書籍販売業者の独立ポータルサイト

‎Famille‎

Main

ペアレントテーマ

‎Education‎
検索結果数 : 31,333 (627 ページ)

最初のページ 前ページ 1 ... 178 179 180 [181] 182 183 184 ... 247 310 373 436 499 562 625 ... 627 次ページ 最後のページ

‎DEMARLE MAURICE‎

‎LE LIVRE DE MON FILS ou l'initiation paternelle des petits garçons au problème sexuel‎

‎FLAMMARION. 1948. In-12 Carré. Broché. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. 125 pages- 1 figure en noir et blanc hors texte 21e mille‎

‎DEMARLE MAURICE‎

‎LE LIVRE DE MON FILS OU L'INITIATION PATERNELLE DES PETITS GARCONS AU PROBLEME SEXUEL.‎

‎FLAMMARION.. 1945.. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos abîmé, Intérieur acceptable. 125 pages. Ecriture au stylo sur la page de faux titre. Manques les coiffes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎Lettres préfaces de M. Monsaingeon, Chanoine Viollet, Le R.P. Tesson. Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : R150059044

‎DEMARLE MAURICE‎

‎LE LIVRE DE MON FILS ou l'initiation paternelle des petits garçons au problème sexuel‎

‎FLAMMARION. 1948. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 125 pages- 1 figure en noir et blanc hors texte. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎21e mille Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : R150214665

‎DEMARLE MAURICE ET DEMARLE-DAUSSEING MARIE.‎

‎LA GRANDE CONFIDENCE OU L'INITIATION MATERNELLE DES PETITES FILLES AU PROBLEME SEXUEL.‎

‎FLAMMARION.. 1946.. In-12 Carré. Broché. Etat d'usage. Couv. légèrement passée. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur acceptable. 167 pages. Etiquette sur le dos. Ecriture au stylo sur la page de garde et sur la page de titre. Tampon sur la page de titre. Lettres préfaces de Mme Jean Camus et M. le Chanoine Viollet.‎

‎DEMARLE MAURICE ET DEMARLE-DAUSSEING MARIE.‎

‎LA GRANDE CONFIDENCE OU L'INITIATION MATERNELLE DES PETITES FILLES AU PROBLEME SEXUEL.‎

‎FLAMMARION.. 1946.. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 167 pages. Etiquette sur le dos. Ecriture au stylo sur la page de garde et sur la page de titre. Tampon sur la page de titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎Lettres préfaces de Mme Jean Camus et M. le Chanoine Viollet. Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : R150059043

‎DEMELIUS, Heinrich‎

‎Eheliches Güterrecht im spätmittelalterlichen Wien.‎

‎Wien, Böhlau, 1970. 140 S. OKart.‎

‎Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 265.‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 618483

‎DEMELIUS, Heinrich‎

‎Eheliches Güterrecht im spätmittelalterlichen Wien.‎

‎Wien, Böhlau, 1970. 140 S. OKart.‎

‎Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 265.‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 258269

‎Dementi Wayne Wayne Dementi Elisabeth Dementi Corrine Hudgins Family Dementi‎

‎Celebrate Richmond‎

‎Very Good. Used book in very good condition. Some cover wear may contain a few marks. 100% guaranteed. 053120 unknown‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 0875171095[vg] ISBN : 0875171095 9780875171098

Biblio.com

allianz
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: allianz]

€ 13.33 購入

‎Dementi Wayne Wayne Dementi Elisabeth Dementi Corrine Hudgins Family Dementi‎

‎Celebrate Richmond‎

‎Dietz Press. Used - Very Good. Great condition for a used book! Minimal wear. Dietz Press unknown‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : GRP74636569 ISBN : 0875171095 9780875171098

Biblio.com

Better World Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Better World Books]

€ 5.47 購入

‎Demetrios Church Family St.‎

‎Mostly Greek: Favorite Recipes of the St. Demetrios Church Family‎

‎CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. Paperback. VERY GOOD. Light rubbing wear to cover spine and page edges. Very minimal writing or notations in margins not affecting the text. Possible clean ex-library copy with their stickers and or stamps. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 3198557371 ISBN : 144867848X 9781448678488

Biblio.com

Discover Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Discover Books]

€ 11.39 購入

‎Demetrios Church Family‎

‎Mostly Greek : Favorite Recipes of the St. Demetrios Church Family‎

‎CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 2009. Paperback. 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. At ThriftBooks our motto is: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : G144867848XI4N00 ISBN : 144867848X 9781448678488

Biblio.com

ThriftBooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: ThriftBooks]

€ 16.37 購入

‎Demetrios Church Family St‎

‎Mostly Greek: Favorite Recipes of the St. Demetrios Church Family‎

‎CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 2009-08-17. Paperback. Good. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : SONG144867848X ISBN : 144867848X 9781448678488

Biblio.com

Ergodebooks
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Ergodebooks]

€ 19.45 購入

‎DEMOLOMBE (Charles)‎

‎TRAITÉ DES SUCCESSIONS, t. XIII à XVII des Cours de Code Napoléon‎

‎demi chagrin vert foncé, plats couverts d’une toile enduite effet chagrin, tit. & tom. dorés souligné encadrés par filets dorés, dos à 4 nerfs soulignés par fers estampés à froid, caissons ornés de fleurons centraux dorés, au chiffre de « M. BOULAY (Georges) » qui a obtenu le 2e prix en Droit international public du Concours de 1891 2e année, coiffes soulignées par fers estampés à froid, sur le 1er plat couronnes de lauriers dorées avec au milieu “Donné à titre de prix par la Faculté de droit de Nancy”, plats encadrés par plusieurs fers estampés à froid, tr. mouchetées, (très lég. épidermures sur dos, feuilles lég. jaunies), très bon état‎

‎Demonque, Marcel ; Guéron, Goerges ; Bour, Henri ; Bresard, Suzanne :‎

‎Prospective. Publication du centre d’études prospectives (Association Gaston Berger). Numéro 8 (Octobre 1961) : L’enfant et l’avenir.‎

‎Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1961 ; in-8, broché ; 8 ff. , 120 pp. , 8 pp. d’extraits des statuts sur papier bleu.‎

‎cachet de bibliotheque dispersée. Exemplaire en bon état.‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 5043

Livre Rare Book

Librairie Ancienne Clagahé
Saint Symphorien d’Ozon France Francia França France
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Librairie Ancienne Clagahé]

€ 20.00 購入

‎DeMont, John‎

‎Citizens Irving: K.C. Irving and His Legacy - The Story of Canada's Wealthiest Family‎

‎253 pages. Index. Footnotes. "Sheds fresh light on this secretive 92-year-old, known simply as K.C., who has emerged victorious over small competitors, faced down multinational oil companies, and battled provincial and federal governments in his drive for weath and power." - from dust jacket. Light wear. Prior owners's details upon front free endpaper, otherwise unmarked. A quality copy. Book‎

‎DeMont, John [Signed]‎

‎Citizens Irving: K.C. Irving and His Legacy - The Story of Canada's Wealthiest Family‎

‎Signed, without inscription, by author upon title page. ix, [2], 2-253, [1] pages. Index. Footnotes. "Sheds fresh light on this secretive 92-year-old, known simply as K.C., who has emerged victorious over small competitors, faced down multinational oil companies, and battled provincial and federal governments in his drive for weath and power." - dust jacket. Clean, bright and unmarked with very light wear. A high-quality copy Book‎

‎Demorest's Family Magazine‎

‎Demorest's Magazine Portrait Album: an Unrivalled Collection of Two Hundred Fine Portraits of Famous Men and Women of all Eras and Every Land from Demorest's Family Magazine‎

‎New York: Demorest's Family Magazine. Good. 1898. Hardcover. Hardcover no dustjacket. 16mo. Maroon boards. A portrait album published by Demorest's Magazine; subscribers were instructed to cut out portraits published in the magazine and glue them into the album. This volume has been filled entirely; portraits range from Shakespeare to Horace Greeley. Book is in Fair condition; rear board is separated from spine and boards are heavily worn and rubbed Front board has a circular white stain. There are several tears to cloth particularly around spine. Corners are bumped. Interior is browning and worn and one page has a 2" tear to bottom edge. Binding is tight although boards are loose. In protective plastic. Unpaginated. . Demorest's Family Magazine hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 11062

Biblio.com

KULTURAs books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: KULTURAs books]

€ 26.65 購入

‎Demos John‎

‎A Little Commonwealth: Family Life in Plymouth Colony‎

‎London: Oxford University Press 1971. Reprint. Trade Paperback. Near Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7�" - 9�" tall. xvi 201 pp. Twenty-fourth printing. Inside surface of covers browning. Minor shelfwear to covers. Some highlighting to pages 135-178. Oxford University Press paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 010154 ISBN : 0195013557 9780195013559

Biblio.com

Persephone's Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Persephone's Books]

€ 4.23 購入

‎Demos John‎

‎A Little Commonwealth: Family Life in Plymouth Colony‎

‎London: Oxford University Press 1976. Reprint. Trade Paperback. Near Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7�" - 9�" tall. xvi 201 pp. Previous owner name on inside of front cover. Bookstore label on front free endpaper. Inside surface of covers browning. Minor shelfwear to covers. Some highlighting to first 11 pages. Oxford University Press paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 001291 ISBN : 0195013557 9780195013559

Biblio.com

Persephone's Books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Persephone's Books]

€ 4.23 購入

‎Demos John‎

‎Little Commonwealth‎

‎London England: Oxford University Press 1980. Book. Good . Trade Paperback. Good trade paperback. Stamp on first page of book. May be some rubbing bumping and creasing to edges corners and spine of book. Overall a nice tight copy. Oxford University Press Paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : EH2209 ISBN : 0195013557 9780195013559

Biblio.com

Snowball Bookshop
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Snowball Bookshop]

