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‎Editor Martha Lampland; Editor Susan Leigh Star‎

‎Standards and Their Stories: How Quantifying Classifying and Formalizing Practices Shape Everyday Life‎

‎Cornell Univ Pr 2009-01. Hardcover. Good. Cornell Univ Pr hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0801447178 ISBN : 0801447178 9780801447174

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€61.66 Buy

‎Editor Martha Lampland; Editor Susan Leigh Star‎

‎Standards and Their Stories: How Quantifying Classifying and Formalizing Practices Shape Everyday Life‎

‎Cornell University Press 2009-01. Paperback. Good. Cornell University Press paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0801474612 ISBN : 0801474612 9780801474613

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€26.70 Buy

‎Editor Order of the Eastern Star of California‎

‎Proceedings of the Grand Chapter of California Order of the Eastern Star Sixty‎

‎Pernau-Welsh / Order of the Eastern Star 1939. Paperback. Good. 1939 squarebound softcover with good binding. Pages are virtually free of pen or pencil markings -- one for every hundred or so pages and these do not obscure the text. A small number of page corners are dog-eared. Cover shows shelf-rubbing and curling and minor wear at corners but is intact with no tears. Overall this is a good useful copy of a very uncommon item. Pernau-Welsh / Order of the Eastern Star paperback‎

Bookseller reference : 922f

Biblio.com

Gadzooks Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Gadzooks Books]

€21.15 Buy

‎Editor Staff of 1991 Silveer Star‎

‎1991 SILVER STAR - Gaither High School Yearbook‎

‎Gaither Senior High School 1991. Hardcover. Good. Hardcover. No inscriptions. Front hinge has some play but still a sound copy. Gaither Senior High School hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : 005734

Biblio.com

Addled Brain Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Addled Brain Books]

€42.31 Buy

‎Editor Susan Leigh Star‎

‎Ecologies of Knowledge: Work and Politics in Science and Technology Suny Series in Science Technology and Society‎

‎State University of New York Press 1995-08. Hardcover. Good. State University of New York Press hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0791425657 ISBN : 0791425657 9780791425657

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€97.70 Buy

‎Editor Susan Leigh Star‎

‎Ecologies of Knowledge: Work and Politics in Science and Technology Suny Series in Science Technology and Society Suny Series Science Technology & Society‎

‎State University of New York Press 1995-07-06. Paperback. Good. State University of New York Press paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0791425665 ISBN : 0791425665 9780791425664

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€14.54 Buy

‎Editor Susan Leigh Star‎

‎The Cultures of Computing Sociological Review Monographs‎

‎Wiley-Blackwell 1995-10-06. Paperback. Very Good. Wiley-Blackwell paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0631192824 ISBN : 0631192824 9780631192824

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€10.19 Buy

‎Editor Timothy Matovina; Editor Gary Riebe Estrella‎

‎Horizons of the Sacred: Mexican Traditions in U.S. Catholicism Cushwa Center Studies of Catholicism in Twentieth-Century America‎

‎Cornell University Press 2002-08. Paperback. Near fine/n/a. New. Remainder mark. Near fine in publisher's slightly rubbed decorated wrappers. Available in our UK premises for prompt dispatch worldwide. Cornell University Press paperback‎

Bookseller reference : PBFH049275 ISBN : 0801488222 9780801488221

Biblio.com

The Book Annex
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[Books from The Book Annex]

€3.20 Buy

‎Editor Timothy Matovina; Editor Gary Riebe Estrella‎

‎Horizons of the Sacred: Mexican Traditions in U.S. Catholicism Cushwa Center Studies of Catholicism in Twentieth-Century America‎

‎Cornell Univ Pr 2002-10. Paperback. Good. Cornell Univ Pr paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0801488222 ISBN : 0801488222 9780801488221

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€8.43 Buy

‎Editor Valeria Cardellini; Editor Emiliano Casalicchio; Editor Julio Cezar Estrella; Editor Kalinka Regina Lucas Jaquie Castelo‎

‎Performance and Dependability in Service Computing: Concepts Techniques and Research Directions Premier Reference Source‎

‎Information Science Pub 2011-04-30. Hardcover. Good. Information Science Pub hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : SONG1609607945 ISBN : 1609607945 9781609607944

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€103.10 Buy

‎Editor W. Dennis Keating; Editor Philip Star; Editor Norman Krumholz‎

‎Revitalizing Urban Neighborhoods Studies in Government and Public Policy‎

‎University Press Of Kansas 1996-10-01. Paperback. Good. Excellent customer service. Prompt Customer Service. University Press Of Kansas paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0700607900 ISBN : 0700607900 9780700607907

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€9.07 Buy

‎Editor Wilmington Star News‎

‎The Savage Season: Hurricanes Bertha and Fran Summer of 1996‎

‎Wilmington Star News Inc 1996-10. Paperback. Good. Wilmington Star News Inc paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG0965516407 ISBN : 0965516407 9780965516402

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€9.52 Buy

‎Editors of The Star Ledger‎

‎One Giant Leap; The Giants' Remarkable Run to the NFL Championship‎

‎Hardcover. GOOD. Spine creases wear to binding and pages from reading. May contain limited notes underlining or highlighting that does affect the text. Possible ex library copy will have the markings and stickers associated from the library. Accessories such as CD codes toys may not be included. hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : 3199320332 ISBN : 1597251313 9781597251310

Biblio.com

Discover Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Discover Books]

€0.85 Buy

‎Editors Of Star Wars Galaxy Collector‎

‎Star Wars: Boba Fett Exclusive Lucasfilm Magazine‎

‎Lucasfilm magazine 1998. First edition. Trade paperback. New. in brodart sleeve flawless. Includes illustrations. Lucasfilm magazine paperback‎

Bookseller reference : Alibris.0070789

Biblio.com

Ponce a Time Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ponce a Time Books]

€6.78 Buy

‎Editors of Black Star‎

‎To Do Justice: The Heroic Struggle for Human Rights-‎

‎Black Star Publishing- 1965. PB/ pub. 1965/ Fair condition/104 pages- Tells in words and pictures the heroic story of Americans both black and white who have risked and given their lives so that all our citizens may enjoy equa l opportunity. D52435. Soft Cover. Good. Black Star Publishing- Paperback‎

Bookseller reference : 2435

Biblio.com

Infospec
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Infospec]

€56.93 Buy

‎Edizinoi White Star Staff‎

‎New Zealand‎

‎Smithmark Publishers Incorporated 1996. Hardcover. As New. Disclaimer:An apparently unread copy in perfect condition. Dust cover is intact; pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Smithmark Publishers, Incorporated hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : G0831744391I2N00 ISBN : 0831744391 9780831744397

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from ThriftBooks]

€6.69 Buy

‎Edizioni White Star Staff‎

‎Caribbean‎

‎Smithmark Publishers Incorporated 1996. Hardcover. Good. Disclaimer:A copy that has been read but remains in clean condition. All pages are intact and the cover is intact. The spine may show signs of wear. Pages can include limited notes and highlighting and the copy can include previous owner inscriptions. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Smithmark Publishers, Incorporated hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : G0831744944I3N00 ISBN : 0831744944 9780831744946

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from ThriftBooks]

€3.29 Buy

‎Edizioni White Star Staff‎

‎Egypt‎

‎Smithmark Publishers Incorporated 1996. Hardcover. Very Good. Disclaimer:A copy that has been read but remains in excellent condition. Pages are intact and are not marred by notes or highlighting but may contain a neat previous owner name. The spine remains undamaged. An ex-library book and may have standard library stamps and/or stickers. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Smithmark Publishers, Incorporated hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : G0831735651I4N10 ISBN : 0831735651 9780831735654

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from ThriftBooks]

€6.33 Buy

‎Edizioni White Star Staff‎

‎Kenya‎

‎Smithmark Publishers Incorporated 1996. Hardcover. As New. Disclaimer:An apparently unread copy in perfect condition. Dust cover is intact; pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Smithmark Publishers, Incorporated hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : G0831743301I2N00 ISBN : 0831743301 9780831743307

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from ThriftBooks]

€3.88 Buy

‎Edizioni White Star Staff‎

‎Scotland‎

‎Smithmark Publishers Incorporated 1996. Hardcover. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Smithmark Publishers, Incorporated hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : G0831743034I5N00 ISBN : 0831743034 9780831743031

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from ThriftBooks]

€5.18 Buy

‎Edmonds, Alan; Earl, Lawrence; Ruddy, Jon; Stephenson, Bill; Gray, Grattan; Edmonds, Alan; Marshall, Douglas; et al‎

‎Maclean's Magazine, 18 June, 1966 - Cape Breton Sunken Treasure‎

‎56 pages. Features: How the French pay ship Le Chameau gave up its fortune to divers Alex Storm, Dave MacEachern and Harvey MacLeod off the coast of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia - great colour photos with article; Harold Wilson - My, how he's changed!; Michael Langham - this quiet man has been the Stratford Festival's undisputed monarch for 11 years; They learn to live with drinking parents; What's Next - a Canadian Tennis Star? - Bob Puddicombe, Bob Bardsley, Barry Shakespeare, Bob Moffat, Vic Rollins, Don McCormick; Divorce, Mexican Style - our reporter zips through the charade of a Juarez divorce to prove a point - but hundreds of Canadians do it in earnest; "You're a Damn Lying Scoundrel" - the last fatal duel to be fought in Canada between John Wilson and Robert Lyon; Vintage colour ad for Honda automobiles - convertible and G.T. Fastback Coupe; Canadiana with Gerald Stevens; Back cover ad by Carling introduces their 9 brewmasters. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book‎

MareMagnum

RareNonFiction.com
Ladysmith, CA
[Books from RareNonFiction.com]

€199.95 Buy

‎Eduardo Estrella‎

‎El pan de America: Etnohistoria de los alimentos aborigenes en el Ecuador Publicaciones del C.S.I.C. conmemorativas del V centenario del descubrimiento de America Spanish Edition‎

‎Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas Centros de Estudios Historicos 1986. Paperback. Good. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Centros de Estudios Historicos paperback‎

Bookseller reference : SONG8400063872 ISBN : 8400063872 9788400063870

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Ergodebooks]

€88.43 Buy

‎Education Midwest Center for Holocaust; Star The Kansas City‎

‎From the Heart : Life Before and After the Holocaust - A Mosaic of Memories‎

‎U.S.A.: Kansas City Star Books/The Kansas City Star Co. 2001. very good hardcover. some wear. . Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. Kansas City Star Books/The Kansas City Star Co. Hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : 160121-MG20 ISBN : 0967951984 9780967951980

Biblio.com

The Book House - St. Louis
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from The Book House - St. Louis]

€21.15 Buy

‎Edward Dmytryk director; Edna Anhalt Edward Anhalt screenwriters; Adolphe Menjou Arthur Franz Gerard Mohr Marie Windsor star‎

‎The Sniper Two original photographs taken on the set of the 1952 film‎

‎Culver City CA: Columbia Pictures 1952. Two vintage reference photographs taken on the set of the 1952 film one showing actors Arthur Franz and Marie Windsor in conversation between takes the other showing Franz and Windsor sitting with director Edward Dmytryk assistant director Billy Reineck dialogue director Lauren Gage and script supervisor Frances McDowell. One with a mimeo snipe affixed to the verso along with a Columbia Pictures stamp the other with a RKO Radio Pictures stamp on the verso. <br/><br/>A severely mentally ill delivery man struggles with his irrational hatred of women and begins venting his rage by killing women from a distance using a M1 carbine. One of the most minimal and exciting noirs of the 1950s and Edward Dmytryk's first return to directing after his long tenure on the Hollywood blacklist. <br/><br/>Shot on location in San Francisco. <br/><br/>One 8 x 10 inches one 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. <br/><br/>Grant US. Selby US. Selby US Canon. Silver and Ward Classic Noir. Spicer US. Columbia Pictures unknown books‎

Bookseller reference : 151878

ABAA

Royal Books, Inc.
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Royal Books, Inc.]

