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Americana, including Maps & Prints Lots 317-395

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Conditions of Sale

Lots 317-395

317

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318 317 ADAIR, James (1709?-1783). The History of the American Indians; particularly those Nations adjoining to the Mississippi, East and West Florida, Georgia, South and North Carolina, and Virginia. London: for Edward and Charles Dilly, 1775.

4to (274 x 212 mm). Half-title; engraved folding map. (Some minor offsetting of map.) Contemporary green calf-backed marbled boards (some rubbing).

FIRST EDITION of the “best 18th-century English source on the Southern tribes, written by one who traded forty years with them” (Howes). Adair lived and traded among several tribes, including the Cherokee, Catawba, and Chickasaw. ESTC T86841; Graff 10; Howes A-38 (“best 18th century English source on the Southern tribes, written by one who traded forty years with them”); Sabin 155.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $1,500 - 2,500

318 [AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR] -- [TILGHMAN, Tench (1744-1786)]. Memoir of Lieut. Col. Tench Tilghman, Secretary and Aid to Washington, together with an Appendix, containing Revolutionary Journals and Letters Hitherto Unpublished. Albany: J. Munsell, 1876.

4to (254 x 174 mm ). Portrait frontispiece, title-page printed in black and red. EXTRA ILLUSTRATED BY THE ADDITION OF APPROXIMATELY 85 PLATES AND 4 ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS (see below). (Some minor spotting and occasional offsetting.) Contemporary half navy morocco gilt (spine sunned, some light wear to extremities).

ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS NEATLY BOUND OR LAID IN from various members of the Tilghman family, comprising: TILGHMAN, William, as jurist. ALS to James C. & Samuel W. Fisher. 7 April 1794. 1pp. Regarding fi nancial transactions with Solomon Scott and Edward Tilghman. -- TILGHMAN, James. ALS to Tench Tilghman. 25 February 1786. 1pp. Regarding request for additional funds. -- TILGHMAN, Tench, and Thomas TILGHMAN. Partially printed DS, counter-signed by Robert Denny. Baltimore-County, Maryland, 25 November 1785. 1pp. Regarding the maturity of a loan from the State of Maryland at the Port of Baltimore to the Tilghman brothers. -- TILGHMAN, Tench, as General Washington’s s aide-decamp. ALS, to General Benjamin Lincoln, 19 April 1777. 1pp. Regarding plans for General Lincoln to discipline privates who have attempted to desert.

Tench Tilghman served as aide-de-camp to General George Washington, and became a trusted member of his staff. He split with Loyalist members of his own family to dedicate himself to the cause of the Patriots. He was admitted as an original member of The Society of the Cincinnati in his home state of Maryland when it was established in 1783; Benjamin Lincoln was also a founding member. On his untimely death in 1786, George Washington wrote to Tilghman’s brother and father: “As there were few men for whom I had a warmer friendship or great regard than for your brother...with much truth I can assure you, that, there are none whose death I could more sincerely have regretted...No one entertained a higher opinion of his worth...than I had done.” $1,000 - 1,500

319 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851). The Birds of America. New York and Amsterdam: Johnson Reprint Co. & Theatrum Orbis Terrarum [i.e. Nico Israel], 1971-1972.

4 volumes, oversize folio. 435 colored plates. Publisher’s half calf over green cloth.

LIMITED EDITION, number 82 of 250 copies printed for Mark and Carmen Holeman. THE FIRST AND FINEST FULL-SIZE REPRODUCTION of Audubon’s Birds of America, reproducing the subscriber’s copy in the collection of the Teyler Foundation in Haarlem, the Netherlands. The edition was limited to 250 copies, which retailed in 1972 for $5,500. A FINE ORIGINAL SUBSCRIBER’S COPY.

320 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Carolina Parrot (Plate XXVI) Psitacus carolinensis Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1829, on J. Whatman paper dated 1831, 954 x 628 mm, a few small neat marginal repairs, a few tiny spots, . Low p.44 (variant 1).

321 322

321 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Children’s Warbler (Plate XXXV) Silvia Childreni Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring, ca 1828, on J Whatman 1832 paper, 975 x 651 mm, marginal tears repaired verso and soiling, some toning from matting, a few tiny spots. Low p.47 (Variant 3).

The Estate of Mary Andrews Chenoweth, Denver, Colorado $800 - 1,200

322 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Ruby-throated Humming Bird (Plate 47) Trochilus colubris Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1828, on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1828, 959 x 646 mm sheet, a few small spots or tiny rustholes. Low p.51 (Variant 1).

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $1,500 - 2,500

323 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Rathbone’s Warbler (Plate 65) Sylva rathboni Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J Whatman Turkey Mill paper (date trimmed away), 963 x 636 mm sheet, some overall browning and fading, a few spots. Low p.567 (variant 2).

Property from the Carmen S. Holeman Trust, Indianapolis, Indiana $1,000 - 1,500

324 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851) -- A pair of engravings with aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell, ca 1833, comprising:

Black and white Creeper (Plate 90). Sylvia varia. 948 x 628 mm sheet, the full sheet folded to 662 x 455 mm. -- Pine Finch (Plate CLXXX). Fringilla pinus. 956 x 630 mm sheet, the full sheet folded to 673 x 466 mm. -- Each fully backed with old linen, old tape residue on folded portion, some toning and staining, matted and framed. Low p.65 (variant 2); 95. $600 - 800

326 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Common Gull (Plate CCXII) Larus canus Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (17931878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman paper dated 1836, 633 x 980 mm sheet, some minor staining and a few small spots, short tear to upper margin neatly repaired verso. Low p.106 (Variant 1).

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $1,000 - 1,500 325 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Booby Gannet (Plate CCVII) Sula leucogaster Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman paper dated 1838, 972 x 651 mm, a few small chips in left margin from binding, a few tiny spots. Low p.104.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $2,500 - 3,500

327 329

327 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Wood Ibis (Plate CCXVI) Tantalus loculator Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1834, 968 x 644 mm sheet, a few marginal chips repaired verso, some minor marginal browning or toning. Low p.107.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $40,000 - 60,000

328 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

White Ibis (Plate CCXXII) Ibis alba Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman paper dated 1836, 644 x 965 mm sheet, a few tiny marginal chips and a few pale spots. Low p.109.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $5,000 - 7,000

329 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Hooping Crane (Plate CCXXVI) Grus Americana Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1834, 950 x 634 mm sheet, 3 3/4-in. tear crossing image and a few marginal chips and tears neatly repaired, a few margins roughly trimmed, some minor marginal browning or toning. Low p.111 (variant 1).

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $10,000 - 15,000

330 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Long-Billed Curlew [Male and Female], (Plate CCXXXI) Numenius americanus Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1834, on J. Whatman paper dated 1836, 650 x 955 mm sheet, a few short marginal tears repaired verso, a few tiny spots. Low p.112.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $20,000 - 30,000

331 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Black Backed Gull (Plate CCXLI) Larus marinus Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1835, on J Whatman Turkey Mill paper dated 1834, 974 x 665 mm sheet, some slight toning and wrinkling, a few small marginal holes repaired verso, some minor spotting, matted and framed. Low p.116. $1,500 - 2,500

332 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Florida Cormorant...View, Florida Keys (Plate CCLII) Carbo Floridanus Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1835, on watermarked paper (“J. Whatm” visible), 635 x 980 overall sheet, plate possibly inlaid to a larger sheet with plate sheet measuring approximately 508 x 680 mm. Low p.119 (variant 1).

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $1,000 - 1,500 328

330

333 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Purple Heron (Plate CCLVI) Ardea rufescens, Buff. Engraving with etching, aquatint and handcoloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1835, on J. Whatman paper dated 1835, 644 x 950 mm sheet, a few tiny marginal chips, a few light spots, extreme outer margins reinforced verso. Low p.121 (Variant 1).

