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  • LeatherBound. Condition: New. LeatherBound edition. Condition: New. Reprinted from 1963 edition. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Pages: 84 Hancock, Claire R,United States. Bureau of Family Services.

  • Seller image for A Tangled Web. The Histories of the Families of John and Jemima Hancock & Thomas and Mary Martin for sale by Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB

    [Hancock and Martin Family History]. HANCOCK, Margaret and Fairalie LIEBELT

    Published by Hancock and Martin Publishing Committee, Adelaide, 1986

    Seller: Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australia

    Association Member: ANZAAB ILAB

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Adelaide, Hancock and Martin Publishing Committee, 1986. Quarto, 319 pages with numerous genealogical tables and illustrations and 2 maps plus endpaper maps. Gilt-lettered cloth slightly marked and bumped; front board a little bowed; Martin family member ownership details on the front pastedown; an excellent copy.

  • Seller image for [ARCHIVE OF CORRESPONDENCE AND PHOTOGRAPHS TO AND FROM MULTIPLE GENERATIONS OF THE HANCOCK FAMILY OF VIRGINIA, ALABAMA, AND TEXAS] for sale by William Reese Company - Americana

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    Approximately thirty-two letters, some with original transmittal envelopes; twenty-three photographs and real photo postcards; and assorted family documents, calling cards, and greeting cards. Overall very good condition. Housed in a modern gray archival box. A wide-ranging collection of correspondence, photographs, and documents centered on the Hancock family of Virginia, Alabama, and Texas in the second half of the 19th century, and first quarter of the 20th. The Hancock family members involved in the correspondence or pictured in the photographs in this archive include Benjamin Palmer Hancock, Arthur B. Hancock, Thomas Benton Hancock, Jane A. Hancock, Jane C. Hancock, Richard J. Hancock, Claudia Hancock, and Harris Hancock. Richard J. Hancock, Sr. was father to Richard J., Jr., Arthur B., and Harris Hancock, and uncle to Benjamin Palmer Hancock. Jane C. Hancock was B.P. Hancock's daughter. Thomas Benton Hancock and Jane A. Hancock were married, and Claudia Hancock was their daughter. The family, though spread out over vast distances, seems to have remained relatively in touch with one another. The correspondents also often write from or receive letters from different cities, suggesting they moved around a bit or traveled more widely than most families at the time. Benjamin Palmer "B.P." Hancock (1868-1943) lived in Dallas, Crockett, and Corpus Christi, Texas in the late 19th-century, and worked for both the Mexican National Railroad and the Texas Mexican Railway. He later returned to Texas, working as the Division Traffic Superintendent for the Western Union Telegraph Company in Dallas from 1913 until his retirement in 1938. He also maintained a family estate in Scotia, Alabama. In one 1905 letter, B.P. Hancock writes home to his wife Martha in Scotia, with detailed instructions for her imminent travel to meet him in New York City. He also writes a very loving letter to his daughter, Jane C. Hancock in 1913, while she was living in Winslow, Arkansas. He praises Jane for "the fine little girl - almost young lady - that you are today." Richard J. Hancock, Jr. (1873-1920) writes a long letter to B. Palmer Hancock on April 12, 1890. Richard was apparently working for the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway, as he writes his four-page letter on the company's stationery, and mentions hearing about a couple of colleagues "surveying a new extension for S[an] A[ntonio] P[acific] road." Richard acknowledges that B.P. and their mother are going to Virginia to visit family, and encourages B.P. to "make a good impression on all of the Hancock family." He also offers B.P. a new suit and money to look good in front of the Virginia Hancocks. Richard then reports on a recent trip "down to Rio Grande" where he "had lots of fun." Richard J. Hancock, Sr. (1838-1912) writes three letters to his nephew, B. Palmer Hancock in 1902, on "Ellerslie" stationery. Ellerslie Plantation (later Ellerslie Farm), near Charlottesville, Virginia, came into the Hancock family after Richard married Thomasia Harris, whose family owned the estate. Richard J. Hancock served as a Confederate captain under Stonewall Jackson during the Civil War. His letters to Palmer are mostly concerned with family business matters, especially Palmer's property in Alabama. At one point, Richard consoles B.P. for his mother's ill health, apparently from typhoid fever. In his third letter, Richard mentions his growing aversion to the life of a farmer at Ellerslie, commenting that he would "quit farming and sell out but for my son Arthur." Richard had already largely turned away from farming to breeding thoroughbred racehorses at Ellerslie, and became quite famous and successful at the venture, winning the 1884 Preakness Stakes with his horse, Knight of Ellerslie. His son, Arthur Hancock, later established a breeding farm in Kentucky named Claiborne Farm, and became one of the most legendary horse breeders of the 20th century. Thomas Benton Hancock (1834-1870) lived in Centreville, Alabama; a letter to him dated 1859 from a friend at the University of Virginia, implores Hancock to spend some time at the school. A slightly earlier autograph note dated 1857 from a professor at Centenary College in Jackson, Louisiana grants Thomas Benton leave from the school: "Mr. Thos. B. Hancock has been a student at Centenary College La. and that he has been honorably dismissed at his own request." There is also present here an 1860 letter of recommendation from a different professor at Centenary College, praising T.B.'s "scholarship, prudence and gentlemanly deportment" and recommending him as a teacher. T.B. Hancock died young, at the age of thirty-six in 1870, and is buried in Oakland, Mississippi. Three letters from 1882 written to "Mrs. J.A. Hancock" in Corpus Christi, Texas are particularly interesting. The recipient was most certainly Jane Alexander Hancock, widow of the late Thomas Benton Hancock. The three letters all concern stories submitted by J.A. Hancock to THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, a long- running children's literary periodical in Boston. One of these stories, titled, "Sorrel Top" is bought by the magazine in one of the present letters, and Mrs. Hancock is encouraged to send more stories. "Sorrel Top" appeared in the magazine later in the year, as "Mrs. Marks' 'Sorrel Top'" in the October 19, 1882 issue. All three letters are signed "Perry Mason & Co.," the publishers of THE YOUTH'S COMPANION. Perry Mason founded the magazine in 1827, and served as its editor until his death; Erle Stanley Gardner was fond of THE YOUTH'S COMPANION as a young reader, and borrowed the editor's name for his protagonist when he began writing a series of stories and books centered on his now-famous attorney/detective. The photographs in the present archive are a combination of cabinet card portraits and real photo postcards. The identified portraits include three of B.P. Hancock (one as a younger man in Corpus Christi, another inscribed "Your Son BP Hancock Dallas.