939), illustrator. -- EVANS, Charles Seddon (18831944). The Sleeping Beauty. London & Philadelphia: William Heinemann & J.B. Lippincott Co., 1920.

Folio. One tipped-in color plate, color frontispiece, color-illustrated title-page, 16 full-page silhouette illustrations (4 in color, 7 double-page), numerous illustrations. (Some offsetting.) Original vellum-backed gilt-stamped pictorial boards, top edge gilt, others uncut (some light wear, toning and soiling).

FIRST EDITION, “Edition de Luxe,” LIMITED EDITION, number 260 of 625 copies of which 600 were for sale, SIGNED BY RACKHAM. With Rackham’s silhouette illustrations.

$600 - 800

354

RACKHAM, Arthur (1867-1939), illustrator. -- EVANS, Charles Seddon (18831944). Cinderella. London & Philadelphia: William Heinemann and J.B. Lippincott Co, 1919.

4to. Color frontispiece and numerous illustrations by Rackham (some fullpage, some in color). (Some light toning.) Original vellum-backed boards gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut (some soiling, some bumping). Provenance: Dorothy March (signature).

LIMITED EDITION, number 53 of 325 copies of “Edition de Luxe” printed on Japanese vellum (300 of which are for sale), SIGNED BY RACKHAM. As with Sleeping Beauty and other works illustrated by Rackham after World War I, he employs the use of silhouette images. Latimore & Haskell pp. 49-50.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

356

RACKHAM, Arthur (1867-1939), illustrator. The Arthur Rackham Fairy Book. London: George C. Harrap & Co., 1933.

4to. 8 color plates. Publisher’s vellum in gilt.

LIMITED EDITION, number 332 of 450 copies SIGNED ON LIMITATION PAGE BY ARTHUR RACKHAM.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

96 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
357 No Lot

358

RAND, Ayn (1905-1982). Atlas Shrugged. New York: Random House, 1957.

8vo. Original green cloth gilt, top edge stained navy (some minor scuffing); dust jacket (clipped, some toning, some chipping or scuffing). Provenance: unidentified Marvin David Davis, gifted to; Sara Lee Davis Sigoloff (1928-2020) (gift inscription, 1957).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST PRINTING, with the words “First Printing” on the copyright page, IN THE FIRST ISSUE DUST JACKET with “10/57” at the bottom of the front flap, and with the publisher’s name and address at the bottom of the rear flap. Atlas Shrugged, Rand’s fourth and final novel, is her most extensive statement of her Objectivist philosophy, depicted in a dystopian United States.

$500 - 700

359

RAND, Ayn (1905-1982). Atlas Shrugged. New York: Random House, 1957.

8vo. Modern half calf gilt with original dust jacket bound-in. FIRST EDITION of Rand’s fourth and final novel.

[With]: RAND. The Fountainhead. Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1943. 8vo. Modern half calf gilt; slipcase. FIRST EDITION.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400 360

RAND, Ayn (1905-1982). A group of 4 works, comprising:

Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal. New York: The New American Library, 1966. FIRST EDITION. -- For the New Intellectual. New York: Random House, 1961. -- Philosophy: Who Needs It. Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1982. FIRST EDITION. -- The Early Ayn Rand: A Selection from Her Unpublished Fiction. New York: The New American Library, 1984. FIRST EDITION. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

361

[REDOUTÉ Pierre-Joseph (1759-1840)]. VAUDOYER Jean-Louis (1883-1963). Choix des plus Belles Roses. Paris: [Librairie Denis et al], 1938.

Folio (415 x 321 mm). 11 color lithographs laid in (of 12, lacking plate III), plates IV and XI individually matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). Folded sheets uncut, in original cloth-backed printed board folder, original ties (some rubbing or light wear, some soiling).

LIMITED EDITION, number 670 of unknown limitation, recreating several of Redoute’s most iconic depictions of roses.

$400 - 600

97FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
361 358

362

[RELIGION -- ENGLAND]. A group of 7 works in 7 volumes, comprising:

The Apocrypha. Edinburgh: A. Donaldson and J. Reid, 1763. Contemporary calf pasted over modern calf; full vellum box. Provenance: James Chapman. -- CLARKE, Samuel. A Martyrologue Containing A Collection of All the Persecutions Which Have Befallen the Church of England... London: T. Ratcliffe and E. Mottershed, 1652. Illustrated. Later black cloth. -- PAYNE, William. The Unlawfulness of Stretching Forth the Hand to Resist or Murder Princes. London: A. Grover, 1683. Modern quarter calf; full calf slipcase. Provenance: Anne Wallis. -- QUARLES, Francis. Emblems, Divine and Moral. [London]: J. Nutt, [1736]. Illustrated. Contemporary calf; folding box. -- SIMON, Richard, Father. Critical Enquiries into the Various Editions of the Bible. London: Thomas Braddyll, 1584. Modern quarter calf. -- TAYLOR, Jeremy. The Rule and Exercises of Holy Dying. London: Printed by J.L. for Luke Meredith, 1690. With fold-out engraving. Modern green cloth. -- The Devout Child. New York: The Ava Maria Press, [n.d.]. Publisher’s stamped calf; slipcase. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, 8vo, 4to, 12mo, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

363

REMARQUE, Erich Maria (1898-1970). All Quiet on the Western Front. Boston: Little, Brown, & Company, 1929.

8vo. Contemporary half calf gilt with original spine and front cover bound-in (toning).

FIRST EDITION. All Quiet on the Western Front initially appeared as a serialized story in the German magazine Vossische Zeitung from November 10-December 9, 1928, and was immediately controversial amongst German war veterans for its perceived denigration of their efforts during the First World War. It was among the first so-called “degenerate books” to be publicly burned by the Nazis upon their ascension to power.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

364

[REMEDIES -- MANUSCRIPT]. Spine title: “Traite des Animaux.” France, ca 18th-century.

Approximately 1040 pp. (numbered 1-1112 with a few pagination inconsistencies), folio (372 x 239 mm). In French. Written in a calligraphic hand in black ink, with headings in black, brown, or red ink. (Some ink show-through, some soiling.) Bound in 18th-century vellum, brown morocco lettering-piece gilt (hinges starting, some soiling). Provenance: Jean-Baptiste Huzard (his Huzard de l’Institut stamp, lower margin first leaf).

A manuscript organizing earlier treatises on the use of various animal, vegetable, and mineral specimens for preparing drugs.  Each treatise is followed by a table of contents with the Latin and French remedy names in two columns. Various animals, birds, fish, insects, reptiles, metals, minerals, stones, and drugs are listed in alphabetical order (by Latin name) and their therapeutic value for adult and child are described. From the library of Jean-Baptiste Huzard (1755-1838), who was Inspector General of Veterinary schools in France and a member of both the Academy of Sciences and the Academy of Medicine.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

- 1,500

A group of 6 works, comprising:

ORFILA, M.P. A Popular Treatise on the Remedies to be Employed in Cases of Poisoning and Apparent Death. Philadelphia, 1818. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- COLBY, Benjamin. A Guide to Health, being an Exposition of the Principles of the Thomsonian System of Practice. Milford, NH, 1846. Third edition. -- And another copy. -- UNSFORD, Harris, translator. The Pathogenetic Effects of Some of the Principle Homoeopathic Remedies. L: Bailliere & Henry Renshaw, 1838. -- LAURIE, J. et al. Homoeopathic Domestic Medicine. NY, 1848. “American edition.” -- SMITH, John E. Sospita, or Live Long, Live Healthy and Save Doctor’s Bills. Syracuse, 1871. FIRST EDITION. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, all 8vo, original or contemporary bindings, condition generally good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

98 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$1,000
365 [REMEDIES].
$300 - 400 363 364 365

366

ROOSEVELT, Theodore (1858-1919). Through the Brazilian Wilderness. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1914.

8vo. Photogravure frontispiece, 2 route maps (one folding), and 48 plates. Original publisher’s decorated brown cloth gilt (sunning to spine and rear board). Provenance: bookplate. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. After his presidency, Roosevelt embarked on an expedition to South America. He and Colonel Candido Rondon partnered to explore and map the Rio da Duvida (“River of Doubt”); together, they navigated over 900 miles of unmapped territory in just two months.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$200 - 300

367

ROUGET DE LISLE, Claude Joseph (1760-1836). Autograph letter signed (“J. Rouget de Lisle”), as former officer with the French Royal Corps of Engineer to Monsieur Fauncy. Choisy-le-Roi, 6 September 1830.

1 page, 8vo, on a bifolium, addressed on integral leaf, postmarked verso, some minor staining and toning, small loss to upper corner not affecting text, some light creasing. Regarding the incomplete payment of 6,000 francs and lack of reimbursement from Mr. Goldier, a former judge. Author and composer of Marseillaise, which eventually became France’s national anthem in 1879, Rouget de Lisle was imprisoned for his defense of the monarchy, released after Robespierre’s fall, and was later imprisoned as a debtor. This letter was written during a time of financial distress for the composer and demands repayment of his property. [Above tipped-in to:] DAMÉ, Frédéric (1849-1907). L’Invasion 1792-1870. Paris: Alphonse Lemerre, 1870. 8vo (187 x 115 mm, interleaved with 199 x 133 mm). Hand-colored pictorial half-title, 2 plates, 2 hand-colored vignettes, stamp laid in after ALS. Later red morocco, spine gilt-lettered, top edge gilt, red, white and navy morocco doublures, STAMP-SIGNED TAFFIN (some staining, joints cracked but holding).

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$500 - 700

368

ROWLANDSON, Thomas (1757-1827), illustrator. -- COMBE, William (1741-1823). The Tour of Dr. Syntax in Search of the Picturesque. --The Second Tour of Dr. Syntax, in Search of Consolation. --The Third Tour of Dr. Syntax, in Search of a Wife. London: Nattali and Bond, [1855]. 3 works in 3 volumes, 8vo (241 x 151 mm). Hand-colored aquatint title-page in vol. I, 78 hand-colored aquatint plates (including frontispieces). (Some offsetting, some spotting or toning, a few leaves detached.) Contemporary half calf gilt, black leather lettering-pieces gilt, marbled boards, edges marbled (slight wear to extremities, rubbing to sides).  Ninth edition. See Tooley 434.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 300

369

RUSKIN, John (1819-1900). A group of 5 works, comprising:

The Art of England Lectures Given in Oxford. 1883. Later half red morocco. -- Verona and other Lectures 1894. Contemporary half morocco. -- Lectures on Art Delivered before the University of Oxford in Hilary Term Oxford, 1870. Original cloth. -- Sesame and Lilies. 1910. Contemporary polished calf gilt, STAMP-SIGNED BY BUMPUS LTD. Later reprint. -- Proserpina Studies of Wayside Flowers. NY, 1879. Original cloth. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, most published in Orpington, Kent by George Allen, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. [With:]  RUSSELL, Lord John, First Earl of Russell (1792-1878). Essays, and Sketches of Life and Character. By a Gentleman Who Has Left His Lodgings. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1820. 8vo (183 x 110 mm). 19th-century brown morocco gilt, edges gilt, concealing FORE-EDGE PAINTING of unidentified cityscape with citizens, soldiers, horses, and carriages (some light wear). FIRST EDITION.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

370

RUSKIN, John (1819-1900). A group of 4 works in 7 volumes uniformly bound, comprising:

The Arrows of the Chace. Sunnyside: George Allen, 1880. Two volumes. Illustrated. -- The Crown of Will Olive. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1866. -- On the Old Road. Sunnyside: George Allen, 1885. Three volumes. Provenance: Samuel Bronfman (bookplate). Wise 257. -- The Two Paths. London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1859. -- Together, 4 works in 7 volumes, all 8vo, uniformly bound in blue morocco by Mansell, condition generally fine.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $300 - 400

99FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
366 367 368

371

SAINT-EXUPERY, Antoine de (1900-1944). The Little Prince. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1943.

8vo. Translated from the French by Katherine Woods. Publisher’s salmon cloth; original dust jacket (stain to front cover, light chipping to head and tail of spine, toning). Provenance: “Barton Surter” (inscription).

FIRST AMERICAN TRADE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with 5-line colophon on final text leaf.  In the FIRST ISSUE dust jacket advertising $2.00 price, the 486 Fourth Avenue address, and with rear flap blank. Following the German invasion of France, Saint-Exupery went into exile in the United States, where he wrote and illustrated The Little Prince during the summer and fall of 1942. The book was published in English and French the following year, however due to the Vichy Regime’s ban on his works The Little Prince would not see publication in France until after the war. The book proved to be SaintExupery’s last, as he disappeared while flying a reconnaissance mission for the Allies the following year.

$800 - 1,200

373

DOCTER, Catherine E. The Village Church Facades of Santiago de Guatemala 1524-1773. Santiago Zamora: Libros San Cristobal, 2010.

2 volumes, folio. 18 (of 22) hand-colored plates by Grove Oholendt depicting various churches in the Antigua, Guatemala region. Two text volumes in English and Spanish with 22 silver gelatin photographs of each church by Daniel Chuache.  Text in publisher’s handwoven cream-colored wraps; plates loose as issued and housed with text volumes in vellum folding case gilt with clasps.

LIMITED EDITION, number 9 of 15 copies including ARTIST’S PROOFS

SIGNED BY OHOLENDT AND NUMBERED: “A/P 9/15.” The Libros San Cristobal Press was founded in 1990 by American artists Christopher Beisel and Grove Oholendt with the aim of establishing a fine press presence in an area which had once hosted the most literate ancient American civilization.

Of 200 copies printed, most were donated to libraries and academic institutions, with a special limited edition of 15 copies.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

372

SALINGER, Jerome David (“J.D.”) (1919-2010). The Catcher in the Rye Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1951.

8vo. Half-title. (Some toning.) Original black cloth, spine gilt-lettered (minor soiling or rubbing to sides, spine creased down center, lower corners lightly bumped); dust jacket (toned, some soiling or chipping).

First Canadian book club edition, with 1951 and “Printed and Bound in Canada T.H. Best Printing Co., Limited, Toronto” at bottom of copyright page. Without the book club indentation on the rear board; the jacket with the author’s photo on rear panel (not present in later printings), and the Book-ofthe-Month Club statement on the top and bottom of front jacket flap and top of rear flap.

[With:] SALINGER. Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour an Introduction. Boston & Toronto: Little, Brown and Company, 1959. 8vo. Halftitle. (Some light toning.) Original gray cloth (slight fading to extremities, water damage to lower spine and endpapers); dust jacket (price-clipped, soiled, some creasing or chipping). FIRST EDITION, second printing with “first edition” stated on copyright page, and integral dedication leaf.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $400 - 600

374

SAUNDERS, Richard. Palmistry, the Secrets thereof Disclosed. London: H. Bruges for G. Sawbridge, 1676.

2 parts in one volume (lacking portion of the second part, starting on L2r, “The position of moles...” comprising pp. 243-299”). 12mo (142 x 80 mm). Title printed within ornamental border; woodcut frontispiece, woodcut plates (one with hand-coloring). Contemporary calf (rebacked to style). Provenance: early tracing of the palm frontispiece on blank recto with hand-coloring.

Fourth (stated) edition. Saunders studied hermeneutics and “practiced astrology and cheiromancy during the golden age of the pseudo-sciences in England” (ODNB). His work is rare in any edition: we trace only 7 copies sold at auction in over 50 years (most sold copies incomplete). ESTC R220938 (locating only 8 copies); see Wing S753.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$500 - 700

100 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$400 - 600

375

SCOTT, Walter, Sir (1771-1832). Waverly Novels. Edinburgh: Adam & Charles Black, 1886-1887.

25 volumes, 8vo (182 x 118 mm). Frontispieces, illustrated title-pages, numerous illustrations. (Some minor spotting.) 20th-century half calf gilt, marbled boards, marbled edges, brown morocco lettering-pieces gilt (some light wear).

“Centenary Edition.”

$400 - 600

376

SCOTT, Sir Walter (1771-1832). A group of 7 works, comprising:

Cabinet Cyclopaedia... The History of Scotland. L, 1830. 2 volumes. Original cloth, printed paper lettering-pieces; slipcases. FIRST EDITION. -- The Lay of the Last Minstrel. L et al, 1805. Contemporary calf gilt (rebacked). Second edition. --Rokeby. Edinburgh et al, 1813. 19th-century half calf. -- The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte Philadelphia, 1827. 3 volumes. Contemporary half calf, original boards. -- The Lord of the Isles. Edinburgh et al, 1815. Fourth edition. -- And 2 others. Together, 7 works in 12 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most FIRST or FIRST AMERICAN EDITIONS, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

Reed,

volumes, 8vo (215 x

-

mm).

J. Nichols and Son et al, 1813.

gilt, brown leather lettering-

SHAW, George Bernard (1856-1950). A group of 11 works, comprising:

The Apple Cart: A Political Extravaganza. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1930. Publisher’s olive green

Library

John Leonard Gillis

Mediaeval

101FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
. Isaac
editor. London:
21
132
Half-titles, frontispieces, numerous illustrations. (Some light offsetting or spotting.) 19th-century calf
$600
800 378
cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Back to Methuselah. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1921. Publisher’s olive green cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Saint Joan. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1924. Publisher’s olive green cloth. -- Peace Conference Hints. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1919. Publisher’s green printed wraps; modern folding box. -- Too Good to Be True. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1934. Publisher’s dark orange cloth; original dust jacket with modern folding box. FIRST EDITION, INSCRIBED BY GEORGE BERNARD SHAW. -- Translations and Tomfooleries. London: Constable and Company Ltd., 1926. Publisher’s olive green cloth; original dust jacket. FIRST EDITION. -- Together, 11 works in 11 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.  The
of
Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of
Studies, Toronto $300 - 400 375 376 377 378

379

SOLIS Y RIBADENEYRA, Antonio de (1610-1686). The History of the Conquest of Mexico.... London: for T. Woodward, J. Hooke and J. Peele, 1724.

Five parts in one volume, folio (345 x 221 mm). Engraved frontispiece portrait, 2 engraved maps (one folding), 6 folding engraved plates. (Old repair to blank margin of title, a few leaves with soiling.) Contemporary English panelled calf (rebacked preserving old endpapers, hinges repaired, some light wear). Provenance: John Alexander Dowie (1847-1907), ScottishAustralian evangelist and faith healer (note indicating sale by A. C. McClurg & Co. to); Ramsay (note, 14 February 1910).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Townsend’s translation. De Solis, dramatist and historiographer to Philip IV of Spain, produced this “highly esteemed work” in 1684 (Brunet). Alden & Landis 724/165; ESTC T135491; Hill 1601; Palau 318693; Sabin 86487.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $500 - 700

380 [SOUTH AFRICA]. WYLD, James (1812-1887). Wyld’s Eastern from the River Limpopo to Algoa Bay Embracing the Transvaal Bechuana Land and Stella Land. Orange Free State Natal Zulu & Griquia-Land West Shewing the British Settlements & Native Locations. London, 1889.

Lithographed map with hand coloring, dissected into 30 sections, mounted on original linen backing, folding. With printed advertisement, “Wyld’s New Maps,” mounted to linen of one section. Overall 563 x 875 mm. (Some very minor browning.) Inserted into original brown publisher’s cloth case with printed labels (some soiling and light wear).  Wyld was a prolific publisher of maps; according to Punch, if a new country were discovered in the center of the Earth, Wyld would produce a map of it “as soon as it is discovered, if not before.”

[

With:] JOHNSTON, W. & A. K. W. & A. K. Johnston’s War Map of the Transvaal, Orange Free State, &c. London, [ca 1900]. Chromolithographed folding map, with original linen backing, folding into original cloth covers. Overall 712 x 875 mm. With inset of flags “for marking the movements of the troops,” and with 15pp. text tipped to front pastedown.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$500 - 700

381

SOUTHEY, Robert. The Life of Nelson. London: for John Murray, 1813.

2 volumes, 8vo (187 x 110 mm). Engraved frontispieces, advertisements. (Light dampstaining to first few leaves vol. II, a few small stains.)

Contemporary straight-grained morocco gilt (rebacked preserving original spines, endpapers renewed).

FIRST EDITION, second issue with p.258 correctly numbered. “Southey constructed an early-nineteenth century hero as a model for the young - in his words, a ‘patriotic manual’. He told a friend that he would write ‘such a life of Nelson as shall be put into the hands of every youth destined for the Navy’” (Knight, The Pursuit of Victory, p. 542).

$200 - 300

382

[SPECIMEN ALBUMS]. A group of 3 specimen albums with samples collected from The Holy Land, Greece and Southern Italy Great Britain, Denmark, Switzerland, Germany and France; and Egypt and Palestine. Ca 1890s.

8vo (195 x 160 mm). The Holy Land, Greece, and Southern Italy: album of 30 specimen leaves, most mounted one per page. -- Great Britain, Denmark, Switzerland, Germany and France: 29 specimen leaves, most mounted one per page. -- Egypt and Palestine: album of 31 specimen leaves. Each album with manuscript captions, interleaved with single-page manuscript descriptions and diary entries. Contemporary red morocco or cloth bindings (some wear).

Including plant specimens from popular tourist destinations, presumably, by a traveler on vacation or tour, from locations including: the Grotto of Jeremiah, Jerusalem; Solomon’s Pools, Bethlehem; The River Jordan, Palestine; The Acropolis, Athens; Herculaneum, Italy: Pompeii; the Coliseum; Stratford-on-Avon; Copenhagen; Versailles; the summit of Mt. Lebanon; Nazareth of Galilee; and Palestine. The accompanying entries describe the plant specimen as well as the historic import of the collection site.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500

102 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
- 700

383

[SPECIMEN ALBUM]. “Phaneroganiae alpinae.” 1869.

Oblong 8vo (215 x 110 mm). 24 dried flower specimens, neatly tipped to sheet, typescript captions for each. Unbound, laid into portfolio (some wear). Provenance: Miss Witzel (gift inscription).

Comprising flowers from an Alpine pass, collected by Eloise and Lenny McCue, 20 August 1869, in the Brunie Pass.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

385

[SPECIMEN ALBUM - ALGAE]. Spine title: “Algues Cotes de Bretagne.” Bretagne, ca 1850.

8vo (241 x 177 mm). Album of 119 specimens each mounted to a leaf and identified by its Latin name in ink (with occasional additions in red ink) in the lower right corner. All bound in on stubs in contemporary green morocco gilt, gilt “LB” monogram in each corner (spine sunned, a few scuffs).

Including algae specimens collected on the coast of Brittany.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$600 - 800

384

[SPECIMEN ALBUM]. M’CALLA, William. Algae Hibernicae. Dublin: Samuel B. Oldham, 1845, 1848.

2 volumes, 4to (360 x 263 mm). 100 mounted specimens on 99 leaves (one folding), each with printed and mounted caption; printed contents list in each volume. Original cloth (some wear and fading).

William M’Calla was an associate of the Edinburgh Botanical Society. The specimens were collected in Ireland, including examples from Dublin and Roundstone Bay. M’Calla was born at Roundstone, Connemara in 1814. An algologist, he discovered Erica mackaina. Algae Hibernicae is his only published work. RARE: OCLC locates only two copies at the National Library of Ireland and Trinity College Dublin.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,000 - 1,500

386

[SPECIMEN ALBUM - MUSHROOMS]. Collection of pressed and preserved Basidiomycete mushrooms, including specimens from nature and watercolor drawings. Ca 1915-1917.

A total of 52 herbarium sheets with pressed and dried specimens in individual folded packets, each packet labeled with captions identifying a scientific name, habitat, and place and date collected. 26 of the herbarium sheets include watercolor drawings; a few of the sheets are organized by family and housed in cardboard folders with a separate label identifying the family name. All loose in a cardboard box with lid.

Within each packet, the specimens include a cross section slice of the mushroom from apex to base on the right and a full pressed mushroom on the left.  Preserved specimens include culinary, non-edible, and poisonous mushrooms.  Genera include: Thelephoraceae, Clavariaceae, Ochrosporae, Hydnaceae, and Polyporaceae. Other samples include: Hypholoma fasciculare, Gomphidius glutinosus, and Collybia velutipes.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$600 - 800

103FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

387 Lot 387

[SPORTING]. FROST, Arthur Burdett (1851-1928). Shooting Pictures. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, [1895].

Folio. 12 large-scale chromolithographic plates, each with accompanying text by Charles Lanier, all loose (as issued). Retaining original pictorial boards (rubbed). All housed in modern portfolio.

FIRST EDITION of Arthur Burdett Frost’s masterpiece, “one of the most famous series of American sporting pictures” (Bennett). Frost remains one of America’s best-loved sporting artists, and the chromolithographs in this work are among his most desired. The subjects of his various shooting scenes include rail shooting, bay snipe, ruffed grouse, summer woodcock, prairie chicken, ducks from a blind, rabbit shooting, autumn woodcock, and quail shooting. Bennett 44; Reed the A. B. Frost Book.

$3,000 - 5,000

388

STEINBECK, John (1902-1968). The Grapes of Wrath. New York: Viking Press, 1939.

8vo. (Some occasional spotting.) Original beige cloth, pictorial stamped in dark brown (endpapers toned); dust jacket (chipping and a few short tears with occasional tissue or cellotape repairs verso); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION. Steinbeck was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Literature in 1940 for this novel. Goldstone & Payne A12a.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$1,200 - 1,800

389 STEINBECK, John (1902-1968). East of Eden. New York: The Viking Press, 1952.

8vo. Original green cloth stamped in red and dark green (spine lightly sunned, slight wear to extremities); dust jacket (price-clipped, some soiling, chipping, tiny loss to “eck” in “Steinbeck” on spine panel). Provenance: unidentified gift inscription from December 1953.

FIRST TRADE EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with ‘’bite’’ on p. 281, IN FIRST ISSUE DUST JACKET without reviews. Elia Kazan’s 1955 film of the same title was loosely based on the fourth and final part of Steinbeck’s novel. Goldstone & Payne A32.b.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

104 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

390

STEINBECK, John (1902-1968). A group of 13 works, including:

Cup of Gold. Covici Friede, [1936]. Second issue. Goldstone & Payne A1.b. -- The Winter of Our Discontent. 1961. FIRST TRADE EDITION. Goldstone & Payne A38.b. -- Once There was a War. 1958. -- The Forgotten Village. 1941. -- The Moon is Down. 1942. With added notation “By the Haddon Craftsmen” without p.112 large period. Goldstone & Payne A16.b. -- The Pearl. 1947. Goldstone & Payne A25.a. -- The Red Pony. 1945. Slipcase. FIRST ILLUSTRATED EDITION. -- A Russian Journal. 1948. 4th binding. Goldstone & Payne A27.a. -- America and Americans and Selected Nonfiction. 2002. -And 4 others. Together, 13 works in 13 volumes, all published in New York, most by the Viking Press, all 8vo, all in original bindings, most in dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally very good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

391

STEINBECK, John (1902-1968). A group of 8 works, including:

Sweet Thursday. 1954. In dust jacket. Second printing. Goldstone & Payne A33b. -- Cannery Row. 1945. In variant Canary-yellow cloth; in dust jacket. Fourth printing. Goldstone & Payne A22b. -- The Short Reign of Pippin IV 1957. In dust jacket. Book-of-the-Month Club edition, with no printer stated. Goldstone & Payne A36f. -- The Wayward Bus. 1947. In variant 2 binding with bus the same color. Goldstone & Payne A23a. -- Of Mice and Men. Covici Friede, 1937. Second printing. Goldstone & Payne A7b. -- And 2 others. Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, all published in New York, most by The Viking Press,  all 8vo, all in original cloth or cloth-backed boards, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good.

$400 - 600

392

STEVENSON, Robert Louis. (1850-1894). Kidnapped; Being Memoirs of the Adventures of David Balfour in the Year 1751. [London]: Cassell & Company, 1886.

8vo. With folding map and advertisement for Treasure Island. Contemporary scarlet full calf signed by Bayntun Riviere (foxing to map, lacking additional advertisements); cloth slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with “business” instead of “pleasure” on pg. 40, “nine o’clock” instead of “twelve o’clock” on pg. 64, and “Long Islands” instead of “Long Island” on pg. 101. Prideux 18.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$800 - 1,200

105FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

394

393

STEVENSON, Robert Louis (1850-1894). In the South Seas. London: Chatto & Windus, 1900.

8vo. (Some occasional spotting.) Original black cloth gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut (spine starting, slight wear to corners and spine ends). FIRST ENGLISH EDITION.

[Laid in:] STEVENSON. Autograph manuscript, a page from the manuscript of Chapter VI “Graveyard Stories” in In the South Seas (see above). One partial sheet, trimmed 4to (98 x 209 mm), containing approximately 171 words including holograph corrections and emendations, in ink, unruled. Describes, in part, the aftermath of a horrific event (published as pp. 193-194, the beginning of chapter VI “Graveyard Stories” in above copy). In part: “…lamenting. Nothing [followed]; and I must suppose the gale somewhat abated, for presently after a chief came visiting.... But when the day came and the doors were opened and men began to go abroad, blood-stains on the wall betrayed the tragedy.”

[Also laid in:] STEVENSON. Cabinet card half-portrait of Stevenson leaning, with one hand in pocket and the other holding cigarette, ca 1890s by James Notman Studio in Boston (printed verso).

$800 - 1,200

blue

EDITION OF THE AUTHOR’S FIRST REGULARLY-PUBLISHED BOOK. A pioneering work of outdoor literature which Stevenson wrote to fund his desire to be financially independent from his parents as well as to pursue a woman with whom he was madly in love

Cassell & Company,

black

(inscription).

EDITION.

David Balfour. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons,

York: Charles Scribner’s Sons,

Publisher’s brown cloth.

EDITION.

Triplex. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1901. Publisher’s green cloth. -- Prayers. Toronto: The Musson Book Company,

olive green cloth gilt. -- And 13 others. Together,

works in

volumes,

The Library of John Leonard Gillis

generally

the Pontifical

Illuminations by Alberto Sangorski.

of Mediaeval Studies,

106 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
393 394  STEVENSON,
Robert Louis
(1850-1894) An
Inland Voyage
. London: C. Kegan Paul & Co., 1878.  8vo. Frontispiece by
Walter Crane.
Half title Publisher’s light
cloth gilt (rubbing, spotting to endpapers). FIRST
and would later marry. Beinecke 12; Prideux 1.  The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto $500 - 700 395 STEVENSON, Robert Louis (1850-1894). A group of 20 prose works, including:  The Black Arrow. London: Cassell & Company, Ltd., 1888. Contemporary half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- The Master of Ballantrae. London:
Ltd., 1889. Modern half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Across the Plains. London: Chatto & Windus, 1892. Publisher’s
cloth. FIRST
--
1893. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. Provenance: Frances A. Campbell
-- St. Ives. New
1897.
FIRST
Provenance: Edward P. Vilas (bookplate). -- Aes
[n.d.].
Publisher’s
20
21
all 8vo, condition
fine.
Sold to Support
Institute
Toronto $500 - 700

396

STOWE, Harriet Beecher (1811-1896). Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly. Boston and Cambridge: Houghton, Osgood and Company, the Riverside Press, 1879.

8vo. Title printed in red and black, illustrated. Publisher’s half morocco gilt, top edge gilt (some light wear to extremities, lower hinge cracked, upper hinge starting); cloth folding case.

“New edition,” PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED

BY STOWE: “”Very truly yours H. B. Stowe Bay View House Aug. 16 1879.”  Bay View House was Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Miami, Florida winter home.  This 1879 new edition of Stowe’s work includes the first appearance of her 31-page introduction in which she describes writing the book. [Laid in:] A stereo view card showing the Florida “Residence of Mrs. H. B. Stowe.” On verso: “Florida Views.” Woot & Bickle, Photographers. Jacksonville, Fla.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,000 - 2,000

396

397

[TEA]. A group of 4 works, comprising:

A Mother. Key to Knowledge; Or, Things in Common Use Simply and Shortly Explained. L: John Harris, n.d. Later quarter green leather. Seventh edition. -- TAYLOR, Fred G. A Saga of Sugar. N.p.: Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, 1944. In dust jacket. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- OKAKURA, Kakuzo. The Book of Tea. NY, 1964. -- A World-wide Tea Organization. The Romance of Tea. NY et al: Irwin-Harrisons-Whitney, Inc., n.d. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, most in original wrappers or cloth, condition generally good.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

398

TENNYSON, Alfred Lord (1809-1892). A group of 5 works, comprising:

Idylls of the King. L, 1864. “New Edition.” -- Tiresias and other Poems. L, 1885. FIRST EDITION, second issue with printer’s imprint at the food of p. 204.  -- In Memoriam. L, 1850. Contemporary half morocco gilt. FIRST EDITION.  -- Enoch Arden. L, 1869. Later edition. -- The Works. NY et al, 1907. Contemporary half morocco. Later printing of the “New Edition with Additions.” -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, most contemporary morocco or calf gilt, condition generally good.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

107FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

399

THACKERAY, William Makepeace (1811-1863).  A group of 6 works, comprising:

The History of Pendennis. L, 1849-1850. 2 volumes. Later maroon calf.  -- The Virginians. L, 1858-1859. 2 volumes. -- Rebecca and Rowena. L, 1850. Later half calf gilt by Bayntun. --  TROLLOPE, Anthony. Thackeray. L, 1879. Later half calf. FIRST EDITION. -- Lovel the Widower. L, 1861. Contemporary green crushed levant gilt, stamp-signed by Riviere & Son; original cloth bound in. FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. -- The History of Henry Esmond. NY, 1852. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- Together, 6 works in 8 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, most in contemporary half morocco or calf, most FIRST EDITIONS IN BOOK FORM, condition generally good. Provenance: one book from the collection of Henry Sayre van Duzer (bookplate), whose collection of Thackeray was sold at auction by Anderson Galleries on 6-7 February 1922.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$200 - 300

400

TOLSTOY, Count Lev Nikolayevich (1828-1910). Anna Karenina. Nathan Haskell Dole, translator. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., 1886.

8vo (191 x 127 mm). Frontispieces, titles printed in red and black, numerous illustrations. (Some soiling, some marginal chipping in vol. II.) 20th-century navy morocco gilt (some light wear, joints starting).

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH, the first to be published in English,” with glossary at the end of vol. II. Anna Karenina was first published in book form in Moscow in 1878.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$600 - 800

401 VERNE, Jules (1828-1905). Tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours. Paris: Pierre Jules Hetzel, [1873].

8vo. (Some browning.) Contemporary quarter calf (corners and edges restored, recased, spine repaired); slipcase. Provenance: Claudine (presentation inscription).

Later printing, PRESENTATIO COPY, INSCRIBED BY JULES VERNE, “Hommage de Claudine.” Around the World in Eighty Days was serialized in Le Temps beginning on November 6, 1872 and was published to coincide with the dates given in the text by Phineas Fogg; because of this many believed that the journey was actually taking place, with numerous bets placed on its success. The last two entries were published on December 22 - one day after Fogg announces his success.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

108 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
400 401

402

402 WALTON, Izaak (1593-1683) and Charles COTTON (1630-1687). The Compleat Angler. Sir John Hawkis, editor. London: John, Francis, and Charles Rivington, 1784.

2 parts in one, 8vo (182 x 114 mm). Frontispieces, 14 engraved plates, numerous illustrations. (Some spotting or toning, some offsetting, some minor soiling.) Contemporary calf gilt, gilt-fish decoration to spine, dark green leather lettering-piece gilt (some wear, front joint cracked with hinge reinforced, some minor soiling). Provenance: James Chaffin (signature); unidentified later owner (“The Bend” bookplate); sold D.P. Elder and Morgan Shepard (ticket). Fourth Hawkins edition, which includes significant additions by Sir Hawkins, who was one of Samuel Johnson’s closest friends.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

403

WARNER, Robert (fl. 1862-1894) and Benjamin Samuel WILLIAMS (1822-1890). Select Orchidaceous Plants. [First series]. London: Lovell Reeve & Co., 1862.

Folio (434 x 317 mm). 40 color lithographic plates. (Some toning or spotting, some creasing to tissue guards, gutter to title-page with 2 tears not affecting text, a few short tears to upper edge near gutter on last few leaves.) 20th-century half black crushed levant gilt (some wear, corners lightly bumped, minor staining to rear cover).

FIRST EDITION of the first series of Warner and Williams’ work on orchids. Nissen, BBI 2108.

Property from a Private Collection

$2,500 - 3,500

404

WAUGH, Evelyn, (1903-1966). [Sword of Honour trilogy]. Men at Arms. --  Officers and Gentlemen. -- Unconditional Surrdender. London: Chapman & Hall, 1952-61.

3 volumes, 8vo. All in publisher’s cloth and dust jackets. FIRST EDITIONS, based on Evelyn Waugh’s experiences during the Second World War. The Sword of Honour trilogy comprises Waugh’s best-remembered works, with Men at Arms receiving the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1952.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$400 - 600

403

109FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

405

WESTALL, William (1781-1850) and Samuel OWEN (ca 1769-1857). Picturesque Tour of the River Thames. London: R. Ackermann, 1828.

One volume expanded to 4, 4to (350 x 280 mm). Additional title-pages printed in red and black, folding map, 26 colored views and vignettes, EXTRA ILLUSTRATED by the addition of 2 original color paintings and approximately 416 views and maps (many inlayed or mounted to size, approximately 150 in color or hand colored, 3 folding). (A few leaves near front or rear detaching in some volumes, some chipping, original painting in vol. I split affecting image, some toning or light spotting.) Late 19-century red morocco gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut, STAMPSIGNED BY H. SOTHERAN & CO. (covers detached or detaching and lacking in vol. III, endpapers chipped, some light wear and staining).

FIRST EDITION, EXTRA-ILLUSTRATED with plates primarily from Ackermann’s History of the University of Oxford, Boydell’s A History of the River Thames, Cooke’s Views on the River Thames, and Ireland’s Picturesque Views on the River Thames. Additions include: Original painting of Cookham by Daniel Sherrin bound into the front of vol. I. -- Original painting of Bisham by Daniel Sherrin bound into vol. II after p. 86.  -- Large folding “Map of The River Thames, from Oxford to its Mouth” at the rear of vol. II.  -- Large folding “View of London from Lambeth” before p. 143 in vol. III. See Abbey, Scenery 435.

$6,000 - 8,000

406

WHITE, Elwyn Brooks (“E.B. White”) (1899-1985). Charlotte’s Web. Garth WILLIAMS, illustrator. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1952.

8vo. Numerous illustrations. Original cloth stamped in blue and black, decorated blue endpapers; dust jacket (price-clipped, some chipping and minor soiling).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE with “I-B” on the copyright page in FIRST STATE DUST JACKET with four blurbs for Stuart Little on the rear panel. White’s children’s literary classic won the John Newbery Medal in 1953, the Horn Book Fanfare in 1952, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal in 1970, and the Massachusetts Children’s Book Award in 1984.

$500 - 700

110 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

407

WIEGLEB, Johann Christian (1732-1800), editor. -- Johann Nikolaus MARTIUS (fl. 1779-1789). Unterricht in der Natuerlichen Magie, oder zu allerhand belustigenden und nuetzlichen Kunststuecken. Berlin & Stettin: Friedrich Nicolai, 1779.

8vo (192 x 115 mm). 9 folding engraved plates. (Some toning and soiling.)

Contemporary boards, rebacked and cornered in modern paste-paper, modern leathering pieces stamped in silver, red-stained edges (endpapers renewed, slight wear to extremities).

German translation of Martius’ manual for the use of natural magic in healing, first published in 1700.

$200 - 300

409 [WORLD LEADERS].  A group of 9 framed items, many signed, by various literary, political, and scientific figures of the 19th and 20th centuries, comprising:

GEORGE, Lloyd. Autograph note signed addressed to British politician Joseph Chamberlain on the occasion of his seventy-third birthday. With accompanying black and white photograph SIGNED BY GEORGE in lower margin. -- EINSTEIN, Albert. Original print by [Name] SIGNED BY ALBERT EINSTEIN in lower margin. -- ROOSEVELT, Edith. Black and white photo portrait with accompanying autograph note signed to Joseph Frost: “With good wishes from Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt.” -- Includes printed images of Abraham Lincoln and Albert Einstein and SIGNED images of Herbert Hoover and James Whitcomb Riley. -- Together, 9 items, of which 7 signed, all framed, not examined out of frames, condition generally fine.

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire $300 - 400

408

WILLIAMS, Tennessee (1911-1983). Moise and the World of Reason. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1975.

8vo. Publisher’s full blue morocco in original shrink wrap.

LIMITED EDITION, SIGNED BY TENNESSEE WILLIAMS. Moise and the World of Reason was the second and final of Tennessee Williams’s novels to be published during his lifetime.

[With]: It Happened the Day the Sun Rose. Los Angeles: Sylvester & Orphanos, 1981. Publisher’s black cloth. LIMITED EDITION, number 247 of 330 copies SIGNED BY TENNESSEE WILLIAMS.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$150 - 250

410

YEATS, William Butler (1865-1939). Poems. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1895.

8vo. Half-title, pictorial title-page by H. Graville Fell. (Some minor toning and soiling.)  Original tan cloth gilt, fore-and-bottom edges uncut (some soiling, spine darkened as usual, near annotations on last leaf).

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED EDITION, unnumbered one of 750 copies. Poems saw the beginning of Yeats’ lifelong commitment to “weeding and rewriting his early work into a canon” (R.F. Foster, Cambridge Companion to W.B. Yeats). Wade, 15.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$800 - 1,200

111FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
End of Session I
112 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 411

411-471

411

WASHINGTON, George (1732-1799). Autograph letter signed (“G.Washington”) to Battaile Muse. Mount Vernon, 28 July 1785.

3 pages, 4to, on a bifolium, some minor mostly marginal chipping touching a few letters, a few discreet repairs, some show-through, docketed verso; in a custom slipcase Provenance: John Gribbel (sold his sale, Parke-Bernet, 30 October-1 November 1940, lot 775.

Washington writes his land agent, Battaile Muse (1750-1803), regarding land he owned in Frederick County. By Washington’s own admission, rents were in arrears and his knowledge about the status of his tenants was poor.

Washington had purchased the land in Frederick County from the sale of Colonel George Mercer’s estate in 1774. Mercer served under Washington during the French and Indian War, and became Washington’s aide-de-camp in 1775. Battaile Muse was the son of Colonel George Muse, who served with Washington in the Virginia Regiment in protecting Virginia claims against French and Native forces, culminating in the Ft. Necessity Campaign. The younger Muse was a planters’ agent in Berkeley County Virginia (present-day Jefferson County West Virginia), and Washington enlisted him as agent for his land in Berkeley, Frederick, Fauquier and Loudoun Counties in 1784. Published in Fitzpatrick, Writings, vol. 28 p. 212.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$6,000 - 8,000

412

[ADAMS, John (1735-1826), his copy]. HUME, David (1711-1776). The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688 London: A. Millar, 1763.

Volume VII only (of 8, lacking vols. I-VI and VIII), 8vo (202 x 124 mm). Half-title. (Some minor spotting or browning.) Contemporary sprinkled calf gilt (rebacked preserving original spine, a few other repairs); custom slipcase. Provenance: Sold Charles Hamilton Galleries New York, 6 May 1971, Lot 5. “A new edition.”

JOHN ADAMS’ COPY SIGNED ON THE TITLE-PAGE, with an additional marginal annotation (“Nolle?”) presumably in Adams’ hand on p.177.

Adams’ published writings and correspondence include numerous references to Hume’s works, indicating that he read Hume carefully. In his Thoughts on Government (1776), Adams wrote: “Americans in this age are too enlightened out of their liberties, even by such mighty names as Locke, Milton, Turgot, or Hume; they know that popular elections of one essential branch of the legislature, frequently repeated, are the only possible means of forming a free constitution...Upon this principle, they cannot approve the plan of Mr. Hume, in his ‹Idea of a Perfect Commonwealth’.”

In a letter of 15 July 1813 to Thomas Jefferson, Adams wrote: “ The English Commonwealth, the Fate of Charles 1st. and the military despotism of Cromwell had Sickened Mankind with disquisitions on Government to Such a degree, that there was Scarcely a Man in Europe who had looked into the Subject. David Hume had made himself So fashionable with the Aid of the Court and Clergy, Atheist as they call’d him, and by his elegant Lies against the Republicans and gaudy daubings of the Courtiers, that he had nearly laughed into contempt Rapin Sydney and even Lock.” In the present copy, the marginal annotation presumably in Adams’ hand refers to a paragraph about Cromwell.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

113FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$3,000 - 4,000 Session II: Wednesday, 9 November | 10am CT The Patrick Atkinson Collection of Signed Books & Manuscripts Lots 411-512 U.S. Presidents Lots
412

414

MONROE, James (1758-1831). Partly printed document signed (“James Monroe”), as President, countersigned by George Graham (1772-1830) as Commissioner of the General Land Office. 1 December 1824.

1 page, oblong folio, 250 x 360 mm, accomplished in manuscript, paper seal, docketed verso, some creasing and soiling; custom slipcase; with engraved portrait

Ohio River Survey land deed for 178 and 64/100ths of an acre of land in Zanesville, Ohio to Daniel Craft of Fayette County, Pennsylvania. Recorded 1 December 1824 for Daniel Craft under “Ohio” by the U. S. Department of Interior Bureau of Land Management General Land Office Records.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

413

JEFFERSON, Thomas (1743-1826). Partly printed document signed (“Th. Jefferson”), as President, countersigned by James MADISON (1751-1836) as Secretary of State, 27 May 1806.

1 page, oblong folio, 425 x 525 mm, accomplished in manuscript, two paper seals, a few minor creases or short tears, some minor staining, tiny loss to blank area of left margin; in custom slipcase

Four-language ship’s passport giving permission to “John Hooper, master or commander of the Brig called Jane of the burthen of 145 tons or thereabouts, lying at present in the port of Boston bound for South America and laden with beef, bread, brandy, dry goods, hats, merchandise, iron, rum, rice, salt, boards, wine, tobacco, earthenware...”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $4,000 - 6,000

415

ADAMS, John Quincy (1767-1848). An Oration Delivered before the Inhabitants of the Town of Newburyport, at their Request, on the Sixty-First Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, July 4th, 1837. Newburyport: Morss and Brewster, Newburyport Herald Office, 1837.