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $12,000 - 18,000

334 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Black-Throated Diver (Plate CCCXLVI) Colymbus arcticus Engraving with etching, aquatint and handcoloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1836, 630 x 958 mm sheet, tipped to board on extreme outer margins, a few tiny tears to outer margin, imprint just shaved, a few small spots, matted showing sheet edge and framed. Low p.151. $3,000 - 5,000

335 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Evening Grosbeak | Spotted Grosbeak (Plate CCCLXXIII) Coccothraustes vespertinus | Pheucticus melanocephalus Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1837, on J Whatman paper dated 1837, 962 x 640 mm, a few tiny spots, a few small chips to extreme left margin, matted and framed. Low p.160. $800 - 1,200

336 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Glossy Ibis (Plate CCCLXXXVII) Ibis falcinellus Engraving with etching, aquatint and handcoloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1837, on J. Whatman paper dated 1837, 649 x 969 mm sheet, some chipping in extreme upper margin from binding, a few spots and very slight toning. Low p.164.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $5,000 - 7,000

337 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Scarlet Ibis (Plate CCCXCVII) Eudocimus ruber Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by Robert Havell (1793-1878), circa 1837, on J. Whatman paper dated 1838, 644 x 964 mm sheet, a few tiny chips or tears to extreme outer margin, a few tiny spots. Low p.168.

Property from a Palm Beach Collection $10,000 - 15,000

338 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

White-fronted Goose (Plate 380) Anser albifrons Chromolithograph by J. Bien after J.J. Audubon, 1860, on wove paper, 635 x 940 mm visible area, a few short tears to lower margin touching imprint, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). $400 - 600

339

340 341

339 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851)

Antilope Americana (Plate LXXVII) Engraving with etching, aquatint and hand-coloring by J. T. Bowen (ca 18011856), circa 1845, 475 x 614 mm visible area, a few marginal tears, some minor spotting, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). $300 - 400

340 AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851). Pair of lithographs with hand-coloring from Quadrupeds of America, J. T. Bowen, on wove paper, comprising:

American Elk - Wapiti Deer. Ca 1845. 478 x 655 mm visible area. -- Columbian Black-Tailed Deer. Ca 1847. 528 x 643 mm visible area. -- A few tiny spots or stains, each matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). $1,000 - 1,500

341 BARTRAM, William (1739-1823). Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida
 London: J. Johnson, 1794.

8vo (203 x 126 mm). Portrait frontispiece, folding map of the East coast of Florida, 7 copperplates (one folding). (Some spotting, some minor offsetting.) Later navy morocco gilt, marbled edges (some staining to edges).

Second English edition. Only the title-page is new in this second edition, which is “unequalled for the vivid picturesqueness of its descriptions of nature, scenery, and productions” (Sabin). Contains observations regarding soil and natural productions in the Southeastern region of the United States as well as about the Native American populations that inhabited them during that period. Howes B-223; Sabin 3870.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $600 - 800

342 BODMER, Karl (1809-1893)

Indians Hunting the Bison (Tab. 31). From Travels in the Interior of North America, Coblenz, Paris, and London, 1839-1842. Aquatint engraving with hand-coloring, Bodmer blindstamp lower margin, title in French, German and English, 410 x 530 mm visible area, a few faint tiny spots, matted and framed, unexamined out of frame. $800 - 1,000

12mo (142 x 85 mm). Title printed within a double rule border; with appendices of Hymns and Music with separate title-pages and pagination. (Lacking 20pp. of Psalms, 20pp. of Hymns, and 18pp. of Music; some overall browning and spotting). Provenance: Thaddeus Bowman (signature on fl yleaf, “Thad. Bowman his Psalm Book 1777”).

Early American edition. Thaddeus Bowman was the last scout sent out by Capt. John Parker on 19 April 1175 at Lexington, Massachusetts, and was the scout who found British troops approaching and returned to warn the militia. “At Lexington, Revere’s alarm at midnight had called out Captain Jonas Parker and his company of minutemen. One hundred and thirty of them gathered on the village green’ but no more news came and the night was cold...At half past four at full gallop. Thaddeus Bowman brought it. The British are coming! They were close at hand, less than half a mile behind them! Alarm guns were fi red” (Christopher Ward, qtd. in The War of the Revolution). $800 - 1,200

344 BRADLEY, Omar (1893-1981). A Soldier’s Story. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1951.

8vo. Numerous illustrations. Original tan cloth, top edge gilt (some soiling to foot of spine); original glassine (chipped); original slip-case, printed paper lettering-piece (some wear).

FIRST EDITION, LIMITED EDITION, no. 30 of 750, SIGNED BY BRADLEY, senior offi cer in the United States Army during and after World War II, who eventually rose to the rank of General of the Army. He later became the fi rst Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, serving in that post from 1949 to 1953 under Presidents Truman and Eisenhower.

Property from the Annette Perlman Trust $200 - 300

345 BUNYAN, John (1628-1688). The Pilgrim’s Progress. Boston, N.E.: John Draper for Thomas Fleet, 1744.

Second part only (of 2, see below), 12mo (150 x 88 mm). 3 woodcuts (of 4, lacking frontispiece). (A few tears crossing woodcuts or text, staining.) Stab-sewn retaining original lower marbled wrapper and portion of spine only, manuscript paper label on spine. Provenance: Patty Upham (signature on rear fl yleaf).

FIRST AMERICAN EDITION OF THE SECOND PART of Pilgrim’s Progress, the third extant American edition of any part of the work, preceded by an unillustrated Boston edition of 1681, and an illustrated edition of the fi rst part published in Boston in 1738 (see Evans 4228). “There is no way to determine if theses crude [wood]cuts were executed in England or America” (Smith, Illustrations of American Editions of ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress’ to 1870, p.17). In his introduction to the fi rst English edition of the second part, Bunyan notes: “’Tis in New-England under such advance Receives there so much loving countenance. The remarkable advance in the value of early editions of the Pilgrim’s Progress, within the last few years, and the diffi culty of obtaining copies of editions before at least the tenth, attest the permanency of the famous allegory as a world-classic, and of no other classic can it be said that but one copy is known of the fi rst edition.” Evans 5351 (recording the Thomas Fleet imprint); See Sabin 62847.

VERY RARE: According to online records, no copy of this edition has sold at auction since 1916. OCLC locates only 7 copies of this edition (most with a variant imprint not recorded by Evans recording that the work was printed for Charles Harrison).

346 CLARK, Charles M. (b. 1834). A Trip to Pike’s Peak and Notes by the Way, with Numerous Illustrations
 of the Country through Kansas and Nebraska... Chicago: S.P. Rounds’ Steam Book and Job Printing House, 1861.

8vo (210 x 130 mm). 18 wood-engraved plates. (Some minor browning, spotting, or soiling.) Publisher’s embossed brown cloth gilt (some slight wear to extremities). Provenance: Gardner S. Chapin (bookplate).

FIRST EDITION of Clark’s account, “one of the best contemporary ones of the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush” (Streeter). The plates depict views of Denver, Golden City, the Rocky Mountains, Fort Kearny and Kearny City, and St. Joseph. Clark’s is “one of the few authentic accounts of that year’s travel to the Rockies. Graff called it ‘one of the best’ and noted that it contains fi ne early views of Denver and other western cities” (Wagner-Camp 372). Graff 731; Howes C-430; Streeter 2144.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $1,000 - 1,500

348 FAUX, William. Memorable Days in America. London: W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 1823.

8vo (220 x 137 mm). Half-title, engraved frontispiece, list of subscribers, 4pp. publisher’s. (Some spotting, a few short marginal tears .) Later blind tooled brown morocco gilt bound by William Anthony; folding case.

FIRST EDITION of “one of the best-advertised English books of the period because of the controversy it provoked among the reviewers” (Clark). Faux’s critical review of America stems from his perspective as a British farmer judging whether British farming practices would prosper in the United States. While early reactions to this present work depict Faux’s criticisms as unfair, “on the whole [this work] is as complimentary as it is critical,” and the “American dislike of the book was probably partially due to sensitiveness about any British criticism of American institutions in those postwar years” (Clark). Clark II 202; Howes F-60; Sabin 23933. 347 [COLORADO]. HALL, Frank (1836-1918). History of the State of Colorado. Chicago: The Blakely Printing Company, 1889-1895.

4 volumes, 4to (253 x 184 mm). Numerous lithographs and photographic reproductions. (Some minor soiling, a few tiny spots.) Contemporary blindstamped brown morocco gilt edges marbled (some light wear, a few hinges and joints starting, a few with old repairs, spine to vol. I slightly sunned).

