Winship, George Parker, 1871-1952
Winship, George Parker
Winship, George Parker, 1871-
George Parker Winship American librarian (1871-1952)
Winship, George Parker, n. 1871
VIAF ID: 64105203 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/64105203
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a George Parker Winship ‡c American librarian (1871-1952)
- 200 _ | ‡a Winship ‡b George Parker ‡f 1871-1952
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Winship, George Parker
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Winship, George Parker ‡d 1871-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Winship, George Parker ‡d 1871-1952
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Winship, George Parker, ‡d 1871-1952
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Winship, George Parker, ‡d 1871-1952
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (19)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Benjamin Franklin's letters to Madame Helvétius and Madame La Freté | |
Bibliotheca typographica in usum eorum qui libros amant : a list of books about books | |
Boston in 1682 and 1699; A trip to New-England | |
Brown university broadsides | |
Cabot bibliography : with an introductory essay on the careers of the Cabots based upon an independent examination of the sources of information | |
Cabot on the American natives, 1497-1508. | |
The Cambridge press, 1638-1692 : a reëxamination of the evidence concerning the Bay Psalm book and the Eliot Indian Bible as well as other contemporary books and people | |
Census of XVth century books owned in America, compiled by a committee of the Bibliographical society of America | |
A chronological list of the books printed at the Kelmscott Press : with illustrative material from a collection made by William Morris and Henry C. Marillier, now in the library of Marsden J. Perry of Providence, Rhode Island. | |
The Coronado expedition, 1540-1542 | |
Dialogue with the gout | |
The Earliest american imprints | |
Early mexican printers | |
Early South American newspapers | |
The Eliot Indian Tracts | |
epilogue to "Sir Courtly Nice, or, it cannot be" | |
The first American Bible ... 1929. | |
The first American Bible; a leaf from a copy of the Bible translated into the Indian language by John Eliot and printed at Cambridge in New England in the year 1663, with an account of the translator and his labors, and of the two printers who produced the book | |
The First Harvard playwright : a bibliography of the Restoration dramatist John Crowne, with extracts from his prefaces and the earlier version of the epilogue to "Sir Courtly Nice", 1685 | |
George Parker Winship : as librarian, typophile and teacher | |
Guide to sources of English history from 1603 to 1660, in reports of the Royal commission on historical manuscripts | |
Gutenberg to Plantin : an outline of the early history of printing | |
Humble request of His Majesties loyall subjects, the governour and company late gone for New-England, to the rest of their brethren in and of the Church of England. | |
Increase Mather | |
John Cabot and the study of sources | |
The John Carter Brown library : a history | |
John Gutenberg | |
The journal of Madam Knight | |
The journey of Coronado | |
A letter from Henry James to Mrs. Linton. | |
A letter from Rudyard Kipling on a possible source of The tempest, 1906: | |
List of titles of documents relating to America contained in volumes I-CX of the Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de España ... | |
Luther S. Livingston, 1864-1914. | |
The Merrymount Press of Boston : an account of the work of Daniel Berkeley Updike | |
A new voyage and description of the isthmus of America | |
Newport newspapers in the eighteenth century; a paper read before the Society | |
Notes on a reprint of the "New-England primer improved" : for the year 1777, for the more easy attaining the truth. | |
An odd lot of New England Puritan personalities, with some observations on the Bay Psalm book | |
Parable against persecution | |
Printing in the fifteenth century | |
The printing press in South America | |
Puritan's farewell to England, being the humble request of the Governor and Company of the Massachussets-Bay in New England about to depart upon the Great emigration, April 7, 1630... | |
The Rhode-Island almanack for the year 1728 : being the first ever printed in the colony : carefully reproduced in exact facsimile by means at that time unknown, without sensible alteration, from the single copy which, it is believed, has survived the permutations of one hundred and eighty-four years : together with a brief account of James Franklin, the printer | |
The Rhode Island almanack of 1728, 1911: | |
Sailors narratives of voyages along the New England coast : 1524-1624 | |
Some facts about John and Sebastian Cabot | |
Still-vext Bermoothes | |
Three proclamations concerning the lottery for Virginia, 1613-1621 | |
Venedig als Mittelpunkt des Buchgewerbes | |
The Vollbehr incunabula at the National Arts Club of New York from August 23 to September 30 MCMXXVI | |
William Caxton, a paper read at a meeting of the Club of odd volumes in Boston... in January 1908, by George Parker Winship | |
William Caxton and his work | |
William Caxton and the first English press, by George Parker Winship, a bio-bibliographical essay... With an original leaf of the Polycronicon [by Ranulph Higden. Translated and printed by William Caxton] |