12mo (209 x 130 mm). 68pp. (Some spotting.) Original printed wrappers (lacking backstrip, front wrapper trimmed and tipped to title-page); custom slipcase. Provenance: Mrs. Dexter (presentation inscription from Adams); E. V. Heise (booksellers’ description, sold the Lincoln Library, Shippensburg, PA, 6 April 1943); Henry E. Luhrs (sold 2007).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY ADAMS to Mrs. Dexter: “Mrs. Dexter from John Quincy Adams.” In his oration, Adams discusses the history of the independence movement, finding support from the Declaration of Independence, attacking nullification and states’ rights, condemning slavery, and supporting free speech. Sabin 294.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $1,000 - 1,500

114 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

416

JACKSON, Andrew (1767-1845). Partly printed document signed (“Andrew Jackson”), as President, countersigned by Martin VAN BUREN (1782-1862) as Secretary of State, and J. MacPherson Berrien as Attorney General. 1 October 1830.

1 page, folio, 375 x 290 mm, on vellum, with paper seal and ribbon, some soiling. [With:] 3 1/2-page manuscript inventor’s description on 2 sheets of vellum.

Granting a patent to Lester E. Denison for “machinery for pressing.” The letters patent accompanying the patent describe specifications for “Denison’s Improved Eccentric Press,” including requirements for the frame, construction, and assembly of the press, concluding, “That which I claim as my invention & improvement is the application of two or more eccentric cambs or pieces to operate as above specified thereby doubly increasing the distance of motion without increasing the size of the eccentric pieces.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

418

[HARRISON, William Henry (1773-1841), his copy]. ULLOA, Antonio de (1716-1795) and Jorge Juan y SANTACILLA (1712-1773). A Voyage to South America. London: L. Davis and C. Reymers, 1760.

Volume I only (of 2, lacking volume II), 8vo (195 x 119 mm). Engraved map (torn along fold, defective). (Some browning and staining.) Contemporary mottled calf, red and black lettering-pieces gilt (rebacked preserving original spine). Provenance: William Henry Harrison (faint signatures title-page and p.iii, presentation inscription); Morgan Neville (presentation inscription from William Henry Harrison, signature on verso of map); Fayette Neville (signature rear flyleaf); Meta A. Bigelow (signature on flyleaf dated 1874); Marshall B. Coyne (his collection, sold Sotheby’s New York, 5 June 2001, lot 120).

Second edition. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON’S COPY, SIGNED BY HIM ON THE TITLEPAGE AND INSCRIBED ON THE FLYLEAF: “Presented by W. H. Harrison to his Friend Morgan Neville.” William Henry Harrison served only 31 days as President; books from his library are rare. Sabin 36813.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $2,000 - 3,000

417

JACKSON, Andrew (1767-1845). Partly printed document signed (“Andrew Jackson”), as President, countersigned by John Henry Eaton as Secretary of War. 1 October1830.

1 page, oblong folio, 259 x 407 mm, docketed recto, blind seal, separations and minor chipping to a few creases, some minor soiling Provenance: Charles Davis (typescript letter, 1928).

Appointing Seraphim Masi as “First Lieutenant of Infy. 2d Reg. 3 Brig” in the Militia of the District of Columbia.  Seraphim Masi was an American silversmith who worked in Washington D. C.  He was commissioned to create the second Treaty Seal of the United States in 1825 which was in use until 1871, when the government stopped the use of pendant seals and retired the die, which is now held by the National Archives.  Several skippets, created to protect the official wax seals, are attributed to Masi as well, including several gold skippets for Commodore Perry’s expedition to China in 1852. Masi also had a contract to regulate and repair the clocks of the United States Senate.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$600 - 800

115FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

419

[TYLER, John (1790-1862) -- AUTOGRAPH ALBUM]. An autograph album, 1843, assembling more than 280 Senators and Congressmen, including three present, past or future Presidents.

8vo (181 x 110 mm). 62 pp., including a 4 pp. partial index. Limp blue straight-grained morocco; custom slipcase.

INCLUDING THE SIGNATURES OF THREE PRESIDENTS, comprising: JOHN TYLER (“John Tyler”), AS PRESIDENT, JOHN QUINCY ADAMS (“John Quincy A”), as Representative, and JAMES BUCHANAN (“James Buchanan”), as Senator. Also signed by 5 members of the President’s cabinet, comprising: Abel P. Upshur, Secretary of the Navy; Walter Forward, Secretary of the treasury; John C. Spencer, Secretary of War; Hugh S. Legare, Attorney general; Daniel Webster, Secretary of State; and Willie P. Mangum, President Pro Tempore of the Senate.  Also included are the signatures of approximately approximately 227 members of the House of Representatives, 48 members of the Senate, and 2 chaplains.

Compiled by John Van Buren during the 27th Congress, signed by him and dated July 1843 on the pastedown.  Some members of Congress kept albums containing the signatures of their fellow legislators as was customary.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $1,000 - 1,500

420

TYLER, John (1790-1862). Partly printed document signed (“John Tyler”), as President, countersigned by William Wilkins (1779-1865), Secretary of War. 26 February 1845.

1 page, folio, 434 x 345 mm, on vellum, paper seal, docketed recto, creased, minor soiling, a few tiny holes along a few folds; custom slipcase

Military commission, appointing Augustus Cook as Brevet Second Lieutenant of Dragoons. Accompanied by a partly engraved document, United States Military Academy diploma for Augustus Cook, appointing him to the Infantry or Dragoons in the U. S. Army, 26 June, 1844.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$600 - 800

116 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

421

[POLK, James K. (1795-1849), his copy]. CLARKE, M. St. Clair and David A. HALL. Cases of Contested Elections in Congress, from the year 1789 to 1834, Inclusive Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1834.

8vo (226 x 140 mm). (Some minor spotting or browning, title leaf reinforced gutter margin.) Contemporary sheep, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (spine repaired preserving portion of original spine, some light wear). Provenance: Tennessee State Library (stamps lower margin title-page and a few other leaves).

FIRST EDITON, JAMES K. POLK’S COPY SIGNED ON THE TITLE-PAGE (“J. K. Polk”), from his legal library. Polk studied law in the office of Tennessee’s top criminal attorney Felix Grundy, who would later serve as U. S. Attorney General. After establishing his own legal practice, Polk began his political career at the age of 28, being elected to the Tennessee House.

Sabin 13437.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $1,000 - 1,500

422

TAYLOR, Zachary (1784-1850). Autograph letter signed (“Z. Taylor”), as Lieutenant Colonel in the U. S. Army, to Hon. J. H. Eaton. Fort Snelling “near the falls of St. Anthony,” 6 July 1829.

2 pages, 4to; custom slipcase.

Taylor writes to Secretary of War J. H. Eaton (1790-1856)  as Lieutenant Colonel in the U. S. Army at Fort Snelling “near the falls of St. Anthony” on the Upper Mississippi Taylor recommending J[ohn] C[raighead] Culbertson as Sutler.

Culbertson, who was born in Pennsylvania in 1791, fought in the War of 1812.  Taylor provides a detailed history of Culbertson’s service, describing his involvement on the Niagara frontier “in most of the hard fought battles in that quarter,” and describing how he was wounded at the Battle of Bridgewater. After he was wounded, Culbertson “continued to serve with reputation in the peace establishment.”  Taylor mentions Culbertson’s service in Baton Rouge, Council Bluffs and the Yellowstone.  On the news that Culbertson’s post was to be broken up and “the troops removed to Prairie du Chien” Taylor concludes: “I hope Capt. Culbertson will be given the Sutling of the post occupied by the greatest number of companies of the 1st Infy., by complying with which request, [Eaton] will confer not only a particular obligation on me by the officers generally at that post.”

Taylor, who served as President from March 1849 until his death in July 1850, was a Major general whose reputation as “Old Rough and Ready” was a result of his Seminole War and Mexican-American War victories which won him election to the White House.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $3,000 - 5,000

423 [FILLMORE, Millard (1800-1874), his copy]. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the Commerce and Navigation of the United States for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1862. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1864.

8vo (224 x 143). (A few leaves with light browning.) Original cloth (rebacked, preserving original spine); custom slipcase.

MILLARD FILLMORE’S COPY, SIGNED TWICE: vertically in ink on the front pastedown (“Millard Fillmore April 10 1865”), and on the title-page (“Millard Fillmore April 10 1865”).

The Report includes tabular statements of imports and exports for the United States for fiscal year ending June 30, 1863. On 2 March 1861, the Morrill Tariff was adopted increasing the import tariff in the United States.  The tariff appealed to industrialists as a way to foster rapid industrial growth, and increased rates encouraged domestic industry addressed the growing federal deficit. It brought forth a period of continuous protectionism in the United States that would last until the adoption of the Revenue Act of 1913.

When Fillmore served as a member of the U. S. House of Representatives, he was active in framing the protective Tariff of 1842 as chairman of Committee on Ways and Means. A protectionist tariff schedule, the Tariff of 1842 was repealed in 1846 and replaced by the Walker Tariff.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

117FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$800 - 1,200

424

[FILLMORE, Millard (1800-1874) -- AUTOGRAPH ALBUM]. An autograph album, ca 1850s-1870s, assembling more than 190 inscriptions, signatures, mounted signatures or letters by various American Presidents, statesmen, missionaries and prominent figures, including: James A. Garfield (inscription: “James A. Garfield / June 1868. Hiram, Ohio”), Millard Fillmore (inscription: “Millard Fillmore / Washington City May 28. 1852”), Daniel Webster (mounted inscription and letter), Henry Clay, William Seward (clipped signature), Jefferson Davis (clipped signature), Patrick  Henry (clipped signature laid in loose, with a note containing dried flowers from his grave and related note), Henry Ward Beecher (inscription), Bayard Taylor (letter), Samuel F. B. Morse (inscription), Edwin E. Bliss, Hannibal Hamlin, and numerous others.

4to (229 x 183mm). (Occasional soiling or discoloration from adhesives, some letters or notes laid in loose.) Contemporary morocco, decorated in gilt and blind (rebacked in cloth preserving most of original spine, some other restoration).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $800 - 1,200

425

[FILLMORE, Millard (1800-1874), his copy].  Report of the Commissioner of the General Land Office for the Year 1865.  Washington: Government Printing Office, 1865.

8vo (224 x 143mm). 15 (of 16) folding maps bound at end, some with hand-coloring. (Lacking one folding map, some maps with some minor spotting, some with splits or breaks at folds, some maps with small repairs or reinforcements.) Contemporary half morocco (joints and extremities restored).

MILLARD FILLMORE’S COPY, SIGNED TWICE: vertically in ink on front pastedown (“Millard Fillmore /Dec. 10 . 1866”), and on the title-page (“Millard Fillmore / Dec. 10. 1866”).

A rare report on the status of government-owned lands in the South and West at the end of the Civil War. The maps are extremely precise, with some geographic details plus full display of what areas had been surveyed and laid out. Includes a large general map of the west, plus individual maps of Arkansas, Alabama, Florida, Iowa and the Dakota Territory, Kansas and Nebraska, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, Minnesota, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota, Oregon, and California and Nevada.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

426

[FILLMORE, Millard (1800-1874), his copy].  STEWART, John. Stable Economy: A Treatise on the Management of Horses, in relation to Stabling, Grooming, Feeding, Watering, and Working. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1845.

8vo (195 x 115mm). (Some dampstaining to upper inner margins, some minor browning). Original publisher’s cloth (spine ends, joints and extremities repaired, upper hinge reinforced). Provenance: Millard Fillmore (see below); Grover W. Wende (bookplate).

MILLARD FILLMORE’S COPY, SIGNED THREE TIMES: on front pastedown (“Millard Fillmore / Buffalo New York”), vertically on the front free endpaper (“Millard Fillmore / Buffalo”), and at the head of the title-page (“Millard Fillmore”, with shelfmark below).

Fillmore lived in Buffalo, New York for many years before his election as vice president under Zachary Taylor, establishing both a family and a highly successful law firm in northern New York. He was also an avid reader who was the first to establish a library in the White House when he discovered its lack of reading material. Grover William Wende (1866-1926), a prominent physician and graduate of University of Buffalo Medical School, who was also a Professor in the Medical School for many years. He served on the Surgeon General’s Advisory Committee for the detection and treatment of venereal and skin diseases during World War I. Grover W. Wende Hall at Buffalo State University was named in recognition of his work there in the 1970s, and is now home to the University’s School of Nursing.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

118 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

PIERCE, Franklin (1804-1869). Partly printed document signed (“Franklin Pierce”) as President, countersigned by Secretary of State William L. Marcy. 30 September 1853.

One page, folio, 425 x 551mm. Original paper seal of the United States in center right-hand portion, accomplished in manuscript. (Folds, some minor reinforcements to marginal fold separations on verso.)

A four-language ship’s passport in French, Spanish, English and Dutch, for the vessel William Wirt, commanded by Edward R. Ashley, sailing from New Bedford to the Pacific Ocean presumably for a whaling voyage.

[Slipcased with:]

PIERCE, Franklin. Partly printed document signed (“Franklin Pierce”) as President, countersigned by Secretary of State William L. Marcy. 14 November 1855.

One page, folio, 443 x 563mm. Original paper seal of the United States in center righthand portion, accomplished in manuscript. (Completely separated in two vertically along center fold [not affecting signatures], a few marginal tears repaired on verso.)

A four-language ship’s passport in French, Spanish, English and Dutch, for the vessel Roman, commanded by Zebeder Devoll sailing from New Bedford to the Pacific Ocean laden with utensils and provisions, stores and utensils for a whaling voyage.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,000 - 1,500

428

BUCHANAN, James (1791-1868). Manuscript document signed (“James Buchanan”) as President, countersigned by Secretary of State Lewis Cass. A contemporary bilingual copy of the ratification of interpretations to Article 12 of the original Treaty of the 26th of July 1851 between the United States and the Republic of Peru. 7 May 1858.

23 pages on 12 leaves, 343 x 255mm. Text in English and Spanish. Ruled in red throughout. Written in a secretarial hand in dark brown ink. (Upper lefthand corner of sheets torn away with some minor loss to some text, with previously bound edge a little rough from stitching, etc. [apparently removed from a bound volume], some soiling); slipcased.

In 1841 the United States made claims against Peru as they seized American ships in neutral waters, especially whalers. By 1850 relations with Peru improved and were considered a friendly port resulting in the Treaty of 1851. This document summarizes the results of a convention held to clarify the interpretation of Article 12 of the original Treaty of 1851 between the United States and the Republic of Peru concerning duty free commerce for the whaling ships of the United States in the ports of entry of Peru. It includes four articles of clarification with regard to barter or sale restrictions and exemptions for whaling ships at various levels.

The concluding article states: “The stipulations in this Convention shall have the same force and effect as of inserted, word for word, in the Treaty concluded in Lima on the 26th of July 1851, and of which they shall be deemed and considered as explanatory. For which purpose, the present Convention shall be approved and ratified by the President of the United States of America, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate thereof… done at Lima the fourth day of July [1857].”

With scribal signatures and seals of  J. Randolph Clay and Manuel Ortiz de Zevallos. The final two pages (in English) confirming the ratification by the Senate on 30 April 1858, and concluding with President’s order of the seal to be and affixed [not affixed on this copy] followed by his signature.

An interesting document offering a detailed perspective on international affairs as it relates to whaling and restrictive commerce in the mid-1800s.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,000 - 1,500

429

[BUCHANAN, James (1791-1868), his copy].  Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Judicial Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Vol. V. Newburyport, MA: Edward Little & Co., 1810.

Vol. V only. 8vo (239 x 138mm). (Some discoloration to endpapers, slight spotting to title-page). Contemporary sheep (rebacked, repairs to corners); slipcase.

JAMES BUCHANAN’S COPY, SIGNED on the title-page (“James Buchanan”).

Born in 1791 near Mercersburg, Pennsylvania and educated at Dickinson College, Buchanan studied law and passed the bar in Lancaster, which would be his home for the rest of his life. Establishing a very successful legal practice, he soon became involved in politics.  After serving briefly in the military during the War of 1812, he served two years in the Pennsylvania legislature after his election in 1814.

Elected five times to the United States House of Representatives, Buchanan was a gifted debater and well versed in the law. After an interlude as minister to Russia, he served for a decade in the United States Senate. He became President Polk’s secretary of state and President Pierce’s minister to Great Britain.  Buchanan made three unsuccessful bids for the presidency, but in 1856, his absence from the country during the turmoil over the Kansas-Nebraska Act and his reputation as a compromiser made him a more acceptable Democratic candidate than either Franklin Pierce or Stephen A. Douglas.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,000 - 1,500

119FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM 427

[LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865), and others—AUTOGRAPH ALBUM]. An autograph album, c.1860’s, assembling more than 140 signatures and inscriptions by various statesmen, military officers and other prominent figures of the Civil War Era, including three present, past or future Presidents.

8vo (169 x 114mm). (Occasional soiling or minor discoloration from adhesives, etc.). Contemporary morocco gilt, with owner’s name lettered on upper cover (“R. C. Scanland”). Provenance: Robert C. Scanland (see below).

INCLUDING THE SIGNATURES OF THREE PRESIDENTS, comprising: ABRAHAM LINCOLN (“A. Lincoln”), ULYSSES S. GRANT (“U. S. Grant / Maj: Gen. / U.S.A. / Cairo, 1863”), and JAMES A. GARFIELD (“J. A. Garfield / Hiram, Ohio”). Also includes signatures by John G. Nicolay (on same page as Lincoln signature), Brigadier Gen. Napoleon Bonaparte Buford, Schuyler Colfax, Major Gen. Napoleon J. T. Dana, James M. Tuttle, John M. Palmer, Chauncey Lawson Higbee, and numerous others, many from the Illinois area (Pittsfield,  Cairo, Alton, Hiram, etc.).

Robert Caldwell Scanland (1825-1895) was an old acquaintance of Lincoln’s during his years as a lawyer in Springfield, and according to an article clipped from The Peoria Journal, Feb. 18, 1896 (included with this lot) the signature (along with Hay’s) was obtained during a visit with his son to the White House in 1862. Another highlight is the signature of Ulysses S. Grant who adds “Maj. Gen. U.S.A. / Cairo, 1863”. Beneath, in another hand, likely Scanland’s, the provenance of where and when the signature was obtained: “on board Steamer ‘City of Alton’ enroute for Vicksburg”. The first page of the book contains a mounted carte-de-visite albumen portrait of Scanland, inscribed and signed on mount below, dated May 1863. Also includes some other Scanland family signatures, and pieces of ephemera including a clipped poem from a newspaper in tribute to Lincoln and a ribbon from the re-union of the 21st Illinois Volunteers.

Interestingly, in preparation of Lincoln’s arrival in Pittsfield while campaigning for Senate against Stephen Douglas in October 1, 1858, Robert Caldwell Scanland and Charles Roger Lame were practice firing a campaign cannon, which was a tradition of the day, which led to an unfortunate mishap which resulted with Lame’s face being burned and his arm badly mangled by the ramrod.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $3,000 - 5,000

431

[JOHNSON, Andrew (1808-1875), his copy]. Stephens, Alexander Hamilton. Speech of Hon. Alex. H. Stephens, Of Georgia, on the Civil Rights’ Bill, delivered ... in Congress assembled, 5th of January, 1874. Washington, 1874.

8vo. 4 unbound folded sheets, with title-page tipped to first leaf. (First and last pages soiled with some pale stains, some marginal fraying.)

ANDREW JOHNSON’S COPY, with his numerous pencil signatures and other notations throughout.

After the expiration of his presidential term, Johnson ran unsuccessfully for the Senate in 1869 and for the House in 1872 before being reelected to the Senate in 1874. While out of office, Johnson remained active in steering reconstruction past both former confederates and radical Republicans, so there is little wonder that he owned and read a speech on the Civil Rights Bill by the Vice President of Confederate States of America. Johnson has signed the title-page in full seven times and the recto of the first page of text three times. In addition, the final page is signed “Johnson” seven times and the title-page “Andrew” twice. The title-page also has a few unconnected autograph words and phrases (“Cotton is Passion”; “wool wool”) and the final page a bit of ciphering. An interesting association item, linking two of the most important Southern politicians-one a Unionist, the other a secessionist-of the Civil War era. A VERY FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$4,000 - 6,000

120 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 430

432

[GRANT, Ulysses S. (1822-1885), and others—AUTOGRAPH ALBUM]. An autograph album, c.1870s,  assembling more than 350 signatures and inscriptions by President Ulysses S. Grant, members of his Cabinet (c.1873-74), Supreme Court Justices, Congressman, Senators, and various other prominent American political leaders and statesmen.

8vo (219 x 138mm). (Occasional minor soiling or spotting). Contemporary morocco gilt (rebacked preserving most of the original spine); slipcase.

Includes: President U. S. Grant (“U. S. Grant”), Vice President Henry Wilson, James G. Blaine (Speaker of the House), Secretary of War William Belknap, Secretary of the Navy George Robeson, Postmaster General John A. J. Creswell, Secretary of the Treasury William A. Richardson, Adolph Sutro, the entire Supreme Court: Chief Justice Morrison Waite, Associate Justices Nathan Clifford, Noah Swayne, Samuel Miller, David Davis, Stephen Field, Joseph Bradley William Strong and Ward Hunt; and numerous others.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $3,000 - 4,000

433

HAYES, Rutherford B. (1822-1893). Message to the House of Representatives, Vetoing the Bill entitled “An Act to Restrict the Immigration of Chinese to the United States.” March 1, 1879. [Washington, 1879].

8vo. (Ink on inscription slightly bled.) Modern cloth-backed boards, with original printed wrappers bound in; slipcase.

INSCRIBED BY RUTHERFORD B. HAYES at head of front wrapper in purple ink: “With Compliments / RB Hayes.”

In 1879, advocates of immigration restriction succeeded in introducing and passing legislation in Congress to limit the number of Chinese arriving to fifteen per ship or vessel. Republican President Rutherford B. Hayes vetoed the bill because it violated U.S. treaty agreements with China. Nevertheless, it was still an important victory for advocates of exclusion. Democrats, led by supporters in the West, advocated for all-out exclusion of Chinese immigrants. Although Republicans were largely sympathetic to western concerns, they were committed to a platform of free immigration. In order to placate the western states without offending China, President Hayes sought a revision of the Burlingame-Seward Treaty in which China agreed to limit immigration to the United States. In 1880, the Hayes Administration appointed U.S. diplomat James G. Angell to negotiate a new treaty with China. The resulting Angell Treaty permitted the United States to restrict, but not completely prohibit, Chinese immigration. In 1882, Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, which, per the terms of the Angell Treaty, suspended the immigration of Chinese laborers (skilled or unskilled) for a period of 10 years. The Act also required every Chinese person traveling in or out of the country to carry a certificate identifying his or her status as a laborer, scholar, diplomat, or merchant. The 1882 Act was the first in American history to place broad restrictions on immigration.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

434

HAYES, Rutherford B. (1822-1893). Annual Message of the President of the United States to the Two Houses of Congress at the Commencement of the Third Session of the Forty-Sixth Congress Washington: Government Printing Office, 1880.

8vo. (Soft vertical crease to text and wrappers.) Original printed wrappers; slipcase. Provenance: M. C. Patterson (presentation inscription [slightly faded]); Lawrence E. Miller (library blindstamp on rear wrapper).

PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY HAYES on front wrapper: “With Compliments / R. B. Hayes /

To Mr. M. C. Patterson”.  Rutherford’s 1880 State of the Union Address was given on December 6, 1880, and significantly includes the statement: “Continued opposition to the full and free enjoyment of the rights of citizenship conferred upon the colored people by the recent amendments to the Constitution still prevails in several of the late slaveholding States.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

121FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

435

[GARFIELD, James A. (1831-1881), his copy]. The Stars of the Earth; or, thoughts upon Space, Time, and Eternity. Boston: Wm. Crosby and H.P. Nichols, 1850.

12mo (152 x 92mm). (Original limp cloth (some fading to spine and edges, early stitched repair on lower spine).

JAMES GARFIELDS COPY, INSCRIBED BY HIM on pencil on front free endpaper: “J. A. Garfield / Syracuse N. Y.  / Sept. 15th 185[6?]” and with a few pencil annotations. On the rear free endpaper he has also written: “The Universe a mere Thought of God.”

The first part of this small anonymous work discusses the phenomenon of light shows how the past may be actually present to God, and become hereafter present to men; the second part the author discusses the unity of the Creator, by showing the unity of the creation.

Garfield’s library consisted of about 2,500 volumes, and this book contains his bookplate (cropped slightly) from his home, “Lawnfield” in Mentor, Ohio. The inscription likely dates from Garfield’s career as a schoolteacher from 1856-57. The final digit in the inscription is illegible (thumbed), but based on the subject of the work and the popular style in which it was written, it may have been used for his instructional purposes. The motto on his bookplate reads: “Inter Folia Fructu[s]. Library of James A. Garfield No…”. Books from Garfield’s library are scarce.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $3,000 - 4,000

436

[GARFIELD, James A. (1831-1881), his copy]. BASKERVILLE, Alfred, translator. The Poetry of Germany…Second Edition. Philadelphia: John Weick, 1856.

8vo (182 x 116mm). (Occasional minor spotting.) Original gilt-decorated cloth (rebacked preserving original spine); slipcase.

JAMES GARFIELDS COPY, INSCRIBED BY HIM on pencil on front free endpaper: “J. A. Garfield / Hiram O.  / 1856”.  With his bookplate (Inter Folia Fructus. Library of James A. Garfield” and shelfmark in ink. Books from Garfield’s library are scarce.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $2,000 - 3,000

437

ARTHUR, Chester (1830-1886). Document signed (“C. A. Arthur”), as Quartermaster General, New York, [ca January 1863].

One page, 504 x 483mm, on lined ledger sheet, ruled in red, docketed on verso. (Reinforced along horizontal centerfold causing slight loss to some letters, a little toning at folds and edges); slipcase.

The document comprises an abstract of stores issued by by Arthur’s department to various New York regiments and forces in the field, including pails, brooms, handcuffs, shackles and straw issued over the period from July to December in 1862. The recipients include Corcoran’s Irish Brigade, the 1st New York Volunteer Sharpshooters, the 1st New York Volunteer Mounted Rifles, and numerous others. The docket on verso reads: “Abstract ‘K’ of Issues of Quartermasters Stores by Brigr. Genl. Chester A. Arthur. Quartermaster Genl., State of New York. From July 10th 1862 to December 31st 1862.”

As  a young New York City lawyer Chester A. Arthur had become involved in Republican Party politics and joined the New York militia before the Civil War. After war was declared, Arthur was commissioned as a Brigadier General and Assistant Quartermaster General of the New York militia, and was responsible for feeding, sheltering, and provisioning thousands of Union troops passing through New York City on their war to battlefronts. It required a mastery of logistics, finances, and record-keeping which Arthur excelled in. He was promoted to Inspector General of the New York militia just a month later, in February 1862, and to Quartermaster General of the New York militia in July 1862. In addition to ensuring the quality of barracks, food, and equipment, Arthur was also involved in recruitment. His term ended in January 1863, after the election of Democrat Party candidates. Arthur would serve as Vice President of the United States from March through September 1881, and as President between September 1881 and March 1885.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

122 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$400 - 600

438

[ARTHUR, Chester (1830-1886), his copy]. DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870).

Martin Chuzzlewit. [“The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit”]. Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson, [ca 1850s].

8vo. Illustrated by Hablot K. Browne. (Some minor toning or offsetting to plates.) Original blindstamped cloth (spine ends and joints repaired, board edges reinforced in cloth, hinges cracked); slipcase. Provenance: Chester A. Arthur (inscription); Joseph F. Underwood, Broadmoor (later owner’s inscription on verso of front free endpaper).

CHESTER A. ARTHUR’S COPY, INSCRIBED BY HIM on front pastedown: “C. A. Arthur / New York City”. Martin Chuzzlewit was first published in monthly installments. Early sales of the monthly parts were lower than those of previous works, so Dickens changed the plot to send the title character to the United States. Dickens had visited America in 1842 in part as a failed attempt to get the American publishers to honor international copyright laws. He satirized the country as a place filled with self-promoting hucksters, eager to sell land sight unseen. In later editions, and in his second visit 24 years later to a much-changed US, he made clear it was satire and not a balanced image of the nation in a speech and then included that speech in all future editions. This volume was issued as part of T. B. Peterson’s Uniform Edition of Charles Dickens’ Works (see Gimbel D25).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,500 - 2,500

439

[CLEVELAND, Grover (1837-1908)—AUTOGRAPH ALBUM]. Inscription on a leaf in a published autograph album entitled A Pathway of Flowers, London: Ernest Nister and New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., [c.1902], kept by Jewel Croasdale, and containing the autograph signature of Grover Cleveland (“Grover Cleveland / May? 8, 1906”), as well as other signatures or inscriptions from other friends or relatives on other leaves. Oblong 8vo. Original decorated limp leather, sewn in Japanese style with leather cord; slipcase.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$100 - 200

440

McKINLEY, WILIAM (1843-1901). Partly-printed document signed twice (“William McKinley, Jr.”) as Prosecuting Attorney for Stark County, Ohio. February Term, 1871.

One page, 356 x 212mm. (A few minor nicks or short tears, four small tape stains from previous mounting.) Slipcase.

An indictment of G. W. Sombeck for “Keeping Rooms of Public Resort for the Sale of Intoxicating Liquors.” With filing date, arraignment date and plea accomplished on cover panel (on verso), with second signature of McKinley.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$150 - 250

FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

441

McKINLEY, WILIAM (1843-1901). Signed menu from a dinner given in honor of President McKinley by the Commercial Club of Chicago on October 10, 1899, at the Auditorium Hotel. [10 October 1899].

4 pages, 235 x 180mm. Original cloth-backed engraved card covers, tied with original red, white and blue ribbon (minor soiling, slight toning on rear cover); slipcase.

INSCRIBED BY MCKINLEY on leaf facing title-page: “With Every good wish / William McKinley”. Additionally signed by members of his cabinet, Secretary of State John Hay (in pencil, below McKinley’s signature) and Secretary of Treasury Lyman Gage (on cover). Also signed by Ignacio Mariscal, the Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs (in pencil), and businessmen Richard Dobell and A. C. Bartlett.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

442

ROOSEVELT, Theodore (1858-1919). The Rough Riders. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1899.

8vo. Portrait frontispiece and numerous plates, mostly from photographs, one after a painting by Frederick Remington. (Front hinge reinforced with archival tape [reattaching front free endpaper]). Original cloth (rebacked in calf preserving most of original spine); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY ROOSEVELT (“Theodore Roosevelt”) on front free endpaper. The publication of Roosevelt’s memoir of his exploits in the Spanish-American War, played a significant role in his being chosen to replace Garret Hobart as William McKinley’s running mate after Hobart died in office.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,500 - 2,500

443

[TAFT, William Howard (1857-1930)]. SPARKS, Edwin Erle, editor. Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library. Volume III. Lincoln Series, Vol. I. The Lincoln-Douglas Debates of 1858.  Springfield, IL: Illinois State Historical Library, 1908.

8vo. Original half morocco (spine, joints and edges repaired, hinges reinforced); slipcase. Provenance: Franklin S. Gatlin (signature on front free endpaper, dated 11 February 1911, bookplate).

SIGNED BY TAFT (“Wm. H. Taft”) on front flyleaf. Additionally signed by twelve members of the Lincoln Centennial Association, including Governor Charles S. Deneen of Illinois, State Senator John T. Denvir. This volume was presented to the members and guests at the banquet given by the Association on the “One Hundred and Second Anniversary of Mr. Lincoln’s birth.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

124 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

444

WILSON, Woodrow (1856-1924). Address of the President of the United States Delivered at a Joint Session of the Two Houses of Congress April 2, 1917. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1917.

12mo. Original gilt-lettered green leather over flexible boards (minor darkening to extremities). Provenance: M. Brugmire (inscription on half-title); E. S. Handy, Wilson Genethnic Study (presentation stamp from Lee Curtice on front free endpaper, and his? inscription “E and E Handy 1964 from CBLC” on front pastedown, and his? ballpoint underlinings and marginal notations on first five pages of text).

DECLARATION OF WAR AGAINST GERMANY, SIGNED BY WOODROW WILSON (“Woodrow Wilson”) on front free endpaper. The text of Wilson’s historic speech asking Congress for a declaration of war against Germany, memorably stating: “We are now about to accept gauge of battle with this natural foe to liberty and shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of the nation to check and nullify its pretensions and its power. We are glad…to fight thus for the ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation of its peoples, the German peoples included: for the rights of nations great and small and the privilege of men everywhere to choose their way of life and of obedience. The world must be made safe for democracy…”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,500 - 2,500

445

WILSON, Woodrow (1856-1924). Mere Literature and Other Essays. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1896.

8vo. Original cloth (spine a little toned with tiny repair at center, minor soiling and rubbing to extremities, front hinge starting); cloth slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY WOODROW WILSON (“Woodrow Wilson / 6 Nov., 1916”) on front free endpaper.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $600 - 800

446

[HARDING, Warren G. (1865-1923), his copy]. WHARTON, Edith (1862-1937). The Descent of Man and Other Stories. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1904.

8vo. Original gilt-lettered cloth (spine slightly dulled, otherwise fine); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY WARREN G. HARDING (“WG Harding”) on front free endpaper in pencil.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $500 - 700

125FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

447

COOLIDGE, Calvin (1872-1933). Autobiography. New York: The Cosmopolitan Book Company, 1929.

8vo. Second trade edition. Publisher’s green cloth gilt; scarce original dust jacket (losses, closed tears). Provenance: George E. Merryweather (presentation inscription).

INSCRIBED TO GEORGE E. MERRYWEATHER BY CALVIN COOLIDGE.

[With]: Have Faith in Massachusetts. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company, 1919. 8vo. Publisher’s dark blue cloth gilt (rubbing, toning). Provenance: Elizabeth R. Walsh (presentation inscription). INSCRIBED TO ELIZABETH R. WALSH BY CALVIN COOLIDGE.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

448

HOOVER, Herbert (1874-1964). The Challenge to Liberty. New York and London: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1934.

8vo. Original gilt-lettered blue cloth (some mottling to front cover); dust jacket (spine panel toned, minor wear and toning to flap folds and edges); slipcase. Provenance: Dr. Morris W. Croll (1872-1947), author, Professor of English at Princeton University (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY HOOVER on the front free endpaper: “To Morris W. Croll / With the kind Regards of / Herbert Hoover.” More commonly found in publisher’s red cloth.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

449

ROOSEVELT, Franklin D. (1882-1945). The Democratic Book 1936. N.p: N.p., 1936.

Folio. Illustrated limitation page with vignette after a watercolor of the White House on heavy paper, 19 full-page portraits, numerous illustrations & advertisements, and facsimiles of the Founding Documents at end. (Some pale spotting to endpapers, a few repairs to fore-margins on front free endpaper and flyleaf.) Original gilt-lettered padded leather, with original color pictorial wrappers bound in as issued (spine ends and extremities repaired, some rubbing to joints and edges); custom calf-backed folding case. Provenance: John Paul Brunt (subscriber designee name gilt-lettered on upper cover).

LIMITED EDITION, number 1945 of 2500 copies SIGNED BY ROOSEVELT under vignette of the White House on limitation page. This lavishly produced “yearbook” contains information such as the party’s platform, election results, and statements from the President, his cabinet members, the first lady, and other important members of his administration. With dozens of contemporary advertisements, many in color, the inclusion of which was deemed controversial at the time.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

126 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

450

TRUMAN, Harry S. (1884–1972). [Memoirs:] Year of Decision—Years of Trial and Hope. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1955–56.

2 volumes, 8vo. Original cloth (slight rubbing to extremities); dust jackets (some spotting [heaviest on vol. I], minor wear to extremities, a few abrasions to front panel vol. II).

FIRST EDITIONS, PRESENTATION COPIES, BOTH VOLUMES INSCRIBED BY TRUMAN on the dedication page and half-title, respectively: “To Joseph Lago / from / Harry S. Truman”. With additional notation in an unidentified hand “4/16/69” at foot of inscribed pages (presumably the date of inscriptions). Also inscribed in an unidentified hand on dedication leaf of vol. II: “My regards to Dr. Joseph Lago”(possibly in Bess Truman’s hand).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

451

TRUMAN, Harry S. (1884-1972). The Economic Reports of the President as Transmitted to the Congress January 1948, January 1947, July 1947. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, [1948].

8vo. Original cloth; dust jacket (minor wear to spine ends, a few short closed tears at edges); slipcase.

INSCRIBED BY TRUMAN on the front free flyleaf: “Most sincerely / Harry Truman.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

452

EISENHOWER, Dwight D. (1890-1969). Crusade in Europe. New York: Doubleday, 1948.

8vo. Color maps and plates throughout. Publisher’s wheat cloth, t.e.g., others uncut (slightest rubbing to black blocking on spine panel, otherwise very fine); custom slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 644 of 1,426 copies, SIGNED BY EISENHOWER on the inserted D-Day Order as issued.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $2,500 - 3,500

452A

EISENHOWER, Dwight D. (1890-1969). Crusade in Europe. New York: Doubleday, 1948.

8vo. Color maps and plates throughout. Publisher’s wheat cloth, top edge gilt, others uncut (spine blocking rubbed, touch of soiling and wear to extremities); facsimile slipcase and custom slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 1,340 of 1,426 copies, SIGNED BY EISENHOWER on the inserted D-Day Order as issued.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $1,500 - $2,500

127FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

454

KENNEDY, John F. (1917-1963). Profiles in Courage. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1956.

8vo. Original quarter cloth (corners bumped, extremities rubbed); in later dust jacket; slipcase. Provenance: Walter E. Noyes, Woburn, MA (ownership notation on front pastedown and presentation inscription).

Later printing. PRESENTATION COPY, inscribed in a secretarial hand on front free endpaper: “To Walter Noyes / with very best wishes / John Kennedy.” The book is a later printing (Harper code H-F, corresponding to August 1956); the dust jacket appears to be later, unclipped, but without a price.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

453

KENNEDY, John F. (1917-1963). Profiles in Courage. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1961.

8vo, original quarter cloth; dust jacket (some chipping and wear, a few closed tears, a bit soiled and wrinkled); slipcase. Provenance: Frances L. Childers [later Hewitt] (1931-2003), speechwriter, public affairs advisor and theatre producer (presentation inscription).

Inaugural Edition, PRESENTATION COPY, inscribed by Kennedy on the front free endpaper: “For Frankie Childers / with very warm / regards - / Jack Kennedy”.

Frances (“Frankie”) Childers began her career on Capitol Hill in 1958 when she left California, moved to Washington and took positions as a speechwriter and legislative liaison specialist. She went on to become a Senate subcommittee staff director, the first woman to run an investigating committee and the first non-lawyer to lead a judiciary committee. Mrs. Hewitt later moved to New York City, when the newly elected President John F. Kennedy appointed her public affairs advisor under Ambassador Adlai Stevenson at the United States Mission to the United Nations. She was also a theater producer and founder of the Ford’s Theater Society, responsible for restoring and reopening the historic site as a working theater. For some years she was married to “60 Minutes” producer Don Hewitt, who was well acquainted with John F. Kennedy, both as candidate and as President.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $3,000 - 4,000

128 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

455

JOHNSON, Lyndon B. (1908-1973). The Vantage Point. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971.

8vo, original cloth; dust jacket (slight toning, cellophane outer layer pealing in places); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY JOHNSON in black felt tip on his personalized gold-embossed Presidential booklabel affixed to half-title: “To Mark John Searce / With warm best wishes / Lyndon B. Johnson / ‘Xmas’ 72.” Also with a printed calling card of Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Baines Johnson laid in, with note “Merry Christmas” in an unidentified hand.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

NIXON, Richard M. (1913-1994). The Real War. New York: Warner Books, 1980. 8vo. Original cloth, all edges silver gilt, silk ribbon bookmark; original cloth slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, SIGNED BY NIXON on inserted signature leaf before half-title. There was another limited issue of 2,500 numbered and signed copies bound in leather.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $100 - 200

457 [WATERGATE]. Submission of Recorded Presidential Conversations To the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives by President Richard Nixon. [Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974].

4to. Publisher’s printed wraps (toning to spine, some creasing). Provenance: Ellen Barsheff (inscription).

The White House released edited transcripts of secret conversations recorded in the Oval Office following the indictment of the “Watergate Seven” in March 1974. Though Nixon’s speech announcing the release was originally well-received, public opinion quickly turned against him as the transcripts became more widely-read, ultimately leading to his resignation in early August. With contemporary annotations from Ellen Barsheff on verso of title-page describing Nixon’s resignation on 8 August 1974: “Pres. Nixon resigned on T.V. effective noon 8/9/74. Vice Pres. Ford will be sworn in at this time.” Then on 9 August 1974: “Pres. Nixon, Mrs. Nixon, Mr. & Mrs. Cox left White House by ‘helo’.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$100 - 200

129FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
458 NO LOT

459

FORD, Gerald R. (1913-2006). Souvenir copy signed, a copy of his message to the American people announcing the pardon of Richard M. Nixon. Washington, D. C., The White House, n.d.

1 page, 4to, on White House stationery, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).

“A FULL, FREE AND ABSOLUTE PARDON UNTO RICHARD NIXON”

Nixon and his family, according to Ford, were caught “in an American tragedy in which we have all played a part. It could go on and on and on, or someone must write an end to it. I have concluded that only I could do that, and if I can I must.” Allegations hanging “like a sword over or former President’s head” were threatening his health. In a criminal trial, “ugly passions would again be aroused. And our people would again be polarized in their opinions. And the credibility of our free institutions would again be challenged at home and abroad.” Ford was criticized for the pardon, and critics wondered if a corrupt bargain had been struck, although no evidence substantiates that charge; in sworn Congressional testimony, Ford said he took the unpopular act for the reasons he gave the public in this message.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

460

FORD, Gerald R. (1913-2006) and Chief Justice Earl WARREN (1891-1974). The Warren Report. Report of the President’s Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy. [Washington, D.C.?]: The Associated Press, [1964].

Large 8vo. (Some discoloration from binder’s glue along gutter on title.) Original printed boards (head of spine bumped, a little wear to extremities, scratch on rear cover); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY GERALD FORD on title-page in blue ink. Gerald Ford, as a Congressman from Michigan, was one of the seven members who served on the Commission.

[With:] FORD, Gerald R. (1913-2006). A Time to Heal. New York: Harper & Row, [1979].

8vo. Original cloth; dust jacket (price-clipped). Later printing. SIGNED BY FORD on personalized Presidential booklabel affixed to front free endpaper.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $300 - 400

461

CARTER, James Earl (“Jimmy”). (b.1924). Farewell Address of President Jimmy Carter, January 14, 1981. [Winston-Salem]: Palaemon Press Limited, 1981.

8vo. Original cloth; original cloth slipcase.

LIMITED FIRST EDITION, number 140 of 300 copies SIGNED BY CARTER on the titlepage. Of the 300 copies printed, 150 copies were reserved for the author, 50 were reserved for hors-commerce distribution by the publisher, and only 100 copies were available for public distribution.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

130 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

462

REAGAN, Ronald (1911-2004). Speaking My Mind. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1989.

8vo. Publisher’s full blue morocco gilt; cloth slipcase.

FIRST LIMITED EDITION, number 695 of 5,000 copies SIGNED BY RONALD REAGAN ON LIMITATION PAGE. Speaking My Mind is a collection of speeches delivered throughout Ronald Reagan’s political career.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$500 - 700

463

BUSH, George Herbert Walker (1924-2018). All the Best. New York: Scribner, 1999.

8vo. Publisher’s blue leather gilt.

LIMITED EDITION, number 99 of 1,000 copies SIGNED ON LIMITATION PAGE BY GEORGE H.W. BUSH. All the Best comprises a collection of writings including diary entries, letters, and memos which begin with Bush’s service during World War II and end shortly after his son Jeb’s election as governor of Florida in 1998.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

464

CLINTON, William Jefferson (b. 1947). My Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2004.

8vo. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt; original dust jacket.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY BILL CLINTON. My Life was written over the course of two and a half years, with the final text written completely in longhand.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

131FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

465

BUSH, George Walker (b. 1946). A Charge to Keep. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 2000.

8vo. Publisher’s burgundy leather gilt.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED ON LIMITATION PAGE BY GEORGE W. BUSH. A Charge to Keep was published shortly before George W. Bush announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination in the 2000 presidential race.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

466

OBAMA, Barack Hussein (b. 1961). Dreams from my Father. New York: Times Books, 1995.

8vo. Publisher’s black cloth (severe rubbing at top of front board, tape residue to boards); original dust jacket.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY BARACK OBAMA. Dreams from My Father was published as Barack Obama was preparing to run for the Illinois Senate, and was re-published nine years later when he announced his candidacy for the United States Senate. The book was described as “the best-written memoir ever produced by an American politician” by Time columnist Joe Klein.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$600 - 800

467

OBAMA, Barack Hussein (b. 1961). A Promised Land. New York: Crown, 2020.

8vo. Publisher’s grey cloth; original pictorial cloth slipcase.

DELUXE FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY BARACK OBAMA. A Promised Land is the first in a planned two-volume set of memoirs detailing the former president’s life and historical first term in the Oval Office.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

132 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

468

TRUMP, Donald John (b. 1946) and Tony SCHWARTZ (b. 1952). The Art of the Deal. New York: Random House, 1987.

8vo. Publisher’s black cloth gilt; original dust jacket (slight rubbing to spine panel); cloth slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY DONALD TRUMP. The Art of the Deal spent 13 weeks at the top of the New York Times Bestseller List and is credited with helping make Trump a household name.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$500 - 700

470 [U.S. PRESIDENTS -- SIGNED]. A group of 4 signed works, comprising: HOOVER, Herbert. Years of Adventure, 1874-1920. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1951 (2 copies). -- NIXON, Richard Milhaus. Six Crises. Garden City: Doubleday & Company, 1962 (2 copies). -- Together, 2 works in 4 volumes, 8vo, all with original publisher’s cloth, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 500

469

BIDEN, Joseph R. (b. 1942). Promise Me. Dad. New York: Flatiron Books, 2017.

