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Seller's Description:
Very Good. 1991. Hardcover. 4to. Cloth, d.j. Some shelf-wear; edge-wear and tearing to d.j. at head of spine. Else clean copy. Very Good. (Subject: American History).
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Seller's Description:
Like New. Size: 139x13x180; 1st edition, 1st printing. Minimal wear to covers. Text clean and unmarked. The binding is tight and square. Minimal wear to the dust jacket. Your satisfaction is guaranteed!
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Seller's Description:
James Stacy [Hand Lettering] Very good in Very good jacket. xviii, 222 pages. Illustrations. Index to Counties. Index to Towns. Name of previous owner on fep. The post cards are reproduced at 86% to 96% of original size. The post card was, or could be, an inexpensive means of advertising. Cards postmarked in the city that was the subject of the view were particularly sought after. In 1909 one national post card collector's club based in Philadelphia claimed to have ten thousand members. After the Columbian Exposition, several companies began to issue limited edition series of postcards. In the early 1900's Eastman Kodak developed a postcard size paper which photographs could be printed on. The first picture post cards from Georgia were a set of twelve views commemorating the Cotton States Exposition held in Atlanta in 1895 and sold from vending machines. The rest is history and is documents in this monumental and intriguing work. The editor was a resident of Watkinsville, Georgia. His post card collection, which at the time of this publication included more that five thousand images, is one of the most extensive of the state covering the period from 1900 to 1920.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in fine jacket. Oversized hardcover. First edition, first printing. Inscribed by Doster on the front free endpaper. A fine, fresh, unused copy in equally fine dust jacket. xviii+222 pp. with index to counties and index to towns. Over six hundred post card images taken between 1900 and 1920 of locations throughout Georgia of hoems, schools, buildings, streets, town squares, veterans' reunions, etc.