A Hebrew chrestomathy designed as an introduction to a course of Hebrew study / by Moses Stuart.
Subject:
PU; PU; PU; PU; Hebrew language -- Readers.
Description:
Kaplan Collection copy collectify accession no. 2006.12.26.00708; Kaplan Collection copy presented to the Penn Libraries in 2012 by Arnold and Deanne Kaplan.
Date:
1838
Creator:
Stuart, Moses,
Publisher:
Andover : Gould and Newman; New York : Godman Press, 1838.
Rights:
https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Notes, critical and practical, on the books of Joshua and Judges : designed as a general help to Biblical reading and instruction / by George Bush.
Subject:
PU; PU; PU; PU
Description:
Kaplan Collection copy collectify accession no. 2006.12.26.00747; Kaplan Collection copy presented to the Penn Libraries in 2012 by Arnold and Deanne Kaplan.
Personal Name:
Bush, George,
Date:
1838
Publisher:
New York : E. French, 1838.
Rights:
https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Ansichten, Grundsätze und Belehrungen über die zweckmässige Behandlung und Dressur des Campagnepferdes von der Aufstallung bis zur Vollendung : Für Officiere und alle Reiter, welche sich mit der Dressur ihrer Pferde selbst befassen wollen / von Julius Christ. Heinrich André.
Subject:
Horsemanship.; Horses -- Training.; PU; PU
Description:
Fairman Rogers copy: Ms. English translation of t.p. (probably by Fairman Rogers) laid in.
Date:
1838
Creator:
André, Julian Christoph Heinrich.
Publisher:
Leipzig : Verlag der J.C. Hinrichsschen Buchhandlung, 1838.
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Fairman Rogers Collection (University of Pennsylvania)
Imrai shaipher : a Hebrew vocabulary : containing a complete list of the Hebrew and Chaldee roots, which occur in the Bible : together with their significations in English ... / By H. Henry.
Subject:
Hebrew language -- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc.; Aramaic language -- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc.; PU; PU; PU
Description:
Kaplan Collection copy presented to the Penn Libraries in 2012 by Arnold and Deanne Kaplan.
Date:
1838
Creator:
Henry, H.
Publisher:
New York : M. Jackson, 1838.
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Sheet music; Russell, Henry; Noah, M. M.; Boston, Massachusetts, United States; 1838
Description:
"Our Way Across the Mountain, Ho" sheet music composed and dedicated to M. M. Noah, the most famous American Jew of the first half of 1800's, by Henry Russell. Sold by Peters and Webster, and published by Parker and Diston
Personal Name:
Russell, Henry; Noah, M. M.
Date:
1838
Language:
English
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Nemrod, ou, L'amateur des chevaux de courses : observations sur les méthodes les plus nouvelles de propager, d'élever, de dresser et de monter les chevaux de courses / par Charles-James Apperley. Nemrod Amateur des chevaux de courses
Subject:
Horse racing.; Horses -- Training.; PU; PU
Date:
1838
Creator:
Nimrod,
Publisher:
Paris : Imprimé aux frais de l'auteur : Se trouve chez Arthus Bertrand, éditeur, 1838.
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Fairman Rogers Collection (University of Pennsylvania)
A grammar of the Hebrew language / By Moses Stuart.
Subject:
Hebrew language -- Grammar.; PU; PU; PU
Description:
Kaplan Collection copies presented to the Penn Libraries in 2012 by Arnold and Deanne Kaplan.; Kaplan Collection copy collectify accession no. 2006.12.26.00707
Date:
1838
Creator:
Stuart, Moses,
Publisher:
Andover : Gould and Newman, Printers and Publishers; New York : Codman Press, 1838.
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Tachyhippodamia, or, Art of quieting wild horses in a few hours : as discovered by the author, in the year 1814 : to which are added many useful instructions concerning horses, &c. : in French, Spanish, and English / by Willis J. Powell. Tachyhippodamia Art of quieting wild horses in a few hours
Subject:
Horses -- Training.; Horses.; PU
Date:
1838
Creator:
Powell, Willis J.
