Showing posts tagged Specialcollections.
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Library Company of Philadelphia

Ask    Welcome to the Library Company of Philadelphia's Tumblr page! Founded by Ben Franklin in 1731, we are an independent research library specializing in American history and culture from the 17th through the 19th centuries. This page highlights materials from LCP's extensive collection of rare books, manuscripts, broadsides, ephemera, prints, photographs, and works of art.
With padded covers of embossed leather, these special edition padded bindings were quite the novelty when the hit the market in the 1880s. Ranging in style from gilt decoration to fake alligator skin, these plush volumes of poetry were both fancy and...

With padded covers of embossed leather, these special edition padded bindings were quite the novelty when the hit the market in the 1880s. Ranging in style from gilt decoration to fake alligator skin, these plush volumes of poetry were both fancy and still affordable.

— 1 year ago with 54 notes
#Shelfie  #bookbinding  #PublishersBindingThursday  #BookbindingHistory  #PaddedBooks  #Poetry  #rarebooks  #SpecialCollections 
Stuck inside? Maybe it’s time to redecorate!
J.C. Finn & Son trade cards (United States: Chas. W. Frost, ca. 1881). Chromolithograph.
Image depicts a girl applying adhesive to wallpaper strips and sloppily hanging them on the wall.

Stuck inside? Maybe it’s time to redecorate!

J.C. Finn & Son trade cards (United States: Chas. W. Frost, ca. 1881). Chromolithograph.

Image depicts a girl applying adhesive to wallpaper strips and sloppily hanging them on the wall.

— 1 year ago with 39 notes
#LCPprints  #BensLibrary  #SpecialCollections  #librariesofinstagram  #iglibraries  #MuseumfromHome 

Just in case you needed another reason to wash your hands… 

The vibrant emerald green cloth on these bindings gets its shocking color from copper acetoarsenite, more commonly known as arsenic. The inorganic pigment was also famously used in Victorian era wallpaper. 

The bindings seen here, along with others in our collection, were tested by Melissa Tedone, Conservator at Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library, in December 2019 as part of the Poison Book Project. The sample is comprised largely of green cloth case bindings, but some green paper (upper left) also tested positive. They have since been properly rehoused, along with updated safe handling instructions. Read more about the Poison Book Project here.

Wishing you all a wonderful and nontoxic #greenpublishersbindingThursday!

— 1 year ago with 33883 notes
#poisonbooks  #poisonbookproject  #arsenic  #bookbinding  #bookbindinghistory  #publishersbindingthursday  #poison  #victorianera  #rarebooks  #specialcollections 
The Wissahickon Boys Club was founded shortly after the Civil War for children of formerly enslaved and domestic African Americans in Germantown. The Club was the only one of its kind to serve African Americans.
Pony riding, Camp Emlen, Norwood,...

The Wissahickon Boys Club was founded shortly after the Civil War for children of formerly enslaved and domestic African Americans in Germantown. The Club was the only one of its kind to serve African Americans. 


Pony riding, Camp Emlen, Norwood, Montg. Co., Pa. Conducted by Wissahickon Boys Club, Germantown, Phila. (New York: Artvue Post Card Co., 1936). Photolithograph. 

— 1 year ago with 13 notes
#LCPprints  #BensLibrary  #MuseumfromHome  #IGLibraries  #SpecialCollections 

This bible belonged to Mary Sandwith, who also likely crafted the embroidered chemise. The bible itself is bound in calf and covered with canvas stitched with a vibrant bargello or flame stitch pattern.  Mary’s name is stitched on the spine, along with the date, 1743, her eleventh year.  Mary was the sister of Elizabeth Drinker, the famous diarist.  A similar chemise covers Elizabeth’s bible, which is in the collections at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

— 1 year ago with 101 notes
#WorldEmbroideryDay  #Embroidery  #embroideredbindings  #bookbinding  #bookcovers  #bargello  #flamestitch  #18thcentury  #pennsylvania history  #rarebooks  #specialcollections 
#OnThisDay in 1868, Secretary of State William Seward issued an official proclamation which certified the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Amendment guaranteed citizenship for “all persons born or naturalized in the United States,” including...

#OnThisDay in 1868, Secretary of State William Seward issued an official proclamation which certified the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Amendment guaranteed citizenship for “all persons born or naturalized in the United States,” including formerly enslaved African Americans. It was also one of three Reconstruction Amendments which sought to codify equal rights for African Americans.

This engraving is a ticket for to the “Grand Mass Demonstration in favor of the Centennial Commemoration of American Independence, February 22, 1873” at the Academy of Music. The image contains scenes contrasting life in Philadelphia in 1776 with life in 1876, after the abolition of slavery.

Centennial commemoration at Philadelphia [ticket] (Philadelphia: 1873). Color wood engraving.

— 1 year ago with 16 notes
#LCPprints  #BensLibrary  #MuseumfromHome  #SpecialCollections  #IGLibraries  #librariesofinstagram 
Here’s a fine finispiece to help you usher in what will hopefully be a fine weekend. And in the rare book world fine isn’t just fine, it’s even better than ‘very good.’
Niccolò Machiavelli. Tutte le opere di Niccolò Machiavell. (London, 1747.)

Here’s a fine finispiece to help you usher in what will hopefully be a fine weekend. And in the rare book world fine isn’t just fine, it’s even better than ‘very good.’

Niccolò Machiavelli. Tutte le opere di Niccolò Machiavell. (London, 1747.)

— 1 year ago with 29 notes
#Finispiece  #FinisFriday  #Fine  #FineFriday  #BensLibrary  #specialcollections  #rarebooks  #18thcentury 
A former owner of this little volume lovingly crafted this book cover for it, illustrated and colored by hand. The image matches the chromolithograph frontispiece found inside.
Definitely a step up from the brown bag covers we used to put on our...

A former owner of this little volume lovingly crafted this book cover for it, illustrated and colored by hand.  The image matches the chromolithograph frontispiece found inside. 

Definitely a step up from the brown bag covers we used to put on our school books. 

Hannah J. Woodman. Sibylline verses; or, the mirror of fate. (Boston: Abel Tompkins, 1846)

— 1 year ago with 69 notes
#RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Bookbinding  #feathursday  #handmade  #bookcovers 
Another Fore-edge Friday is upon us! These beautiful gauffered edges are on a binding presented “as a token of respect to Capt. Samuel Tatem by the crew of the steamer Major Reybold.” The Major Reybold was built in 1853 and served on the Delaware...

Another Fore-edge Friday is upon us! These beautiful gauffered edges are on a binding presented “as a token of respect to Capt. Samuel Tatem by the crew of the steamer Major Reybold.” The Major Reybold was built in 1853 and served on the Delaware River between Salem and Philadelphia until 1906. 

The comprehensive Bible. (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co., 1854.)

— 1 year ago with 49 notes
#BensLibrary  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Bookbinding  #BookbindingHistory  #GaufferedEdges  #GiltyPleasures 
Gentle reminder to double-check your work. Maybe triple-check.
Errata slips such as this one were inserted into books to identify and alert the reader to important errors in the text that were noticed after the book was published. Good thing, too,...

Gentle reminder to double-check your work. Maybe triple-check.  

Errata slips such as this one were inserted into books to identify and alert the reader to important errors in the text that were noticed after the book was published.  Good thing, too, because last time we checked hands and heads were two very different things. 😳 

From: W.R. Wells. A new theory of disease. (Rochester, NY: Steam Press of C.D. Tracy & Co., 1862.) 

— 1 year ago with 12 notes
#BensLibrary  #RareBooks  #specialcollections  #19thcentury  #errata  #mistakes