Today I found "Famous Men of Ancient Times" by S.G.Goldrich! The copy was published in 1855.
Have you ever found some old gems of books?
Today I found "Famous Men of Ancient Times" by S.G.Goldrich! The copy was published in 1855.
Have you ever found some old gems of books?
I have a collection of Shakespeare's writings published in 1927
A History of the Reformation published in 1875
A collection of Mark Twain's essays published in 1910 (by the looks of it, it may have been published in honor of him since he died that same year)
Cool, remember demoed an house and found an newspaper about the Japanese capitulation who ended WW2 inside a wall.
My guess somebody was fixing the house and left it as an fun time capsule.
A newspaper with a story about Henry Ford saying the US would not get into Europe's war against Germany. Ford had many positive things to say about Germany, though he never mentioned their leader....
I've haunted used bookstores for years wherever I travel. Three of the things I've found: a leather-bound collected works of Robert Burns from 1835, a first edition of the three-volume Longfellow translation of Dante's Comedy from 1867 and a 21-volume Household Edition of dikeens from 1871. And not ancient but valuable to me anyway: a copy of the September 1952 Life issue that published Hemingway's Old Man and the Sea.
years ago when I was helping a relative move, I found some old business documents from a company another relative of mine owned in the 50s.. thats about the closest thing
And here I thought you were going to tell us about this skin bound tome you found.
For a moment you got me thinking of the Necronomicon.
During my rare visits to the library I do come across some dusty tomes (*ahem* engineering texts which have seen little use). The oldest was from the 60s.
The two oldest books I own are fairly recent compared to some on here: Protozoology by R. Kudo (1950) - a bit tatty, and How to know the Protozoa by Jahn (1949) which is in amazing condition for its age.