FIRST EDITION, written by Hall to provide “the historian of the future” with “the most accurate guide which could be furnished during the lifetime of those who planted the seeds of civilization here” in Colorado (Preface, p.v). [With:]

First Annual Report of the Union Colony of Colorado, including a History of the Town of Greeley
. New York: George W. Southwick, 1871. 8vo. (Some soiling.) Modern brown cloth; original printed wrappers neatly bound-in (chipped, soiled). Provenance: D.B. Ames (signature); Jonny (signature, 1900). FIRST EDITION. Graff 4235; Howes C-608.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $400 - 600

349 FRANKLIN, Benjamin (1706-1790). The Private Life of the Late Benjamin Franklin. London: for J. Parsons, 1793.

8vo (210 x 125 mm). Half-title. (Marginal tear with small loss to S6.) Modern morocco gilt. Provenance: St. Andrew’s Working Men’s Association Plymouth (stamp on fi nal leaf, stamp on title partially effaced).

FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH of Franklin’s memoirs, fi rst published in an unauthorized French translation in 1791, and then translated back into English for this edition. Though not Franklin’s words exactly, “this account is the epitome of Franklin’s spirit. In it one sees him as a typical though great example of 18th-century enlightenment, a Yankee Puritan who could agree with Rousseau and Voltaire” (Hart 142). Grolier American 21 (“The most widely read of all American autobiographies...it holds the essence of the American way of life”); Howes F-323.

Property from the Annette Perlman Trust $2,500 - 3,500

350 [FRANKLIN, Benjamin (1706-1790)]. Caption title: “Franklin in France 17771785. To which is added an Article on Life Portraits of Benjamin Franklin.” Chicago: n.p., 1906.

4to (317 x 246 mm). Title-page printed in red and black. Comprising some 68 plates and leaves of text (see below). Contemporary navy morocco gilt, stamp-signed MacDonald N.Y. (spine sunned, some slight rubbing to extremities). Provenance: William H. Bartlett (gift note on title-page from Henry A. Smith).

Including engraved portraits and periodical publications about Franklin (including “Franklin at Passy”). Facsimiles include letters from George Washington and Franklin. Compiled by noted Chicago print collector Henry A. Smith for William H. Bartlett (see lots 390-392). Franklin was dispatched to France in December 1776 to serve as The United States’ Ambassador to France, becoming one of America’s fi rst signifi cant diplomats. He was tasked with gaining French support for American independence, and was widely admired by the French. $500 - 700

with gaining French support for American independence, and was widely admired by the French. $500 - 700

352 [FUR TRADE]. LARPENTEUR, Charles (1803-1872). Forty Years a Fur Trader [FUR TRADE]. LARPENTEUR, Charles (1803-1872). Forty Years a Fur Trader

on the Upper Missouri. Elliott COUES, editor. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1898. 351 [FUR TRADE]. CHITTENDEN, Hiram Martin (1859-1917). The American Fur Trade of the Far West. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1902.

3 volumes, 8vo. Frontispieces in vols. I&II, 8 plates, folding map. (Some chipping, short tears in map crossing image, some soiling.) Publisher’s original green cloth gilt, edges uncut (light rubbing).

FIRST EDITION of “the fi rst modern history of the fur trade, and still a standard work on the subject” (Reese). Includes a history of the pioneer trading posts, early fur trade, and overland commerce. Graff 696; Howes C390; Rader 770; Reese Best of the West 231.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $400 - 600

353 353 [FUR TRADE]. LARPENTEUR, Charles (1803-1872). Forty Years a Fur Trader

on the Upper Missouri. Elliott COUES, editor. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1898.

2 volumes, 8vo. 2 portrait frontispieces, 2 folding maps, 14 plates. (Some minor staining, some toning, a few tears not affecting text.) Publisher’s blue cloth gilt, (some minor rubbing, spines darkened). FIRST EDITION, LIMITED ISSUE, number 511 of 950 copies. This important source on the history of fur trading contains Larpenteur’s narrative of forty years in the fur trade from 1833-1872.Graff 2404; Howes C800.

[With:] CHITTENDEN, Hiram Martin (1859-1917). The American Fur Trade of the Far West. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1902. 3 volumes, 8vo. 10 plates; linen-backed folding map in vol. III rear pocket. (Some light toning, a few pencil markings.) Publisher’s green cloth gilt (some light rubbing, repairs to one spine). FIRST EDITION, one of 1,000 copies printed, of Chittenden’s defi nitive work. Graff noted that even “Sixty years after publication, this is still the great work on the subject.” Graff 196; Howes C390; Rader 770; Streeter IV: 3206. 2 volumes, 8vo. 18 plates (including 2 portrait frontispieces, 2 folding maps). (One leaf detaching, some toning.) Publisher’s blue cloth gilt, edges uncut (some minor rubbing or scuffi ng). Provenance: Samuel B. Webb (bookplates).

LIMITED EDITION, one of 950 copies, this being unnumbered, of Larpenteur’s important source on the history of fur trading. Graff 2404; Howes C800.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 300

354 [GEORGIA] -- [LONGSTREET, Augustus Baldwin (1790-1870)]. Georgia Scenes, Characters, Incidents, &c. In the First Half Century of the Republic. Augusta, GA: Printed at the S.R. Sentinel Offi ce, 1835.

12mo (180 x 108 mm). (Some spotting or a few tiny stains throughout, blank corners of a few leaves repaired.) Modern quarter morocco, uncut. Provenance: Christopher Oscanyan (1818-1895), American-Armenian writer, Turkish consul general (signature); Mrs. J. Smith (faint gift inscription in pencil).

FIRST EDITION of Longstreet’s “humorous and realistic sketches of life in the ‘Old Southwest’ [which] were a landmark in American literature, and among the earliest works of the tradition that led to Clemens” (Streeter Sale 1168). “The aim of the author was to supply a chasm of history which has always been overlooked - the manners, customs, amusements, wit, dialect, as they appear in all grades of society” (Willingham Georgiana 28). Despite Longstreetâ€șs attempts to suppress Georgia Scenes when he entered the Methodist ministry, fifteen printings were issued by 1860. BAL 12946; De Renne I, p. 445; Howes L-448; Sabin 41936.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $2,000 - 3,000

356

[GEORGIA] -- [OGLETHORPE, James Edward (1696-1785), editor?]. Select Tracts Relating to Colonies. London: J. Roberts, [ca 1732].

8vo (202 x 119 mm). (Some browning, a few small spots.) 20th-century quarter calf gilt, brown morocco lettering-piece gilt (some rubbing to extremities). Provenance: Jacob Harsen Purdy (1844-1917), American book collector, (bookplate); Henry Raup Wagner (1862-1957), American bibliographer, historian, and collector, gifted to; Yale University Library (bookplate 1910, with duplicate note).

FIRST EDITION, prepared for the promotion of Oglethorpe’s Georgia colony, and including: “An Essay on Plantations,” by Sir Francis Bacon; “Some Passages taken out of the History of Florence, &c.”; “A Treatise,” by John DeWitt; “The Benefi t of Plantations or Colonies,” William Penn; and “A Discourse Concerning Plantations,” Sir Josiah Child. RARE: According to online records, no copy of this tract has appeared at auction since 1966. De Renne I, pp. 35-36; ESTC T47433; Sabin 78992.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $500 - 700 357

355 [GEORGIA] -- [MARTYN, Benjamin (1699-1763)]. Reasons for Establishing the Colony of Georgia... London: W. Meadows, 1733.

4to (233 x 171 mm). Engraved frontispiece by T. Pine; engraved map (small hole to blank area repaired verso, short marginal tear repaired verso); engraved tail-piece by T. Pine. (Upper margin trimmed very slightly shaving woodcut head-piece on one leaf, a few minor stains.) Modern half calf gilt. Provenance: Long Island Historical Society (stamp on title-page).

FIRST EDITION, THE PREFERRED SECOND ISSUE, with the 8-page “Postscript” containing a letter from Georgia founder James Oglethorpe, and with the map in the second state as usual. Benjamin Martyn acted as chief publicity agent for Oglethorpe’s planned colony, and here recounts the primary benefi ts to Great Britain for the founding of a new colony. His name did not appear on the title-page until the second edition, published later in the same year. With the map in the second state, having “S Augustin” located below “Matansas.” “A well-written tract; plausible in its arguments, glowing in its descriptions, valuable for its information, and pertinent in its appeals to the philanthropic and benevolent” (Sabin 45002). Cumming Southeast 211 (map); De Renne, p. 45; Howes M-356; Streeter Sale 1144.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $3,000 - 5,000

[GEORGIA]. SIBBALD, George. Notes and Observations, on the Pine Lands of Georgia, Shewing the Advantages they Possess, Particularly in the Culture of Cotton... Augusta, GA: William J. Bunce, 1801.