€253.83 Buy

‎Edward Duffield Neill North Star Publishing Company Minneapolis Minn..‎

‎Minnesota Explorers and Pioneers from A.D. 1659 to A.D. 1858 1881 Leather Bound‎

‎2019. Leather Bound. New. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden Leaf Printing on round Spine. Reprinted in 2019 with the help of original edition published long back 1881. This book is printed in black & white sewing binding for longer life Printed on high quality Paper re-sized as per Current standards professionally processed without changing its contents. As these are old books we processed each page manually and make them readable but in some cases some pages which are blur or missing or black spots. If it is multi volume set then it is only single volume if you wish to order a specific or all the volumes you may contact us. We expect that you will understand our compulsion in these books. We found this book important for the readers who want to know more about our old treasure so we brought it back to the shelves. Hope you will like it and give your comments and suggestions. Lang: - English Pages 149. EXTRA 10 DAYS APART FROM THE NORMAL SHIPPING PERIOD WILL BE REQUIRED FOR LEATHER BOUND BOOKS. FOLIO EDITION IS ALSO AVAILABLE. hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : LB1111001114380

Biblio.com

Gyan Books
India India Índia Inde
[Books from Gyan Books]

€31.40 Buy

‎Edward Duffield Neill North Star Publishing Company Minneapolis Minn..‎

‎Minnesota Explorers and Pioneers from A.D. 1659 to A.D. 1858 1881‎

‎2020. Paperback. New. Lang: - English Pages 149. Reprinted in 2020 with the help of original edition published long back 1881. This book is Printed in black & white sewing binding for longer life with Matt laminated multi-Colour Soft Cover HARDCOVER EDITION IS ALSO AVAILABLE Printed on high quality Paper re-sized as per Current standards professionally processed without changing its contents. As these are old books we processed each page manually and make them readable but in some cases some pages which are blur or missing or black spots. If it is multi volume set then it is only single volume if you wish to order a specific or all the volumes you may contact us. We expect that you will understand our compulsion in these books. We found this book important for the readers who want to know more about our old treasure so we brought it back to the shelves. Any type of Customisation is possible with extra charges. Hope you will like it and give your comments and suggestions. paperback‎

Bookseller reference : PB1111001114380

Biblio.com

Gyan Books
India India Índia Inde
[Books from Gyan Books]

€16.18 Buy

‎Edward Duffield Neill North Star Publishing Company Minneapolis Minn..‎

‎Minnesota Explorers and Pioneers from A.D. 1659 to A.D. 1858 1881 Hardcover‎

‎2020. Hardcover. New. Lang: - English Pages 149. Reprinted in 2020 with the help of original edition published long back 1881. This book is Printed in black & white Hardcover sewing binding for longer life with Matt laminated multi-Colour Dust Cover Printed on high quality Paper re-sized as per Current standards professionally processed without changing its contents. As these are old books we processed each page manually and make them readable but in some cases some pages which are blur or missing or black spots. If it is multi volume set then it is only single volume if you wish to order a specific or all the volumes you may contact us. We expect that you will understand our compulsion in these books. We found this book important for the readers who want to know more about our old treasure so we brought it back to the shelves. Any type of Customisation is possible with extra charges. Hope you will like it and give your comments and suggestions. hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : 1111001114380

Biblio.com

Gyan Books
India India Índia Inde
[Books from Gyan Books]

€18.71 Buy

‎Edwards Blake director screenwriter; Robert Bob Willoughby photographer; Evelyn Anthony novel; Julie Andrews Omar Sharif star‎

‎The Tamarind Seed Original screenplay for the 1974 film with six original film still photographs‎

‎London: AVCO Embassy Pictures 1973. Draft script for the 1974 film. From the collection of still photographer Bob Willoughby. Rainbow copy with blue pink and white leaves. Included are six vintage black-and-white reference still photographs from the film. Bob Willoughby 1927-2009 studied with Saul Bass at the Kann Institute of Art in Los Angeles worked as a photographer for magazines such as "Life" "Look" and "Harper's Bazaar" and as a set photographer for every major studio documenting some of most important films of the era and creating intimate portraits of some of Hollywood's greatest celebrities. Willoughby moved his family to County Cork Ireland in 1972 working on only a handful of films through the late 1970s and early 1980s this was one of his final films though he would continue to photograph exhibit and publish books for the remainder of his life. Based on Evelyn Anthony's 1971 novel about a woman on holiday in the Caribbean who meets a handsome Russian. Judith Farrow Andrews meets Feodor Sverdlov Sharif and together they visit all the beautiful spots on the island but Judith's ties to the British government and Feodor's to the Russian government cause problems for their romance. An underrated but serious look at espionage in the Cold War. Set in Barbardos and shot on location there and in London and Paris. Yellow titled wrappers marked copy No. 122. Title page present dated April 1973 with credits for screenwriter Edwards. 127 leaves mimeograph duplication with pink and blue undated revision pages throughout. Pages Near Fine wrapper Very Good bound internally with two silver brads. Stills Near Fine. AVCO Embassy Pictures unknown‎

Bookseller reference : 131474

Biblio.com

Royal Books, Inc.
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Royal Books, Inc.]

€549.96 Buy

‎Edwards Ifan Ab Owen 1895 1970. England and Wales. Court Of Star Chamber. Great Britain. Public Record Office‎

‎A Catalogue of Star Chamber Proceedings Relating to Wales / Compiled by Ifan Ab Owen Edwards‎

‎Cardiff : University Press Board 1929. First Edition. Fine cloth copy in a good if somewhat edge-nicked and dust-dulled dw now mylar-sleeved. Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight bright clean and sharp-cornered. ; 225 pages; Description: viii 225 p. ; 26 cm. Subjects: Trials --Great Britain --Wales --History --Sources. Series: History and law series ; no. 1. Cardiff : University Press Board hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : 150274

Biblio.com

MW Books Ltd.
Ireland Irlanda Irlanda Irlande
[Books from MW Books Ltd.]

€111.69 Buy

‎Edwards John with The Llanelli Star'‎

‎Llanelli : Story of a Town‎

‎Derby: Breedon Books. As New in As New dust jacket. 2001. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. 185983258X . A near 'As New' hardback book without inscriptions or other marks. Deep purple-blue boards with bright gilt titling to the spine. In the original publisher's pictorial dustjacket. Bright clean and tight virtually unworn. 183 pages 4 added. Apology slip from The 'Llanelli Star' laid in on the blank front free endpaper re the 'added pages'. 15 Chapters; Appendices; Chapter-end notes; Many monochrome photographs line drawings etc. Plus 4-page acknowledgements & Index laid in separately at the end. "John Edwards has written the first-ever comprehensive history of Llanelli. Originally written in Welsh it was commissioned by Carmarthenshire County Council as a gift to the National Eisteddfod 2000 at Llanelli. The story takes us from the Ice Age to the dawning of the Third Millennium.The beginnings of Llanelli centred around the Parish Church and we see the influence of three landed families the Vaughans the Stepneys and the Mansels in the development of the town. From the mid-19th century it is the production of tinplate which takes pride of place." . An Excellent First Edition copy. GIFT QUALITY. See Images. ; Small 4to 9" - 11" tall . Breedon Books. hardcover‎

Bookseller reference : M009487 ISBN : 185983258X 9781859832585

Biblio.com

Sue Lloyd-Davies Books
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[Books from Sue Lloyd-Davies Books]

€11.42 Buy

‎EDWARDS Juanita Chairman Cookbook Committee Eastern Star‎

‎OLDE FAMILY FAVORITES: Favorite Eastern Star Recipes Including Menus‎

‎Favourite Eastern Star Recipes 1965-01-01. Paperback. Acceptable. A standard copy with a plastic comb binding. Text is lightly yellowed and has a small amount of notes on p. 281 first front end paper and reverse side of back cover. Presentation inscription is written on reverse side of front cover. White plastic comb is soiled. Top edge has foxing speckling. Careful packaging and fast shipping. We recommend EXPEDITED MAIL for even faster delivery. Favourite Eastern Star Recipes paperback‎

Bookseller reference : 20047

Biblio.com

Polly's Used Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Polly's Used Books]

€8.45 Buy

‎Edwards, Anne‎

‎Shirley Temple: American Princess‎

‎The Shirley Temple story from child star to Ambassador to Ghana. Lots of photographs. This book is extra heavy, and may involve extra shipping charges to some countries‎

‎Edwards, Gus; Cobb, Will D.‎

‎School Days (When We Were A Couple of Kids): Sheet Music for Voice, Ukulele and Piano‎

‎6 pages. Cover photo of Bing Crosby. From the Paramount film "The Star Maker". Above-average wear. Unmarked. A worthy working copy. Sheet music‎

‎Edwards, Lt.-Comdr. Kenneth; Burckhardt, W.; Kahn, Kermit; Menke, Frank G.; Frost, Michael; Neuberger, Richard L.; Penn, David; Leitzell, Ted; et al‎

‎Ken Magazine, December 15, 1938, Volume 2, No. 12 - The German-Japanese Spy Alliance / Cleveland's Negro Problem / Marijuana (Marihuana) - Our Newest Vice‎

