San Francisco City Hall Competition - Rare Book Insider
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San Francisco City Hall Competition

4to. 48 pp. 18 illustrated plates presenting various designs. Business advertisements. Two black & white photographs of the existing city hall laid in. Yellow staplebound wrapers. A scarce edition of the "Building and Industrial News weekly publication devoted to the building and industrial activities of the Pacifc Coast; only 1 copy located at Stanford University Library. This issue contains complete drawings of the accepted design for the San Francisco City Hall, the winning Architects Bakewell & Brown, together with twenty other half tones of the elevations submitted by the architect, awarded prizes of one thousand dollars each. The competition was the most noteworhy architectural one ever held on the Pacific Coast. One hundred and odd applications were received, and seventy-three sets of finished plans were submitted.
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Empire on the Platte

Crabb, Richard; with research by Burt Sell "An official publication of the Nebraska Centennial. This is number 180 of a special edition of 250 copies SIGNED by the author". 8vo. x, 373 pp. Index. Illustrated by Ernest L. Reedstrom and with photographic plates and portraits throughout, map endpapers. Two original paper "Nebraska Centennial" blue promotional wrap-around bands laid in (one in fine condition, see image). Decorated tan cloth spine, rust paper covered boards in publisher's pictorial dustjacket. Housed in publisher's box with jacket image applied to top. A fine copy; minor rubbing to box corners else fine. A trade edition was also issued in pictorial cloth. Ramon Adams in his Six-guns mentions the trade edition but apparently was unaware of this scarce special edition. We find only one copy of this special edition in online institutions. A rousing adventure in a fascinating history of the Great Plains from the Civil War until the 1880's. The book was supressed (and copies ordered destroyed) by the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, as a result of a suit by Alan Swallow (publisher of titles by Sage Books) which proved plagerism from Harry Christman's "Ladder of Rivers" published by Swallow. This copy is certainly from the few copies that were surrendered to Alan Swallow. How many copies Swallow had is not known. In any case, this is one of the best books on the constant fight of I. P. Olive and his cowboys in Texas and Nebraska and their fight with the homesteaders and the rustlers. It is "one of the most nearly complete histories of the feud between the Olives and Luther Mitchell and Ami Ketchum" (Adams). Also includes material on Doc Middleton, Jesse James, and Johnny Ringo.