8vo (207 x 134 mm). (Some overall browning, dampstaining to fi rst few leaves.) Disbound; morocco-backed folding case.

FIRST EDITION, later issue, with the addition of the 6pp. postscript. “Sibbald’s book became an emigrants’ guide to Georgia and, more importantly, gave encouragement to the growth of a crop which had hitherto in the state been almost ignored -- cotton. Because of Sibbald’s convincing arguments and Eli Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin, cotton production became both logically and physically feasible for the Georgia planter” (Willingham Georgiana 16). De Renne I, p.302; Howes S-443; Sabin 80814. RARE: According to online records, no copy of this work has appeared at auction in over 50 years.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $1,500 - 2,500

358 [GEORGIA] -- [STEPHENS, William (1671-1753)]. A State of the Province of Georgia, Attested upon Oath in the Court of Savannah, November 10, 1740. London: W. Meadows, 1742. 359 [GEORGIA] -- [STEPHENS, William (1671-1753)]. A State of the Province of Georgia, Attested upon Oath in the Court of Savannah, November 10, 1740. London: W. Meadows, 1742.

8vo (189 x 119 mm). Half-title; woodcut device on title-page. 20th-century half red morocco gilt, stamp-signed by Zaehnsdorf (original sewing-holes present in gutter margin). Provenance: L. S. (stamp on fi rst text leaf).

FIRST SEPARATE EDITION, “also issued from the same setting of type differently imposed, as an appendix to vol. 2 of the author’s Journal, 1742, and included in the reprint in the Colonial Records of Georgia” (Sabin). Stephens’ work “was ordered printed by Egmont and put into the hands of members of Parliament as ‘an antidote’ to Tailfer’s True and Historical Narrative...though issued as a reply to Tailfer, neither he nor his associates are mentioned” (Streeter Sale 1151). «With all the problems besetting the colony at this time, it became the task of William Stephens, colonial secretary, to fire volleys of responses to the questions raised by Tailfer and the other malcontents...Stephens was an important cog in the machinery of colonial government and his journals and reports to the Trustees form a revealing account of operations in Georgia» (Willingham Georgiana 4). De Renne I, p.109; see Howes S-945; Sabin 91315. For a copy of Tailferâ€șs True and Historical Narrative, see lot 361.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $500 - 700 8vo (189 x 119 mm). Woodcut device on title-page. (Lacking half-title, some light spotting.) Later boards, printed label on spine (a few repairs to spine ends, soiling and a few small losses to spine label). Provenance: L. S. (stamp on fi rst text leaf).

360

[GEORGIA] -- [STEPHENS, William (1671-1753)]. A Brief Account of the causes that have Retarded the Progress of the Colony of Georgia, in America... London: N.p., 1743.

8vo (190 x 120 mm). Half-title. 20th-century half red morocco gilt, stampsigned by Zaehnsdorf (original sewing-holes present in gutter margin).

FIRST EDITION. “Though Thomas Stephens was the son of William Stephens, who succeeded Oglethorpe as governor of Georgia, he was a leader of what the administration forces called the malcontents. Thomas complains of the prohibition against Negroes and against the transportation of rum, (this latter deprived the colonists of a trade which the New Englanders, especially those from Rhode Island, found very lucrative) and in an Appendix of 101 pages gives various contemporary letters and protests regarding affairs in Georgia” (Streeter Sale 1152). De Renne I, p.112; Howes S-942; Sabin 91305.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $600 - 800 FIRST SEPARATE EDITION, “also issued from the same setting of type differently imposed, as an appendix to vol. 2 of the author’s Journal, 1742, and included in the reprint in the Colonial Records of Georgia” (Sabin). De Renne I, p.108109; see Howes S-945; Sabin 91315. For a copy of Tailfer’s True and Historical Narrative, see lot 361.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $400 - 600

361 [GEORGIA]. TAILFER, Patrick, Hugh ANDERSON, David DOUGLAS, et al. A True and Historical Narrative of the Colony of Georgia in America, From the First Settlement thereof until this present Period.... Charles-Town, South Carolina: P. Timothy for the Authors, 1741.

8vo (200 x 124 mm). Collation: A-Q4; pp. [i]-xviii, 1-118 [i.e. 110, pp.79-86 omitted in the pagination]. Modern quarter calf gilt, red morocco lettering-piece gilt, marbled boards, uncut.

Second American edition, published in the same year as the fi rst edition with the Charles-town, and with the catchword “mean-” on p.3, and the catchword “of” on p.27, and omitting pp.79-86 from the pagination. De Renne, Howes and Sabin suggest that this is possibly a London imprint, although Church considers it to be a genuine Charleston imprint and of great typographical importance and rarity. The collation of the present copy conforms with the Hoe and Streeter copies.

Tailfer’s pamphlet constitutes a forceful critique of General James Oglethorpe and the Georgia government. Talifer was the leader of an outspoken group of malcontents in Savannah who were driven out of the colony by Oglethorpe and took refuge in Charleston in 1740. “The most interesting of all books about Georgia written in the colonial period, for attack is almost always more interesting than praise. The authors...give here their account of what they felt to be Oglethorpe’s despotism. The work is a masterpiece of invective and one of the cornerstones of the historical literature of Georgia” (Streeter Sale 1147). Church 940; De Renne I, p.95-96; Howes T-6; Sabin 94216; Willigham Georgiana 3. For a copy of Stephensâ€ș response to Tailferâ€șs tract, see lots 358 and 359.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $800 - 1,200

362 [GEORGIA]. THICKNESSE, Philip (1719-1792). Memoirs and Anecdotes of Philip Thicknesse, Late Lieutenant Governor of Land Guard Fort, and Unfortunately Father to George Touchet, Baron Audley. [London?]: Printed for the Author, 1788.

2 volumes (of 3), 8vo (184 x 113 mm). (Lacking the portrait frontispiece called for in Sabin, some staining, some chipping, some creasing.) Contemporary half calf gilt, black leather lettering-pieces gilt, red morocco onlays gilt, marbled boards, blue sprinkled edges (vol. I front cover detached, front joint cracked vol. II, some rubbing, some chipping). Provenance: George Best, Esq. (signature); T. Fairfax Best (armorial bookplate, Wiarton).

FIRST EDITION, with fi nal blank leaves. Thicknesse, a prominent English author, visited the Colony of Georgia in September of 1736. The titular son reference’s Thicknesse’s son with his second wife, George ThicknesseTouchet (1758-1818), the 19th Baron Audley in the title. Thicknesse’s will demanded that upon his death his right hand be severed and given to George “to remind him of his duty to God after having so long abandoned the duty he owed to a father, who once so affectionately loved him” (Olmert). The present work was “probably printed in London like many other works of the author, but might also have been printed at Bath where was his home” (Sabin). Like the present copy, “many of the located copies lack vol. 3, of this edition, published after the fi rst two volumes” (Sabin). Michael Olmert (1996), Milton’s Teeth and Ovid’s Umbrella, p. 72; Sabin 95343.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $300 - 500

364 [GEORGIA] -- [YAZOO LAND COMPANIES]. Sundry Papers, in Relation to Claims, Commonly Called the Yazoo Claims. December 18, 1809. Printed by the Order of the House of Representatives. City of Washington, [D.C.]: A. and G. Way, 1809.

8vo (212 x 122 mm). (Some browning or spotting.) Modern quarter calf, red morocco lettering-piece gilt.

FIRST EDITION, one of 300 copies printed, of this “grouping of the most signifi cant documents relating to the Yazoo claims” (Eberstadt 167:224), which includes the Constitution of Georgia of 1789. Georgia sold its western lands to four land companies in 1795, The Georgia legislature repudiated the sale of the land along the Yazoo River to the Yazoo land companies, ultimately leading to the John Marshall decision in Fletcher vs. Peck in 1810. RARE: According to online records, only two copies of this work have sold at auction in the last 45 years. De Renne I, p. 339-340; Howes Y-4; Shaw and Shoemaker 19074. 363 [GEORGIA] -- [YAZOO LAND COMPANIES]. ANDERSON, John E. and William J. HOBBY. The Contract for the Purchase of Western Territory, Made with the Legislature of Georgia, in the Year 1795; Considered with a Reference to the Subsequent Attempts of the State, to Impair its Obligation. Augusta, [GA]: Randolph & Bunce, 1799.

