Editore: BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART PUB, Baltimore, Maryland, 1941
Da: WONDERFUL BOOKS BY MAIL, CHICO-CA, CA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. Illustrated by Many Glossy 4x7" Photographs (illustratore). Original ed. VERY GOOD CONDITION, clean, solid, bright.bit toning along edges of cover, White glossy text pages. ; Black titles on double spine stapled grey paper covers .last page has small "Trades Council 52" Printer's logo. ; 44pg? thin pages; 1 Gothic Church & 29 model rooms descriptions & photo ilust of era they were popularized. Interesting text for each of a great many European Historical periods. originally exhibieted at Chiclgo Art Institue, S.F.Exposition 1939 & NY World's Fair 1940.Every detail accurately copied from some historic original".
Editore: Bedrock Press, Los Angeles, 1920
Da: R Bryan Old Books, Sewell, NJ, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Fair. No Jacket. Autobiography. No date, circa 1920, trade paperback printing. Printed paper covers rubbed and sunned, spine tanned, small tear on the bottom of the spine, corners bumped with small creases, stains from rusted binding staples. Owner's ink stamps inside the front cover, on the title page, and on the last page, other owner's name on the title page, ink price on the first endpaper. Endpapers and title page foxed, book edges spotted, endpapers pulled from the rusted binding staples. Musty smell from storage. So-so copy of a very scarce book.
Editore: Bedrock Press, Los Angeles, CA, 1944
Da: S. Howlett-West Books (Member ABAA), Modesto, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione: Very Good+. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. 1st Edition; 1st Printing. B&W Illustrations; This book is in Very Good+ condition and has a Good dust jacket. The book and its contents are in generally clean, bright condition. The spine ends and corners of the book covers have some light bumping and rubbing. The text pages are clean and bright. The dust jacket has several edge tears, nicks and medium sized chips missing. "Prior to the arrival of white settlers in present-day Sevier County in the mid-18th century, the area had been inhabited for as many as 20,000 years by nomadic and semi-nomadic Native Americans. In the mid-16th century, Spanish expeditions led by Hernando de Soto (1540) and Juan Pardo (1567) passed through what is now Sevier County, reporting that the region was part of the domain of Chiaha, a minor Muskogean chiefdom centered around a village located on a now-submerged island just upstream from modern Douglas Dam. By the late 17th-century, however, the Cherokee whose ancestors were living in the mountains at the time of the Spaniards' visit had become the dominant tribe in the region. Although they used the region primarily as hunting grounds, the Chicakamauga faction of the Cherokee vehemently fought white settlement in their territory, frequently leading raids on households, even through the signing of various peace treaties, alternating short periods of peace with violent hostility, until forcibly marched from their territory by the U. S. Government on the "Trail of Tears." ".