8vo. Publisher’s ivory cloth; original dust jacket; cloth slipcase. Provenance: “Joy” (presentation inscription)

FIRST EDITION, INSCRIBED BY JOE BIDEN ON TITLE PAGE, “Joy - Keep the faith! - Joe Biden, 12-29-19.” In Promise Me, Dad Biden reflects on the loss of his son to brain cancer. Vanity Fair described it as a “brisk, often uplifting read, a consequence of its author’s congenital jollity and irrepressible candor.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

471 [U.S. PRESIDENTS -- SIGNED]. A group of 5 signed works by 20th century presidents, comprising:

CARTER, Jimmy. Keeping Faith. New York: Bantam Books, 1982. LIMITED EDITION. -- CARTER, Jimmy. The Nobel Peace Prize Lecture. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2002 (2 copies). -- CLINTON, Bill. Giving. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007. -- [JOHNSON, Lyndon Baines]. WHITE, William S. The Professional. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Company, 1964. -- Together, 5 works in 5 volumes, all in publisher’s cloth, many with dust jackets, all 8vo, condition generally very fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

133FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

World Leaders & Historic Figures

BREZHNEV, Leonid Ilyich (1906-1982). Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev [in Cyrillic]. Moscow, 1976.

12mo.  Text in Cyrillic. Illustrated. Original gilt-lettered boards; slipcase.

SIGNED BY BREZHNEV on title-page.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

473

CASTRO, Fidel (1926-2016).  Speech Delivered… at the Opening Session of the 68th Conference of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Havana, September 15, 1981 [Havana, 1981].

12mo. Text in French, English and Spanish printed on separate colored papers for each language section. Original pictorial wrappers; slipcase.

SIGNED BY CASTRO on the title-page of the Spanish language section of the booklet (white pages). Castro delivered this speech at the 68th Inter-Parliamentary Conference in Havana Cuba on September 15, 1981. His opening speech is presented here in three languages, each sectioned on a different colored paper, respectively.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

134 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 472
472 473
Lots 472-512

474

[CHAVEZ, Cesar (1927-1993)]. LEVY, Jacques (1927-2004). Autobiography of La Causa. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1975.

8vo. Illustrated with photographs. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. Provenance: Michelle Hamilton (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, second printing. INSCRIBED BY CESAR CHAVEZ: “Best wishes.” Autobiography of La Causa describes the founding and growth of the United Farm Workers of America, as well as their historic victory over the Delano growers of California which resulted in the union winning higher wages, the restriction of certain pesticide use in crops, and health care.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

475

CHURCHILL, Winston S. (1874-1965). The Second World War: The Hinge of Fate. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1950.

Vol. 4 (of 6) only. 8vo. Original cloth (front hinge cracked with half-title partially detached); dust jacket (some wear with a few chips and short tears); slipcase.

Book-of-the-Month Club edition, SIGNED BY CHURCHILL (“Winston S. Churchill”) on the title-page. Churchill chose this title to reflect the turn in the Allies’ fortunes from “almost uninterrupted disaster to almost unbroken success.” The Book-of-the-Month Club edition was published virtually simultaneously with the U.S. first edition and is quite similar in appearance. See Woods A123(a).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $800 - 1,200

476

CLINTON, Hillary Rodham (b. 1947). Invitation to the White House: At Home with History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000.

4to. Publisher’s red leather gilt; slipcase.

DELUXE LIMITED FIRST EDITION, one of 50 copies, SIGNED BY HILLARY CLINTON. Invitation to the White House was written during Hillary Clinton’s 2000 campaign for the United States Senate.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

135FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

477

COLOP, Luis Enrique Sam (1955-2011). Popol Wuj. Guatemala City: Cholsamaj, 2008.

4to. Publisher’s printed wraps; later slipcase.

INSCRIBED BY LUIS ENRIQUE SAM COLOP. The Popol Wuj is an ancient text recounting the history and myths of the Ki’che’ people. It passed through the centuries as oral tradition until the 16th century, when it was first recorded in writing; it was later translated into Spanish by the Dominican friar Francisco Ximenez.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$100 - 200

478

CURIE, Marie (1867-1934). Pierre Curie. Paris: Payot, 1924.

8vo. (Margins browned and brittle, single wormtrack in lower margin of last third of text.) Contemporary half morocco gilt, upper cover with gilt ship motif (slight wear to extremities); slipcase. Provenance: Marie Mattingly Meloney (1878-1943), journalist and friend of Curie (presentation inscription from the author, gift inscription to her son on front flyleaf in pencil, dated Christmas 1924); William Brown Meloney IV (bookplate and ship motif on binding).

PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY CURIE TO A FRIEND AND SUPPORTER on title-page: “To dear Missy / her friend / M. Curie.” Marie (“Missy”) Mattingly Meloney was one of the leading woman journalists of the United States, a magazine editor and a socialite who in the 1920s organized a fund drive to buy radium for Marie Curie and began a movement for better housing. She was a friend and confidante of Eleanor Roosevelt in the 1930s. William Brown Meloney was born in San Francisco to a seafaring family, and at the age of eighteen became a shipping news and political reporter in San Francisco before moving to New York in 1901, where he worked for the New York World Newspaper. He wrote several novels and plays but concentrated on a history of shipping, The Heritage of Tyre

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

479

[CUSTER, George Armstrong (1839-1876)]. Index to Officer’s Pay Accounts. A ledger for the years 1841-1870.

334 pages, on red and blue ruled sheets, 383 x 290 mm, modern black morocco binding.

Listing officers alphabetically, each page divided into 14 columns listing regiment, officer name, date of transfer, “book and page,” and “Remarks.” The “Remarks” column includes dates of retirement, resignations, deaths and dismissals.

Included are entries for George Custer and his brother Thomas W. Custer, with the remark: “Killed 25 June ‘76.” An annotation next to George Custer’s name in red ink in an unidentified hand identifies him as Lieutenant Colonel of the Cavalry (“Lt. Col. of Cav.”).

Throughout are entries for every United States officer of the period who served in the MexicanAmerican war, the Civil War, and the Indian Wars. Union officers from the Civil War include Ulysses S. Grant, George B. McClellan, Philip Sheridan, and William T. Sherman. Confederate officers from the Civil War include Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, Robert E. Lee, Charles E. Lee, Francis Lee, Richard B. Lee, George Pickett, James Longstreet, Jefferson Davis, and Pierre Gustave Beauregard. Future Presidents Zachary Taylor and John Tyler are listed for their service in the Mexican-American War. The ledger likely served as an index enabling the Army to keep track of their records.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$1,500 - 2,500

136 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

480

CUSTER, Elizabeth (1842-1933). “Boots and Saddles” or Life in Dakota with General Custer. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1885.

8vo. Frontispiece portrait and map. Original pictorial cloth (spine toned, minor soiling); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, second issue with portrait and map, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY ELIZABETH CUSTER TO HER NEPHEW on the front free endpaper: “For Alfred Stone / with the compliments of the Author / Elizabeth B. Custer / April 4 - 1887 / from affectionate Aunt Libbie.” Howes C-980.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

482

481

[CUSTER, Elizabeth Bacon (1842-1933)].

LIBBY, O. G., editor. The Arikara Narrative of the Campaign Against the Hostile Dakotas June, 1876. Bismarck, ND: n.p., 1920.

8vo. Frontispiece, maps and plates. Publisher’s cloth, spine gilt-lettered (extremities lightly rubbed). Provenance: Elizabeth Custer (signature).

FIRST EDITION, ELIZABETH CUSTER’S COPY, SIGNED BY HER. The work comprises vol. VI of the North Dakota Historical Collections, and includes personal accounts of the Arikara Indians, who served as scouts for Custer. “There has been no volume published on Custer’s last fight of more interest than this. While it requires a careful analytical study, it furnishes a surprising number of facts which before its publication were unknown.” (Dustin).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

[CUSTER, George Armstrong (1839-1876)] -- [SCOTT, Hugh Lenox (1853-1934), his copy]. LIBBY, O. G., editor. Collections of the State Historical Society of North Dakota Grand Forks, ND: n.p., 1925.

Comprising Vol. VII of the Collections of the State Historical Society of North Dakota, 8vo. Frontispieces, plates and maps. Original cloth (a few discreet repairs, some slight rubbing to extremities). Provenance: Major General Hugh Lenox Scott (1853-1934), Chief of Staff of the U. S. Army (signature in Vol. VII, extensive annotations, see below); Library of Congress Bureau of American Ethnology Library (release stamp, shelf label on spines).

FIRST EDITIONS. MAJOR GENERAL HUGH LENOX SCOTT’S COPY WITH HIS ANNOTATIONS or underlinings on some 50 pages in chapters relating to Dakota Pioneers. After Scott’s graduation from West Point, he was commissioned in the Cavalry and he served on the Western frontier for some 20 years, chiefly with the 7th United States Cavalry. He was assigned to the quarters only recently vacated by the widow of George Armstrong Custer, and was sent to mark gravesites for Custer’s men killed in the Battle of Little Big Horn.

[With:] LIBBY, O. G., editor. The Arikara Narrative of the Campaign Against the Hostile Dakotas June, 1876. Bismarck, ND: n.p., 1920. Provenance: Library of Congress (release stamp, shelf label on spine). (See lot 481 for Elizabeth Custer’s copy.)

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

137FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

483

DALAI LAMA (b. 1935). The Art of Living. Translated by Geshe Thupten Jinpa. London: Thorsons, 2001.

4to. Publisher’s burgundy cloth; original dust jacket.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY THE DALAI LAMA.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $100 - 200

484

[DAVIS, Jefferson (1808-1889), his copy].  Message from the President of the United States to the Two Houses of Congress, at the Commencement of the Second Session of the Thirty-Third Congress, Part I Washington: Beverley Tucker, Senate Printer, 1854.

8vo. (Some spotting and marginal browning throughout, a few small tape reinforcements on front free endpaper.)  Original cloth (recased preserving original endpapers, spine ends and corners repaired); slipcase.

JEFFERSON DAVIS’S COPY, SIGNED (“Jefferson Davis / Secretary of War”) on front free endpaper (some ink bleed).  Davis served as Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce from 1853 to 1857. This volume is the Senate Issue, Executive Document No 1, 33d Congress, 2d Session, Part I, containing the report of the Secretary of the Interior.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

485

GANDHI, Mohandas K. (1869-1948). Autograph letter signed (“MK Gandhi”), to Mrs. McMillan Seely. Segaon, 15 February 1940.

One page, 110 x 164mm; with original envelope addressed in another hand (possibly by the recipient), docketed on verso, with censor’s label.

In full: “Dear Sister / I thank you for your letter and the sentiments expressed therein. / Yours sin’ly, / MK Gandhi.” The recipient of the letter is most likely Harriet McMillan Seely, granddaughter of Senator from Minnesota (1875-87), who like her mother Jessie McMillan Seely collected autographs. The Minnesota Historical Society holds the Ravi D. Goel collection of Samuel James Renwick McMillan family papers, 1818-1956.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $1,500 - 2,500

138 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

486

GANDHI, Mohandas K. (1869-1948). Young India, 1919-1922. Madras: S. Ganesan, 1922.

8vo. Original cloth (recased preserving original endpapers, spine ends and corners repaired, finish recoated, some red in stains on fore-edge); slipcase. Provenance: B. G. Platten, “Chanctonbury”, Loughton, Essex (signature and inscription on front free endpaper).

FIRST EDITON. INSCRIBED BY GANDHI on half-title: “With love / MK Gandhi 18-9-’31.” Additionally signed on front pastedown by his son Devadas Gandhi, his secretaries Pyarelal Mahadev and Haribhai Desai, and his disciple Mirabehn (Madeleine Slade), dated “18.9.31.”

Possibly a presentation copy to his son or one of his followers.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$4,000 - 6,000

488

487

GORBACHEV, Mikhail (1931-2022).

The August Coup: The Truth and the Lessons. London: Harper Collins Publishers, 1991.

8vo. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY MIKHAIL GORBACHEV. The August Coup tells the story of the failed attempt by Soviet hardliners to seize control of the rapidly-collapsing Soviet Union from President Gorbachev.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

[HOOVER, J. Edgar (1895-1972)]. COLLINS, Frederick L. The FBI in Peace and War. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1943.

8vo. Publisher’s orange cloth. Provenance: “Bob” (gift inscription).

Fourth impression. INSCRIBED BY J. EDGAR HOOVER, “Best wishes,” and INSCRIBED BY FBI SPECIAL AGENT EARL J. CONNELLEY, “Regards.” Earl J. Connelley took over Chicago operations after the departure of Inspector Sam Cowley in late 1934 and would later orchestrate the raids which led to the captures of Ma Barker, Doc Barker, and Fred Barker.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

489

139FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
NO LOT

490

KAI-SHEK, Madame Chiang (May-ling Soong Chiang) (1898-2003). Selected Speeches 1958-1959. Taipei: the Office of the President, 1959.

8vo. Original cloth, printed paper cover label; slipcase.

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, SIGNED BY MADAME CHIANG KAI-SHEK on front flyleaf as “Mayling Soong Chiang.”

Signed in teal-blue ink by the former First Lady of the Republic of China.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$100 - 200

491

[KEY, Francis Scott (1779-1843), his copy]. CROKE, Sir George. Reports of Sir George Croke, Knight, formerly one of the Justices of the Courts of King’s-Bench and Common-Pleas of such Select Cases as were Adjudged in the Said Courts during the Reign of James the First… Dublin: E. Lynch et al, 1792

8vo (232 x 142mm). Contemporary calf, morocco spine labels (spine ends and corners repaired, minor wear); slipcase. Provenance: Francis Scott Key, lawyer and author of “The Star Spangled Banner” (signature on title and bookplate); “B.M.” (unidentified monogram bookplate).

Fourth edition. SIGNED BY FRANCIS SCOTT KEY (“F. S. Key”) on title and with his rare printed bookplate on the front pastedown (“F. S. Key, Georgetown - Columbia”). Key practiced law in Washington D. C, and this was undoubtedly from his law reference library there. This is volume two of Croke, published many years after volume one and considered complete in itself. When this copy sold at Sotheby’s New York in 1994, it was described as containing a pencil notation on front free endpaper indicating that this copy had once belonged to Kingman Brewster, but the note is no longer legible.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$2,000 - 3,000

492

KHRUSHCHEV, Nikita Sergeyevich (1894-1971).

Typed document signed, in Russian Cyrillic, apparently dealing with discuss companies and commodities in Voroshilovgrad, now Luhansk in modern day eastern Ukraine. [ca 1947].

3 pages, 301 x 206mm. (Some minor marginal chips, filing punch-holes in left margin.) Slipcase. Provenance: Ron Hoskins Collection.

SIGNED BY KHRUSHCHEV as Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine. Countersigned by Lazar Kaganovich, as Secretary of the Central Committee of the KPU (Communist Party of Ukraine).

Khrushchev, then in his role as Chairman of the Board of Ministers of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, signed as “N. Khrushchev” in green ink at lower left. Kaganovich, serving as Secretary of the Central Committee of the KPU (Communist Party of Ukraine) has signed in purple ink as “L. Kaganovich” at lower right. The typed sheets show scattered pencil and pen notations, apparently clerical.

The untranslated document appears to discuss companies and commodities in Voroshilovgrad, now Luhansk in modern day eastern Ukraine. The city of Voroshilovgrad was known as such between 1935-1958 and 1970-1990. The first of these time periods coincides with the date “8.10.47” (October 8, 1947) docketed on the bottom of the third page. The year “1947” also appears within the body of the text on the second page.

In early 1947, Khrushchev lobbied Stalin in person for food aid for Ukraine and eventually received it, at a cost; Stalin was so irritated by Khrushchev’s “mischief-making” that the premier temporarily removed Khrushchev from the secretaryship and replaced him with Lazar Kaganovich, the cosigner of this document. Yet Khrushchev was sufficiently restored in Stalin’s graces to be restored to his office by December 1947. This political rehabilitation was no small feat when one considers the toxic political environment. Khrushchev himself had participated in Stalin’s purges (arrests, exile, and executions) while managing Ukraine.

Lazar Kaganovich was Khrushchev’s old mentor from the earliest days of the Russian Revolution. The two had met as early as 1917, and Khrushchev had served as Kaganovich’s second-in-command in Ukraine in the 1920s. An interesting document signed by two of the most important Soviet leaders, the future premier of the Soviet Union and Kaganovich (1893-1991), one of Josef Stalin’s closest advisers.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$800 - 1,200

140 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

493

KHRUSHCHEV, Nikita Sergeyevich (1894-1971). An Account to the Party and the People. Report of the C.C. C.P.S.U. to the 22nd Congress of the Party October 17, 1961. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1961.

8vo. Text in English. Original pictorial wrappers (small marginal tear and chip on rear wrapper, minor soiling and rubbing); slipcase.

SIGNED BY KHRUSHCHEV on title-page. The 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was held from 17 to 31 October 1961. In fourteen days of sessions, the more than 4000 delegates, in addition to delegates from 83 foreign Communist parties, listened to Khrushchev and others review policy issues. At the Congress, the Sino-Soviet split hardened, especially due to Soviet de-Stalinization efforts. It was the last Congress to be attended by the Chinese Communist Party. The Congress elected the 22nd Central Committee. The core of the Party program was a promise of the millennium: Russia would catch up and overtake the United States standard of living over the next decade or two. The complete transition from socialism to fully fledged communism would be accomplished.  Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $500 - 700

494

KING, Martin Luther, Jr. (1929-1968). Stride Toward Freedom. The Montgomery Story. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1958.

8vo. (Upper corner of front flyleaf reattached with archival tape.) Original cloth; dust jacket (spine panel slightly faded, minor soiling); slipcase.

“THE STRONG MAN IS THE MAN WHO CAN STAND UP FOR HIS RIGHTS AND NOT HIT BACK…”

FIRST EDITION, FIRST PRINTING, with the publisher’s code H-H on copyright page.

PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY KING WITH HIS NONVIOLENCE CREDO on front free endpaper: “The strong man is the man who can stand up for his rights and not hit back. With Best Wishes / Martin L. King Jr.”.  The quotation comes from his address given to the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) Mass Meeting at Holt Street Baptist Church on November 14, 1956, following the MIA’s failure to receive a temporary restraining order to prevent the city of Montgomery from interfering with the car pool system which enabled blacks to participate in the Montgomery bus boycott. Anticipating the imminent desegregation of city buses, King asks everyone to remain nonviolent during the first challenging days. Echoing Gandhi, he tells them that “I’m not asking you to be a coward. ...You can be courageous and yet nonviolent.”  A SUPERB INSCRIPTION: ENCAPSULATING KING’S PHILOSOPHY AND ADVOCACY FOR NONVIOLENCE.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$8,000 - 12,000

141FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
493 494

495

LINDBERGH, Anne Morrow (1906-2001). “Flying Around the North Atlantic.” In: National Geographic. Washington: The National Geographic Society, September 1934.

Volume LXVI, number 3, 4to. Illustrated with photographs and maps. Publisher’s printed wraps; slipcase.

SIGNED BY CHARLES AND ANNE MORROW LINDBERGH. “Flying Around the North Atlantic” chronicles the transatlantic journey taken by Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh following the trial of Bruno Hauptmann for the kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh, Jr. A VERY FINE COPY.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

496

[MacARTHUR, Douglas (1880-1964)]. WHITNEY, Courtney (1897-1969). MacArthur: His Rendezvous with History. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1956.

8vo. Publisher’s orange and blue cloth; original dust jacket (very worn, lacking rear flap).

Later edition, SIGNED BY DOUGLAS MacARTHUR.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

497

MANDELA, Nelson (1918-2013). Long Walk to Freedom. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 2000.

8vo. Publisher’s green leather gilt.

COLLECTOR’S EDITION, SIGNED ON LIMITATION PAGE BY NELSON MANDELA. Long Walk to Freedom was written shortly after Mandela›s release from prison and chronicles his upbringing, education, and his 27 year prison sentence.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$500 - 700

142 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

498

MANDELA, Nelson (1918-2013). In His Own Words. London: Little, Brown, 2003.

8vo. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket.

LIMITED EDITION, number 42 of 50 copies, SIGNED BY NELSON MANDELA. In His Own Words is a collection of speeches, writings, and letters from throughout Nelson Mandela’s public life, beginning in 1951 and ending in 1995.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

499 McCAIN, John (1936-2018). A group of 3 signed works in 3 volumes, comprising:

Character is Destiny. 2005. -- Faith of My Fathers. 1999. -- Worth the Fighting For. 2002. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, all published by Random House in New York and written with Mark Salter, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

500

[MORÈS, Marquis de (1858-1896), his copy]. GREGOIRE, Leon. Le pape les Catholiques et la question sociale. Paris: Perrin et Cie, 1895.

8vo. (Some marginal browning.) Contemporary half cloth, with original printed front wrapper bound in; cloth slipcase. Provenance: Felix Potin Collection bookplate laid-in.

THE MARQUIS DE MORÈS’S COPY, SIGNED (“Mores”) on front wrapper in pencil, and with his annotations in pencil throughout.

Antoine-Amédée-Marie-Vincent Manca Amat de Vallombrosa, Marquis de Morès et de Montemaggiore, commonly known as the Marquis de Morès, was a French duelist, frontier ranchman in the Badlands of Dakota Territory during the final years of the American Old West era, a railroad pioneer in Vietnam, and a politician in his native France. He resigned from the French cavalry in 1882 and married Medora von Hoffman, sometimes called the Marquise. Soon thereafter, he would move to the North Dakota badlands to begin ranching, purchasing 44,500 acres for that purpose. He also opened a stagecoach business. He tried to revolutionize the ranching industry by shipping refrigerated meat to Chicago by railroad, thus bypassing the Chicago stockyards. He built a meat-packing plant for this purpose in Medora, the town he founded in 1883 and named for his wife. He became famous in the West as a rancher and gunslinger, getting arrested for murder a few times, but was always acquitted. Known as an adventurer, he was quick to anger and was engaged in numerous duels throughout his life; he notoriously sent Theodore Roosevelt what the latter interpreted as a challenge to a duel. Following his business failure, he left Dakota Territory and returned to France. He was commissioned by the French army to build a proposed railroad in Vietnam, from the Chinese frontier to the Gulf of Tonkin, and arrived in Asia to lead railroad construction in the fall of 1888. Later, the Marquis went on an expedition to Africa. He had gotten involved in political disputes and made some bitter enemies. While he was in Africa, he was murdered. With a Felix Potin celebrity trade card depicting the Marquis de Morès laid in. ACCORDING TO  ONLINE RECORDS, WE FIND NO MATERIAL SIGNED BY THE MARQUIS DE MORÈS.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

143FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$600 - 800

501

MOTHER TERESA (BOJAXHIU, Agnes Gonxha, Saint, 1910-1997). The Blessings of Love. Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Publications, 1996.

Oblong 12mo. Original glazed pictorial wrappers; slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, INSCRIBED BY MOTHER TERESA on title: “God bless you / M Teresa MC” in purple ink. The Blessings of Love is a collection of Mother Teresa›s words that serve as instructions for how to make our daily lives count. Mother Teresa was an Albanian-Indian Catholic nun who was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in in Skopje, North Macedonia (at the time part of the Ottoman Empire). At the age of eighteen she moved to Ireland and then to India, where she lived most of her life. In 1950, she founded the Missionaries of Charity, whose sisters, brothers and priests serve the poorest of the poor throughout the world. Active in nearly 140 countries, they run hospices and homes for people with HIV/AIDS, leprosy and tuberculosis; soup kitchens; dispensaries and mobile clinics; children’s and family counseling programs; orphanages; and schools. Mother Teresa was the recipient of numerous honors, including the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize. She was beatified as “Blessed Teresa of Calcutta” in October 2003.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

502

POPE JOHN PAUL II (Karol Jozef Wojtyła,1920-2005). Rise, Let Us Be on Our Way. [New York]: Warner Books, 2004.

8vo. Original cloth; dust jacket; slipcase.

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH, FIRST PRINTING, SIGNED BY POPE JOHN PAUL II (“Joannes Paulus II”) on the title-page, and with the Papal blindstamp of the Segreteria Particolare di Sua Santita beside.  Previously published in the Polish language as Wstańcie, chod my!

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

503

[POPE JOHN PAUL II (Karol Jozef Wojtyła,1920-2005)]. Pastoral Visit of His Holiness Pope John Paul II to Jamaica, Merida and Denver, August 9-16, 1993 [Vatican City]: Typus Vaticanus, [1993].

Large 8vo. Text in English, Spanish and some prayers in Latin. Original giltdecorated white roan with Papal arms on upper cover, with three attached silk bookmarks; slipcase.

SIGNED BY POPE JOHN PAUL II (“Joannes Paulus PP II”) on the title-page of the Denver service. During his reign, Pope John Paul II (“The Pilgrim Pope”) made 104 foreign trips, more than all previous popes combined. The 1993 World Youth Day was held on August 10-15, 1993 in Denver, Colorado. It was the first World Youth Day held in either North America or an Englishspeaking nation.The event took place in the context of the pope’s sixtieth apostolic journey, on which, before reaching Denver, he had stopped in Jamaica and Mexico.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

144 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

POPE FRANCIS (Jorge Mario Bergoglio, b.1936). Lettera enciclica Lumen Fidei del sommo pontefice Francesco ai vescovi ai presbiteri e ai diaconi alle persone consacrate e a tutti i fedeli laici sulla fede. [Vatican City]: Tipografia Vaticana, [c.2013].

8vo. Original red roan with gilt Papal arms on upper cover (a few minor bumps).

SIGNED BY POPE FRANCIS (“Francesco”) on the title-page, and with the Papal blindstamp of the Segreteria Particolare di Sua Santita below. Lumen fidei (The Light of Faith) is the first encyclical of Pope Francis, issued on 29 June 2013, the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, and published on 5 July 2013, less than four months after his election to the papacy. It was the first encyclical in the history of the Catholic Church written by two popes, being begun by Pope Benedict XVI and finished by Pope Francis. The encyclical traces the history of the faith of the Church (from the call of God to Abraham and the people of Israel, to the resurrection of Jesus), discusses the relationship between reason and faith, the Church›s role in the transmission of the faith, and the role faith plays in the building of societies in search of the common good. The text concludes with a prayer to the Virgin Mary, who is presented as a model of faith. Accompanied by a typed letter signed from Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Segretario di Stato di Sua Santita, 15 December 2014.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

ROOSEVELT, Eleanor (1884-1962). This is My Story. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1937.

8vo. Publisher’s blue cloth (sunning to spine, rubbing).

LIMITED FIRST EDITION, number 155 of 250 copies, SIGNED BY ELEANOR ROOSEVELT. This is My Story was the first of four memoirs published by Eleanor Roosevelt; its serialization in The Ladies’ Home Journal sold 250,000 copies and prompted its editors to remark that the book “was read...by everyone - in government, parlor, and slums.”

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

506 RUBY, Jack (1911-1967).  Autograph manuscript signed (in the third person) written from his jail cell while incarcerated for the murder of Kennedy assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, [n.d., ca 1966].

14 pp, 12mo, 154 x 101mm. Written in pencil on rectos only of hand-numbered sheets. (A few minor marginal chips, some tiny pinholes on upper lefthand corners.) Slipcase.  Provenance: Earl Ruby, Jack Ruby’s brother (accompanying affidavit copy, see below); Anthony V. Pugliese III (purchased from Earl Ruby, 21 December 1992, according to affidavit).

An autobiographical account by the Dallas night-club owner, written while incarcerated awaiting a new trial for the nationally televised murder of Kennedy’s assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald. The text begins: “Here are the facts about Jack Ruby!!…” and goes on to tell about his early jobs and his first visit to Dallas, the building of his sister’s nightclub near the Ambassador Hotel, hiring a band leader, moving back to Chicago, and returning to Dallas to take over his sister’s club. According to the a copy of the notarized statement by Jack’s brother Earl Ruby on 22 December 1992, this is an “autographed, unpublished manuscript written by my brother Jack Ruby from Jail at my request after Jack was convicted of murder and sentenced to death…” According to to his brother’s affidavit “the manuscript was to be used by Jack’s lawyers if a new trial was granted to establish his character as not being capable of pre-meditated murder and that his act on November 24, 1964 was spontaneous and born of anguish and grief. A new trial was granted, but Jack died before the new trial could commence”.

On March 14, 1964, Ruby was convicted of murder with malice and was sentenced to death. Ruby’s conviction was overturned by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on the grounds that “an oral confession of premeditation made while in police custody” should have been ruled inadmissible, because it violated a Texas criminal statute. The court also ruled that the venue should have been changed to a Texas county other than the one in which the high-profile crime had been committed. Ruby died technically unconvicted, because his original conviction was overturned and his retrial was pending at the time of his death.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

145FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM 504
$2,500 - 3,500

507

SANTA ANNA, Antonio López de (1794-1876). Manuscript document signed (“Ant. López Santa Anna”), as President of Mexico, countersigned by José María Tornel, Senior Minister of the War and Navy, 10 March 1842.

12 pages, on three bifolia, on Ministerio de Guerra y Marina stationery, stab-sewn in outer margin.

An official notice outlining rules in 28 parts to the military office of invalids, created in 12 January. Rules and regulations are established regarding operations and hospital accounting, particularly with regard to persons in hospitals who are disappearing.

Antonio López de Santa Anna exerted his strong influence on Mexican politics and government in the first half of the 19th-century, a time often referred to as the “Age of Santa Anna.” He served non-consecutive presidential terms over a 22-year period, interspersed with the continued pursuit of his military career. In the fall of 1841, Santa Anna returned to the presidency for a sixth time, a position he would hold until the turbulent election of 1842. José María Tornel (1795-1853) was prominent among the “santanista,” a group of politicians who helped Santa Anna return to power frequently, despite defeats in the 1836 Texas Revolution and later in the Mexican-American War.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $500 - 700

508

SCHWEITZER, Albert (1875-1965). Out of My Life and Thought. An Autobiography. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1949.

8vo. (Front endpapers slightly toned.) Original cloth (spine head and one fore-corner bumped); dust jacket (price-clipped, minor wear to extremities); slipcase. Provenance: Antonia Brico (1902-1989), conductor and pianist (gift inscription to Margaret and Maria Lial on front pastedown, dated 10 July 1950, and related cards and newspaper clippings laid in).

Fourth printing. ASSOCIATION COPY. The Dutch-born conductor and pianist, Antonia Brico had an enduring friendship with Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the organ-playing doctor who practiced medicine in the wilds of Africa. The two shared a love of Bach’s music, and she detoured home from an engagement in Europe to visit Schweitzer in Africa in 1950. This copy was inscribed by Brico to music shop owner in Monterey CA, Margaret Lial, who arranged concerts in a hall above her shop where presumably the two met. In July 1938, Brico was the first woman to conduct the New York Philharmonic.

[With:]  A postcard photograph depicting a nursing care scene in Lambarene, in western Gabon, where Schweitzer’s hospital was built to treat tropical diseases, INSCRIBED BY SCHWEITZER on the recto margin to Miss Margaret Lial and additionally inscribed and signed by him in French on verso; a photograph of Brico conducting the Denver Orchestra in 1950, inscribed and signed by her on verso; a two-page photostat Christmas letter from Brico outlining her travels, including her lecture on Schweitzer and being his guest at his French headquarters in Gunsbach, inscribed to Margaret Lial and signed at end, with envelope; an unsigned photograph portrait of Schweitzer; and several newspaper clippings related to Brico laid in.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

509

[SHERMAN, William Tecumseh (1820-1891)].

UPTON, Emory. The Armies of Asia and Europe: Embracing Official Reports on the Armies of Japan, China, India, Persia, Italy, Russia, Austria, Germany, France, and England.  New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1878.

8vo. Original cloth (recased with hinges reinforced, some light stains and soiling); slipcase. Provenance: Hon. John A. Kasson (1822-1910), U.S. Congressman from Iowa and Minister to Austria-Hungary (presentation inscription from W. T. Sherman).

INSCRIBED BY GEN. SHERMAN TO THE U. S. MINISTER TO VIENNA on front free endpaper in pencil: “Hon. John A. Kasson / U. S. Minister to Vienna, With Compliments of / W. T. Sherman / General / Washington DC / May 20. 1878.”  Emory Upton “distinguished himself in the Civil War and left a marked influence on the army as commandant of cadets at West Point from 1870 to 1875. Starting in July, 1875, he toured the world and spent two years writing this highly detailed book” (Smith). The recipient, John A. Kasson, spent many years serving as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Iowa. In 1877, Kasson was appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Austria-Hungary by President Rutherford B. Hayes, a position he held until early 1881. Smith U15.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

146 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

510

[STALIN, Joseph (1878-1953), his copy].  Session of the Academy of Science USSR - Dedicated to the Anniversary of the Brilliant Work of J. V. Stalin “Marxism and Linguistics Issues” [in Russian]. Moscow, 1951.

8vo. Photographic frontispiece portrait of Stalin. Original gilt-lettered cloth (lettering a little dulled); slipcase.

STALIN’S COPY, SIGNED ON THE TITLE-PAGE AND WITH A COUPLE OF MARGINAL ANNOTATIONS in his hand in blue pencil. With his library stamp “J. V. Stalin” on title-page and lower margin of first page of the main text. Stalin was an avid reader, and at the time of his death, it is estimated his personal library ran to approximately 25,000 books, pamphlets and periodicals. Roughly 11,000 were classics of Russian and world literature by authors like Pushkin, Gogol, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Hugo and Shakespeare. The remainder were nonfiction titles in Marxism, history, economics and other fields. Lenin was by far the most represented author, at nearly 250 publications. Stalin had his own ex-libris stamp and classification system. The centerpiece of his Moscow residence was its library, although he preferred to store his collection off-site and have an assistant bring him reading material upon request.

According to Roberts, scholars have preserved about 400 volumes that contain Stalin’s pometki— markings, notes and marginalia. BOOKS FROM STALIN’S LIBRARY ARE RARE AT AUCTION, ESPECIALLY SO SIGNED BY HIM. See Geoffrey Roberts, Stalin’s Library: A Dictator and His Books, New Haven, 2022.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $5,000 - 7,000

511

THATCHER, Margaret (1925-2013). Statecraft. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 2002.

8vo. Publisher’s blue leather gilt.

FIRST EDITION, SIGNED BY MARGARET THATCHER of her work Statecraft, which outlines Thatcher’s views of a post-9/11 world. With additional certificate signed by Thatcher laid in.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $200 - 300

512

[WRIGHT, Orville (1871-1948)]. KELLY, Fred C. The Wright Brothers: A Biography Authorized by Orville Wright. New York, 1943.

8vo. (Some toning and spotting to half-title, occasional minor spotting.) Original cloth (recased with free endpapers renewed, spine ends and extremities repaired); slipcase. Provenance: Melvill Jones (1887-1975), aeronautical engineer (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY ORVILLE WRIGHT on half-title: “To Professor Melvill Jones / with my compliments and cordial regard. Orville Wright / May 5, 1943.”

Sir Bennett Melvill Jones was Francis Mond Professor of Aeronautical Engineering at the University of Cambridge from 1919 to 1952. He demonstrated the importance of streamlining in aircraft design, developing the ideas of Louis Charles Breguet into a refined theory to demonstrate emphatically the importance of drag to the performance of aircraft. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$600 - 800

147FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
148 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 515

513

ADAMS, John (1735-1826). Partly printed document signed (“John Adams”), as President, Philadelphia, 28 October 1799, countersigned by Timothy Pickering as Secretary of State.

1 page, folio, 371 x 320 mm, accomplished in manuscript, with paper seal, creased from folding, a few tiny holes along creases occasionally repaired or touching text, some soiling

A military land grant issuing 400 acres northwest of the Ohio River between the little Miami and Sciota Rivers to Robert Jouitt (1756-1796), who served as Lieutenant, “in consideration of military service...to the United States, in the Virginia line on Continental Establishment, and in pursuance of an Act of the Congress of the United States.” Jouitt fought at the Battles of Monmouth and Brandywine, and was a Valley Forge under Washington, and was ultimately promoted to Captain. The Virginia Military District comprised a nearly four-million-acre tract of land in the southwestern part of Ohio. State officials used land grants to reward veterans for their military service in lieu of payment. In order to promote recruitment, Washington offered tracts of land in exchange for three or more years of service to the Continental Army during the war.

$3,000 - 5,000

514

[AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR]. A group of 3 works about the Revolutionary War, comprising:

ADAMS, John Quincy. The Jubilee of the Constitution. NY, 1839. EXTRA ILLUSRTATED BY THE ADDITION OF 58 ENGRAVED PLATES OF PORTRAITS, SCENES, AND A DOUBLE-PAGE FACSIMILE. Later red morocco gilt and stamped in black by Charles E. Lauriat Co.; chemise and slipcase. Sabin 281. -- CARSON, Hampton L., editor. History of the Celebration of the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Promulgation of the Constitution of the United States. Philadelphia, 1889. 2 volumes. -MORRIS, Gouverneur. A Diary of the French Revolution 1789-1793. Boston, 1939. 2 volumes. Glassine for vol. II. -- Together, 3 works in 5 volumes, all 8vo, most in original cloth, ALL FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine.

$400 - 600

AGRICOLA, Georgius (1494-1555). De Re Metallica Translated from the First Latin Edition of 1556...

Herbert Clark HOOVER and Lou Henry HOOVER, translators. London: The Mining Magazine, 1912.

Folio (343 x 213 mm). Numerous full-page and in-text illustrations reproducing the 1556 woodcuts. Original vellum, spine lettered in black (some spotting and soiling, a few tiny splits to upper joint). Provenance: Mrs. Hessenberg (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY HOOVER to Mrs. Hessenberg: “To Mrs. Hessenberg from Lou Henry Hoover.” This first systematic treatise on mining and metallurgy was translated from the first Latin Edition of 1556. Duveen, p. 5; Hoover 28; Norman 21.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

149FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
515
Printed & Manuscript Americana, including American Prints Lots 513-694 514 515

use of Allied Forces in China. Kweilin: n.p., 1943.

Oblong 8vo. Printed on accordion-folded rice paper. Original wrappers (spine repaired).

Presumed first edition, dedicated to Major General C. L. Chennault, and including a reproduction of a letter from Chennault to Colonel M. E. Chiang in which Chennault agrees that the book can be dedicated to him at Professor Oo’s request. Major General Clair Chennault led the Flying Tigers and the U. S. 14th Air Force against the Japanese in China and Burma during WWII. The work, not an official U. S. Government publication, was written by Monglou L. Oo, a professor in Guilin, who wanted to do something to be of help to the Americans and Allied Forces. RARE.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

[ALMANACS - BOSTON]. A group of 8 almanacs, published Boston by various printers, comprising:

LOW, Nathanael (1740-1808). An Astronomical Diary or almanack for...1787 Boston: Printed and Sold by T. & J. Fleet, [1786]. ESTC W22497; Evans 19760. -- LOW, Nathanael (1740-1808). An Astronomical Diary or almanack for...1797. Boston: Printed and Sold by T. & J. Fleet, [1796]. ESTC W22483; Evans 30707. -- LOW, Nathanael (1740-1808). An Astronomical Diary or almanack for...1798. Boston: Printed and Sold by T. & J. Fleet, [1797]. ESTC W22536; Evans 32391. -- LOW, Nathanael (1740-1808). An Astronomical Diary or almanack for...1799. Boston: Printed and Sold by T. & J. Fleet, [1798]. ESTC W14009; Evans 34020. -- Another copy (lacking leaves), bound with: LOW, Nathanael (1740-1808). An Astronomical Diary or almanack for...1800. Boston: Printed and Sold by T. & J. Fleet, [1799]. (Lacking quire D.) ESTC W14010; Evans 35746. -- Bickerstaff’s genuine Massachusetts, New-Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode-Island, and Connecticutt Almanack, For...1792. Boston: Printed and sold by Nathaniel Covely, [1791]. ESTC W35408 (locating 5 copies in North America); Evans 23984. -- THOMAS, Robert Bailey (1766-1846). The Farmer’s Almanack...for...1795 Boston: for Joseph Belknap and thomas Hall, [1794]. ESTC W328; Evans 27792. -- CARLETON, Osgood (1742-1816). Carleton’s Almanack, for...1797 Boston: Printed and sold by Samuel Hall, [1796]. ESTC W22569 (locating 6 copies in North America); Evans 30163. -- Together, 8 works in 8 volumes, 8vo, some overall browning and soiling, a few leaves with tears, all stabsewn.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois

517

[ALMANAC - BOSTON]. AMES, Nathaniel (1708-1764). An Astronomical Diary, or an Almanack For the Year of our Lord Christ, 1761. Boston [i.e. New London, CT]: John Draper et al [i.e. Timothy Green], [1761].

8vo (170 x 100 mm). Stab-sewn.  A pirated issue, typographically distinct from the real Draper issue, lacking the phrase “Sold also by the booksellers” at the end of the imprint. ESTC W22464; Evans 8787.

[And:] AMES. An Astronomical Diary; Or, Almanack....1764. Boston: R. and S. Draper et al, [1763]. 8vo (170 x 106 mm). Disbound with old cellotape repairs (soiled and frayed). ESTC W587 (locating only two copies, both at the American Antiquarian Society); Evans 9231.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois

$400 - 600

519

[ALMANACS - PHILADELPHIA]. A group of 7 almanacs, published Philadelphia by various printers, comprising:

COPERNICUS, Philo, pseud. The American Calender; or an Almanack...1768 Philadelphia: William and Thomas Bradford [1767]. (Defective, lacking leaves.) See ESTC W556 locating 3 copies in North America); see Evans 10741. -- WEATHERWISE, Abraham. Father Abraham’s Almanack...1771 Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by John Dunlap, [1770]. (Defective, lacking leaves.) See ESTC W36916; see Evans 11927. -- [ANDREWS, William]. Poor Will’s almanack, for...1777. Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by Joseph Crukshank, [1776]. (Lacking one leaf, repairs.) ESTC W32683; Evans 14648. -- Poulson’s Town and Country almanac, for...1789. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by Zachariah Poulson, [1788]. (Defective, lacking leaves.) ESTC W22810; Evans 21572. -- SAUNDERS, Richard, pseud. Poor Richard improved: being an almanack...for...1790. Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by Hall and Sellers, [1789]. ESTC W22797 (locating 6 copies in North America); Evans 22129. -- SAUNDERS, Richard, pseud. Poor Richard improved: being an almanack...for...1800. [Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by Hall and Sellers, 1799]. (Portion of title torn away.) ESTC W21205 (locating 4 copies in North America); Evans 36277. -- [With:] The Virginia almanack for...1776. [Williamsburg: J. Dixon & W. Hunter, [1775]). (Defective, lacking most leaves.) See ESTC W33490; see Evans 14434. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, all 8vo, all soiled and frayed with spine repairs, all stab-sewn.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois $500 - 700

150 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
518
$500 - 700

520

[ALMANACS - TRENTON]. SHOEMAKER, Abraham (1753-1818). The NewJersey and Pennsylvania Almanac, for the Year 1795. Trenton: Printed and sold by Isaac Collins, [1794].

8vo (180 x 110 mm). Stab-sewn (imperfect, lacking leaves, some old cello repairs, a few holes, a few repairs, soiled and frayed.) Not in ESTC; see Sabin 53165.

[And:] SHOEMAKER. The New-Jersey and Pennsylvania Almanac, for the Year 1800. Trenton: Printed and sold...by Sherman, Mershon & Thomas, [1799]. 8vo (185 x 112 mm). (Imperfect, lacking several leaves at end.) ESTC W15783 (locating 9 copies in North America); Evans 36305.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois $200 - 300

521

[ALMANAC - WORCESTER, MA]. THOMAS, Isaiah (1749-1831). A group of 5 almanacks, all published in Worcester, Massachusetts by Isaiah Thomas, comprising:

Thomas’s Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode-Island, Newhampshire & Vermont Almanack, With an Ephemeris, for the Year of our Lord 1795 Worcester, [1794]. (First two leaves torn horizontally, 12 leaves with 1 1/2-in. strip excised at head). ESTC W29842; Evans 27052. -- Thomas’s... Almanack...1796. Worcester, [1795]. (Lacking one leaf, a few marginal tears affecting text, 2 leaves with 1 1/2-in strip excised at head.) ESTC W29843; Evans 29624. -- Isaiah Thomas’s...Almanack...1798. Worcester, [1797]. Second edition. (One leaf torn with loss to lower margin.) Provenance: A few contemporary annotations. ESTC W29845; Evans 32919. -- Isaiah Thomas’s...Almanack...1800. Worcester, [1799]. (Lacking F1, tears with occasional losses.) ESTC W29795; Evans 36413. -- Isaiah Thomas’s... Almanack...1801. Worcester, [1800]. (Lacking several leaves, 2 leaves with 1 1/2-in. strip excised at head.) ESTC W10916; Evans 38628. -- Together, 5 volumes, all 8vo (each approximately 190 x 115 mm), all stab-sewn, all with some soiling or fraying.

- CARLISLE, PROVIDENCE, WILMINGTON]. A group of 4 almanacs published Carlisle, Providence and Wilmington by various printers, comprising:

TOBLER, John. The Pennsylvania Town and Country-man’s Almanack, for...1772. Wilmington: Printed and Sold by James Adams, [1771]. ESTC W36789 (locating 4 copies in North America); Evans 12248. -- THORNTON, Elisha (1748-1816). The New-England Almanack, or Lady’s and Gentleman’s Diary, For...1796. Providence: Carter and Wilkinson, [1795]. ESTC W22728; Evans 29630. -- BICKERSTAFF, Isaac, pseud. The New-England Almanack, or Lady’s and Gentleman’s Diary, For...1799. Providence: Carter and Wilkinson, [1798]. (A few tape repairs to spine.) ESTC W15189; Evans 35002. -- The Western Almanac, for...1798. Carlisle, PA: for Archibald Loudon by George Kline, [1797]. (Lacking 10 leaves.) ESTC W32777 (locating only 2 copies in North America); Evans 35008. -- Together, 4 works in 4 volumes, 8vo, some overall browning, soiling, and fraying, all stab-sewn.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois $300 - 400

CAPPON, Lester Jesse. Atlas of Early American History the Revolutionary Era 1760-1790. Princeton: Princeton University Press for The Newberry Library & The Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1976. -- REMINGTON, Frederic. Men with the Bark On. NY & L, 1900. -- HITTELL, Theodore H. The Adventures of James Capen Adams. Boston et al, 1860. Howes H543. -- SERVICE, Robert W. The Spell of the Yukon and other Verses. NY, 1907. Partial glassine laid in. -- GARRETT, Pat F. The Authentic Life of Billy, The Kid. Norman, OK, [1954]. First “New” edition, FIRST ISSUE. -- MERCER, Asa Shinn. The Banditti of the Plains. Norman, OK, [1954]. First “New” edition, second issue. -- McDONALD, John. Biographical Sketches of General Nathaniel Massie. Dayton, OH, 1852. 19th-century half calf gilt. Later edition. -- And 6 others. Together, 13 works in 13 volumes, various 8vo and folio sizes, most in original cloth, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Provenance: One book from the collection of Daniel Carter Beard, American illustrator, author, and social reformer (book plate). Complete list available upon request.

