Thursday, November 10, 2011

George Eliot novels 1870 's History 1874  Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Very scarce ,old and original article/story. Some old staining/foxing on pages.
18 pages,no illustrations.Please take a look at article sample page(s) bellow.

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George Eliot novels 1870 's History Very Rare Old item.
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1895 The Gladstone (surname) Family 1895 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Very scarce ,old and original article-story.
7 pages with 22 illustrations. The Gladstone (surname) Family UK branch.
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1895 The Gladstone (surname) Family Very Rare Old item.
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1884 Merino Sheep Merinos in America 1884 Original Magazine Article/Story. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
9 Pages.
9 Illustrations.


Photobucket 1884 Merino Sheep Merinos in America Very Rare Old item.
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1912 Burgos, Spain 1912 Original magazine article/story.Removed from an old magazine. Quite Scarce.
15 pages with  10 illustrations.
Please take a look at the article's sample page (s)  bellow.



Photobucket 1912 Burgos, Spain Very Rare Old item.
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Athens (Greece) in 1870 's 1872 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
7 pages with 1 illustrations.Please take a look at Article sample page(s) below.

Photobucket Athens (Greece) in 1870 's Very Rare Old item.
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1890 's Josh Billings Home Lanesborough Massachusetts 1898 Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine. Quite Scarce.
8 pages with 10 illustrations
Please take a look at the article's sample page(s).


Photobucket 1890 's Josh Billings Home Lanesborough Massachusetts Very Rare Old item.
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1902 Holland 's Dutch Cartoonists Cartoon Artists 1902 Original Magazine Article-removed from an Antique Magazine.
Quite Scarce and Old Article.
7 Pages  with 16 illustrations.

Photobucket 1902 Holland 's Dutch Cartoonists Cartoon Artists Very Rare Old item.
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1912 Peter Krapotkin Russian Nihilist Prison Escape 1912 Original Magazine Article-removed from an Antique Magazine.
Quite Scarce and Old Article
8 pages  with  2 illustrations.

Photobucket 1912 Peter Krapotkin Russian Nihilist Prison Escape Very Rare Old item.
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Ossip Gabrilowitsch Russian-Born American Pianist 1909 Original  Magazine Article. Removed from an antique American Magazine.
8 Pages. 1 Illustration of a pianist.

Photobucket Ossip Gabrilowitsch Russian-Born American Pianist Very Rare Old item.
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Robinson Crusoe How Daniel Defoe Wrote the book 1899  1899 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
7 Pages.Several Illustrations.

Photobucket Robinson Crusoe How Daniel Defoe Wrote the book 1899 Very Rare Old item.
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1902 Charles Jones Cycle Bicycle Track London Pavilion Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine published in 1902. Quite Scarce.
5 pages with 8 illustrations. Pages have some old tape repairs.
Please take a look at the article sample page(s) bellow.


Photobucket 1902 Charles Jones Cycle Bicycle Track London Pavilion Very Rare Old item.
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New York during American Revolution Antique Illustrated 1876   Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Very scarce ,old and original article/story. Pages have some old staining/foxing.
32 pages with 25 illustrations.Please take a look at the article sample page(s) bellow.

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New York during American Revolution Antique Illustrated Very Rare Old item.
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1897 Sports in 17th Century Hunting Germany Coburg 1897 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an antique Magazine.
13 Pages.5 Illustrations.Mostly about Hunting in Germany,France.

Photobucket 1897 Sports in 17th Century Hunting Germany Coburg Very Rare Old item.
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1890 's Colonial Architecture 1898 Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine. Quite Scarce.
15 pages with 23 illustrations.
Please take a look at the article's sample page(s).