1 volume, 4to. With pp. 17-24 and 74-90 uncancelled; with the unsigned gathering of 2 leaves (apparently not present in the Streeter copy), containing an errata statement and explanation, bound after the title-page, (without C4, blank, as in the Streeter copy). (Short tear along gutter margin of title, title browned.) Modern calf-backed marbled boards, red morocco lettering-piece gilt.

FIRST EDITION, “ONE OF THE IMPORTANT PAMPHLETS ON THE YAZOO LAND CASE” (Streeter). A RARE EARLY GEORGIA IMPRINT.

“The argument made here, that the state had no right to rescind the sale made to the land companies, was upheld by the Supreme Court in Fletcher vs. Peck decided in 1810, and the original investors who had bribed the Georgia legislators were paid off on their original deeds upward of four million dollars” (Streeter Sale 1160). VERY RARE: According to online records, no copy of this pamphlet has appeared at auction in over 50 years. De Renne I, pp.286-287; Evans 35111; Howes A-231; Sabin 27034.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $1,000 - 2,000

365 [GEORGIA]. WHITEFIELD, George (1714-1770). A Journal of a Voyage from London to Savannah in Georgia. In Two Parts. --A Continuation of the Reverend Mr. Whitefi eld’s Journal, from his Arrival at London to His Departure from thence on his Way to Georgia. London: James Hutton, 1738, 1739.

2 works in one volume, 8vo (199 x 123 mm). (Closed tear touching letters repaired on title-page of fi rst work, some browning.) 20th-century half roan, marbled boards.

FIRST EDITIONS of Whitefi eld’s fi rst and fourth journals. De Renne calls A Continuation of the...Journal from his Arrival at London to his Departure... on his Way to Georgia Part IV of the journals, whereas Sabin calls it Part III. Whitefi eld’s “infl uence in America...was many-sided and far reaching. With his advent a religious awakening already begun was greatly stimulated... Although others contributed greatly to this movement, Whitefi eld was its most dynamic representative” (DAB). De Renne I, pp. 75-76 (second edition only); p. 82 (with the last leaf in facsimile); Sabin 103534, 103538.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $600 - 800

366 [GEORGIA]. ZUBLY, John Joachim (1724-1781). The Law of Liberty. A Sermon on American Affairs, Preached at the Opening of the Provincial Congress of Georgia
 With an Appendix, Giving a Concise Account of the Struggles of Swisserland to Recover Their Liberty. London: for J. Almon, 1775.

8vo (199 x 120 mm). (Title-page bound in on a stub.) Modern red cloth, red morocco lettering-piece gilt.

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION, printed in the same year as the fi rst edition published by Henry Miller in Philadelphia. Swiss-born American pastor and planter, Zubly was seated as a delegate for Georgia to the Continental Congress in September 1775. Despite initially supporting the Patriot cause, he was accused of disloyalty in the fall of 1775 due to his moderate positions. He left the Continental Congress by mid-November 1775, and was exiled with half of his property seized on July 1, 1776. Adams American Controversy 75-160b; De Renne I p. 210; ESTC T37611; Howes Z-23; Sabin 106388.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 300 367 [GEORGIA – CANALS & RAILROADS]. A sammelband of 5 promotional imprints regarding the Brunswick, Georgia Canal and Railroad Company, comprising:

368 [GEORGIA]. A group of 3 works about the state of Georgia, comprising: [GEORGIA]. A group of 3 works about the state of Georgia, comprising:

SEABROOK, Whitemarsh B. A Memoir on the Origin, Cultivation and Uses of Cotton, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time, with Especial Reference to the Sea-Island Cotton Plant. Charleston: Miller & Browne, 1844. Later brown morocco gilt; original yellow printed wrappers bound in. Howes S-251; Sabin 78551. -- BURKE, Emily P. Reminiscences of Georgia. [Oberlin, OH]: James M. Fitch, 1850. Modern quarter brown leather gilt. . De Renne II, p. 530; not in Sabin. -- WHITE, George. Historical Collections of Georgia. New York: Pudney & Russell, 1854. 20th-century calf gilt. De Renne II, pp. 568-9; Howes W353. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, 8vo, all FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally good or fi ne.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $500 - 700 [GEORGIA – CANALS & RAILROADS]. A sammelband of 5 promotional

BALDWIN, Loammi (1780-1838). Report on the Brunswick Canal and Rail Road, Glynn County, Georgia. Boston: John H. Eastburn, 1837. Second edition. De Renne II, p. 453. -- [Trust Deed, and By-Laws, of the Brunswick Land and Canal Companies. Boston: N.p., 1837.] -- By-laws of the Brunswick Canal and Rail Road Company. [Boston: N.p., 1836.] -- [Public Sale, At] Brunswick, Georgia
 January
 1837. [Boston: N.p., 1837.] -- [Report] to the Directors and Stockholders of the Brunswick Land Company and of the Brunswick Canal and Rail Road Company. Boston: N.p., March 1838.

5 works bound in one, 8vo (224 x 133 mm). 2 folding maps. (Some toning and spotting.) 19th-century quarter brown morocco gilt, marbled boards (some minor wear). Colonel Loammi Baldwin, known as the Father of American Civil Engineering, served in the American Revolutionary War, fi ghting in the Battle of Lexington and Concord, the Battle of Bell’s Point, and the Battle of Trenton. The folding maps depict a plan of the city of Brunswick, Georgia in 1837, and a plan for the canal between the Altamaha River to Brunswick Harbor. Thomson, Checklist of Publications on American Railroads before 1841, 1228, 1553, 1566, 1567, 1810.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 400

369 [GEORGIA. A group of 3 works about the state of Georgia, comprising:

JONES, Charles Colcock. Jr. Hernando De Soto. Savannah, GA: J.H. Estill for the Author, 1880. Later quarter black morocco gilt. . PRESENTATION COPY WITH TYPED CARD TIPPED-IN: “With the Compliments of Charles C. Jones, Jr., Augusta, GA.” De Renne II, p. 789. -- JONES, Charles C., O.F. VEDDER, and Frank WELDON. History of Savannah, GA. Syracuse, New York: D. Mason & Co. Publishers, 1890. Publisher’s quarter brown leather, edges gilt. Bradford 2737; De Renne II, pp. 885-6. -- JENKINS, Charles Francis. Button Gwinnett Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Garden City and New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1926. Original green clothbacked boards; dust jacket; slipcase. LIMITED EDITION, number 775 of 1001 copies. -- Together, 3 works in 3 volumes, various 4to and 8vo sizes, all FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally fi ne.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 300

370 HEWATT, Alexander (1739-1824). An Historical Account of the Rise and Progress of the Colonies of South Carolina and Georgia. London: for Alexander Donaldson, 1779.

2 volumes, 8vo (205 x 124 mm). (Some spotting and browning.) Later calf, red morocco letteringpieces gilt.

FIRST EDITION of the “earliest history of this region” (Howes). Hewitt, a Presbyterian minister, lived in Charleston for several years. He remained loyal to the King during the Revolutionary War, and he was expelled and his property seized in 1777. His comprehensive account of the economy and society of the two colonies includes a critique of slavery and the colonial reaction to the Stamp Act. His work was used as the uncredited basis for David Ramsay’s The History of the Revolution of South-Carolina, published in 1785. De Renne I, p. 217; Howes H-452; Sabin 31630; Streeter sale II:1133.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $1,000 - 1,500

371 [INDIANA]. COLTON, Joseph H. (1800-1893). The State of Indiana Delineated. New York: J.H. Colton, 1838. New York: J.H. Colton, 1838.

16mo (93 x 141 mm). Engraved folding map with hand-coloring, publisher’s advertisement. (Some separations 16mo (93 x 141 mm). Engraved folding map with hand-coloring, publisher’s advertisement. (Some separations on map folds, some spotting.) Original morocco-backed boards, paper label on upper cover (some wear and light on map folds, some spotting.) Original morocco-backed boards, paper label on upper cover (some wear and light dampstaining, upper cover with a few slice-marks). Provenance: George Robinson (signature dated 1839 on fl yleaf). : George Robinson (signature dated 1839 on fl yleaf). FIRST EDITION, including the map, which is often cited as being printed separately, but whose inclusion is mentioned on the printed label on the front cover in the present copy. The map includes overland routes to western territories, including Texas, Oregon, and California. Bradford 1005 (“Vastly more correct than any other pocket map of Indiana, and with the book, will be found a valuable directory and guide for travellers to that state”); Howes C-622; Sabin 34577; Streeter Sale 1416. $500 - 700

FIRST EDITION, including the map, which is often cited as being printed separately, but whose inclusion is mentioned on the printed label on the front cover in the present copy. The map includes overland routes to western territories, including Texas, Oregon, and California. Bradford 1005 (“Vastly more correct than any other pocket map of Indiana, and with the book, will be found a valuable directory and guide for travellers to that state”); Howes

372 LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809). CLARK, William (1770-1838). History of the Expedition... Philadelphia: Bradford and Inskeep, 1814.