$200 - 300

151FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
522 [ALMANACS

524

[AMERICAN NATURAL HISTORY]. A group of 2 19th century American works in 4 volumes, comprising:

BROWNE, D.J. The Sylva Americana. Boston; William Hyde & Co., 1832. Illustrated. Contemporary calf. --  WALCOTT, Charles D. Nineteenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1899. Includes two map volumes. Publisher’s brown cloth gilt. -- Together, 2 works in 4 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally good.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $300 - 500

525

[AMERICAN REVOLUTION]. Explication de ce tableau touchant l’etat de la Nation d’Angleterre | Erklarung dieses Kupfer, in denen jezigen umstande der Engl. Nation. Amsterdam: n.p., [1780?].

Engraving with hand-coloring, 364 x 241 mm, with captions in French and Dutch in two columns lower margin, hinged to mount, matted and framed, some minor browning ,a few captions in pencil and one old crayon mark lower margin.

RARE REVOLUTIONARY WAR-ERA SATIRICAL ENGRAVING

Referencing the thread to British commerce posed by the avarice of England’s neighbors and controversial conduct of Richard and William Howe as commanders of the British land and sea forces in America.  A cow, representing the commerce of Great Britain, stands at the shore while an American saws off her horns. A Dutchman milks the cow while a Frenchman and Spaniard wait for their share of the milk. The British lion sleeps in the foreground while a small dog befouls him.  In the background, Lord Howe’s ship has run ashore at Philadelphia, and the Howe brothers are depicted in a drunken stupor at a table, representing the hollow victory of the capture of Philadelphia. An Englishman, wringing his hands in despair, watches the scene unaware of how to help.

We trace copies of this engraving in the Colonial Williamsburg collection, and at the John Carter Brown library; the present copy has captions which conform to the Williamsburg copy, while the captions of the John Carter Brown copy differ slightly.

- 700

AMERICANA]. A group of 6 works, comprising:

ELLIOTT, Richard Smith. Notes Taken in Sixty Years. St. Louis: R. P. Studley, 1883. Contemporary green cloth gilt. -- FLINT, Timothy (1780-1840). The History and Geography of the Mississippi Valley. Cincinnati and Boston: E. H. Flint, and Carter, Hendee, and Co., 1833. 2 volumes, 8vo (217 x 131 mm). Third edition. Howes F200. -- GRAY, A. B. Mineral Lands on Lake Superior. Letter from The Secretary of War relative to the mineral lands on Lake Superior... 29th Congress, 1st Session. Washington, D.C.: House of Representatives, War Department, 1846. Includes attached large folding map of Lake Superior with vignette of outpost. -- SAPPINGTON, John. The Theory and Treatment of Fevers. Revised and Corrected by Ferdinando Stith, M. D. Arrow Rock: Published by the Author, 1844. Contemporary calf pasted over modern calf. Provenance: Dr J.F. Snyder. -- THIERS, Adopphe. The Mississippi Bubble: A Memoir of John Law. To Which are Added Authentic Accounts of the Darien Expedition, and the South Sea Scheme. Frank S. Fiske, translator and editor. New York: W. A. Townsend & Company, 1859. Contemporary brown cloth gilt. Provenance: Benjamin H. Lane. -- WALKER, C. B. The Mississippi Valley, and Prehistoric Events. Burlington, Iowa: R. T. Root, 1881. Contemporary sheepskin crudely rebacked. Provenance: Virginia Institute. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, 8vos, condition generally very good.

700

152 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$500
526 NO LOT 527 [19TH-CENTURY
$500 -
524 525 527

528

[19TH-CENTURY AMERICANA]. A group of 7 works, comprising:

BURTON, Richard F. The City of the Saints and Across the Rocky Mountains to California. London: Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1861. Illustrated. Later cloth with marbled boards. -- COOPER, Susan Fenimore. Pages and Pictures, from the Writings of James Fenimore Cooper, with Notes New York: James Miller, 1865. Contemporary full calf gilt. Provenance: General and Mrs. George Custer (presentation inscription to Mrs. Custer, letter explaining the book was in Custer’s library). PRESENTATION COPY.  -- FEARON, Henry Bradshaw. Sketches of America. Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles Through the Eastern and Western States of America... London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1818. Contemporary half calf with upper cover detaching. -- KIPLING, Rudyard. Captains Courageous. New York: The Century Company, 1897. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. FIRST AMERICAN EDITION. -- MITCHELL, S. Augustus. Mitchell’s Primary Geography. An Easy Introduction to the Study of Geography: Designed for the Instruction of Children in Schools and Families. Philadelphia: Thomas, Cowperthwait & Co., 1846. Illustrated. Contemporary marbled wraps. -- WALTER, Richard. A Voyage Round the World in the Years 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, by George Anson. Esq. Afterwards Lord Anson, Commander-in-Chief of a Squadron of his Majesty’s Ships, Sent Upon an Expedition to the South Seas. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, ca. 1835- 1850. Folding map present. Publisher’s brown cloth gilt. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, various 8vo and 4to sizes, condition generally fine.

- 800

[AMERICAN WEST].  A group of 9 signed works, comprising:

BYRNE, P.E. Soldiers of the Plains. New York: Minton, Balch, & Company, 1926. Publisher’s red cloth. -- CARNEGIE, Andrew. An American Four-in-Hand in Britain. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1891. Publisher’s red cloth. -- CODY, William F. Last of the Great Scouts. Chicago and Duluth: The Duluth Press Publishing Company, 1899. Publisher’s red cloth gilt. -- LAUT, Agnes C. The Blazed Trail of the Old Frontier. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company, 1926. Publisher’s red cloth; original slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 67 of 926 copies. -- ROOSEVELT, Kermit. The Long Trail. New York: The Review of Reviews, 1921. Publisher’s beige cloth. Provenance: Frank E. Wade, Jr. -- Together, 9 works in 9 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally very fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

- 700

153FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$600
529
$500
528 529

530

[AMERICANA]. A group of 9 works relating to the American West, including:

LEWIS, Meriwether, and William CLARK, William. History of the Expedition. NY, [1842]. 2 volumes. “First Harper edition.” -- SCHRADER, Frank Charles. [Collected Papers of Frank Charles Schrader 1898-1916]. Comprising various publications. Contemporary cloth.  -- MITCHELL, Samuel Augustus. Accompaniment to Mitchell’s New Map Philadelphia, 1925. Reprint. -- JEKYLL, Gertrude. Old West Surrey. L et al, 1904. -- SCHLEY, Winfield Scott. Report of… Greely Relief Expedition of 1884. Washington. 1887. -- And 4 others. Together, 9 works in 10 volumes, various 4to, 8vo, and 12mo, most illustrated, most in original cloth, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Provenance: one volume compiled by and from the collection of Frank Charles Schrader, American geologist (letter, annotations); subsequently loaned to and withdrawn from the Harvard University Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology (bookplate, withdrawn stamps). Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $400 - 600

531

[AMERICANA]. A group of 10 works in 10 volumes, including a pair of Native American language works, comprising:

BUEL, J.W. Heroes of the Plains. St. Louis: N.D. Thompson & Co., 1881. Frontispiece, with illustrations. Contemporary calf. -- CRAVEN, Thomas (ed.) A Treasury of American Prints. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1939. Publisher’s spiral bound cloth. --  CROOK, William H. Memories of the White House. Boston: Little, Brown, & Company, 1911. Publisher’s blue cloth. INSCRIBED BY WILLIAM H. CROOK, “With all good wishes.” -- NEVINS, Allan. Hamilton Fish: The Inner History of the Grant Administration. New York: Dodd, Mead, & Company, 1937. Publisher’s red cloth. INSCRIBED BY ALLAN NEVINS, “With the sincere regards.” -- NORTH, S.D. (ed.) Heads of Families at the First Census of the United States, 1790. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1908. Publisher’s blue wrappers. -- RIGGS, S.R. Model First Reader, Wayawa Tokaheya. Chicago: George Sherwood & Co., [n.d.]. Publisher’s printed boards. -- TRUMBULL, John. Autobiography, Reminiscences, and Letters. New York and London: Wiley and Putnam, 1841. Publisher’s black cloth. -- Together, 10 works in 10 volumes, 8vo and 4to, condition generally fine.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $400 - 600

532

[AMERICANA]. A group of 8 works relating to American history, including:

BEVERLEY, Robert. Histoire de la Virginie. Amsterdam, 1712. Howes B410. -- MARSHALL, Humphrey. The History of Kentucky. Frankfort, KY, 1824. Vol. I only.  Contemporary calf. Sabin 44780. -- LINCOLN, Mary Johnson. Mrs. Lincoln’s Boston Cook Book. Boston, 1884. Original cloth-backed boards. Second issue. -- The Constitution of the State of Massachusetts. Boston, 1805. Original sheep-backed boards. Sabin 45692. -- And 4 others. Together, 8 works in 9 volumes, various 8vo and 12mo sizes, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $400 - 600

532A

AMES, Fisher (1758-1808). The Speech of Mr. Ames in the House of Representatives of the United States...on Thursday, April 28, 1796. Philadelphia: John Fenno, 1796.

8vo (193 x 118 mm). Half-title. (Some spotting.) Modern brown paper wrappers. Provenance: Horatio Townsend (cropped signature on title-page).

Second edition of Ames’s famous Federalist oration. “Fisher Ames was one of the most distinguished thinkers of the Federalist party and a staunch supporter of Hamilton on the floor of the House. During the critical debate on Jay’s Treaty, his great speech ultimately carried the day in a close vote” (Federal). ESTC W3540; Evans 29985; see Federal Hundred 55; Sabin 1302.

$400 - 600

533

ANDREWS, John (1736-1809).

History of the War with America, France, Spain, and Holland; Commencing in 1775 and Ending in 1783. London: John Fielding and John Jarvis, 1785-1786.

4 volumes, 8vo (206 x 125 mm). 31 plates and maps (6 folding, 7 with hand-coloring), list of subscribers in vol. IV. (Some offsetting or spotting, some soft creasing, marginal chipping to a few leaves.) Contemporary tree calf gilt, spines gilt (a few joints starting or repaired, lacking lettering-pieces, some light wear); slipcase. Provenance: John Parkinson (signatures, 1786).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST STATE with double-rule heading on the first text leaf of each volume. Andrews’ work, compiled from contemporaneous newspaper and pamphlet accounts, was considered the most satisfactory account of the war by the Tories. The maps show the North American colonies as far west as the Great Lakes, and there are portraits of Burgoyne, Cornwallis, Franklin, Lafayette, and Washington. ESTC T88338; Howes A-259; Sabin 1501.

- 1,500

154 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$1,000
530 532A 532 533

534

ARMSTRONG, Ambrose N. (b.1852).  Oregon: Comprising a Brief History and Full Description of the Territories of Oregon and Washington. Chicago: Chas. Scott & Co., 1857.

8vo (186 x 111 mm). (Some spotting and browning.) Original blind-stamped green cloth gilt-lettered on upper cover and spine (some very slight staining, corners bumped, otherwise bright). Provenance: Alfred J. Cox (bookplate); a few annotations in pencil on rear pastedown.

FIRST EDITION. “It is apparent that Armstrong spent most of his time in Oregon west of the Cascade Mountains. Seven of his chapters are devoted to this area, with two chapters on the Willamette Valley alone. One chapter only is given to Eastern Oregon. Armstrong concludes the work with brief vocabularies of Chinook Jargon and the Nootka dialect” (Wagner-Camp 283a). Graff 87; Howes A-318; Streeter Sale 3330.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $300 - 400

[ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY] -- [SOUTHWESTERN AMERICANA]. BIEBER, Ralph B. and LeRoy Reuben HAFEN (1893-1985), editors. The Southwest Historical Series. Glendale, CA: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1931-1943.

12 volumes, 8vo. Frontispieces, numerous illustrations. Original maroon cloth gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut and unopened (some minor rubbing).

FIRST EDITION of the important Southwestern Americana reference, including Index vol. XII and “The Southwest Historical Series” pamphlet from The Arthur H. Clark Company laid in. The first major series issued by the Arthur H. Clark company after their move to Glendale. In addition to southwestern travel accounts, The Southwest Historical Series also includes documents related to the Colorado Gold Rush, southern trail routes to California in 1849, and the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush. Howes S791.

$400 - 600

editors. [Kingdom in the West Series]  Spokane, WA & Norman, OK: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1997-2013.

11 volumes (of 14, lacking vols. XI and XIII-XIV), 8vo. Portrait frontispieces, numerous illustrations, vol. I with Mormon Pioneer Trail brochure in rear pocket. Original blue leather, stamped in silver.

LIMITED EDITION, number 46 of 55 copies.  The first “Collector’s Edition,” of which 50 were for sale, EACH VOLUME SIGNED BY ITS AUTHOR: William Bagley, David L. Bigler, Roger Robin Ekins, Kenneth N. Owens, Michael W. Homer, B. Carmen, and William P. MacKinnon. With Vols IV and XII signed by both Bagley and BiglerThe “Kingdom in the West” Series explores the story of the Latter Day Saints and their history in and contributions to the Western Frontier. “The Mormons’ frontier experience, their religious vision and political ambitions will be revealed in the words of the pioneers, edited and illuminated by noted historians of the West” (preface).

[With:] Collector’s Edition Keepsakes for volumes I-X and XII. 11 volumes, 8vo. Original wrappers, stamped in silver or printed in blue.

$300 - 400

537

[ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY] -- [WESTERN AMERICANA]. HAFEN, LeRoy Reuben (1893-1985) and Ann W. HAFEN (1893-1970), editors. The Far West and the Rockies Historical Series. Glendale, CA: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1954-1961.

15 volumes, 8vo. Frontispiece, numerous illustrations. Original green cloth, spine gilt-lettered, top edges stained red, others uncut (slight wear to a few corners).

FIRST EDITIONS of this collection of primary documents related to the exploration of the American far west, including Heap’s Central Route to the Pacific, journals of the S.H. Long Expedition, diaries of W.H. Jackson, and letters of Rufus B. Sage. The Far West and the Rockies Historical Series was completed by Arthur H. Clark, Jr. and considered the largest undertaking by the Arthur H. Clark Company in the decade since the passing of its founder. Clark & Brunet 104.

$600 - 800

155FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

538 [ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY] -- [MONTANA]. STUART, Granville (18341918). Forty Years on the Frontier. Paul C. PHILLIPS, editor. Cleveland: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1925.

2 volumes, 8vo. Frontispieces, numerous illustrations. (Some light toning.)

Original navy cloth gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut (some light wear, corners lightly bumped).

FIRST EDITION of Stuart’s history of early Montana and who “had a knowledge of the far western frontier that was intimate and varied… he was a part of every development until its end,” (preface). Adams, Rampaging Herd 2195; Adams, Six-Guns 2160; Clark & Brunet 245; Howes S1096.

$200 - 300

[ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY] -- [AMERICANA]. A group of 7 works published by the Arthur H. Clark Company, comprising:

FREDERICK, James Vincent. Ben Holladay: The Stagecoach King. 1940. -- MERRIAM, Clinton Hart. The Dawn of the World. 1910. -- RISTER, Carl Coke. The Southwestern Frontier, 1865-1881. 1928. -- ROTHERT, Otto A. The Outlaws of Cave-in Rock. 1924. -- FOREMAN, Grant. Pioneer Days in the Early Southwest. 1926. -- HALLENBECK, Cleve et al. Legends of the Spanish Southwest. 1938. -- ROBERTSON, James Alexander. Louisiana Under the Rule of Spain, France, and the United States 1785-1807. 1911. 2 volumes. -Together, 7 works in 8 volumes, all 8vo, all illustrated, all in original cloth gilt, ALL FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine.

$300 - 400

[ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY]. WHITE, David A., compiler. News of the Plains and Rockies 1803-1865. Spokane, WA: The Arthur H. Clark Company, 19962001.

8 volumes (of 9, lacking later-issued index volume IX), 8vo. Numerous maps, tables, facsimiles, and illustrations. Original tan cloth gilt, stamped in brown.

FIRST COLLECTED EDITION of important Western Americana reference, which includes “168 rare news reports of pioneers who epitomized the Western spirit… from the Louisiana Purchase to the end of the Civil War and the building of the Pacific railroad” (vol. I, p.[7]).

$200 - 300

541

[ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY] -- [WESTERN AMERICANA]. A group of 7 works, comprising:

MORGAN, Dale Lowell, and Carl I. WHEAT. Jedediah Smith and his Maps of the American West. SF, 1954. LIMITED EDITION, number 26 of 530. -- DICKSON, Albert Jerome, editor. Covered Wagon Days. 1929. -- HAFEN, Le Roy R. The Overland Mail 1849-1869. 1926. Howes H11. -- PEAKE, Ora Brooks. The Colorado Range Cattle Industry. 1937. -- PELZER, Louis. The Cattlemen’s Frontier. 1936. Howes P187. -- BLAIR, Walter A. A Raft Pilot’s Log. Cleveland, 1930. -- HOUGHTON, Eliza Poor Donner. The Expedition of the Donner Party and its Tragic Fate. 1920. Later edition. -- Together, 7 works in 7 volumes, most published in Cleveland or Glendale by the Arthur H. Clark Company, various folio and 8vo sizes, all in original cloth gilt, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally fine.

$400 - 600

156 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

542

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851) and John BACHMAN (1790-1874). The Quadrupeds of North America. New York: V. G. Audubon, 1849-1851-1854. 3 vols.

3 volumes, 4to. Half-titles with 155 hand-colored lithographed plates plates by W.E. Hitchcock and R. Trembly after original drawings by John James and John Wodehouse Audubon. (Some light spotting.) Contemporary calf gilt (some rubbing, hinges reinforced). Provenance: Bookplate.

FIRST OCTAVO EDITION. The Quadrupeds was first published between 1845 and 1848 in three folio volumes with 150 colored plates; a supplement, published in 1854, provided an additional volume of text and 6 plates. This first octavo edition, issued in response to the success of the octavo edition of The Birds of America, contains all of the original 150 plates and 5 of the 6 supplemental plates, reduced by means of the camera lucida. Bennett, p. 5; Nissen ZBI 163.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$2,500 - 3,500

543

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851). PETERSON, Roger Tory and Virginia Marie PETERSON. The Audubon Society Baby Elephant Folio Audubon’s Birds of America. New York: Abbeville Press, 1981.

Folio. Half-title, color frontispiece, profusion of color plates, numerous color illustrations. Original brown leather gilt (slight wear to extremities, a few minor scuffs to sides).

LIMITED EDITION, number 1592 of 2500 copies, SIGNED BY THE PETERSONS. Unlike early editions of Birds of America, this volume is organized in “a modern scientific classification sequence that somewhat parallels the evolutionary history of a genetically related group of organisms” (preface).

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

544

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851).   Red-Shouldered Hawk (Plate LVI)

Falco Lineatus

Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1834, 950 x 628 mm, 2-in. tear crossing imprint repaired verso, some marginal chipping, some toning to extreme outer margin, a few spots. Low p. 54 (variant 1)

$5,000 - 7,000

157FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
542 544

545

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Chestnut-Sided Warbler (Plate LIX)

Dendroica pensylvanica Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1835, 968 x 640 mm, one tiny marginal chip, a few mostly marginal soft stains or spots, some light toning from matting. Low p. 55 (variant 1).

Property from the Estate of Timothy Wehling, Seattle, Washington

$800 - 1,200

546

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

House Wren (Plate 83)

Troglodytes aedon Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), circa 1830, on J. Whatman paper dated 1830, 960 x 636 mm, some toning, a few short marginal tears repaired, a few tiny spots. Low p. 63 (variant 2).

$2,000 - 3,000

158 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

547

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Broad-winged Hawk (Plate 91)

Buteo platypterus

Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), circa 1830, on J. Whatman paper dated 1830, 970 x 654 mm, 4-in. marginal tear not affecting image and some marginal chipping repaired verso, some darkening to extreme sheet edge, some mostly marginal spotting. Low p. 66 (variant 2).

$5,000 - 7,000

548

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Rose-breasted Grosbeak (Plate CXXVII)

Pheucticus ludovicianus

Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), on J. Whatman paper dated 1831, 955 x 638 mm, some toning from old matting, small surface abrasion in blank area of plate, a few pale spots. Low p. 78.

Property from the Estate of Timothy Wehling, Seattle, Washington

$1,500 - 2,500

159FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

549

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Rose-breasted Grosbeak (Plate CXXVII)

Pheucticus ludovicianus

Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), on J. Whatman paper dated 1831, 810 x 652 mm. Low p. 78. 32 x 25 3/4 inches.

Property from a Private Collector, Madison, Wisconsin

$1,000 - 1,500

551

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Mountain Mocking bird. Varied Thrush (Plate CCCLXIX)

Sage Thrasher, Oreoscoptes montanus. Varied Thrush, Ixoreus naevius. Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), circa 1837, on J. Whatman paper dated 1837, 698 x 584 mm. Low p. 158. Tiny abrasion to blank area in plate, crease to lower corner with small repair verso. 27 1/2 x 23 inches.

Property from a Private Collector, Madison, Wisconsin $1,000 - 1,500

550

AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Great Crested Flycatcher (Plate CXXIX)

Myiarchus crinitus

Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), on J. Whatman paper dated 1836, 940 x 628 mm, one tiny tear lower margin repaired. Low p. 78.

Property from the Estate of Timothy Wehling, Seattle, Washington

$800 - 1,200

552

BARTRAM, William (1739-1823). Voyage dans les parties sud de l’Amerique Septentrionale; Savoir: les Carolines septentrionale et meridionale, la Georgie, les Florides orientale et occidentale, le pays des Cherokees, le vaste territoire des Muscogulges ou de la confederation Creek, et le pays des Chactaws Translated from English into French by P.V. Benoist. Paris: Maradan, An IX [1801].

2 volumes, 8vo (211 x 138 mm). Half-titles and errata leaf in each volume; folding map “Carte des Carolines Meridionale et Septentrionale, la Georgie, la Floride, Orientale et Occidentale...” after J.B. Poirson by Blondeau, frontispiece portrait of Mico Chlucco engraved by Bovinet after Bartram, 3 engraved folding plates. ORIGINAL WRAPPERS, UNCUT (some wear, upper hinge split vol. II); modern chemises.

Second edition in French, preceded by an edition of 1799, of Bartram’s classic work on the Southern frontier. William Bartram’s father, John Bartram, was a noted botanist, and the present work details plant and animal life as well as various Indian cultures. The French editions of Bartram’s work are the only editions to include the map of the United States.  Howes B-223; Sabin 3871; Stafleu & Cowan 329.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

160 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
$400 - 600

553

BATES, Katharine Lee. Autograph manuscript signed (Katharine Lee Bates”), a fair copy of the full four verses of “America the Beautiful.” N.p., n.d.

1 page, 4to, 32 lines in 4 stanzas, on her personal stationery, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame) Provenance: Corinne Waldo (Bates’s friend, with signed note from Waldo’s granddaughter).

“O BEAUTIFUL FOR SPACIOUS SKIES, FOR AMBER WAVES OF GRAIN”

A fine copy of all four stanzas of the 1911 version of “America the Beautiful.” Bates was inspired to pen her patriotic hymn by a visit to Pike’s Peak. Bates was living in Colorado where she was teaching English at Colorado College. She would explain, “One day some of the other teachers and I decided to go on a trip to 14,000-foot Pikes Peak. We hired a prairie wagon. Near the top we had to leave the wagon and go the rest of the way on mules. I was very tired. But when I saw the view, I felt great joy. All the wonder of America seemed displayed there, with the sea-like expanse.” She returned to her room at the Antlers hotel, and wrote a few stanzas in her notebook.

The poem, which she originally entitled “Pikes Peak,” was first published with the title “America” in The Congregationalist to commemorate the fourth of July in 1893, and was amended in 1904 and again in 1911. In addition to her visit to Pike›s Peak, Bates was inspired by what she saw when she traveled from Massachusetts to Colorado: the World›s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and the wheat fields of the heartland in Kansas. Her poem was set to at least 75 different melodies, but it was Samuel A. Ward›s hymn tune which was generally considered the best setting as early as 1910. The song, often considered to be America›s «second national anthem,» is as easily recognizable as «the Star-Spangled Banner,» and several unsuccessful attempts have been made to give «America the Beautiful» legal status as a national hymn or anthem. The original manuscript is held by the Falmouth Historical Society.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $10,000 - 15,000

161FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

554

[BIBLE, in Dakota] -- [The Old Testament in the Dakota Language.] Woope Mowis Owa Kin Dakota Iapi En Pejuta Wicasta Kaga. The Laws Written by Moses, in the Dakota Language. New York: American Bible Society, 1872.

-- Psalm Wowapi. The book of Psalms, in the Dakota Language: translated from the Hebrew by S. R. Riggs. New York: American Bible Society, 1871.

8vo. Printed in Dakota syllabics throughout. Original blind-embossed leather (rebacked preserving spine, hinges repaired).

Translation of the Old Testament by Dr. Thomas S. Williamson, “the father of the Dakota mission,” who received medical training at Yale and started his missionary work at Fort Snelling in present-day Minnesota. He remained among the Indians until the Sioux Outbreak of 1862. Translation of the Psalms by Rev. Stephen Return Riggs, who began working with the Dakota in 1837 at Lac qui Parle in present-day Minnesota. He also completed a translation of the New Testament and a Dakota grammar and dictionary.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$600 - 800

555

BINGHAM, George Caleb (1811-1879), after -- John Sartain, engraver County Election.  New York, 1854.

Line and mezzotint engraving, in a 19th-century butternut frame (ca 5-in. mostly closed tear in sky repaired, some minor spotting, unexamined out of frame).

Engraved in 1854 by John Sartain for the American Art Union after Bingham’s 1852 painting.

$800 - 1,200

556

BOWDITCH, Nathaniel (1773-1838). The New American Practical Navigator New York: Edmund M. Blunt for William Hooker, 1821.

8vo (220 x 126 mm). Folding engraved map frontispiece, 11 engraved plates, numerous illustrations. (Toned, some spotting or soiling.)

Contemporary sheep gilt, red leather lettering-piece gilt (slight wear to extremities, some minor staining). Provenance: John B.L. Natson? (signature, 1827).

“Fifth Stereotype edition” of Bowditch’s popular navigational text, based on corrections Bowditch made for John Hamilton Moore’s The New Practical Navigator for America, first published in 1772.

$200 - 300

162 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

557

BRACKENRIDGE, Henry Marie (1786-1871) Journal of a Voyage Up the River Missouri. Baltimore: Coale & Maxwell, 1816.

8vo. Publisher’s printed boards (rebacked, some dampstaining); modern leather folding box.

Second edition, second issue. In 1811 Henry Marie Brackenridge became the first recorded tourist to visit the Dakota territories. In subsequent years Brackenridge would work in various capacities, almost all of them related to land cultivation, through the Presidential administrations of John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

558

BROWN, Samuel R. (1775-1817). The Western Gazetteer; Or Emigrant’s Directory. Auburn, NY: H. C. Southwick, 1817.

8vo (205 x 120 mm). (Some browning and staining.) Contemporary tree calf, smooth spine gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (rebacked preserving original morocco lettering-piece). Provenance: Early signature in pencil on front free endpaper.

FIRST EDITION, third issue, with 360 pages. “One of the earliest Americanprinted emigrant’s guides” (Howes B-867). Graff 433; Sabin 8558.

$400 - 600

559

CATLIN, George (1796-1872). North American Indians, Being Letters and Notes on the manners, Customs, and Conditions... Philadelphia: Leary, Stuart and Company, 1913.

2 volumes, 8vo. 180 color-printed plates (including 3 maps, of which one folding). Publisher’s red pictorial cloth; original box with printed label (some light wear to edges with a few old repairs).

Later edition. A SUPERB COPY, RETAINING THE ORIGINAL BOX.

Catlin’s work, first published in 1841 and reprinted many times, served as “the basis for much Plains ethnology.... Today [Catlin’s] work is criticized for its unrelenting Romanticism, but it is treasured by historians and anthropologists alike, who value his attention to details and brave dedication to his task” (Tyler, Prints of the American West, pp. 46-55). See Howes C-241.

Property from the Collection of Forrest Fenn

$3,000 - 4,000

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164 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

Al

Chicago-area gangsters in the Prohibition era had close ties to Wisconsin – in addition to being an important avenue for bringing bootlegged liquor to Chicago and the Midwest, it was a refuge where they could escape for rest. “They love[d] to vacation in the Wisconsin Northwoods… The hoods of the Depression era enjoyed escaping to and from Wisconsin when the situation demanded… Enjoying gangster holidays of sorts in the Northwoods during the summers from 1925 to 1931 was ‘Scarface’ Al Capone whose refuge, ‘The Hideout,’ is in Couderay, Wis., 50 miles southwest of Manitowish Waters” (Chicago Tribune, “Northwoods’ Gangsters of Old: From Fishing Holes to Bullet Holes,” 2 March 1987).

William and Lowrene Sell, owners of Sell Improvement Company, a realty and insurance company, also owned and operated Sell’s Resort in Manitowish Waters from the 1920s to 1950s, where, in the early 1920s, Al Capone and his associates were regular guests. According to family lore, Capone was adored by those who knew him, and Lowrene would allow him to take over her kitchen to make his famous gravy. The Sells and Capone developed an intimate friendship over the years, as evidenced by correspondence retained by the family. Taking the Sells into his confidence, Capone maintained a correspondence with them over the years, asking for advice on finding bootleggers and real estate in the Northwoods, and even writing his friend two days after the 1925 assassination attempt to let them know he’s alright. The family kept the correspondence and related items for several generations, but offer it for sale now for the first time.

560

CAPONE, Alphonse (“Al”) (1899-1947). Autograph letter signed (as “Al Brown”), to Bill [Sells]. Chicago, IL, 14 June 1924.

1 page, 4to, on a ruled sheet, creased, some minor ink-smudging

“I WANT YOU TO FIND THAT BOOTLEGGER...TELL HIM I WANT HIM TO COME RIGHT AWAY TO CHICAGO”

In 1923, Chicago voters elected reformer William Dever as mayor after 8 years under corrupt William Hale “Big Bill” Thompson, who was closely aligned with Johnny Torrio.  Torrio decided he needed a second base of operations, and chose Cicero, a town just outside of Chicago city limits.  Incumbent mayor of Cicero, Joseph Z. Klenha, facing a strong challenger in Democrat Rudolph Hurt during his reelection campaign, turned to Torrio; in return for securing his reelection, Torrio’s gang would be granted immunity from the law in Cicero.

The Chicago Outfit secured a favorable result for Mayor Klenha in the April 1 municipal elections, relying on brute force, and Capone and his men, including his brothers Frank and Ralph, roamed the streets.  Chicago police officers, responding to an appeal to try to restore law and order, arrived at 22nd Street and Cicero Avenue, in the shadow of the Hawthorne Works facility of the Western Electric Company, and Al’s brother Frank Capone opened fire. The squad returned fire, killing Frank Capone, but Al Capone was uncaptured.

On April 2, the Chicago Tribune ran the headline “GUNMAN SLAIN IN VOTE RIOTS” reporting that the Cicero election had been “marked by shootings, stabbings, kidnappings, and other outlawry unsurpassed in any previous Cook County political contest.” Capone established his Cicero headquarters at the Hawthorne Inn (now demolished), located 4833 W. 22nd Street, just west of the intersection of 22nd Street and Cicero Avenue.  In the aftermath, Cicero would remain the headquarters of the Outfit until after Capone was sent to prison in 1931 for tax evasion.

Cicero solidified as the new headquarters of The Chicago Outfit, Capone wrote to his friend Bill Sells: “Just a few lines to let you know that I am feeling fine... ‘Wall Bill’ I want you to find that Bootlegger that sold me the Wine and Wiskey [sic] went [sic] I was there and tell him to that I want him to come right away to Chicago because I have a big order for him, tell him to come over to 2242 Cicero Ave, Cicero, that is just a few miles outside of Chicago and when he gets there to ask for Fred Pope in case I am not there.” He includes a postscript instructing Bill to write him using Fred Pope’s name at 2242 Cicero Avenue, which was located just a half a block from the Hawthorne Inn; it was likely the location of the Hy-Ho Club, a popular haunt for John Dillinger and Baby Face Nelson. Capone signs the letter using his most common alias when doing business for the Outfit, “Al Brown”; he admitted at his 1931 trial that some people called him Al Brown, but that “wasn’t his name.”

CAPONE LETTERS ARE EXCEEDINGLY SCARCE: According to online records, only 4 Al Capone letters have sold at auction in at least the last 50 years, none of which was written during Prohibition or his years with the Chicago Outfit.

CONSEQUENTIAL LETTERS FROM CAPONE’S PRIME PERIOD ARE VIRTUALLY UNOBTANABLE.

$12,000 - 18,000

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Capone Lots 560-564
166 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

561

CAPONE, Alphonse (“Al”) (1899-1947). Autograph letter signed twice (“Al Capone”, “Al”), to Bill Sells (“Friend Sells”) Chicago, IL, 14 January 1925.

2 pages, 8vo, with original addresses envelope, creased, a few short tears

DAYS AFTER AN ATTEMPT ON HIS LIFE, CAPONE WRITES: “NO DOUBT YOU WILL BE SUPPRISED [sic] TO HEAR FROM ME. WELL PAL, THINGS HAVE BEEN SO DARN EXCITING”

On January 12, 1925, North Side Gang members Hymie Weiss, Bugs Moran, and Vincent Drucci, attempted to kill Al Capone at a South Side, Chicago restaurant. They fired at Capone’s car, missing Capone, but injuring his chauffeur.

The ambush left him shaken but unhurt.  Twelve days later, on January 24, Weiss, Moran, Drucci, and Frank Gusenberg ambushed Chicago Outfit leader Johnny Torrio, shooting him and his chauffeur, Robert Barton, several times, but as Moran was about to kill Torrio, his gun misfired. After Torrio recovered, he resigned, naming Al Capone the leader of The Chicago Outfit. He moved to Italy with his wife and mother, and on giving Capone control of the criminal empire, which grossed some $70 million per year, he told him: “It’s all yours, Al. Me? I’m quitting. It’s Europe for me.”

Following the attempt on his life, Capone writes a quick note to Bill Sells (who he calls “Friend Sells”) to let him know he’s alright: “No doubt you will be supprised [sic] to hear from me. Well Pal things have been so darn exciting that I haven’t even had time to change clothes. Well Sells old boy how are you doing and how is the Mrs and your dear little Slugger are you going to make a champion out of him if you are I’ll be his manager. And tell him I have got a big rocking horse so write me and let me know how the best way to ship it. Well Pal have no more to say only give my best of wishes to your dear wife and all of your brothers try and make a trip later. Your Pal & Friend Al Capone 7244 Prairie Ave. PS: Let me no [sic] if I can do anything for you. Al.”

CAPONE LETTERS ARE EXCEEDINGLY SCARCE: According to online records, only 4 Al Capone letters have sold at auction in at least the last 50 years, none of which was written during Prohibition or his years with the Chicago Outfit.  CONSEQUENTIAL LETTERS FROM CAPONE’S PRIME PERIOD ARE VIRTUALLY UNOBTANABLE.

$10,000 - 15,000

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168 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

562

CAPONE, Alphonse (“Al”) (1899-1947). Typed letter unsigned, to Bill Sells (“Friend Bill”). Philadelphia, PA, 13 December 1929.

1 page, 8vo, on an Eastern State Penitentiary form, creased, a few annotations in pencil and ink verso

CAPONE WRITES HIS FRIEND SEEKING REAL ESTATE IN WISCONSIN: “LET ME KNOW OF SOMETHING...WITH PLENTY OF WATER, SOMETHING OUT OF THE WAY”

In May 1929, while driving to Chicago from Atlantic City, Capone stopped in Philadelphia where he was arrested in front of a movie theater for carrying a concealed, unlicensed .38 caliber revolver. Wanting to make an example of him, the Philadelphia courts sentenced him to the maximum sentence, one year, of which he served 9 months.

While serving his sentence, Capone writes to his friend in Wisconsin to see if he can help him buy some land: “ No doubt you are surprised to hear from me, because the old saying, Out of sight, Out of mind…Say Bill I am writing to you in regards to that big house that was being built on that Island of the property belonging to the Trostel people from Milwaukee...they also own a lot of land aroung [sic] that island. Please let me know if it is for Sale. If not, let me know of something else within two hundred or a thousand acres, with plenty of water, something out of the way.”

[With:] A carbon copy typescript of Bill Sell’s response, 18 December 1929. 1 page, 4to, a few stains and short tears. Sells responds to Capone’s letter: “We certainly were glad as well surprised to hear from you we have often talked about and thought of the good times we hadwhen [sic] you were up here in the woods. time [sic] sure passes by very quickly, just think Al it is five years since I saw you...As regards the Trostel property it is not for sale and could not be bought for any price. But I am enclosing a plat of a tract of land [not present] containing 2010 acres, taking in three lakes entirely...This spot is really at the trails end and the wildest country left in the North, and still it is only eleven miles from Mercer, there is a tote road running to an old set of lumber camps between Oak and Forest lakes, an ideal location good drinking water, good shore lines... I can get this entire tract for you at a price as low as $30.00 per acre which is a real buy.”

In the 1920s and ‘30s, Capone and other members of the mob sought property in Wisconsin, where it was easier to receive bootlegged alcohol from Canada by seaplane, which could then be easily transported by car into Illinois and elsewhere. Al Capone’s brother Ralph purchased a home in Wisconsin in the 1930s, and later managed a hotel (The Rex Hotel) and tavern (Billy’s Bar) in Mercer, Wisconsin.  Al Capone’s supposed residence in Couderay, Wisconsin, “The Hideout,” was located on some 400 acres with frontage on a 40-acre lake; it was reportedly surrounded by 18-inch stone walls, and included guard towers along the lake where he would receive whisky deliveries from Canada.

CAPONE LETTERS OF ANY KIND ARE EXCEEDINGLY SCARCE: although unsigned, this transmitted letter from prison is nonetheless significant in providing insight into Capone’s business operations while incarcerated. $3,000 - 4,000

169FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

A group of modern reprints from original negatives of photographs showing Capone and his associations horsing around with what appears to be a .41 Colt revolver at the Sell’s Resort in Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin.

Also with:] “Former Trostel Estate.” Upper half only of a printed map of the Former Trostel Estate, located along the Wisconsin and Michigan border. With annotations in ballpoint pen presumably in the hand of Bill Sells, and with lots colored in red and blue crayon indicating the ownership of Bill Sell and others, with lines in ballpoint pen delineating private roads. (See lot 560.) -- A matchbook, from Club Carnival, Hurley, Wisconsin. Reportedly, in the 1920s, Hurley was known as a town that ignored prohibition, and Silver Street gained notoriety. Capone and other gangsters were known to frequent establishments there. -- A collection of 20th-century newspaper articles and clippings relating to Capone.

- 1,200

170 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
[
$800
564

[

564 [CAPONE, Alphonse (“Al”) (1899-1947)]. Colt New Army & Navy Revolver Model of 1896.

.41 LC. 6” barrel length. SN: 75042. Double-action swing-out cylinder revolver with topstrap notch and front blade sights. Item displays a blued metal finish with polished hammer and trigger. Black hard rubber grips displaying “{Rampant Colt}” logos mounted to square butt frame without lanyard loop.

The same logo within a circle is stamped to the rear left frame. Barrel marks include “DA 41” caliber marking to left barrel and the two-line patent and address mark to top reading, “COLT’S PT. F.A. MFG. CO. HARTFORD CT. U.S.A./PATENTED AUG. 5. 1884 NOV 6. 88. MAR. 5. 95,”. Assembly number “862” stamped to the cylinder area with rear of cylinder marked “15” beneath the star extractor. Serial number indicates item manufactured in 1896.

A .41 COLT REPORTEDLY USED BY AL CAPONE

“You can get more with a kind word and a gun than with just a kind word” (Al Capone).

Al Capone’s friendship with Bill and Lowrene Sell developed during his vacations to Sell’s Resort in Manitowish Waters in the 1920s.  According to family history and stories from Bill and Lowrene, Capone brought a .41 Colt with him during one visit, and gave it to Bill to hold on to in case he should need it. As evidenced by the letters in the family’s collection, the Sells developed a close relationship with Capone: Bill Sells tried to help Capone find real estate in the Northwoods, and apparently introduced Capone to a bootlegger. For several years, Capone spent a great deal of leisure time at the Sells resort.

Accompanying the gun are several modern reprints of photographs also from negatives in the family’s collection showing Capone, his associates, and a female companion, fooling around at the Sell’s resort with what appears to be a .41 Colt.  The gun remained in a safe with other Capone material at the Sell’s Resort in Manitowish Waters for several decades, and has been in the family since.

Provenance: Al Capone, by repute, given to Bill and Lowrene Sell; to present owner.

[Please note that this item is located on our Cincinnati premises. Hindman complies with all local, state, and federal firearms regulations in regards to the storage and shipment of firearms.]

$5,000 - 7,000

565 [CAPONE, Alphonse (“Al”)] -- [NESS, Eliot (19031957)]. Partial draft typescript detailing Eliot Ness’s recollections of his time with “The Untouchables” as dictated to his secretary Miss Janet E. Boyd (1935-), [1956].

11 typed pages with holograph emendations in a secretarial hand, light toning and a few small tears, staple holes in upper left corner Provenance:  Janet E. Boyd, by descent to present owner.

PERHAPS THE EARLIEST VERSION OF ELIOT NESS’S RECOLLECTIONS WHICH LATER FORMED THE BASIS OF OSCAR FRALEY’S THE UNTOUCHABLES

The Eliot Ness Papers held in Cleveland’s Western Reserve Historical Society contain a 21pp typescript detailing Ness’s career in Chicago which is similar to the partial typescript offered here though not an exact copy. The WRHS copy appears to be a revised, later version.

In late 1955, Miss Janet E. Boyd of Parma, Ohio, responded to an ad in the Cleveland Plain Dealer seeking an applicant for a position with The Fidelity Check Corporation and Guaranty Paper Corporation. After initial employment with the CEO of the company, she soon assumed the role of secretary to Eliot Ness who was brought on to serve as president of the subsidiary corporations. According to Boyd’s oral history (oral history included in the lot), she accompanied Ness on his earliest business trips to and from Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C. Predominantly traveling via train, Ness “came up with the idea of dictating to me on the train...the story of when he was with the government....”

Taking shorthand while riding in the dining car, Boyd would then return to their office and type Ness’s recollections for his later review. After several months, Ness relocated to Coudersport, Pennsylvania, where he would embark on a collaboration with reporter Oscar Fraley, providing Fraley with a typescript of his recollections upon which the writer would base his 1957 best-selling book The Untouchables. He died of a heart attack in May 1957, just before publication of the book that would immortalize his image as the incorruptible crimefighter who helped topple Al Capone and his crime syndicate.

With:] Additional correspondence related to Miss Janet E. Boyd and documenting her employment with North Ridge Industrial Corporation of Coudersport, Pennsylvania, and a small archive of related materials (complete list available on request).  $2,000 - 3,000

171FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

566

CARVER, Jonathan (1732-1780). Three Years Travels through the Interior Parts of North-America....Philadelphia: Key & Simpson, 1796.

8vo (212 x 120 mm). 28pp. subscriber’s names at end. (Some spotting and staining.) 20th-century half green morocco (touch of wear to a few corners). Provenance: George: (faint signature on title partially effaced).

Seventh edition of Carver’s “valuable work...[which] attracted much attention from its description of parts near to the supposed North-West Passage” (Lowndes). Sabin 11185.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$200 - 300

568

[CHICAGO]. DANFORTH, S. Chester. A suite of 3 signed etchings. Framed etchings depicting various Chicago landmarks including Admiral Richard Byrd’s South Pole flagship City of New York moored outside of the Tribune building for the 1933 World’s Fair, a view of the Chicago River with the Tribune Tower and Wrigley Building in the background, and a view of the Chicago Water Tower. -- Together, 3 etchings matted and framed (unexamined out of frame), ALL SIGNED AND NUMBERED BY DANFORTH in the lower margin, condition generally very fine.

$300 - 500

567

[CHICAGO]. ARNOLD, Bion J. (1861-1942). Cover title: Maps on the Chicago Transportation Problem. Chicago: n.p., 1902.

8vo. 14 folding maps, many with hand coloring. (Ca 5-in. tear to first map, a few maps with other short tears to folds.) Original green cloth gilt (some very slight rubbing to extremities).

FIRST EDITION, AUTHOR’S PRESENTATION COPY with his compliments slip tipped in.  This portfolio was published to accompany a report issued by the local transportation company of the Chicago City Council. Arnold developed a new method to convert alternating current from power plants to direct current in substations for the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway.  He later assisted the New York Central Railroad and the Hudson River Railroad in converting their lines leading into Grand Central Terminal.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $300 - 400

569

[CHICAGO]. Jevne & Almini, Chicago Illustrated, 1866 33 prints (5? duplicates)

$3,000 - 5,000

172 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

570 [CHICAGO]. VARIN, Raoul. A suite of 4 works depicting 19th century Chicago, including:

A Bird’s Eye View of Lake Shore Drive Chicago 1889. -- Michigan Avenue Looking North 1863 with a View of Michigan Terrace. -- Michigan Avenue Chicago Looking South at Van Buren Street 1889. --  Rush Street Bridge Chicago 1863.

Together, 4 works, none examined out of frame, all SIGNED BY ARTIST, all published by A. Ackerman & Son Co. 1929-1932, condition generally very fine.

$300 - 500

572

CLARK, Daniel. Proofs of the Corruption of Gen. James Wilkinson, and of His Connexion with Aaron Burr, with a Full Refutation of His Slanderous Allegations in Relation to the Character of the Principal Witness Against Him Philadelphia: Wm. Hall, Jun. & Geo. W. Pierie, 1809.

8vo (214 x 123 mm). (Some browning and spotting). Contemporary half morocco gilt (some light rubbing and wear). Provenance: Dr. Edward Livingston (engraved bookplate, see below).