Publisher:
New Orleans : Printed at the Observer Office, 1838.
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Fairman Rogers Collection (University of Pennsylvania)
Sheet music; Russell, Henry; Parker and Diston; Boston, Massachusetts, United States; 1838
Description:
Sheet music entitled "Our Way Across the Mountain, Ho" dedicated to M. M. Noah by Henry Russell, words by Charles Mackay, and published by Parker and Ditson
Personal Name:
Russell, Henry; Noah, M. M.; Mackay, Charles
Corporate Name:
Parker and Ditson
Date:
1838
Language:
English
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Pamphlet; Charleston, South Carolina, United States; 1838
Description:
Two discourses on the Great Fire in Charleston on Friday night, April 27th, 1838, listing the places burned including numerous Jewish names an the Great Synagogue
Date:
1838
Language:
English
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Letter; Leeser, Isaac; Hart, Abraham; Bar Simcha, Shlomo (Zalman); Bas Yosef, Breynah; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States; 1838
Description:
Kesuvah (Jewish Wedding Document) Between Groom Shlomo (Zalman) Bar Simcha and Bride Breynah Bas Yosef. Witnesses include Isaac Leeser and Abraham Hart. Philadelphia, PA
Personal Name:
Leeser, Isaac; Hart, Abraham; Bar Simcha, Shlomo (Zalman); Bas Yosef, Breynah
Date:
1838
Language:
Aramaic
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
Print; Carvalho, Solomon Nunes; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States; Charleston, South Carolina, United States; 1838
Description:
Lithographic print depicting the "Interior of the Hebrew Synagogue of Charleston, S.C…/Destroyed By Fire 27' April; 1838." The print contains the dedication "to the Rev. Gustavus Voznansky by very respectfully...Solomon N. Carvalho." Imprint reads "J.T. Bowen's Lith. 94 Walnut St. Phila."
Personal Name:
Carvalho, Solomon Nunes
Date:
1838
Language:
English
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?
Collection:
Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica (University of Pennsylvania)
This two-volume diary traces the nine-month journey (April to December 1838) of Mr. and Mrs. W. Daw as they travel from London, England to Moscow, Russia, and their return trip home. Mrs. Daw writes almost daily about their experiences and observations, which are embellished with eighteen watercolor sketches. Mrs. Daw reports on other travelers, captains of vessels, and their travel companion, Mr. White. The couple travels by ship, steamboat, coach, horseback, and train, stopping at small villages and large cities. On the outbound trip from England to Russia, Mr. and Mrs. Daw travel chiefly by boat through Germany and via the Danube River to Galati, Romania. Mrs. Daw describes the landscapes and towns as seen from the Danube and at stops along the river. From Galati the couple travels to Constantinople, Turkey, and here Mrs. Daw records the dress of Muslims, the mosque, and her experience of watching the dancing dervishes from behind a latticed screen in the mosque; she includes a watercolor of the event. She also records Mr. W. Daw's encounter at a Turkish Bath. Mrs. Daw often interrupts her own narrative to record in quoted passages the observations of her husband; she signs his initials at the end of the entries. Leaving Turkey, the Daws arrive in Odessa, Russia (now Ukraine), where they are quarantined for fifteen days: Mrs. Daw writes about the indignity of the situation, including the fumigation rooms. After quarantine they travel to the Crimean peninsula and stay at Yalta and Alupka, where Mr. Daw and Mr. White go on a three-week journey of their own. Reuniting, the party travels by coach and horseback through the steppes of Russia; Mrs. Daw writes of the landscape and the fields of buckwheat and corn. Arriving in Moscow, they visit the czars' palaces and churches. From Moscow, with a coachman and Jewish guide, Mr. and Mrs. Daw travel through Lithuania. Here Mrs. Daw records the number of versts they have traveled, the desolate land, and the customs and dress of the Jewish families managing the inns along the route to Warsaw. They reach Poland, and Mrs. Daw observes that the country is "feeling the effects of the unfortunate revolution--a people broken