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TREATIES
Their Judgment:
FARCICAL
Process
But Enforceable
POLICY
Bolivia. Treaties. 1842. Manuscript Document Signed. Sucre, 10 December 1842. On paper, in Spanish. Folio, 3½ pp.
$500.00
The official, signed report of the Presidential Committee appointed to investigate the just-concluded "treaty of peace, commerce and navigation" with Great Britain. The report observes: "The present treaty is, letter for letter, the same as that concluded in 1837 in Lima by the Proctor of the Peruvian-Bolivian Confederation, and the same, also, bearing the date of 30 May 1838 that the Extraordinary Bolivian Congress (meeting in Cochabamba) approved" (our translation). With five members dissenting, the committee decides that the method of congressional approval, though "farcical," was legal and binding.
Bearing signatures, among others, of Pedro Buitrago, Narciso Dulón, Eusebio Gutiérrez, M. de la Cruz Méndez, José M. Dalence, and Manuel Sagarnaga.
Very good condition. Two small tears at folds, not affecting text.

France
Sadly
Disappointed Him . . .
Harper, Robert Goodloe.
Observations on the dispute between the United States and France, addressed
by...one of the representatives in Congress for the state of South Carolina,
to his constituents, in May, 1797...second edition. London: (Pr. in Philadelphia
& repr. by) Philanthropic Press, 1798. 8vo (21.5 cm, 8.5"). [2 (lacking
half-title)], 5109, [1] pp.
$200.00
Denunciation of France's aggressive stance, written by a politician
who had been one of that country's most vocal American supporters during the
Revolution. Harper, a prominent Federalist who served as a representative from
South Carolina and later as a senator from Maryland, admits in this address
his former pro-French sympathies before going on to critique the French assertions
regarding various American actions and the U.S. treaty with Great Britainin
fact, he goes so far as to call for war. This much-discussed tract was reprinted
numerous times throughout the United States and Great Britain, both in English
and in French, immediately following its initial appearance in 1797.
ESTC T110138; Sabin 30433. On Harper, see: Dictionary of
American Biography, VIII, 28586. Recent quarter blue morocco with
blue cloth sides, spine gilt-stamped with title within gilt-ruled raised bands
and with trefoils at head and foot. Half-title lacking; one page (not the
title) stamped by a now-defunct institution. Faint traces of waterstaining
to lower outer margins of most leaves.
A handsome copy of an important document.

The
VIENNA Treaties
[Hoadly, Benjamin]. A defence of the enquiry into the reasons of the conduct of Great-Britain, &c. Occasioned by the paper published in the Country-Journal or Craftsman on Saturday, Jan. 4, 1728-9. London: Pr. & Sold by Ja. Robert, 1729. 12mo. 40 pp.
$70.00
Jackson, Andrew (President, 1829–1837). [drop-title] Treaty between the United States and the Emperor of Russia. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of a treaty of navigation and commerce between the United States and his Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias. May 14, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. [Washington]: Gales & Seaton, printers, 1834. 8vo (22.7 cm, 8.9"). 10 pp.
$450.00
Uncommon. Contains Jackson’s transmittal letter and a copy of the treaty (printed in double columns), concluded at St. Petersburg on 6/18 December 1832, and the ratifications which were exchanged in the city on 11 May 1833. The text is provided in English and French.
Click the image for an enlargement.
This is the first printing of the first treaty of commerce and navigation between the United States and Russia; the only prior convention between the two nations was the convention of 1824 concerning the Pacific Northwest. This treaty establishes
and confirms reciprocal trade, and commercial and navigation rights to vessels of both countries, and also applies the same rights to the
kingdom of Poland.
Government document: 23d Congress, 1st Session. Doc. No. 415. Ho. of Reps. Executive.
Recent paper wrappers. Title-page with inked numeral in upper margin. Light spotting.
(Jubilance). Jubilos festivos da corte de Pariz, pella publicaçaõ da paz general que nella celebrou a 20 de Junho de 1763.... Lisboa: Na Offic. de Ignacio Nogueira Xisto, 1763. 4to (20 cm, 7.875"). 15, [1 (blank)] pp.
$400.00

