Produktart
Zustand
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Land des Verkäufers
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Erscheinungsdatum: 1900
Anbieter: G.S. MacManus Co., ABAA, Bryn Mawr, PA, USA
(MARYLAND REGIMENTAL). GOLDSBOROUGH, W[illiam] W. The Maryland Line in the Confederate Army, 1861-1865. [Baltimore: Press of Guggenheimer, Weil & Co.], 1900. Enlarged ed. 397pp. Frontis., illus., portraits, plates. Later cloth, orig. brown morocco title laid down on front board, A.e.g. Tape repair to frontis., genealogical notes William A. Albaugh III on rear pastedown, else very good. HOWES G-226. Laid in are pieces of the battle flag of the First Virginia Cavalry. "The best study of a Maryland unit; Goldsborough was one of the few Confederates who freely confessed to robbing dead soldiers" Nevins I, p. 95. In Tall Cotton, 69. Dornbusch II, 502.
Verlag: Kelly, Piet & Company, Baltimore, 1869
Anbieter: Vintage Books and Fine Art, Oxford, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Very Good. 1st Edition. 8vo. A wonderful and quite scarce 1st Edition of this important Maryland Confederate history, uniquely rebound in crushed leather with the original spine laid down, as is Goldsborough's signature in gilt, laid into the front board. 357pp + ads. Square tight binding. Frontis portrait of Arnold Elzey, commissioned a Lieutenant Colonel of the 1dst Maryland Brigade and fought with Stonewall Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley. Interior generally clean and bright, save for 1869 and 1886 pencil signatures to a front preliminary page, and what appears to be some 19th-century pencil ghosting to another of the front prelims. Very sporadic and light foxing to outer pages. A very desirable copy of a scarce Maryland Civil War history.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1869
Anbieter: G.S. MacManus Co., ABAA, Bryn Mawr, PA, USA
Erstausgabe
GOLDSBOROUGH, W[illiam] W[orthington]. The Maryland Line in the Confederate States Army. Baltimore: Kelly, Piet & Company, 1869. 1st ed. Portraits. Orig. cloth. Front hinge professionally repaired, else a very good copy. HOWES G-226. "The best study of a Maryland unit; Goldsborough was one of the few Confederates who freely confessed to robbing dead soldiers." Nevins I, p. 95.