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STAMP DUTIES. One Penny Stamps. A popular explanation of the statute requiring a stamp duty of one p

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:100.00 - 150.00 EUR
STAMP DUTIES. One Penny Stamps. A popular explanation of the statute requiring a stamp duty of one p

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
STAMP DUTIES. One Penny Stamps. A popular explanation of the statute requiring a stamp duty of one penny on receipts and orders for money, and of some provisions of former acts bearing thereupon ; with a schedule of stamp duties. Published by authority of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue. Printed for George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode, for H.M.S.O., 1853FIRST EDITION, pages 14 and leaf of imprint, 8vo, recent wrapper : a very good copy.Apparently the only edition : NSTC locates copies at O, C and LC and COPAC adds Manchester and LSE.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) CHESHIRE ( Edward ). The Results of the Census of Great Britain in 1851 ; with a description of the machinery and processes employed to obtain the returns. Also an appendix. John William Parker and Son, 1853. FIRST EDITION THUS, 56-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy.The first printing of this distillation of the voluminous folios issued by the Census Office - evidentally very successful in that there were eight printings within a year.(2) STATE OF PARTIES. The Country Well Governed ; or, plain questions on the perplexed state of parties in opposition. [In answer to “The Country without a Government” by Loror, plain questions on the perplexed state of parties in opposition. [In answer to : The Country without a Government by Lord Brougham]. Hatchard and Son, 1830. FIRST EDITION, pages (4), 79, (1, blank), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : inscribed on half-title "From the Author : a very good copy. An examination of the state of English politics and governance in a year when the Commons had decided in principle on Parliamentary reform - trade, taxation, the law, corn laws, slavery in the colonies, religion are all covered in his overall view.(3) RUSSELL ( John ), first Earl Russell. A letter to Viscount Althorp, on the resolutions of the late House of Commons respecting bribery at elections. James Ridgway, 1827. FIRST EDITION, 16-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy. Russell's proposed bill for the discovery and suppression of bribery at elections was read a first and second time without a division in 1826, but was abandoned owing to the government declaring that they would oppose it.(4) DUPANLOUP (F.A.P. ), Bp. A Study of Freemasonry. Burns and Oates, 1873. FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH, 103-pages, 8vo, recent wrapper : a very good-nice copy.A penetrating study by the noted French educationalist. With a 17-page preface by the anonymous translator.(5) COBDEN ( Richard ). Mr. Cobden and "The Times". Correspondence between Mr. Cobden, M.P., and Mr. Delane, editor of "The Times" ; with a supplementary correspondence between Mr. Cobden, and the editor of the "Daily Telegraph". Manchester : Alex. Ireland and Co., 1864. FIRST EDITION THUS, pages vi, 35, (1, blank), 8vo, recent wrapper : a very good copy. “In December 1863 he became embroiled in an acrimonious dispute with The Times … In November a Times editorial had accused Bright of wanting to divide the land of the rich among the poor, and had called on both Bright and Cobden to disavow any such schemes. Cobden leapt to Bright's defence, attacking J. T. Delane, the paper's editor, for making scandalous aspersions behind the screen of anonymous journalism. The Times refused to publish Cobden's reply to Delane, and a rather petty correspondence ensued.” – ODNB.(6) SEDGWICK ( Adam ), FRS. Remarks on the observations of Dr.[Wm.] French ; with an argument on the law of elections to offices created by the Senate. Cambridge : Printed by James Hodson, Trinity Street, 1824. FIRST EDITION, pages (4), 48, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good to nice copy, inscribed "From the Author" - the recepient's name shaved. Privately published and uncommon. Sedgwick (1785-1873), one of the founders of modern geology, proposed the Devonian period of the geological timescale and later the Cambrian period. Though he had guided the young Charles Darwin in his early study of geology, Sedgwick was an outspoken opponent of his theory of evolution by means of natural selection.(7) GRENFELL ( Henry Riversdale ). Banking and Currency. A letter to Henry Hucks Gibbs, Esq., governor of the Bank of England, with ten letters reprinted from the "Observer". Effingham Wilson, 1875. FIRST EDITION, 64-pp, 8vo, recent wraps : very good-nice, inscribed "from the Author". Grenfell (1824-1902), banker and Liberal Party politician, a leading member of the Bimetallic League and Governor of the Bank of England (1881 and 1883).(8)ECONOMICS; STAMP DUTY; POPULATION; CENSUS; HISTORY; ENGLAND; ELECTIONS; FREEMASONRY; RELIGION; LAND; CAMBRIDGE PRINTED; CAMBRIDGE