FIRST EDITION of Clark’s work, which published for the first time the text of documents demonstrating that the leader of America’s army was a secret Spanish agent. One of Wilkinson’s New Orleans associates, “Clark... broke with Wilkinson, with whom he had been intimate, and in this book gives much evidence of the General’s treachery” (Streeter Sale III:1694). Wilkinson was Burr’s co-conspirator in the so-called “Burr Conspiracy,” Burr’s attempt to detach the Western states and the Louisiana territory from the Union.

Edward Livingston acted simultaneously as U. S. Attorney for New York and the mayor of New York City from 1801-1803. He moved to New Orleans in 1804, and was falsely accused of abetting Aaron Burr in the Burr Conspiracy.  He no sooner cleared himself of the charges before he was brought into controversy alongside President Jefferson over land rights in New Orleans.  Livingston later organized the people of Louisiana in their resistance to the British invasion of 1814, and served as Andrew Jackson’s aide-de-camp in the Battle of New Orleans.  A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.  Howes C-431; Sabin 13265.

571 [CHICAGO]. SARG, Anthony Frederick (1880-1942). Century of Progress 1833-1933. A Geographical Map of the Century of Progress Exposition Held in Chicago, Illinois 1933. Chicago: The Lakeside Press for the Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation, 1933.

Pictorial side-by-side map “printed in watercolors” depicting the south and north ends of the Columbian Exposition, 1420 x 640 mm, mounted on a larger linen-backed sheet.

Sarg’s map depicts the Midway of the World’s Fair in the south, and the lagoon to the north. Included are the Goodyear Blimp, the General Motors pavilion, the Adler Planetarium, the Aquarium, the Field Museum, and Soldier Field, with cartoon-like fish and an octopus. Sarg shows visitors enjoying the fair, and highlights rickshaws and a fair patron with sore so-called “Exposition Feet.” A FINE BRIGHT EXAMPLE.

$1,000 - 1,500

[WILKINSON, James, General]. Public Plunder. Documents Presented to Congress by the Committee appointed to inquire whether any Advances of MONEY have been made to the Commander in Chief of the Army, by the Department of War, contrary to Law; and if any, to what amount. With a few Remarks. Boston? 1809?

16pp. (Dampstaining, spotting.) Sewn into modern wrappers (repairs to folds).

Presumed FIRST EDITION. The anonymous author, taunting the Jeffersonians for their hypocrisy, presents documents relating to Wilkinson’s activities at Natchitoches, New Orleans. Wilkinson is singled out for receiving an illegal payment -- by “our Jeffersonian friends of economy” -- of more than $50,000 to General Wilkinson, “not only without any appropriation, but in direct violation of the express and formal terms of an Act of Congress, and with full notice of the illegality.” Wilkinson was eventually court-martialed and subjected to congressional inquiries for his suspicious activities. RARE: We trace no copy at auction.

$300 - 400

173FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$400 - 600 573

574

COGHLAN, Margaret (b. 1763). Memoirs of Mrs. Coghlan, (Daughter of the Late Major Moncrieffe,) Written by Herself... New York: T. & J. Swords for J. Fellows, 1795.

12mo (172 x 99 mm). Woodcut device at end. (Some spotting and soiling.) Late 19thcentury half morocco (some rubbing). Provenance: J. F. (early signature on title); James M. Bailey (signature, July 1877).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION, WITH THE RARE PREFACE, comprising pp.iii-iv, which was suppressed and is frequently lacking. Finding herself alone behind Rebel lines in 1776 in New York City, Margaret Moncrieffe Coghlan sought protection among the Continental Army’s most senior officers, where she entered into a relationship with Aaron Burr. On her return to the British Army lines, her father, Major Moncrieffe, forced the 14-year-old to marry British Lieutenant John Coghlan. She despised him, and they soon separated. She suffered financial, legal and social problems throughout her life. Her memoir, in which she shares her political opinions, provides a glimpse into the plight of 18-th century women.  Sabin 14208.

$500 - 700

575

[COLONIAL HISTORY]. A group of 2 early works of Colonial American history, comprising:

COXE, Tench. A View of the United States of America in a Series of Papers. Philadelphia: William Hall, 1794. Includes tables relating to shipping and population. Later beige cloth gilt. -- MARSHALL, John. A History of the Colonies Planted By the English on the Continent of North America. Philadelphia: Abraham Small, 1824. Contemporary calf. -Together, 2 works in 2 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally very good.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $200 - 300

576

COX, Ross (1793-1853).  The Columbia River; or, Scenes and Adventures During a Residence of Six Years on the Western Side of the Rocky Mountains, among Various Tribes of Indians Hitherto Unknown: Together with a Journey Across the American Continent London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, 1832.

2 volumes, 8vo (206 x 133 mm). (Some light spotting.) Contemporary marbled boards with modern calf rebacking (some rubbing).

Second London edition of Cox’s narrative, which gives “an excellent firsthand account of the fur trade and of the Indian tribes in Montana, Idaho, and eastern Washington with whom the fur traders dealt and sometimes fought. While Cox was making this journey the tension between Hudson’s Bay and Northwest Companies had become very acute and he gives a good account of their rivalry” (Streeter, first edition). The first edition was published London 1831, and was followed by an American edition of the same year. Howes C-822; Sabin 17267; Wagner-Camp 43:3.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $400 - 600

577

[CRAMER, Zadok (1773-1813)]. The Navigator, containing Directions for Navigating the Monongahela, Allegheny, Ohio and Mississippi Rivers...Containing an Account of Louisiana, and of the Missouri and Columbia Rivers, as Discovered by the voyage under Capts. Lewis and Clark. Pittsburgh: Cramer & Spear, 1821.

12mo (176 x 103 mm). 28 woodcut maps of rivers and creeks, including one plan entitled “Fall of Ohio.” (Some dampstaining and browning, portion of fore-edge of N6 torn away affecting portions of map and text.) Original boards, old leather backing (early rustic stitch repair to spine on front board, some overall wear). Provenance: John W. Sterne (signature, rear flyleaf).

Eleventh edition of Cramer’s navigational guide to the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, the “most widely used guide to western waters in the early period, both before and after the application of steam in 1807” (Howes). the Navigator first included an account of the discoveries of Lewis and Clark in the sixth edition of 1808, present also in this edition. The Appendix includes a summary of Lewis and Clark’s discoveries based on a letter written by William Clark to his brother in Louisville (see Wagner-Camp 4). According to Graff, no copies of the first two editions of the Navigator are known. See Graff 2954; see Howes C-855; see Literature of the Lewis & Clark Expedition pp.89-94; Sabin 17386. $600 - 800

174 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
574 576 577

577A

[CREVECOEUR, Michel- Guillaume St. Jean de]. Letters from an American Farmer; Describing Certain Provincial Situations, Manners, and Customs, Not Generally Known; and Conveying Some Idea of the Late and Present Interior Circumstances of the British Colonies in North America. London: Thomas Davies & Lockyer Davis, 1782.

8vo (210 x 124 mm). 2-page publisher’s advertisements at end. 2 engraved folding maps of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. (Some pale spotting.) Modern quarter calf.

FIRST EDITION OF A WORK WHICH “HAD A GREATER INFLUENCE IN ATTRACTING ITS READERS TO AMERICA THAN ANY OTHER BOOK OF THE PERIOD” (Vail). The maps provide the first detailed descriptions of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket. “The author was a native of Normandy, of noble birth, and came to the British Colonies at the age of sixteen. Having established himself on a farm near the frontier, he became one of the first victims of the War of Independence, the Indian allies of Great Britain setting fire and destroying his property. He wrote his letters during the different epochs of the war, in English. Returning to France, he translated them into French” (Sabin 17496). Howes C-883 (“As literature unexcelled by an American work of the eighteenth century”); Streeter II:711 (“These are a series of twelve charming letters, describing the life in America, four of them about Nantucket, and one about Martha’s Vineyard and the Whale Fishery”); Vail 674.

$2,000 - 3,000

578

CREVECOEUR, Michel Guillaume St. Jean de (1735-1813). Lettres d’un Cultivateur Americain. Paris: Cuchet, 1787.

3 volumes, 8vo (188 x 125 mm). Engraved title-pages, 4 engraved plates (including frontispiece, one folding). (Lacking engraved folding maps, some soiling or staining, some unidentified contemporary annotations or signatures, some wormholing to a few leaves.) Contemporary half calf gilt, vol. I: plain boards, edges sprinkled red, brown morocco lettering-piece gilt; vols. II and III: marbled boards (worn, some soiling, tiny wormhole to vol. I rear cover lower corner).

Second French Edition and considered the “best French edition” and “most complete of all editions” (Howes). The present edition is also “greatly enlarged, the whole of the third volume being added” (Sabin). First published in English in 1782, Crevecoeur’s Letters from an American Farmer was one of the first works to explain a version of a unified American identity through descriptions of American frontier life to Europeans life in rather than comparing the identifies of each colony. Howes C883; Sabin 17495.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$500 - 700

579

CRONAU, Rudolf Daniel Ludwig (1855-1939). Von Wunderland zu Wunderland Landschaftsund Lebensbilder aus den Staaten und Territorien der Union. Leipzig: T.O. Weigel, 1886.

One volume only (of 2, lacking Vol. II), folio (450 x 307 mm). 25 mounted collotype plates bound in on stubs, text leaves disbound but laid in. (Some mostly marginal chipping.)

Original light gray pictorial cloth gilt laid over modern cloth (some soiling).  Provenance: D.? F.? Knapp (gift inscription from H. Virchow, January 12 1886).

FIRST EDITION, inducing views of the American West and portraits of American Indians. Cronau was sent to America as a correspondent for German newspaper Die Gartenlaube; he published his series of drawings and notes on his return to Germany.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$500 - 700

175FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

580

CURRIER and IVES, publishers -- After George H. Durrie

New England Winter Scene, 1861. (G.4801)

Large-format lithograph with hand-coloring heightened in gum arabic, on wove paper, visible area 18 3/4 x 25 1/2 in. (visible margin 1-1 1/2-in.), matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).  Some very pale spotting, minor marginal surface abrasion. Provenance: Sold The Old Print Shop (with label).

This example exhibited, “Currier & Ives: Best Fifty Revisited,” 8 June to 16 September 1990, Milwaukee Art Museum, with label.

Property from a Private Collection

$1,000 - 1,500

581

CURRIER and IVES, publishers -- After George H. Durrie

Winter in the Country. The Old Grist Mill, 1862. (G.7275)

Large-format lithograph with hand-coloring heightened in white, on wove paper, visible area 21 x  28 1/4 in. (visible margin 1-2 1/4-in.), matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).  Provenance: Sold The Old Print Shop (with label).  A BRIGHT EXAMPLE.

This example exhibited, “Currier & Ives: Best Fifty Revisited,” 8 June to 16 September 1990, Milwaukee Art Museum, with label.

Property from a Private Collection $800 - 1,200

582

CURRIER and IVES, publishers -- After George H. Durrie

Winter in the Country. A Cold Morning, 1864. (G.7273)

Large-format lithograph with hand-coloring heightened in white, on wove paper, visible area 21 x  28 1/4 in. (visible margin 1/2-1 3/4-in.), matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).  Provenance: Sold The Old Print Shop (with label).  A BRIGHT EXAMPLE.

This example exhibited, “Currier & Ives: Best Fifty Revisited,” 8 June to 16 September 1990, Milwaukee Art Museum, with remnant of label.

Property from a Private Collection

$1,000 - 1,500

176 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

583

CURRIER and IVES, publishers

The Great Race on the Mississippi. From New Orleans to St. Louis..., 1870. (G.2864)

Large-format lithograph with hand-coloring heightened in gum arabic, on wove paper, visible area 22 1/2 x 31 1/4 in. (visible margin 1-2 3/4-in.), matted and framed in an old frame (unexamined out of frame).  Provenance: Sold The Old Print Shop (with label).

Property from a Private Collection

$500 - 700

584

CURRIER and IVES, publishers -- After L. Maurer

Camping Out. “Some of the Right Sort.”, 1856 (G.0867).

Large-format lithograph with hand-coloring heightened in gum arabic, on wove paper, visible area 21 1/2 x 28 3/4 in. (visible margin 3/4-1-in.), matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).  Provenance: Sold The Old Print Shop (with label). A BRIGHT EXAMPLE.

Property from a Private Collection

$500 - 700

585

CURRIER and IVES, publishers -- After Arthur F. Tait

American Field Sports. “Flush’d,” 1857 (G.0162).

Large-format lithography with hand-coloring on wove paper, visible area 20 3/4 x 28-in. (visible margin 5/8 - 3/4-in.), some toning and some minor staining, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame).

$400 - 600

177FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

586

[WINTER SCENES] -- CURRIER and IVES, publishers

Winter Pastime, 1855. (G.7281) -- Winter Morning in the Country, 1873. (G.7280) -- Trotters on the Snow, n.d. (G.6648)

3 lithographs with hand-coloring on wove paper, comprising one mediumformat, and 2 small-format, visible area 13 1/2 x 17 1/4-in. or smaller, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame), all sold The Old Print Shop with labels. BRIGHT EXAMPLES.

Property from a Private Collection

$400 - 600

587

[HUDSON RIVER] -- CURRIER and IVES, publishers

The Hudson, From West Point. Grounds of the U. S. Military Academy, 1862. (G.3216) -- Hudson River-Crow Nest, n.d. (G.3222)

2 lithographs with hand-coloring on wove paper, comprising one mediumformat, and one small-format, visible area 14 3/4 x 18 1/2-in. or smaller, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame), one with a few spots, both sold The Old Print Shop with labels.

Property from a Private Collection

$500 - 700

588

[NEW YORK SCENES] -- CURRIER and IVES, publishers

City of New York and Environs, 1875. (G.1226). -- The Narrows, New York Bay. From Staten Island, n.d. (G.4760).

2 small-format lithographs with hand-coloring on wove-paper, 10 /8 x 14 1/16-in. or smaller, matted, some light soiling or toning, both with some tears and repairs verso.

$300 - 400

178 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

589

[MISSISSIPPI RIVER] -- CURRIER and IVES, publishers

Floating Down to Market, 1870. (G.2183) -- A Home on the Mississippi, 1871. (G.3109).

2 small-format lithographs with hand coloring on wove paper, visible area 10 1/2 x 13 1/2-in. or smaller, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame), one with marginal surface abrasion and marginal tear repaired, both sold The Old Print Shop with labels.

Property from a Private Collection

$500 - 700 590

[LANDSCAPE SCENES] -- CURRIER & IVES

The Katz-Kills in Winter. Bastion Falls, n.d. (G.3592). -- Yo-semite Falls. California, n.d. (G.7384).

2 small-format lithographs with hand-coloring on wove paper, visible area 11 1/2 x 15 1/4-in or smaller, one matted, both framed (unexamined out of frame), both with toning, one with staining to upper portion affecting image.

$300 - 400 591

[HUNTING & SPORTING SCENES] -- CURRIER and IVES, publishers

Deer Shooting. In the Northern Woods, n.d. (G.1672). -- And another copy. -- Partridge Shooting, No. 174, 1855. (G.5113). -- Partridge Shooting, 1870. (G. 5115). -- Wild Duck Shooting. On the Wing, 1870. (G.7213). -- The Rubber. “Put to His Trumps,” n.d. (G.5687).

6 lithographs with hand-coloring on wove paper, comprising one large-format, and 5 small-format, one heightened in gum arabic, visible area 26 3/8 x 21 1/8-in. or smaller, all matted, one framed (unexamined out of frame), some toning, a few with stab-holes, a few with some minor marginal chipping or staining, a few with soiling, a few with tear repairs or mount remnants verso.

$400 - 600

[CURRIER and IVES, publishers]. A group of 42 reference works, including:

RAWLS, Walton. The Great Book of Currier & Ives’ America. 1979. -- PETERS, Harry T. Currier & Ives Printmakers to the American People. 1942. -- PETERS, Harry T. California on Stone. 1935. -- PETERS, Fred. J., compiler. Railroad Indian and Pioneer Prints. 1930. -- BLAND, Jane Cooper. Currier & Ives a Manual for Collectors. 1931. -- SIMKIN, Colin. Currier and Ives’ America 1952. -- EBERT, John and Katherine EBERT. Old American Prints for Collectors. 1974. SIGNED BY BOTH EBERTS. -- BERKOFF, Marshall R., editor. Currier & Ives the New Best 50. N.p., 1991. LIMITED EDITION, 26 of 2,000, INITIALED. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED WITH AN ALS LAID IN. -- Currier & Ives Print Portfolio Series. Maplewood, NJ, [1976]. 6 volumes. -- WEAVER, Warren A. Lithographs of N. Currier and Currier & Ives. 1925. -- SCHURRE, Jacques. Currier & Ives Prints. 1984. Reprint. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- SLOBODY, Evelyn et al. Currier & Ives Present Trotting. 1984. LIMITED EDITION, 528 of 2500 , SIGNED BY ALL 3 AUTHORS.  -- And 30 others. Together, 42 works in 48 volumes, most published in New York or Garden City, NY, various folio, 4to, 8vo, and smaller sizes, all in original bindings, some with dust jackets, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

179FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
592
$200 - 300 589 590 592

593

[DAKOTAS -- KNIGHTS TEMPLAR]. A group of 2 volumes of proceedings of the Grand Commandery. comprising:

Proceedings of the Grand Commandery of the Knights Templar of the Territory of Dakota. [N.p.]: Published by Order of the Grand Commandery, 18841889. Six volumes in one. Contemporary half calf. -- Proceedings of the Grand Commandery of the Knights Templar of the Territory of Dakota. [N.p.]: Published by Order of the Grand Commandery, 1884-1893. Ten volumes in one. Contemporary half calf. -- Together, two volumes comprising 16 works, 8vo, condition generally fine. Provenance: Scottish Rite Cathedral Association Library.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

594A [DARROW, Clarence (1857-1938)] -- [LEOPOLD & LOEB]. The New Testament of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. New York: Oxford University Press, American Branch, 1899.

12mo. Title and marginal manicules printed in red, several printed underlinings in-text. (Browned, leaves brittle). Original salmon cloth (worn, hinges starting). Provenance: Clarence Darrow (bookplate): Nathan Leopold Jr. (1904-1971), criminal involved in the famous Leopold and Loeb case (gift inscription).

INSCRIBED BY CLARENCE DARROW TO HIS CLIENT, NATHAN LEOPOLD, JR.: “To Nathan Leopold Jr. from a friend. ‘God help you.’

Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, wealthy University of Chicago students, were charged with the kidnapping and murder of 14-year-old Bobby Franks. They believed that their superior intellect would allow them to commit the “perfect crime” without consequences; the murder was characterized at the time as the “crime of the century.”

They retained the counsel of renowned criminal defense attorney Clarence Darrow, whose 12-hour summation at their sentencing hearing was notable for its criticism of capital punishment as retributive, rather than transformative, justice.  Darrow’s conclusion of the hearing is considered to be the finest speech of his career. Ultimately, Leopold and Loeb were sentenced to life in prison plus 99 years. The New Testament is market with printed underlinings of passages of redemption. A SUPERB ASSOCIATION COPY.

594

[DAKOTAS]. MYERS, Frank (1833-1922). Soldiering in Dakota, Among the Indians in 1863-4-5. Pierre, SD: State Historical Society, 1938.  8vo. Publisher’s printed wraps (toning); slipcase.

Facsimile edition, reprinting the rare first edition of 1888. On October 15, 1862, Myers enlisted with Company E, 6th Iowa Cavalry. Expecting to be sent south, he was instead ordered to report to the Dakota Territory; he writes about his time in the Dakota territory and the warfare that occurred following the Sioux Uprising in Minnesota in 1862.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

595

DARROW, Clarence (1857-1938). A collection of works from Darrow’s library, some with presentation inscriptions, most with bookplates, and with several copies of his own works, including:

LIEB, Hermann. The Protective Tariff. What it Does for Us!. Chicago et al: Belford, Clarke & Co., 1888. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY LIEB. -- McINTOSH, William. Sermons from a Philistine Pulpit. East Aurora, NY: The Roycroft Shop, 1898. PRESENATION COPY INSCRIBED BY ELBERT HUBBARD. -- McGAFFEY, Ernest. Poems of the Town. Boston: Richard G. Badger, 1901. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED by McGaffey. -- SALT, Henry S. Cum Grano. Berkeley Heights, NJ: The Oriole Press, 1931. PRESENTATION COPY INSCRIBED by Joseph Ishill, typsetter for The Oriole Press. -CALVERTON, V. F. The Passing of the Gods. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1934. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY CALVERTON. -- DARROW. A Persian Pearl. East Aurora, NY: The Roycroft Shop, 1899. PRESENTATION INSCRIPTION FROM DARROW to Gertrude Bassier?. -- DARROW. The Skeleton in the Closet. Riverside, CT: Frederick C. Bursch, 1914. With Darrow’s bookplate. --  DARROW. An Eye for an Eye. New York: Duffield & Co., 1920. PRESENTATION INSCRIPTION FROM DARROW to Fay Lenin. -- With 8 works in 9 volumes with Darrow’s bookplate, with 18 works in 18 volumes by Darrow, and with 13 works in 15 volumes. Together, 47 works in 50 volumes, various sizes

Clarence Darrow, defense attorney, leading member of the American Civil Liberties Union, and civil libertarian, most notably provided the defense for John T. Scopes (opposing William Jennings Bryan), Leopold and Loeb, and Ossian

180 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
Sweet.  $1,000 - 1,500
$1,000 - 2,000

596

DAVIDSON, George (1825-1911). Pacific Coast: Coast Pilot of California, Oregon, and Washington Territory. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1869.

8vo (264 x 176 mm). 32 wood-engraved plates (3 folding); 262pp. Original black cloth, gilt-lettered on cover and spine (some wear to joints and spine ends, some minor staining, corners bumped). Provenance: S. W. Bill (signature in pencil on flyleaf).

Third edition of Davidson’s important West Coast sailing guide, preceded by earlier appearances as appendices to various U. S. Coast Survey annual reports. From 1850 through 1857, Davidson headed a team tasked with providing an accurate survey of the Pacific Coast. His survey was first published in 1853 as the Directory for the Pacific Coast of the United States

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$300 - 400

598

DUNN, John (fl. 1845). History of the Oregon Territory and British NorthAmerican Fur Trade; with An Account of the Habits and Customs of the Principal Native Tribes on the Northern Continent. London: Edwards and Hughes, 1844.

8vo (223 x 137 mm). Lithographed folding map of the Oregon Territory. (Short tear to stub of map, some minor spotting.) Original blue-gray blindstamped cloth, spine gilt-lettered (corners and extremities slightly bumped, small separation to spine end at foot). Provenance: W. A. Shaw (signature, 1844, on title); Charles Durham (armorial bookplate).

FIRST EDITION, “practically a history of the Hudson’s Bay Co. operations in the North-west; by one of their men” (Howes). The map depicts Oregon Territory, and New Caledonia and New Hanover (present-day British Columbia). Included at the end are specimens of the Millbank and Chinook languages. Graff 1182; Howes D-577; Wagner-Camp 106:1; Wheat Transmississippi West 477.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $500 - 700

597

DIXON, George, Captain. (1755?-1800). A Voyage Round the World; but More Particularly to the North-West Coast of America.... London: Geo. Goulding, 1789.

4to (271 x 210 mm). 17 engraved plates (3 folding); 5 engraved folding maps (the large map with tear crossing image repaired verso). (One plate with tear, some spotting and browning.) Contemporary calf (worn, stained). Provenance: 18th-century annotations to a few leaves; armorial bookplate obscured; Oliver (bookplate on rear pastedown)

Second edition of this account of the Pacific Northwest, a voyage undertaken by the newly-formed King George’s Sound Company to establish a fur trade between the northwest American coast and China. The text of Dixon’s voyage is by William Beresford, the supercargo aboard the Queen Charlotte, written in the form of letters to a friend in London, but edited by Dixon who added the introduction, the appendix, and the maps. This copy with contemporary annotations, possibly by a member of the expedition, on 3 leaves discussing the positions of the voyages led by La Perouse and Mears, and later discussing a 1788 encounter: “August 1788 - Capt. Duncan met Capt. Mears and Capt D. said that Capt. Dixon would give him no stores, wh. the sloop (only 50 tons) was much in want of and same... The voyage of the Princess Royal 50 tons from England round the Horn to Vancouver was very wonderful.” Cox II: 27-28; Forbes 161; Hill 117; Howes D-365; LadaMocarski 43; Sabin 20364; Streeter VI: 3484; Wickersham 6574.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$500 - 700

602

FEATHERSTONHAUGH, George W. (1780-1866). A Canoe Voyage up the Minnay Sotor; With an Account of the Lead and Gold Deposits in Wisconsin; Of the Gold Region in the Cherokee country; And Sketches of Popular Manners.. London: Richard Bentley, 1847.

2 volumes, 8vo (212 x 133 mm). 2 lithographed frontispieces; 2 lithographed folding maps. (Short tears to folds of maps.) Contemporary half calf gilt (rebacked preserving original spines, upper cover to vol. I detached, some light rubbing).

FIRST EDITION in which Featherstonhaugh, a geologist, writes in diary form, focusing his intense observation on the central states of the U. S. He focuses in particular on the Native Americans, about whom he contributes useful information. He began his journey at Washington, D.C. and traveled via Pittsburgh and Cleveland before arriving at Detroit. He navigated by canoe on Lake Huron and Lake Michigan to Mackinac and Green Bay, and from there via the Fox and Mississippi Rivers to Saint Anthony and Fort Snelling.  The party negotiated the Minnesota River as far as Lake Traverse on the Dakota border, before returning to Galena, and St. Louis and then traveling through Tennessee, Georgia, and the Carolinas. Howes F-67; Sabin 23959.

$300 - 400

181FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
599 NO LOT
600 NO LOT 601 NO LOT

603

FISHER, William. An Interesting Account of the Voyages and Travels of Captains Lewis and Clark. Baltimore: Anthony Miltenberger, [1812].

12mo (168 x 93 mm). 2 woodcut portraits depicting Lewis and Clark. (Without the 4 plates showing views as often, publication year on title-page effaced, browning and spotting, a few leaves with tears, a few lower margins shaved.) Contemporary sheep, smooth spine gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (some wear, small tear to head of spine).

Counterfeit edition, one of several Lewis and Clark “Apocrypha” editions.

“The preparation of Lewis and Clark’s authorized account of their expedition encountered a series of delays and the account was not complete and published until eight years after their return. in the meantime, curiosity continued unabated about the deeds of the ‘Corps of Discovery,’ the mysterious Rocky Mountains, and the tribes of Indians inhabiting the lands between the Mississippi and the Pacific Ocean” (Wagner-Camp p.46). Wagner-Camp, Sabin and Howes only call for two portraits in this edition, although copies of this edition appear with 4 additional views. Howes F-153a; Sabin 24508; Wagner-Camp 8:5.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$600 - 800

604

FRANKLIN, Benjamin (1706-1790). Autograph note signed (“B Franklin”), to Col. Nathaniel Sparhawk. Philadelphia, 15 June 1748.

1 page, 8vo, creased with minor separations and tiny losses along folds, matted and framed Provenance: Tobias Ham Miller; by descent to Helen Pearson; acquired from her estate by Joseph W. P. Frost.

In full: “I receiv’d yours per Mr. Baynton with the Money as therein specified; and have since deliver’d it to Mr. Warren (who is now here) with Mr. Pepperill’s Letter; of which please advise Mr. Pepperill. I am Sir, Your most humble Servant.” Franklin writes Nathaniel Sparhawk (17151776), merchant at Portsmouth and Boston and son-in-law of Sir William Pepperell, regarding funds to be sent to Louisbourg on behalf of the Province of Pennsylvania, of which Franklin is the Treasurer. “Baynton” is likely Philadelphia merchant John Baynton (1726-1773), and “Mr. Pepperill” is likely Andrew Pepperrell, business partner of his father Sir William.  According to the Papers of Benjamin Franklin, “Warren” has not been identified, but a typescript note by a previous owner of the document identifies him as Admiral Sir Peter Warren, first governor of Louisbourg under English command.

According to the previous owner’s account, Tobias Ham Miller had this note attached to the first printing press in New Hampshire, which had been bought by Fowle from James Franklin, Benjamin Franklin’s brother. That press was apparently the press on which Franklin received his printing apprenticeship, and the letter was obtained by Miller from the Sparhawk or Pepperrell mansion while he was minister of the Congregational Church at Kittery Point ca 1838. Published in The Papers of Benjamin Franklin

Property from the Frost Family Collection, New Hampshire

$8,000 - 12,000

182 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

605

FRANKLIN, Benjamin (1706-1790). Manuscript document signed (“B. Franklin”), as President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 9 May 1787, countersigned by James Trimble for John Armstrong, secretary.

1 page, oblong folio, 345 x 397 mm, on vellum, with paper seal, docketed and additionally sealed verso, creased from folding, some offsetting and staining, portion of paper seal lacking.

A land grant issuing 377 1/4 acres of land in Bedford County to Ranney Breathed, signed by Franklin as President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania, a position analogous to governor.  Acknowledging payment and granting a tract of land known as “Ranney’s Fancy,” situated on both sides of to the south branch of Brush Creek in Providence Township, Bedford County, adjacent to lands owned by Peter Smith and George Breathed; recorded in the Rolls Office.

Less than a week after signing this land grant, Franklin would attend the Constitutional Convention as delegate, where his closing speech would become “the most effective propaganda for [the Constitution’s] ratification. Franklin’s presence and argument contributed more than any other element to harmonize the delegates and to persuade thirty-nine of the forty-two members present to sign the formal document” (ANB).

$5,000 - 7,000

606

FRANKLIN, Benjamin (1706-1790).  The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. Cleveland: The Rowfant Club, 1898.

8vo. Numerous plates. Red crushed levant gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut, BY THE ROWFANT BINDERY (touch of rubbing to spine ends). Provenance: Edwin Babcock Holden (1861-1906), former President of the Grolier Club, member of the Rowfant Club (bookplate).

LIMITED EDITION, number 8 of 150 copies.  With an introduction by Liberty Emery Holden, owner of the Cleveland Plain Dealer and art collector. [Tipped in:] Rowfant Club Ex Libris with motto: “Light seeking light doth light of light beguile.” Designed by Will H. Low and printed in colors presumably by Bierstadt in a limited edition, labeled number 36 of 100 sets.

$800 - 1,200

607

[FREEMASONRY]. HARRIS, Thaddeus Mason, Rev. Compiler. Constitutions of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons... Worcester, MA: Isaiah Thomas, 1798.

4to. Engraved frontispiece, woodcut device on title-page. Later roan-backed boards (upper cover detached with a few leaves disbound, lower joint starting, some wear). Provenance: George G. Lee (contemporary signature on title-page); discreet library markings on foot of spine and title verso).

Second edition incorporating revisions of the first edition, which was printed in 1792 when Paul Revere was Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts. A committee comprised of Revere, John Cutler, Isaiah thomas, Timothy Whiting, and william Bentley approved the revisions and corrections published in the second edition.

[With:] SICKELS, Daniel, editor. The Freemason’s Monitor; containing the Degrees of Freemasonry.... New York: Masonic Manufacturing Company, 1868. 12mo. Engraved frontispiece, printed music, woodcut illustrations. Original leather wallet-style binding gilt (a few repairs and minor losses, rebacked); cloth folding case. Provenance: George B. Munson (contemporary gift inscription from R. M. Palm).

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - $600

183FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

608

FREMONT, John Charles (1813-1890). Report of The Exploring Expedition to The Rocky Mountains in the year 1842, and to Oregon and North California in the years 1843-’44 Washington, D. C.: Printed by Order of the Senate, by Gales and Seaton, 1845.

8vo (229 x 139 mm). Large map folding in pocket at rear (a few tiny tears along folds); 4 lithographed maps (2 folding); 22 lithographed plates. (Dampstaining in lower gutter margin, some spotting and browning.) Original brown blind-stamped cloth, gilt-lettered on spine (some rubbing and staining, minor losses to spine ends). Provenance: Captain John Farnshaw (signatures title and flyleaf).

FIRST EDITION, the Senate issue, with the astronomical and meteorological observations omitted from the House issue and subsequent editions (see next lot). The two reports, written with the help of Fremont’s wife Jessie Benton, “caught the public imagination: images of Fremont’s guide, the then little-known Christopher ‘Kit’ Carson, riding bareback across the prairie, and Fremont himself, raising a flag on a Rocky Mountain peak, entered the national mythology” (Pamela Herr, ANB). Graff 1436; Howes F-370; Sabin 25845; Streeter VI:3131; Wagner-Camp 115:1.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $600 - 800

609

FREMONT, John Charles (1813-1890). Report of The Exploring Expedition to The Rocky Mountains in the year 1842, and to Oregon and North California in the years 1843-’44. Washington, D. C.: Printed by Order of the House of Representatives, by Blair and Rives, 1845.

8vo (230 x 143 mm). Large map folding in separate portfolio (separated along centerfold and repaired verso); 4 lithographed maps (2 folding); 22 lithographed plates. (Some spotting and browning.) Original brown blind-stamped cloth, gilt-lettered on spine (rebacked preserving most of original spine and endpapers). Provenance: Reverend Samuel A. Van Franken (presentation inscription from George Sykes, see below); David L. Dunkin (signature).

FIRST EDITION, the House issue, without the astronomical and meteorological observations present in the Senate issue and subsequent editions (see previous lot). “The year 1845...though otherwise somewhat cartographically barren, because of a single event is in fact one of the towering years in the story of Western Cartography. In that year John C. Fremont’s report of his journey to Oregon and California in 1843-44 was published. This report and the Fremont (Preuss) map which accompanied it, changed the entire picture of the West, and made a lasting contribution to cartography.” (Cowan pp.223-4).  Inscribed by House of Representatives member from New Jersey, George Sykes. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY. Graff 1436; Howes F-370; Sabin 25845; Streeter VI:3131; Wagner-Camp 115:1.

$600 - 800

610

FREMONT, John Charles. The Expeditions. Donald JACKSON, and Mary Lee SPENCE, editors. Urbana, IL et al: University of Illinois Press, 1970-1973.

3 volumes (of 4, including supplement to vol. II and map portfolio, but lacking vol. III), 8vo. 11 separate folding maps, numerous illustrations (some folding). Original orange cloth gilt and stamped in maroon (slight wear to spine ends); dust jackets for 3 vols. (clipped, slight creasing to vol. II supplement); map portfolio in original folder and slipcase.

FIRST EDITIONS, including folding maps and “hitherto unpublished correspondence and financial records, together with valuable explanatory notes and comments.” WagnerCamp 115:25.

$200 - 300

184 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

611

GALLATIN, Albert (1761-1849). Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, Transmitting a Report, in part, on the Subject of American Manufactures. Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman, 1810.

8vo. Disbound; remnants of old backstrip, sewing holes present.

FIRST EDITION, one of 1,000 copies printed, of the second American report on manufactures, published for members of the House of Representatives. Gallatin reaches the same pro-manufacturing conclusions, in many respects, as Alexander Hamilton does in his 1791 report on manufactures (see lot 615). The second American edition of Hamilton’s report was issued by the House to accompany this report. RARE: According to online records, only one copy of this report has appeared at auction in the last 45 years; OCLC locates only one copy of this edition, held by the American Antiquarian Society.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois $800 - 1,200

GORDON, William (1728-1807). The History of the Rise, Progress, and Establishment, of the Independence of the United States of America... London: printed for the author, sold by Charles Dilly and James Buckland, 1788.

4 volumes, 8vo (213 x 128 mm). 9 engraved folding maps. Contemporary tree calf, spines in 7 compartments with 6 raised bands, gilt-decorated in 4, the rest gilt-lettered (a touch of wear to extremities). Provenance: W. Leuwen? (signatures, 1841).

FIRST EDITION in a fine contemporary binding of Gordon’s History, the “first full-scale history of this war by an American” (Howes).  Howes G-256; Sabin 28011 (erroneously calling for 8 plates and 5 maps).

$2,500 - 3,500

613

GORDON, William (1728-1807). The History of the Rise, Progress, and Establishment, of the Independence of the United States of America... London: printed for the author, sold by Charles Dilly and James Buckland, 1788.

4 volumes, 8vo (220 x 133 mm). 9 engraved folding maps. (Tear crossing image on map of New Hampshire & Vermont repaired verso, some minor spotting, a few stains). 20th-century half red morocco gilt, top edges gilt. Provenance: George Sens (note recording purchase 1901 in Vol. I).

FIRST EDITION. “Gordon is deservedly reckoned as one of the most impartial and reliable of the numerous historians of the American Revolution” (Sabin 28011). Howes G-256; Sabin 28011 (erroneously calling for 8 plates and 5 maps).

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$2,500 - 3,500

185FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

614

[GRAHAM ANDERSON PROBST & WHITE]. The Architectural Work of Graham Anderson Probst & White Chicago and their Predecessors D.H. Burnham & Co. and Graham Burnham & Co. London: Privately published by B.T. Batsford Ltd, 1933. 2 volumes, folio (410 x 295 mm). 385 photogravure plates. (Some very minor offsetting.) Brown crushed levant gilt, spines gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut, signed by Sangorski and Sutcliffe (some very minor ribbing to spine ends and raised bands, otherwise fine); cloth slipcases (some light wear to extremities). LIMITED EDITION, number 277 of 300 copies SIGNED BY ERNEST P. GRAHAM for presentation (but naming no recipient). A FINE COPY.

$1,500 - 2,500

615

[HAMILTON, Alexander]. Report of the Committee Appointed to Examine into the State of the Treasury Department Made to the House of Representatives of the United States on the 22d Day of May, 1794. Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Childs and John Swaine, 1794.

8vo (217 x 138 mm). (Some browning, a few short tears, lacking L4, blank.) Disbound; remnants of old backstrip, original sewing holes present.

FIRST EDITION, the issue with the pagination in signature H correctly imposed.  By the elections of 1792, two distinct political parties were starting to emerge: the pro-administration Federalist Party, who retained control of the Senate, and the anti-administration Democratic-Republican Party, who took control of the House.  The previous year, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison had attempted to remove Hamilton from office for alleged misuse of foreign loans, and emboldened by their victory, Republican lawmakers continued their investigation into Alexander Hamilton’s alleged corrupt conduct as Secretary of the Treasury.  “On February 24, the House assembled a select committee with sweeping powers to investigate the Treasury Department. ...The bulk of the committee was Republican. The members drew up an exhausting schedule to drain any energy Hamilton had left [following his recent bout with yellow fever]. Until their work was complete, they planned to meet every Tuesday and Thursday evening and Saturday morning. For three months, the committee stuck to this punitive schedule, and Hamilton testified at about half the sessions. ...He had to disclose all of his private accounts with the Bank of the United States and the Bank of New York, as Republicans tried to prove that Hamilton had exploited his office to extort credits from the two banks” (Chernow, Alexander Hamilton). Ultimately, Hamilton was exonerated of all of the allegations.  Evans 27909; Ford Bibliotheca Hamiltoniana p.45 (“This examination was made at the request of Hamilton, in order to silence the charges of misappropriation and mismanagement of the public funds”); Sabin 69800. RARE: According to online records, only two copies of this report have sold at auction since 1950. See lot 611 for Gallatin’s 1810 report on American manufactures.

Property from the Collection of Mr. Felix Brejente, Schaumberg, Illinois $2,000 - 3,000

186 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
614 615

616

[HAMILTON, Alexander] -- [WEBSTER, Noah (1758-1843]. A Letter to General Hamilton, Occasioned by his Letter to President Adams. By a Federalist. [New York?: n.p., 1800?].

8vo (213 x 132 mm). 8pp. (Some spotting and browning.) Stab-sewn and tipped into modern marbled paper wrappers.

FIRST EDITION, Evans’s FIRST ISSUE, but Sabin’s second issue, with “By a Federalist” in black letter type and with 33 lines on p.1 (including two rules). Attributed to Noah Webster by Skeel-Carpenter, who calls for at least 6 printings.  Webster’s rebuttal, signed “Aristedes,” to a pamphlet written by Hamilton in 1800 criticizing President John Adams, “a scathing attack on Hamilton for his secret maneuvers within the Adams administration & his support of a standing army” (Skeel-Carpenter).

Webster charges that Hamilton has succumbed to “the secret enmity which has long rankled in his breast,” citing as examples situations which are “mostly of a private and trifling nature.” Webster charges Hamilton that his “policy and your conduct have been the principal causes of the division among Federal men.” Evans 39045; Sabin 102361; Skeel-Carpenter 727. VERY RARE: We trace no copy of any issue of this pamphlet at auction in the last 30 years.  $400 - 600

617

HINTON, John Howard (1791-1873), editor. The History and Topography of the United States of America. London et al: John Tallis and Company, [ca 1850].

2 volumes, 4to (297 x 185 mm). Engraved title-page in vol. I, portrait frontispieces, approximately 57 hand-colored engraved plates (one double-page), 7 double-page maps with color. (Some spotting especially to plates, engraved title-page detached with some chipping, some soiling or staining.) Contemporary half blue calf gilt (some minor wear or scuffing).

Fourth edition of Hinton’s popular illustrated history of the United States first published in 1934. Double-page engraved maps with outlines in color depict North America, South America, the United States, British America, East Canada, West Canada, and Mexico. Howes H512.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 300

618

HOUGH, Romeyn Beck (1857-1924). American Woods illustrated by actual specimens: Commercial Species. Lowville, NY: prepared by the author, 1916.

2 parts in 2 volumes, 8vo (227 x 150 mm). Text volumes with illustrations. 150 samples of wood, representing wafer-thin transverse, radial and tangential sections, illustrating 50 species, window-mounted in 50 card mounts. (A few wood samples with tiny chips or cracks, one mount creased.) Text bound in original printed wrappers, samples on card mounts unbound as issued, each text volume and accompanying sample cards loose in original green cloth covers (a few tiny separations along hinges), the covers in matching half morocco over green cloth slipcases, with metal catches. Provenance: bookplates.

FIRST EDITION of the text, presumably reissuing samples used in a contemporary edition of Hough’s American Woods (retaining the plate numbering from that edition): “In the issuing of American Woods as originally planned -- to cover all of the woods of the United States and Canada that are of economic or special botanical importance -- it has been found that many people limit their interest in the subject to the comparatively few woods that are recognized as of the greatest commercial value. It is to accommodate that class that we have decided to issue two special volumes...covering the fifty kinds of American woods with the U. S. Census returns report to have been most largely manufactured into lumber during the period of one year -- 1912” (Preface to Commercial Woods Part I, p.i.). Volume I includes examples of hard wood, such as ash, beech, birch, cherry, chestnut, elm, maple, oak and walnut; volume II includes examples of soft woods, such as cedar, cypress, fir, pine, redwood and spruce. Not in Stafleu & Cowan TL2.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

187FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$500 - 700

619

IRVING, Washington (1783-1859). Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise beyond the Rocky Mountains. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, 1836.

2 volumes, 8vo (218 x 132 mm). Folding map. (Some spotting.) Modern half red morocco gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut.

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with copyright notice on verso of title and garbled footnote on p.239 of vol.II. Irving’s “lengthy history of John Jacob Astor’s venture into the fur trade on the Pacific Coast is based in part on a revised transcript of the Journal of Robert Stuart and the journals of Wilson Price Hunt and Ramsay Crooks, which were for a time in the possession of Astor” (Wagner-Camp 61). BAL 10148; Graff 2158; Howes I-81; Sabin 35120.

$300 - 400

620

JEFFERSON, Thomas (1743-1826). Engraved document signed (“Th. Jefferson”), as President, Norfolk and Portsmouth, Virginia, 7 May 1805, countersigned by James MADISON (1751-1836) as Secretary of State

1 page, on vellum, 4to, 388 x 266 mm, accomplished in manuscript, with scalloped edge at top, paper seal, docketed verso, some fading of ink, creased from folding

Ship’s passport for the Brig Triton of Norfolk, with captain David Frazer as Captain, to pass “without any hinderance, seizure or molestation.” The Triton was mounted with approximately 170 tons and a crew of 9 men.

$3,000 - 4,000

621

JEWITT, John Rodgers (1788-1821). Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings...During a captivity of nearly three years among the Savages of Nootka Sound. Richard Alsop, editor. New York: for the Publishers, [ca 1815].

12mo (170 x 96 mm). Woodcut device on title-page; woodcut frontispiece, woodcut illustrations in-text. (Some browning and fraying, frontispiece reinforced gutter.) 20thcentury red morocco; original wrapper (fully backed) bound in. Provenance: L. James West? (early inscription in pencil); Archie W. Shiels (bookplate).

Second edition, “with the exception of Dana’s book, the best-known and most popular of the early narratives of adventure on the western coast” (Hill). The Boston, a trading vessel, was seized by natives in the Nootka Sound after the captain insulted the chief; nearly the entire crew, excluding Jewitt and one other member, were massacred.  Jewitt’s work includes information about the life and habits of his captors, and includes a vocabulary of the Nootka language. Hill 888; Howes A-189; Sabin 36123.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$300 - 400

188 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

[

622

KEATING, William H. (1799-1840). Narrative of an Expedition to the Source of St. Peter’s River. London: Geo. B. Whittaker, 1825.

2 volumes, 8vo (198 x 127 mm). Engraved folding map, 8 engraved plates (2 colored, including frontispiece), 3 folding tables. (Map split and tearing along folds, some spotting or minor soiling.) Contemporary half black roan (worn with some losses to vol. II spine cover, vol. I front cover detached and first few leaves detached, other covers detaching). Provenance: Louis S. Tiemann (ca 1869-1962) American banker (bookplates).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of the account of Long’s Second Expedition. “Nothing escaped the attention or record of the gentlemen who accompanied the expedition; and their statements respecting the Sioux and Chippeway tribes are among the most valuable we have” (Sabin). Howes K-20; Sabin 37137; Wagner-Camp 26b:2.

With]: LUMHOLTZ, Carl (1851-1922). Among Cannibals. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1889. Translated by Rasmus B. Anderson. Portrait frontispiece, 2 color folding maps, 28 plates, numerous woodcuts. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. FIRST EDITION. -- PARDOE, Julia (1806-1862). The Beauties of the Bosphorus. London: George Virtue, 1838. Illustrations by W.H. Bartlett. One volume bound from 20 original parts, 4to (288 x 227 mm). Additional engraved title-page, 80 engraved plates. Later black pebbled cloth, printed cloth lettering-piece, uncut; original wrappers. FIRST EDITION, BOUND FROM THE ORIGINAL PARTS. Blackmer 1254. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400 623

LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809) and William CLARK (1770-1838). Travels to the Source of the Missouri River and across the American Continent London: for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1815. 3 vols.

