Search preferences
Direkt zu den wichtigsten Suchergebnissen

Suchfilter

Produktart

  • Alle Product Types 
  • Bücher (3)
  • Magazine & Zeitschriften (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Comics (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Noten (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Kunst, Grafik & Poster (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Fotografien (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Karten (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Manuskripte & Papierantiquitäten (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)

Zustand Mehr dazu

  • Neu (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Wie Neu, Sehr Gut oder Gut Bis Sehr Gut (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Gut oder Befriedigend (1)
  • Ausreichend oder Schlecht (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Wie beschrieben (2)

Einband

Weitere Eigenschaften

Sprache (2)

Preis

Benutzerdefinierte Preisspanne (EUR)

Land des Verkäufers

  • EUR 22,58

    EUR 5,26 Versand
    Versand innerhalb von USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 1st Edition. First Edition. Original publisher's blue cloth binding with gilt lettering on front cover. No lettering on spine. 6" x 8 3/4." Ninety-four pages, complete. Several black-and-white plates, complete. Pages are clean and intact except for a former owner's ink inscription on front free endpaper, former owner's stamp on front pastedown, small occasional smudges or stains, slightly bumped corners, and light age toning. Covers are clean and intact overall except for light rubbing, slight loosening to binding, and slight wear to extremities. A Very Good copy. This book contains a multifaceted report about the Pennsylvania Monument at Andersonville, Georgia that was built in 1905. The monument honors the 1,849 Pennsylvania Union prisoners-of-war (POWs) who died at Andersonville Prison (Camp Sumter) during the American Civil War. The monument is a granite domed arcade that features a solemn bronze figure at the top who represents a POW. The monument also features a bronze relief sculpture on a plaque that shows POWs gathering fresh water from Providence Spring, a spring that had arisen from the parched earth, as if by an act of divine providence, and provided some respite for the POWs. Miller and Clark Granite and Monumental Works of Americus, Georgia had won the commission to design and build the monument (the company also collaborated with artists for specific parts of the monument). Each section within this book is relatively brief, but a variety of information is included. Any original historical materials quoted herein appear as printed text. The following are some of the contents: historical account and correspondence relating to the planning and commissioning of the monument; notable people in charge of the monument's planning and design; exercises observed at Andersonville, Georgia on December 7, 1905; speeches of noted military officers associated with the project such as Colonel James D. Walker, Harry White, Captain William H. Bricker, and Thomas J. Stewart; "Historical Incidents in Connection with Imprisonment of Union Soldiers at Andersonville, Georgia" (including an account by one of the members of an expedition sent to survey Andersonville Prison in July 1865 and accounts about the people who intervened to preserve Andersonville Prison and its cemetery where thousands of POWs were buried); "Roster of Applications Received at Adjutant General's Office, Harrisburg, PA., for Transportation to Andersonville, Georgia, Under Provision of Act of Assembly, Approved May 11, 1905"; and "Evidences of Causes of Mortality." Andersonville Prison was established in February 1864 by the Confederate government as a POW camp. Over the 14-month span of Andersonville Prison's existence, about 45,000 Union prisoners-of-war were held captive there and about 13,000 of them died. In the infamous summer of 1864, it is estimated that 100 Union POWs died every day from disease, exposure, or malnutrition. The camp was beset by overcrowding, inadequate shelter, and a lack of sanitation, potable water, food, and medical supplies. Andersonville Prison was shut down by the Union after the Confederacy's defeat in April 1865.

  • Bild des Verkäufers für Pennsylvania at Salisbury, North Carolina: Ceremonies at the Dedication of the Memorial Erected by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the National Cemetery at Salisbury, North Carolina; In Memory of the Soldiers of Pennsylvania who Perished in the Confederate Prison at Salisbury, North Carolina, 1864 and 1865 zum Verkauf von Cat's Cradle Books

    EUR 21,68

    Versand gratis
    Versand innerhalb von USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Hardcover. Book is rebound in buckram over boards. Binding and hinges sound, pages clean but age-darkened. Illustrated with black and white plates. Contents include proceedings of the monument dedication ceremonies, sources from Union and Confederate records, roster of surviving Pennsylvania prisoners of war who attended the Salisbury ceremony. The Confederate prisoner of war camp at Salisbury, N.C., housed over 15,000 Union prisoners throughout the Civil War with about 5,000 dying and being buried at the site. Ex-Library; 8.5" tall; 71 pages. Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket.

  • EUR 19,87

    EUR 10,96 Versand
    Versand von Kanada nach USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Cloth. Zustand: Good VG, or Better. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Dustjacket Issued. Later Printing of 1905. In memory of the 1849 soldiers of Pennsylvania who perished in the Confederate Prison at Andersonville, Georgia. 93pp, photo illustrated, tables. Clean, unmarked interior. Tight, square binding. Only slight wear to the blue cloth at the tips of the corners. Solid and sound. Weight, 455g. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Book.