rather than subdued." Leaving Warsaw, they visit Mr. White's sister-in-law in Radom, Poland and then continue on to Krakow, a free state at the time. They move on to Czechoslovakia and Austria, staying in Vienna, where, while sightseeing, Mrs. Daw writes that she is much disturbed by Rubens paintings. The Daws leave Vienna, travel through Salzburg onto Germany, where in Stuttgart they take leave of Mr. White. From Cologne, Germany the couple boards a steamship to Brussels, Belgium, where they stay almost a week. They then travel by train to Antwerp, staying for a few days, and continue on to Ostend, where they board a ship to London. Through keen observations and watercolors Mrs. Daw captures many aspects of this lengthy Eastern European journey, including local people, their costumes, customs, religious beliefs, and social attitudes. She describes the landscapes, vistas, hotels, palaces, homes, and buildings. Curiously, Mrs. Daw does not provide the reason for the journey, nor does she reveal the first name of herself or her husband.; This two-volume diary traces the nine-month journey (April to December 1838) of Mr. and Mrs. W. Daw as they travel from London, England to Moscow, Russia, and their return trip home. Mrs. Daw writes almost daily about their experiences and observations, which are embellished with eighteen watercolor sketches. Mrs. Daw reports on other travelers, captains of vessels, and their travel companion, Mr. White. The couple travels by ship, steamboat, coach, horseback, and train, stopping at small villages and large cities. On the outbound trip from England to Russia, Mr. and Mrs. Daw travel chiefly by boat through Germany and via the Danube River to Galati, Romania. Mrs. Daw describes the landscapes and towns as seen from the Danube and at stops along the river. From Galati the couple travels to Constantinople, Turkey, and here Mrs. Daw records the dress of Muslims, the mosque, and her experience of watching the dancing dervishes from behind a latticed screen in the mosque; she includes a watercolor of the event. She also records Mr. W. Daw's encounter at a Turkish Bath. Mrs. Daw often interrupts her own narrative to record in quoted passages the observations of her husband; she signs his initials at the end of the entries. Leaving Turkey, the Daws arrive in Odessa, Russia (now Ukraine), where they are quarantined for fifteen days: Mrs. Daw writes about the indignity of the situation, including the fumigation rooms. After quarantine they travel to the Crimean peninsula and stay at Yalta and Alupka, where Mr. Daw and Mr. White go on a three-week journey of their own. Reuniting, the party travels by coach and horseback through the steppes of Russia; Mrs. Daw writes of the landscape and the fields of buckwheat and corn. Arriving in Moscow, they visit the czars' palaces and churches. From Moscow, with a coachman and Jewish guide, Mr. and Mrs. Daw travel through Lithuania. Here Mrs. Daw records the number of versts they have traveled, the desolate land, and the customs and dress of the Jewish families managing the inns along the route to Warsaw. They reach Poland, and Mrs. Daw observes that the country is "feeling the effects of the unfortunate revolution--a people broken rather than subdued." Leaving Warsaw, they visit Mr. White's sister-in-law in Radom, Poland and then continue on to Krakow, a free state at the time. They move on to Czechoslovakia and Austria, staying in Vienna, where, while sightseeing, Mrs. Daw writes that she is much disturbed by Rubens paintings. The Daws leave Vienna, travel through Salzburg onto Germany, where in Stuttgart they take leave of Mr. White. From Cologne, Germany the couple boards a steamship to Brussels, Belgium, where they stay almost a week. They then travel by train to Antwerp, staying for a few days, and continue on to Ostend, where they board a ship to London. Through keen observations and watercolors Mrs. Daw captures many aspects of this lengthy Eastern European journey, including local people, their costumes, customs, religious beliefs, and social attitudes. She describes the landscapes, vistas, hotels, palaces, homes, and buildings. Curiously, Mrs. Daw does not provide the reason for the journey, nor does she reveal the first name of herself or her husband.