Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Appleton - Century- Crofts, Inc., New York, 1966
Da: Mountain Books, Kent, CT, U.S.A.
Cloth. Condizione: Good Minus. Second Edition. Reading copy of this very large book full of stories/poetry. Some writing inside, signs of age and wear. Paper edges are foxed. we ship fast. Size: big book.
Editore: New Mexico Historical Review, Albuquerque, 1967
Da: Tschanz Rare Books, Salt Lake City, UT, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
First Edition. 165-209pp. Octavo [23.5 cm] Green side-stapled wrappers. Near fine. Offprint from the New Mexico Historical Review. The diary here published is Lee's account of his trip, with notes on the terrain, the happenings in camp, and the general condition of the army. Lee made it as far as Santa Fe, before returning to Brigham Young with some money collected. There are few major events in the history of the Far West from 1846 to 1849 that did not involve the Mormon Battalion. Recruits for the Mexican War from migrating Mormons in Iowa, the Battalion helped make that migration to Utah possible, opened four major western trails to wagons (including principal overland routes of the forty-niners), showed the importance of the Gadsden Purchase corridor, participated in the United States conquest of California and in the discovery of gold there, escorted John Fremont to his court martial, and carried the news of the gold east to an eager American public. Juanita Brooks (1898-1989) is one of the major historians of Utah history and particularly of the history of southern Utah. She was born and raised in the southern Nevada outpost of Bunkerville. After high school she focused on her education first at Dixie College, and then Brigham Young University. After obtaining a master's degree from Columbia University, she returned to St. George, where she was appointed dean of women for Dixie College. She then embarked on a career of research. In 1934, Brooks' "A Close-Up of Polygamy" was published in Harper's Monthly Magazine, the first of over forty articles and fifteen books published during her career.
Editore: The Huntington Library, San Marino, 1955
Da: Tschanz Rare Books, Salt Lake City, UT, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione sovraccoperta: dj. First Edition. Two volume set. 344, 480pp. Octavos [24 cm] Brown cloth with the red title labels on the backstrips. Near fine/Near fine. Jacket of volume one is price clipped, otherwise nice. John D. Lee was the only person ever convicted of the atrocities at Mountain Meadows (nearly two decades after the event) and executed just a few months before the death of his adopted father, Brigham Young. Important work edited by Brooks and Cleland that covers the time before Lee's arrival in the Great Basin up to his arrest in 1876 for the Mountain Meadows Massacre. These two volumes contain five hitherto unpublished diaries of John D. Lee, 'one of the most tragic, controversial, and enigmatic figures in the history of the West.' The second adopted son of Brigham Young, Lee participated as an important leader in the historic Mormon migration of 1848 to the valley of the Great Salt Lake; played a major role in the exploration and settlement of southern Utah; took an active part in the treacherous, cold-blooded Mountain Meadows Massacre of 1857. Scallawagiana Hundred 98.