[ALAMEDA GOLD AND SILVER MINING CO.]. Stock Certificate. - Rare Book Insider
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[ALAMEDA GOLD AND SILVER MINING CO.]. Stock Certificate.

printed by M. E. Mathews San Francisco, Oakland, California: 1877
  • $125
ALAMEDA GOLD AND SILVER MINING CO.]. Stock Certificate. No. 996. Unused. 3¾x9¼ inches plus borders. Slightly toned. Minor wrinkling to center. Small thin spot to upper right corner, but fine and crisp. Oakland, California: printed by M. E. Mathews San Francisco, c.1877. The works of The Alameda Gold and Silver Mining Company were located in the Cornucopia Mining District, Elko County, Nevada. The company's offices were in Oakland, California. The company was incorporated April 24, 1876. Quite scarce.
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The Illustrated Hand-Book, a New Guide for Travelers through the United States of America. accompanied by a Large and Accurate Map

SMITH, J. Calvin 16mo. (6x3¾ inches) Pp. 2 [advts], 233, 234 [blank]. Steel-engraved frontis, wood-engraved title vignette, 123 wood-engraved illustrations interspersed throughout the text, large folding hand-colored engraved map (21½ x 27 inches). Publisher's light green cloth, gilt lettering and design on front cover and spine, blind stamped on rear cover. Light wear to spine ends and corners, bookplate on inner cover. Light foxing to engraved frontis plate, a few tiny breaks at some fold junctions of map, 3 inch split to center of one fold. A very good copy and, with the exception noted, the map in very nice condition. New York: Sherman & Smith, 1850. First published in 1846, and reprinted with the same collation in 1847, '48, '49, and 1850. Rare in any of the early printings. The large folding map, with contemporary hand-coloring in outline is titled, "A New Map for Travelers through the United States of America showing the Rail Roads, Canals & Stage Roads. With the Distances., Published by Sherman & Smith. New York, 1850" (entered 1846). The important map was first published in the 1846 edition and then updated for the editions of 1848, 1849 and this edition (1850). This fine map includes engraved pictorial vignettes and 4 inset maps. The insets include "Rail Road Route from New York to Philadelphia," "Rail Roads between the cities of New York, Boston, and Albany," "Rail Road and Canal Routes from Albany to Buffalo," and "Oregon, Northern California, Santa Fe, etc." The latter inset (first published in the 1846 edition) is important for showing regions before the Mexican War. The map extends as far west as central Texas. [Howes I: S-614; Howes II: 622; Sabin: 82928; [see] Wheat, Mapping the Transmississippi West, volume 3: p. 267]. Size: 16mo - over 5¾ - 6¾" tall
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Disturnell’s Strangers’ Guide to San Francisco and Vicinity. A Complete and Reliable Book of Reference for Tourists and other Strangers visiting the Metropolis of the Pacific

Disturnell, W.C. First edition. This guide book was published with a map. Our copy lacks the small folding map but there is no indication of anything being removed. In this case, the book slipped through without the map.12mo. [7], 162, [13]pp. Numerous advertisements, including endpapers. Blind and gilt-stamped dark blue cloth. Mild rubbing to spine ends and extremities. A fine and clean copy. A comprehensive tourist guide to San Francisco. Provides an historical sketch of San Francisco and its municipal government, location of schools, the health department, the fire department and locations of apparatus and signal boxes, the police department, municipal buildings, wards and election precincts, Federal officers, the Post Office and Custom House, military posts and fortifications, lighthouses and fog signals, buildings and blocks, halls, the Sea Wall and dry docks, Consuls, banks and clearing houses, telegraph and express companies, water and gas works, churches of various denominations, Chinese missions, associations and societies, asylums, hospitals and cemeteries, libraries, private schools, newspapers, hotels, hack and cab ordinance, markets, baths, theatres, museums, public parks and squares, public gardens, race courses, private residences, manufacturing industries, the Chinese district, railroads, street railroads, ferries and river steamers, steamship lines and Atlantic steamship agencies, routes of travel from San Francisco to principal towns and Summer resorts, prominent localities (from Alcatraz Island to Visitation Valley), etc., etc. Also gives information on Alameda, Oakland, etc. The last 15 pages provides a fairly comprehensive business and hotel directory or "Purchaser's Guide" listing businesses offering everything from Apothecaries to Windmills. [Cowan: p.176; Rocq: 9168; not noted by Quebedeaux].
  • $900
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Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Snow White and Doc Original Production Cel and Master Background from Courvoisier Galleries.