€ 3.38 購入

‎Demoss Arthur‎

‎The Family Album: 1975 Edition‎

‎Broadman & Holman Publishers 1975. Unabridged. Hard Cover. Fine. Fine in Very Good jacket Fine in very good dust jacket. <br/><br/> Broadman & Holman Publishers hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 00508 ISBN : 0879810661 9780879810665

Biblio.com

Melissa E Anderson
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Melissa E Anderson]

€ 5.08 購入

‎DeMoss Arthur & Nancy Edited by‎

‎The Family Album‎

‎Old Tappan N.J.: Fleming H. Revell Company. VG/NONE. 1969. Hardcover. Brown leather-look binding with gilt lettering on the spine is clean book is straight & tight. The interior is completely free of marks or tears. There is a bit of rubbing at the spine ends and corners. An inspirational book illustrated with beautiful color photographs. ; Color Illustrations; 10 1/4" x 7 1/4"; 177 pages . Fleming H. Revell Company hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 8745

Biblio.com

Authors & Artists
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Authors & Artists]

€ 10.97 購入

‎Dempster,Nigel‎

‎Heiress : The Story of Christina Onassis‎

‎Christina Onassis lived,she once said,in a world where everything shimmered.Not yet embarked on her playgirl path,not yet in possession of the fortune that would make her the richest woman on earth,the future beckoned brilliantly.She was seventeen years old,and she would never be happy again. The world followed the tragic tale of Christina Onassis:her childhood in a charmed world of pampered neglect,with her parent"s affection scrawled on postcards and wrapped in second-hand hugs from passing friends;her spoiled,beautiful mother"s quickie divorce and remarriage to an English peer,her father"s scandalous liaisons with Maria Callas and Jackie Kennedy;the violent deaths of her beloved aunt Eugenie Niarchos and her brother Alexander,the battle of wills with her father,and her escape into the international jet set;her inheritance of his empire,which she ruled with the ruthless verve of a true Onassis;and her own long odyssey in search of happiness,ending with sudden death in Argentina,away from her fourth husband and the child she loved so much. Christina"s story - a story of money,sex,drama and intrigue among the very rich - reached out to millions of people.Yet the woman herself,strong and passionate,remained a mystery. Dempster,the gossip columnist for the Daily Mail,knows her story intimately.His Heiress is compulsive reading,packed with new revelations.But it is more than simply an expose.It is a study of wealth and power,and of the woman who wielded both in a fierce hunt for love.s Book‎

‎Dempster,Nigel‎

‎Heiress : The Story of Christina Onassis‎

‎Christina Onassis lived,she once said,in a world where everything shimmered.Not yet embarked on her playgirl path,not yet in possession of the fortune that would make her the richest woman on earth,the future beckoned brilliantly.She was seventeen years old,and she would never be happy again. The world followed the tragic tale of Christina Onassis:her childhood in a charmed world of pampered neglect,with her parent"s affection scrawled on postcards and wrapped in second-hand hugs from passing friends;her spoiled,beautiful mother"s quickie divorce and remarriage to an English peer,her father"s scandalous liaisons with Maria Callas and Jackie Kennedy;the violent deaths of her beloved aunt Eugenie Niarchos and her brother Alexander,the battle of wills with her father,and her escape into the international jet set;her inheritance of his empire,which she ruled with the ruthless verve of a true Onassis;and her own long odyssey in search of happiness,ending with sudden death in Argentina,away from her fourth husband and the child she loved so much. Christina"s story - a story of money,sex,drama and intrigue among the very rich - reached out to millions of people.Yet the woman herself,strong and passionate,remained a mystery. Dempster,the gossip columnist for the Daily Mail,knows her story intimately.His Heiress is compulsive reading,packed with new revelations.But it is more than simply an expose.It is a study of wealth and power,and of the woman who wielded both in a fierce hunt for love. Book‎

‎Dempster,Nigel‎

‎Heiress : The Story of Christina Onassis‎

‎Christina Onassis "A story of money, sex, drama and intrique amongst the very rich." LARGE TYPE edition 264p + plates. Clean. tight copy, final end paper missing and a single library "withdrawn" stamp. Ex-Library‎

‎Denay Jessica‎

‎The Hot Mom's Handbook‎

‎Nashville TN: Naked Ink 2006. A nice reading copy. Pages are clean and bright. Binding is tight. Book and jacket show some shelfwear. No jacket pictorial hardcover. First Edition 1st printing. Pictorial Hard Cover. Very Good -/No Jacket. Naked Ink Hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 057312 ISBN : 1595558519 9781595558510

Biblio.com

after-words bookstore
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: after-words bookstore]

€ 6.98 購入

‎DENDIAS (ChristosM.)‎

‎LE DIVORCE COMME FAIT SOCIAL EN GRÈCE, [Mémoire de D.E.S. d’Histoire], Université de droit, d’économie et des sciences sociales de Paris (Paris2)‎

‎, Paris, [non renseigné] 1976, A4, br., lettre de l’auteur demandant un délai supplémentaire pour déposer son mémoire avant la soutenance, présence du feuillet de convocation avec date de soutenance, d’un feuille établissant une liste de noms d’étudiants ou doctorants et mentionnant quelques titres de thèse pour les années 1974 et 1975, trois feuillets de prise de notes en vue de la soutenance du présent mémoire, (lég. mq. de finition notamment dans la taille des feuilles reliées qui n’est pas homogène, couv. passée), intérieur très frais, [Cet ouvrage provient de la bibliothèque personnelle du professeur Jean Carbonnier (1908-2003)], 90-[13]ff.‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 47990

‎DENDIAS (Christos M.)‎

‎LE DIVORCE COMME FAIT SOCIAL EN GRÈCE, [Mémoire de D.E.S. d’Histoire], Université de droit, d’économie et des sciences sociales de Paris (Paris 2)‎

‎br., lettre de l’auteur demandant un délai supplémentaire pour déposer son mémoire avant la soutenance, présence du feuillet de convocation avec date de soutenance, d’un feuille établissant une liste de noms d’étudiants ou doctorants et mentionnant quelques titres de thèse pour les années 1974 et 1975, trois feuillets de prise de notes en vue de la soutenance du présent mémoire, (lég. mq. de finition notamment dans la taille des feuilles reliées qui n’est pas homogène, couv. passée), intérieur très frais, [Cet ouvrage provient de la bibliothèque personnelle du professeur Jean Carbonnier (1908-2003)]‎

‎Dendy P. P.‎

‎Cambridge Problems in Physics‎

‎Cambridge University Press 1979. First Edition Seco. Paperback. Used; Good. Edition: First Edition Seco. <p><i><strong>Fast Dispatch. Expedited UK Delivery Available. Excellent Customer Service. </strong></i> <br/><br/>Bookbarn International Inventory #3199530</p> Cambridge University Press paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 3199530 ISBN : 0521227305 9780521227308

Biblio.com

Bookbarn International
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Bookbarn International]

€ 4.00 購入

‎DENEUVILLE J.B.‎

‎Le Nouveau Trésor des Familles, ou Guide journalier du français.‎

‎DENEUVILLE M. 7ème édition. 1868. In-8. Cartonnage d'éditeurs. Etat d'usage, Couv. défraîchie, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 478 pages. Tampon sur page de titre. Ouvrage déboité. Mors fendus et coiffes usées. Dos fané.. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎Véritable Encyclopédie renfermant tout ce que l'homme et la femme ont de plus plus précieux à connaitre, à faire et à conserver dans la vie pratique et sociale. Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : RO80046815

‎Dengate Stephen‎

‎Improving Levels of Attainment in Science Croners manual for heads of science‎

‎Croner CCH Group Ltd 1998. Paperback. Used; Good. <p><i><strong>Fast Dispatch. Expedited UK Delivery Available. Excellent Customer Service. </strong></i> <br/><br/>Bookbarn International Inventory #3045991</p> Croner CCH Group Ltd paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 3045991 ISBN : 185524473x 9781855244733

Biblio.com

Bookbarn International
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Bookbarn International]

€ 4.83 購入

‎DENIS DE ROUGEMONT‎

‎L' AMOUR ET L' OCCIDENT‎

‎EDITION 10/18 N°0034/0035. 1962. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 444 pages.Plusieurs années d' édition disponibles. Couverture illustrée en couleur.. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : RO90000033

‎DENIS SONET‎

‎REUSSIR NOTRE COUPLE.‎

‎DROGUET & ARDANT. 1997. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 169 pages. Premier plat illustré en couleurs. Nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc de Bernard Debelle. 2 illustrations en couleurs dépliantes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

‎Classification Dewey : 306.8-Mariage et famille‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : R260158737

‎DENIS VASSE‎

‎L'homme et l'argent.‎

‎2008 Seuil, 2008, 169 pages, in 8 broché, très bon état / état neuf.‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 15831 ISBN : 2020967367

‎Denise Kennedy‎

‎I Wish I Were‎

‎<p>"Reach out and discover the joy this book will bring you. It will touch your heart-over and over again. A perfect gift you'll want to share with someone special." -Moya Brennan the voice of Clannad</p><p>"I Wish I Were" is a beautiful poem expressing the precious moments of love throughout an ordinary day. From the pillow to the paper to the simplicity of the unfolding day Denise brings home the warmth that can lie in companionship.</p><p>Brought to life by Deirdre O'Neill's stunning illustrations this is a book you will treasure. The perfect gift for a child or partner to a husband or wife! 28 Full-colour pages.</p><p>from the back cover</p> Amo Productions paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : biblio452 ISBN : 0954099516 9780954099510

‎Dennett Family Letters‎

‎Correspondence of the Dennett family of Kittery York County Maine members of the United States Navy includes Lieutenant Commander Ralph Earle Dennett and sons Lieutenant Commander Armistead Dennett & Midshipman & Naval Engineer William A. Dennett 1910-1959‎

