American Miscellany from J & J Hanrahan
J & J Hanrahan's List 57
By Michael Stillman
This month we review our first catalogue from J & J Hanrahan. The Hanrahans are located in Wells, Maine, along the Atlantic coast and just down the road from the Bush family compound. Not the ranch, the summer home. It is the epitome of old New England, and so are many of the books they offer. Now, you will find much more in their catalogue, even some Texas material, but their "List 57" does contain many items pertaining to Maine and Northern New England. Some of what we found follows.
Do you have trouble understanding women? Here's the solution: The History of Women, from the Earliest Antiquity, to the Present Time; Giving Some Account of almost every interesting Particular concerning that Sex, among all Nations ancient and modern. Since everything ever known about women was covered, a second volume was required. However, the author not being a member of "that sex," he might have missed a thing or two. Still we must give Dr. William Alexander credit for trying. Since this was published in 1782, it may be time for an update. Item 1. Priced at $450.
Francis Underhill wrote a book helpful for those of means, Driving for Pleasure Or, The Harness Stable and its Appointments. This book included illustrations of horses and carriages suitable for a pleasure drive. But, his timing was terrible. Look at the publication date: 1897. This book couldn't have had a very long shelf life. Something was about to happen to make it obsolete in a very short time. Item 82. $475.
William Haskett provided an expose of the Shakers in 1828 titled Shakerism Unmasked, or the History of the Shakers... Haskett knew the Shakers as he had formerly been a member. The Shakers developed a series of communities, primary in New England and the Northeast, during the 19th century. They practiced an austere lifestyle, lots of work, not much fun, and, of course, celibacy. Not surprisingly, none of these were helpful for long-term survival of the community. Today, the Shakers have virtually disappeared, but they left us a legacy of uncomfortable furniture with which to remember them. Item 291. $550.
|
American Miscellany from J & J Hanrahan
Robert Frost's signature on a bibliography of his work.
Here is one of those Texas titles: The Texan Revolution. Republished from the Northampton (Massachusetts) Gazette. This book includes a group of letters which are less than complimentary toward the Lone Star Republic (this is from 1843 when Texas was still an independent republic). Among the headings that telegraphs author David Child's views is, "The Kindness and Generosity of the Mexicans, and the Ingratitude and Falsehoods of the American Emigrants, and the Pretexts of the Revolution." There is also a letter about the "Late Outrage in California" involving an incident at Monterey. The explanation of Child's hostility is that he was a strong abolitionist, while the Texas Revolution brought slavery to that land. Item 3. $1,500.
President Zachary Taylor, though not against slavery, was an ardent unionist. During his brief administration, 1848-1849, he made it clear that he would personally lead the army against the South if it should ever attempt to secede, and hang the rebels. So, it is the ultimate irony to find that his only son, Richard Taylor, was an officer in the Confederate Army. After the war, Lt. General Richard Taylor wrote a book about his experiences, Destruction and Reconstruction. It is considered to be one of the better accounts of some of the battles of the Civil War. Item 101 is a first edition from 1879. $350.
Here is another interesting post-Civil War title, A Constitutional View of the Late War Between The States, by Alexander Stephens. Stephens makes the argument that state sovereignty and the right of secession are constitutionally upheld. Richard Harwell, in his bibliography of Confederate books "In Tall Cotton," describes Stephens' book as, "A learned defense of what the Civil War just proved was indefensible." Item 117. $400.
Hannibal Hamlin is one of those forgotten people who almost was a major figure in American history. Hamlin was a Democratic senator from Maine in 1850, but one from the party's antislavery wing. As the party became more compromising toward slavery, Hamlin became less happy. In 1856, he bolted to join the new Republican Party. That support earned him the party's vice-presidential nomination in 1860, although that nomination came to him as a total surprise (he was informed by an out-of-the-blue telegram from the party's convention in Chicago while he was playing cards in Washington). Hamlin served as Lincoln's first vice-president. While he evidently spent much of his term back home in Maine, finding the vice-presidency an irrelevant position, he did counsel Lincoln in favor of the Emancipation Proclamation and of forming troops of freed Blacks. However, when the election of 1864 appeared in doubt for Lincoln, the party, with the President's support, chose to dump Hamlin in favor of Andrew Johnson, a Democrat from Tennessee who had remained loyal to the Union. It was hoped that Johnson could help pull some pro-Union Democratic voters to the Republican ticket. Though his feelings were hurt, Hamlin said nothing and campaigned for the new Republican team.
|
American Miscellany from J & J Hanrahan
none
We can only wonder how history might have evolved had Lincoln stuck with Hamlin, for early in his second term, Lincoln was assassinated, and the moderate Johnson, rather than the more radical Hamlin, ascended to the presidency. Hamlin would go on to serve briefly in the Civil War, as a cook and private, and would return to his first love, the senate, from 1869-1881. He died a decade later on July 4th. Item 176 is Hamlin's biography, The Life and Times of Hannibal Hamlin, by his son, Charles Hamlin, published in 1899. $200.
Item 57 is an outstanding item for Robert Frost collectors. It is a Frost bibliography, with the appropriate title Robert Frost Bibliography, by W.B. Shubbrick Clymer and Charles R. Green. This was a 1937 limited edition, with 650 copies printed, 150 of them on handmade paper (this is one of the latter, number 104). It is signed by Frost. $550.
Article 2 is A Pocket Almanack for the Year of our Lord 1784. Being bissextile..., Uh oh. What is this? Do we have something off-color and controversial here? Should bissextiles be allowed to marry? Well, you can relax. There is no controversy at all. However, there is a new word to add to your vocabulary. "Bissextile" simply means pertaining to a leap year. So, of course, bissextiles, people born in a leap year, should be allowed to marry. Why not? And you can purchase this bisexy almanack for your own collection for $250.
One final note: for fans of children's writer Maurice Sendak, J & J Hanrahan offers a complete collection. It contains virtually everything Sendak ever published, primarily first editions in unclipped dust jackets, and much, much more. The collection was put together over a period of 44 years and includes 695 items. $220,000.
You may find J & J Hanrahan on the web at www.jandjhanrahan.com or call them at 207-646-1811.
|