Walt Disney Studios and Courvoisier Galleries [DISNEY] Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Snow White and Doc Original Production Cel and Master Background from Courvoisier Galleries. 23.25" x 19.50" Plexiglas-fronted frame with a 15" x 11" mat opening. Courvoiser set-up of original cels of Snow White and Doc, on the Master watercolor background. Clear celluliod sheet over entire image, matted and framed. Some waviness to whole celluloid sheet, as usual. Overall, a beautiful image. San Francisco: Walt Disney Studios and Courvoisier Galleries, 1937. Rare hand-inked, hand-painted production cels of Snow White and Doc. Doc is warning Snow White to be careful of the Evil Queen as the dwarves leave to go to work for the day. The cels are on their hand-painted watercolor Key Master production background, showing the front of the dwarf's home. As hundreds of cels may have been required for a single scene, only one background was necessary, so master backgrounds such as this are extremely scarce. In late 1937, The Walt Disney Studios awed the world with the release of their first feature-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. With the tremendous success of the film, Guthrie Courvoisier, President of the highly respectable Courvoisier Galleries in San Francisco, saw the opportunity to showcase the artistic talents of Walt Disney and his team. Guthrie believed that the Disney paintings on celluloid that were used to create the animation of Snow White could be sold in high-end galleries and museums around the world as valuable pieces of art. In July of 1938, Walt and Roy Disney signed a contract with Courvoisier Galleries, giving them the exclusive rights to market and sell Disney original art. Guthrie closed his gallery in 1942, in order to help the War effort and manufacture parts for military aircraft, but he continued to market the original Disney cels through 1946.
  • $42,500
  • $42,500
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The Overland Stage to California. Personal Reminiscences and Authentic History of the Great Overland Stage Line and Pony Express from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean

Root, Frank A. and W. E. Connelley First edition. Very scarce, and quite rare in this condition! SIGNED by the author, "Sincerely and truly, Frank A. Root. Very rare thus! Pp. xvii, [1], 630. Frontis portrait, numerous photographic illustrations and portraits, folding map. Index, list of subscribers. Original pictorial light brown cloth stamped in black and gold on spine and front cover. Very minor rubbing to spine ends and corners. A very fine and clean copy. One of the most valuable narratives on the Overland Stage. As the agent of the postal department, Root oversaw the transportation of the mails over the great stage line. Connelley was a veteran writer who whipped Root's manuscript into shape. The narrative is packed with anecdotes and details and is abundantly illustrated. "The original is very rare and is considered the standard history of the early stage lines" (Six-Guns). "Root's Overland Stage is a classic account of this mode of travel under conditions of extreme peril" (Mattes). "A basic work about early Western transportation systems" (Paher). A number of years ago, a direct relative of Frank A. Root informed me that the reason the first edition of this work is so scarce is that there was a major flood of the Kansas River and most copies of the work were destroyed. [Cowan: p.541; Dobie: pp. 79, 81; Flake: 7417; Graff: 3562; Howes I: R-434; Howes II: R-434; Mattes: 1908 and 2027; Paher: 1689; Six-Guns: 1897; Streeter: 3117].
  • $1,500
  • $1,500
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Lights and Shades in San Francisco