‎<p>863 letters 2569 manuscript pp. dated 1910-1959 with 317 pieces of ephemera including postcards telegrams calling cards invitations printed material documents manuscript notes newspaper clippings greeting cards used envelopes etc.</p><p> The correspondence in this collection includes but is not limited to the following: 223 incoming letters to Lieut. Alexander Dennett father of Lieut. Comdr. Ralph E. Dennett many from his son Ralph; 40 outgoing letters of Elizabeth Dennett wife of Ralph E. Dennett to her father-in-law Alexander Dennett; 235 outgoing letters of Ralph E. Dennett mostly to his father or sons and 307 incoming letters to him; Lieut. Armistead Dennett son of Ralph E. Dennett 45 outgoing letters and 8 incoming letters mostly to his father or brother; William Dennett brother of Ralph E. Dennett 12 outgoing letters to their father Alexander Dennett; and Midshipman William A. Dennett son of Ralph E. Dennett 32 outgoing letters and 284 incoming letters many from his father and brother as well as friends and associates. </p><p> The remaining letters and many of the incoming letters to the Dennett's are written to and from family members friends or associates of the Dennett family including Louise Howard Dennett wife of Armistead Dennett and her mother Jill Noble Howard of Round Bay Maryland; "Bunny" Daigle Dennett wife of William A. Dennett and her mother Mrs. L. Daigle of Portsmouth New Hampshire; Dr. John Dennett of Phoenix Arizona an uncle; as well as friends of William A. Dennett: Edmond C. Tarbold Lydia Sawyer Florence A. Paul and Lois S. Gimmi; and friends of Ralph E. Dennett: Alberta Carolyn and Charlie.</p><p><b>Dennett Family of Kittery York County Maine</b></p><p> Alexander Dennett was born 10 November 1811 at Kittery Maine and died 6 May 1889 in Kittery. He was a farmer and was educated in the common schools. At the age of 19 he moved to York Maine where he eventually conducted a general store and owned coasting vessels. He moved back to Kittery and lived on the ancestral homestead until his death. During the Civil War he was appointed inspector of timber at the navy yard. Politically he was a Whig in early life a Republican afterward. He was a trial justice for many years; represented his district in the legislature in 1849-50-51; and was a delegate to the convention when the Free Soil and Whig Parties fused when the Republican Party was organized. Alexander was frequently moderator of town meetings and selectman of the town. He was active in good works and interested in the great questions of the day and an enthusiastic supporter the anti-slavery and temperance movements. He was a member of the Sons of Temperance and was active in the Methodist Episcopal Church being a charter member of the Second Methodist Episcopal church of Kittery. He married Mary Kingsbury Remick 1819-1878 and together they had at least six children: Ellen Miriam Elizabeth John Sarah Mary Alice and Alexander who was the father of Ralph Earle Dennett.</p><p> Lieut. Alexander Dennett of the U.S. Coast Guard was born 13 April 1853 at York Village York Maine and died 24 December 1934 at Kittery Maine. His son Ralph was the only heir and executor. Alexander was educated in the public schools Eliot Academy and various private schools. In 1878 he entered the U. S. Revenue Cutter Service as second assistant engineer and was stationed in New York at the office of Consulting Engineer Charles E. Emery. He and his wife resided at a number of locations during his naval career lived in Boston Portland Bucksport Bath Castine Eastport Mobile Baltimore and Somerville while Dennett was attached to vessels <i>William H. Crawford</i> <i>John A. Dix</i> <i>Thomas Ewing</i> <i>Albert Gallatin</i> <i>Woodbury</i> with headquarters at or near these places. He later made first assistant engineer in 1890 and served on the <i>Hannibal Hamlin</i> in 1893. He continued on this ship with the Coast Guard until 1895 when he retired from active labor making his home at Kittery and Thomasville Georgia.</p><p> He was a Republican in politics and had been a member of the school committee for a number of years and superintendent of schools. He was a prominent member of the Second Christian church. He married first in 1883 to Sarah Eva Paul 1856-1899 daughter of Warrington and Sarah A.E. Paul. Together Lieut. Alexander and his wife Sarah had at least three children William A. Dennett 1886- Ralph Earle Dennett 1891- and Mary Elizabeth Dennett 1894- </p><p> Sara Eva Paul Dennett died on 9 June 1899. After the death of his first wife he was married a second time to Josephine E. Cox only daughter of Carpenter Joseph Cox U.S.N. retired. Josephine died in 1917 Alexander outlived both his wives. He died in 1934.</p><p> William A. Dennett 1885-1911 Alexander Dennett's oldest son graduated Cornell University in 1907 in the mechanical engineering course and died at Kittery MEof typhoid fever. He worked at Holyoke and New York City for the Santa Fe Sugar Plantation San Pedro de Maconic San Domingo. </p><p> Alexander's fourth child Mary Elizabeth Dennett 1893-1895 died young of congestion of the lungs.</p><p> Lieut. Alexander Dennett's third child was Lt. Comdr. Ralph Earle Dennett USN. He was born 30 July 1890 at Kittery York County Maine and died in February 1986. Prior to entering the Naval Academy he attended Kittery High School and the Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter New Hampshire. He attended the Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland. He lived at Upper Darby Pennsylvania at the time of the 1930 Census. When his wife Elizabeth died in 1943 he was stationed at the Portsmouth Navy Yard a position he had held since 1939.</p><p> Ralph Earle Dennett married Elizabeth Armistead. She was born 3 September 1889 in Virginia. The couple married 4 December 1920 at Washington D.C. Elizabeth died 16 May 1943. Together Ralph and his wife Elizabeth had at least two children: Armistead Dennett and William A. Dennett. After the death of his wife Ralph married a second time to Josephine Cox daughter of Joseph Cox and Joanna Hurd. They married 28 August 1901 at Kittery Maine.</p><p> Ralph Dennett's oldest son was Lieut. Comdr. Armistead Dennett. He was born about 1922; attended Kittery Schools and Portsmouth High School; and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland in 1941 where he took postgraduate course in ordnance. He served aboard the <i>USS Benson </i>two years in the Mediterranean on destroyers and was a veteran WWII serving in the Pacific theater on a destroyer that was hit by a kamikaze. He later became Commander on several ships including the <i>USS Wallace L. Lind</i> DD-703 1958-1960.</p><p> Armistead Dennett married Louise Howard. Armistead and his wife had at least one child a daughter Sarah Dennett who was born in May 1948.</p><p> Ralph Dennett's second son was William A. Dennett. He was born in 1928 and died on 5 January 2013. Like most of the men in his family he joined the Navy and reached the rank of midshipman 4th class. He graduated from Portsmouth High School in 1944 and attended the University of New Hampshire prior to entering the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis Class of 1949. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT in 1951 with degrees in both naval architecture and marine engineering. After graduation he was employed by Newport News Shipbuilding and later retired from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in 1987 after 37 years of government service. He was a member of the Kittery Point Yacht Club the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers and several other professional organizations. He enjoyed sailing locally as well as having substantial blue water experience participating in both the Monhegan and Bermuda races. He was an expert navigator well skilled in celestial navigation. </p><p> William A. Dennett married Mary Irene "Bunny" Daigle of Portsmouth New Hampshire on 9 September 1950 in Maine. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Daigle. Bunny attended the Vesper George School of Art in Boston. Together they had at least one son John A. Dennett.</p><p> Another Dennett family member who wrote some of the letters in this collection is Dr. John Dennett. He was born in 1869 in Maine. He was a first cousin of Ralph E. Dennett son of his father's brother Capt. John Dennett U.S.C.G. He attended Harvard University and Harvard Medical College. After medical training he worked at Boston General Hospital until developing tuberculosis. In an attempt to regain his health he first moved to Santa Fe then arrived in Phoenix in 1895. Finding initial work as doctor at the Congress Mine he remained there until 1905 when it closed. On August 20 1902 he married Louise Gage niece of the owner of the Congress Mine. After work with the Congress Mine Dennett moved to the Silverbell Mine west of Tucson where he worked until 1910 when the family moved to Phoenix. After the move to Phoenix Dr. Dennett stopped practicing medicine and entered business. He became the manager for a creamery Hassayampa Creamery located at 5th Ave and Jackson St. and later became involved in the manufacturing of evaporated milk. Between 1911 and 1923 both Dr. and Mrs. Dennett were active in business and social activities in Phoenix. Dr. Dennett was president of the Rotary Club active with the Phoenix Chamber of Commerce and local Republican Party politics. He died in San Diego California on October 17 1957 at the age of 88.</p><p><b>Sample Letters:</b></p><p> Ralph Earle Dennett wrote his father Alexander Dennett 162 letters between the years 1909 and 1931. The early letters show Ralph attending school at the Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland and received his first command during WWI. He writes his father about the academy and life at the academy and his activities there when he goes out on ships for exercises. He also writes about his various ports of call and the various ships he is assigned to and what he is allowed to tell that the censors won't scrub:</p><p>"USS Washington Hampton Rds. January 2 1912</p><p>Dear Mother and Dad -</p><p> Tomorrow at ten we clear the harbor for another sea trip of uncertain duration they don't have mail boxes at sea the'fore I write while I may. The Admiral expects to take the rest of the little flock with him and join the fleet 400 miles at sea or thereabouts and then we're all going to play horse for little while with the Red Fleet and the Blue Fleet - really a very interesting thing if you can get inside dope on what's going on the only one I really even savvied was the one we were working on when we left Newport last and bad weather bused that up. Later on in the month about 21 the gallant Fifth Seems I never get away from 5th 5th Company 5th Division etc is to go to Key West for the celebration. What celebration I know not just a celebration that's all. I haven't seen an up to date paper since we left the Navy Yard four days ago Old Point is a tiresome sort of a joint at this time of year you can't get your finger on the pulse of affairs down here it doesn't belong the main arterial system of the country. There's life in it still but it's all fungus growth - rooky army lieutenants coast artillery school or "incubators" and their would be or is sweet hearts. Besides Hampton Rds is such a dreary windy place to anchor it hasn't the slightest suggestion of coziness about it but instead the old ship is yawed about in the tide the shore in the dim distance all around the horizon. If you ever sat in a big draughty desolate unfurnished room you can get an idea of Hampton Rds at this time of year. All the time you have the feeling of being somewhere and yet no where.</p><p> Today has been a very enjoyable day for all; we started coaling at day break and finished about 4 p.m. with intermissions for breakfast and lunch having increased our coal supply by 1600 tons. There's a certain exhilaration that the crew takes on when performing useful work that makes everybody happy. I imagine the novelty would soon wear off if we had to do it every day tho.</p><p> After leaving Key West the Fifth is expected to arrive sooner or later at Havana to aid in disposing of the wreck of the Maine if she is then ready. Altogether we have a very pleasant outlook for the coming routes and if our plans are not changed we may have a chance to laugh up our sleeves at the boys who have to spend their time at Guantanamo.</p><p> "Fat" Hicks has fully clinched his job in the Army but he missed connection in getting his orders probably much to Fats disgust. He wanted to be detailed to Fort Riley and run down to Kansas City occasionally to see the girls and perhaps "land" a good one among the latter who had plenty of cash in her jeans but he got a jack-ass mountain paltry out in Fort Russell Wyo.</p><p>Hoping this will find you well I am your affectionate son Ralph Dennett"</p><p>"March 8 1918 New York NY</p><p>My dear Dad</p><p> My attention has been temporarily turned away from the complication of affairs at home by the passing demand which have been made on my time and thought and shoe leather since I arrived in New York but I have during the lapses of evening after all the various naval Hqtrs have done up their business had some chance to think things over I'll come back to that later.</p><p> The change in my own affairs have reached the advanced stage of completion where I am now after two days of toilsome "reporting" back and forth between 280 Broadway and City Park Bklyn sometimes alone and most of the time with my predecessor finally installed aboard the "New York" as the com'dg officer of her Armed Guard detachment. From the face of it it looks like a most excellent billet. Tho I have been aboard the ship only once for a few minutes she looks like a very fine lady to me and I'm glad I got the job. "Stitchy" Paine my pred. was loathe to give it up. Said he'd like to stay aboard for the period of the war. Can't find out why they relieved him. Probably too much rank. He was 1908. Tomorrow I shall take a small share of my household goods aboard for the trip and the rest I shall probably store here in New York somewhere. With all the truck you have to handle just now I shall not send it home besides I might need some of the stuff when I get back.</p><p> My ship sails Tuesday carrying passengers mail and cargo. She is fast and therefore safe. I don't think you need give yourself any worry about me at all Quarters are comfortable and Paine tells me that the officers are congenial. I have a good titled second a lieutenant and 44 men. During the past two days I have worn out my feet and my change pocket hiking and subbing around between different offices of which there are three besides the ship. All in different parts of the city.</p><p> My voyage will last about three weeks if you have need of any of that money of mine in the York Bank and can get it out in my name you are at liberty to do so.</p><p>With much love Ralph"</p><p>"New York June 11 1918</p><p>My dear Dad</p><p> I have not mentioned the name of the ship here because I would be afraid that the censor if there is one would hold up the letter. I am therefore writing in a deuce of a hurry because there is very little time left you may understand why the feverish remodeling of the ship has been finished as far as possible we are still in very much of an uproar. For myself I have been trying very hard to keep a reasonable hold on what would be ordinarily three different jobs. There are only three regular offices on the ship including the Captain this makes it rather difficult since the remaining number are stripers of only a few weeks experience and are still in the process of training sometimes with only an indifferent amount of progress in their new job day by day.