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<center><b>Jeschke Jadi Auctions Berlin<br>Rare Books, Prints, Historical Photography<br>29 September 2023</b><b>Jeschke Jádi, Sep. 29:</b> Jan Theodor de Bry. <i>Anthologia magna sive Florilegium novum.</i> 1626. 9,000 €<b>Jeschke Jádi, Sep. 29:</b> John Locke. <i>Epistola de tolerantia ad Clarissimum Virum T.A.R.P.T.O.L.A.</i> 1689. 9000 €<b>Jeschke Jádi, Sep. 29:</b> F. T. Marinetti, Boccioni, Pratella, Carrà, a.o. <i>Collection of 35 Futurist manifestos.</i> 1909-1933. 7000 €<b>Jeschke Jádi, Sep. 29:</b> Johann Elert Bode, Rare engraved celestial globe. (1804). 6000 €<b>Jeschke Jádi, Sep. 29:</b> Sebastian Brant (ed.). <i>Tertia pars huius operis in se continens glosam ordinariam cum expositione lyre litterali et morali.</i> 1498. 5000 €
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<center><b>Christie’s<br>Charlie Watts: Literature and Jazz<br>London and online auction<br>15–29 September</b><b>Christie’s, Explore now:</b><br>F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940). <i>The Great Gatsby.</i> New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1925. £100,000–150,000<b>Christie’s, Explore now:</b><br>Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930). </i>The Hound of the Baskervilles: Another Adventure of Sherlock Holmes.</b> London: George Newnes, 1902. £70,000–100,000<b>Christie’s, Explore now:</b><br>Agatha Christie (1890–1976). <i>The Thirteen Problems.</i> London: for the Crime Club Ltd. by W. Collins Sons & Co. Ltd., 1932. £40,000–60,000<b>Christie’s, Explore now:</b><br>Dashiell Hammett (1894–1961). <i>The Maltese Falcon.</i> New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1930. £30,000–50,000
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<center><b>Potter & Potter Auctions<br>Nobu Shirase and the Japanese Antarctic Expedition: the Collection of Chet Ross<br>October 12, 2023</b><b>Potter & Potter, Oct. 12:</b> [BYRD]. VEER, Willard Van der and Joseph T. RUCKER, cinematographers. The 35mm motion picture Akeley camera that filmed the Academy Award-winning documentary “With Byrd at the South Pole”. $30,000 to $50,000.<b>Potter & Potter, Oct. 12:</b> [SHIRASE, Nobu, his copy]. RYUKEI, Yano. <i>Young Politicians of Thebes: Illustrious Tales of Statesmanship.</i> Tokyo(?), 1881-84. $15,000 to $20,000.<b>Potter & Potter, Oct. 12:</b> SHACKLETON, Ernest H. <i>The Antarctic Book.</i> Winter Quarters 1907-1909 [dummy copy of the supplement to: <i>The Heart of the Antarctic</i>]. London, 1909. $10,000 to $15,000.<b>Potter & Potter, Oct. 12:</b> [USS BEAR]. The original auxiliary deck wheel from the famed USS Bear, 1874-1933. “PROBABLY THE MOST FAMOUS SHIP IN THE HISTORY OF THE COAST GUARD” (USCG). $10,000 to $15,000.<b>Potter & Potter, Oct. 12:</b> HENSON, Matthew. <i>A Negro Explorer at the North Pole.</i> With a forward by Robert Peary. Introduction by Booker T. Washington. New York, [1912]. $3,000 to $4,000.
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<center><b>Gonnelli: Auction 46 Books<br>Autographs & Manuscripts<br>Oct 3rd-5th 2023</b><b>Gonnelli:</b> Tilson - Zanotto, Il vero tema. 2011. Starting price 150 €<b>Gonnelli:</b> Munari, Storia di un filo. Starting price 400 €<b>Gonnelli:</b> Debord, Contre le cinéma. 1964. Starting price 150 €<b>Gonnelli:</b> Futurism books and ephemera<b>Gonnelli:</b> Travel books<b>Gonnelli:</b> Medicine books<b>Gonnelli:</b> Levaillant, Histoire naturelle des perroquets. 1801-1805. Starting price 52.000 €<b>Gonnelli:</b> Carrera, Il gioco de gli scacchi. 1617. Starting price 3200 €<b>Gonnelli:</b> Vergilius, Opera. 1515. Starting price 800 €
Rare Book Monthly
Book Catalogue Reviews - February - 2006 Issue
Signed Documents of The South from Joe Rubinfine
Fast forward 77 years and the names are the same, but the world has been turned upside down. John A. Washington III was the great grand-nephew of George, and the last Washington to hold title to Mount Vernon. In 1861, he was a colonel in the Confederate army. This Washington, however, was the aide, not the boss. His boss was Robert E. Lee, Light Horse Harry's son. Together, they strove to tear apart the nation their forbearers had created. Item 84 is a collection of seven letters John A. Washington wrote to his 13-year-old daughter in 1861. He provides advice to young "Lily" (Eliza), and describes his own travels. On July 17 he writes, "we are off to war at last, Gen. Lee, Mr. Taylor and I leave here tomorrow morning for Staunton..." On August 26, he explains that most of his property has either been taken by the enemy or rendered useless, and the income he used to receive from it is gone. He advises the children to save all possible expenses. On September 6, he reports he expects to be advancing on the enemy the next day. He signs off, "Good bye dear Lily, as soon as anything occurs I shall certainly write if I can..." It was his last letter. This story does not have a happy ending like that of great great Uncle George. A week later, while on a scouting mission with Lee's son, young Washington was killed. Four years later, Light Horse Harry's son would surrender. The Union held together. $15,000.
Here is a reminder of another Washington and Lee connection, in earlier, happier, united times. It is a letter from Eliza Lewis to her friend Mary Anna Randolph Custis on December 17, 1828. Miss Custis was the great-granddaughter of Martha Washington, and, at the time, the future Mrs. Robert E. Lee. It is filled with gossip about the social aristocracy of Virginia. At one point Miss Lewis comments, "you did not mention Mr. Lee, I presume he is still a worshiper at your shrine..." Obviously, he was, for they married two and one-half years later. Item 78. $500.
While these young ladies were having a splendid time in late 1828, master orator and Great Compromiser Henry Clay was most morose. Clay had thrown his support to John Quincy Adams in the 1824 election, enabling the latter to defeat Andrew Jackson despite Jackson's winning the plurality of the popular vote. Adams named Clay Secretary of State, which Jackson's supporters labeled a "corrupt bargain," believing the appointment was a trade for support. Four years later, Jackson trounced Adams in the rematch, a most distressing result for Clay. This was made worse by the fact that Jackson carried Clay's home state of Kentucky. Clay states that it is his duty to submit to the will of the people, though, "as a lover of liberty, I shall ever deeply deplore it." The results from his home state, he says, "will mortify and distress me." Clay concludes, "I hope, nevertheless, that I shall find myself able to sustain with composure the shock of this event, and every other trial to which I shall be destined..." The melodramatic Clay would be subject to more trials, as he would lose two more presidential elections, and though being one of America's greatest statesmen, never make it to the highest office in the land. Item 67. $4,500.