‎86 pages. Features: Nice color ad for Laird & Co. Apple Brandy inside front cover; Samson card table ad; Chamberlain and British press censorship; Britain War Preparations; The Kaiser on Hitler; Myra Kingsley - Star of the Star-Gazers; The German-Japanese Spy Alliance - article with photos of Nazi spies in America, Lt. Comm. Farnsworth, Harry T. Thompson, Eric Glaser, Otto Voss, Guenther Rumrich and Johanna Hofmann; 20th-Century Wonder Girl Eleanora Sears of Boston; Feuding Among the FCC; Red Cross Surgeon in China describes how injuried and sick Japanese soldiers are killed rather than tended to, 'for the glory of the Emperoro'; Photos of yoga disciple Buddha Bose in various unusual physical states; Photo of toy tanks being painted in Nuremberg, Germany; Photo of toy battleships being painted by Japanese teen; Other photo subjects include French Foreign Minister Bonnet, Labor man Dave Beck, the Matanuska Valley colony in Alaska, Mr. Rolly sharpening a huge saw blade in Alaska, Japanese soldiers in action, Dr, Virgil Dickson, Principal Bruce Zimmerman, Dr. Vaclav Podstata, many photos of children being racially integrated in the U.S., the Budin Clinic in New York, X-ray devices, streetlighting for safety, and the Brooklyn bail bond racket; Dave Beck - Political and Economic Boss of the Pacific Northwest; Hugh Bartlett Monjar and his assorted 'clubs' make him a lot of money; Meddling in Matanuska; Article on Marihuana - "Our Newest Vice"; America's Solution to a Minority Problem - racial mixing of kids in California; Would You Have Noticed That? - Albert S. Osbornprobably has the world's most observant eyes and is a 'student of questioned documents'; Humanitarian surgeons look forward to the day when their intervention will no longer be needed; Proper Highway Illumination for safety; Cleveland's Negro Problem - the "Future Outlook League" uses racketeer-style methods to promote black employment; Hoaxes often invented to sell newspapers; Photo of bicycle polo game; Article on Crooked Bond Bailsmen in New York; Nice color-photo back cover ad for Lucky Strike features tobacco buyer James Walker and associates chatting around pot-bellied stove; and more. Above-average wear. Front cover nearly loose. A worthy vintage copy. Magazine‎

MareMagnum

RareNonFiction.com
Ladysmith, CA
[Books from RareNonFiction.com]

€249.95 Buy

‎Edythe Little Star‎

‎WHITE MORNING STAR. Ed. Helen L. Hall‎

‎Greensburg-KS:: the author. VG unmarked 8 1/2" x 11" Paperback. c. 1974-1982. ISBN: Life Account of a native American woman born 1828 of Sioux & Cheyenne. ISBN: parentage 320 pp. Catalogs: HISTORY. Keywords: HISTORY NATIVE AMERICANS CHEYENNE SIOUX ANTHROPOLOGY AMERINDIAN. [the author] paperback‎

Bookseller reference : BOOKS031225I

Biblio.com

de Wit Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from de Wit Books]

€55.00 Buy

‎Eguino Estrella Haze Xaviant‎

‎Robot Zombies: Transhumanism and the Robot Revolution‎

‎Adventures Unlimited Press 2015-11-15. Paperback. VeryGood. 0.7300 inches 8.4300 inches 5.8500 inches. Adventures Unlimited Press paperback‎

Bookseller reference : mon0002285005 ISBN : 1939149517 9781939149510

Biblio.com

Schwabe Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Schwabe Books]

€8.17 Buy

‎EKRUTT Joachim ..//.. Joachim Ekrutt.‎

‎Etoiles et planètes.‎

‎Paris, Nathan, 1992, 1 volume, in-8, cartonnage souple remplié, 159 p.. 175 cartes du ciel et graphiques, 30 photographies couleur, glossaire des corps célestes et index en fin de volume.‎

‎Superbe exemplaire. ************* Remise 20 % pour toute commande supérieure à 100 €, envoi gratuit en courrier suivi et assurance à partir de 30 € d'achat (France seulement).‎

Bookseller reference : 7841

Livre Rare Book

Yves Oziol
Clermont-Ferrand France Francia França France
[Books from Yves Oziol]

€15.00 Buy

‎Elans - Le journal des sports / Directeur : J. Lecacheur, P. Skawinski‎

‎Elans Victoires-surprises de Clermont et du Stade Français - Thietard domine la course et Caffi gagne à la belge - Lyon joue à 10, muis à 9... et le Red Star l'emporte avec brio - Au mont Agel Bartali battu par meilleur que lui - Les Kiwis, jouant au petit trot ont battu les Parisiens en trois galop s de Sherratt - ...‎

‎N° 15 - Lundi 1er et Mardi 2 avril 1946 - Direction, administration, rédaction : 5, rue du Faubourg Poissonnière - Journal de 2 pages illustrées‎

‎bon état (Légèrement jauni au niveau des pliures)‎

Bookseller reference : 43190

Livre Rare Book

Librairie Le Père Pénard
Lyon France Francia França France
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‎Elans - Le journal des sports / Directeur : J. Lecacheur, P. Skawinski‎

‎Elans La coupe... sur deux tableaux. Les Toulousains visent... les Palois. Favoris : Lille et le Red Star - Saint-Etienne seul en tête demain - Atmosphère de Tour de France aux championnats d'Europe - Plus de Pays Baltes pour barrer la France - Sept Cliff Anderson sans compter le vrai - "Pour vaincre imitez Harpagon..." - ...‎

‎N° 35 - Samedi 27 dimanche 28 avril 1946 - Direction, administration, rédaction : 5, rue du Faubourg Poissonnière - Journal de 2 pages illustrées‎

‎bon état (légèrement jauni et frotté au niveau des pliures)‎

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‎Elans - Le journal des sports / Directeur : J. Lecacheur, P. Skawinski‎

‎Elans Lille sur sa lancée, le Red Star à l'arraché - Saint-Etienne et Roubaix devancent Lille - Clermont n'a duré qu'une mi-temps - Pau stoppé par Biarritz. Toulouse seul qualifié - Paris-Bruxelles commence à la frontière et Schotte gagne 4' d'avance - Faillite des championnats de l'Union Française - Le stadiste Clare espoir du demi-fond - "J'étais certain de lâcher Camellini, assure Baratin - ...‎

‎N° 36 - lundi 29 dimanche 28 avril 1946 - Direction, administration, rédaction : 5, rue du Faubourg Poissonnière - Journal de 2 pages illustrées‎

‎bon état (légèrement jauni au niveau des pliures)‎

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‎Elaine Goldsmith Thomas Producer; William Sherak Producer; Jason Shuman Producer; Blue Star Entertainment; Red Om Films; Zide/Pe‎

‎Little Black Book‎

‎Sony Pictures Home Entertainment 2004-01-01. DVD. Like New. DVD plays perfectly & the case looks good. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment unknown‎

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‎Elan Sun Star‎

‎Smile! The Secret Science of Smiling‎

‎2009-06-01. New. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May be re-issue. Buy with confidence excellent customer service! unknown‎

Bookseller reference : 1878682202n ISBN : 1878682202 9781878682208

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‎Elan Sun Star‎

‎Smile! The Secret Science of Smiling‎

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Bookseller reference : 1878682202 ISBN : 1878682202 9781878682208

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‎ELEVEN STAR AFIRST NATIONALA FLAG WITH SINGLE STAR ABONNIE BLUEA FIRST UNOFFICIAL CONFEDEDERATE FLAG VERSO‎

