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  • Rare Image of Australia’s Rarest Bird – Rawnsley’s Satin Bower Bird [Ptilonorhynchus Rawnsleyi] – Silvester Diggles – c1870

    Rare Image of Australia’s Rarest Bird – Rawnsley’s Satin Bower Bird [Ptilonorhynchus Rawnsleyi] – Silvester Diggles – c1870

    Rare original hand-coloured image lithographed on stone by Queensland naturalist Silvester Diggles. Highlighted with gum Arabic. Published as part of his magnificent work “The Ornithology of Australia” between 1866 and 1870 in twenty-one parts by Pugh of Brisbane, in a very limited edition. By the time part sixteen was published there were only ninety-two subscribers. The original plates were executed by Diggles and his niece, Rowena Birkett.

    The bird specimen from which this lithograph was derived was found by H.C. Rawnsley in the scrub behind his house in Witton [Indooroopilly] on the Brisbane River in Julu 1867. Diggles dedicated and named the bird after him. The narrative that accompanies the plate goes on and is of historical interest. Diggles states that the strong resemblance in the bird’s colouring to the Satin Bower bird and the Regent Bower bird may lead to the suspicion of it being a hybrid. However, he refers to the explorer A.C. Gregory, who inspected the bird and confirmed that he had seen the very same species in Northern Queensland … the narrative goes into detail regarding Gregory’s testimony. However, we now know that the bird was a hybrid after all – the only other examples of a similar occurrence are quite recent … in the last twenty year. We believe though only three such occurrences have been identified to date.

    The work measures 38cm by 27cm, good strong hand colouring clean and undamaged. A very scarce item.

    About Silvester Diggles

    Silvester Diggles (1817-1880) artist and musician born in Liverpool, England. He came to Australia in 1853 settling in Brisbane where he taught music and drawing. Diggles was a founder of the Brisbane Choral Society in 1859 and the Philharmonic Society in 1861 known as “the father of music in Brisbane”. Diggles was also a founder of the Queensland Philosophical Society and helped establish the Museum. His greatest work was The Ornithology of Australia. It nearly sent him broke. His health deteriorated worry about finances being a factor. He died at Kangaroo Point in 1880.

    Price $590.00 unframed
    An opportunity to own a Silvester Diggles lithograph of an exceedingly rare bird indeed.

    $590.00

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  • The Traitors – The Double Life of Fuchs, Pontecorvo and Nunn May – Alan Moorehead – First edition 1952

    The Traitors – The Double Life of Fuchs, Pontecorvo and Nunn May – Alan Moorehead – First edition 1952

    First edition published by Hamish Hamilton, London in 1952 …. Hot for the beginning of the spy era. Octavo, 222 pages, illustrations from relevant photographs. A very good copy apart from a some loss of the dust jacket in one area top left – balance complete and clean and protected.

    Moorehead’s desirable book on the trifecta of traitors; how they were caught and the disappearance of Pontecorvo. The bomb confused them it all happened very quickly …

    Interesting readable true spy goings on.

    $30.00

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  • Treks and Palavers [Travels in Nigeria]-Richard Oakley – 1938

    Treks and Palavers [Travels in Nigeria]-Richard Oakley – 1938

    Before we go further “Palaver” is meant in the truest sense – an improvised meeting which was often held with groups to iron out some difficulty – Oakley was good with a palaver … Voyager likes this book – there is something special about it …

    A first edition published by Seeley etc, London [they published a number of high quality serious travel accounts. Thick octavo, 300 pages, good sketch map and numerous full page illustrations from original photographs. No jacket, original red cloth covered binding, top edge stained red as required – very good condition.

    A full and interesting account from Captain Oakley who was for a period a Magistrate in the Nigerian Administrative Service. He draws on other key references as well as his own extensive travels and experiences. We like it even more the deeper he gets into Nigeria up towards the Chad border. Surprisingly few good accounts on this African major and their now disappearing underlying culture(s)

    Richard Oakley and one of the better accounts on Nigeria.

    $60.00

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  • The Life of George Bass – Surgeon and Sailor of the Enlightenment – Miriam Estensen – Signed and Inscribed by the Author

    The Life of George Bass – Surgeon and Sailor of the Enlightenment – Miriam Estensen – Signed and Inscribed by the Author

    Published by Allen & Unwin in 2005. Octavo, 259 pages, nicely illustrated and in fine condition.

    A thorough account by the meticulous researcher Miriam Estensen .. the end notes and references take up the last 35 pages.

    Boldly signed by the author, on the half title, as a gift to a clearly very good friend

    Bass the surgeon, and a good one seemingly, more at home on the waves as an explorer adventurer. Later after much accomplished his adventures turned to money making and off he set for South America only to disappear. And throughout all this his beloved Bess … who he left following his primary passion. Estensen explores all of this and provides insight regarding his whereabouts at the end.

    George Bass a truly adventures medic.

    $30.00

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  • The Sextant Simplified [A Practical Explanation of the Use of the Sextant at Sea] – Oswald Watts

    A later edition of this “go to” book on the sextant published by Thomas Reed, Sunderland etc in 1969.

    Octavo, 100 pages, many diagrams and images to explain the use of the instrument as one would expect. A near fine copy.

    First glance the sextant is a pretty simple and straightforward device. This book take one from the simple “take and angle” understanding to the more complex use and correction required have a solid and sure position – quite useful the sure bit when facing reefs and rock in previously new territory.

    Sextant explained – enough to make you a master mariner – fill up the bathtub and go for it!

    $35.00

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  • The Missing Macleans – Geoffrey Hoare – First Edition 1955

    The Missing Macleans – Geoffrey Hoare – First Edition 1955

    It was May 1951 and Donald Maclean invited a stranger, Roger Styles [aka Guy Burgess], to his home for dinner with his wife and family. Afterwards they went outside and never returned.

    Two years later the other Maclean in this true story likewise disappeared with her children when in Geneva as if in a puff of smoke.

    Some understand the background of Maclean and his defection. On the other hand, the deserted wife who had been planning a life in the US played a good hand of cards and surprised everyone, even those close, when she joined Donald behind the Iron curtain.

    The author Horae is no ordinary journalist – he knew the Macleans with some intimacy and had access to letter and evidence through the confidence of Melinda Macleans mother. This firs hand evidence makes this account that much more credible and excruciatingly interesting.

    First edition published by Cassell, London in 1955. Octavo, 182 pages, illustrated from photographs. A very good copy.

    Solid account of the traitor Donald Maclean and his loyal wife Melinda

    $35.00

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