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Edité par 1890 CIRCA, 1890
Vendeur : Princeton Antiques Bookshop, Atlantic City, NJ, Etats-Unis
Etat : GOOD. DATE PUBLISHED: 1890 CIRCA EDITION:
Edité par Bradley & Rulofson (n. d.), San Francisco
Vendeur : Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, Etats-Unis
Ca 1880. Albumen bust portrait of Sanger, looking to her right. Grey mount, imprint at bottom, under image; elaborate publisher imprint to verso. Image: 5-7/8" x 4"; mount: 6-1/2" x 4-1/8" "Rachel Mary Sanger made her professional debut in London at the 1865 opening of the Bijou Theatre (Highbury) in the title role of a burlesque of Ernani. She later appeared in two Covent Garden pantomimes (Aladdin and The Forty Thieves), and in succeeding years took a number of important parts at the St. James's, Princess's, Gaiety, Olympic, Globe, and Adelphi Theatres, as well as on tour. Her first appearance under D'Oyly Carte management came in 1876, when from January until March of that year he appeared first as Malvina, then as Valentine in The Duke's Daughter at the Royalty, Globe, and Charing Cross Theatres. Carte was joint manager with George Dolby for Selina Dolaro's Company. In 1878 she played the leading role in Diplunacy, a burlesque at the Strand, and in 1879 she was engaged at the Gaiety Theatre, Dublin, where she created the part of Annie in a play called Pair o' Wings. She then made her way to America, appearing first at the Corinthian Academy of Music, Rochester, New York, as Princess Zeolide in W. S. Gilbert's The Palace of Truth in September 1879. She later performed at Haverley's Brooklyn Theatre in November 1879 as Minnie Symperson in Gilbert's Engaged, before making her Manhattan debut in January 1880 at the Park Theatre in a Gilbert double-bill, as the Marchioness of Market Harborough in The Wedding March and Jenny Northcott in Sweethearts. In 1880 she appeared in San Francisco as Mabel in a Carte-sanctioned production of The Pirates of Penzance with Charles Locke's Pacific Coast Company. â In April and May 1881 Miss Sanger appeared as Arabella Lane in Stephens & Solomon's Billee Taylor with R. D'Oyly Carte and Edward E. Rice's Second American Billee Taylor Company, and in May she transferred to the First Company, switching assignments with Vernona Jarbeau, and playing Arabella in Boston and New York until June 1881. â She had a few more roles on the New York stage in 1881-82, but was forced to retire shortly thereafter. She was just 34 when she died in New York in 1884.â " [D'Oyle Carte website]. Bit of yellowing to photograph, with small chip to upper right corner, otherwise good contrast & tonality, overall Very Good. Mount with minor wear & soiling, Very Good. Housed in an archival mylar sleeve.
Edité par Bradley & Rulofson, San Francisco, 1878
Vendeur : Harry E Bagley Books Ltd, Fredericton, NB, Canada
Photographie
No Binding. Etat : Very Good. albumen photo, cabinet card (6.50 x 4.25 inches), 3/4 length port. of Richard L. Sherlock, with his name in ink, dated, at foot of back mark. Richard Lloyd "Dick" Sherlock was born in Ireland in 1852. He came to the United States with his brother Tom to settle, first in Humboldt County, California and later to Lake County, Oregon in 1872. He spent his life in the sheep ranching busines with a short time-out to join in the Klondike gold rush in 1898. He died in West Side, Lake County, Oregon in 1937. Please note the scan of the back mark is from a photocopy since I am unable to display both from a single scan.
Edité par Argonia, Kansas, 1898
Vendeur : Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
1st Edition. One black and white photograph. Photograph: 3-3/4" x 5-1/2". Mount: 4-1/4" x 6-1/2" Ink inscription reads "Ge[orge] Tracy, Montie Wagoner (sp?), Dortha Ziegler, Prof. A. W. Lynn Taken about 1898 This was a Pricilla and John Alden play. At Argonia Kansas Summer co.". A VG copy, some scuffing/scratches to photograph, edges rubbed and bumped, ink markings (later annotation) and water soiling to verso, overall bright. Single photograph, mounted to stiff gray card stock. Now housed in a mylar sleeve.
Edité par (n. d.), (n. p.)
Vendeur : Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, Etats-Unis
Ca 1880s. Photograph: 4-1/2" x 6-3/4". Mount: 6-3/8" x 8-3/8" 19th C. albumen photograph of the Walter Baker Pierce Mill, in Dorchester Massachusetts. "Built in 1872 after the designs of Nathanial J. Bradlee and Walter T. Winslow, the Pierce Mill at 1220 Adams Street is a three-story plus mansard Second Empire style brick building with four-story projecting central and end pavilions capped by peaked roofs and cast-iron cresting. Facade detailing includes decorative window lintels, moulded stringcourses, and bracketed cornice. Segmetally arched window openings characterize the third and fourth floors, and tall dormer windows extend the height of the building's mansard roof. Attached to the rear is a five-story brick building which was completed in 1868 and was originally known as the 'Steam Mill.'" [Dorchester Atheneum]. Mount age-toned, and some wear. Spot to lower left margin [just touching image]. Title penciled under photograph. Photograph with some browning & spotting, a bit faded to lower portion, though all details still visible. About Very Good. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve.
Edité par W. A. Collom (n. d.), San Francisco
Vendeur : Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, Etats-Unis
Ca 1880s/1890s [definitely post-1883]. "The Conservatory of Flowers is a greenhouse and botanical garden that houses a collection of rare and exotic plants in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. With construction completed in 1878, it remains the oldest building in the park, and the oldest municipal wooden conservatory remaining in the United States. It is also one of the first municipal conservatories constructed in the country." [Wiki]. A fire in 1883 damaged the Conservatory's dome, which was rebuilt with a $10,000. donation from Charles Crocker. The new dome, pictured here, included a clerestory, and a finial of turned wood, vice an eagle, which had been in place prior. Pencil presentation to verso, "With Compliments". A Very Good example. Black & white photograph, mounted to stiff card stock. Photo: 4-1/4" x 7-1/2". Card: 5-1/4" x 8-1/2". Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve.
Edité par 6 5/8" x 4 3/4"., in full uniform. Werner & Son, Artists. 39 Grafton Street, Dublin. c.[1893], 1893
Vendeur : J. Patrick McGahern Books Inc. (ABAC), Ottawa, ON, Canada
Printed on the verso, numerous attestations., near fine condition, rare. (cgc.bx).