‎Confederate Flag Given by Infamous Spy Belle Boyd to a Union Officer‎

‎<p>"<i>June 18. Reached Front Royal & met there the famous & very handsome rebel spy Belle Boyd who gave to me the rebel flag waving which she led the attack upon Kenly in May.</i>"</p><p>The "stars and bars" circular canton pattern with eleven-stars was used for First National flags from July 2 1861 when Tennessee and North Carolina joined the Confederacy until November 28 1861 when stars were added for Missouri and Kentucky. The other side of this rare two-pattern configuration is a tribute to the "Bonnie blue flag that bears the single star" the unofficial first Confederate flag.</p><p>Frederic d'Hauteville's small autograph note has been loosely stitched to the flag: "<i>Confederate flag. Taken by F.S.G d<i>'</i>H. and given by him to E.S.F. in 1862. To be given to Freddie d'Hauteville when he is fifteen.</i>" His first wife Elizabeth Stuyvesant Fish died in 1863. Freddy his son by his second wife was born in 1873 thus dating his note about the second gifting of the flag to between 1873 and 1888. The flag remained in his family preserved in perfect condition until 2015 when contents from their Swiss castle were sold clearing the way for the property to be sold; it is now on the market for $60 million dollars.</p> <b>ELEVEN-STAR "FIRST NATIONAL" FLAG WITH SINGLE STAR "BONNIE BLUE" FIRST UNOFFICIAL CONFEDEDERATE FLAG VERSO.</b>Belle Boyd the "Siren of the Shenandoah" gave the flag to Captain Frederic Sears Grand d'Hauteville on June 18 1862 telling him that it was the flag she waived to urge on Confederate troops at the Battle of Front Royal a month earlier. D'Hauteville's 25-page autograph manuscript war memoir with his account of the gift of the flag quoted above is included. See below for complete transcript. With additional photographs and manuscripts. Homemade perhaps even by Boyd or a family member and used only briefly before being given to d'Hauteville the flag has been perfectly preserved retaining the short ribbons along its hoist and showing no tears holes fraying loss or staining. Over 5 x 3 feet. <p><b>Historical Background</b></p><p>D'Hauteville had joined General Nathaniel P. Banks' staff before Banks advanced south up the Shenandoah valley the Shenandoah river flows north into the Potomac at Harper's Ferry so you go "up" the valley to the south and "down" the valley to the north to Strasburg maneuvering against Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's army.</p><p>Belle Boyd had moved to Front Royal to stay with relatives when her hometown of Martinsburg West Virginia had been occupied by Union troops in March 1862. Shortly after her eighteenth birthday Boyd hid in a local hotel in Front Royal where she overheard General James Shields and his officers discussing orders to transfer his division to the Union army along the Rappahannock River in eastern Virginia. Boyd reportedly rode fifteen miles on horseback through Union lines to tell Confederate Colonel Turner Ashby of the reduced Union presence in Front Royal. When approximately 3000 of Jackson's men attacked the Union force occupying Front Royal on May 23 Boyd ran to meet Jackson's men as they advanced and urged them onward. The Union garrison approximately 1000 strong under the command of Colonel John R. Kenly of the Union 1st Maryland Volunteer Infantry was routed. Kenly was wounded and he and nearly 700 of his men were captured. Jackson later sent Boyd a note of gratitude for her role.</p><p><b>Robert Gould Shaw </b>1837-1863 another officer in Banks' command confirmed d'Hauteville's account. In a letter to his mother Shaw wrote "Perhaps you have seen some accounts of a young lady at Front Royal named Belle Boyd. There was quite a long and ridiculous letter about her copied into the 'Evening Post' the other day. I have seen her several times but never had any conversation with her. Other men who have talked with her tell me that she never asked for any information about our army or gave them the slightest reason to suppose her a spy; and they were probably as capable of judging as the correspondent who wrote about her. She gave Fred. D'Hauteville a very pretty Secession flag which she said she carried when she went out to meet Jackson's troops coming into Front Royal." Shaw went on to command an African-American regiment the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry which obtained fame in the Second Battle of Fort Wagner at Charleston Harbor on July 18 1863. Shaw died with many of his men that day and was immortalized in a memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens in Boston and in the 1989 film <i>Glory</i>.</p><p>That both d'Hauteville and Shaw believed Boyd's account that she waved this flag to encourage the Confederate attack demonstrates her ability to manipulate both men and narratives. In her own entertaining and exaggerated memoir Boyd later wrote "As I neared our line I waved my bonnet to our soldiers to intimate that they should press forward." Another key witness Henry Kyd Douglas 1838-1903 a member of Jackson's staff later recalled in his memoir seeing "the figure of a woman in white glide swiftly out of town" and that Boyd "seemed when I saw her to heed neither weeds nor fences but waved a bonnet as she came on." Whether she actually waived her bonnet or this flag or perhaps both at different moments during the battle that day she clearly gave it to d'Hauteville to curry favor and that apparently worked. Rather than being prosecuted for her role in aiding the Confederates in what was a disaster for the Union she was celebrated for her charm. Before being banished to England Boyd was arrested six or seven times and always managed with the help of gentlemanly Union officers to avoid the most serious consequences. Her seemingly innocuous flirtations apparently provided her with her greatest source of influence.</p><p><b>Isabella Marie "Belle" Boyd </b>1844-1900 was one of the most famous and notorious Confederate spies. After her father enlisted in the Confederate army Boyd became an espionage agent at the age of seventeen aiding the Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley. Forced from her home in Martinsburg West Virginia when Union troops occupied it she moved in with relatives in Front Royal Virginia. During the spring 1862 Valley Campaign she was a courier and provided valuable information to General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson. General Jackson reportedly made her a captain and honorary aide-de-camp on his staff. On one occasion she wooed a Northern soldier to whom she was "indebted for some very remarkable effusions some withered flowers and last but not least for a great deal of very important information. I must avow the flowers and the poetry were comparatively valueless in my eyes." Boyd continued in her melodramatic style "I allowed but one thought to keep possession of my mind—the thought that I was doing all a woman could do for her country's cause."</p><p>After being betrayed by a lover she was arrested on July 29 1862 and spent a month in the Old Capitol Prison in Washington D.C. Exchanged a month later she lived with relatives in the South for a time. She was again arrested in June 1863 while on a visit to her birthplace of Martinsburg. Suffering from typhoid fever she was released on December 1 1863 and banished to the South. While attempting to sail to England on May 8 1864 she was arrested again as a Confederate courier. With the help of Lieutenant Sam Hardinge a Union naval officer she escaped to Canada and then to England where she and Hardinge married in August 1864. While in England Boyd had a stage career and published a highly fictionalized two-volume work entitled <i>Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison</i> 1867. She died in Wisconsin while touring the western United States telling her story.</p><p><b>Frederick or Frédéric Sears Grand d'Hauteville</b> 1838-1918 was born in Boston Massachusetts to a Swiss nobleman and American mother who returned to the United States while pregnant. Their marital conflict led to a contentious custody battle over Frederick in 1840 in a Philadelphia court which his mother won. D'Hauteville graduated from Harvard University in 1859. He was appointed volunteer aide-de-camp to General Nathaniel Banks in December 1861 and served at the Battle of Winchester in March 1862. Commissioned captain on June 30 1862 he served on General Samuel Crawford's staff including action at Cedar Mountain in August. At the Battle of Antietam in September his commanding general was wounded in the leg while talking to him and a few minutes later d'Hauteville himself was struck by a musket ball that was deflected by his boot but still seriously bruised his leg but. By December he returned to General Banks' staff in the Department of the Gulf. He resigned his commission on March 1 1863. He married Elizabeth Fish daughter of Hamilton Fish of New York in 1863 but she died the following year. In 1872 he married Susan Watts Macomb 1849-1928 with whom he had three children. She was the grand-daughter of Major General Alexander Macomb 1782-1841 general-in-chief of the U.S. Army from 1828 to 1841.</p><p><b>Additional Items</b></p><p>Five additional brief notes including one on letterhead marked "Newport" are loose in the notebook. Most were written by d'Hauteville and two are initialed "F d'H." This lot also includes cartes-de-visite of d'Hauteville and his commander Major General Nathaniel P. Banks and an albumen image of four officers who attended d'Hauteville's alma mater Harvard University and served with d'Hauteville in the Shenandoah Valley in 1862 from left to right Major James Savage Jr. 1832-1862 killed at Cedar Mountain; Captain Robert Gould Shaw 1837-1863 killed at Fort Wagner; Major Robert Morris Copeland 1830-1874; Captain Henry S. Russell 1838-1905.</p><p><b>Provenance</b></p><p>These materials descended in the d'Hauteville family until sold in September 2015.</p><p>The d'Hautevilles kept a home in Newport Rhode Island but they also lived much of the time at his family's palatial estate overlooking Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Approximately 1600 items from the family's estate were sold. Having been cleaned out the 30-room d'Hauteville chateau built in 1760 and its 64-acre estate is now on the market.</p><p><b>More Historic Background</b></p><p>Learning that Confederates had captured Front Royal Banks retreated north to Winchester. There he tried to slow Stonewall Jackson's pursuit leading to another lopsided Confederate victory on May 25. Fearing that Washington D.C. was exposed President Abraham Lincoln ordered General John C. Fremont's forces in western Virginia and General Irvin McDowell's forces in Fredericksburg to converge and trap Jackson. The Confederates demonstrated against Harper's Ferry on May 29 and 30 but General James Shields leading the only division McDowell actually sent recaptured Front Royal on May 30.</p><p>Over the next week as Jackson retreated the opposing cavalries met in several small skirmishes. In battles on June 8 and 9 at Cross Keys and Port Republic Jackson repulsed Fremont's and Shields' armies and stopped their pursuit. After initially considering a counterattack in the valley Jackson instead joined General Robert E. Lee at Richmond opposing General George B. McClellan's Army of the Potomac. Although Jackson's daring actions had threatened Washington D.C. and relieved pressure on Richmond Union armies resumed their occupation of Winchester and Front Royal.</p><p><b>Civil War Memoir of Frederick Sears Grand d'Hauteville </b>included with the flag.</p><p>The notebook is bound in black leather stamped in blind and gilt with marbled endpapers and lined pages. Titled in manuscript "The War of Secession 1861" this memoir was written between 1887 and d'Hauteville's death clearly compiled from notes or a diary made during the conflict. The gilt decoration is still bright and the leather and pages still fresh.</p><p>D'Hauteville's Memoir includes fascinating accounts of and commentary on the Battles of Winchester Cedar Mountain and Antietam. At Cedar Mountain D'Hauteville was particularly moved by the losses of the 2d Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers "one of the best in the whole Union Army… officered almost entirely by young men belonging to the leading families in the City of Boston. All of them were my friends & very dear friends. Their loss was enormous but they went to their deaths with sublime courage. There was no flinching there."</p><p><b>Complete Transcript of Civil War Memoir of Frederick Sears Grand d'Hauteville </b></p><p><i>The War of Secession 1861.</i></p><p><2> <i>I enlisted as "private" in the Fourth Battalion of Massachusetts State Infantry Militia at Boston Harbor Fort Independence in May 1861 & remained there for garrison duty and drill for one month. Afterwards drilled with the Battalion in Boston during the summer and autumn of that year.</i></p><p><i> Reported to Major General N P Banks commanding Fifth Corps Army of the Potomac at Darnstown Maryland about November 20 1861 as volunteer Aid de Camp without pay. Was appointed volunteer Captain & A.D.C. on General Banks Staff on December 5 1861. See General Orders no 70 Head Quarters Banks Division.</i></p><p><i> Was very busy learning duties during all the time that the division remained in Autumn field quarters at Darnestown and during the winter months at Frederick City.</i> <3></p><p><i>Darnestown Md. Headquarters of the Fifth Corps Army of the Potomac Banks Division November 1861.</i></p><p><i>Major General N. P. Banks Major General Commanding.</i></p><p><i>Major R Morris Copeland Asst. Adjt. Genl.</i></p><p><i>Major D. D. Perkins USA Chief Inspector.</i></p><p><i>Colonel S B Holabird Chief Quartermaster.</i></p><p><i>Colonel E S Beckwith Chief Commissary.</i></p><p><i>Captain Aberd U.S.A. Chief Engineer.</i></p><p><i>Captain C S Best Chief of Artillery.</i></p><p><i>Colonel John S Clark A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Captain Schreiber German A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Captain Schiffler German A.D.C. not speaking English</i></p><p><i>Captain Munther German A.D.C. not speaking English</i></p><p><i>Captain Strothers extra A.D.C. Old magazine writer Porter Crayon</i></p><p><i>Captain F. d'Hauteville Volunteer A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Dr. King Medical Director </i></p><p> <4></p><p><i> The Division left Darnestown for Frederick City Md on December 4 1861 arriving there on December 6<u>th</u>. Quarters were assigned to me in the law office of Colonel Bradley T. Johnson of the Confederate Army. All law books and papers were carefully looked after by me. Friends made during the winter at Frederick City: General Shriver & family & Colonel Maudsley & family.</i></p><p><i> The advance of the Army of the Shenandoah into Virginia began on February 26<u>th</u> Head Quarters Staff left Frederick City on February 27 reached Harper's Ferry on that day & crossed to Virginia by pontoon bridge. Visit from General McClellan & staff on February 28<u>th</u> Comte de Paris & Duc de Chartes ADC accompanied by the Prince de Joinville.</i></p><p><i> From Harpers Ferry marched to Winchester by Charlestown. Winchester occupied March 10. </i>Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall"<i> Jackson retiring down the Valley of </i><5> <i>of the Shenandoah.</i></p><p><i> March 22. First battle of Winchester or Kernstown in which General Jackson was defeated by General Shield's Division. General Shields wounded.