</p><p> Boucher and myself have had to share between us nearly all the work of organizing and quartering the new crew and it has been some husky. Both of us have stuck pretty close to the job. Not since I have been in the Navy have I been pushed with so much different kinds of urgent work at one time.</p><p> Leave for me or anybody else connected with the ship was absolutely impossible. I should have liked very much as you must know to come home to see you and the letter you wrote me recently made me home sick but she could not be done this time.</p><p> Probably my lack of time is due more to mismanagement or shortage of grey matter than anything else. But I can say this: that I have this conciliation I have pushed the job and the job has not pushed me which was what I was fighting for. In case it had been the other way around it would have been a case of being invalidated out of the transport service instead of leave of absence.</p><p>Give my love to all the folks at home.Ralph"</p><p>"October 12 1918</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Have arrived on my new station. Give you my word this is awful. After a year or so of real activity it's like being buried alive or a spirit flight to the moon. The only thing missing is the funeral service. Here in front of the casket containing the remains of many a live man's lost hopes they are holding a solemn requiem day by day over embalmed doctrines of naval efficiency while the current of modern sea life sweeps swiftly past the door and on into the joyous vigorous future. It's a sickening decline from the land of Doing to the land of Being.</p><p> The Bones of this old packet should have been and were laid to rest years ago and there she ought to lie and not rack her poor old frame with the nervous excitement of this day and generation. Nature seems to want to scrap fighting men and fighting machines when they got too large and intricate and unwieldy. She prefers new and growing stock I guess and nothing too good anymore than anything too bad. So it is I see highly trained sailor men in comparative idleness here and amateurs struggling with greater slathers of work elsewhere.</p><p>Hope you in your lack of companionship and help at home do not find it wholly unbearable. It must be difficult and I realize it now more since seeing you last and remaining in close touch. Better times are probably coming for us all tho let's hope so your affectionate son Ralph.Illinois care P.M. NYC"</p><p> The collection also contains letters of both of Ralph's sons when they were students at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. There are 36 letters to Ralph E. Dennett from his son Armistead "Army" Dennett. Twelve of these letters are written by "Army" when he was attending the Naval Academy in 1940. His class graduated early due to the outbreak of WWII. There is much in these letters about sailing for the Annapolis sailing team against other schools Harvard MIT Brown etc the types of boats they use and his studies at the academy as well when he goes out to sea on exercises. The other letters are from 1944-1959 when he was serving in the U.S. Navy on the USS <i>Hansworth</i> 1944 or when he was attending Naval Post Graduate School at Annapolis 1945-1946 and later while serving on the USS <i>Juneau</i> 1949-1951.</p><p>"15 March 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Still sailing down here. Had a meet Saturday with Brown and Sunday with Haverford. Both were fairly easy but this week we sail with Princeton who beat us last fall by about two points. I think we have to keep hot this spring to make a little reputation for the new team. So far we've sailed seven teams. MIT beat us because as usual we sank more boats.</p><p> I sent you a letter received this morning. It came in a blank envelope and I almost threw it away as propaganda when I saw it was addressed to "Memphis Maryland."</p><p> Mrs. Ferrell was here Sunday with no previous word to me. I was out sailing in the races until late and hardly got to see them. She seems to be enjoying herself as usual and hopes you are taking good care of her house.</p><p> Incidentally Danny says in a terse letter that he wants to buy my boat. If you see Danny please discourage that. What is there to sail with the Caribou gone It's so hard to find a sailboat. I want to keep that one even if she is a pee wee. I think she might plane like a 14 with encouragement. </p><p>I got to study bull. I got a 2.2 last week on the Dutch wars. </p><p>Love your son Army."</p><p>"31 March 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> We sailed Boston and St. John's yesterday in a fog. We won 61 ½ to 51 ¼ to 23. We go to Boston April sixth to race MIT Boston and Harvard. I have my doubts about being with the team. They say maybe if the team gets hot the NAA might think about a boat house on the America dock new sails more boats bigger squad and so on.</p><p> Be sure if you get a little boat to get one that you can race. Then get Bill to studying Curry and he can really have some fun. He can sail a Dyer by himself if he wants to. The Band X classes are good too. The Tech classes are like the B's loose footed main roomy and don't sink when they roll over. Our 14's are expensive and big and take two men to sail right. So I think either a Dyer or a B would be best. They still cost about $250 and should be hauled up on a float. For pete's sake get a real Dyer. We've got one built by the Annapolis Yacht Yard "exactly like." We can't find any difference in the lines or weight or sail but the thing only sails half as fast as our one good Dyer.</p><p> Well I hope the Caribou has a good owner. She was like a member of the family. Our back yard won't look the same at all without her masts.</p><p> My standings are up a little. I don't know why. I think I study less when we sail because every night I'm too tired to bone. Still my math came up. Think I'll go to the chapel.</p><p>Your son Army"</p><p>"5 April 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Your devoted son didn't make the squad of nine that goes to MIT. I was in the top six for last week's race with Boston here but I dropped to eleventh by Thursday when they made out the list.</p><p> Maybe I can make the next trip in May. Lately I've been averaging about fifth in our ten boats which doesn't mean much. All last fall it was 3.5. Top man has about 2.7 and low man has about 8.5. </p><p> Still I'd like to know where we are going this summer for our destroyer cruise.</p><p> Think I'll go to the formation.</p><p>Love your son Army"</p><p>"17 June 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Here I am back with my sad story about being broke again. Mary came down for June Week and stayed through six days and four hops. That and keeping an apartment stocked with everything for a week just ruined me. Now we are going up to Barnegat Bay for a five day race week in scows and I don't own a quarter.</p><p> We are probably going to be graduated early in three and a half years. They are even making out a new summer schedule and shortening the cruises effective Thursday. Leave and academic year will start early and we will be graduated in February so the officers predict.</p><p>I have been sailing one of our racing stars at Gibson Island each weekend in a star series there. She is a good boat but I'm not used to her yet and haven't been doing well at all. We tow three boats up behind one of the diesel motor-sailer ketches Saturday go ashore race Sunday come back for supper.</p><p> The candidates '44 bless 'em are being seen around the yard. Did Dick Underwood ever make it The poor guys look as bewildered as I felt two years ago.</p><p> Have you got any boat yet Too bad you aren't near one of the real good racing classes. These innocent looking yacht clubs put out some stiff competitors.</p><p>Your son Army"</p><p>Ralph E. Dennett's second son William A. Dennett also attended the Naval Academy at Annapolis. William wrote a total of 32 letters to his father. During the years 1945 - 1946 William is at the Naval Academy. There are also letters on the different cruises he takes during his training to Cuba Panama etc.:</p><p>"Unites States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 5305 Bancroft Hall 6 July 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Don't think that I haven't been thinking of home most of the time. This place at times has been almost enough to get me down. </p><p> I felt very much elated at having passed the physical. That was last Wednesday 27 June. Tuesday night 26 June I left and by the next day at 1400 I knew that I had passed. That night 27th I tried to call you with no success. From then on my time was all spent indoctrinating myself. On the 29th I was sworn in. Days 29th 30th June 1 July 2 3 July I was wishing that I had never come to this place.</p><p> That feeling has worn off now after having settled down to a routine. Now that I am resigned to my fate I am content to wait patiently for Christmas leave and want very much to hear from home. Your telegram was a moral inoculation. I need letters now very much.</p><p> I can use up to five of Army's white work uniforms. Tell Clodia to start sending the cookies and other food now.</p><p> Everyone that goes to the NA now is 19 and up has spent much time in the navy or three years at college or both. My plebe summer roommate is Wm. M. Shanhouse of Rockford Ill. I am trying to arrange rooming with a boy I met as a candidate Bill Hall from Ohio. I like him very much. He will take Spanish as a language so that may separate us unless I take Spanish.</p><p> I was required to send all non-reg clothing home. Did you get the laundry bag of clothes Monday I have the watch. Saturday tomorrow we take inoculations and such stuff. There were 600 of the 4th Class here when I came and 600 were to come after 1200 in the class of '49.</p><p> The life here is difficult for me at first. Much harder than when I was helper to the plasterer.</p><p> Where is Army I wish I could have been home when he was. I will be glad to see him when he comes. Be sure and come to see me if you get the chance. I am moderately homesick moderately to lightly.</p><p>Tell me how the farm is working out and what goes on Your loving son Bill"</p><p>"United States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 5305 Bancroft Hall 5 September 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Don't let the bill worry you. It is for the coming college year and I won't be able to attend. I wrote the Registrar and told him to withdraw me from the student body. The letter was mailed 26 August so it should have gotten there by the time they sent out that bill but it is known how slow UNH is on such matters - see my college certificate of late.</p><p> There was liberty on Labor Day and rare dining out privilege was granted to plebe summer plebs. Nancy Leeds Army and I had dinner at Carvel Hale.</p><p> Last Saturday and Sunday I sailed on the Vamarie for an over night race. The weather was rough and all save few were sick. Never let it be said that I was seasick on Chesapeake Bay though - I wasn't.</p><p> Too many headsails rigged so the Vamarie spent the night thrashing around mostly and placed next to last. That's what poor handling does to the Queen of Ocean Racing.</p><p> Marched in a P-rade yesterday in Annapolis. Understand we get more Christmas leave - maybe 10 days. Your loving son Bill"</p><p>"United States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 6313 Bancroft Hall 10 October 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> The word has it that we have town liberty tomorrow afternoon. so I shall follow the trail to Army's apt. and maybe later go to the movie.</p><p> The big celebration this week is the USNA's 100th Anniversary but the Navy Public Relations or what ever it is has probably been hard at work on the story so that I don't need to tell you.</p><p> Last night some engraved announcements of the Centennial to those midshipmen desiring to send them to their home town newspaper providing they came from a town of less than 5000 population. Just the thing to send to Aunt Florence.</p><p> The biggest flop of Centennial Week so far has been Educator's Day. College Presidents from NROTC Colleges about 55 were invited to explore the NA and express their opinions. About ten presidents showed up from places like Case Inst. Tech and Villanova. NA seems to come in for much criticism these days concerning policy toward expansion to include St. Johns and method of teaching. Having just come from college I notice a big difference in the method. I am afraid that the college student has the greater chance for individual thought whereas the midshipman learns mostly to follow orders or a gauge.</p><p> I like the idea of midshipmen being trained in civilian colleges first and finishing off at this place.</p><p>Kay Kyser is playing tonight for the Centennial Ball.</p><p> The P-rade looked well today - 24 companies - it takes 20 minutes for our brigade to pass in review. There were only 16 companies here when Army was a Mid'n. He was amazed when I told him I was in the 23rd Company.</p><p> Army and his roommate seem to drag a different set of girls each week. I'm going to arrange dining out with Army on a Sunday. That way I can see him and go into town at the same time because we can't have liberty on Sunday unless dining out.</p><p> I'm having a little trouble with Bull and Skinny but a little application will make everything rosy.</p><p>I still need to know about insurance - should I pay for it from personal funds which is the only way or ignore it until I graduate. I'll see the financial adviser and ask Army when I can.Love Bill"</p><p> After his time at the Naval Academy William A. Dennett was honorably discharged due to an illness. After recovering he studied naval architecture and marine engineering at M.I.T. then went to work for Newport News Shipyard. Letters from his wife "Bunny" to her father-in-law Ralph give insight into that chapter of their lives:</p><p>"May 5 1951Cambridge MA</p><p>Dearest Dad</p><p> Since Bill and I have been quite busy tying up little ends we've not had the time that we would have liked to have had to spend on a visit with you. We shall be seeing you very soon though and in the meantime I have lots to tell you.</p><p> Bill has had a number of splendid offers of employment from some of the very best yards and firms. He has considered them all very carefully and has decided that the Newport News Ship Yard holds the most future for a young and inexperienced engineer. The salary is of course not particularly spectacular but it is ample enough to allow us to manage without my having to contribute.</p><p> It has been very difficult for me to get used to the idea of living so very far from home but I have tried not to sway him on that account. I would feel very badly if Bill made a wrong choice because of me because it does seem that it is important to work in the place where one feels most content. We are in any case both looking forward to this summer because it will be marvelous to have a real income and time to enjoy each other.</p><p> Our last weeks here and there are only thee you know will be filled with activity. Bill has to complete his thesis prepare for exams and pass in lots of last papers in each class. His marks are very good and he has been a credit to both of us. You have good reason to be proud of him as I am. Although he has had just mountains of work he has attacked it all with admirable gusto.</p><p>.Bill and I both miss you and look forward to seeing you soon All our love Bunny & Bill"</p>‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 30397