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COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE. 501 as they could, the moderately pitched hipped roofs under which their fathers had lived; and the pro- totypes of the old brick houses along the Atlantic coast of New England and in the valley of the James are serving the present day and genera- tion in England. Wherever Dutch influence prevailed, there was a ten- dency to breadth rather than height, so prone is man to self-repetition; although the most striking character- istic of the distinctly Dutch colonial buildings is the high pitched roof with the battlemented gables. But these gables belong rather to the town than the country. Where there was plenty of room, the Dutchman flat- tened himself. The distinct types of colonial roofs are few and easily remembered. The plain, symmetrical gable, both slopes of the roof being of the same length, is the simplest. The variation of this type so often found in New England, where the roof at the back side is ex- tended to cover additional rooms on the ground floor, and perhaps trun- cated chambers in the case of a two story house, is sometimes considered an original fashion; but in most if not all cases I think it was an amend- ment, indicative of the former New England tendency to enlarge the fam- ily and at the same time provide for its growth by added room, rather than by closer pack- ing. The house in which the two Presidents Ad- ams were born is of this style, and confirms the fact that great m e n are com- monly born in small houses. The hump- backed gambrel roof is a familiar type; and this, too, is sometimes found with the upper and flatter slope pulled down behind to cover more room on the first floor. An- other family is distinguished by a hipped roof, which on a square house culminates in a mathematical point over the centre of the building, and upon an oblong plan produces a ridge of some length. A fourth type is the truncated hip, which is in fact the mansard. The high-stepped battle- ments of the Dutch houses merely give a different termination to what is in reality a plain gabled roof; and the roofs called flat are hipped roofs of so slight a pitch as to b~ invisible except from a distance. For archi HOUSE IN AGAWAM. IN GREENFIELD.
502 COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE. CORINTHIAN CAPITAL. The designs on this and the four following pages are re- produced from The Town and Country Builders Assist- ant by J. Norman, published in Boston in 1786. tectural effects such roofs might as well be omitted, especially when they are surrounded by balustrades. So it appears that there were not more than half a dozen different styles of roofs in the good old times, each one of which had a logical reason for its shape; now there are as many roofs as houses, and each one is more un- accountable than its neighbor. A brief list of important colonial houses in New England showed that of twen- ty-four built before the war of the Revolution eighteen had gambrel roofs, two were gables and four were finished with truncated hips or man- sards. Of sixteen built in the last quarter of the last century, only one had a gambrel roof, three were ac- cording to Mansard, and all the rest were, not modern flats, but covered with flat roofs. Another list might show different results, but this is sug- gestive of the changes of fashion. It is by no means true that the majority of American, houses have ever been flat headed at any period. The pitched gable has always prevailed over all others and is likely to do so for many years to come. But when architec- ture became fashionable, it inclined to classic authorities, and in classic work, although the roof is still at the top constructively, it is a secondary consideration architecturally, at least in domestic work; and until near the beginning of the present century there was little but domestic building that was worth studying or remem- bering naturally so, for I suppose there is no other part of the earth where the value of the individual home has been so clearly recognized as in America, no country in which domestic life has been such a control- ling element in the growth and devel- opment of the great mass of the peo- ple from the very first. But aside from this fact, the colonists had little use for public buildings for legislative or municipal purposes, the Church being practically the State, and the meeting-house accommodating the town meeting and the caucus. For the Puritans to have built meeting- houses, large or small, that resembled in. the remotest degree the ecclesiastical architecture of medheval Europe would have been not merely impossi- ble, but a thousand times worse than that, sinful. So when the time came for what Mr. Ruskin considers the principal part of architecture, i. e., ornamentation, its first display was upon domestic buildings. Many devout citizens gradually ac- cumulated worldly wealth, by the manufacture of New England rum, by shrewd traffic in persons of Afri- can birth, and by other legitimate in- dustries and commercial ventures. Such wealthy citizens would seriously incline to more expensive dwellings. It was not to be expected that the artis- tic instinct, which is not imitative, but rather creative and inventive, had been stimulated by the harsh and struggling experiences that were foreordained for the men and women who colonized America. We often wonder at the large quantity of ances- tors and furniture that came over in the Mayflower. There was also an amazing amount of condensed piety, but if there was any artistic cult stowed away in the hold, it was either carried back to England or blown away by the gales from the northeast, long before the forest primeval was cleared, the soil subdued, and the red men exterminated. For a good many generations, our ancestors found enough for their hands to do without philosophizing on the essential ele- ments of beauty. They were suffi- ciently concerned, though sometimes mistaken, about the Good and the True, but the Beautiful was not treat- ed as a means of saving grace, either in their preaching or in their practice. If, along with their highly developed religious and business tendencies, they had possessed even a small frac- tion of the esthetic intuitions of the heathen Greeks, or of the superstitious monks of the i ith and 12th centuries, the architecture called colonial, though Georgian~~ is a better name xvould never have been born. That divine recognition of the eternal fit- ness which seems to have been the DESIGN FOR PULPIT. 503

1890 's Colonial Architecture Very Rare Old item.
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1904 Ormond Florida Cars Bicycles on the beach 1904  Original Magazine Print. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Quite old and scarce.Size approx 9"x6".

Photobucket 1904 Ormond Florida Cars Bicycles on the beach Very Rare Old item.
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1908 New Zealand 1908 Original magazine Article-Story removed from old magazine.
Quite scarce and interesting old article.
11 pages with  8 illustrations .Please note:  there are some tears on pages margins,some old stains and ex-library marks/stamps.

Photobucket 1908 New Zealand Very Rare Old item.
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1896 LEE Prominent Family of General Robert E. Lee Original magazine articles.Removed from an antique magazine published in 1896. Quite Scarce.
14 pages with 27 illustrations.
Please take a look at the article sample page(s) bellow.