Account of the celebrations in Lisbon surrounding the announcement of the peace which ended the Seven Years War, including some discussion of the fireworks used, an address to the King of Great Britain, and a list of the newly appointed ambassadors between the former belligerents.
Rare. No copies were traced in the U.S. via NUC Pre-1956, OCLC, or RLIN.
Plain brown wrappers, shallowly chipped; small paper label on front with rubber-stamped numeral thereon. Small hole in title-page without loss of print. Paper repairs in top margins of pp. 10 and 11. Light soiling. Pencilled notations on title-page and front wrapper.
Las continuas vitorias que ha tenido el serenissimo, y potentissimo Vlasdilao Quarto Rey de Polonia, Sbecia, &c. Y las capitulaciones que admitò para la paz perpetua entre los Moscouitas, y su Reyno de Polonia en este año de 1634. [Seville, 1634]. Folio (28.2 cm, 11.1"). [2] ff.
$750.00
Uncommon Spanish report on the end of the Smolensk War and the peace treaty between Poland and Russia, in which Vladislaus IV, King of Poland, renounced his claim to the Muscovite throne.
Click the image for an enlargement.
Palau 60707; not in Almirante. Removed from a nonce volume. Creased, with holes along creases causing loss of some letters; lower inner
margins waterstained. Leaves trimmed closely, second leaf with first line
lost and second line partially shaved.
This
also appears in the HISPANIC
MISCELLANY click here.
[Manwaring,
Arthur]. Remarks upon the present negotiations of peace begun between Britain
and France. London, 1711. 8vo (20.5 cm; 8"). [2] ff., 35, [1] pp.
$1000.00


Uncut copy of the first (or possibly second) edition of what the Henry Stevens Company described in its 1927 Catalogue of Rare Americana (#671) as a “secretly printed” pamphlet in which the anonymous writer (Arthur Manwaring) studies what he sees as the problem of the growing power and influence of France in Europe and the New World (Canada, the West Indies, and potentially much of the Spanish empire). Such concern sprang from the Peace of Utrecht ending the War of the Spanish Succession, by which the French House of Bourbon assumed the Spanish throne following the death of the last of the Hapsburgs and a decade-long war.
There were two editions printed: This, with the pagination as above and with the title-page sporting a double-rule around the text area, and another with only 32 pp. and no border on the title-page. Precedence apparently not established.
Alden & Landis, European Americana, 711/177; Goldsmiths’ 4837; Kress 2743; ESTC 46891. Not in Sabin. Uncut, some chipping of edges. Recent, slate-grey light boards. Some cockling and staining. Six-digit number stamped on half-title. A good+ copy.

Folwell's Printing: The Fifth U.S. Congress
United States. Laws, statutes, etc. 1797–99 (5th Cong., 1st–3rd sess.). Acts passed at the first session of the fifth Congress of the United States of America, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday the fifteenth of May, in the year MDCCXCVII and of the independence of the United States, the twenty-first. Philadelphia: Richard Folwell, [1797–99]. 8vo (21.3 cm, 8.4"). 240, vii, [1], [241]–561, [1 (blank)], 26, iv, [48 (index)] pp.
$300.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Acts of the first, second, and third sessions of the Fifth Congress, printed in the same years as their original appearances — with these Richard Folwell printings being less common than the William Ross editions. Each section has a separate title-page, with the pagination of the first session's acts continued in the second and third. Covered here are the establishment of the Department of the Navy, the creation of the Mississippi Territory, treaties with the Cherokees and with Tripoli, and the Alien and Sedition Acts; the volume closes with a copy of the Constitution as “ratified by the several states.” In passing, one happens upon acts regulating the distillers of “Geneva” (gin) and “the Medical Establishment.”
Reading or browsing, in this volume, is interesting and eye-opening.
Provenance: Old signature, “Hall Harrison,” on title-page.
Evans 32952, 34688, & 36479; ESTC W11750; Sabin 15502, 15503, & 15504. Contemporary treed calf, rebacked with calf, spine with gilt-stamped bands and gilt-stamped leather title and publication labels; leather of boards (but not spine) crackled, chipped/chipping, and discolored from a fire, with rear board most affected and with one corner lost (3/4" up and across from the point, this showing in our extra photograph). Front pastedown with old institutional bookplate; title-page with early inked ownership inscription as above and old institutional rubber-stamp. Offsetting from binding at beginning and end, intermittent mild offsetting and faint spotting generally, a few leaves towards the back browned, with pages otherwise clean; the fire that affected the boards did not reach the interior, here. (25667)
For Books for the BUSTED
BIBLIOPHILE, click here.

Detailing
Damages, Maritime
United States. Department of State. Message from the President of the United States, accompanying a report of the Secretary
of State, with a letter to him, from Matthew Clarkson, Esq. And a list of the claims adjusted by the Commissioners under the 21st article of our treaty with Spain. 23d January, 1800. [Philadelphia, 1800]. 8vo. 8 pp.
$225.00