Biblio.com

Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Michael Brown Rare Books, LLC]

€ 634.57 購入

‎Dennett Family Letters‎

‎Correspondence of the Dennett family of Kittery York County Maine members of the United States Navy includes Lieutenant Commander Ralph Earle Dennett and sons Lieutenant Commander Armistead Dennett & Midshipman & Naval Engineer William A. Dennett 1910-1959‎

‎<p>863 letters 2569 manuscript pp. dated 1910-1959 with 317 pieces of ephemera including postcards telegrams calling cards invitations printed material documents manuscript notes newspaper clippings greeting cards used envelopes etc.</p><p> The correspondence in this collection includes but is not limited to the following: 223 incoming letters to Lieut. Alexander Dennett father of Lieut. Comdr. Ralph E. Dennett many from his son Ralph; 40 outgoing letters of Elizabeth Dennett wife of Ralph E. Dennett to her father-in-law Alexander Dennett; 235 outgoing letters of Ralph E. Dennett mostly to his father or sons and 307 incoming letters to him; Lieut. Armistead Dennett son of Ralph E. Dennett 45 outgoing letters and 8 incoming letters mostly to his father or brother; William Dennett brother of Ralph E. Dennett 12 outgoing letters to their father Alexander Dennett; and Midshipman William A. Dennett son of Ralph E. Dennett 32 outgoing letters and 284 incoming letters many from his father and brother as well as friends and associates. </p><p> The remaining letters and many of the incoming letters to the Dennett's are written to and from family members friends or associates of the Dennett family including Louise Howard Dennett wife of Armistead Dennett and her mother Jill Noble Howard of Round Bay Maryland; "Bunny" Daigle Dennett wife of William A. Dennett and her mother Mrs. L. Daigle of Portsmouth New Hampshire; Dr. John Dennett of Phoenix Arizona an uncle; as well as friends of William A. Dennett: Edmond C. Tarbold Lydia Sawyer Florence A. Paul and Lois S. Gimmi; and friends of Ralph E. Dennett: Alberta Carolyn and Charlie.</p><p><b>Dennett Family of Kittery York County Maine</b></p><p> Alexander Dennett was born 10 November 1811 at Kittery Maine and died 6 May 1889 in Kittery. He was a farmer and was educated in the common schools. At the age of 19 he moved to York Maine where he eventually conducted a general store and owned coasting vessels. He moved back to Kittery and lived on the ancestral homestead until his death. During the Civil War he was appointed inspector of timber at the navy yard. Politically he was a Whig in early life a Republican afterward. He was a trial justice for many years; represented his district in the legislature in 1849-50-51; and was a delegate to the convention when the Free Soil and Whig Parties fused when the Republican Party was organized. Alexander was frequently moderator of town meetings and selectman of the town. He was active in good works and interested in the great questions of the day and an enthusiastic supporter the anti-slavery and temperance movements. He was a member of the Sons of Temperance and was active in the Methodist Episcopal Church being a charter member of the Second Methodist Episcopal church of Kittery. He married Mary Kingsbury Remick 1819-1878 and together they had at least six children: Ellen Miriam Elizabeth John Sarah Mary Alice and Alexander who was the father of Ralph Earle Dennett.</p><p> Lieut. Alexander Dennett of the U.S. Coast Guard was born 13 April 1853 at York Village York Maine and died 24 December 1934 at Kittery Maine. His son Ralph was the only heir and executor. Alexander was educated in the public schools Eliot Academy and various private schools. In 1878 he entered the U. S. Revenue Cutter Service as second assistant engineer and was stationed in New York at the office of Consulting Engineer Charles E. Emery. He and his wife resided at a number of locations during his naval career lived in Boston Portland Bucksport Bath Castine Eastport Mobile Baltimore and Somerville while Dennett was attached to vessels <i>William H. Crawford</i> <i>John A. Dix</i> <i>Thomas Ewing</i> <i>Albert Gallatin</i> <i>Woodbury</i> with headquarters at or near these places. He later made first assistant engineer in 1890 and served on the <i>Hannibal Hamlin</i> in 1893. He continued on this ship with the Coast Guard until 1895 when he retired from active labor making his home at Kittery and Thomasville Georgia.</p><p> He was a Republican in politics and had been a member of the school committee for a number of years and superintendent of schools. He was a prominent member of the Second Christian church. He married first in 1883 to Sarah Eva Paul 1856-1899 daughter of Warrington and Sarah A.E. Paul. Together Lieut. Alexander and his wife Sarah had at least three children William A. Dennett 1886- Ralph Earle Dennett 1891- and Mary Elizabeth Dennett 1894- </p><p> Sara Eva Paul Dennett died on 9 June 1899. After the death of his first wife he was married a second time to Josephine E. Cox only daughter of Carpenter Joseph Cox U.S.N. retired. Josephine died in 1917 Alexander outlived both his wives. He died in 1934.</p><p> William A. Dennett 1885-1911 Alexander Dennett's oldest son graduated Cornell University in 1907 in the mechanical engineering course and died at Kittery MEof typhoid fever. He worked at Holyoke and New York City for the Santa Fe Sugar Plantation San Pedro de Maconic San Domingo. </p><p> Alexander's fourth child Mary Elizabeth Dennett 1893-1895 died young of congestion of the lungs.</p><p> Lieut. Alexander Dennett's third child was Lt. Comdr. Ralph Earle Dennett USN. He was born 30 July 1890 at Kittery York County Maine and died in February 1986. Prior to entering the Naval Academy he attended Kittery High School and the Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter New Hampshire. He attended the Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland. He lived at Upper Darby Pennsylvania at the time of the 1930 Census. When his wife Elizabeth died in 1943 he was stationed at the Portsmouth Navy Yard a position he had held since 1939.</p><p> Ralph Earle Dennett married Elizabeth Armistead. She was born 3 September 1889 in Virginia. The couple married 4 December 1920 at Washington D.C. Elizabeth died 16 May 1943. Together Ralph and his wife Elizabeth had at least two children: Armistead Dennett and William A. Dennett. After the death of his wife Ralph married a second time to Josephine Cox daughter of Joseph Cox and Joanna Hurd. They married 28 August 1901 at Kittery Maine.</p><p> Ralph Dennett's oldest son was Lieut. Comdr. Armistead Dennett. He was born about 1922; attended Kittery Schools and Portsmouth High School; and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland in 1941 where he took postgraduate course in ordnance. He served aboard the <i>USS Benson </i>two years in the Mediterranean on destroyers and was a veteran WWII serving in the Pacific theater on a destroyer that was hit by a kamikaze. He later became Commander on several ships including the <i>USS Wallace L. Lind</i> DD-703 1958-1960.</p><p> Armistead Dennett married Louise Howard. Armistead and his wife had at least one child a daughter Sarah Dennett who was born in May 1948.</p><p> Ralph Dennett's second son was William A. Dennett. He was born in 1928 and died on 5 January 2013. Like most of the men in his family he joined the Navy and reached the rank of midshipman 4th class. He graduated from Portsmouth High School in 1944 and attended the University of New Hampshire prior to entering the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis Class of 1949. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT in 1951 with degrees in both naval architecture and marine engineering. After graduation he was employed by Newport News Shipbuilding and later retired from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in 1987 after 37 years of government service. He was a member of the Kittery Point Yacht Club the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers and several other professional organizations. He enjoyed sailing locally as well as having substantial blue water experience participating in both the Monhegan and Bermuda races. He was an expert navigator well skilled in celestial navigation. </p><p> William A. Dennett married Mary Irene "Bunny" Daigle of Portsmouth New Hampshire on 9 September 1950 in Maine. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Daigle. Bunny attended the Vesper George School of Art in Boston. Together they had at least one son John A. Dennett.</p><p> Another Dennett family member who wrote some of the letters in this collection is Dr. John Dennett. He was born in 1869 in Maine. He was a first cousin of Ralph E. Dennett son of his father's brother Capt. John Dennett U.S.C.G. He attended Harvard University and Harvard Medical College. After medical training he worked at Boston General Hospital until developing tuberculosis. In an attempt to regain his health he first moved to Santa Fe then arrived in Phoenix in 1895. Finding initial work as doctor at the Congress Mine he remained there until 1905 when it closed. On August 20 1902 he married Louise Gage niece of the owner of the Congress Mine. After work with the Congress Mine Dennett moved to the Silverbell Mine west of Tucson where he worked until 1910 when the family moved to Phoenix. After the move to Phoenix Dr. Dennett stopped practicing medicine and entered business. He became the manager for a creamery Hassayampa Creamery located at 5th Ave and Jackson St. and later became involved in the manufacturing of evaporated milk. Between 1911 and 1923 both Dr. and Mrs. Dennett were active in business and social activities in Phoenix. Dr. Dennett was president of the Rotary Club active with the Phoenix Chamber of Commerce and local Republican Party politics. He died in San Diego California on October 17 1957 at the age of 88.