</i></p><p><i> The pursuit of Jackson by General Banks entire Army Corps began on the following day by main road passing Cedar Creek. First camp at Strasburg.</i></p><p><i>April 1st advanced from Strasburg to Woodstock. Artillery duel Cothran Battery. Bridge at the narrow pass saved then on to Edenburg. Bridge burned by enemy. Rebuilt next day by Pennsylvania men. Very heavy storm.</i></p><p><i>April 17th Pursuit of Jackson resumed reached Mt Jackson General Shields Division leading. Next day to Newmarket frequent Artillery duels & rear guard & advanced guard skirmishes & picket firing. Lovely country.</i></p><p><i>April 25. Moved on to near Harrisburg</i> Harrisonburg. <6></p><p><i>May 5. Started on return towards Strasburg after many reports of impending battle with Jacskon who report said had been largely reinforced. Strasburg May 13.</i></p><p><i> <b>May 23. Colonel Kenly attacked & overwhelmed at Front Royal. The first news was received by <u>me</u> at Head Quarters at 4. P.M. General Banks was absent but Captain Brown of the 2d Mass was with me at the time.</b></i></p><p><i> May 24. Retreat commenced towards Winchester by Middletown Newtown & Kernstown.</i></p><p><i> May 25. Battle of Winchester. See General Banks Official Report. United States War of the Rebellion Series I Volume XII. Part 1 pages 550</i><i> 552 606</i><i>Personal notice of myself. In this battle my attention was called to the very gallant conduct of a Confederate General Officer in leading his men alone on horseback over the Hill on the Federal right to what appeared</i> <7> <i>certain death. </i><i>After the conclusion of the war I asked General Richard Taylor whose Brigade fought on the Confederate side if he could tell me the name of that gallant Officer. He replied very modestly that it was himself and that it gained for him the rank of Major General.</i></p><p><i> Banks defeated & much demoralized Army retreated in disorder to Williamsport & remained there until June 10.</i></p><p><i> On June 10 the army largely reinforced recrossed the Potomac & marched towards Winchester through Falling Waters and Bunker Hill.</i></p><p><i> <b>June 18. Reached Front Royal & met there the famous & very handsome rebel spy Belle Boyd who gave to me the rebel flag waving which she led the attack upon Kenly in May.</b></i></p><p><i> July 6. Advance again passing through Chester Gap Luray Amissville Little Washington</i> <8> <i>Sperryville Gaines Cross Roads to Fairfax Culpepper August 4<u>th</u>. </i></p><p><i> Although ordered several weeks previously by the War Department to report to General Crawford for assignment as Ass<u>t</u> Adj<u>t</u> Gen<u>l</u>to his Brigade General Banks short of Staff Officers could not spare me and he ordered me to remain with him until the Army reached Culpeper and it was not until August 4 that I was detached from his Staff.</i></p><p><i>Advanced towards Cedar Mountain on August 8 and crossed the Creek.</i></p><p><i> August 9 1862 Battle of Cedar Mountain. See Official Reports War of the Rebellion Series 1. Volume XII. Part II. Page 149 150.</i><i> Personal notice</i></p><p><i> During the battle my blankets strapped behind my saddle were pierced by one ball making more than a dozen holes.</i></p><p><9></p><p> <i>The battle of Cedar Mountain was one of the most sanguinary of modern times having in view the numbers engaged and the losses sustained. It should never have been fought. The Commander of the Corps </i>Banks<i> was a political General without military experience or training & the plan of the battle was thoroughly bad. Nothing but disaster could have been the result & there was no co-operation from beginning to end. The right flank of the attacking Brigade General Crawford was exposed to the fire of a largely superior force. No reconnaissance of the ground was made during all the morning previous to the enemy's advance while the troops were lying idle under arms & there were no reserves. Any advantage which the Union Army might have temporarily gained was therefore lost in advance before the battle began as it could not be held. </i></p><p><10></p><p><i>General Banks was afterwards charged by General Pope the Commander in Chief with disobedience of orders in forcing the battle. This accusation was unjust and was clearly an afterthought on the part of General Pope. As the Assistant Adjutant General of the advanced Brigade these written orders were shown to me by General Banks and no question whatever arose in the minds of everyone who saw them in regard to their purpose & intent. They were worded as follows & taken down in writing when they were given: "If the enemy advances attack him instantly & be reinforced from here." Culpepper. The enemy certainly forced the attack to which General Banks replied with disastrous results. The explicit orders were strictly obeyed but the disposition for the attack & the general management of the battle could not have been worse. </i></p><p><11></p><p> <b><i>General Pope afterwards claimed that General Banks should have attacked only with his "skirmishers" & wait to be reinforced on the following day. The written orders cannot be twisted into such a construction as this. An instant attack against any advance of the enemy was ordered early in the morning in writing and it was naturally inferred that the necessary orders for reinforcements were arranged for <u>then</u>.</i></b></p><p><b><i> The 2d Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers one of the best in the whole Union Army in General Gordon's Brigade was officered almost entirely by young men belonging to the leading families in the City of Boston. All of them were my friends & very dear friends. Their loss was enormous but they went to their deaths with sublime courage. There was no flinching there.</i></b></p><p><i> The retreat began on August 11<u>th</u> & the</i> <12> <i>Brigade reduced in numbers by exactly one half reached Culpepper on August 12.</i></p><p><i> August 18. fell back towards the Rappahannock.</i></p><p><i> August 19. Brandy Station & Beverley ford. Sharp skirmish across the river & very heavy rain.</i></p><p><i> August 20. Sulpher Springs. Very heavy shelling from Confederate batteries. Next day to Bealton Station by Fayetteville then Catletts. August 28. Kettle run. First day of second battle of Manassas.</i></p><p><i> August 30. Broad run.</i></p><p><i> August 31. Burned by urgent orders all wagons including ammunition. Attack expected at any moment by overwhelming forces. It did not come. Passed through Brentsville & forded the Occoquan to Bull Run & Centreville.</i></p><p><i> September 1<u>st</u> Battle of Chantilly. Generals Kearny & Stevens killed. The Brigade was on the extreme right of the</i> <13> <i>line & was not actually engaged.</i></p><p><i> September 2. on towards Alexandria.</i></p><p><i>September 3d camped near Fort Albany</i></p><p><i>September 4<u>th</u> Crossed the Potomac & encamped just outside of Washington on the Rockville turnpike.</i></p><p><i>September 5. Rockville.</i></p><p><i>September 9. Advanced along the Rockville Road & encamped near Middlebrook. The 124 125 & 128 Pennsylvania Regiments new were assigned to Crawford's Brigade.</i></p><p><i>September 10. Encamped near Damascus.</i></p><p><i>September 12 General Crawford in command of Division.</i></p><p><i>September 13 Crossed the Monocacy and encamped just outside Frederick City.</i></p><p><i>September 15 Battle of South Mountain Brigade acted as reserve & was not engaged. General Reno killed.</i> <14></p><p><i>September 16. Advanced during the day. Crossed the Antietam and encamped in fields just across the stream. Heavy rain at night.</i></p><p><i>September 17. Under arms at 5. AM and advanced. Was very promptly met by very heavy firing from both Artillery & infantry. The battle in our immediate front had its ups & downs all day long & the Regiments became very much broken up & formations lost. General Crawford was with the old Regiments & I was with the new ones from Pennsylvania. About noon when we were together under very heavy fire & close to the enemy General Crawford was wounded in the leg & a few minutes later a musket ball struck the calf of my leg but my heavy top boots stopped its entrance.</i> <15> <i>The leg however was very much bruised. Shortly before this <b>General Williams temporarily in command of the Corps General Mansfield having been killed early in the Battle gave an order for the Commanding Officer of a small Brigade which did not belong to his Command to charge the woods from which we had just been driven back.</b></i></p><p><b><i> I took the order under a very heavy fire but the Commanding Officer very properly questioned the authority.</i></b></p><p><b><i> To obey it would have been the destruction of his Brigade without the slightest chance for success.</i></b></p><p><i> Colonel Wilder Dwight of the 2d Massachusetts & a very dear friend was killed at Antietam.</i></p><p><b><i> From the eighth of August when we marched from Culpepper en route for Cedar Mountain until the battle of</i> </b><16><b> <i>Antietam on September 17<u>th</u> I had slept for four nights only under any kind of shelter. The weather had been very wet & officers & men slept on the grass without shelter tents. Everyone was starved during Pope's retreat as all supplies were cut off & our principal ration was the growing green corn. I remember very well picking up a piece of "hard tack" dropped in the mud by a soldier & eating it ravenously. The horses from want of fodder could hardly stand. </i></b><i>The result was a very severe attack of diarrhea which I could not shake off for many weeks.</i></p><p><i> For the official reports of General Crawford's Division at the Battle of Antietam see No 107 167 page 484 Official Records War of the Rebellion. Series 1. Vol XIX Part I Personal record.</i></p><p><17></p><p><i>After Antietam General Crawford's wound obliged him temporarily to relinquish his command & he ordered me to report to General Banks who was then in command of the Defences of Washington to help me to recover from an attack of jaundice which the acute diarrhea had promptly brought on. General Banks assigned me to the task of passing upon all applications for furlough for the whole army around Washington. My offices were on the whole of the ground floor in the historic building which had served as Head Quarters for the General in Chief since the beginning of the war. It was a very arduous & responsible duty as the orders from General Halleck were very positive. No leaves of absence were to be given except upon Surgeons certificate that there was danger to life or permanent disability.</i></p><p><i> I remained in Washington on duty for about a month. My dear Mother</i> <18> <i>my Grandmother & Mr Amory paid me a visit of a few days.</i></p><p><i> In the early part of October General Banks invited me to go with him as one of the Assistant Adjutant Generals in his Staff on a proposed expedition South by sea no one knew where. I accepted promptly as General Banks paid me the compliment of asking me first before any other officer to join his staff. The expedition was being fitted out in New York & the Head Quarters of the Command were located there. About October 15 General Banks paid an official visit to Boston and I went with him. My dear Mother was then far from well but upon the advice of Dr Warren I went back to New York as it was feared that by remaining with her & missing</i> <19> <i>the Expedition the worry & anxiety of my remaining near her would very likely do her more harm than good. On the evening of November 29 Mr Frank Davis brought me a telegram from Boston telling me that my dear Mother was dying and that all hope was gone. I was able to catch the night train & reached her bedside very early in the morning.</i></p><p><i> My darling mother was then unconcious & at half past nine on November 30 1862 she passed away.</i></p><p><i> About December 10 I returned to New York. General Banks Expedition having sailed I was ordered to report to General Andrews who was in charge of a number of regiments to be dispatched later on.</i></p><p><i> While with him I had charge of sanitary inspection duty among other things & I found that there was much irregularity which required correction.</i></p><p><i> On January 5<u>th</u> I was ordered by</i> <20> <i>General Andrews to report at once to General Banks & I sailed for New Orleans by way of Havana. I remained at New Orleans for about six weeks with nothing to do but office work & on occasion uneventful expedition up the Mississippi to Baton Rouge & elsewhere.</i></p><p><i> My resignation was offered on March 1st & accepted as my Mothers death & the consequent urgency of winding up her estate & other matters called me home.</i></p><p><i> I shall never cease to regret as long as I live that I did not remain in the Army until the end of the war.</i></p><p><21></p><p><i>Details.</i></p><p><i>Private Fourth Battalion Massachusetts State Militia May 1861.</i></p><p><i>Volunteer Aid de Camp to Major General N. P. Banks Commanding Division Army of the Potomac Darnestown November 1861. Rank of Captain Volunteer December 5 861 Frederick City M<u>d</u></i></p><p><i>Head Quarters Department of the Shenandoah February to July 1861.</i></p><p><i>Captain & Assistant Adjutant General N P Banks Commanding Department of Washington September 1862.</i></p><p><22></p><p><i>Assigned to duty with "Banks Expedition" as Assistant Adjutant General with others November 1862. Sailed for New Orleans Department of the Gulf January 5 1862</i></p><p><i>Resigned alas! March 1 1863.</i></p><p><i> During all my services with General Banks from Frederick City to Culpepper I always acted as his personal Aid de Camp. All his private & official papers & dispatches came under my notice & I occupied not only a very interesting but also a very responsible position on his Staff.</i></p><p><i> During the retreat of General Banks</i> <23> <i>Corps from Strasburg to the Potomac in the temporary absence of the Assistant Adjutant General Major R. Morris Copeland practically all the duties were performed by me & I think to the entire satisfaction of the Commanding General. Proof of this is forthcoming in the double offer of Generals Crawford & Gordon to accept the regular position of Assistant Adjutant General upon their Staff. Both of these Generals had recently been appointed to the command of Brigades in General Banks Army Corps & both were present during the retreat.</i></p><p><i> During all the spring months I alone in all the Army Corps was entrusted with the Government Cyphers. During General Pope's retreat I was one day sent for by Generals Pope & Banks to</i> <24> <i>put into cypher a very important dispatch to General McDowell with whom direct communication had been cut off by the enemy.</i></p><p><i> I was obliged to reply that during the severest part of the Battle of Cedar Mountain when I was in the greatest danger of being killed or captured at any moment I had felt it my duty to destroy the cypher which I tore up into a hundred or more very small pieces & swallowed some of them. My action was approved. I then offered to carry the orders unwritten myself to General McDowell if I could find him and take my chances.</i></p><p><i> My offer was accepted but while</i> <25> <i>the instructions were being prepared the advance of General McDowells Corps came in sight & I was relieved from a duty which would have put me in the greatest danger of capture or otherwise.</i></p>‎

