-40%
Mohawk River Flood, Palm Beach, Africa, Harper's Weekly Mar 12, 1910
$ 10.02
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
You are bidding on a complete original issue of Harper's Weekly published March 12, 1910. The pages measure approximately 10.5 x 15 inches (13 x 18 for center-folios) and this issue includes pages 1-36. All pages may not be shown due to space constraints. Great pictures, humor, science, literature, sports, theatre, history, news of the day, and wonderful old ads. Most issues are replete with politics and New York City doings.It is 1910
. The "Progressive Era."
William H. Taft
is the U.S. president. The Boy Scouts of America is incorporated. The Westmorland coal strike is at its height.
Henry Ford
sells 10,000 automobiles. African-American boxer
Jack Johnson
defeats white boxer
James Jeffries
, sparking race riots throughout the country. Meanwhile, the greatest fire in U.S. history, the "Great Fire of 1910," rages
in the west.
This Issue:
Outer Supplemental Color Cover Page: Statue of Liberty (detached)
Cover Page: Mohawk Valley Flood
LaFarge's "The Muse of Painting"
Women of the Confederacy Monument
The Mother of Parliaments, ll
A Diana in Africa
"...The Patient May Die" centerfold by E. W. Kemble
"The Curse of the Cashmere Shawl" by Coningsby William Dawson
Palm Beach, American Riviera
"The Former Resident Pays A Visit" by Angus MacDonall
Finance
Ice Cutting in Montreal
Supplemental Rear Color Cover Page, Napoleon Flour (detached)
Please look at my feedback to witness
sane pricing in action!
I am not a book or paper dealer so please view pictures to determine condition.
This lot will be packed flat and mailed first class USPS. I will pay half of the just under .00 cost for first class.
Paypal please.
Please view my present and soon-to-come Harper's Weekly listings and thanks for looking.
Harper's Weekly, A Journal of Civilization was an American political magazine based in New York City. Published by Harper & Brothers from 1857 until 1916, it featured foreign and domestic news, fiction, essays on many subjects, and humor, alongside illustrations. It carried extensive coverage of the American Civil War, including many illustrations of events from the war. During its most influential period, it was the forum of the political cartoonist Thomas Nast.