3 volumes, 8vo (196 x 125 mm). Engraved folding route map (short tear at fold crossing image repaired verso); 5 engraved maps. (Dampstain gutter margin to a few leaves, some spotting and browning.) 20th-century half green calf gilt (some rubbing and light wear).

FIRST ENGLISH OCTAVO EDITION, edited by Thomas Rees. It is a reproduction in larger type and on better paper, of the Philadelphia edition of 1814, omitting the ‘Observations on the Government of the Indians,’ by Captain Lewis and the eight meteorological tables. Another edition was printed in Dublin with the same title with some additions” (Sabin 40830). Graff 24881; Howes L-317; Wagner-Camp 13:3.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$600 - 800

624 [LEWIS & CLARK EXPEDITION]. ALLEN, Paul, editor. “Review of and excerpts from Lewis and Clark’s History of the Expedition.”

In: The Analectic Magazine. Pp. 127-149 and 210-234. Philadelphia: Moses Thomas, 1815.

6 monthly issues, January-June, comprising Volume V bound in one, 8vo (210 x 130 mm). Engraved general title. (Some spotting and browning.) Contemporary calf-backed boards (some soiling and wear, portion of a shelf label on foot of spine.)

A LENGTHY CONTEMPORARY REVIEW OF LEWIS AND CLARK’S HISTORY OF THE EXPEDITION. “There is something peculiarly interesting in the narrative of the adventures of men, who, leaving the circle of civilized life, and cultivated nature, traverse unknown seas on a voyage of discovery, or break their way through the unvisited deserts of a continent, exploring the hidden sources of some immense river, or penetrating to the remote confines of an exterior ocean...”

The review was published in two installments: on pages 127-149 in the February issue and on pages 210-234 in the March issue.  Allen’s is one of the earliest reviews recorded in the Lewis and Clark College bibliography and it is by far the longest. In addition to reviewing the work, extended excerpts are printed. Literature of the Lewis and Clark Expedition 5a.1 (Notices).

$400 - 600

189FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

625

LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809) and William CLARK (1770-1838). History of the Expedition under the Command of Lewis and Clark. Elliott Coues, editor. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1893.

4 volumes, large 8vo. Titles printed in red and black; 2 portrait frontispieces; 8 maps (3 folding in rear cover pocket); 2 facsimile letters; 2 folding tables. (Lacking the facsimile letters in vol. I.)

Original cloth-backed boards, printed paper labels on spines, uncut (some browning and rubbing, slight chipping to labels, endleaf in vol. I detached). Provenance: Thad. Huston (bookplate); C. A. Snowden (gift inscription from Huston, 1907); bookplate.

LIMTED EDITION, LARGE-PAPER COPY, number 178 of 200 copies on handmade paper of a total edition of 1,200. Coues’s “edition of 1893 ranks second in importance only to the original journals. his lengthy annotations, based on first-hand knowledge of the territory, are highly informative, and his biographical essay is a major contribution (Wagner-Camp). Graff 2484; Howes L-317; see Wagner-Camp 13:7 note.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $800 - 1,200

626

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Partially engraved document signed (“Abraham Lincoln”), as President, City of Washington, 26 July 1862, countersigned by Edwin STANTON (1814-1869), as Secretary of War.

1 page, folio, 498 x 402 mm, on vellum, accomplished in manuscript, with paper seal, docketed upper margin, creased from folding

Military appointment promoting George F. Tennatt to “Additional Aide-de-Camp with the rank of Captain.” Tennatt was mortally wounded in the battle of Cedar Mountain, Culpeper Virginia, on 9 August 1862 after being shot.  According to Brigadier General Henry Prince’s account of the battle, “Capt. George F. Tennatt, aide-de-camp, fell from his horse mortally wounded by a Minie ball passing through the bridle hand and through the body while advancing toward the enemy in the execution of his duty.  His deportment and his death were alike heroic.”

$4,000 - 6,000

190 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
626 625

627

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Engraved document signed (“Abraham Lincoln”), as President, countersigned by Secretary of the Interior John Palmer Usher, 16 March 1865.

1 page, oblong folio, 367 x 482 mm, with blind embossed seal of the Department of the Interior, creased, some minor staining, framed (unexamined out of frame).

Signed less than a month before Lincoln’s assassination on 14 April 1865, this document appointed Joel A. Potter of the Dakota territories to be the “Agent for the Ponca Indians in the Territory of Dakota.”

$5,000 - 7,000

628

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Complete Works...edited by John G. Nicolay and John Hay. New York: Francis D. Tandy Company, 1905.

12 volumes, 8vo. Photogravure frontispieces with lettered tissue guards, numerous captioned plates throughout. Publisher’s morocco elaborately gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut (some chipping to a few spine ends, some slight rubbing). Provenance: bookplates.

The “Biographical Edition,” printed from the plates of the celebrated “Gettysburg Edition” of 1894.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$800 - 1,200

629

MacARTHUR, Douglas (1880-1964). Reminiscences. New York: McGraw-Hill Company, 1964.

8vo. Publisher’s cream-colored cloth stamped with five stars; original slipcase with paper label (toning).

LIMITED EDITION, 1076 of 1500 copies, SIGNED BY GENERAL DOUGLAS MACARTHUR.

Property from a Private Collection, Chicago, Illinois

$300 - 500

191FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
627 628 629

630 MADISON, James (1751-1831). Partly printed document signed (“James Madison”), as President, Washington, D. C., 24 September 1812, countersigned by James MONROE (1758-1831), as Secretary of State.

1 page, oblong folio, 422 x 542 mm, with 2 paper seals, creased from folding, a few small losses or tears occasionally repaired verso and with occasional tiny losses

Four-language ship’s passport, printed in French, Spanish, English and Dutch, granting permission to “J. B. Parker master and commander of the Brig called Hiram of the burthen of 219 tones, or thereabouts, lying at present in the port of Baltimore and bound for Lisbon and laden with Flour & Bread to depart and proceed.” Also signed by James McCulloch, collector of customs for the port of Baltimore.  $1,000 - 2,000

631

[MAINE]. PARSONS, Charles, lithographer (1821-1910) -- After John William HILL (18121879). Bangor, Me. New York: Endicott & Co. for Smith, Brothers & Co., 1854.

Lithograph with hand-coloring, matted and framed, 640 x 1024 mm. (Unexamined out of frame, some minor toning). Provenance: acquired The Old Print Shop with their label.

A landmark view of Bangor, Maine. “The large and attractive views issued by the Smith Brothers in the 1850s, like that of Bangor Maine...received...recognition as works of art. A Bangor newspaper greeted the publication...with these works: ‘In the foreground the Penobscot is seen as it comes winding its course from ‘neath the extensive Toll Bridge that stretches across its proud waters on the north, filled with countless boats, rafts, logs, &c...The Kenduskeag...presents a most beautiful and pleasing effect. In fact, this picture gives a minute detail and striking likeness of every object that comes within the range of the Artist’s eye, and when spread out before you one can hardly realize that that they are beholding nature itself rather than a drawing on paper’” (Reps p. 64). RARE: according to online records, we trace only one other example of this print at auction in at least 50 years. Reps 1177; Stokes & Haskell, p.187.  23 x 39 inches.

$800 - 1,200

632

[MANUSCRIPTS - FARMING]. A group of 2 notebooks, comprising:

[Farm Account Book]. Rochester, Strafford County, New Hampshire, 1829-1858. 38 leaves, with an additional 32 blank leaves, 8vo. Written in black ink. Bound in contemporary sheep-backed boards. Accounts kept by James Y. Hayes, who maintained his family farm. Entries record transactions for cider, corn, apples, barley, and other foodstuffs as well as candles, cords of wood, and plank nails.

[

With:] Cover title: “Stray Book.” Westfield Township, Ohio, 1856-1922. 15 leaves, with an additional 41 blank leaves. Written in black ink or pencil. Bound in contemporary sheep-backed boards. Records stray mares, ponies, and cattle including descriptions of the strays in various hands. Also includes Mortgages of Chattel.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

192 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

633

[MANHATTAN PROJECT]. An extensive archive including original laboratory notebooks, typed laboratory reports and drafts, and typed communications relating to the research activities in Princeton’s Frick Laboratories of the Princeton Analytical Group under the direction of Professor Nathaniel H. Furman for the Manhattan Project, ca 1942-1946.

The Manhattan Project, organized under the direction of Major General Leslie Groves, grew to employ more than 130,000 at a cost of nearly two billion dollars, and had project sites at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Los Alamos, New Mexico, Chicago, and Hanaford, Washington, with research taking place at a network of institutions across the United States and Canada. Organized under the “Madison Square Area” of the “Manhattan District, Corps of Engineers,” researchers at the Frick Laboratories in Princeton’s Department of Chemistry, under the direction of Professor Nathaniel H. Furman (1892-1965), worked to identify uranium in ores and to purify and measure trace contaminants in uranium concentrates, apparently to work toward discovering uranium deposits in the United States.

Included in the archive are:

Carbon copy typescript. A letter from the War Department, signed (in facsimile) by Under secretary of War Robert P. Patterson (“Robert P. Patterson”), 7 August 1945, “To the Men and Women of Manhattan District Project.” 1 page, 8vo, marginal chipping “TODAY THE WHOLE WORLD KNOWS THE SECRET WHICH YOU HAVE HELPED US KEEP FOR MANY MONTHS.” Written one day after the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Patterson comments: “I am pleased to be able to add that the warlords of Japan now know its effects better even than we ourselves...No one of you has worked on the entire project or known the whole story. Each of you has done his own job and keep his own secret, and so today I speak for a grateful nation when I say congratulations and thank you all.”

Western Union Telegram, to Dr. Furman, 10 August 1945. “SURRENDER OF JAPAN APPEARS IMMINENT.” Instructions from the Madison Square Area, Manhattan Project, instructing “Cessation of hostilities does not repeal nor affect our program and our work should continue as scheduled. Continue present security measures.” Surrender would be announced by Emperor Hirohito 5 days later on 15 August 1945.

Furman’s manuscript ledger recording sample data from various locations including MIT, U. S. Engineers, Westinghouse and DuPont. Entries note the type and amount of the sample, as well as dates received and reported. With 4 additional ledgers kept by Furman, ca December 1942 through February 1946, recording samples, with two ledgers labeled “Special Defense Note Book.”

WITH: 4 of Nathaniel H. Furman’s notebooks.  Each including handwritten data from several of the project’s other sites, including Ames, Iowa, Du Pont, Hooker Electro Metal Company, Linde Air Products Company, Harshaw Chemical, Mallinckrodt Chemical Works, and U. S. Engineers. -- Three composition notebooks of student calculations and data from Bruce McDuffie and Roy J. Mundy -- Two dissertations, comprising: N. N. Furman, W. B. Mason, and J. S. Pekola. “The Use of Cupferron in the Estimation of Uranium.” June 1946. 65 pages, carbon copy typescript. A portion of the paper contributed by William Burkett Mason constituted his Doctoral dissertation. In board portfolio.; Another copy.; Clark E. Bricker. An Electrolytic-Polarographic Method. 1944. 47 pages, carbon copy typescript. Loose in folder. -- A notebook belonging to W. B. Mason including handwritten data relating to cupferron and uranium. -- 10 “spring” binders containing carbon typescript copies of papers and presentations prepared by the Princeton Analytical Group.

Many of the reports and typescripts are marked “confidential,” “classified,” or “secret,” but were declassified on May 18, 1954. The Seely G. Mudd Library at Princeton University holds a collection of papers and other materials relating to Frick Laboratory’s role in the Manhattan Project; the present archive was acquired by a previous owner in the 1970s during preparations for work to be done in the Frick Laboratories. The archive comprises some two linear feet, and more complete listings and information are available on request.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota $5,000 - 7,000

633A

[MANHATTAN PROJECT]. OPPENHEIMER, J. Robert (1904-1967). A group of works relating to Oppenheimer from the library of American scientist and chairman of the National bureau of Standards, Wallace R. Brode (1900-1974), comprising:

SMYTH, Henry DeWolf (1898-1986). Atomic Energy for Military Purposes. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1945. 8vo. Photographic plates. Original publisher’s grey cloth lettered in burgundy on spine (some soiling); original printed yellow and black dust jacket (lower portion of spine panel missing, some chipping and soiling). FIRST EDITION, trade issue, SIGNED BY J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER, HENRY D. SMYTH, and NORRIS BRADBURY.  Smyth’s work is a “remarkably full and candid account of the development work carried out between 1940 and 1945 by the American-directed but internationally recruited team of physicists, under the code name of ‘Manhattan District’, which culminated in the production of the first atomic bomb” (PMM).

[With:] United States Atomic Energy Commission In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Transcript of Hearing before Personnel Security Board. Washington, D. C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1954. Original wrappers (hand-lettered on spine). Provenance: U. S. S. D. Reserve Collection (stamp front wrapper). -Another copy. -- United States Atomic Energy Commission In the Matter of J. Robert. Oppenheimer. Texts of Principal Documents and Letters of Personnel Security Board General Manager Commissioners. Washington, D. C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1954. Original wrappers. -- Carbon copy typescript, 3pp., 16 June 1954. A press release comprising a “Statement by the Atomic Energy Commission,” and a list of witnesses, including Enrico Fermi, Leslie R. Groves, Edward Teller, and John Von Neumann.

[Also with:] OPPENHEIMER. The Open Mind. NY, 1955. Original wrappers. Fourth printing INSCRIBED BY OPPENHEIMER. -- One World or None. New York, 1946. Original wrappers. Introduction by Niels Bohr and with contributions by Albert Einstein, Walter Lippmann, Oppenheimer and others of this “report to the public on the full meaning of the atomic bomb. -- ALSOP. We Accuse! The Story of the Miscarriage of American Justice in the Case of J. Robert Oppenheimer. NY, 1954. Original wrappers. -- And one other.

from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

193FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
Property
$500 - 700 633

634

[MANUSCRIPT – MATHEMATICS]. Notebooks containing examples of practical arithmetic and arithmetical exercises. Halfmoon, NY, ca late-18th or early-19th century.

2 volumes, small folio (each approximately 318 x 195 mm). Volume I: 45 leaves, with an additional 10 leaves on bifolia laid in. Written in cursive in blue and black ink. (Several bound leaves excised at end, some spotting and staining.) Bound in calf-backed marbled boards (worn with a few manuscript annotations on covers).

Volume II: 63 leaves. (Quire disbound at end, some chipping and tears.) Written in cursive in blue and black ink. Bound in paper covers (with all-over cursive writing, soiled, some minor chipping). Provenance: The Flynn Family (signatures).

These volumes were kept by members of the Flynn family of Halfmoon New York.  John Flynn, the patriarch, was one of the earliest settlers in the area, and the Flynn family settled along the Hudson River from Ireland in the 1750s, where they opened a well-known tavern which the family operated well into the 19th century.  Volume I was kept by John Flynn, and Volume II includes work by Mary Jane Flynn, Daniel Flynn, William Flynn, John Flynn, and David [George] Flynn.  Included throughout are sections on compound multiplication, addition, subtraction, decimals, division, tare and tret, apothecary weights, other various weights and measures, Rule of Three, fellowship compound, and loss and gain.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $800 - 1,000

635

[MANUSCRIPT – MATHEMATICS]. Notebook containing examples of practical arithmetic and arithmetical exercises. [Virginia], ca 1800.

57pp, folio (330 x 200 mm). Written in cursive in black and brown ink, with decorative headings and borders. (A few leaves excised at end.) Contemporary linen over newspaper waste (manuscript annotations on lower cover). Provenance: Edward W. Scott (signatures).

Includes exercises and examples of simple and compound addition, federal money, troy weights, averdupois, apothecary weights, cloth measurements, land measurements, compound multiplication and division, dry and liquid measurements, single and double rules of 3, practice tables, insurance commission and brokerage, and the purchasing of stocks.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $400 - 600

194 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

636

[MANUSCRIPT – MATHEMATICS]. A mathematical textbook and practice book. Andover, MA, 1807-1809.

33 leaves, small folio. Written in cursive in brown ink. (Some spotting and ink show-through, marginal fraying to a few leaves.) Bound in modern half calf, marbled boards. Provenance: Dudley Watrous (signature on first leaf and throughout).

Dudley Watrous (1790-1867) was born in Hebron Connecticut, and attended school at Andover Massachusetts, where he kept this book. Lessons start out simply and include examples of simple addition, multiplication and division. The book progresses with degrees of difficulty, and includes examples of monetary exchanges and simple and compound interest problems.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

637

[MANUSCRIPT – MATHEMATICS]. Notebook containing examples of practical arithmetic and arithmetical exercises. Oyster Bay, NY, 1808.

95 leaves, folio (324 x 197 mm). Written in cursive in black ink. (Some spotting and staining.) Bound in contemporary paper covers (stained and with a few annotations, one quire unglued from covers). Provenance: Charles Peters (signature and title-page).

Charles Peters attended Oyster Bay Academy, where he kept this book, likely a copy of his teacher’s exercises. Including information about the calculation of interest, calculation of American duties, equation of payment, loss and gain, “Reducing the Current money of Holland into Bank money,” the Double Rule of Three, and annuities.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

638

[MANUSCRIPT – MATHEMATICS]. Notebook containing examples of practical arithmetic and arithmetical exercises. Ridgefield, Connecticut, 1813-1819.

150 leaves, folio (323 x 202 mm). Written in cursive in brown ink, with several separate title-pages, and elaborate headings; figures and decorations throughout. (Small losses to a few sheets, marginal chipping, soiling.) Bound in contemporary wrappers (soiled, with minor losses and a few annotations, front cover detached).  Provenance: Seth B. Jones (signatures).

An extensive American arithmetic including information on land measure, the rule of 3 and double rule of 3, liquid measure, interest, rebate and discount, exchange, square root and cube root, annuities, leases and pensions, and American monies.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200

195FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

639

[MANUSCRIPTS – REMEDIES]. Manuscript home maintenance and home remedy guide.  Jamestown, NY, 1832.

58 leaves, 8vo (202 x 126 mm). Written in black ink. With 9 pp. table of contents at end, and with an additional approximately 60 blank leaves.  Bound in contemporary boards with modern rebacking.

The manuscript comprises practical advice, formulas, recipes and remedies for use in the home.  Included are formulas for the composition of alloys including brass, pinchback, printer’s types, steel joints, solder, silver solder, gold solder, ring gold, and yellow dipping metal. Also included are instructions on gilding wood, glass, porcelain, and other materials, and inkmaking, as well as formulas for lacquers of various colors, gums and resins, and cement, all with instructions for use. With recipes for preserving butter and for currant wine, and with several home remedies including a cure for jaundice using bitters, a recipe for a wash for diphtheria, and cures for snake bites.  The manuscript also includes several “magical experiments,” biographical information from the life of General Francis Marion, and fair copies of verse.  Laid in are several newspaper clippings and two notes with various additional remedies.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

640

[MANUSCRIPT - REMEDIES]. Manuscript home maintenance and home remedy guide. Chesapeake City and Elizabeth City VA, and later Little Rock AR, 19th-century.

103 leaves, with 17 blank leaves at end, 8vo (185 x 124 mm). Written in black ink or pencil. 13 ll. table of contents at beginning. Bound in contemporary sheep (wear to spine and extremities). Provenance: William P. Bainbridge (name on cover, signatures); Ray Staffien (signature).

Compiled by William P. Bainbridge, comprising nearly 300 recipes for beer, wine, chocolate cream, cleaning formulas, and insect repellents. Also included are remedies for diphtheria, rheumatism, and chapped lips as well as a mixture to strengthen and promote the growth of hair. Recipes for millefleurs perfume, perfumed soap, Columbian soap, tooth powders, and parchment glue are also included, as are recipes for yellow wall coloring, blue wash for walls, and dye for cashmere.  William P. Bainbridge served as an Aide-de-Camp in the Civil War in Little Rock, and the 1890 federal census shows a William P. Bainbridge residing in Elizabeth County, Virginia.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$800 - 1,200 641

[MANUSCRIPT – SURVEYING]. Notebook containing surveying, navigation, and examples of practical arithmetic. Mystic River, CT, 1860.

50 leaves, folio (325 x 210 mm). Written in cursive in black ink in possibly two hands. Several ink diagrams. (Some staining and show-through.) 24pp. sewn into wrappers (staining and tears with losses); with additional 26pp. stab-sewn and laid in (several leaves becoming disbound). Provenance: Horatio N. Fish Jr. (inscription on cover).

Horatio Nelson Fish Jr. (1843-1864), was raised in Mystic, Connecticut, and was a member of one of Mystic’s founding families.  He enlisted in the Connecticut Volunteer infantry in 1862, and died in Virginia in 1864 as a result of wounds he received.  His manuscript, surveying the Mystic River on 12 January 1860, also includes notes and exercises relating to simple and quadratic equations, algebra, Mercator’s sailing, and plain and traverse sailing.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

196 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

642

MARSHALL, John (1755-1835).  The Life of George Washington. Philadelphia: C. P. Wayne, 1804-1807.

5 volumes 8vo (218 x 132 mm). Engraved portrait of Washington after Gilbert Stuart in Vol. I. (Some spotting to portrait, scant spotting to a few leaves, slight browning to a few leaves, without the 22-page subscribers list, as often.) Contemporary calf, smooth spines gilt, tan morocco letteringpiece gilt (some rubbing or wear); Atlas: contemporary cloth-backed boards, printed label to upper cover. Provenance: Matthew Gregory (signatures on titles).

FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with 1804 imprints in the first three volumes, octavo format. Marshall’s fundamental biography of Washington was compiled from the late President’s papers. “After the able, accurate, and comprehensive work of Chief Justice Marshall, it would be presumptuous to attempt a historical biography of Washington” (Sparks, Washington, I.12). Howes M-317; Sabin 44788 (one of “the only complete editions of this indispensable work”).

[With:] Atlas to Marshall’s Life of Washington. Philadelphia: J. Crissy, ca 1838. Engraved title, 10 double-page engraved maps, a few with handcoloring. (Some minor spotting.) Original cloth-backed boards, printed label to upper cover. Howes M-317; Sabin 44788.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $1,500 - 2,500

643

McKENNEY, Thomas L. (1785-1859) -- HALL, James (1793-1868). History of the Indian Tribes of North America. Philadelphia: Edward C. Biddle (Vol. I); Daniel Rice and James G. Clark (Vol. II); 1836, 1842.

2 volumes (of 3, lacking volume 3), folio (508 x 356 mm). Text only (lacking all plates, offsetting to tissue guards, some spotting or staining). Contemporary half calf (rebacked preserving portions of original spines, some other repairs and light wear).

Mixed edition of the text only of History of the Indian Tribes of North America, which U.S. Superintendent of Indian Trade Thomas McKenney’s wrote to create a lasting record of the Native American tribes whom McKenney believed were vanishing as settlers moving west.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

197FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

- 3,000

644

MICHAUX, François-André (1770-1855), and Thomas NUTTALL (1786-1859). The North American Sylva; or, a Description of the Forest Trees of the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia. Philadelphia: Rice, Rutter & Co., 1865.

5 volumes, 8vo (263 x 167 mm). Engraved portrait frontispiece in vol. I, 277 hand-colored engraved or lithographic plates. (Some minor spotting or staining, some light offsetting or toning.)

Original brown morocco, spines gilt-lettered and blind-stamped, edges gilt (rebacked preserving original spines, scuffing to sides, some light wear).

Third American edition of Michaux, and second edition of Nuttall. “Few American color plate books had such lasting popularity as this classic work on American trees, or as tangled a publication history... In 1856 a fire destroyed the premises of the publisher of the joint edition. The Michaux plates were saved, but the Nuttall stones were evidently lost, and the later joint editions used new stones” (Reese, Stamped with a National Character: Nineteenth Century American Color Plate Books 21). Nissen BBI 1361 & 1458; Sabin 48695 & 56351 (“Of the two works united, it is no exaggeration to remark that it is the most complete work of its kind and is a production of unrivaled interest and beauty”).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$2,000 - 3,000

198 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
645 [MILWAUKEE]. Panoramic View of Milwaukee Wis. Taken from City Hall Tower. Milwaukee: Gugler Lithographic Co., 1898.  Lithographed panoramic view with hand-coloring, 453 x 1310 mm, framed (unexamined out of frame, some soft creasing to margin).  With captions in lower margin identifying important landmarks such as the Pabst Brewing Company, Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, Val Blatz Brewing Company, City Water Works, Milwaukee County Court House, the Masonic temple, Hotel Pfister, the Gas Works, Plankinton House , Bijou Theater, Germania, the Public Library, and the Exposition Building. Reps 4393.  $2,000

646

[MILWAUKEE]. ELLSBURY, George H. (1840-1900) and Vernon GREEN. Milwaukee, Wis. Milwaukee: Milwaukee Lith. & Eng. Co., 1874.

Engraving with hand-coloring, 454 x 768 mm, matted and framed. (Some surface adhesions and some soft creasing, diagonal crease lower corner.) Provenance: Library of Congress Copyright 1874 stamp lower corner.

“Ellsbury did not use the bird’s-eye view perspective so popular with his contemporaries. Instead, he portrayed his cities as seen from the ground or from a slight elevation and some distance. He filled the foregrounds of these long panoramas with interesting and pictorially effective details” (Reps p.174). RARE: We trace no copy of this lithograph at auction. Reps 4383.

Property from a Private Collection $600 - 800

647

[MILWAUKEE]. A group of 6 prints, comprising:

Milwaukee. New York: Charles Magnus, ca 1850. Lithographed pictorial lettersheet with hand coloring. -- City of Milwaukee. New York: D. Appleton, 1872. Lithograph with hand-coloring. -- Vue de Milwankee, dans l’Etat du Wisconsin (Etats-Unis d’Amerique). N.p., n.d. Woodcut with hand-coloring. -- View of the City of Milwaukee. Published in Harper’s Weekly. New York, 30 December 1862. Woodcut with hand-coloring. --  Milwaukee River, at Milwaukee. Published in Picturesque America. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1874. Woodcut with hand-coloring. --  City of Milwaukee. Published in Picturesque America. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1874. Woodcut with hand-coloring. -- Together, 6 prints, all matted and framed (unexamined out of frame), condition generally fine.

Property from a Private Collection

- 400

648

MINOT, George Richards (1758-1802). The History of the Insurrections, in Massachusetts, in the Year mdcclxxxvi, and the Rebellion Consequent Thereon. Worcester, MA: Isaiah Thomas, 1788.

8vo (225 x 132 mm). Engraved portrait of Minot inserted as a frontispiece. (Some minor spotting and browning.) 20th-century red morocco gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut (very slight rubbing to joints). Provenance: Frank C. Deering (1866-1939), Americana collector (morocco booklabel).

FIRST EDITION, THE FRANK DEERING COPY, of Minot’s definitive account of Shays’ Rebellion. At the time of Shays’ Rebellion, the newly-formed United States was governed by the Articles of the Confederation, which many felt was too weak to manage the nation. Shays’ Rebellion informed the debate about the framing of the U. S. Constitution, particularly among Federalists, who advocated for a stronger federal government and diminished states’ rights. Howes M-651.

$400 - 600

199FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$300

649

MÖLLHAUSEN, Heinrich Balduin (1825-1905). Vandringer gjennem det vestlige Nordamerikas Prairier og Udorkener fra Mississippi til Sudhavets Kyster. [Copenhagen]: P.G. Philipsens forlag, 1862.

8vo (220 x 137 mm). Tipped-in portrait, 9 tinted lithographic plates (including frontispiece), folding lithograph map with color. (Some light toning or soiling, some minor chipping.) Modern half leather gilt, original blindstamped black cloth (rebacked, slight wear to extremities).

FIRST DANISH EDITION of “experiences and observations of the author while with the Whipple expedition, of which his is the best account” (Howes M-713). Sabin 49914; Streeter V 3134; Wagner Camp 305:5.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 300

650

MOUNT, William Sidney (1807-1868), after. -- Soulange Teissier, lithographer.

Coming to the Point. New York: William Schaus, 1855.

Color lithograph with hand coloring, sheet 21 1/2 x 28”. Toning, browning along margins.

$600 - 800

651

MULLAN, John, Captain (1830-1909). Report on the Construction of a Military Road from Fort Walla-Walla to Fort Benton. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1863.

8vo (225 x 140 mm). 4 folding maps (very short tears to folds, some minor toning); 10 lithographed plates.

FIRST EDITION, Senate issue. Captain Mullan’s report (appearing on pages 1-84) is followed by engineers’ reports and meteorological data.  The maps are: “Map of the Mountain Section of the Ft. Walla Walla and Ft. Benton Military Wagon Road” -- “Map of the Military Reconnaissance from Fort Taylor to Coeur d’Alene Mission” -- “Map of Military Reconnaissance from Fort Dalles, Oregon, via Wallah-Wallah to Fort Taylor, Washington Territory” -- “Map of Military Road from Fort Walla Walla on the Columbia to Fort Benton on the Missouri.” Howes M-884; Sabin 51275; Wagner-Camp 393; Wheat Transmississippi V, pp. 85-95.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$500 - 700

200 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

652

[NATIVE AMERICANA]. A Collection of Chippeway and English Hymns. Peter Jones, translator. New York: Carlton & Porter for the Missionary Society of the M. E. Church, n.d. [ca 1847].

24mo. With a second title-page printed in Ojibway; text in English and Ojibway throughout. Contemporary calf, smooth spine gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (repairs to spine, hinges and corners, some light wear); slipcase. Provenance: Library Los Angeles County Museum (stamp on verso of title-page); Library Natural History Museum (discard stamp on pastedown).

Presumed second edition, with “Advertisement to the Second Edition” on p. 3 dated 1847. See Sabin 36589 (the edition published by Lane and Tippett). RARE: We find no copies of any edition of Jones’s translation at auction in 40 years.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$300 - 400

653

[NAVAL ACCOUNTS]. A group of 3 works, comprising:

JONES, John Paul. Life and Correspondence of John Paul Jones, Including His Narrative of the Campaign of the Liman. New York: D. Fanshaw, 1830. Frontispiece. Modern full calf with original errata slip. Howes S91. -- Lives of Illustrious Seamen, to Whose Intrepidity and good Conduct the English are Indebted... London: J. Cundee, Ivy Lane; for T. Hurst et. al, 1803. Frontispiece. Illustrated with pictures of prominent naval figures. Modern beige cloth. Provenance: John N. Macomb. -- [NEALE, William Johnstoun]. History of the Mutiny at Spithead and the Nore; with an Enquiry into its Origin and Treatment... London: Thomas Tegg, 1842. Portrait frontispiece. Half title. Contemporary cloth gilt. Provenance: The Admiralty Library. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, 8vo, condition generally fine.

$400 - 600

654

OLMSTED, Frederick Law (1822-1903). The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller’s Observations of Cotton and Slavery in the American Slave States. New York et al: Mason Brothers et al, 1861.

2 volumes, 12mo. Folding color map. (Some short tears or chipping to the map with cellotape repairs verso, some minor toning.) Original green waveembossed cloth, spines gilt-lettered (some wear to extremities, some soiling or staining, front hinge vol. I cracking). Provenance: F. Ritschl (signature).

FIRST EDITION. Best known as a landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted was also a journalist by profession.  He was commissioned by the New York Daily Times, (now The New York Times) to embark on a research journey through the American south and Texas from 1852 through 1857. His dispatches for the Times were collected into three volumes: A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States (1856), A Journey Through Texas (1857), and A Journey in the Back Country in the Winter of 1853-4 (1860). In 1861, during the first six months of the Civil War, Olmlsted published this one-volume abridgement of those three works, Journeys and Explorations in the Cotton Kingdom, at the suggestion of his publisher. Sabin 57240.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$200

201FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
- 300

655

PARKER, Samuel (1779-1866). Journal of an Exploring Tour Beyond the Rocky Mountains, Under the Direction of the A.B.C.F.M. in the Year 1835, ’36, and ’37...  Ithaca: Mack, Andrus, & Woodruff, 1842.

8vo (194 x 122 mm). With large folding “Map of Oregon Territory” bound in. (Tear to fold of map, some spotting.) Original blind-embossed brown cloth, spine gilt lettered (some wear to extremities). Provenance: C. A. Parker (signatures in pencil).

Third edition, including Parker’s map, the “earliest showing accurately the Oregon interior” (Forbes). After exploring Oregon and Washington, parker joined the barque, Columbia, which was headed to the Hawaiian Islands in June 1836. Graff 3194; Howes P89; Sabin 58729; Wagner-Camp 70:3.

$150 - 250

656

[PENNSYLVANIA]. Memoirs of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: McCarty and Davis et al, 1826-1850. -- Collections of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: John Pennington & Henry C. Baird, 1853.

8 parts in 5 volumes (Memoirs 7 parts in 4 volumes, Collections vol. I only), 8vo (210 x 133 mm). (Some minor spotting or staining, some toning with a few leaves browned.) Uniformly in later quarter diced black calf, spines gilt-lettered, marbled boards, edges sprinkled brown (some light wear, a few joints tender). Provenance: unidentified early owner (annotations); with the bookplate of Isaac Norris, added by a later owner (1701-1766), Pennsylvania politician and merchant.

FIRST EDITIONS. Memoirs and Collections result from Historical Society of Pennsylvania’s devotion to preserving materials related to the early history of Pennsylvania, and include accounts of  William Penn’s Treaty of Shackamaxon as well as Penn’s letters, a biography of former Governor Sir William Keith, proceedings of the earliest tribunal during the colonial period, and military journals of Ebenezer Denny regarding the Yorktown campaign in the American Revolutionary War.

$300 - 400

657

PIERCE, Franklin (1804-1869). Engraved document signed (“Franklin Pierce”), as President, Washington, D. C., 17 October 1855, countersigned by James C. Dobbin, Secretary of the Navy.

1 page, folio, 410 x 342 mm, on vellum, with paper seal, creased, dampstaining

signature

Military appointment promoting William K. Mayo to “Master (in the line of promotion)” in the Navy. William Kennon Mayo (1824-1900) was an officer in the U. S. Navy, ultimately rising to the rank of Commodore.  He was appointed midshipman for active service in the Mexican-American War, and then worked as an instructor at the U. S. Naval Academy.  During the Civil War, he was appointed executive officer of the Housatonic during the Union blockade of Charleston. He stayed in the Navy after the end of the Civil War, attaching to various ships before being named commandant of the Norfolk Naval Shipyard from 1882 to 1885.

- 800

202 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
affecting
$600
657 655

658

PURSH, Frederick Traugott (1774-1820). Flora Americae Septentrionalis. London: for James Black and Son, 1816.

2 volumes, 8vo (219 x 136 mm). 24 engraved plates (some browning and staining).

Contemporary green cloth, paper labels to spines (some wear to labels, rebacked preserving original spines); folding case. Provenance: Bacon free Library (bookplate, remnants of label on spine of vol.I).

Second edition of “the most important work which had hitherto been published on the Botany of North America” (Sabin), which includes descriptions of plants from the Lewis and Clark expedition.  Pursh worked with Bernard M’Mahon, one of the stewards of Lewis and Clark’s plant specimens, on the work, which includes nine plates engraved and signed by Hooker after drawings by Pursh.  Sabin 66728.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,000 - 1,500

659

RAMSAY, David (1749-1815). The History of the American Revolution. Trenton: James J. Wilson, 1811.

2 volumes, 8vo (215 x 128 mm). 4pp. subscriber’s list at end (Some spotting and browning, leaf E2 in Vol. II torn across repaired with old stitching, dampstaining to a few leaves.) Contemporary sheep, smooth spine gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt (some rubbing and wear). Provenance: William S. Wright (signature dated 1812).

Second American edition of Ramsay’s account of the Revolution, drawn from papers he studies while serving in the Continental Congress in 1782, 1783, 1785, and 1786. Howes R-35; Sabin 67687.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$200 - 300

660

RAMSAY, David (1749-1815). The History of the American Revolution. Trenton: James J. Wilson, 1811.

2 volumes, 8vo (213 x 128 mm). (Browned, some spotting or staining, some creasing.) Contemporary marbled calf, red calf lettering-pieces gilt (some wear, hinges starting); slipcase. Provenance: Daniel Gusailer? (signatures).

Second American edition of Ramsay’s account of the Revolution, drawn from materials collected by the author while he served as a member of the Continental Congress in the years 17821783 and 1785-1786. Ramsay’s work was first published in Philadelphia in 1789 and was followed London (1793) and Dublin (1795) editions prior to the publication of this second American edition. Sabin 67687.

$200 - 400

203FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

662

[RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS]. Some Account of the Conduct of the Religious Society of Friends Towards the Indian Tribes... from the Time of their Settlement in American, to the Year 1843. London: Edward Marsh, 1844.

8vo (222 x 139 mm). Engraved color frontispiece, engraved folding map with outlines hand-colored. (Some light toning, some minor soiling, a few tears to folding map). Modern half red morocco gilt, marbled boards (some minor scuffing). Provenance: Albert Merritt (inscription), gifted to; Martha Bunting (inscription, annotations).

FIRST EDITION. The “Map of North America, Denoting the Boundaries of the Yearly Meetings of Friends and the Locations of the Various Indian Tribes” includes the depiction of a Texas as a large, independent area extending to the Rio Grande and small portion extending as far as the Oregon border. Sabin 86572.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 400

661

REED, William. Olaf Wieghorst. Flagstaff: Northland press, 1969.

4to. Color frontispiece, title-page printed in blue and black, numerous illustrations (many in color). Original quarter black leather gilt, spine stamped in puce (a touch of rubbing to spine ends); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED EDITION, number 37 of 200 copies, SIGNED BY REED WITH AN INITIALED ORIGINAL DRAWING BY WIEGHORST depicting the profile of an Indigenous man wearing in a feather headdress in pen on the limitation page.  Denmark-born Weighorst worked with horses throughout his life in various jobs with the U.S. Calvary, as a wrangler, or breaking horses for the New York City Police Department. His knowledge of horses was later useful to him in Hollywood, where he painted from Gene Autry’s Champion and Roy Rogers’ Trigger and his art was featured in the open titles for the film El Dorado (1966).

$300 - 400

663

REMINGTON, Frederic (1861-1909), illustrator. -- GARLAND, Hamlin (18601940). The Book of the American Indian. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1923.

4to. Frontispiece, numerous illustrations (many in color) by Remington and others. (Some toning.) Original cloth-backed boards, top edge red-stained (some chipping). Provenance: London Public Library and Art Museum (stamps).

FIRST EDITION, with Remington’s illustrations reprinted from editions of Harper’s Weekly.

The Library of John Leonard Gillis Sold to Support the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto

$300 - 400

204 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

664

REMY, Jules (1826-1893) and Julius BRENCHLEY (18161873). A Journey to Great-Salt-Lake City...With a Sketch of the History, Religion and Customs of the Mormons. London: W. Jeffs, 1861.

2 volumes, 8vo. Half-title and frontispiece portrait in each volume, 10 engraved plates, folding map. Original blue blindstamped cloth, Mormon tabernacle in gilt on front covers, spines gilt-lettered (spines darkened, some wear to spine ends and extremities). Provenance: bookplates.

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH, preceded by the French language first edition of the previous year, recounting Remy and Brenchley’s trip from San Francisco to Salt Lake City in 1855, where they stayed for one month. The Frenchmen “were fascinated by the Mormons, and much of this book is devoted to the new American religion” (Wagner-Camp). The folding map traces the authors’ route. Flake 6867; Forbes 2447; Howes R-210; Sabin 64594; Wagner-Camp 364:2.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $500 - 700

665

NO LOT

666

[SALESMAN’S CATALOGUE]. Nurseryman’s Plant Catalog. Rochester, NY: for J. W. Thompson & Co., ca 1880.

Oblong 8vo (213 x 136 mm). 92 chromolithographic plates signed J. W. Thompson; one plate signed D. M. Dewey. (Some overall toning and staining, a few captions shaved, a few plates excised.) Original morocco gilt (rebacked, lacking clasp).

Agricultural trade catalogue with an extensive collection of plates, comprising: 49 fruit plates including apples, pears, peaches, grapes, plums,  currants, strawberries, and other berries; 35 flower plates including roses, clematis, wisteria, quinquefolia, honeysuckle, althea, hydrangea, lilies, quince; 9 tree and hedge plates including Judas’ tree, weeping birch, weeping willow, purple fringe, weeping linden, weeping elm, and spruce.

John Wrigley Thompson began producing color plates in approximately 1876; his advertisement in an 1876 directory reads: “We are prepared to manufacture first class plates for nurserymen, twenty percent less than any other establishment in town, and fully equal, if not superior in quality.” The plates include information about the fruit or plant’s common name and information about the properties of the plant.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

- 700

[SALESMAN’S CATALOGUE]. DEWEY, D. M.  The Nurseryman’s Specimen Book of American Horticulture and Floriculture, Fruits, Flowers, Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Roses, &c. N.p., n.d.  [ca 1880s?].

Oblong 8vo (212 x 137 mm). Chromolithographed title, 80 chromolithographed and stencil-colored plates. (Some minor toning, a few captions shaved, a few plates without captions or with pencilled captions.) Contemporary wallet-style morocco gilt (some wear, lacking clasp). Provenance: James M. Chambers (binding, signature).

Agricultural trade catalogue with an extensive collection of plates comprising: 58 fruit plates including apples, peaches, grapes, pears, plums, strawberries and other berries, currants;

11 flower plates including roses, honeysuckle, and hydrangea; 8 tree or bush plates including arbor vitae, weeping willow, ash, spruce, juniper and pine; and 3 landscape or scenery plates.

Dewey was the most successful of the nineteenth-century nurserymen from the Flower City.  The plates his firm produced “were simple watercolours, but later, as demand grew, the technique of theorem paintings coloured with the help of stencils was used to multiply the number of copies as quickly and as cheaply as possible” (Oak Spring Pomona 64).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500 - 700

205FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$500
667

668

SCHOOLCRAFT, Henry Rowe (1793-1864). Information Respecting the History, Conditions, and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States....Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Company, 1853, 18521857.

6 volumes, 4to (315 x 244 mm). Half-titles; engraved frontispiece portrait of Schoolcraft; engraved title-pages; 329 engraved plates and maps (some with hand-coloring or printed in color) after S. Eastman and others; several woodcut illustrations in text. PUBLISHER’S RED MOROCCO elaborately gilt, upper covers with central gilt eagle, lower covers with vignette of an Indian gilt, 2 volumes with the name of the recipient, Henry M. Rice, gilt-lettered on upper cover (some light rubbing, a few joints starting, a few spine ends chipping). Provenance: Henry M. Rice (bookplates, binding).

FIRST EDITION, IN A PUBLISHER’S DELUXE BINDING, with the reissue of Part I incorporating a new title to be uniform with the other parts (see Sabin). Although it is somewhat haphazardly arranged, Schoolcraft’s work “contains a vast mass of really valuable material. It has indeed performed a very important service for Indian history, in collecting and preserving an immense amount of historic data....A very large number of beautiful steel engravings, representative of some phase of Indian life and customs, are contained in the work” (Field).

Henry Mower Rice was a fur trader with the Ho-Chunk and Chippewa Indians who was influential in negotiating the United States treaty with the Ojibwe Indians in 1847, as well as several other Indian treaties. He later served as delegate for the Minnesota Territory in 1853 through 1857. He was a member of the wing of the Minnesota Democratic party referred to as “Moccasin Democrats” because of their affiliation with the fur trade. Rice’s work on the Minnesota Enabling Act helped facilitate Minnesota’s statehood. Field 1379; Howes S-183; Sabin 77855.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $4,000 - 6,000

669

SCHOOLCRAFT, Henry Rowe (1793-1864). Historical and Statistical Information Respecting the History, Condition and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States.... Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1851.

Volume I only (of 6), 4to. 75 lithographed plates, including 65 chromolithographed, after Captain S. Eastman. Original blue cloth decorated in gilt and blind (rebacked preserving original spine, some scuffing and soiling). Provenance: Charles E. Mix (1810-1878), chief clerk of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (gift inscription to); Josiah Minot (1818-1891), American jurist (presentation inscription).

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY CHARLED E. MIX: “Hon. Josiah Minot, with respects of Charles E. Mix, Acting Commissioner of Indian Affairs.”  Josiah Minot, once the law partner of President Franklin Pierce, served as a judge in Concord, New Hampshire. Charles Mix served a brief term as commissioner of Indian Affairs in 1858, during which time he oversaw the signing of a treaty with the Yankton Sioux Tribe in Dakota Territory and oversaw the Treaty of Washington, which was ratified by the United States Senate on 16 February 1859.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $400 - 600

206 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

670

[SHAKERS]. Catalogue of Medicinal Plants, Barks, Roots, Seeds, Flowers and Select Powders.....Raised, Prepared, and put up in the most careful manner by the United Society of Shakers, at New Lebanon, N.Y. Albany: Van Benthuysen, ca 1851?

8vo. 35 pp. (A few blank corners torn away, some staining.) Original printed wrappers, stab-sewn (lacking lower wrapper, upper corner torn away, some soiling). Provenance: Baxter L. Knowlton (signature on cover, Syracuse, NY).

19th-century catalogue for the United Society of Shakers at New Lebanon, NY.  Includes a list of abbreviations, a catalogue of seeds, information about pure vegetable extracts in fluid and solid form, ointments and essential oils, plant name synonyms, and remedies.

[With:] Two single-sheet letterpress advertisements, comprising: “The Shaker Vegetable Remedy” and “Shaker Hair Restorer”. [Mount Lebanon, NY?], ca 1889. 239 x 150 mm, printed recto and verso. (A few small holes.) -- “List of Garden Seeds Raised by the Society of Shakers, near Albany, NY.” [Albany, NY?]: n.p., n.d. 396 x 138 mm, printed recto only. [Also with:] Five 20th-century works about the Shakers, Shaker industries, and Shaker herbs.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

[

671

[SHAKERS]. 6 seed packets from the Shakers’ Garden, Enfield, New Hampshire, comprising beets, cucumbers (early cluster, common, and early), lettuce, and turnip.

6 seed packets (66 x 58 mm - 88 x 87 mm). Letterpress labels, planting instructions, and codes printed within letterpress borders. Envelopes folded and pasted. (Some minor staining to a few envelopes, a few tiny holes with occasional repairs.)