2 volumes, 8vo (204 x 127 mm). With 5 (of 6) plates and maps (lacking the large map). (Several leaves, including the title-page to vol. I, with repairs occasionally affecting text, spotting and staining.) Contemporary calf (modern rebacking, recornered, some wear).

FIRST EDITION OF THE “MOST IMPORTANT OF ALL OVERLAND NARRATIVES,” (Grolier American), AND THE “DEFINITIVE ACCOUNT OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EXPLORATION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENT” (Wagner-Camp)

President Thomas Jefferson, who commissioned the expedition and ensured its funding by Congress in 1803, contributed a prefatory “Life of Captain Lewis” to the work. Publication was delayed by the death of Lewis, but the work was fi nally brought to press on 20 February 1814 by Bradford and Inskeep. Of the 2,000 copies that were printed, only 1,417 were perfect and put out for sale. According to Elliott Coues, “the map is gone from many if not most of the copies of the book now extant. ..[It] was not inserted in all copies of the original edition.” Church 1309; Grolier American 30; Howes L-317; Sabin 40829; Streeter III: 1777; Wagner-Camp 13:1. $4,000 - 6,000

William CLARK (1770-1838). Travels to the Source of the Missouri River and Across the American Continent to the Pacifi c Ocean. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1814.

4to (267 x 210 mm). Engraved folding map after Clark by S. Lewis (short tear at fold, some minor offsetting), 5 engraved maps and plans on 3 leaves. (Lacking half-title, a few small stains.) 20th-century quarter calf, corners vellum-tipped (extremities very slightly rubbed). Provenance: Sir John Francis Davis, 1st Baronet (17951890), British diplomat, fi rst President of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong (bookplate, signature on fl yleaf); Milburn McCarty Jr. (stamp on fl yleaf).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION OF THE AUTHORIZED ACCOUNT OF “THE MOST IMPORTANT WESTERN EXPLORATION” (Howes). Lewis and Clark intended to publish their journals after the completion of their 1804-1806 expedition, but their offi cial duties and Lewis’s death in 1809 delayed publication. Nicholas Biddle edited the text of the fi rst American edition with the assistance of Paul Allen, and the fi rst edition was published in Philadelphia in 1814. The present edition was edited by Thomas Rees from sheets of the fi rst American edition; he notes, “the only liberty that has been taken with the language, has been merely the correction of a few inadvertent grammatical or typographical errors” (p. xiv). His introduction includes Jefferson’s “Message on the Subject of this Expedition” of 19 February 1806 (pp. viii-ix) and an extract from Lewis’s “Fort Mandan” letter of “17” [i.e. 7] April 1805 to Jefferson (pp. x-xii). Hill, p.180 (“one of the most interesting narratives of North America in existence”); Sabin 40829; Wagner-Camp 13:2.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $6,000 - 8,000

374 [LOWDEN, Frank Orren (1861-1943), his copies] -- [ILLINOIS HISTORY]. A set of uniformly bound works about Illinois, comprising:

DAVIDSON & STUVE. A Complete History of Illinois from 1673 to 1884. Springfi eld, IL: J.W. Rokker, Publisher, 1884. Later edition. -- REYNOLDS. The Pioneer History of Illinois. Chicago: Fergus Printing Company, 1887. Second edition. -- MOSES. Illinois, Historical and Statistical. Chicago: Fergus Printing Company, 1889-1892. 2 volumes. -- PALMER. The Bench and the Bar of Illinois. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1899. 2 volumes. -- BOGGESS. The Chicago Historical Society’s Collection--Vol. V. The Settlement of Illinois 1778-1830. Chicago: Chicago Historical Society, 1909.

Together, 5 works in 7 volumes, 8vo. Uniformly bound in 20th-century half green calf gilt, Lowden’s monogram gilt-stamped on front covers. Provenance: Frank Orren Lowden (18611943), 25th Governor of Illinois (bookplates, bindings). Lowden was the Governor of Illinois from 1917 until 1921 after serving as a U.S. Representative from Illinois’ 13th district in the United States House of Representatives from 1906 until 1911. During his gubernatorial term, Lowden was best known for reorganizing state government to reduce the rate of taxation, vetoing the bill to abolish capital punishment, as well as for his handling of the 1919 Chicago Race Riots.

$300 - 400

375 [LOWDEN, Frank Orren (1861-1943), his copies]. A group of 8 works about Illinois and Western settlement from Lowden’s collection, including:

HERNDON, William H. Herndon’s Lincoln The True Story of a Great Life. Chicago: Belford-Clarke Co., [1889]. 3 volumes. Contemporary calf with dark brown morocco lettering-pieces gilt. -- BURNET, Jacob. Notes on the Early Settlement of the North-Western Territory. NY & Cincinnati: D. Appleton & Co., and Derby, Bradley & Co., 1847. 20th-century half brown morocco gilt. -- PERKINS, James H. Annals of the West. Cincinnati: James R. Albach, 1847. 20th-century half navy morocco gilt. -- [The Illinois Centennial Commission.] ALVORD, Clarence Walworth, editor-in-chief. The Centennial History of Illinois set, comprising: BUCK, Solon Justus. Illinois in 1818; ALVORD. The Illinois Country 1673-1818; PEASE, Theodore Calvin. The Frontier State 1818-1848; COLE, Arthur Charles. The Era of the Civil War 1848-1870; BOGART, Ernest Ludlow et al. The Industrial State 1870-1893; BOGART et al. The Modern Commonwealth 1893-1918. Springfi eld, [IL]: Illinois Centennial Publications, 1917, 1920, 1919, 1919, 1920, 1920. 6 works in 6 volumes. Uniform contemporary half green morocco gilt. -- And 3 others. Together, 8 works in 14 volumes, various 8vo sizes, most FIRST EDITIONS, condition generally fi ne. Provenance for the lot: Lowden Frank Orren Lowden, 25th Governor of Illinois (bookplates, bindings, inscriptions). Complete list available upon request. $400 - 600

377 [MAP]. SMITH, John, Captain (1580-1631). Virginia. [London ca 1625].

Engraved map of Virginia (edges slightly trimmed or frayed affecting longitude and latitude, 3/4-in. tear lower margin with old repair verso). Overall sheet 325 x 410 mm. Float-mounted and framed. Vignette depicting a Native American ceremony, Royal arms of England, Smith’s arms with motto, strapwork cartouche, large Native American fi gure, galleon.

“ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT PRINTED MAPS OF AMERICA EVER PRODUCED AND CERTAINLY OF THE GREATEST INFLUENCE” (Burden)

State 10, with page numbers in the upper corners altered to “1690” and “1691.” The present state was used for Smith’s own The Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England and the Summer Isles and Samuel Purchasâ€șs Purchas his Pilgrimes (London, 1625-1632). «It became the prototype for the area for half a century until Augustine Hermannâ€șs map of 1673. First issued separately in London, it accompanied many editions of various publications for another twenty years. It, therefore, was seen widely and inspired much interest in the fledgling Virginia colony, influencing considerably its eventual success. Consequently the east coast of North America became dominated by the English. To this day the map is still used by archaeologists to locate native Indian villages. It records 166 of them, and is remarkably detailed» (Burden 164). Tooley, The Mapping of America, p.157.

Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $15,000 - 20,000 Engraved map of Virginia. (Some minor toning, a few tiny spots.) Overall sheet 330 x 458 mm. Matted and framed. Royal arms of England, decorative cartouche, compass rose, ships, canoes, and sea monsters.