</p><p><b>Sample Letters:</b></p><p> Ralph Earle Dennett wrote his father Alexander Dennett 162 letters between the years 1909 and 1931. The early letters show Ralph attending school at the Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland and received his first command during WWI. He writes his father about the academy and life at the academy and his activities there when he goes out on ships for exercises. He also writes about his various ports of call and the various ships he is assigned to and what he is allowed to tell that the censors won't scrub:</p><p>"USS Washington Hampton Rds. January 2 1912</p><p>Dear Mother and Dad -</p><p> Tomorrow at ten we clear the harbor for another sea trip of uncertain duration they don't have mail boxes at sea the'fore I write while I may. The Admiral expects to take the rest of the little flock with him and join the fleet 400 miles at sea or thereabouts and then we're all going to play horse for little while with the Red Fleet and the Blue Fleet - really a very interesting thing if you can get inside dope on what's going on the only one I really even savvied was the one we were working on when we left Newport last and bad weather bused that up. Later on in the month about 21 the gallant Fifth Seems I never get away from 5th 5th Company 5th Division etc is to go to Key West for the celebration. What celebration I know not just a celebration that's all. I haven't seen an up to date paper since we left the Navy Yard four days ago Old Point is a tiresome sort of a joint at this time of year you can't get your finger on the pulse of affairs down here it doesn't belong the main arterial system of the country. There's life in it still but it's all fungus growth - rooky army lieutenants coast artillery school or "incubators" and their would be or is sweet hearts. Besides Hampton Rds is such a dreary windy place to anchor it hasn't the slightest suggestion of coziness about it but instead the old ship is yawed about in the tide the shore in the dim distance all around the horizon. If you ever sat in a big draughty desolate unfurnished room you can get an idea of Hampton Rds at this time of year. All the time you have the feeling of being somewhere and yet no where.</p><p> Today has been a very enjoyable day for all; we started coaling at day break and finished about 4 p.m. with intermissions for breakfast and lunch having increased our coal supply by 1600 tons. There's a certain exhilaration that the crew takes on when performing useful work that makes everybody happy. I imagine the novelty would soon wear off if we had to do it every day tho.</p><p> After leaving Key West the Fifth is expected to arrive sooner or later at Havana to aid in disposing of the wreck of the Maine if she is then ready. Altogether we have a very pleasant outlook for the coming routes and if our plans are not changed we may have a chance to laugh up our sleeves at the boys who have to spend their time at Guantanamo.</p><p> "Fat" Hicks has fully clinched his job in the Army but he missed connection in getting his orders probably much to Fats disgust. He wanted to be detailed to Fort Riley and run down to Kansas City occasionally to see the girls and perhaps "land" a good one among the latter who had plenty of cash in her jeans but he got a jack-ass mountain paltry out in Fort Russell Wyo.</p><p>Hoping this will find you well I am your affectionate son Ralph Dennett"</p><p>"March 8 1918 New York NY</p><p>My dear Dad</p><p> My attention has been temporarily turned away from the complication of affairs at home by the passing demand which have been made on my time and thought and shoe leather since I arrived in New York but I have during the lapses of evening after all the various naval Hqtrs have done up their business had some chance to think things over I'll come back to that later.</p><p> The change in my own affairs have reached the advanced stage of completion where I am now after two days of toilsome "reporting" back and forth between 280 Broadway and City Park Bklyn sometimes alone and most of the time with my predecessor finally installed aboard the "New York" as the com'dg officer of her Armed Guard detachment. From the face of it it looks like a most excellent billet. Tho I have been aboard the ship only once for a few minutes she looks like a very fine lady to me and I'm glad I got the job. "Stitchy" Paine my pred. was loathe to give it up. Said he'd like to stay aboard for the period of the war. Can't find out why they relieved him. Probably too much rank. He was 1908. Tomorrow I shall take a small share of my household goods aboard for the trip and the rest I shall probably store here in New York somewhere. With all the truck you have to handle just now I shall not send it home besides I might need some of the stuff when I get back.</p><p> My ship sails Tuesday carrying passengers mail and cargo. She is fast and therefore safe. I don't think you need give yourself any worry about me at all Quarters are comfortable and Paine tells me that the officers are congenial. I have a good titled second a lieutenant and 44 men. During the past two days I have worn out my feet and my change pocket hiking and subbing around between different offices of which there are three besides the ship. All in different parts of the city.</p><p> My voyage will last about three weeks if you have need of any of that money of mine in the York Bank and can get it out in my name you are at liberty to do so.</p><p>With much love Ralph"</p><p>"New York June 11 1918</p><p>My dear Dad</p><p> I have not mentioned the name of the ship here because I would be afraid that the censor if there is one would hold up the letter. I am therefore writing in a deuce of a hurry because there is very little time left you may understand why the feverish remodeling of the ship has been finished as far as possible we are still in very much of an uproar. For myself I have been trying very hard to keep a reasonable hold on what would be ordinarily three different jobs. There are only three regular offices on the ship including the Captain this makes it rather difficult since the remaining number are stripers of only a few weeks experience and are still in the process of training sometimes with only an indifferent amount of progress in their new job day by day.</p><p> Boucher and myself have had to share between us nearly all the work of organizing and quartering the new crew and it has been some husky. Both of us have stuck pretty close to the job. Not since I have been in the Navy have I been pushed with so much different kinds of urgent work at one time.</p><p> Leave for me or anybody else connected with the ship was absolutely impossible. I should have liked very much as you must know to come home to see you and the letter you wrote me recently made me home sick but she could not be done this time.</p><p> Probably my lack of time is due more to mismanagement or shortage of grey matter than anything else. But I can say this: that I have this conciliation I have pushed the job and the job has not pushed me which was what I was fighting for. In case it had been the other way around it would have been a case of being invalidated out of the transport service instead of leave of absence.</p><p>Give my love to all the folks at home.Ralph"</p><p>"October 12 1918</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Have arrived on my new station. Give you my word this is awful. After a year or so of real activity it's like being buried alive or a spirit flight to the moon. The only thing missing is the funeral service. Here in front of the casket containing the remains of many a live man's lost hopes they are holding a solemn requiem day by day over embalmed doctrines of naval efficiency while the current of modern sea life sweeps swiftly past the door and on into the joyous vigorous future. It's a sickening decline from the land of Doing to the land of Being.</p><p> The Bones of this old packet should have been and were laid to rest years ago and there she ought to lie and not rack her poor old frame with the nervous excitement of this day and generation. Nature seems to want to scrap fighting men and fighting machines when they got too large and intricate and unwieldy. She prefers new and growing stock I guess and nothing too good anymore than anything too bad. So it is I see highly trained sailor men in comparative idleness here and amateurs struggling with greater slathers of work elsewhere.</p><p>Hope you in your lack of companionship and help at home do not find it wholly unbearable. It must be difficult and I realize it now more since seeing you last and remaining in close touch. Better times are probably coming for us all tho let's hope so your affectionate son Ralph.Illinois care P.M. NYC"</p><p> The collection also contains letters of both of Ralph's sons when they were students at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. There are 36 letters to Ralph E. Dennett from his son Armistead "Army" Dennett. Twelve of these letters are written by "Army" when he was attending the Naval Academy in 1940. His class graduated early due to the outbreak of WWII. There is much in these letters about sailing for the Annapolis sailing team against other schools Harvard MIT Brown etc the types of boats they use and his studies at the academy as well when he goes out to sea on exercises. The other letters are from 1944-1959 when he was serving in the U.S. Navy on the USS <i>Hansworth</i> 1944 or when he was attending Naval Post Graduate School at Annapolis 1945-1946 and later while serving on the USS <i>Juneau</i> 1949-1951.</p><p>"15 March 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Still sailing down here. Had a meet Saturday with Brown and Sunday with Haverford. Both were fairly easy but this week we sail with Princeton who beat us last fall by about two points. I think we have to keep hot this spring to make a little reputation for the new team. So far we've sailed seven teams. MIT beat us because as usual we sank more boats.</p><p> I sent you a letter received this morning. It came in a blank envelope and I almost threw it away as propaganda when I saw it was addressed to "Memphis Maryland."</p><p> Mrs. Ferrell was here Sunday with no previous word to me. I was out sailing in the races until late and hardly got to see them. She seems to be enjoying herself as usual and hopes you are taking good care of her house.</p><p> Incidentally Danny says in a terse letter that he wants to buy my boat. If you see Danny please discourage that. What is there to sail with the Caribou gone It's so hard to find a sailboat. I want to keep that one even if she is a pee wee. I think she might plane like a 14 with encouragement. </p><p>I got to study bull. I got a 2.2 last week on the Dutch wars. </p><p>Love your son Army."</p><p>"31 March 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> We sailed Boston and St. John's yesterday in a fog. We won 61 ½ to 51 ¼ to 23. We go to Boston April sixth to race MIT Boston and Harvard. I have my doubts about being with the team. They say maybe if the team gets hot the NAA might think about a boat house on the America dock new sails more boats bigger squad and so on.