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Newly Acquired Material at Michael Sharpe Rare and Antiquarian Books

Book List 1 from Michael Sharpe Rare and Antiquarian Books.


By Michael Stillman

Michael Sharpe Rare and Antiquarian Books has issued their List 1, A selection of newly acquired books, prints, photographs and autograph letters. As the title implies, you can find a bit of just about everything here. This is all collectible material, mostly scarce works, and in top condition. Beyond that, the group is hard to categorize, but we will now provide a few examples.

Here is an appropriate item for a presidential election year: The Photographs of Abraham Lincoln. This collection of photographs was published in 1911 by author Frederick Hill Meserve in a limited edition of 102 signed and numbered copies. It includes 100 chronologically arranged pictures of Lincoln along with others of his family, contemporary generals and politicians, and of his burial. Additionally, there is a facsimile of a letter from Lincoln's son Robert to Meserve. Item 59. $18,500.

Item 43 is another collection of photographs, but this one is an album rather than a book. They were taken during a camping trip by four of the most famous men in America around 1920, President Warren Harding, inventor Thomas Edison, and business magnates Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone. Pictures include Ford cranking up a car (a Ford, naturally), Edison lounging, and Harding and Firestone petting a dog. $1,750.

Here is one more photographic album for those who cranked up the Ford and went on a cross-country trip (not easy considering the roads in 1915): Universal Beauty Trip to the California Expositions and Universal City. This was not a private photo album, but something put together by Universal Moving Pictures, evidently in small numbers. There are 149 photographs mounted in the album, each with a description, while the album is stamped with the recipient's name, in this case Madge Henry of Winner, Iowa. Item 79. $5,000.

Item 3 is a first octavo edition of John James Audubon's less well-known collection of animal drawings, The Quadrupeds of North America. After finally achieving success with the octavo edition of his "Birds of America," Audubon set out to create a similar collection for four-legged creatures. The result is this three-volume set, published in 1849. $12,500.

Mark Twain had a great sense of humor (no real surprise there), as is shown by this signed inscription he wrote on an index card in 1898: "There is but one way to keep well, according to the doctors: Eat what you don't want, drink what you don't like, and do what you'd rather not. Truly Yours, Mark Twain. New Years 98." Someone pass the tofu and soy milk, please. Item 98. $1,250.

Newly Acquired Material at Michael Sharpe Rare and Antiquarian Books

A Lincoln and a Ford - Abe poses, Henry cranks up the engine.


Speaking of Mr. Twain, he died in 1910, and in 1911, his library was auctioned off at Anderson Auction, the largest American auction house at the time. One of those items sold was Twain's copy of In the Himalayas and on the Indian Plains, an 1886 work by Constance Gordon Cumming. This copy is signed "S.L. Clemens, Bombay, 1896," along with having a bookplate signed by Twain's literary executor, Albert Bigelow Paine, stating that it was from Clemens' library and sold at Anderson in 1911. Item 100. $1,250.

From prose we go to poetry. Item 61 is the first American edition of The Song of Hiawatha, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's epic poem. This may be an imaginary look at Indian life, but still a notable piece of writing. Published in 1855. $1,300.

Michael Sharpe Rare and Antiquarian Books may be visited online at www.sharperarebooks.com, or reached at 626-405-2934 or info@sharperarebooks.com,