The life and finances of the Enfield Shaker community revolved around agriculture, and their most important industry was their garden seed business. “Shaker-grown garden seeds, one of their best and most successful endeavors, were sold throughout the US. To facilitate sales, the Shakers packaged seeds in small packets or sold them by weight and measure for wholesale use. The packets, however, which were an Enfield Shaker innovation, defined the garden-seed business and are still used today” (connecticuthistory.org).  Envelope labeling includes planting instructions, and occasionally includes information for cooking preparation methods (for example, describing the early cluster cucumber as “one of the very best varieties for family use, both for pickles and the table”).

With:] A group of unused seed envelopes and letterpress labels, comprising: early cucumber and bassino red beet printed envelopes from West Pittsfield, MA; bassino beet and yellow onion printed envelopes from New Lebanon, NY; and horehound, motherwort, and wolf bane letterpress labels from New Lebanon, NY.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$400 - 600

207FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

672

SMITH, Samuel Francis (1808-1895). Autograph manuscript signed (“S. Fr. Smith”), a fair copy of the full five verses of “America” (“My country ‘tis of thee...”). N.p., 31 January 1893.

2 pages on a bifolium, 8vo, 28 lines in 4 stanzas, center fold reinforced verso, a few tiny stains, tipped to mat; cloth folding case.

THE FULL FIVE VERSES OF “AMERICA”

The poem begins with the familiar “My country , ‘tis of thee, / Sweet land of Liberty, / Of thee I sing...” and concludes: “Our fathers’ God, to Thee, / Author of liberty, / To thee we sing; Long may our Land be bright / With freedom’s holy light. / Protect us Thy might, / Great God, our King.” Beneath, Smith notes “Written Feb. 1832.” Smith describes the composition and publication of the poem in a clipping laid in, recalling: “[I] instantly felt the impulse to write a patriotic hymn of my own...Seizing a scrap of waste paper, I put upon it, within half an hour, the verses substantially as they stand to-day. I did not propose to write a national hymn. I did not know that I had done so.” After sending “America” accidentally among other poems to a colleague in February 1832, he recalls “To my surprise, I found later that he had incorporated it into a programme for the celebration of July 4, 1832, in Park Street Church, Boston.” In 1932, “America” became the national hymn of the United States. See James J. Fuld, The Book of World-Famous Music, pp. 249-251.

Property from the Collection of Ms. Lauren W. Henry $1,000 - 1,500 673

SNOW, Eliza, compiler (1804-1887). Correspondence of Palestine Tourists; comprising a series of letters by George A. Smith, Lorenzo Snow, Paul A. Schettler, and Eliza R. Snow, of Utah. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Steam Printing Establishment, 1875.

8vo (216 x 145 mm). Original morocco gilt (lacking portion of spine panel, text block detached, a few leaves sprung, overall wear). Provenance: Samuel P. and Mary W. Snow (presentation inscription from Eliza Snow); pencil drawings on two leaves by a previous owner; by descent to present owner.

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED BY ELIZA SNOW TO HER BROTHER: “To my beloved Brother & Sister, Samuel P. & Mary W. Snow, with affectionate regards. Eliza R. Snow. Salt Lake City May 14, 1879.” With a clipping of reddish hair laid in (presumably Eliza Snow’s?).

Eliza Roxcy Snow, one of the most celebrated Latter Day Saint women of the 19th-century, was married to Joseph Smith as a plural wife and was a plural wife of Brigham Young after Smith’s death.  She was the second president of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which she re-established in Utah Territory in 1866.  Her brother, Lorenzo Snow, was the fifth president of the church.  Samuel Pearce Snow was the youngest brother of Lorenzo and Eliza Snow; Mary Blair (nee Wilmot) was his second wife.  Eliza Snow was an accomplished poet, and several of her hymns were set to music and included in the Mormon hymnal. According to Sabin, Correspondence of Palestine Tourists was compiled and published by Eliza Snow, and her brother, Lorenzo Snow, likely collaborated with her on its preparation. Sabin 85504. A FINE ASSOCIATION COPY.

From the Private Collection of Tamara Frauenfelder-Stover

$1,500 - 2,500

208 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

674

[SPECIMEN ALBUMS]. A group of albums with samples collected in the United States, comprising:

[FLORA]. 2 albums of approximately 45 samples of common plants mounted on sheets, including daisies, ferns, laurel, ranunculus, and purslane among others, several with typed labels pasted lower right. Flexible board covers. Presumably collected by John Fetty in the Washington, D. C. area. Ca 20thcentury?

[SEAWEED]. Album of approximately 75 specimens of seaweed mounted on small sheets and laid or tipped in. Half morocco (some wear). Ca late1800s.

[HERBARIUM]. Cover title: “Herbarium and Plant Description.” 23 bifolium containing specimens tipped to right-hand sheet, with plant description, drawings and classification noted on the left-hand sheet. Specimens include wild currant, elderberry, gooseberry, dogwood, lily of the valley, and violet. Loose in folding cloth portfolio (lacking ties). Ca 1910. -- Together, 3 works in 4 volumes.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

675

STANSBURY, Howard (1806-1863). An Expedition to the Valley of the Great Salt Lake of Utah...including...an Authentic Account of the Mormon Settlement Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1852.

2 volumes, 8vo, including text and atlas. 3 folding maps (2 large maps bound in atlas volume); 59 lithographed plates. (Some spotting throughout.)

Original purple gilt-lettered cloth. Provenance: John Izard Middleton, Jr. (signature, April 1854); early 20th-century annotation recording purchase at auction; bookplate.

FIRST EDITION, published in the same year as Stansbury’s report to the Senate, Exploration and Survey of the Valley of the Great Salt Lake of Utah, which was also published by Lippincott, Grambo & Co. Stansbury commanded a detachment of the Army’s Topographical Engineers which explored the Great Salt Lake Basin in 1849. “Of particular interest were the newly established Mormon settlements, and the routes and passes through the Rockies for emigrants” (Wagner-Camp 219:1). Graff 1490; Howes S-884; Sabin 90370.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$400 - 600

676

STEDMAN, Charles (1753-1812). The History of the Origin, Progress, and Termination of the American War. London: For the author and sold by J. Murray, J. Debrett, & J. Kerby, 1794.

2 volumes, 4to (269 x 209 mm). Half-titles, 15 maps and plans (11 folding, one with overlay in vol. I). (A few short tears to folds of maps occasionally repaired, some offsetting of maps and charts, some light spotting.) Contemporary sprinkled calf, red and brown morocco lettering-pieces gilt (rebacked preserving original spines and recornered with a few other repairs, some light wear); slipcase. Provenance: Edward Monckton (1744-1832), British Whig politician (bookplate, signatures); R.F.B. Monckton, gifted to; Library of the Royal Empire Society London (presentation bookplates, withdrawn stamps).

FIRST EDITION of Stedman’s work, “generally considered the best contemporary account… written from the British side” of the American Revolutionary War (Sabin). Born in Philadelphia, Stedman was a loyalist who served the British during the war. He participated in major battles and was seriously wounded twice. He was captured and set to be hanged as a rebel two times but escaped each time. The present account covers all major military engagements of the war as well as many individual battles accompanied by accurate maps and plans, which are “the finest collection of plans assembled by an eyewitness” (Revolutionary Hundred 89). Howes S-914; Sabin 91057.

$4,000 - 6,000

209FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

677 UDELL, John (1795-1874).  Incidents of Travel to California, across the Great Plains; together with the return trips through Central America and Jamaica. Jefferson OH: Printed for the author at the Sentinel Office, 1856.

8vo (176 x 115 mm). Woodcut portrait frontispiece; 1p. errata at end. (Some spotting and staining.) 20th-century half calf gilt by Zaehnsdorf.

FIRST EDITION, containing Udell’s diary from 1 January 1850 through 5 July 1855.  Udell made four overland journeys to California before settling there permanently; he was 55 when he began his first journey in May 1850. It was his practice to stay in California, working in the mines and doing odd jobs, and then return home by Nicaragua or Panama for a short stay, and then set forth again” (Kurutz Gold Rush 644). According to Howes, the portrait (present in this copy) was not issued with all copies. Graff 4230; Howes U-3; Sabin 97663; Wagner-Camp 281.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $600 - 800

678

TREVELYAN, George Otto, Sir (1838-1928). The American Revolution. -- George III and Charles James Fox. London, New York, Bombay & Calcutta: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1899-1907, 1912-1914.

12 volumes (extended from 6 volumes), 8vo (220 x 137 mm). Numerous illustrations, numerous folding maps (some with coloring), EXTRA ILLUSTRATED BY THE ADDITION OF APPROXIMATELY 456 PLATES AND 17 DOCUMENTS (see below). (Some light toning and offsetting, minor tears to a few leaves.) Contemporary brown crushed levant gilt, top edges gilt, others uncut, STAMP-SIGNED BY THE HARCOURT BINDERY INC. (spines sunned, some minor scuffing, minor offsetting to endpapers). Provenance: Frederick Stanhope Peck (1868-1947), Rhode Island Legislator (bookplates). FIRST EDITIONS.

ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS NEATLY BOUND IN THROUGHOUT, INCLUDING CORRESPONDENCE FROM SEVERAL SIGNERS OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE AND OTHER AMERICAN HISTORIC FIGURES, including:

HANCOCK, John, Signer of the Declaration of Independence, Former President of the Continental Congress and former Governor of Massachusetts. Clipped autograph signed (“John Hancock”). N.p, n.d. “Approved John Hancock True Copy,...”   HART, John, Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Partially printed document signed (“John Hart”), [New Jersey], [ca 25 March 1776]. Eighteen pence bill number 10562 for the Colony of New Jersey dated to 25 March 1776 with signatures of two others. -- HOPKINSON, Francis, Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Printed document signed (“Fra.s Hopkinson”), [Pennsylvania], [ca 20 March 1771]. Twenty shillings bill number 2954 for Pennsylvania dated to 20 March 1771 with signatures of two others. -- MORTON, John, Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Printed document signed (“John Morton”), [Pennsylvania], [1777]. Six pence bill number 27782 for the Pennsylvania.  -- PAINE, Robert Treat, Signer of the the Continental Association and the Declaration of Independence. Clipped autograph (“R.T. Paine”). N.p., n.d. -- SHERMAN, Roger, Signer of the Continental Association, Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and the U.S. Constitution. Clipped autograph signed (“Roger Sherman’s”). N.p., n.d. “R.T. Paine Agreeing to the above...” -- GATES, Horatio, controversial British-born American Army Officer during the Revolutionary war. Autograph document signed (“Horatio Gates”) as Major General to Pardon Grey. N.p., May 1779. Regarding various military officers. -- GREENE, Nathanael, Major General of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. Autograph letter signed (“Nath Greene”) to [Nehemiah Hubbard, Esquire]. Morris Town, January 1780. Demanding an estimate regarding the Quarter Masters expenditures for Congress and the Treasury Board. -- JAY, John, Signer of the 1783 Treaty of Paris. Autograph letter signed (“John Jay”) to unidentified recipient. London, 6 December 1794. Regarding copies of letter no. 23. -- MASON, George, one of 3 delegates to the US. Constitutional Convention of 1787 who refused to sign the U.S. Constitution. Autograph annotation signed (“G.M.”). N.p, n.d. Annotation on the half-title of Les Oeuvres de Virgile.

Tome Premier: “Down a Danes’ anime pensatar.” MIFFLIN, Thomas, Signer of the U.S. Constitution and first governor of Pennsylvania. Autograph letter signed (“Thomas Mifflin”) to Gen. Thomas. N.p., 26 December 1785. Regarding delivery of 3-pound payment to George Lutz. -- [READ, Thomas], Pennsylvania Navy during the American Revolutionary War. Partially printed document signed (“Corland?”). [St. James’ Court], 9 July 1798. Appointing Read to Lieutenant in a Company of Infantry. -- And others. Complete list available upon request.

$1,000 - 1,500

ULLOA Y DE LA TORRE GIRAL, Antonio de (1716-1773) and Jorge JUAN Y SANTACILLA (1712-1773). Voyage Historique De L’Amerique Meridionale Fait Par Ordre Du Roi D’Espagne. Paris: Charles-Antoine Jombert [but Amsterdam and Leipzig: Arkestee and Merkus], 1752.

2 volumes, 4to (250 x 192 mm). 2 engraved frontispieces, 55 engraved maps, plans and views on 53 sheets. (Some occasional pale spotting, generally very crisp and clean.) Contemporary French calf, spines gilt, arms removed on sides (arms on sides effaced, a few short splits to joints, a few pale stains). Provenance: Frank S. Streeter (bookplate, his sale, Christie’s New York, 17 April 2007, Lot 507).

FIRST EDITION IN FRENCH, THE FRANK S. STREETER COPY, with the Paris imprint on the title which appears in some copies. According to Sabin, no copies were printed at Paris, but all were printed in Paris and Leipzig by Arkesee and Merkus.  Ulloa and Juan, officers in the Spanish Navy, were attached to a French expedition organized by the Academie des Sciences to South America, and on their return to Spain in 1746, they compiled the present work, with Juan writing the scientific observations, and Ulloa writing the historical aspect of the expedition.

THE WORK INCLUDES THE EARLIEST RECORDED REFERENCE TO THE “AURORA AUSTRALIS.” Sabin calls for only 45 plates, and copies are recorded in American Book Prices Current with totals ranging from 45-55. The large map of Quito is three joined plates.  Hill 1740; Howgego U3; Palau 125473; Sabin 36812.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$1,500 - 2,500

210 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
679

680

[UNITED STATES CONTINENTAL CONGRESS]. Journals of the Congress...[Volume I] (Sept. 5, 1774-Jan. 1, 1776) through Volume X (from 1 November 1784). Philadelphia: R. Aitken, John Dunlap, David Claypoole, 1777-1785.

10 volumes (of 13, comprising volumes I-X), 8vo (each approximately 220 x 134 mm or smaller). (Some occasional browning and spotting.) Vols. I-V, VII uniformly bound in later half calf, fore-edge uncut (some wear, a few joints starting); Vol. VI in a variant half calf (minor loss to head of spine, some wear); Vols. VIII-X uniformly bound in 20th-century cloth-backed boards uncut, printed labels on spines (labels chipping with losses). Provenance: James Tilton (presumably, 1745-1822), Delaware delegate to the Continental Congress (18th-century signatures Vols. II-IV, VII); John Camer (18th-century signature Vol. V); manuscript note: “Mr. Lee’s motion on 8th Act of Cong. (final leaf Vol. VIII); Emmett Collection (duplicate stamp Vol. VIII).

CONTENTS:

Vol. I, Sept. 5, 1774 to Jan. 1 1776. Philadelphia: R. Aitken, 1777. (Bound without title-page.) Evans 15683

Vol. II, January 1, 1776 to January 1, 1777. York-Town, PA: John Dunlap 1778. Evans 16137

Vol. III, January 1, 1777 to January 1, 1778. New York: John Dunlap [1778]. (Bound without the “General Index to Volume I”, 12pp., at end). Evans 16138

Vol. IV, January 1st, 1778 to January 1st, 1779. Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, [1779].  (With only 4pp. [of 7 called for by Evans] at the end.) Evans 16584

Vol V, January 1, 1779 to January 1, 1780. Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, 1782.  Evans 17766

Vol. VI, January 1st, 1780 to January 1st, 1781. Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, [1781]. (With only 4pp. [of 6 called for by Evans] at the end.) Evans 17392

Vol. VII, For the Year 1781. Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, 1781 FIRST ISSUE, with the index incorrectly numbered VIII. Evans 17767

Vol. VIII, First Monday in November 1782 to First Monday in November 1783. Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, 1783. Evans 18266

Vol IX, Third Day of November 1783 to Third Day of June 1784. Philadelphia: John Dunlap, [1784]. (Without the rare August addendum as often.) Evans 18840

Vol. X, From the First Monday in November, 1784. Philadelphia: John Dunlap, 1785. Evans 19316

A CONSECUTIVE RUN OF THE JOURNALS OF CONGRESS, INCLUDING THE RARE SECOND VOLUME, INCLUDING THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

The Journals were issued by the government’s printers Robert Aitken, John Patterson, John Dunlap and David Claypoole. The printing of Vol.II was interrupted when the British seized Philadelphia in the summer of 1777, and most copies of the volume were printed by both Robert Aitken and John Dunlap The set incorporates the full text of the Declaration of Independence including the names of the Signers, the minutes of the debates at the 1787 Constitutional Convention, and the proposed Constitution (pp.241-246, Vol. II).  FOUR VOLUMES FROM THE COLLECTION OF A DELEGATE TO THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS. James Tilton served in the 1st Delaware Regiment of the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War, where he served with distinction and saw action in the battles of Brooklyn, White Plains, Trenton, and Princeton. On July 4, 1783, he was elected first president of the Delaware chapter of the society of the Cincinnati, an office he held until 1793. He was named a delegate to the Continental Congress three times from 1783 to 1785.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier $10,000 - 15,000

211FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

682

681

[UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.] Growth and Manufacture of Silk. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury… of May 11, 1826, in Relation to the Growth and Manufacture of Silk. Washington: Printed by Gales & Seaton, 1828.

8vo (222 x 137 mm). 5 engraved plates (2 folding, one hand-colored), numerous tables (2 folding). (Some spotting or soiling, some minor creasing.) Later paper wrapper unattached (binding defective but sewing holding, some fading).

The present work is document number 158 from the 20th Congress, 1st session. With an additional folding plate laid in. Sabin 81010.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $200 - 300

682

VANCOUVER, George (1757-1798). A Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean and Round the World. London: G. G. 7 J. Robinson, 1798.

4 volumes, comprising: text, 3 volumes, 4to (295 x 233 mm); atlas, folio (517 x 425 mm). Text: half-titles in vols. II and III, 18 engraved plates and maps; atlas: 16 engraved maps and profiles (10 folding). (Some spotting to text, plates, and profiles

Contemporary blind-stamped calf, later rebacking (worn, some damage, a few covers detached or detaching.) Provenance: John Waldie (1833-1907), Canadian politician and lumber baron (armorial bookplate); bookplate.

FIRST EDITION of Vancouver’s voyage, “one of the most important ever made in the interests of geographical knowledge” (Hill).

After serving on Cook’s second and third voyages, Vancouver was made commander of a grand-scale expedition to establish Britain’s territorial rights in the Pacific North West following the Nootka Convention at Nootka Sound, Vancouver Island in 1790. His orders were also to examine thoroughly the coast south of 60° in order to find a possible passage to the Atlantic. Over the course of three seasons, he surveyed the coast of California (visiting San Francisco and San Diego), met with the Spanish at Nootka, discovered the Strait of Georgia, circumnavigated Vancouver island, and proved that no passage existed between the Pacific and Hudson’s Bay. He died in 1798, and his narrative was completed by his brother and by Peter Puget. Hill notes that Vancouver undertook his surveys “with a thoroughness rarely equalled in the history of maritime exploration...completing the most arduous survey that it had fallen any navigator to undertake.” Forbes 298; Hill 1753; Howes V-23c; Lada-Mocarski 55; Sabin 98443; Streeter sale 3487.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$2,500 - 3,500

212 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

683

WASHINGTON, George (1732-1799). Partly printed document signed (“Go: Washington”), as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, “HeadQuarters,” 7 June 1783. Countersigned by John TRUMBULL (1740-1809) (“J. Trumbull Gen Secy.”), as General Secretary.

1 page, 4to, 332 x 205 mm, docketed verso, separation to fold along portion of Washington’s signature, a few tiny holes, some staining

Washington grants furlough and discharge to Elijah Knapp, Sergeant of the 2nd Connecticut Regiment, who served from 7 June 1777 until the close of the war and American victory in 1783. The signature of William S. Smith, Knapp’s Colonel, appears below a notice that Knapp will receive the Badge of Merit for six years’ service. Knapp and the 2nd Connecticut Regiment saw action in the New York Campaign, the Battle of Brandywine, the Battle of Germantown, and the Battle of Monmouth.  The regiment was furloughed 15 June 1783 at West Point, and disbanded on 15 November 1783.  $5,000 - 6,000

213FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

684

[WESTERN AMERICANA] A group of 3 works in 4 volumes, comprising:

FEATHERSTONHAUGH, George William. A Canoe Voyage Up the Minnay Sotor. London: Richard Bentley, 1847. 2 volumes. Contemporary half calf. -- FLINT, Timothy. Indian Wars of the West. Cincinnati: E.H. Flint, 1833. Contemporary half calf. -- SCHOOLCRAFT, Henry R. Narrative Journal of Travels Through the Northwestern Regions of the United States. Albany: E & E Hosford, 1821. Contemporary calf. -- 8vo. Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, condition generally good.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$200 - 300

686

[WESTERN FRONTIER]. TAYLOR, Joseph Henry (1844-1908). Sketches of Frontier and Indian Life on the Upper Missouri. Pottstown, PA: By the Author, 1889.

8vo. Frontispiece, with illustrations. Modern half calf.

FIRST EDITION of Taylor ‘s account of living in North and South Dakota and the Northwestern territories between 1864 and 1889. The author printed this edition on an improvised hand-press. Howes T-68.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$200 - 300

685

[WESTERN AMERICANA -- CALIFORNIA AND OREGON]. A group of 6 works, comprising:

ALLEN, A. J. Ten Years in Oregon. Travels and Adventures. Ithaca, NY: Mack, Andrus, & Co., 1848. Contemporary calf. -- FREMONT, John Charles (1813-1890). Report of The Exploring Expedition to The Rocky Mountains in the year 1842, and to Oregon and North California in the years 1843’44. Washington, D. C.: Printed by Order of the Senate, by Gales and Seaton, 1845. 4 lithographed maps (2 folding); 22 lithographed plates.

Contemporary brown cloth. FIRST EDITION. Graff 1436; Howes F-370; Sabin 25845; Streeter VI:3131; Wagner-Camp 115:1. Provenance: R. C. A. Prior (armorial bookplate). -- GREENHOW, Robert T. (1800-1854). The History of Oregon and California, and the other territories on the North-West Coast of North America. London: John Murray, 1844. Contemporary half calf. -- HINES, Gustavus. A Voyage Round the World: With a History of the Oregon Mission

Buffalo: George H. Derby and Co., 1850. Publisher’s brown cloth. -- PARKER, Samuel. Journal of an Exploring Tour Beyond the Rocky Mountains. Ithaca, NY: Published by the Author, 1840. Includes map of Oregon territory.

Contemporary cloth. -- THORNTON, Jessy Quinn. Oregon and California in 1848.... New York, 1849. Vol I only. Publisher’s brown cloth. -- Together, 6 works in 6 volumes, all 8vo, condition generally very good.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$500 - 700

687

WINTERBOTHAM, William (1763-1829).  An Historical, Geographical, Commercial and Philosophical View of the American United States.... London: for the editor et al, 1795.

4 volumes, 8vo (217 x 127 mm). 5 engraved portrait frontispieces (including an additional frontispiece portrait of Washington in Vol. I); 11 engraved maps and plans (9 folding; a few tears to folds, the map of North America with tear crossing image); 19 engraved plates (one hand-colored); 7 letterpress tables on 4 folding sheets; with “Directions to Binder” leaf at end of Vol. IV. (Some offsetting and browning.) Contemporary calf, brown morocco letteringpieces gilt (overall wear, a few covers detached or detaching). Provenance: Susanna Arder (early signatures on flyleaves).

FIRST EDITION, with the large folding plan of Washington D. C. and with the hand-colored tobacco plate.  Also with folding maps of North America, the United States, New England, the Mid-Atlantic, the South, Kentucky, South America and the West Indies.  The list of plates erroneously calls for a plate of Niagara Falls rather than the plate of the Falls of St. Anthony present in all copies (see Howes and Sabin). ESTC T131074; Howes W-581; Sabin 104832.

Property from the Westland Library of the Frontier

$2,500 - 3,500

214 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

688

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. ALDEN, John, et al. (ed.) European Americana: A Chronological Guide to Works Printed in Europe Relating to the Americas, 14931776. New York: Readex Books, 1980.

6 volumes, 4to. Publisher’s red cloth gilt.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 300

689

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHY]. SABIN, Joseph (1821-1881) et al. A Dictionary of Books Relating to America. R.W.G VAIL, editor. New York: Joseph Sabin, 18681936.

27 volumes (of 29, lacking vols. IV and XIV), 8vo. (Some light toning, some minor soiling.) Original black cloth, spines gilt-lettered. FIRST EDITION, LIMITED EDITION, unnumbered one of 525 copies.

[With:] MOLNAR, Joseph Edgar. Author-Title Index to Joseph Sabin’s Dictionary of Books Relating to America. Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1974. 3 volumes, 8vo. Original blue cloth stamped in silver. FIRST EDITION.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$500 - 700

690

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 6 works, comprising:

CARRINGTON, Henry Beebee. Battles of the American Revolution. New York: A.S. Barnes & Company, 1876. Later red cloth gilt. INSCRIBED BY HENRY B. CARRINGTON. -- COLE, George Watson. A Catalogue of Books Relating to the Discovery and Early History of North and South America. New York: Peter Smith, 1951. 5 volumes. Publisher’s salmon cloth. -- DECKER, Peter. Catalogues of Americana. Austin: Jenkins Publishing Company, 1979. 3 volumes. Publisher’s buff cloth. -- FLAKE, Chad. A Mormon Bibliography 1830-1930. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1978. Publisher’s blue cloth gilt. TLS LAID IN SIGNED BY CHAD FLAKE. -- MANCHESTER, Herbert. Four Centuries of Sport in America 1490-1890. New York: The Derrydale Press, 1931. Publisher’s red cloth. -- STEPHENSON, Richard W. (ed.) Civil War Maps. Washington: The Library of Congress, 1989. Publisher’s quarter calf gilt. INSCRIBED BY RICHARD W. STEPHENSON. -- Together, 6 works in 12 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 400 691

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 7 works, comprising:

FORBES, David W. Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780-1900. Honolulu et al, 1999-2003. 4 volumes. -- The Thomas Winthrop Streeter Collection of Americana. NY: Parke-Bernet Galleries Inc., 1966-1970. 8 volumes. Most with Glassines (chipped). -- McBRIDE, L.R. Petroglyphs of Hawaii. Hilo, HI, 1969. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- The Frank T. Siebert Library of the North American Indian and the American Frontier. NY: Sotheby’s, 1999. 2 volumes. -- LADA-MOCARSKI, Valerian. Bibliography of Books on Alaska Published Before 1868. New Haven, CT et al, 1969. In dust jacket. -- And 2 others. Together, 7 works in 18 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, most in original bindings, most FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil $300 - 400 692

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 11 works, comprising:

DECKER, Peter. Catalogues of Americana. Austin, TX, 1979. 3 volumes. -- HARTLEY, William E., III, editor. Wright Howes: The Final Edition (of U.S.iana). Pine Mountain, GA, 1994. -- And another copy. -- WEATHERWAX, Paul. Indian Corn in Old America. NY, 1954. In dust jacket. FIRST ISSUE. -- HOWES, Wright. U.S.iana (1650-1950). NY, 1962. Second edition. -- HEDRICK, Ulysses Prentiss. A History of Agriculture in the State of New York. NY, 1933. In dust jacket. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- And 5 others. Together, 11 works in 14 volumes, various 8vo and 4to sizes, all in original bindings, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$200 - 300

693

[AMERICANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 12 works, including:

WAGNER, Henry R. and Charles L. CAMP. The Plains & the Rockies. SF, 1982. 2 volumes. Fourth edition. -- COWAN, Robert Ernest, and Robert Granniss COWAN. A Bibliography of the History of California 1510-1930. SF, 1933. 3 volumes. Slipcase. Second edition. -- BAER, Elizabeth. Seventeenth Century Maryland a Bibliography. Baltimore, 1949. Slipcase. PRESENTATION COPY, INSCRIBED. -- HOPKINS, Joseph G.E. et al, editor. Concise Dictionary of American Biography. NY, 1964. In dust jacket. -- ADAMS, Ramon F. The Rampaging Herd. Norman, OK, 1959. In dust jacket. -- California Spanish Exploration to American Statehood the Library of Jennie Crocker Henderson. SF, 1979-1980. 5 volumes. -- And 6 others. Together, 12 works in 21 volumes, various Folio, 4to, and 8vo sizes, most illustrated, all in original bindings, most FIRST EDITION, condition generally good. Complete list available upon request.

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$300 - 400

694

[CANADIANA -- BIBLIOGRAPHIES]. A group of 5 works, comprising:

ALSTON, Sandra, et al. A Bibliography of Canadiana, Second Supplement. Toronto: The Public Library, 1989. 4 volumes. Publisher’s red cloth. -- BOYLE, Gertrude M., et al. A Bibliography of Canadiana, First Supplement. Toronto: The Public Library, 1959. Publisher’s red cloth. -- LANDE, Lawrence. A Bibliography of Canadiana. Montreal: The Lawrence Lande Foundation for Canadian Historical Research, 1965. Publisher’s half calf; slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 689 of 950 copies, SIGNED BY LAWRENCE LANDE. -- LANDE, Lawrence. Rare and Unusual Canadiana. Montreal: The Lawrence Lande Foundation for Canadian Historical Research, 1971. LIMITED EDITION of 500 copies SIGNED BY LAWRENCE LANDE, with laid-in ALS BY LAWRENCE LANDE. --  STATON, Frances M. and TREMAINE, Marie. A Bibliography of Canadiana. Toronto: The Public Library, 1934. Publisher’s red cloth. -- Together, 5 works in 8 volumes, various folio and 4to sizes, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$200 - 400

215FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
216 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA 695

Maps and Atlases

695

SPIRINX, Nicolas (fl. 1606-1643). [Celestial Globe Gore] -[Terrestrial Globe Gore]. [Lyons:] dated 1610 (but later?).

Two engraved sheets, each 12 gores, making up a celestial and terrestrial globe, on laid paper with central watermark depicting a bunch of grapes, sheets 287 x 423 mm, diameter of each globe approximately 113 mm. Celestial: first gore with a dedicatory cartouche, third gore with mapmaker’s name and date. Terrestrial: first gore with a dedicatory cartouche, tenth gore with mapmaker’s name and date. (A few tiny marginal holes on Celestial gore sheet.)

Shirley records two sets of globe gores, including both celestial and terrestrial: one pair at the Newberry Library, the other at Yale University.  Based on Shirley’s examination, he considered them both to be 18th-century pulls. The present examples are printed on half sheets of laid paper with chain lines running horizontally, and with a central watermark depicting a bunch of grapes. According to the Newberry Library, their gores are printed on “19th-century machine-made paper.” Spirinx’s cartography was based on Francois de Mongenet’s celestial and terrestrial globe gores. Examples of any strike of Spirinx’s gores are rare at auction: according to online records, we trace only 4 examples of Spirinx’s celestial gores, and no examples of Spirinx’s terrestrial gores at auction in the last 50 years.

$2,000 - 3,000

696

PRICHARD, James Cowles (1786-1848). Six Ethnographic Maps, Illustrative of “The Natural History of Man” and “Researches into the Physical History of Mankind.” [London]: N.p., [ca 1850].

Folio (560 x 350 mm). Six double-page hand-colored maps. (Some occasional spotting.) Contemporary roan-backed  marbled boards (covers detaching, some wear). Provenance: Mrs. M. O. Munroe (stamp).

Second edition, published to illustrate Prichard’s The Natural History of Man, which was first published in 1843.  The maps illustrate the distribution of races in Asia, Africa, Europe, the Americas and Oceania.  The atlas, sold separately from the text, is rare in any edition.  Sabin 65480.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$500 - 700

697

BLAEU, Willem (1571-1638). Britannia Prout Divisa Suit Temporibus Anglo-Saxonum Praesertim Durante Illorum Heptarchia. Amsterdam, ca 1645.

Engraved map of Britain, text on verso in Latin, sheet 508 x 608 mm, with hand-coloring (a few tiny marginal chips, short tear lower margin repaired verso, small loss to upper margin repaired verso some tiny spots). Wide side borders decorated with 14 historiated scenes of the Saxon kingdoms including the shield of each kingdom.

[With:] HONDIUS, Henricus (1597-1651). Magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae Tabula. Amsterdam, ca 1635. Engraved map of Britain, sheet 491 x 592 mm, with hand-coloring, compass rose gilt (map laid down, a few pale stains and tiny marginal chips). With small inset map of the Orkney Islands.

$600 - 800

217FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
Lots 695-717 696 697

698

VAN DER AA, Pieter (1659-1733). ‘t Koninkryk van China met d’Aangrenzende Landen Siam et Bengale. Leiden, ca 1706.

Engraved map of China, sheet 229 x 152 mm, with hand coloring. (Some mostly marginal staining and chipping, a few small marginal holes.)

Decorative cartouche, depicting China and including Japan, Korea.

Van Der Aa’s map illustrated Dutch translations of the account of Fernando Perez d’Andrade’s voyage to Malaga, the Gulf of Bengal and China in 1516.

$300 - 500

699

STANFORD, Edward (1827-1904). Stanford’s Library Map of Australasia. London: Edward Stanford, 1925.

4 engraved maps with hand-coloring, each 795 x 856 mm, dissected and mounted on cloth. Folding into original cloth portfolio.

Large-scale map of Australasia divided into four sections depicting the northeast, southeast, southwest, and northwest portions of the continent, and with an inset chart of the world. Stanford’s popular map was first published in 1859 and was first reprinted in 1863.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

700

[MAPS & ATLASES]. STANFORD, Edward (1827-1904). A group of maps and an atlas by Stanford, comprising:

A Map of the Nile, from the Equatorial Lakes to the Mediterranean....London, 1889. Engraved map, linen-backed, dissected and folding into original cloth covers, printed paper label on upper cover. -- Central Africa. London, n.d. Engraved map, linen-backed, dissected and folding into original cloth covers, printed paper label on upper cover. -- Stanford’s London Atlas of Universal Geography Exhibiting the Physical and Political Divisions of the Various Countries of the World… One Hundred Maps, with a list of Latitudes and Longitudes. London, 1896. Folio. 100 maps, most double-page. Half morocco. -- Together, 3 works, condition generally good.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$400 - 600

218 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

701

[ARMY AIR FORCE]. A group of World War II escape charts, all printed in  Washington, D. C. on synthetic silk cloth, comprising:

Philippine Series. No. C-43, Mindanao Island (recto). 1944.; No. C-44, North Borneo (verso). 1944. -- C-45 East Borneo (recto). 1944.; C-46 West Borneo (verso). 1944. -- C-52, Japan and South China Seas (recto). 1945.; C-53, East China Sea. 1945. -- C-495, Omei Mountain (recto). 1944.; C-384, Wei River (verso). 1944. -- C-859, Penang Island (recto). 1945.; C-860, Bintan Island (verso). 1945. -- NL-50, Burr Nor (recto). 1944.; Tsitsihar, (LungChiang), China (verso). 1943. -- (Condition for all generally fine, a few with minor browning, fraying to outer edges, or staining.)

Together, 10 charts on 5 sheets. These detailed aeronautical charts were issued to pilots as part of their survival gear to be used if they were shot down.  The charts were printed on silk-like material so they would be water proof, and could be worn by pilots under their flight suits.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

- 600

702

MITCHELL, Samuel Augustus (1792-1868). Mitchell’s National Map of the American republic or United States of North America, together with maps of the Vicinities of thirty-two of the principal cities and towns in the Union. Philadelphia, 1843.

Engraved wall map with hand-coloring in wash and outline, overall 1020 x 1235 mm, with modern linen backing and selvage mounted on rollers. (A few tears and minor losses, some browning.)

Drawn by J. H. Young and engraved by J. H. Brightly. Extending west into the eastern part of the Independent Republic of Texas and the Indian Territory to the north. Minnesota is not named, but the Iowa territory is and includes the label “Dacotah or Sioux.” With 32 inset maps of U.S. cities including New York, Trenton, Philadelphia, Hartford, Providence, Rochester, Pittsburgh, Albany, Baltimore, Washington D. C., Richmond, Raleigh, Charleston, Savannah, New Orleans, Natchez, Nashville, and Louisville. Rumsey 3345; Streeter 3861.

$8,000

703

DUVAL, Pierre and  Gérard JOLLAIN. L’Amérique françoise où son Décrites La France nouvelle... Paris, ca 1665.

Engraved map of the coasts of North and Central America, the west coasts of parts of Europe and Africa, and the Atlantic, sheet 410 x 560 mm. (Short tear to fold, some minor staining.)

Duval and Jollain’s undated map draws on Sanson’s model of North America. Gérard Jollain and Jacques Honervogt began a publishing partnership in approximately 1654, with Jollain taking control after Honervogt’s death ca 1663; based on this, Burden assigns the map a publication date of ca 1665. An example of this map, included in a French composite atlas, was offered for sale by Paulus and Swaen, who trace only four examples of the map: the copy present in the atlas, another copy in private hands, and copies at the New York Public Library and the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris. Burden, The Mapping of North America, 382a.

$400 - 600

219FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
$400
- 1,200
220 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

PALMATARY, J[ames] T. Chicago. Cihcago [sic]: Braunhold & Sonne [now Charles Sonne], [1857].

Engraved bird’s-eye view of Chicago with contemporary hand-coloring on 4 sheets, image 1213 x 2107 mm. (Laid down on a backing board, some overall browning, some cracking and tiny holes with occasional losses and minor work in facsimile, some spotting.) Framed.

FIRST EDITION OF THIS RARE AND IMPORTANT MAP.

Palmatary drew his bird’s-eye view of Chicago just one year after the Illinois Central Railroad was completed; when it opened in 1856, the Illinois Central was the longest railroad in the world, running 705 miles from Cairo, Illinois to Chicago, and it features prominently in Palmatary’s view in the lower left, with tracks on trestles protected by breakwaters and dikes over a strip of land several hundred feet out in Lake Michigan. The Illinois Central originally intended to enter Chicago from the south, and requested permission to lay track along the lakefront to reach the city’s inner harbor. They were not granted permission, however, because the section of lakefront (also visible lower left) had been designated for public use in 1836 by the Illinois and Michigan Canal Commission (marked “Public Ground-A Common to remain Forever Open, Clear, Free of Any Buildings, or Other Obstruction Whatever” on a real estate map from 1836). After months of fighting, the City Council granted the Illinois Central the land in Lake Michigan, which led to the northern terminus for the railroad in the old Fort Dearborn reservation.

Visible in the lower right is an area called “The Sands,” near present-day Streeterville, notorious in its time for having a high concentration of brothels, gambling dens, saloons and inexpensive motels; the Sands became a point of refuge for Chicagoans in 1871 during the Great Chicago Fire. The lower margin includes a legend of notable places in the city, including Richmond House, the U.S. Marine Hospital, Grain and Freight Houses, the McCormick Reaper Factory, the “Illi. & Diversy” Brewery, and the Chicago Water Works. The view includes street names, homes, churches, and points of industrial interest, and was lithographed by Christian Inger, or Herline & Hensel in Philadelphia. Along the north and east portions of Wolf Point, three buildings have been drawn in by hand; these hand-drawn buildings are present in all copies we have examined.

VERY SCARCE: We trace only one other copy of this exceedingly rare map at auction in the last 100 years, sold in these rooms 13 September 2017; it is one of five known copies, and is one of only two copies in private hands, with copies being held by the Newberry Library, the Chicago History Museum, and the Library of Congress. Robert Holland, Chicago in Maps 1612-2002, (2005), pp.80-83; Robert Karrow, Checklist of Printed Maps of the Middle West to 1900, (1981), 4 0357; John R. Hubert and Patrick E. Dempsey, Panoramic Maps of Cities in the United States and Canada, (1984), p.38, Illinois No.146; Reps 800.

$50,000

221FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
- 70,000

705

FLOWER, W. L. Map Of Cook County Illinois. [Chicago: S. H. Burnhams and J. Van Vechten, 1862].

Engraved wall map with hand-coloring in wash and outline, overall 1785 x 1595 mm sheet, with modern linen backing and selvage mounted on rollers, with inset maps of Chicago and Blue Island, inset diagram of the state of Illinois. (Mounted on new linen, a few tiny losses to edges, some minor staining as usual.)

FIRST EDITION, ONE OF THE EARLIEST MAPS OF COOK COUNTY, A PRE-FIRE RARITY.

“Walter Flower’s enormously large map of Cook County...presents an historical snapshot of the Chicago area at the dawn of the Civil War that remains unparalleled in its richness of detail” (Robert Holland, Chicago in Maps, p.87). “This huge map of Cook County, with its inset of Chicago is the earliest for Cook County listed in Phillips and...is a most valuable record of Cook County and Chicago at just before the War of the Rebellion” (Streeter). Borders include advertisements from Chicago merchants, and the map includes plats of over thirty towns in Cook County. The map also includes large-scale pictures of numerous properties around Chicago and Cook County, including the Tremont House Hotel, the Washington House, Bryant Hall, Graceland and Rosehill Cemeteries, J. J. Sand’s Columbian Brewery, the Cook County Courthouse, Oak Ridge School in Cicero, the residences of Thomas Cook and James W. Scoville, E. Haskin’s House in Evanston, and Northwestern Female College in Evanston. Streeter III: 1513.

$4,000

705A

DUTTON, Clarence Edward, Captain (1841-1912). Atlas to Accompany the Monograph of the Tertiary History of the Grand Cañon District Washington, D. C.: Julius Bien & Co,, 1882.

Atlas volume only, folio (505 x 450 mm). Lithographed title, contents list, and 22 double-page lithographed or chromolithographed plates. Original brown gilt-lettered cloth (hinges tightened, some wear to corners and extremities, some minor dampstaining to upper corners); slipcase.

FIRST EDITION of “one of the grandest publications of the scientific expeditions in the American West… [depicting] the Grand Canyon in a series of magnificent panoramas” (Reese & Miles). Including panoramic views after Thomas Moran and William Henry Holmes of the Temples and Towers of the Virgen, the Toroweap Valley, Vulcan’s Throne, the Uinkaret Plateau, Mount Trumbull, the Kaibab Plateau, Point Sublime. “One of the greatest if not the greatest of all Grand Canyon books” (Farquhar, The Books of the Colorado River & the Grand Canyon 73). Goetzmann, Exploration and Empire pp. 512-513; W.B. Reese & G.A. Miles, Creating America 40.

[With:] Miscellaneous Documents of the House of Representatives for the Second Session of the Forty-Eighth Congress. 1884-’85 Washington: Government Printing Office, 1885. Volume 11 only (of 17), 4to. Geological plans and plates (some in color or double-page). Modern cloth.

$4,000 - 6,000

222 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
- 6,000

705B

DUTTON, Clarence Edward, Captain (1841-1912). Tertiary History of the Grand Canyon District. Santa Barbara: Peregrine Smith, Inc., 1977.

2 volumes, 4to and folio. Illustrated throughout. Original leatherette gilt; original printed slipcases; original shrinkwrap; original shipping carton.

LIMITED EDITION, one of 1,500 copies, of this facsimile reprint of Dutton’s atlas of the Grand Canyon. A FINE COPY IN AS-NEW CONDITION.

$300 - 400

706

[ATLAS]. FISHER, Richard Swainson.

Maps compiled, drawn, and engraved under the supervision of J.H. Colton and A.J. Johnson. New York: Johnson & Ward, [1865].

Folio (457 x 337 mm). 58 engraved maps (comprising 36 double-page, 22 single-page); engraved frontispiece, double-page engraved chart showing mountains and rivers, double-page engraved plate depicting flags, engraved Universal Time chart, 2 engraved charts of coats of arms. Contemporary cloth cut down retaining original marbled endpapers (spine re-cased, damp stains, toning, restoration to endpapers).

Early 1865 edition with updates on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and subsequent pursuit and death of John Wilkes Booth; predates later edition with double-page map of “Nebraska, Dakota, Idaho, and Montana” but including the unnumbered Civil War-era map of the Vicinity of Richmond and Peninsular Campaign in Virginia and the New Military Map of the United States. Not in Rumsey.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$500 - 700

223FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

707

[ATLAS]. Atlas of Grundy Co. and the State of Illinois to which is added an Atlas of the United States, Maps of the Hemispheres &c. Chicago: Warner & Beers, 1874.

Folio (464 x 399 mm). Lithographed title-page, 5pp. lithographed views of Grundy County, 13 lithographed maps hand-colored in wash and outline of Grundy County (2 double-page); 26 maps of Illinois hand-colored in wash and outline (one double-page); 13 maps of the United States hand-colored in wash and outline (one double-page); double-hemisphere map of the world hand-colored in wash.

The section on the United States is after H. H. Lloyd & Company’s atlas of the United States, and includes maps of Texas with Oklahoma designated as “Indian territory,” and the territory of Alaska. Not in Rumsey (which records only the 1872 and 1876 editions of this atlas).

Selections from Antiquariat Botanicum, Dr. Eugene Vigil

$200 - 300

708

[ATLASES]. A group of 3 atlases, comprising:

Mitchell’s School Atlas. Philadelphia: H. Cowperthwait & Company, 1856. Fourth revised edition. --Standard Atlas of Barnes County North Dakota. Chicago: Alden Publishing Co., 1910. -- Standard Atlas of Burleigh County North Dakota. Chicago: George A. Ogle & Co., 1912. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, various 4to and folio sizes, condition generally good.

Property from the Patrick Atkinson Collection, Minneapolis, Minnesota

$400 - 600

709

[ATLAS] -- WALCOTT, Charles D., et al. Geologic Atlas of the United States... A group of 48 issues (including duplicates), published by the Department of the Interior United States Geological Survey in Washington, D. C.

Folio volumes relating to the American West and the East Coast, including: Livingston, Montana. Folio 1. 1894. 5 maps and charts. -- Chattanooga, Tennessee. Folio 6. 1894. 5 maps. -- Marysville, California. Folio 17. 1895. 4 maps. -- Three Forks, Montana. Folio 24. 1896. 5 maps and charts. -- Pueblo, Colorado. Folio 36. 1897. 8 maps, charts and plates. -- Boise, Idaho. Folio 45. 1898. 4 maps. -- Holyoke, Massachusetts. Folio 50. 1898. 5 maps. -- Tacoma, Washington. Folio 54. 1899. 6 maps and charts. -- Fort Benton, Montana. Folio 55, 1898. 5 maps and charts. -- Little Belt Mountains, Montana. Folio 56. 1899. 5 maps and charts. -- Tintic Special, Utah. Folio 65. 1900. 6 maps. -- Chicago, Illinois and Indiana. Folio 81. 1902. 8 maps and plates. -- New York City, New York, New Jersey. Folio 82. 1902. 9 maps and plates. -- Tishomingo, Indian Territory. Folio 98. 1903. 4 maps and charts. -- Muscogee, Indian Territory. Folio 132. 1906. 2 maps. -- Devils Tower, Wyoming. Folio 150. 1907. 3 maps. -- Laramie Sherman, Wyoming. Folio 173. 1910. 6 maps and charts. --Birmingham, Alabama. Folio 175. 1910. 6 maps and charts. -- San Francisco. Folio 193. 1914. 11 maps and plates. -- Detroit, Michigan. Folio 205. 1917. 8 maps and plates. -- Deming, New Mexico. Folio 207. 5 maps and plates. -- [And with:] Paleotectonic Maps of the Triassic System. 7 folding maps. -- Physiographic Types. 1900. 10 maps and charts. -- All folio, in original wrappers (some chipping, a few wrappers detaching).