</p><p> Be sure if you get a little boat to get one that you can race. Then get Bill to studying Curry and he can really have some fun. He can sail a Dyer by himself if he wants to. The Band X classes are good too. The Tech classes are like the B's loose footed main roomy and don't sink when they roll over. Our 14's are expensive and big and take two men to sail right. So I think either a Dyer or a B would be best. They still cost about $250 and should be hauled up on a float. For pete's sake get a real Dyer. We've got one built by the Annapolis Yacht Yard "exactly like." We can't find any difference in the lines or weight or sail but the thing only sails half as fast as our one good Dyer.</p><p> Well I hope the Caribou has a good owner. She was like a member of the family. Our back yard won't look the same at all without her masts.</p><p> My standings are up a little. I don't know why. I think I study less when we sail because every night I'm too tired to bone. Still my math came up. Think I'll go to the chapel.</p><p>Your son Army"</p><p>"5 April 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Your devoted son didn't make the squad of nine that goes to MIT. I was in the top six for last week's race with Boston here but I dropped to eleventh by Thursday when they made out the list.</p><p> Maybe I can make the next trip in May. Lately I've been averaging about fifth in our ten boats which doesn't mean much. All last fall it was 3.5. Top man has about 2.7 and low man has about 8.5. </p><p> Still I'd like to know where we are going this summer for our destroyer cruise.</p><p> Think I'll go to the formation.</p><p>Love your son Army"</p><p>"17 June 1940 Annapolis MD</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Here I am back with my sad story about being broke again. Mary came down for June Week and stayed through six days and four hops. That and keeping an apartment stocked with everything for a week just ruined me. Now we are going up to Barnegat Bay for a five day race week in scows and I don't own a quarter.</p><p> We are probably going to be graduated early in three and a half years. They are even making out a new summer schedule and shortening the cruises effective Thursday. Leave and academic year will start early and we will be graduated in February so the officers predict.</p><p>I have been sailing one of our racing stars at Gibson Island each weekend in a star series there. She is a good boat but I'm not used to her yet and haven't been doing well at all. We tow three boats up behind one of the diesel motor-sailer ketches Saturday go ashore race Sunday come back for supper.</p><p> The candidates '44 bless 'em are being seen around the yard. Did Dick Underwood ever make it The poor guys look as bewildered as I felt two years ago.</p><p> Have you got any boat yet Too bad you aren't near one of the real good racing classes. These innocent looking yacht clubs put out some stiff competitors.</p><p>Your son Army"</p><p>Ralph E. Dennett's second son William A. Dennett also attended the Naval Academy at Annapolis. William wrote a total of 32 letters to his father. During the years 1945 - 1946 William is at the Naval Academy. There are also letters on the different cruises he takes during his training to Cuba Panama etc.:</p><p>"Unites States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 5305 Bancroft Hall 6 July 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Don't think that I haven't been thinking of home most of the time. This place at times has been almost enough to get me down. </p><p> I felt very much elated at having passed the physical. That was last Wednesday 27 June. Tuesday night 26 June I left and by the next day at 1400 I knew that I had passed. That night 27th I tried to call you with no success. From then on my time was all spent indoctrinating myself. On the 29th I was sworn in. Days 29th 30th June 1 July 2 3 July I was wishing that I had never come to this place.</p><p> That feeling has worn off now after having settled down to a routine. Now that I am resigned to my fate I am content to wait patiently for Christmas leave and want very much to hear from home. Your telegram was a moral inoculation. I need letters now very much.</p><p> I can use up to five of Army's white work uniforms. Tell Clodia to start sending the cookies and other food now.</p><p> Everyone that goes to the NA now is 19 and up has spent much time in the navy or three years at college or both. My plebe summer roommate is Wm. M. Shanhouse of Rockford Ill. I am trying to arrange rooming with a boy I met as a candidate Bill Hall from Ohio. I like him very much. He will take Spanish as a language so that may separate us unless I take Spanish.</p><p> I was required to send all non-reg clothing home. Did you get the laundry bag of clothes Monday I have the watch. Saturday tomorrow we take inoculations and such stuff. There were 600 of the 4th Class here when I came and 600 were to come after 1200 in the class of '49.</p><p> The life here is difficult for me at first. Much harder than when I was helper to the plasterer.</p><p> Where is Army I wish I could have been home when he was. I will be glad to see him when he comes. Be sure and come to see me if you get the chance. I am moderately homesick moderately to lightly.</p><p>Tell me how the farm is working out and what goes on Your loving son Bill"</p><p>"United States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 5305 Bancroft Hall 5 September 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> Don't let the bill worry you. It is for the coming college year and I won't be able to attend. I wrote the Registrar and told him to withdraw me from the student body. The letter was mailed 26 August so it should have gotten there by the time they sent out that bill but it is known how slow UNH is on such matters - see my college certificate of late.</p><p> There was liberty on Labor Day and rare dining out privilege was granted to plebe summer plebs. Nancy Leeds Army and I had dinner at Carvel Hale.</p><p> Last Saturday and Sunday I sailed on the Vamarie for an over night race. The weather was rough and all save few were sick. Never let it be said that I was seasick on Chesapeake Bay though - I wasn't.</p><p> Too many headsails rigged so the Vamarie spent the night thrashing around mostly and placed next to last. That's what poor handling does to the Queen of Ocean Racing.</p><p> Marched in a P-rade yesterday in Annapolis. Understand we get more Christmas leave - maybe 10 days. Your loving son Bill"</p><p>"United States Naval Academy Annapolis Maryland Room 6313 Bancroft Hall 10 October 1945</p><p>Dear Dad</p><p> The word has it that we have town liberty tomorrow afternoon. so I shall follow the trail to Army's apt. and maybe later go to the movie.</p><p> The big celebration this week is the USNA's 100th Anniversary but the Navy Public Relations or what ever it is has probably been hard at work on the story so that I don't need to tell you.</p><p> Last night some engraved announcements of the Centennial to those midshipmen desiring to send them to their home town newspaper providing they came from a town of less than 5000 population. Just the thing to send to Aunt Florence.</p><p> The biggest flop of Centennial Week so far has been Educator's Day. College Presidents from NROTC Colleges about 55 were invited to explore the NA and express their opinions. About ten presidents showed up from places like Case Inst. Tech and Villanova. NA seems to come in for much criticism these days concerning policy toward expansion to include St. Johns and method of teaching. Having just come from college I notice a big difference in the method. I am afraid that the college student has the greater chance for individual thought whereas the midshipman learns mostly to follow orders or a gauge.</p><p> I like the idea of midshipmen being trained in civilian colleges first and finishing off at this place.</p><p>Kay Kyser is playing tonight for the Centennial Ball.</p><p> The P-rade looked well today - 24 companies - it takes 20 minutes for our brigade to pass in review. There were only 16 companies here when Army was a Mid'n. He was amazed when I told him I was in the 23rd Company.</p><p> Army and his roommate seem to drag a different set of girls each week. I'm going to arrange dining out with Army on a Sunday. That way I can see him and go into town at the same time because we can't have liberty on Sunday unless dining out.</p><p> I'm having a little trouble with Bull and Skinny but a little application will make everything rosy.</p><p>I still need to know about insurance - should I pay for it from personal funds which is the only way or ignore it until I graduate. I'll see the financial adviser and ask Army when I can.Love Bill"</p><p> After his time at the Naval Academy William A. Dennett was honorably discharged due to an illness. After recovering he studied naval architecture and marine engineering at M.I.T. then went to work for Newport News Shipyard. Letters from his wife "Bunny" to her father-in-law Ralph give insight into that chapter of their lives:</p><p>"May 5 1951Cambridge MA</p><p>Dearest Dad</p><p> Since Bill and I have been quite busy tying up little ends we've not had the time that we would have liked to have had to spend on a visit with you. We shall be seeing you very soon though and in the meantime I have lots to tell you.</p><p> Bill has had a number of splendid offers of employment from some of the very best yards and firms. He has considered them all very carefully and has decided that the Newport News Ship Yard holds the most future for a young and inexperienced engineer. The salary is of course not particularly spectacular but it is ample enough to allow us to manage without my having to contribute.</p><p> It has been very difficult for me to get used to the idea of living so very far from home but I have tried not to sway him on that account. I would feel very badly if Bill made a wrong choice because of me because it does seem that it is important to work in the place where one feels most content. We are in any case both looking forward to this summer because it will be marvelous to have a real income and time to enjoy each other.</p><p> Our last weeks here and there are only thee you know will be filled with activity. Bill has to complete his thesis prepare for exams and pass in lots of last papers in each class. His marks are very good and he has been a credit to both of us. You have good reason to be proud of him as I am. Although he has had just mountains of work he has attacked it all with admirable gusto.</p><p>.Bill and I both miss you and look forward to seeing you soon All our love Bunny & Bill"</p> books‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 30397