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‎ELEVEN STAR AFIRST NATIONALA FLAG WITH SINGLE STAR ABONNIE BLUEA FIRST UNOFFICIAL CONFEDEDERATE FLAG VERSO‎

‎Confederate Flag Given by Infamous Spy Belle Boyd to a Union Officer‎

‎<p>"<i>June 18. Reached Front Royal & met there the famous & very handsome rebel spy Belle Boyd who gave to me the rebel flag waving which she led the attack upon Kenly in May.</i>"</p><p>The "stars and bars" circular canton pattern with eleven-stars was used for First National flags from July 2 1861 when Tennessee and North Carolina joined the Confederacy until November 28 1861 when stars were added for Missouri and Kentucky. The other side of this rare two-pattern configuration is a tribute to the "Bonnie blue flag that bears the single star" the unofficial first Confederate flag.</p><p>Frederic d'Hauteville's small autograph note has been loosely stitched to the flag: "<i>Confederate flag. Taken by F.S.G d<i>'</i>H. and given by him to E.S.F. in 1862. To be given to Freddie d'Hauteville when he is fifteen.</i>" His first wife Elizabeth Stuyvesant Fish died in 1863. Freddy his son by his second wife was born in 1873 thus dating his note about the second gifting of the flag to between 1873 and 1888. The flag remained in his family preserved in perfect condition until 2015 when contents from their Swiss castle were sold clearing the way for the property to be sold; it is now on the market for $60 million dollars.</p> <b>ELEVEN-STAR "FIRST NATIONAL" FLAG WITH SINGLE STAR "BONNIE BLUE" FIRST UNOFFICIAL CONFEDEDERATE FLAG VERSO.</b>Belle Boyd the "Siren of the Shenandoah" gave the flag to Captain Frederic Sears Grand d'Hauteville on June 18 1862 telling him that it was the flag she waived to urge on Confederate troops at the Battle of Front Royal a month earlier. D'Hauteville's 25-page autograph manuscript war memoir with his account of the gift of the flag quoted above is included. See below for complete transcript. With additional photographs and manuscripts. Homemade perhaps even by Boyd or a family member and used only briefly before being given to d'Hauteville the flag has been perfectly preserved retaining the short ribbons along its hoist and showing no tears holes fraying loss or staining. Over 5 x 3 feet. <p><b>Historical Background</b></p><p>D'Hauteville had joined General Nathaniel P. Banks' staff before Banks advanced south up the Shenandoah valley the Shenandoah river flows north into the Potomac at Harper's Ferry so you go "up" the valley to the south and "down" the valley to the north to Strasburg maneuvering against Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's army.</p><p>Belle Boyd had moved to Front Royal to stay with relatives when her hometown of Martinsburg West Virginia had been occupied by Union troops in March 1862. Shortly after her eighteenth birthday Boyd hid in a local hotel in Front Royal where she overheard General James Shields and his officers discussing orders to transfer his division to the Union army along the Rappahannock River in eastern Virginia. Boyd reportedly rode fifteen miles on horseback through Union lines to tell Confederate Colonel Turner Ashby of the reduced Union presence in Front Royal. When approximately 3000 of Jackson's men attacked the Union force occupying Front Royal on May 23 Boyd ran to meet Jackson's men as they advanced and urged them onward. The Union garrison approximately 1000 strong under the command of Colonel John R. Kenly of the Union 1st Maryland Volunteer Infantry was routed. Kenly was wounded and he and nearly 700 of his men were captured. Jackson later sent Boyd a note of gratitude for her role.</p><p><b>Robert Gould Shaw </b>1837-1863 another officer in Banks' command confirmed d'Hauteville's account. In a letter to his mother Shaw wrote "Perhaps you have seen some accounts of a young lady at Front Royal named Belle Boyd. There was quite a long and ridiculous letter about her copied into the 'Evening Post' the other day. I have seen her several times but never had any conversation with her. Other men who have talked with her tell me that she never asked for any information about our army or gave them the slightest reason to suppose her a spy; and they were probably as capable of judging as the correspondent who wrote about her. She gave Fred. D'Hauteville a very pretty Secession flag which she said she carried when she went out to meet Jackson's troops coming into Front Royal." Shaw went on to command an African-American regiment the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry which obtained fame in the Second Battle of Fort Wagner at Charleston Harbor on July 18 1863. Shaw died with many of his men that day and was immortalized in a memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens in Boston and in the 1989 film <i>Glory</i>.</p><p>That both d'Hauteville and Shaw believed Boyd's account that she waved this flag to encourage the Confederate attack demonstrates her ability to manipulate both men and narratives. In her own entertaining and exaggerated memoir Boyd later wrote "As I neared our line I waved my bonnet to our soldiers to intimate that they should press forward." Another key witness Henry Kyd Douglas 1838-1903 a member of Jackson's staff later recalled in his memoir seeing "the figure of a woman in white glide swiftly out of town" and that Boyd "seemed when I saw her to heed neither weeds nor fences but waved a bonnet as she came on." Whether she actually waived her bonnet or this flag or perhaps both at different moments during the battle that day she clearly gave it to d'Hauteville to curry favor and that apparently worked. Rather than being prosecuted for her role in aiding the Confederates in what was a disaster for the Union she was celebrated for her charm. Before being banished to England Boyd was arrested six or seven times and always managed with the help of gentlemanly Union officers to avoid the most serious consequences. Her seemingly innocuous flirtations apparently provided her with her greatest source of influence.</p><p><b>Isabella Marie "Belle" Boyd </b>1844-1900 was one of the most famous and notorious Confederate spies. After her father enlisted in the Confederate army Boyd became an espionage agent at the age of seventeen aiding the Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley. Forced from her home in Martinsburg West Virginia when Union troops occupied it she moved in with relatives in Front Royal Virginia. During the spring 1862 Valley Campaign she was a courier and provided valuable information to General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson. General Jackson reportedly made her a captain and honorary aide-de-camp on his staff. On one occasion she wooed a Northern soldier to whom she was "indebted for some very remarkable effusions some withered flowers and last but not least for a great deal of very important information. I must avow the flowers and the poetry were comparatively valueless in my eyes." Boyd continued in her melodramatic style "I allowed but one thought to keep possession of my mind—the thought that I was doing all a woman could do for her country's cause."</p><p>After being betrayed by a lover she was arrested on July 29 1862 and spent a month in the Old Capitol Prison in Washington D.C. Exchanged a month later she lived with relatives in the South for a time. She was again arrested in June 1863 while on a visit to her birthplace of Martinsburg. Suffering from typhoid fever she was released on December 1 1863 and banished to the South. While attempting to sail to England on May 8 1864 she was arrested again as a Confederate courier. With the help of Lieutenant Sam Hardinge a Union naval officer she escaped to Canada and then to England where she and Hardinge married in August 1864. While in England Boyd had a stage career and published a highly fictionalized two-volume work entitled <i>Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison</i> 1867. She died in Wisconsin while touring the western United States telling her story.</p><p><b>Frederick or Frédéric Sears Grand d'Hauteville</b> 1838-1918 was born in Boston Massachusetts to a Swiss nobleman and American mother who returned to the United States while pregnant. Their marital conflict led to a contentious custody battle over Frederick in 1840 in a Philadelphia court which his mother won. D'Hauteville graduated from Harvard University in 1859. He was appointed volunteer aide-de-camp to General Nathaniel Banks in December 1861 and served at the Battle of Winchester in March 1862. Commissioned captain on June 30 1862 he served on General Samuel Crawford's staff including action at Cedar Mountain in August. At the Battle of Antietam in September his commanding general was wounded in the leg while talking to him and a few minutes later d'Hauteville himself was struck by a musket ball that was deflected by his boot but still seriously bruised his leg but. By December he returned to General Banks' staff in the Department of the Gulf. He resigned his commission on March 1 1863. He married Elizabeth Fish daughter of Hamilton Fish of New York in 1863 but she died the following year. In 1872 he married Susan Watts Macomb 1849-1928 with whom he had three children. She was the grand-daughter of Major General Alexander Macomb 1782-1841 general-in-chief of the U.S. Army from 1828 to 1841.</p><p><b>Additional Items</b></p><p>Five additional brief notes including one on letterhead marked "Newport" are loose in the notebook. Most were written by d'Hauteville and two are initialed "F d'H." This lot also includes cartes-de-visite of d'Hauteville and his commander Major General Nathaniel P. Banks and an albumen image of four officers who attended d'Hauteville's alma mater Harvard University and served with d'Hauteville in the Shenandoah Valley in 1862 from left to right Major James Savage Jr. 1832-1862 killed at Cedar Mountain; Captain Robert Gould Shaw 1837-1863 killed at Fort Wagner; Major Robert Morris Copeland 1830-1874; Captain Henry S. Russell 1838-1905.</p><p><b>Provenance</b></p><p>These materials descended in the d'Hauteville family until sold in September 2015.</p><p>The d'Hautevilles kept a home in Newport Rhode Island but they also lived much of the time at his family's palatial estate overlooking Lake Geneva in Switzerland. Approximately 1600 items from the family's estate were sold. Having been cleaned out the 30-room d'Hauteville chateau built in 1760 and its 64-acre estate is now on the market.</p><p><b>More Historic Background</b></p><p>Learning that Confederates had captured Front Royal Banks retreated north to Winchester. There he tried to slow Stonewall Jackson's pursuit leading to another lopsided Confederate victory on May 25. Fearing that Washington D.C. was exposed President Abraham Lincoln ordered General John C. Fremont's forces in western Virginia and General Irvin McDowell's forces in Fredericksburg to converge and trap Jackson. The Confederates demonstrated against Harper's Ferry on May 29 and 30 but General James Shields leading the only division McDowell actually sent recaptured Front Royal on May 30.</p><p>Over the next week as Jackson retreated the opposing cavalries met in several small skirmishes. In battles on June 8 and 9 at Cross Keys and Port Republic Jackson repulsed Fremont's and Shields' armies and stopped their pursuit. After initially considering a counterattack in the valley Jackson instead joined General Robert E. Lee at Richmond opposing General George B. McClellan's Army of the Potomac. Although Jackson's daring actions had threatened Washington D.C. and relieved pressure on Richmond Union armies resumed their occupation of Winchester and Front Royal.</p><p><b>Civil War Memoir of Frederick Sears Grand d'Hauteville </b>included with the flag.</p><p>The notebook is bound in black leather stamped in blind and gilt with marbled endpapers and lined pages. Titled in manuscript "The War of Secession 1861" this memoir was written between 1887 and d'Hauteville's death clearly compiled from notes or a diary made during the conflict. The gilt decoration is still bright and the leather and pages still fresh.</p><p>D'Hauteville's Memoir includes fascinating accounts of and commentary on the Battles of Winchester Cedar Mountain and Antietam. At Cedar Mountain D'Hauteville was particularly moved by the losses of the 2d Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers "one of the best in the whole Union Army… officered almost entirely by young men belonging to the leading families in the City of Boston. All of them were my friends & very dear friends. Their loss was enormous but they went to their deaths with sublime courage. There was no flinching there."</p><p><b>Complete Transcript of Civil War Memoir of Frederick Sears Grand d'Hauteville </b></p><p><i>The War of Secession 1861.</i></p><p><2> <i>I enlisted as "private" in the Fourth Battalion of Massachusetts State Infantry Militia at Boston Harbor Fort Independence in May 1861 & remained there for garrison duty and drill for one month. Afterwards drilled with the Battalion in Boston during the summer and autumn of that year.</i></p><p><i> Reported to Major General N P Banks commanding Fifth Corps Army of the Potomac at Darnstown Maryland about November 20 1861 as volunteer Aid de Camp without pay. Was appointed volunteer Captain & A.D.C. on General Banks Staff on December 5 1861. See General Orders no 70 Head Quarters Banks Division.</i></p><p><i> Was very busy learning duties during all the time that the division remained in Autumn field quarters at Darnestown and during the winter months at Frederick City.</i> <3></p><p><i>Darnestown Md. Headquarters of the Fifth Corps Army of the Potomac Banks Division November 1861.</i></p><p><i>Major General N. P. Banks Major General Commanding.</i></p><p><i>Major R Morris Copeland Asst. Adjt. Genl.</i></p><p><i>Major D. D. Perkins USA Chief Inspector.</i></p><p><i>Colonel S B Holabird Chief Quartermaster.</i></p><p><i>Colonel E S Beckwith Chief Commissary.</i></p><p><i>Captain Aberd U.S.A. Chief Engineer.</i></p><p><i>Captain C S Best Chief of Artillery.</i></p><p><i>Colonel John S Clark A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Captain Schreiber German A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Captain Schiffler German A.D.C. not speaking English</i></p><p><i>Captain Munther German A.D.C. not speaking English</i></p><p><i>Captain Strothers extra A.D.C. Old magazine writer Porter Crayon</i></p><p><i>Captain F. d'Hauteville Volunteer A.D.C.</i></p><p><i>Dr. King Medical Director </i></p><p> <4></p><p><i> The Division left Darnestown for Frederick City Md on December 4 1861 arriving there on December 6<u>th</u>. Quarters were assigned to me in the law office of Colonel Bradley T. Johnson of the Confederate Army. All law books and papers were carefully looked after by me. Friends made during the winter at Frederick City: General Shriver & family & Colonel Maudsley & family.</i></p><p><i> The advance of the Army of the Shenandoah into Virginia began on February 26<u>th</u> Head Quarters Staff left Frederick City on February 27 reached Harper's Ferry on that day & crossed to Virginia by pontoon bridge. Visit from General McClellan & staff on February 28<u>th</u> Comte de Paris & Duc de Chartes ADC accompanied by the Prince de Joinville.</i></p><p><i> From Harpers Ferry marched to Winchester by Charlestown. Winchester occupied March 10. </i>Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall"<i> Jackson retiring down the Valley of </i><5> <i>of the Shenandoah.