[With:] CLEMENTS, J. Morgan. Atlas to Accompany Monograph XLV on the Vermilion Iron-Bearing District of Minnesota. Washington: n.p., 1903. Folio. title, contents leaf, legend and key map, 23 maps. -- HISE, Charles Richard Van and William Shirley BAYLEY. Atlas to Accompany Monograph XXVII on the Marquette Iron-bearing District of Michigan. Washington: n.p., 1896. Folio. Title, contents leaf, legend and key map, 36 maps. -- Together, 50 items.

from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

- 1,200

224 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
Property
$800
708 709

710

KARROW, Robert W. Jr. (ed.) Checklist of Printed Maps of the Middle West to 1900. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1981.

4to. 12 volumes. Publisher’s red cloth gilt. Typed letter signed from Karrow laid-in.

[With]: MARSHALL, Douglas W. (ed.) Research Catalog of Maps of America to 1860. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1972. Folio. 4 volumes. Publisher’s red cloth gilt. SIGNED BY DOUGLAS W. MARSHALL.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

711

LEIGHLY, John (1895-1986). California as an Island. San Francisco: The Book Club of California, 1972.

Folio. Hand-colored vignette on title-page, 25 plates, many folding. Publisher’s quarter calf gilt. LIMITED EDITION one of 450 copies with prospectus laid in.

[With]: WHEAT, Carl Irving (1892-1966). Maps of the California Gold Region. San Francisco: The Grabhorn Press, 1942. Publisher’s original cloth. LIMITED EDITION one of 300 copies.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$300 - 400

712

PHILLIPS, Philip Lee (1857-1924) and LeGEAR, Clara Egli (1896-1994). A List of Geographical Atlases in the Library of Congress. Washington: Government Printing Office/Library of Congress, 1909-1992.

4to. 9 volumes with original publisher’s prospectus. (Some toning.) Publisher’s cloth (rubbed, some joints starting). [With:] PHILLIPS, Philip Lee (1857-1924). A List of Maps of America in the Library of Congress. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1901. Publisher’s red cloth gilt (a few joints starting).

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch

$400 - 600

713

[BIBLIOGRAPHIES -- CARTOGRAPHY]. TOOLEY, Ronald Vere (1898-1986). A group of 6 works, comprising:

The Mapping of America. London: The Holland Press, 1980. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket. -- Maps and Mapmakers. London: B.T. Batsford Ltd., 1952. Publisher’s dark orange cloth; original dust jacket. Provenance: W.L. Harrell (presentation inscription). INSCRIBED TO W.L. HARRELL BY R.V. TOOLEY, “Kind regards.” -- Tooley’s Dictionary of Mapmakers. Hertfordshire, UK: Map Collector Publications Limited, 1979. Publisher’s red cloth gilt; original dust jacket. --   Tooley›s Dictionary of Mapmakers Supplement. New York: Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1985. Publisher’s green cloth; original dust jacket. -- Tooley’s Handbook for Map Collectors. Chicago: Speculum Orbis Press, 1985. Publisher’s blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. -- FRENCH, Josephine, et al. (eds.) Tooley’s Dictionary of Mapmakers. Hertfordshire, UK: Map Collector Publications Limited, 1999. 4 volumes. Publisher’s red cloth gilt; original dust jacket. -- Together, 6 works in 9 volumes, various 8vo and 4to sizes, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 500

714

[BIBLIOGRAPHIES -- CARTOGRAPHY]. WHEAT, Carl Irving (1892-1966). Mapping the Transmississippi West. San Francisco: The Institute of Historical Cartography, 1957-1963.  5 parts in 6 volumes, folio. Frontispiece with illustrations throughout each volume. Publisher’s quarter calf. Provenance: Elinor Campbell (presentation inscription).  FIRST EDITION, INSCRIBED BY WHEAT to Elinor Campbell: “With every good wish.” With supplemental prospectus.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $200 - 400

715

[BIBLIOGRAPHIES -- CARTOGRAPHY]. A group of 17 works regarding American geography, comprising:

BLAKE, Janice Gayle. Pre-1900 Maps of Georgia. Atlanta: State Printing Office, 1975. Publisher’s quarter cloth. -- CLARK, Thomas D. Historic Maps of Kentucky. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1979. Publisher’s quarter calf folding case with booklet and map facsimiles. -- HARLEY, John Brion, et al. Mapping the Revolutionary War. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1978. Publisher’s grey cloth; original dust jacket. -- LANEGRAN, David A. Minnesota on the Map: A Historical Atlas. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2008. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. -- MILLER, Iris. Washington in Maps 1606-2000. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, 2002. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- NEBENZAHL, Kenneth. A Bibliography of Printed Battle Plans of the American Revolution 1775-1795. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1975. Publisher’s brown cloth; original dust jacket.

INSCRIBED BY KENNETH NEBENZAHL. -- THOMPSON, Edward V. Important Maine Maps, Books, Prints, and Ephemera. Orono, ME: Stillwater Press, 2003. Publisher’s green cloth. -- List of Maps of Boston. Boston: Municipal Printing Office, 1903. Contemporary red cloth. -- Together, 18 works in 19 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, condition generally fine.

Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 400

[BIBLIOGRAPHIES -- CARTOGRAPHY]. A group of 11 works regarding the mapping of the American West, comprising:

COHEN, Paul E. Mapping the West: America’s Westward Movement 1524-1890. New York: Rizzoli, 2002. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. INSCRIBED BY PAUL COHEN. -- COWAN, Robert Ernest and COWAN, Robert Granniss. A Bibliography of the History of California 1510-1930. San Francisco: John Henry Nash, 1933. 3 volumes. Publisher’s quarter cloth. -- GOURNAY, Luke. Texas Boundaries: Evolution of the State’s Counties. College Station: Texas A & M University, 1995. Publisher’s black cloth; original dust jacket. -- STORM, Colton. A Catalogue of the Everett D. Graff Collection of Western Americana. Chicago: Published for the Newberry Library by the University of Chicago Press, 1968. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. -- STREETER, Thomas Winthrop. Bibliography

and

225FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
716
of Texas. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1955. 5 volumes. Publisher’s green cloth gilt. -- Together, 9 works in 15 volumes, various folio, 4to
8vo sizes, condition generally fine.  Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $300 - 400 717 [BIBLIOGRAPHIES -- CARTOGRAPHY]. A group of 16 works regarding the mapping of the Americas, comprising:  BURDEN, Philip D. The Mapping of North America. Hertfordshire, UK: Raleigh Publications, 1996. Publisher’s half calf. INSCRIBED BY PHILIP D. BURDEN.  -- GUTHORN, Peter J. United States Coastal Charts 1783-1861. Exton, PA: Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 1984. Publisher’s blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- PORTINARO, Pierluigi and KNIRSCH, Franco. The Cartography of North America 1500-1800. New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1987. Publisher’s dark blue cloth; original dust jacket. -- SHIRLEY, Rodney W. The Mapping of the World: Early Printed World Maps, 14721700. London: The Holland Press, 1983. Publisher’s red cloth; original dust jacket. -- SMITH, Thomas H. The Mapping of Ohio. [Kent, OH]: The Kent State University Press, 1977. Publisher’s ivory cloth; original dust jacket. -- The Hill Collection of Pacific Voyages at the University of California, San Diego. New Haven: William Reese Company, 2004. Publisher’s blue cloth. -- Together, 16 works in 19 volumes, various folio and 4to sizes, most FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally fine.  Property from the Collection of Dorothy and Richard Fitch $400 - 600 End of Sale

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Guide for Prospective Sellers and Buyers

GUIDE FOR PROSPECTIVE SELLERS

Evaluation of Property

Hindman is pleased to provide complimentary auction estimates for items you’re considering consigning. You are welcome to submit items electronically (consign@hindmanauctions.com) or to contact any of our offices directly.

Our specialists are eager to help you learn more about your collection and current auction sale estimates.

To begin an estimate, our specialists will need:

• At least 3 photos

• Detailed description

• Details on signatures or marks

Shipping Arrangements

Buyers assume full responsibility for the packing and shipping of lots won at auction. Our Recommended Shippers offer a wide variety of local, domestic, and international shipping options.

In the interest of our clients, Hindman requires a written authorization from the buyer in order to release property to anyone other than the purchaser of record (including but not limited to our recommended shippers). You may submit the Shipping Release Form via fax to 312.280.1211 or email to shipping@hindmanauctions.com

Appraisals

Our exceptional team of specialists regularly appraises property by analyzing market trends and conducting comprehensive research. Specialists evaluate thousands of objects each year for auction, allowing them to closely monitor the nuances of the current market.

Professional appraisals are prepared for estate tax, gift tax, charitable contribution, insurance and for equitable distribution purposes.

• Estate Tax

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• Appraisals for Corporate Valuation Needs

Our trust and estates department recognizes that each client and appraisal situation is unique and often involves multiple asset categories and residences. Fees for appraisals are determined by the number of specialists, hours involved and the necessary travel and expenses. Our competitive fees are negotiated based upon the express needs of each client and are competitive within the marketplace.

Please contact our Appraisals Department (appraisals@hindmanauctions.com) for more information.

Estate Services

Estate settlement is a meticulous and multi-faceted process. Hindman provides executors, fiduciaries and beneficiaries throughout the country with confidential and customized appraisals and disposition services. All appraisals are prepared fully in accordance with USPAP guidelines and meet all current requirements set forth by the IRS.

We recognize that each client and appraisal situation is unique and often involves multiple asset categories and residences. Our Trusts and Estates department offers services that are tailored to meet our clients’ timelines and specifications.

Our specialists offer complimentary walk-through services with the goal of providing an accurate representation of each items’ value based on the current auction market. A detailed proposal outlining the manner in which a sale will be conducted from the initial value assessment to removal of the property and settlement is provided to all parties involved.

Please contact our Estate Services (inquiries@hindmanauctions.com) team for more information.

Updated 9/7/22

GUIDE FOR PROSPECTIVE BUYERS

Conditions of Sale

All bidders with Hindman LLC must read and agree to Conditions of Sale posted in this catalogue prior to bidding at an auction.

Viewing Auction Items

It is highly recommended that all prospective bidders either view the sale via our online catalogue or contact Hindman LLC for further images or to schedule an appointment to view objects in person.

Estimates

Hindman LLC provides catalogue descriptions and pre-auction estimates for each lot included in the sale. These estimates are a guide for prospective bidders. They are not definitive. All pre-sale estimates are subject to revision.

Condition Reports

We are happy to provide a condition report for lots with a low estimate of $300 and above. Nevertheless, intending buyers are reminded that condition reports are statements of our opinion only, and that each lot is sold “AS IS,” per our Conditions of Sale, as outlined in the back of this catalogue. All lots should be viewed personally by prospective buyers or their agents to evaluate the condition of the property offered for sale due to the highly subjective nature of condition

reports.

Bidding at Auction

The highest bidder acknowledged by the auctioneer will be the purchaser. In addition to the hammer price, the buyer agrees to pay Hindman LLC a buyer’s premium as well as any applicable taxes.

Bidding Increments

Bidding generally opens at half the low estimate and advances in the following order, although the auctioneer may vary the bidding increments during the course of the auction.

The standard bidding increments are:

$0 - $500

$25

$500 - $1,000 $50 $1,000 - $2,000 $100 $2,000 - $5,000 $250 $5,000 - $10,000 $500 $10,000 - $20,000 $1,000 $20,000 - $50,000 $2,500 $50,000 - $100,000 $5,000 $100,000 - $200,000 $10,000

Above > $200,000 At Auctioneer’s Discretion

In-House Bidding

Our auctions are free and open to the public with no obligation for attendees to bid. Registration requires your full contact information, photo identification, credit card information, your signature and agreement to the Conditions of Sale.. If you are the successful bidder, your paddle number and the hammer price will be announced by the auctioneer.

Live Bid Online

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Absentee Bidding

If you are unable to attend an auction, you may place an absentee bid, either through our website at hindmanauctions.com or through the bid form provided at the back of this catalogue. An absentee bid is the highest price you are willing to pay exclusive of buyer’s premium and applicable sales tax. Hindman LLC will exercise absentee bids at no additional charge. Absentee bids are always confidential, and bids are executed at the lowest price possible by the auctioneer according to reserves and competing bids.

Telephone Bidding

You may register telephone bid requests either through our website at hindmanauctions.com or through the bid form provided at the back of this catalogue. Upon registering for a telephone bid, you will be called on the day of the auction by a Hindman representative approximately five lots before your item is scheduled to be sold. They will communicate to you the bidding activity and will relay your bids to the auctioneer at your discretion. Please note we can only accept telephone bids for lots with a low estimate of $500 or above unless otherwise noted online. Telephone bids may be requested up to 2 hours prior to the auction start time.

228 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
.......................................

These Conditions of Sale set out the terms upon which Hindman LLC (“we,” “us,” or “our”) sells property by lot in this catalogue. You agree to be bound by these terms by registering to bid and/or by bidding in our auction.

A. BEFORE THE AUCTION

1. LOT DESCRIPTIONS AND WARRANTIES

Our description of a lot, any statement of a lot’s condition, and any other oral or written statement about a lot—such as its nature, condition, artist, period, materials, dimensions, weight, exhibition or publication history, or provenance— are our opinion and shall not to be relied upon by you as a statement of fact. Except for the limited authenticity warranty contained in paragraphs E and F below, we do not provide any guarantee of our description or the nature of a lot.

2. CONDITION

The physical condition of lots in our auctions can vary due to age, normal wear and tear, previous damage, and restoration/repair. All lots are sold “AS IS,” in the condition they are in at the time of the auction, and we and the seller make no representation or warranty and assume no liability of any kind as to a lot’s condition. Any reference to condition in a catalogue description or a condition report shall not amount to a full accounting of condition and may not include all faults, inherent defects, restoration, alteration, or adaptation. Likewise, images in our catalogue may not depict a lot accurately, as colors and shades may appear different in print or on screen than on physical inspection. We are not responsible for providing you with a description of a lot’s condition in the catalogue or in a condition report.

3. VIEWING LOTS

We offer pre-auction viewings, either scheduled or by appointment, that are free of charge. If you believe that the catalogue description or condition reports are not sufficient, we suggest you inspect a lot personally or through a knowledgeable representative before you bid on a lot to make sure that you accept the description and its condition. We recommend you hire a professional adviser if you are not familiar with how to address the nature or condition of an object. Hindman has several salerooms throughout the country and the location of sales, or individual items may vary. It is important to check with our website and be aware of where each lot is located, for both viewing and for shipping purposes.

4. ESTIMATES

Estimates of a lot account for the condition, rarity, quality, and provenance of the object and are based upon prices realized for similar objects in past auctions. Neither you nor anyone else may rely on our estimates as a prediction or guarantee of the actual selling price of a lot or its value for any other purpose. Estimates do not include the buyer’s premium, any applicable taxes, and any other applicable charges.

5. WITHDRAWAL

We may, in our sole discretion, withdraw a lot from auction at any time prior to or during the sale and shall have no liability to you for our decision to withdraw.

B. REGISTERING TO BID

1. GENERAL

We reserve the right to reject any bid. By participating in the sale, you represent and warrant that:

(a) The bidder and/or purchaser is not subject to trade sanctions, embargoes or any other restriction on trade in the jurisdiction in which it does business as well as under the laws and regulations of the United States, and is not owned (nor partly owned) or controlled by such sanctioned person(s) (collectively, “Sanctioned Person(s)”); (b) Where you are acting as agent, your principal is not a Sanctioned Person(s) nor owned (or partly owned) or controlled by Sanctioned Person(s); and

(c) The bidder and/or purchaser undertakes that none of the purchase price will be funded by any Sanctioned Person(s), nor will any party be involved in the transaction including financial institutions, freight forwarders or other forwarding agents or any other party be a Sanctioned Person(s) nor owned (or partly owned) or controlled by a Sanctioned Person(s), unless such activity is authorized in writing by the government authority having jurisdiction over the transaction or in applicable law or regulation.

2. NEW BIDDERS

New bidders must register at least twenty-four (24) hours before an auction and must provide us with documentation of their identity.

(a) Individuals must provide photo identification (driver’s license, non-driver ID card, or passport) and, if not shown on the photo identification, proof of current address (a current utility bill or bank statement). (b) Corporate clients must provide a Certificate of Incorporation or its equivalent bearing the company’s

Conditions of Sale

name and registered address, together with documentary proof of directors and beneficial owners. (c) Trusts, partnerships, offshore companies, and other business entities must contact us in advance of the auction to discuss our requirements. If we are not satisfied with the information you provide us in our bidder identification and other registration procedures, we may refuse to register you to bid, and if you make a successful bid, we may cancel the contract for sale between you and the seller. New bidders may be required to provide us with a financial reference and/or a deposit before we allow them to bid.

3. RETURNING BIDDERS

If you have not bought anything from us recently, then we may require you to register as a new bidder, as described in the paragraph above. Please contact us at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the auction.

4. BIDDING FOR ANOTHER PERSON

If you are bidding as an agent on behalf of another person, your principal must be a registered bidder and must provide us with written authorization allowing you to bid. You, as the agent, shall accept personal liability to pay the purchase price and all other sums due unless we have agreed in writing before the auction that you are acting as an agent on behalf of your principal and that we will only seek payment from your principal.

5. BIDDING IN THE SALEROOM

If you wish to bid in the saleroom, you must first acquire a bidding paddle at least thirty (30) minutes before the auction.

6. OUR BIDDING SERVICES

We offer the following bidding services as a convenience to our clients, subject to these Conditions of Sale. We shall not be responsible for any error, omission, or failure, human or otherwise, in providing these services.

(a) Phone Bids: You must contact us at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the auction to arrange a phone bid. We will accept bids by telephone for lots only if our staff is available to take the bids. We agree that we may record telephone bids.

(b) Internet Bids: You can bid in our live sales via our bidding platform or through third-party bidding sites.

(c) Written Bids: You can find a Written Bid Form at the auction location, or online at www.hindmanauctions.com. We must receive your completed Written Bid Form at least twenty-four (24) hours before the auction. We will endeavor to execute written bids at the lowest possible price consistent with the reserve. If you make a written bid on a lot that does not have a reserve and there is no higher bid than yours, we will bid on your behalf at approximately fifty percent (50%) of the low estimate or, if lower, the amount of your bid. The first written bid we receive of those for identical amounts will be given priority over other bids.

7. CREDIT CARD AUTHORIZATION HOLD

When you register to bid you may be asked to provide us with a valid credit card number. You authorize us to verify the validity of the credit card by placing a temporary authorization hold on the card that will remain until it falls off, usually within 2 to 7 days.

C. DURING THE AUCTION

1. BIDDING IN THE AUCTION

(a) Live Auctions. We will appoint an individual auctioneer to administer a live auction. The auctioneer may accept bids from (a) written bids left with us by bidders before the auction; (b) bidders in the saleroom; (c) telephone bidders; and (d) Internet bidders, including bidders through third-party bidding sites. Bidding generally starts below the low estimate and increases in steps, called bid increments. The auctioneer will decide at his/her sole option where the bidding should start and the bid increments. Bid increments may vary from auction to auction. You shall comply with all laws and regulations in force that govern your bidding.

(b) Online Auctions. The auctioneer will accept bids from Internet bidders, including bidders through third-party bidding sites. Bidding generally starts below the low estimate and increases in steps, called bid increments. The auctioneer will decide at his/her sole option where the bidding should start and the bid increments. Bid increments may vary from auction to auction. You shall comply with all laws and regulations in force that govern your bidding.

(c) Timed Auctions. Bids may only be submitted on our website between the dates and times specified in the lot’s description. Your bid is submitted once you place and confirm your bid amount. You agree that a bid is final once it is placed and that you may never amend or revoke your bid. You are fully responsible for any errors you make in bidding. Bidding generally opens at or below the low estimate and increases in steps (bidding increments) to be determined in Hindman’s sole discretion.

229FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

2. AUCTIONEER’S DISCRETION

The auctioneer shall have absolute discretion to (a) admit a bidder into or remove a bidder from the saleroom or online auction; (b) accept or refuse any bid; (c) change the order of the lots in the auction; (d) move the bidding backward or forward; (e) withdraw any lot from the auction; (f) divide any lot or combine any two or more lots; (g) reopen or continue the bidding even after the hammer has fallen; and (h) continue the bidding, determine the successful bidder, cancel the sale of the lot, or reoffer and resell any lot in the event that there is an error or dispute related to bidding or the application of the reserve, whether during or after the auction. You must provide us with written notice within three (3) business days of the date of the auction if you believe that the auctioneer has accepted the successful bid in error. The auctioneer will consider the claim and decide in good faith if the sale of the lot is final, whether he/she will cancel the sale of the lot, or whether he/she will reoffer and resell the lot. The auctioneer’s decision in exercise of this discretion is final. This paragraph does not in any way affect our ability to cancel the sale of a lot under other applicable provisions of these Conditions of Sale, including the rights of cancellation set forth in sections B(1), D(6), E(2), and G(1).

3. BIDDING ON BEHALF OF THE SELLER

The auctioneer may, at his/her sole option, bid on behalf of the seller up to one bidding increment before the reserve by making either consecutive or responsive bids. The auctioneer will not identify these as bids made on behalf of the seller. If a lot is offered without reserve, the auctioneer will open the bidding at a set increment lower than the lot’s low estimate and will solicit higher bids from that amount. If there are no bids on a lot, the auctioneer may deem the lot unsold.

4. SUCCESSFUL BIDS AND INVOICES

Subject to paragraph C(2), the contract of sale between the seller and the successful bidder is formed when the final bid is accepted and the auctioneer’s hammer strikes. The successful bid price is the hammer price, and we will issue an invoice only to the registered bidder who made the successful bid. While we send out invoices by mail and/or email after the auction, we shall not be responsible for telling you whether your bid was successful. You should contact us immediately after the auction to find out the success of your bid in order to avoid having to pay storage charges. Please note that Hindman will not accept payments for purchased lots from any party other than the purchaser, unless otherwise agreed between the purchaser and Hindman prior to the sale.

D. AFTER THE AUCTION

1. THE BUYER’S PREMIUM

In addition to the hammer price, the successful bidder agrees to pay us a buyer’s premium on the hammer price of each lot sold. On all lots, we charge twenty-five percent (25%) of the hammer price up to and including $400,000; twenty percent (20%) of any amount in excess of $400,001 up to and including $4,000,000; and twelve percent (12%) of any amount in excess of $4,000,001. If the bidder bids through a third-party platform the bidder agrees to pay us a surcharge equal to the fee levied by the third-party platform. The third-party platform fee is in addition to the buyer’s premium.

2. TAXES

The successful bidder is responsible for any applicable taxes, including any sales or use tax or equivalent tax wherever such taxes may arise on the hammer price, the buyer’s premium, and/or any other charges related to the lot. A sales or use tax is dependent upon a number of factors, including, but not limited to, our volume of sale and the place of delivery of the lot, regardless of the nationality or citizenship of the successful bidder. The applicable sales tax rate will be determined based upon the state, county, or locale to which the lot will be shipped or where it is picked-up in person. We collect sales tax in states where legally required.

3. MAKING PAYMENT

(a) Immediately following the auction, you must pay the purchase price, consisting of the hammer price, plus the buyer’s premium, plus any applicable duties and sales, use, or other applicable taxes. Payment is due no later than by the end of the seventh (7th) calendar day following the date of the auction, which we refer to as the due date.

(b) We will only accept payment from the registered successful bidder. Once issued, we cannot change the buyer’s name on an invoice or reissue the invoice in a different name.

(c) You must pay for lots in US dollars in one of the following ways: (i) Wire transfer.

(ii) Bank checks: You must make these payable to Hindman LLC, and we may impose other conditions. Once we have deposited your check, property cannot be released until five (5) business days have passed.

(iii) Personal checks: You must make these payable to Hindman LLC, and they must be drawn from US dollar accounts from a US bank. The property will not be released until the check has cleared and the funds are received by us.

(iv) Credit card: Credit card payments may not exceed $10,000 and a

convenience fee of 3% will be added to each credit card payment.

(v) ACH Bank Transfer

(d) You must quote your invoice number when making a payment. All payments sent by post must be sent to Hindman LLC, 1338 West Lake Street, Chicago, IL 60607, ATTN: Client Accounting Department.

4. TRANSFERRING OWNERSHIP TO YOU

You will not own the lot and title will not pass to you until we have received full payment in good funds of the purchase price, even in circumstances where we have released the lot to you.

5. TRANSFERRING RISK TO YOU

Unless we have agreed otherwise with you, the risk in and responsibility for the lot will transfer to you from whichever is the earlier of the following: (a) when you collect the lot; or (b) the end of the thirtieth (30th) day following the date of the auction or, if earlier, the date the lot is taken into care by a third-party warehouse.

6. YOUR FAILURE TO PAY

If you fail to pay us the purchase price in full in good funds by the due date, we will be entitled to do one or more of the following (as well as enforce any other rights and remedies we have by law) at our sole discretion:

(a) We can charge interest from the due date at a rate of up to one and one-half percent (1.5%) per month on the unpaid amount due.

(b) We can cancel the sale of the lot and sell the lot again, publicly or privately, on such terms as we believe appropriate, in which case you must pay us any shortfall between the amount you owe us and the resale price, plus all costs, expenses, losses, damages, and legal fees we incur due to the cancellation.

(c) We can pay the seller the amount due to them, in which case you acknowledge and understand that we will have all the seller’s rights to pursue you for such amount.

(d) We can hold you legally responsible for the amount you owe us and bring legal proceedings against you to recover the amount owed by you, plus other losses, interest, legal fees, and costs as allowed by law.

(e) We can reveal your identity and contact details to the seller.

(f) We can reject any bids made by or on behalf of you in future auctions or require you to provide us with a deposit before accepting any bids.

(g) We can exercise all the rights and remedies of a person holding security over any property in our possession owned by you, whether by way of pledge, security interest, or in any other way as permitted by the law of the place where such property is located. You will be deemed to have granted such security to us and we may retain such property as collateral security for your obligations to us.

(h) We can take any other action we deem necessary or appropriate.

7. SHIPPING, COLLECTION, AND STORAGE

(a) You must collect purchased lots within thirty (30) days of the auction. We can assist in making shipping arrangements by suggesting art handlers, packers, transporters, or experts, but you must arrange all transport and shipping with them, and we are not responsible for their acts, failure to act, or neglect. Hindman has several salerooms throughout the country and the location of sales, or individual items may vary. It is important to check with our website and be aware of where each lot is located, for both viewing and for shipping.

(b) If you do not collect any purchased lot within thirty (30) days following the auction, we may, at our sole option, (i) charge you storage and insurance costs; (ii) move the lot to another Hindman location or to a third-party warehouse, whereupon we will charge you transport costs, insurance costs, and administration fees for doing so, and you will be subject to the third-party storage warehouse’s standard terms and responsible for paying its standard fees and costs; or (iii) sell the lot in any commercially reasonable way we think appropriate.

(c) In accordance with applicable state law, if you have paid for the lot in full but you do not collect the lot within the time specified by the law of the state where the auction takes place, we may charge you state sales tax for the lot.

(d) Nothing in this paragraph is intended to limit our rights under paragraph D(6).

8. EXPORTING, IMPORTING, AND ENDANGERED SPECIES

(a) The shipping of a lot is affected by United States export laws or the import laws of other countries. If you are outside the United States, then local laws may prevent you from importing a lot. You alone are responsible for seeking advice prior to bidding and meeting the requirements of any law or regulation applying to the export or import of a lot.

(b) Lots made of or including (regardless of the percentage) endangered and other protected species of wildlife—such as, among other things, ivory, tortoiseshell, crocodile skin, rhinoceros horn, whalebone, certain species of coral, and Brazilian rosewood—may be subject to export controls in the US and import controls in other countries. You should check the relevant wildlife laws and regulations before bidding on any lot containing wildlife material if you plan to export the lot from the United States, import the lot into another country, or ship the lot between states. Your purchase of a lot containing endangered and other protected species of wildlife is at your own risk, and you shall be

230 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA

responsible for any scientific test or other reports required for export from the United States or for shipment between states. We will not cancel your purchase and refund the purchase price if your lot may not be exported, imported, or shipped between states, or if it is seized for any reason by a government authority. It is your responsibility to determine and satisfy the requirements of any applicable laws or regulations relating to import, export, and/or interstate shipping of a lot containing endangered and other protected species of wildlife.

E. WARRANTIES

1. SELLER’S WARRANTIES

For each lot, the seller gives a warranty that the seller (a) is the owner of the lot or a joint owner of the lot acting with the permission of the other co-owners or, if the seller is not the owner or a joint owner of the lot, has the permission of the owner to sell the lot or the right to do so by law; and (b) has the right to transfer ownership of the lot to the buyer without any restrictions or claims by anyone else. If either of the above warranties are incorrect, the seller shall not have to pay more than the purchase price (as defined in paragraph D(3) above) paid by you to us. The seller will not be responsible to you for any reason for loss of profits or business, expected savings, loss of opportunity or interest, costs, damages, other damages, or expenses. The seller gives no warranty other than as set out above, and as far as the seller is allowed by law, all warranties from the seller to you, and all other obligations upon the seller that may be added to this agreement by law, are excluded. No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide other information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the seller’s warranties or creates an additional warranty on behalf of the seller with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.

2. OUR LIMITED AUTHENTICITY WARRANTY

Our limited authenticity warranty, which lasts for one (1) year from the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction, is that the lots in our sales are authentic as defined in paragraph H, below. You must notify Hindman regarding concerns of authenticity in writing within one (1) year of the date of a live auction or within three (3) months of the date of an online only auction. Following receipt of that written notification, subject to the terms below, Hindman will refund the purchase price paid by the client. The terms of this limited authenticity warranty are as follows:

(a) It will be honored for claims notified in writing within a period of one (1) year from the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction. After such time, we will not be obligated to honor the limited authenticity warranty.

(b) It is given only for information shown in UPPERCASE type in the first line of the catalogue description (the Heading). It does not apply to any information other than that in the Heading, even if it is shown in UPPERCASE type.

(c) It does not apply to any Heading or part of a Heading that is qualified. “Qualified” means limited by a clarification in a lot’s catalogue description or by the use in a Heading of one of the terms listed in the definition of “qualified” provided in paragraph H, below. Qualified Headings are not covered at all by this limited authenticity warranty.

(d) It applies to the Heading as amended by any saleroom notice.

(e) It does not apply where scholarship has developed since the auction, leading to a change in generally accepted opinion. Further, it does not apply if the Heading either matched the generally accepted opinion of experts at the date of the auction or drew attention to any conflict of opinion.

(f) It does not apply if the lot can only be shown not to be authentic by a scientific process that, on the date we published the catalogue, was not available or generally accepted for use, was unreasonably expensive or impractical, or was likely to have damaged the lot.

(g) Its benefit is only available to the original buyer shown on the invoice for the lot, issued at the time of the sale, and only if, on the date of the notice of claim, the original buyer is the full owner of the lot and the lot is free from any claim, interest, or restriction by anyone else. The benefit of this limited authenticity warranty may not be transferred by the original buyer to anyone else.

(h) In order to make a claim under the limited authenticity warranty, you must (i) give us written notice of your claim within one (1) year of the date of a live auction or three (3) months from an online only auction ; (ii) at our option, pay for and provide us with the written opinions of two recognized experts in the field, mutually agreed upon by you and us, confirming that the lot is not authentic (we reserve the right to obtain additional opinions at our expense); and (iii) return the lot at your expense to the saleroom from which you bought it in the condition it was in at the time of sale.

(i) Your only right under this limited authenticity warranty is to cancel the sale and receive a refund of the purchase price paid by you to us. We will not, under any circumstances, be required to pay you more than the purchase price, nor will we be liable for any loss of profits or business, loss of opportunity or value, expected savings or interest, costs, damages, other damages, or expenses.

(j) No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide additional information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the limited authenticity warranty or creates an additional warranty with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.

3. ADDITIONAL WARRANTY FOR BOOKS

If the lot is a book, then we give an additional warranty to the original buyer shown on the invoice for the lot issued at the time of the sale in the following circumstances:

(a) We will refund the purchase price to the original buyer if we, in our sole discretion, are convinced that the book is defective in text or illustration, subject to the following terms:

(i) This additional warranty does not apply to (A) the absence of blanks, half titles, tissue guards, or advertisements; or damage in respect of bindings, stains, spotting, marginal tears, or other defects not affecting the completeness of the text or illustration; (B) drawings, autographs, letters or manuscripts, signed photographs, music, atlases, maps, or periodicals; (C) books not identified by title; (D) lots sold without a printed estimate; (E) books that are described in the catalog as sold not subject to return; or (F) defects stated in any condition report or announced at the time of sale.

(ii) To make a claim under this additional warranty, you must give written details of the defect within twenty-one (21) days of the date of the sale and return the lot within twenty-one (21) days of the date of the sale to the saleroom at which you bought it in the same condition as at the time of sale.

(iii) Paragraphs E(2)(b), (c), (d), (e), (h), and (i) also apply to a claim under this additional warranty. (c) No employee or agent of Hindman is authorized to make a representation or provide other information, whether orally or in writing, that amends the additional warranty for books or creates an additional warranty with respect to a lot. Any such representation, other information, or additional warranty shall be null and void.

4. JEWELRY

(a) Colored gemstones (such as rubies, sapphires, and emeralds) may have been treated to improve their appearance through methods such as heating and/or various clarity enhancements. These methods are considered common by the international jewelry trade but may make a gemstone more fragile and/or cause the gemstone to require special care over time.

(b) All types of gemstones may have been improved by some method. You may request a gemological report for any item that does not have a report if the request is made to us at least three (3) weeks before the date of the auction and you pay the fee for the report.

(c) We do not obtain a gemological report for every gemstone sold in our auctions. When we do get gemological reports from internationally accepted gemological laboratories, such reports are described in the catalogue. Reports from American gemological laboratories describe any improvement or treatment to the gemstone. Reports from European gemological laboratories describe any improvement or treatment only if we request that they do so, but they do confirm when no improvement or treatment has been made. Because of differences in approach and technology, laboratories may not agree on whether a gemstone has been treated, the amount of treatment, or whether that treatment is permanent. The gemological laboratories only report on the improvements or treatments known to them at the date they make the report.

(d) For jewelry sales, estimates are based on the information in any gemological report. If no report is available, assume that the gemstones may have been treated or enhanced.

5. WATCHES AND CLOCKS

(a) Almost all clocks and watches are repaired in their lifetime and may include parts that are not original. We do not give a warranty that any individual component part of any watch is authentic. Watchbands described as “associated” are not part of the original watch and may not be authentic. Clocks may be sold without pendulums, weights, or keys.

(b) As collectors’ watches often have very fine and complex mechanisms, you are responsible for any general service, change of battery, or further repair work that may be necessary. We do not give a warranty that any watch is in good working order. Certificates are not available unless described in the catalogue. (c) Most wristwatches have been opened to find out the type and quality of movement. For that reason, wristwatches with water-resistant cases may not be waterproof, and we recommend you have them checked by a competent watchmaker before use.

(d) Many of the watches offered for sale in this catalogue are pictured with straps made of endangered or protected animal materials such as alligator or crocodile skin. When straps are shown for display purposes only and are not for sale. We may remove and retain the strap prior to shipment from the sale site. Please check with the department for details on a lot with such a strap.

6. YOUR WARRANTIES

You warrant to us and the seller that (a) the funds you use for payment are not connected with any criminal activity, including tax evasion, and neither are you under investigation, nor have you been charged with or convicted of money laundering, terrorist activities, or other crimes; (b) where you are bidding on behalf of another person, (i) you have conducted appropriate customer due diligence on the ultimate buyer(s) of the lot(s) in accordance with all applicable anti-money

231FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM

laundering and sanctions laws, you consent to us relying on this due diligence, you will retain for a period of not less than five (5) years the documentation evidencing the due diligence, and you will make such documentation promptly available for immediate inspection by an independent third-party auditor upon our written request to do so; (ii) the arrangements between you and the ultimate buyer(s) in relation to the lot or otherwise do not, in whole or in part, facilitate tax crimes; (iii) you do not know, and have no reason to suspect, that the funds used for payment are connected with or the proceeds of any criminal activity, including tax evasion, or that the ultimate buyer(s) are under investigation for, or have been charged with or convicted of, money laundering, terrorist activities, or other crimes.

F. OUR LIABILITY TO YOU

(a) We give no warranty in relation to any statement made, or information given, by us or our representatives or employees about any lot other than as set out in the limited authenticity warranty or in the additional warranty for books, and as far as we are allowed by law, all warranties and other terms that may be added to this agreement by law are excluded. The seller’s warranties contained in paragraph E(1) are their own, and we do not have any liability to you in relation to those warranties.

(b) We are not responsible to you for any reason (whether for breaking this agreement or for any other matter relating to your purchase of, or bid for, any lot) other than in the event of fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation by us, or other than as expressly set out in these Conditions of Sale.

(c) WE DO NOT GIVE ANY REPRESENTATION, WARRANTY, OR GUARANTEE OR ASSUME ANY LIABILITY OF ANY KIND IN RESPECT OF ANY LOT WITH REGARD TO MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, DESCRIPTION, SIZE, QUALITY, CONDITION, ATTRIBUTION, AUTHENTICITY, RARITY, IMPORTANCE, MEDIUM, PROVENANCE, EXHIBITION HISTORY, LITERATURE, OR HISTORICAL RELEVANCE. EXCEPT AS REQUIRED BY LOCAL LAW, ANY WARRANTY OF ANY KIND IS EXCLUDED BY THIS PARAGRAPH.

(d) Our written and telephone bidding services, online bidding services, and condition reports are free services, and we are not responsible to you for any error, omission, or failure of these services.

(e) We have no responsibility to any person other than a buyer in connection with the purchase of any lot.

(f) If, despite the terms in paragraphs F(a)–(e) or E(2)–(3) above, we are found to be liable to you for any reason, we shall not have to pay more than the purchase price paid by you to us. We will not be responsible to you for any reason for loss of profits or business, loss of opportunity or value, expected savings or interest, costs, damages, or expenses.

G. OTHER TERMS

1. OUR ABILITY TO CANCEL

In addition to the other rights of cancellation contained herein, we can cancel a sale of a lot if (i) any of your warranties in paragraph E(4) are not correct; (ii) we reasonably believe that completing the transaction is, or may be, unlawful; or (iii) we reasonably believe that the sale places us or the seller under any liability to anyone else or may damage our reputation.

2. RECORDINGS

We may videotape and/or audio record proceedings at any auction. We will keep any personal information confidential, except to the extent that disclosure is required by law. If you do not want to be videotaped, you may decide to make a telephone or written bid or bid online instead. Unless we agree otherwise in writing, you may not videotape or record proceedings at any auction.

3. COPYRIGHT

We own the copyright in all images, illustrations, and written material produced by or for us relating to a lot, including the contents of our catalogues, unless otherwise noted therein. You cannot use them without our prior written permission. We make no representation and offer no guarantee that the buyer of a lot will gain any copyright or other reproduction rights.

4. ENFORCING THIS AGREEMENT

If a court finds that any part of this agreement is invalid, illegal, or impossible to enforce, that part of the agreement will be treated as being deleted, and the rest of this agreement will not be affected.

5. TRANSFERRING YOUR RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES

You may not grant a security over or transfer your rights or responsibilities under these terms unless we have given our written permission. This agreement will be binding on your successors or estate and anyone who takes over your rights and responsibilities.

6. PERSONAL INFORMATION

We will hold and process your personal information in line with our privacy policy at www.hindmanauctions.com.

7. WAIVER

No failure or delay to exercise any right or remedy contained herein shall constitute a waiver of that or any other right or remedy, nor shall it prevent or restrict the further exercise of that or any other right or remedy. No single or partial exercise of such right or remedy shall prevent or restrict the further exercise of that or any other right or remedy.

8. LAW AND DISPUTES

This agreement, and any noncontractual obligations arising out of or in connection with this agreement, or any other rights you may have relating to the purchase of a lot will be governed by the laws of Illinois. You and we agree to try to settle the dispute by mediation submitted to JAMS, or its successor, for mediation in Illinois. If the dispute is not settled by mediation within sixty (60) days from the date when mediation is initiated, then the dispute shall be submitted to JAMS, or its successor, for final and binding arbitration in accordance with its Comprehensive Arbitration Rules and Procedures or, if the dispute involves a non-US party, the JAMS International Arbitration Rules. The seat of the arbitration shall be Illinois, and the arbitration shall be conducted by one arbitrator, who shall be appointed within thirty (30) days after the initiation of the arbitration. The language used in the arbitral proceedings shall be English. The arbitrator shall order the production of documents only upon a showing that such documents are relevant and material to the outcome of the dispute. The arbitration shall be confidential, except to the extent necessary to enforce a judgment or where disclosure is required by law. The arbitration award shall be final and binding on all parties involved. Judgment upon the award may be entered by any court having jurisdiction thereof or having jurisdiction over the relevant party or its assets. This arbitration and any proceedings conducted hereunder shall be governed by Title 9 (Arbitration) of the United States Code and by the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of June 10, 1958.

H. GLOSSARY

authentic: a genuine example, rather than a copy or forgery of (a) the work of a particular artist, author, or manufacturer, if the lot is described in the Heading as the work of that artist, author, or manufacturer; (b) a work created within a particular period or culture, if the lot is described in the Heading as a work created during that period or culture; (c) a work of a particular origin or source, if the lot is described in the Heading as being of that origin or source; or (d) in the case of gems, a work that is made of a particular material, if the lot is described in the Heading as being made of that material. buyer’s premium: the charge the buyer pays us along with the hammer price. catalogue description: the description of a lot in the catalogue for the auction, as amended by any saleroom notice. due date: has the meaning given to it in paragraph D(3)(a). estimate: the price range included in the catalogue or any saleroom notice within which we believe a lot may sell. Low estimate means the lower figure in the range, and high estimate means the higher figure. The mid estimate is the midpoint between the two. hammer price: the amount of the highest bid the auctioneer accepts for the sale of a lot.

Heading: has the meaning given to it in paragraph E(2). limited authenticity warranty: the guarantee we give in paragraph E(2) that a lot is authentic other damages: any special, consequential, incidental, or indirect damages of any kind or any damages that fall within the meaning of “special,” “incidental,” or “consequential” under local law. purchase price: has the meaning given to it in paragraph D(3)(a). provenance: the ownership history of a lot. qualified: has the meaning given to it in paragraph E(2), subject to the following terms:

(a) “Cast from a model by” means, in our opinion, a work from the artist’s model, originating in his circle and cast during his lifetime or shortly thereafter. (b) “Attributed to” means, in our opinion, a work probably by the artist. (c) “In the style of” means, in our opinion, a work of the period of the artist and closely related to his style.

(d) “Ascribed to” means, in our opinion, a work traditionally regarded as by the artist.

(e) “In the manner of” means, in our opinion, a later imitation of the period, of the style, or of the artist’s work.

(f) “After” means, in our opinion, a copy or after-cast of a work of the artist. reserve: the confidential amount below which we will not sell a lot. saleroom notice: a written notice posted next to the lot in the saleroom and on www.hindmanauctions.com, which is also read to prospective telephone bidders and provided to clients who have left commission bids, or an announcement made by the auctioneer either at the beginning of the sale or before a particular lot is auctioned.

UPPERCASE type: type having all capital letters. warranty: a statement or representation in which the person making it guarantees that the facts set out in it are correct.

232 FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA
Update 1/1/22

Upcoming Auction Schedule

SALE 1090

GOLD BOXES AND VERTU FROM THE ESTATE OF A PROMINENT KANSAS CITY COLLECTOR

OCTOBER 18 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1086 & 1087

EUROPEAN FURNITURE & DECORATIVE ARTS OCTOBER 18 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE OCTOBER 19 | CHICAGO | ONLINE

SALE 1092 & 1093

WESTERN ART, INCLUDING CONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICAN

NOVEMBER 1 | DENVER | LIVE + ONLINE NOVEMBER 2 | DENVER | TIMED ONLINE

SALE 1095

AMERICAN HISTORICAL EPHEMERA & PHOTOGRAPHY NOVEMBER 3-4 | CINCINNATI | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1097

BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA NOVEMBER 8-9 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1099 & 1100

ANTIQUITIES & ANCIENT ART

NOVEMBER 10 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE NOVEMBER 11 | CHICAGO | ONLINE

SALE 1103

EARLY 20TH CENTURY DESIGN NOVEMBER 17 | CINCINNATI | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1104

MODERN DESIGN NOVEMBER 18 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1122

EUGENE ATGET PHOTOGRAPHS SOLD BY THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS HOUSTON DECEMBER 6 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1131

PHOTOGRAPHS SESSION II DECEMBER 6 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1113

AMERICAN & EUROPEAN ART DECEMBER 7 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1108

IMPORTANT JEWELRY DECEMBER 13 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

AUDUBON, JOHN JAMES. HOOPING CRANE (PLATE CCXXVI), GRUS AMERICANA ENGRAVING WITH ETCHING, AQUATINT AND HAND-COLORING BY ROBERT HAVELL (1793-1878) SOLD FOR $56,250

SALE 1114

POST WAR & CONTEMPORARY ART DECEMBER 14 | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

SALE 1115

PRINTS & MULTIPLES DECEMBER 15; | CHICAGO | LIVE + ONLINE

233FOR ADDITIONAL IMAGES AND LOT DETAILS VISIT HINDMANAUCTIONS.COM
SOLD PRICES ARE INCLUSIVE OF BUYER’S PREMIUM
FINE BOOKS & MANUSCRIPTS, INCLUDING AMERICANA | 8-9 NOVEMBER 2022 NO. 1097

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