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Virginia City,NV - Storey County - Comstock Publications :

Currency:USD Category:Books Start Price:25.00 USD Estimated At:50.00 - 100.00 USD
Virginia City,NV - Storey County - Comstock Publications :
Lot of 7 includes: 1) The Comstock Guidebook by Townley, John M. Soft cover, 25 pages including many maps and illustrations. Published for the Great Basin Studies Center by the Jamison Station Press, 1984. 2) Virginia & Truckee by Beebe, Lucius and Clegg, Charles. Soft cover, 68 pages including many photographs, maps, and illustrations. Published by Howell-North, 1963. Story of the "Virginia and Truckee, golden railroad to yesterday, the railroad which made possible the Big Bonanza…whose wealth it carried down to the mills on the Carson River." 3) The Virginia City Cook Book by Brown, Helen Evans et al. Soft cover, indexed, 148 pages . The Ward Ritchie Press, second printing 1954, copyright 1953. Compilation of articles contributed by past and present residents of Virginia City. 4) Eilley Orrum, Queen of the Comstock by Paine, Swift. Pacific Books, Palo Alto, copyright 1929 with additional material copyrighted 1949. The story of the "Queen of the Comstock," Eilley Orrum, and her husband, Sandy Bowers. 5) The Big Bonanza by Glasscock, C.B. Hardcover, indexed, 368 pages. Bobbs-Merrill Publishers, Indianapolis, 1931. The story of the Comstock Lode. 6) My Memories of the Comstock by Gorham, Harry M. Hardcover, 22 pages with illustrations. Sutton house Publishers, 1939. The author attempts "to recall events, stories, and people with which and with whom I have been connected. I give assurance that all I may write is what I myself have seen, know by direct knowledge, or learned firsthand from the participants." 7) The Amazing Story of Piper's Opera House by Hillyer, Katharine and Best, Katharine. Soft cover, 23 pages including photographs and illustrations. Printed by the Enterprise Press, Virginia City, NV, 1953. Pamphlet covers "the history of the Old West's most famous playhouse, where the world's theatrical great trod the boards before the rich, racy cosmopolitan audiences of Big Bonanza days."