Verlag: Holzstich nach Neumann, aus dem Jahr., 1876
Anbieter: Antiquariat Hild, Weilburg, Deutschland
Bildgröße 19x17 cm.
Verlag: La Boîte à Pandore, 2022
ISBN 10: 2875575333 ISBN 13: 9782875575333
Anbieter: RECYCLIVRE, Paris, Frankreich
Zustand: Bon. Merci, votre achat aide à financer des programmes de lutte contre l'illettrisme.
Verlag: Lulu.com, 2018
ISBN 10: 1387952145 ISBN 13: 9781387952144
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Lulu.com, 2018
ISBN 10: 1387952137 ISBN 13: 9781387952137
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New.
Verlag: British Library, Historical Print Editions, 2011
ISBN 10: 1241419205 ISBN 13: 9781241419202
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009
ISBN 10: 1458989984 ISBN 13: 9781458989987
Anbieter: Buchpark, Trebbin, Deutschland
Zustand: Sehr gut. Zustand: Sehr gut - Gepflegter, sauberer Zustand. | Seiten: 382 | Sprache: Englisch | Produktart: Bücher.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1920
Anbieter: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Zustand: Near Fine. [12.5 x 17.5cm]. Black and white photo. Copy. A touch toned, with minimal wear to edges. Likely designed by Truman O. Angell, this charming cottage was commissioned by Brigham Young for his "19th wife," Ann Eliza Young. Built in the late 1860s, on what is now 180 E S Temple Street - Ann Eliza only lived in the home until 1873. The house was then gifted to a daughter of Brigham Young, and her husband. Her family occupied the home until it was dismantled in 1953. At the time, a man named Horace Sorenson was gathering a large collection of items, including dismantled buildings, in pursuit of his vision of a fully operational Pioneer Village within the Salt Lake City area. He had assembled a small village in the Holladay area, but when the Sugar House Prison was moved in the 1950s, Sorenson set his sights on the land it had occupied. For 15 years, he attended every suggested meeting and drafted every requested plan. Ultimately, his efforts were unsuccessful. Ill health prevented Sorenson from seeking any comparable home for his village. In 1975, the village was sold to Lagoon Amusement Park - where it remains. Only some of Sorenson's collection was used in the new Pioneer Village, and Ann Eliza Young's home was never rebuilt.
Verlag: Dustin, Gilman & Co, Hartford, Connecticut, 1875
Anbieter: Aardvark Rare Books, ABAA, EUGENE, OR, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Good Plus. First Edition. Quarto. Rebacked leather over sheep. Scuffing and rubbing to extremities. Printed gilt spine label affixed to spine. Salmon colored endpapers. Front hinge started, but holding well. Previous owner's penciled inscription to front free endpaper. Frontis engraved portrait of Ann Eliza Young, protected by tissue guard. Light foxing to portrait. Clean, bright, supple pages, with illustrations. ".I dedicate this Book to you, as I consecrate my life to your cause. As long as God gives me life I shall pray and plead for your deliverence from the worse than Egyptian bondage in which you are held. Despised, maligned, and wronged; kept in gross ignorance of the great world, its pure creeds, its high aims, its generous motives, you have been made to believe that the noblest nation of the earth was truly represented by the horde of miscreants who drove you from State to State, in early years, murdering your sons and assassinating your leaders, .But He will not long permit you to be so wickedly deceived; nor will the People permit you to be so cruelly enslaved.Hope and pray! Come out of the house of bondage! Kind hearts beat for you ! Open hands will welcome you!.Courage! The night of oppression is nearly ended, and the sun of liberty is rising in the heavens for you. (From author's Dedication "To The Mormon Wives of Utah".
Verlag: Philadelphia: Aldine Press, Inc., 1908
Hardcover, no dust jacket. Ex-library, very shaken. Front hinge nearly broken. Spine cloth frayed at edges. Board corners lightly bumped. Limited edition, library edition, number 44. Eliza Ann Young was Brigham Young's 19th wife. 512 pages. 512 pp.
Verlag: Aldine Press, Inc, Philadelphia, 1908
Anbieter: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Good +. Limited Edition. 512pp. Octavo [23cm]. Original red cloth with gilt stamped title on spine, and gilt stamped decoration on spine and front board. Lovely floral endsheets and gilt topstain. Spine mildly sunned and rear board partially darkened. Subtle, tastefully repaired split down front pastedown. Light rubbing to edges, particularly spine ends. Textblock a bit yellowed, with a handful of dog eared pages. Ann Eliza Young is also known as "Wife No. 19," or the 19th wife of Brigham Young. Her parents were early adopters of Mormon polygamous practices. Her father took a second wife in 1845, when Ann Eliza was still a baby. The family followed the pioneer trail, relocating from Nauvoo to the Utah territory in 1846. After a short, failed marriage, 24-year-old Ann Eliza married 67-year-old Brigham Young. Historians dispute whether she was the 19th woman to wed Young, with many considering Ann Eliza to be his 27th bride. She was unhappy in the marriage, filing for divorce after only four years. The divorce proceedings garnered international interest, and led to her excommunication from the church. Subsequently, Ann Eliza began a national tour - speaking out against polygamy, Mormonism and Brigham Young. She also published two popular autobiographies, including this title. Her story directly contributed to increasing national interest in wiping out the practice of polygamy, which ultimately led to the 1890 Manifesto outlawing the practice within the church. Frontispiece portrait of the author. Black and white illustrations and facsimile photographs. Library edition, copy no. 148. Flake10050.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1874
Anbieter: Kaaterskill Books, ABAA/ILAB, East Jewett, NY, USA
Signiert
1 sheet. 4.4 x 7.5 inches. Signed quote from Ann Eliza Young (1844-1917) during her divorce proceedings with Brigham Young. Born into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Nauvoo, IL, Ann Eliza Webb divorced her first husband, James Dee, and married Brigham Young when he was 66 years old. In 1873 she filed for divorce, claiming "neglect, cruel treatment, and desertion," (which was granted early in 1875). Ann spent the years after her filing, speaking out against polygamy and Mormonism and in 1876 published "Wife No. 19," (1876), an autobiographical account of her experience with Young and with Mormon culture. "In New York City she told a reporter that Congress needed to legislate Mormonism out of existence. To that end, she traveled to Washington, D.C., went to the Ladies Reception Room of the House of Representatives, and passed out photographs of polygamous wives to show from their faces the effects of polygamy. President Ulysses S. Grant and Julia Dent Grant attended one of her lectures and personally congratulated her. "Not long afterward Congress passed the Poland Law, which took civil and criminal cases out of Mormon probate courts and gave them to the federal government and stated that jurors who believed in plural marriage or practiced it could not serve. The Salt Lake Tribune, an anti-Mormon newspaper, credited Young's influence for the enactment of the law" . "Young's lectures on her marriage and the Mormon religion entertained the American public for several years and helped influence legislation so that the Mormon church in 1890 issued a Manifesto advising church members to refrain from marriages forbidden by the law of the land. Her life, however, was a personally unhappy one; she failed in her attempts to destroy the church, and her end remains a mystery" (ANB). Provenance: Milton Slater from Scott J Winslow Assoc. 7/8/1999, Lot 684. Very good, minor soiling, title inked along top margin.