The Alpine Club Centenary Dinner 1857-1957 . . . November 6th, 1957, Dorchester Hotel, London, W.1. - Rare Book Insider
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The Alpine Club Centenary Dinner 1857-1957 . . . November 6th, 1957, Dorchester Hotel, London, W.1.

4to. pp. 8; very good in original stiff pictorial card wrappers, slightly rubbed and soiled, with, loosely inserted, the table plan for the dinner. A menu printed for the dinner, at which were present Lord Hunt, and many luminaries of the climbing world - Tenzing, Noyce, Desio, Franco, Francis Farquhar, James Wordie, Houston, Longstaff, Winthrop Young, Gavin de Beer, Howard-Bury, Odell, Rebuffat, Kenneth Mason, and many more.
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Seven Pillars of Wisdom. A Triumph.

Seven Pillars of Wisdom. A Triumph.

Subscriber's edition. 4to. pp. xxii, 659, [i] [page xv mispaginated as viii]; 66 plates including port. frontis. of Faisal, decorative initials by Edward Wadsworth, 4 folding coloured maps on linen, illusts. to text, decorative endpapers; very good in original quarter pigskin, gilt, a.e.g., a few minor marks, flaw to pigskin on upper board. Initialled by Lawrence on p. xix "Complete copy 1.xii.26 T.E.S." with a MS correction to list of plates. "I hate bibliophiles", Lawrence claimed in a letter to Edward Garnett, "and did my best to throw them off the track with the SP, so I did not number my copies, or declare how large the edition was . . . or have a standard binding, or signatures, or index, or anything posh". Lawrence's epic narrative of his war career in the Middle East took many years to come into print. A first draft dating from 1919 was reputedly lost at Reading Station. Re-written in haste, the new text comprised some 400,000 words, which Lawrence redrafted over the next two years, reducing it to about 70,000 words by 1922. This initial version was printed in only a handful of copies for friends, and in 1923 he decided to publish it in an expensive limited edition. This process took a further two years, Lawrence making changes as the project continued. On completion, the printed sheets were bound by different binders, supposedly to make it impossible to distinguish earlier from later issues. This lavish edition includes illustrations, initials and vignettes that were contributed by Eric Kennington, William Roberts, Augustus John, William Nicholson, Paul Nash, Blair Hughes-Stanton, Gertrude Hermes, and others. In common with other copies of this edition, the "Prickly Pear" plate not included in the list of illustrations is present, and two Paul Nash illustrations called for on pages 92 and 208 are absent (as usual); also not present is the Blair Hughes-Stanton wood engraving on the dedication recorded in a very few copies.
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A small archive of items relating to Operation Deep Freeze, 1955-63.

Comprising: 1: Album belonging to William K. Horner, Chief Aerographer's Mate who overwintered 1955-6, with over 60 contemporary photographs mostly approx. 5 x 4" but some larger, a large-format photographic portrait of Commander George Dufek inscribed to Horner, two Christmas cards sent from the Antarctic by Horner to his family, and two tin labels taken from one of the historic huts; 2: An envelope of approx. 40 large format official photographs from the 1950s expeditions, each approx. 10 x 8" and captioned to verso; 3. An Information Folder for 1963, containing three booklets (Welcome to Operation Deep Freeze, Introduction to Antarctica, and Aviation in the Antarctic), a leaflet for Air Devron Six, a 2pp. mimeograph, and eight 1960s photographs. From 1955, the United States initiated a series of expeditions to the Antarctic, in preparation for its involvement in the International Geophysical Year 1957/8. Known collectively as Operation Deep Freeze, the first expedition was led by George Dufek in 1955, though the Polar pioneer Richard Byrd had titular command. The sizeable task force for the first season established an operations station at McMurdo Sound, and a further base on the Ross Ice Shelf, Little America V. The location put members of the expedition in relative proximity to the huts built by Scott and Shackleton at Hut Point and Cape Royds. The album offered here, compiled by or for expedition member William Horner, contains images of the first season, and mementoes such as Christmas cards sent home from the Antarctic, and two tin labels almost certainly collected from one of the historic huts - one for Beach's Apricot, the other Griffiths McAlister & Co. (arguably these were taken from Shackleton's hut). This first year of operation also saw the first plane landing at the South Pole. Operation Deep Freeze continued each year - the other items offered here record later seasons from 1956 to 1963 - and to date forms part of the United States ongoing presence on the continent.
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