LLOYD, Benjamin E. First edition. Very scarce, especially in this condition. 523pp. Extra-engraved pictorial title, 18 plates. Handsomely bound in new three-quarter light tan calf, 2 gilt-lettered black spine labels, endpapers renewed. A fine copy, clean throughout with almost none of the usual foxing. A classic account. "Yet the best work descriptive of the familiar and unfamiliar features of old San Francisco" (Cowan). An extraordinary thorough portrait of the city where "life. is intense, and has marked peculiarities." A wonderful book covering every aspect of early San Francisco, with each of the seventy-six chapters covering a different subject: Thomas Starr King, the Palace Hotel, mining stocks, restaurant life, the Cliff House, Ralston, the Barbary Coast, Emperor Norton, Bank of California, the Elite, the police and fire departments, theaters, street railroads, saloons, earthquakes, Woodward's gardens, suicide and insanity, Golden Gate Park, cemeteries, the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, Hotels, charities, quacks, clubs, blackmailing and confidence games, street preaching, Golden Gate Park, and on, and on; nearly 100 pages are devoted to Chinatown and the Chinese. "The descriptive passages on the Chinese in California contained in this book. are some of the best to be found in any reference work listed in this bibliography. They are detailed to a degree which gives them excellent historical value for the researcher" (Hansen). [Cowan: p. 394; Hansen, Chinese in California: p.84; Howes I: L-404; Howes II: L-405; Rocq: 10249; Zamorano Select: 66].
  • $1,250
  • $1,250
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Official Guide Book – 1940. Revised Edition. Golden Gate International Exposition on San Francisco Bay (cover title)

Small octavo. 8x5½ inches. 96pp. Profusely illustrated with photographs (some in color) ads, etc. Large folding color "cartograph," 16x19½ inches. Index. Slighter stiffer pictorial wrappers printed in color; gray cloth spine. Interior leaves toned. A very good copy with the original folding cartograph in fine condition. First Revised edition. Scarce with the folding map intact. The official guide book for the Treasure Island exposition. How to get there, what to see, services and rest rooms, food and refreshments, courts and gardens, outdoor art, etc. Printed with an Art Deco style cover, this guide includes the large folding color oblique bird's-eye-view "cartograph" by Ruth Taylor showing the entire island and all the buildings and exhibits (keyed by number or letter), with a portion of San Francisco in the foreground and the East Bay in the background. The verso of the cartograph shows detailed sections of the island. First Revised edition. Scarce with the folding map intact. The official guide book for the Treasure Island exposition. How to get there, what to see, services and rest rooms, food and refreshments, courts and gardens, outdoor art, etc. Printed with an Art Deco style cover, this guide includes the large folding color oblique bird's-eye-view "cartograph" by Ruth Taylor showing the entire island and all the buildings and exhibits (keyed by number or letter), with a portion of San Francisco in the foreground and the East Bay in the background. The verso of the cartograph shows detailed sections of the island.
  • $125
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Letter of Hon. Whiting Griswold, in Reply to the Speech of Hon. Benjamin F. Butler, Delivered a Lowell, May 15, 1860, on the Proceedings of the Charleston Convention

GRISWOLD, Hon. Whiting First edition. Scarce. Octavo. 16pp. Sewn. Self-cover lightly soiled, 2 light horizontal creases to leaves, tiny light stain to fore-edge of text block. A fine copy. This speech was delivered at the official proceedings of the Democratic National Convention in Charleston, South Carolina. At Charleston, a number of nominations were made, and voting took place to decide the presidential ticket. However, delegates, at logger heads over the issues of slavery, failed to successfully reach the 2/3 vote necessary to nominate a presidential candidate at the 1860 Democratic Convention in Charleston. Whiting Griswold (1814-1874) was an American abolitionist, lawyer and politician who served as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and in the Massachusetts Senate. The following, from part of this speech, says it all: "In conclusion you say you voted for Jefferson Davis of Mississippi. Among the chief reasons for this vote was the fact that he assisted Massachusetts in securing her just dues, which she ought to have had and which Mr. Davis if within his power, ought to have Obtained for her years before. Now I have nothing to say against Mr. Davis. Massachusetts thanks him for his exertions in doing tardy justice to our State. Mr. Davis is a man of courage, a statesman of the extreme Southern sectional school, honest I doubt not, and patriotic in his views. But it is a curious fact, that, after the long struggle, so honorable to you, in favor of non-intervention, you should select as a candidate the only prominent statesman, almost in the country, who never indorsed the Cincinnati Plat form, who entered his protest in the outset, against the great doctrine of popular sovereignty in the territories. You may be able to reconcile his course of action in your own mind. I cannot do it myself" (Griswold, Letter of. p.11). [Sabin: 28909].
  • $175