</i></p><p><i> March 22. First battle of Winchester or Kernstown in which General Jackson was defeated by General Shield's Division. General Shields wounded.</i></p><p><i> The pursuit of Jackson by General Banks entire Army Corps began on the following day by main road passing Cedar Creek. First camp at Strasburg.</i></p><p><i>April 1st advanced from Strasburg to Woodstock. Artillery duel Cothran Battery. Bridge at the narrow pass saved then on to Edenburg. Bridge burned by enemy. Rebuilt next day by Pennsylvania men. Very heavy storm.</i></p><p><i>April 17th Pursuit of Jackson resumed reached Mt Jackson General Shields Division leading. Next day to Newmarket frequent Artillery duels & rear guard & advanced guard skirmishes & picket firing. Lovely country.</i></p><p><i>April 25. Moved on to near Harrisburg</i> Harrisonburg. <6></p><p><i>May 5. Started on return towards Strasburg after many reports of impending battle with Jacskon who report said had been largely reinforced. Strasburg May 13.</i></p><p><i> <b>May 23. Colonel Kenly attacked & overwhelmed at Front Royal. The first news was received by <u>me</u> at Head Quarters at 4. P.M. General Banks was absent but Captain Brown of the 2d Mass was with me at the time.</b></i></p><p><i> May 24. Retreat commenced towards Winchester by Middletown Newtown & Kernstown.</i></p><p><i> May 25. Battle of Winchester. See General Banks Official Report. United States War of the Rebellion Series I Volume XII. Part 1 pages 550</i><i> 552 606</i><i>Personal notice of myself. In this battle my attention was called to the very gallant conduct of a Confederate General Officer in leading his men alone on horseback over the Hill on the Federal right to what appeared</i> <7> <i>certain death. </i><i>After the conclusion of the war I asked General Richard Taylor whose Brigade fought on the Confederate side if he could tell me the name of that gallant Officer. He replied very modestly that it was himself and that it gained for him the rank of Major General.</i></p><p><i> Banks defeated & much demoralized Army retreated in disorder to Williamsport & remained there until June 10.</i></p><p><i> On June 10 the army largely reinforced recrossed the Potomac & marched towards Winchester through Falling Waters and Bunker Hill.</i></p><p><i> <b>June 18. Reached Front Royal & met there the famous & very handsome rebel spy Belle Boyd who gave to me the rebel flag waving which she led the attack upon Kenly in May.</b></i></p><p><i> July 6. Advance again passing through Chester Gap Luray Amissville Little Washington</i> <8> <i>Sperryville Gaines Cross Roads to Fairfax Culpepper August 4<u>th</u>. </i></p><p><i> Although ordered several weeks previously by the War Department to report to General Crawford for assignment as Ass<u>t</u> Adj<u>t</u> Gen<u>l</u>to his Brigade General Banks short of Staff Officers could not spare me and he ordered me to remain with him until the Army reached Culpeper and it was not until August 4 that I was detached from his Staff.</i></p><p><i>Advanced towards Cedar Mountain on August 8 and crossed the Creek.</i></p><p><i> August 9 1862 Battle of Cedar Mountain. See Official Reports War of the Rebellion Series 1. Volume XII. Part II. Page 149 150.</i><i> Personal notice</i></p><p><i> During the battle my blankets strapped behind my saddle were pierced by one ball making more than a dozen holes.</i></p><p><9></p><p> <i>The battle of Cedar Mountain was one of the most sanguinary of modern times having in view the numbers engaged and the losses sustained. It should never have been fought. The Commander of the Corps </i>Banks<i> was a political General without military experience or training & the plan of the battle was thoroughly bad. Nothing but disaster could have been the result & there was no co-operation from beginning to end. The right flank of the attacking Brigade General Crawford was exposed to the fire of a largely superior force. No reconnaissance of the ground was made during all the morning previous to the enemy's advance while the troops were lying idle under arms & there were no reserves. Any advantage which the Union Army might have temporarily gained was therefore lost in advance before the battle began as it could not be held. </i></p><p><10></p><p><i>General Banks was afterwards charged by General Pope the Commander in Chief with disobedience of orders in forcing the battle. This accusation was unjust and was clearly an afterthought on the part of General Pope. As the Assistant Adjutant General of the advanced Brigade these written orders were shown to me by General Banks and no question whatever arose in the minds of everyone who saw them in regard to their purpose & intent. They were worded as follows & taken down in writing when they were given: "If the enemy advances attack him instantly & be reinforced from here." Culpepper. The enemy certainly forced the attack to which General Banks replied with disastrous results. The explicit orders were strictly obeyed but the disposition for the attack & the general management of the battle could not have been worse. </i></p><p><11></p><p> <b><i>General Pope afterwards claimed that General Banks should have attacked only with his "skirmishers" & wait to be reinforced on the following day. The written orders cannot be twisted into such a construction as this. An instant attack against any advance of the enemy was ordered early in the morning in writing and it was naturally inferred that the necessary orders for reinforcements were arranged for <u>then</u>.</i></b></p><p><b><i> The 2d Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers one of the best in the whole Union Army in General Gordon's Brigade was officered almost entirely by young men belonging to the leading families in the City of Boston. All of them were my friends & very dear friends. Their loss was enormous but they went to their deaths with sublime courage. There was no flinching there.</i></b></p><p><i> The retreat began on August 11<u>th</u> & the</i> <12> <i>Brigade reduced in numbers by exactly one half reached Culpepper on August 12.</i></p><p><i> August 18. fell back towards the Rappahannock.</i></p><p><i> August 19. Brandy Station & Beverley ford. Sharp skirmish across the river & very heavy rain.</i></p><p><i> August 20. Sulpher Springs. Very heavy shelling from Confederate batteries. Next day to Bealton Station by Fayetteville then Catletts. August 28. Kettle run. First day of second battle of Manassas.</i></p><p><i> August 30. Broad run.</i></p><p><i> August 31. Burned by urgent orders all wagons including ammunition. Attack expected at any moment by overwhelming forces. It did not come. Passed through Brentsville & forded the Occoquan to Bull Run & Centreville.</i></p><p><i> September 1<u>st</u> Battle of Chantilly. Generals Kearny & Stevens killed. The Brigade was on the extreme right of the</i> <13> <i>line & was not actually engaged.</i></p><p><i> September 2. on towards Alexandria.</i></p><p><i>September 3d camped near Fort Albany</i></p><p><i>September 4<u>th</u> Crossed the Potomac & encamped just outside of Washington on the Rockville turnpike.</i></p><p><i>September 5. Rockville.</i></p><p><i>September 9. Advanced along the Rockville Road & encamped near Middlebrook. The 124 125 & 128 Pennsylvania Regiments new were assigned to Crawford's Brigade.</i></p><p><i>September 10. Encamped near Damascus.</i></p><p><i>September 12 General Crawford in command of Division.</i></p><p><i>September 13 Crossed the Monocacy and encamped just outside Frederick City.</i></p><p><i>September 15 Battle of South Mountain Brigade acted as reserve & was not engaged. General Reno killed.</i> <14></p><p><i>September 16. Advanced during the day. Crossed the Antietam and encamped in fields just across the stream. Heavy rain at night.</i></p><p><i>September 17. Under arms at 5. AM and advanced. Was very promptly met by very heavy firing from both Artillery & infantry. The battle in our immediate front had its ups & downs all day long & the Regiments became very much broken up & formations lost. General Crawford was with the old Regiments & I was with the new ones from Pennsylvania. About noon when we were together under very heavy fire & close to the enemy General Crawford was wounded in the leg & a few minutes later a musket ball struck the calf of my leg but my heavy top boots stopped its entrance.</i> <15> <i>The leg however was very much bruised. Shortly before this <b>General Williams temporarily in command of the Corps General Mansfield having been killed early in the Battle gave an order for the Commanding Officer of a small Brigade which did not belong to his Command to charge the woods from which we had just been driven back.</b></i></p><p><b><i> I took the order under a very heavy fire but the Commanding Officer very properly questioned the authority.</i></b></p><p><b><i> To obey it would have been the destruction of his Brigade without the slightest chance for success.</i></b></p><p><i> Colonel Wilder Dwight of the 2d Massachusetts & a very dear friend was killed at Antietam.</i></p><p><b><i> From the eighth of August when we marched from Culpepper en route for Cedar Mountain until the battle of</i> </b><16><b> <i>Antietam on September 17<u>th</u> I had slept for four nights only under any kind of shelter. The weather had been very wet & officers & men slept on the grass without shelter tents. Everyone was starved during Pope's retreat as all supplies were cut off & our principal ration was the growing green corn. I remember very well picking up a piece of "hard tack" dropped in the mud by a soldier & eating it ravenously. The horses from want of fodder could hardly stand. </i></b><i>The result was a very severe attack of diarrhea which I could not shake off for many weeks.</i></p><p><i> For the official reports of General Crawford's Division at the Battle of Antietam see No 107 167 page 484 Official Records War of the Rebellion. Series 1. Vol XIX Part I Personal record.</i></p><p><17></p><p><i>After Antietam General Crawford's wound obliged him temporarily to relinquish his command & he ordered me to report to General Banks who was then in command of the Defences of Washington to help me to recover from an attack of jaundice which the acute diarrhea had promptly brought on. General Banks assigned me to the task of passing upon all applications for furlough for the whole army around Washington. My offices were on the whole of the ground floor in the historic building which had served as Head Quarters for the General in Chief since the beginning of the war. It was a very arduous & responsible duty as the orders from General Halleck were very positive. No leaves of absence were to be given except upon Surgeons certificate that there was danger to life or permanent disability.</i></p><p><i> I remained in Washington on duty for about a month. My dear Mother</i> <18> <i>my Grandmother & Mr Amory paid me a visit of a few days.</i></p><p><i> In the early part of October General Banks invited me to go with him as one of the Assistant Adjutant Generals in his Staff on a proposed expedition South by sea no one knew where. I accepted promptly as General Banks paid me the compliment of asking me first before any other officer to join his staff. The expedition was being fitted out in New York & the Head Quarters of the Command were located there. About October 15 General Banks paid an official visit to Boston and I went with him. My dear Mother was then far from well but upon the advice of Dr Warren I went back to New York as it was feared that by remaining with her & missing</i> <19> <i>the Expedition the worry & anxiety of my remaining near her would very likely do her more harm than good. On the evening of November 29 Mr Frank Davis brought me a telegram from Boston telling me that my dear Mother was dying and that all hope was gone. I was able to catch the night train & reached her bedside very early in the morning.</i></p><p><i> My darling mother was then unconcious & at half past nine on November 30 1862 she passed away.</i></p><p><i> About December 10 I returned to New York. General Banks Expedition having sailed I was ordered to report to General Andrews who was in charge of a number of regiments to be dispatched later on.</i></p><p><i> While with him I had charge of sanitary inspection duty among other things & I found that there was much irregularity which required correction.</i></p><p><i> On January 5<u>th</u> I was ordered by</i> <20> <i>General Andrews to report at once to General Banks & I sailed for New Orleans by way of Havana. I remained at New Orleans for about six weeks with nothing to do but office work & on occasion uneventful expedition up the Mississippi to Baton Rouge & elsewhere.</i></p><p><i> My resignation was offered on March 1st & accepted as my Mothers death & the consequent urgency of winding up her estate & other matters called me home.</i></p><p><i> I shall never cease to regret as long as I live that I did not remain in the Army until the end of the war.</i></p><p><21></p><p><i>Details.</i></p><p><i>Private Fourth Battalion Massachusetts State Militia May 1861.</i></p><p><i>Volunteer Aid de Camp to Major General N. P. Banks Commanding Division Army of the Potomac Darnestown November 1861. Rank of Captain Volunteer December 5 861 Frederick City M<u>d</u></i></p><p><i>Head Quarters Department of the Shenandoah February to July 1861.</i></p><p><i>Captain & Assistant Adjutant General N P Banks Commanding Department of Washington September 1862.</i></p><p><22></p><p><i>Assigned to duty with "Banks Expedition" as Assistant Adjutant General with others November 1862. Sailed for New Orleans Department of the Gulf January 5 1862</i></p><p><i>Resigned alas! March 1 1863.</i></p><p><i> During all my services with General Banks from Frederick City to Culpepper I always acted as his personal Aid de Camp. All his private & official papers & dispatches came under my notice & I occupied not only a very interesting but also a very responsible position on his Staff.</i></p><p><i> During the retreat of General Banks</i> <23> <i>Corps from Strasburg to the Potomac in the temporary absence of the Assistant Adjutant General Major R. Morris Copeland practically all the duties were performed by me & I think to the entire satisfaction of the Commanding General. Proof of this is forthcoming in the double offer of Generals Crawford & Gordon to accept the regular position of Assistant Adjutant General upon their Staff. Both of these Generals had recently been appointed to the command of Brigades in General Banks Army Corps & both were present during the retreat.</i></p><p><i> During all the spring months I alone in all the Army Corps was entrusted with the Government Cyphers. During General Pope's retreat I was one day sent for by Generals Pope & Banks to</i> <24> <i>put into cypher a very important dispatch to General McDowell with whom direct communication had been cut off by the enemy.</i></p><p><i> I was obliged to reply that during the severest part of the Battle of Cedar Mountain when I was in the greatest danger of being killed or captured at any moment I had felt it my duty to destroy the cypher which I tore up into a hundred or more very small pieces & swallowed some of them. My action was approved. I then offered to carry the orders unwritten myself to General McDowell if I could find him and take my chances.</i></p><p><i> My offer was accepted but while</i> <25> <i>the instructions were being prepared the advance of General McDowells Corps came in sight & I was relieved from a duty which would have put me in the greatest danger of capture or otherwise.</i></p> books‎