Photobucket 1896 LEE Prominent Family of General Robert E. Lee Very Rare Old item.
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1894 Lawrence Alma-Tadema Dutch-born English Painter 1894 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
14 Pages with 15  illustrations.

Photobucket 1894 Lawrence Alma-Tadema Dutch-born English Painter Very Rare Old item.
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1896 Florentine Villas Florence Italy 1896 Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine. Quite Scarce.
18 pages with 16  illustrations
Please take a look at the article's sample page(s).


1896 Florentine Villas Florence Italy Very Rare Old item.
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1895 Edward Coley Burne-Jones English Painter Artist UK 1895 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Very scarce ,old and original article-story.
11 pages with 12  illustrations. Some old dry stains on pages.

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1895 Edward Coley Burne-Jones English Painter Artist UK Very Rare Old item.
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1890 's Sophia Oliver Smith Hatfield, Massachusetts MA 1898 Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine. Quite Scarce.
10 pages with 7 illustrations.
Please take a look at the article's sample page(s).


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right could stay, and to look at the rich velvet wall-paper, with its rows of shepherdesses and poppies, was not a daily privilege. Just south of the house, by the front fence, stood the great elm, known as such by the first settlers, and with Indian marks of high floods cut in its trunk. Four feet from the ground, just above the spread of its roots, it measured thirty-two feet in circum- ferencethe largest girth, I think, of any New England tree. Its three enormous branches were not lofty nor graceful. The whole tree was a gnarled and knotted mass of enduring strength; and it lived over two centu- ries. Not far north, on the same side of the street, is the Academy, built and endowed by Sophia Smith for the ben- efit of her townsfolk. On the oppo- site side of the street, just south of the meeting-house, was the ample and comfortable house of Joseph Smith, father of Sophia, where most of her life was spent. Oliver was in the fourth generation from Samuel Smith and his wife Elizabeth, who crossed the Atlantic in 1634, in the ship Elizabeth, from Ips- wich to New York, with their three young children, found their way to Hadley and Hatfield, lived to be over eighty and left six children, who reared large families,ancestors of a true-hearted race. Samuel was a trustworthy and capable man, hold- ing offices in Church and State. His son John was killed by the Indians in Hatfield meadows in 1676. Uncle Oliver was a frequent and welcome visitor in our Hatfield home. He was social, cheerful and of simple habits. It was my delight to hear him talk, for he knew much of men and things, and his genial and sagacious humor instructed us. When sixty years of age, he was the youngest of six brothers, residents in or near the town, a family of steadfast men, who aimed to do true work and helped hold the commonwealth together. He was the rich man of that region. We boys u ed to talk over his wealth, and try to figure up how big a pile, in silver or gold, his money would make. A million was then incredible, THE BIRTHPLAcz OF OLIVER AND 5OPHIA 5MITH.
1890 's Sophia Oliver Smith Hatfield, Massachusetts MA Very Rare Old item.
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1895 England Unusual Children's Toys Novelties 1895 Original Magazine Article. Removed from an Antique Magazine.
Very scarce ,old and original article-story.
9 pages with 53  illustrations. Some old dry stains on pages.

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1895 England Unusual Children's Toys Novelties Very Rare Old item.
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1894 Ecclefechan Scotland Thomas Carlyle Country 1894 Original magazine article-removed from an old magazine.
Quite scarce and old article.
11 Pages  with 12 illustrations. Please, take a look at article sample page (s) below.

Photobucket 1894 Ecclefechan Scotland Thomas Carlyle Country Very Rare Old item.
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1890 's Ann Radcliffe Lady Mowlson Harvard College 1894 Original magazine article.Removed from an antique magazine. Quite Scarce.
9 pages with 3 illustrations.
Please take a look at the article's sample page(s).