“ONE OF THE MOST SIGNIFICANT CARTOGRAPHICAL MILESTONES IN COLONIAL NORTH AMERICAN HISTORY... THE MOST ACCURATE MAP DRAWN IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY OF ANY PART OF THAT CONTINENT” (Burden)

Second state, with the initial “C” superimposed on the letter “E” in “Chesepiooc.” The fi rst map to depict and name the Chesapeake Bay (“Chesepiooc Sinus”), and the second map of Roanoke, after John White’s manuscript map. White accompanied Raleigh’s voyage in 1585, and served as governor of the ill-fated Roanoke settlement. The map depicts the coast from the Cape Lookout to the Chesapeake Bay; it infl uenced other 16th-century maps of the region by de Jode, Wytfl iet, and Metellus. De Bry produced White’s map to show the west along the top edge rather than north, which became the preferred orientation for mapmakers until the 18thcentury. Burden 76; Cumming Southeast 3.

Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $8,000 - 12,000

378 [MAP]. BLAEU, Willem and Jan. Nova Virginiae tabula. [Amsterdam, ca 1631].

Engraved map of Virginia (some minor browning. Overall sheet 23 1/4 x 19 1/8 in. (590 x 488 mm). Matted and framed. Vignette depicting a Native American ceremony, Royal arms of England, cartouches, Latin text verso with the leaf signed C7.

“THE FIRST AND MOST IMPORTANT DERIVATIVE OF JOHN SMITH’S MAP OF VIRGINIA ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN 1612” (Burden)

Derivative 1, second state (of 2), with Blaeu’s imprint, of this map, originally issued by Jodocus Hondius from 1618-1629, which closely follows State 1 of Smith’s Virginia of 1612. After Hondiusâ€șs death in 1629, Blaeu purchased the plates and changed the imprint. «Through the purchase of this plate by William Jansz. Blaeu in 1629 and its subsequent extensive publication for forty-two years, word of the English in Virginia became known throughout Europe. It is slightly larger than its parent, although more attractively engraved. Taken from the first state of Smith, it continues the coastlines where the former left them vague» (Burden 193). Tooley, The Mapping of America, p.162.

Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $2,000 - 3,000

Engraved map of the Americas, 500 x 590 mm visible area, matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). Decorative cartouche with Native Americans, serpents and cherubs, decorative cartouche depicting two angels, a Native American and a devil falling away, letterpress Alphabetical Table of Names tipped to right margin with descriptions in Latin, Dutch, French and English.

FIRST EDITION, the eighth state, first engraved in 1670, and updated to include New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Quiri Regio, Fretum Aniani, and with the crack at longitudinal line 338°E in the southern hemisphere repaired. McLaughlin 49 (state 8); Tooley America 33.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $600 - 800

380 [MAP]. HOMANN, Johann Baptist (1663-1724). Virginia, Marylandia et Carolina in America Septentrionali. Nuremberg, [ca 1714].

Engraved map of the Mid-Atlantic with hand-coloring in wash and outline. (Some minor toning and very minor creasing.) Overall sheet 538 x 614 mm. Matted and framed. Decorative cartouche depicting Native Americans, European merchants and goods.

FIRST STATE, without the “Cum Privilegio Sac. Cas. Magest.” line beneath “Norimberge.” Homann’s map was intended to promote German immigration to America, and includes the first appearance of Alexander Spotswood’s settlement at the headwaters of the Rappahanock River noted as “Germantown Teutsche Statt.” Cumming Southeast 156 Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $1,000 - 1,500

381 [MAP]. FRY, Joshua (1699-1754) and Peter JEFFERSON (1708-1757). A Map of the Most Inhabited Part of Virginia containing the whole Province of Maryland with Part of Pensilvania, New Jersey, and North Carolina. London: Robert Sayer and Thomas Jefferys, 1775.

Engraved map of Virginia and Maryland on 4 sheets joined as two horizontal sheets, borders and waterways hand-colored in outline (a few soft vertical creases, some light browning and spotting, tiny hole in blank area of North Carolina with old repair verso). Each overall sheet 1303 x 492 mm. Framed. Cartouche by Charles Grignion after Francis Hayman depicting a wharf scene.

THE FIRST PRINTED MAP OF VIRGINIA BY VIRGINIANS, state 6 with the date changed from 1751 to 1775. Peter Jefferson (father of Thomas Jefferson) and Joshua Fry first prepared the map at the request of Lord Halifax in 1751, who had recently become the president of the board of Trade and Plantations. It was first revised in 1751, and revised again in 1755 to include information about western Virginia colony based on John Dalrymple and Christopher Gist’s journals. In his autobiography, Thomas Jefferson describes his father’s collaboration with Joshua Fry produced the “first map of Virginia which has ever been made, that of Captain Smith being merely a conjectural sketch.” The map is the first to accurately depict the Blue Ridge Mountains and to delineate the road system in Virginia. Pritchard & Taliaferro, Degrees of Latitude, no. 30; Schwartz & Ehrenberg, Mapping of America, pp. 157–158; Stevens & Tree 87f.

383 [MAP]. TANNER, Henry Schenck (1786-1858). Virginia, Maryland, Delaware. [Philadelphia, 1825].

Engraved map of Virginia with hand-coloring in wash and outline (short tear to fold). Overall sheet 609 x 790 mm). Matted and framed.

Later issue, with “American Atlas” printed in the upper margin, of Tanner’s map which was fi rst published in his American Atlas in 1820. According to Ristow, Tannerâ€șs American Atlas «raised U.S. commercial map production to a new level of excellence.» The map shows West Virginia together with Virginia, and was updated and reissued several times into the 1840s.

Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $600 - 800 382 [MAP]. REID, John (fl . ca 1775-1800). The State of Virginia from the best Authorities. New York, 1796.

Engraved map of Virginia (short marginal tear repaired verso, a few tiny rust spots, a few faint pencil annotations in southwestern Pennsylvania). Overall sheet 410 x 518 mm. Matted and framed.

From the fi rst edition of Reid’s American Atlas, the second folio atlas published in America following Matthew Carey’s American Atlas of 1795. The map depicts roads east of the Alleghanies, including those to New London and Hot Springs; only one road west of the Alleghanies, from Ft. Cumberland to Clarksburg, is included. Wheat & Brun 572.

Property from the Collection of Richard D. Simmons, Alexandria, VA $300 - 400

384 MCKENNEY, Thomas L. (1785-1859) and James HALL (1793-1868). Two portraits from History of the Indian Tribes of North America. [Philadelphia, ca 1844 or later]. Lithographs with hand-coloring, comprising:

Ne Sou a Quoit. A Fox Chief. 462 x 335 visible area. -- Hoo-Wan-Ne-Ka, A Winnebago Chief. 462 x 335 mm visible area. -- A few tiny spots, each matted and framed (unexamined out of frame). $1,000 - 1,500

385 [NATIVE AMERICANS -- CHEROKEE] -- [POINSETT, Joel Roberts (17791851)]. Removal of the Cherokees... July 4, 1838. [Washington, D.C.]: printed by Thomas Allen, [1838]. 8vo (237 x 155 mm). (Some minor soiling.) Folded sheets, with stab-sewing, uncut and unopened. FIRST EDITION of this letter from the Secretary of War transmitting correspondence between the War Department and Major Winfi eld Scott. Correspondence runs from 6 April 1838 to 27 June 1838. De Renne II, p. 464.

[With:] ROSS, John (1790-1866). Memorial of John Ross
Representatives of the Cherokee Nation of Indians, on the Subject of the Exiting Diffi culties in that Nation... [Washington:] Ritchie & Heiss, [1846]. 8vo (225 x 138 mm). (Holes from stab-sewing in gutter, minor staining.) Modern quarter leather. FIRST EDITION outlining communication between members of the Senate and members of the Cherokee Nation, who were requesting fi nancial restitution. Ross encouraged members of the Cherokee Nation to protest these calls of relocation. These efforts were unsuccessful and General Scott was ordered to enforce the relocation on 6 April 1838, better known now as the “Trail of Tears.” Streeter 559.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $100 - 200

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia

387 PIKE, Zebulon Montgomery (1779-1813). Elliott Coues, editor. PIKE, Zebulon Montgomery (1779-1813). Elliott Coues, editor. The Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike, To Headwaters of the Mississippi River Through Louisiana Territory, and in New Spain, During the Years 1805-67. New York: Francis P. Harper, 1895.

3 volumes, 8vo. Portrait frontispiece in vol.I, folding facsimile letter, 7 maps (including 6 folding into rear pocket of the Index volume). (Some toning and light chipping to extreme outer margin, maps with a few short tears.) Original green cloth gilt (some minor rubbing).