‎Denney Jim;Reagan Michael;Denny Jim‎

‎Twice Adopted‎

‎Nashville Tennessee U.S.A.: Broadman & Holman Pub 2004. Jacket and boards have only light wear. Pages are clean text has no markings binding is sound. . First Printing. Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. 8vo - over 7�" - 9�" tall. Broadman & Holman Pub Hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 109147 ISBN : 0805431446 9780805431445

Biblio.com

Top Notch books
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Top Notch books]

€ 7.61 購入

‎Dennis Garvie‎

‎Concise Chemistry‎

‎Oxford University Press 1979. 1st. Paperback. Used; Good. Edition: 1st. Ex Library. <p><i><strong>Fast Dispatch. Expedited UK Delivery Available. Excellent Customer Service. </strong></i> <br/><br/>Bookbarn International Inventory #2586034</p> Oxford University Press paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 2586034 ISBN : 0199140731 9780199140732

Biblio.com

Bookbarn International
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Bookbarn International]

€ 4.00 購入

‎Dennis Rainey; Barbara Rainey‎

‎Moments Together For Couples: Devotions for Drawing Near to God and One Another‎

‎Regal 1995. Nice copy with dust jacket. Just minor shelfwear. Pages of text are clean bright and free of markings. Binding is tight and secure. Superior service: accurate descriptions prompt shipping and virtually all items carefully packed in boxes not envelopes . Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. Regal Hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 227024 ISBN : 0830717544 9780830717545

Biblio.com

The Book Escape
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: The Book Escape]

€ 5.08 購入

‎Dennis Star & Family‎

‎A Tropical Christmas‎

‎M COOKE. Audio CD. New . Still Sealed; M COOKE unknown‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : RWAW13860

Biblio.com

Books Music Videos 4 U
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Books Music Videos 4 U]

€ 13.50 購入

‎Dennison Manufacturing‎

‎Tables and Favors‎

‎Framingham: Dennison 1922. Book. Very Good. Soft cover. 1st Edition. VG one crease on front paper cover booklet of various suggestions on decorating a table 32pps many long forgotten but still interesting and entertaining attractive ill showers weddings engagements announcements parties FAVORS etc. Dennison Paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 106948

Biblio.com

BohemianBookworm
United States Estados Unidos Estados Unidos États-Unis
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: BohemianBookworm]

€ 25.34 購入

‎DENORMANDIE, Louis-Jules-Ernest - Paris, 6 août 1821, 28 janvier 1902 - Avoué au tribunal de la Seine, ayant dans sa clientèle la liste civile de la famille d'Orléans, Représentant de la Seine à l'Assemblée Nationale de 1871 à 1875, puis Sénateur inamovible de 1875 à 1902.‎

‎Temps Passé - Jours Présents. (Notes de famille).‎

‎PARIS, Lib. Hachette & cie - 1900 - In-8 - Débroché -734 pages - Très propre‎

‎- ATTENTION: Colis recommandé uniquement sur demande (parcel recommended on request). Si vous désirez un remboursement équivalent au montant de votre achat, en cas de perte détérioration ou spoliation, demandez-nous expressément un envoi en recommandé ( if you wish a repayment equivalent to the amount of your purchase, in case of loss - deterioration or despoliation, ask us expressly for a sending recommended)- Conditions de vente : Les frais de port sont affichés à titre Indicatifs (pour un livre) Nous pouvons être amené à vous contacter pour vous signaler le prix du supplément de port en fonction du poids et du nombre de livres- Conditions of sale : The shipping costs are displayed as an indication (for one book) We may need to contact you to inform you of the cost of the additional shipping depending on the weight and the number of books- Possibilité d'envoi par Mondial-Relay - Réception en boutique sur rendez-vous. Librairie G. PORCHEROT - SP.Rance - 0681233148‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 24627

Livre Rare Book

A l's.p.rance
Brest France Francia França France
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: A l's.p.rance]

€ 95.00 購入

‎Denoyer Gassier Lecocq‎

‎Concours d'entrée infirmier‎

‎Editions Masson 2003 310 pages 25x18x2cm. 2003. Broché. 310 pages.‎

‎French édition -L'article présente de légères marques de stockage et/ou de lecture mais du reste en très bon état d'ensemble - Expédié soigneusement dans un emballage adapté depuis la France‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 35179

Livre Rare Book

Démons et Merveilles
Joinville France Francia França France
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Démons et Merveilles]

€ 19.99 購入

‎Denton Kady MacDonald‎

‎Watch Out William I am Reading‎

‎Kingfisher Books Ltd 1996. Paperback. Used; Good. Ex Library. <p><i><strong>Fast Dispatch. Expedited UK Delivery Available. Excellent Customer Service. </strong></i> <br/><br/>Bookbarn International Inventory #3317466</p> Kingfisher Books Ltd paperback‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 3317466 ISBN : 0753400219 9780753400210

Biblio.com

Bookbarn International
United Kingdom Reino Unido Reino Unido Royaume-Uni
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Bookbarn International]

€ 4.00 購入

‎DENUIT Désiré‎

‎Albert, Roi des Belges.‎

‎Bruxelles, Editions Biblis, 1953. 13 x 21, 257 pp., quelques illustrations en N/B, reliure d'édition skivertex grenat, bon état.‎

‎préface du Lieutenant Général Baron de Hennin de Boussu-Walcourt (Aide de Camp Honoraire du Roi).‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 61800

Livre Rare Book

Librairie Ausone
Bruxelles Belgium Bélgica Bélgica Belgique
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Librairie Ausone]

€ 10.00 購入

‎Denver Colo . Juvenile and Family Court‎

‎Report of the Denver Juvenile Court 1904 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 1904. 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 237. EXTRA 10 DAYS APART FROM THE NORMAL SHIPPING PERIOD WILL BE REQUIRED FOR LEATHER BOUND BOOKS. FOLIO EDITION IS ALSO AVAILABLE. hardcover‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : LB1111000511404

‎Denver Colo . Juvenile and Family Court‎

‎Report of the Denver Juvenile Court 1904‎

‎2020. Paperback. New. Lang: - English Pages 237. Reprinted in 2020 with the help of original edition published long back 1904. 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

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : PB1111000511404

‎Denver Colo . Juvenile and Family Court‎

‎Report of the Denver Juvenile Court 1904 Hardcover‎

‎2020. Hardcover. New. Lang: - English Pages 237. Reprinted in 2020 with the help of original edition published long back 1904. 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

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 1111000511404

‎Deny Madeleine‎

‎50 façons d'occuper son diablotin chéri pour avoir 15 minutes de vraie tranquilité‎

‎Bayard Jeunesse 2013 141 pages 11x9x2cm. 2013. Poche. 141 pages.‎

‎l'article peut présenter de légères marques de stockage mais aucune marques de lecture et du reste en très bon état. Envoi rapide et soigné dans enveloppe à bulles depuis France‎

書籍販売業者の参照番号 : 62204

Livre Rare Book

Démons et Merveilles
Joinville France Francia França France
[この書籍販売業者の本を検索: Démons et Merveilles]

€ 4.97 購入

検索結果数 : 31,333 (627 ページ)

最初のページ 前ページ 1 ... 178 179 180 [181] 182 183 184 ... 247 310 373 436 499 562 625 ... 627 次ページ 最後のページ