Bookseller reference : 24356.99

ABAA

Seth Kaller, Inc.
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Seth Kaller, Inc.]

€152,298.00 Buy

‎ELISABETH ANTEBI‎

‎Avec Lucifer.‎

‎Editions j'ai lu, l'aventure mysterieuse, 1973 , bon état, in12 format poche, 304 pages.‎

Bookseller reference : 6043

Livre Rare Book

Librairie des deux frères
Autreches France Francia França France
[Books from Librairie des deux frères]

€5.00 Buy

‎Elia Kazan director; John Steinbeck novel; Paul Osborn screenwriter; James Dean Raymond Massey Julie Harris Jo Van Fleet star‎

‎East of Eden Original photograph of James Dean and Julie Harris on the set of the 1955 film‎

‎Burbank CA: Warner Brothers 1955. Vintage reference photograph of actors James Dean and Julie Harris examining a small scale model of a farm on the set of the 1955 film. With holograph ink and pencil annotations identifying Harris and Dean to the verso. <br/><br/>Based on the 1952 novel by John Steinbeck about two brothers who struggle for the attentions and favor of their deeply religious emotionally troubled father. <br/><br/>Winner of Best Dramatic Film at Cannes and nominated for the Palme d'Or. Actress Jo Van Fleet would go on to win a Best Supporting Actress Oscar and the film was nominated for three more Academy Awards including Best Director Best Screenplay and the first ever posthumous acting nomination in Academy history for Dean's lead performance. <br/><br/>Set and shot on location in Monterey and Salinas California. <br/><br/>10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. <br/><br/>National Film Registry. Rosenbaum 1000. Scorsese A Personal Journey Through American Movies. Warner Brothers unknown books‎

Bookseller reference : 152321

ABAA

Royal Books, Inc.
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Royal Books, Inc.]

€465.35 Buy

‎Ellie's Elves of Broome Chenango District Order of the Eastern Star compilers‎

‎Ellie's Cook Book: a book of favorite recipes‎

‎Shawnee Mission KS: Circulation Service Inc. 1979. 1st Edition . Soft cover. Near Fine. Unlettered black comb binding very slightly soiled pictorial green covers. No names clean text. With index many regional ads. Recipes from the Broome County/ Binghamton NY area. 900 shelf <br/> <br/> Circulation Service, Inc. paperback‎

Bookseller reference : 053898

Biblio.com

Gil's Book Loft
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[Books from Gil's Book Loft]

€12.69 Buy

‎Elton Britt; Bob Miller; John Klenner; Darnell, Shelby: Editor‎

‎Elton Britt's Collection of Famous Recorded Songs, Including "There's a Star-Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere", Bluebird Record No. B-9000‎

‎34 pages. Includes brief bio and one-page black and white photo of Elton Britt, plus sheet music for piano, lyrics and guitar chords for these songs: Buddy Boy; Chime Bells; Darling What Do You Care; Driftwood On the River; Ev'rything But You; I'll Be Cryin' Over You; Missouri Joe; Patent Leather Boots; Pinto Pal; Rocky Mountain Lullaby; There's a Star Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere; There's So Much That I Forgot; Too Many Tears; Why Did You Leave Me Alone. Unmarked with somewhat above-average wear. Complete and intact. A worthy vintage copy of this great Elton Britt collectible. Book‎

MareMagnum

RareNonFiction.com
Ladysmith, CA
[Books from RareNonFiction.com]

€149.95 Buy

‎Elwood Marjorie / The Star Weekly Newspaper‎

‎Casseroles from the Star Weekly Kitchen / The Star Weekly Newspaper - Pamphlet No. 50 Cookbook / Cook Book / Recipes‎

‎Toronto Ontario: Toronto ON: The Star Weekly Newspaper No Date Circa 1963 1st Edition First Printing 1963. -----------stapled pamphlet a solid Very Good copy 12 pages including covers any image directly beside this listing is the actual book and not a generic photo. Later Printing of the first Edition. Soft Cover. Very Good see description. Illus. by Text Cover. Toronto, ON: The Star Weekly Newspaper , No Date ( Circa 1963 ), 1st Edition, First Printing Paperback‎

Bookseller reference : 157356

Biblio.com

Leonard Shoup
Canada Canadá Canadá Canada
[Books from Leonard Shoup]

€12.65 Buy

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