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that use, which being given in upon account to the state there, and the pious desire of the lady signified, they settled /Jio per annum forever upon two poor scholars in the College, /~ apiece. It will be observed that Weld, by mak- ing a report to the Society for the Propa- gation of the Gospel in New England, of his collections in behalf of the cause of education in the colony, would seem to recognize some sort of appointment in that behalf on the part of that society. On the other hand, in the acknowledg- ment to the committee for books to the value of one hundred and fifty pounds, entered in the records of the college, there is no recognition whatever of the society. Furthermore, Weld appears by the foregoing letter to have remitted some of his collections directly to the college, and to have acted under instruc- tions in making purchases on college account with some of the money. The hundred pounds which he received from Lady Mowlson, or, to repeat his spelling, Lady Moulsham, was, however, tre-ted differently. This he says he gave in upon account to the State. It is not positively known when this money was given in on account, but a reference to it in the college records justifies the inference that it was in 1643; while an account of Tyng, the country treasurer, acknowledges that in 1644 there was something due the college, of that which was sent by Mr. Weld and Mr. Peters. It is possible also that the General Court had this fund in mind in 1644, when an order was passed that /Ji~o be gathered by the treasurer for the college out of the money sent out from England for the children. The re- ceipt, by the treasurer of the colony, of this specific sum can be shown, and knowledge of the manner in which the income was to be applied can be traced to the college authorities through entries made at various times in the colony and college records. A copy of the covenant to which Weld refers in his statement to the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in New England is preserved in the archives of Harvard College. It is in substance an~ acknowledgment by XVeld that he has received the money, and an agreement on his part that he will see it applied according to the de- sires of Lady Mowlson. It was engrossed upon parchment, and by some good chance has been particularly well cared for, so that the writing is to-day as legi- ble as it was in 1643, when Lady Mowlson affixed her signature thereto. It was some curious misunderstanding which led her to put her signature to a document which by its terms required the hand and seal of Thomas Weld; but we can congratulate ourselves that through this mistake the precious auto- graph of Ann Mowlson has been pre- served in perfect condition for our inspection. It is probable that two copies of the instrument were prepared by her solici- tor, for execution, and that Weld signed one of these copies, while she signed the copy which Weld sent to the college. If this be the case, it is possible that the copy signed by XVeld may still be in ex- istence in England. There is no point which will impress itself more forcibly upon the attention of any person who may examine the early records of Harvard College than the scrupulous fidelity with which those who managed the affairs of that institution endeavored to administer the trusts im- posed upon them by benefactors of the college. The books were at first kept by single entry, and it was the custom of the treasurer to put all gifts of money into a general fund and allow interest to each specific trust. In that way the college became responsible for the custody of the gift, and the attention of the treas- urer was necessarily called to the ques- tion of the application of the income each time that a distribution of the in- come of the college was made. The deposit of Lady Mowlsons hundred pounds in the hands of the treasurer of the colony relieved the treasurer of the college from all responsibility as to this fund, and undoubtedly tended to pro- duce the confusion and neglect which envelop the history of this alone, among the beneficiary foundations of Harvard College. The first allusion in the college records to Lady Mowlsons gift occurs in I643. The overseers then declined to assign the income of the /ioo, because they did not have the money in hand and they could not expect payment until the Gen- eral Court should meet. In 1655, Dun- ster attempted to secure the money for repairs to the college building, which al- though only fifteen years old was already in a dilapidated condition. The magis- trates declined to give their consent, say- ing that the money was given by the Lady Mowlson and others for scholarships annually to be maintained there, which this Court cannot alter. Quincy, refer- ring to this, says it was fortunate for the college that Lady Mowlson had taken a bond from Weld that the money should not be diverted from the object to which she had devoted it. In the light of the recent action of the college, this congrat- ulation is more forcible than it was when it was uttered. The amount of money belonging to Harvard College held by the country treas- urerat this time was /162 16s.4d. It in- cluded Lady Mowlsons /ioo, a gift from Mr. Bridges of/so, and /12 r 6s. 4d. from unknown sources. So far as is known, Lady Mowlsons gift was the only portion of this sum which was actually dedicated to beneficiary purposes. Men- tion of this indebtedness occurs frequently in the college inventories. At one time the debt appears on the records as if it were due from the estate of Richard Russell, the late country treasurer. The amount annually allowed to the college for the use of this fund between 1648 and 1685 was fifteen pounds. In 1684 the colony charter was an- nulled. It was the opinion of competent persons at that time that all colonial legislation, including the college charter, was by this proceeding rendered null and void. For that reason, and also on ac- count of the general disturbance of affairs in the colony, all payments to the college then ceased. During the remainder of the reign of Charles II., and~ during the time of James II., no effort was made by the college to collect either principal or interest from the colony. Shortly after the accession of William and Mary, the province charter was brought to Boston. This document confirmed all gifts and bequests which had been made to schools or colleges, and partially restored confi- dence in the power of the college to manage its own affairs. Efforts were thereupon made to secure from the Gen- eral Court the payment of this /162 i6s. Radcflffe Colfege [Harvard Annexi.
1890 's Ann Radcliffe Lady Mowlson Harvard College Very Rare Old item.
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1904 California Women Photographers Adelaide Hanscom 1904 Original Magazine Article-removed from an Antique Magazine.
Quite Scarce and Old Article.
9 Pages  with 9 illustrations.California Women Photographers Adelaide Hanscom, Blanche Cumming.Please note: there are tears on the edges ,some old stains and library marks.

Photobucket 1904 California Women Photographers Adelaide Hanscom Very Rare Old item.
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