LIMITED EDITION, number 788 of 1150 copies. This new edition was “fi rst reprinted in full from the original of 1810, with copious critical commentary, memoir of Pike, new map and other illustrations, and complete index.” (Rittenhouse). Howes P-373; Rittenhouse 467 (“Scholars have preferred the 1895 edition for its annotations, clarity, and appended documents”). 386 OLMSTED, Frederick Law (1822-1903). A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States. New York & London: Dix & Edwards; Sampson Low, Son & Co., 1856.

12mo. Several woodcuts. (Stitching weak, some minor spotting.) Publisher’s brown cloth stamped gilt and blind-stamped (some light wear).

FIRST ENGLISH EDITION. Olmsted fi rst published the accounts of his journey through the seaboard slave states in the New York Daily Times under the pseudonym “Yeoman.”. After making a second journey to expand his observations, he published his observations in book form, endeavoring to “correct the erroneous impressions of the earlier” which he noted was “too fault-finding” (Preface). De Renne II, pp. 580-1; Howes O-78; Sabin 57242 (first American edition).

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $400 - 600

388 ST. CLAIR, Arthur (1736-1818). A Narrative of the Manner in Which the Campaign Against the Indians... Philadelphia: Jane Aitken, 1812.

8vo. Half-title, with the extended list of subscribers. (Light toning and spotting.) Original boards, printed paper label on spine (front joint cracked, minor scuffs).

FIRST EDITION of St. Clair’s account of the defeat of 800 soldiers by Ohio Territory Native Americans. Howes S-24; Sabin 75020. $400 - 600

389 [TENNESSEE]. BREAZEALE, John William McNairy. (1795-1843). Life as it is; or Matters and Things in General: Containing
 Historical Sketches of the Exploration and First Settlement of the State of Tennessee. Knoxville, [TN]: printed by James Williams, 1842.

12mo (182 x 115 mm). (Some minor staining and chipping.) Later red morocco gilt, top edge gilt. Provenance: William H. Harmon? (signature dated 1867, annotations).

FIRST EDITION of this history of Tennessee covering various wars with the Indigenous population, the Harpe brother murderers, and the election process. Bradford 530; Howes B-741; Sabin 7651; Streeter Sale 1670.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 300 $200 - 300

390 [WASHINGTON, George (1732-1799).] -- CARRINGTON, Henry Beebee (18241912), General. Washington the Soldier. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1899.

8vo (217 x 149 mm). Numerous illustrations and maps, EXTRA ILLUSTRATED BY THE ADDITION OF APPROXIMATELY 95 ENGRAVED PORTRAITS AND PLATES. (Some light toning to edges, some minor spotting or offsetting, some occasional chipping.) Contemporary red half morocco gilt, stamp-signed by MacDonald (some light rubbing, spine slightly darkened ). Provenance: William H. Bartlett (gift inscription from Henry A. Smith, Milford, Connecticut, 28 August 1912).

Second edition, with extra illustrations compiled for William H. Bartlett by Henry A. Smith (see lots 350, 391, and 392). $500 - 700

391 [WASHINGTON, George (1732-1799)]. Caption title: “Washingtoniana. Sketches of George & Martha Washington.” N.p., n.d., 1902.

4to (295 x 233 mm). Calligraphic title-page with round portrait of Washington. Comprising some 178 plates and leaves of text (see below). Contemporary navy morocco gilt, stamp-signed by the Adams Bindery. Provenance: William H. Bartlett (calligraphic gift annotation on title-page from Henry A. Smith).

Chicago grain magnate William H. Bartlett (1850-1918) was a descendant of the Declaration of Independence signer Josiah Bartlett. William H. Bartlett was a cofounder of the Chicago grain fi rm Bartlett, Frazier & Co., and helped establish the Vermejo Club in New Mexico for the wealthiest and most prominent American celebrities. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright’s mentor Joseph Silsbee, Vermejo is now owned by media mogul Ted Turner. Chicagoan Henry A. Smith was a print collector noted for his compilations of works about historic fi gures. The present work was presented to Bartlett and his wife, Mary Wentworth Campbell (1852-1904), and includes periodical publications, engraved portraits and views, photographic reproductions, and facsimile signatures and documents.

$1,000 - 1,500

392 [WASHINGTON, George (1732-1799).] Caption title: “Washingtoniana: A Sketch of the Inauguration of George Washington, April 30th, 1789 as First President of the united States and other Sketches of Washington. Excerpts from Magazines Bound 1916.”

4to (302 x 235 mm). Letterpress title-page; 8 periodical publications about Washington, each neatly inlaid and bound in (see below); approximately 76 engraved portraits and plates. Contemporary navy morocco gilt, stampsigned by MacDonald. Provenance: William H. Bartlett (gift card and note from Henry A. Smith, Milford, Connecticut, 22 February 1916).

A gift from Henry A. Smith to William H. Bartlett (see previous lot). A unique album, including 18th- and 19th-century periodical publications about Washington and his inauguration, comprising: LAMB, Martha. “The Inauguration of Washington, 1789.” In: Magazine of American History, Vol. XX, No. 6, pp. 433-460. -- LAMB, Martha. “Washington as President, 17891790.” In: Magazine of American History, Vol. XXI, No. 2, pp. 89-112. -- “Washington’s Visit to New England in 1789.” In an unidentifi ed publication, pp.345-350. -- “United States.” Clipping from the Columbian Magazine, [1 April 1789], pp. 264-268. -- “United States.” Clipping from the Columbian Magazine, n.d. [1789], pp. 321-324. -- “Life Portraits of George Washington.” In: McClure’s magazine, Vol. VIII, No. 4, February 1897, pp. 291-308. -- HART, Charles Henry. “An Unpublished Life Portrait of Washington.” In an unidentifi ed publication. -- “New York as George Washington Saw It in 1789.” In: The New York Times Magazine, 20 February 1916, pp. 12-13 (laid-in). $600 - 800

394 [WESTERN EXPANSION] -- [McAFEE, Robert Breckinridge (1784-1849)]. A History of the Late War in the Western Country. Lexington, Kentucky: Worsley & Smith, 1816. 393 [WELCH, Andrew G. (1797-1852)]. A Narrative of the early Days and Remembrances of Oceola Nikkanochee, Prince of Econchatti, A Young Seminole Indian. London: Hatchard and Son, 1841.

8vo (214 x 125 mm). Half-title, lithographic frontispiece, 2 lithographic plates. (Tear on half-title repaired, some spotting and toning.) Modern quarter black morocco gilt.

FIRST EDITION of this work, attributed to Dr. Andrew Welch Nikkanochee, nephew of the Seminole chief Oceola, was adopted by Welch after his capture by U. S. troops. Welch wrote several books about the Seminole wars, many of which include Nikkanochee’s detailed recollections from the perspective of his relatives who were involved. De Renne II, p. 479; Decker 37:110; Howes W-230; Sabin 56642.

Property from the Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $300 - 500

395 [WESTERN FRONTIER] -- TAYLOR, Joseph Henry (1844-1908). Sketches of Frontier and Indian Life on the Upper Missouri. Pottstown, PA: By the Author, 1889.

8vo (199 x 121 mm). (Some minor spotting and staining.) Contemporary half red morocco gilt, edges gilt, stamp-signed by Zaehnsdorf (some slight rubbing). Provenance: Thomas Tarquiar? (faint signature, 27 February 1822, on verso of preliminary blank); Frank Orren Lowden (1861-1943), 25th Governor of Illinois (bookplate).

[Laid in:] A Calling called for Mrs. Pullman for Thursdays at The Arlington, inscribed: “With Love and ‘a Merry Christmas’.”

FIRST EDITION. “This valuable work is now scarce; it is one of the most authentic books on the subject, and is the source from which many subsequent writers have borrowed very freely” (Sabin 42929). From the library of Frank Lowden, 25th Governor of Illinois. Lowden married to Florence Pullman, daughter of the industrialist George M. Pullman, the industrialist who founded the Pullman Company. The laid in card is presumably from Lowden’s mother-in-law. Howes M-9; Streeter Sale 1076. $500 - 700 8vo (194 x 127 mm). Numerous illustrations. (Some occasional spotting, some toning.) Later quarter brown morocco (preserving the original backstrip of dark red calf gilt), marbled boards.

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 Collection of Robert P. Hunter, Jr. and Barbara Hunter, Alpharetta, Georgia $200 - 300

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