Looking for help with book Civil War

Discussion in 'Books' started by Crim000, May 1, 2020.

  1. Crim000

    Crim000 Active Member

    Looking for any opinions or help with the inscription in this book. First part reads.....J A Pettibones book. Captured in S. Carolina Jan. 25th 1864. Geneva Ohio Sept 26 1867. .... pettibone. Can’t make out first initials of the name. The Union one and uninseperable now and forever.......set as have peace US Grant. Second inscription I can’t make out. The third inscription reads....This book trans-filled to the undersigned.....can’t make out first letters Pettibone.
    Any help with translation
    I probably did not get all translation right and couldn’t make out some words. 2371560E-28F7-4735-B356-B880C077B321.jpeg F01B6AA7-A6E4-48F2-8584-879D30672DFA.jpeg 29D1484A-5207-4951-B0D2-C67DE0F6FB9A.jpeg 61F3E660-1E90-4EF0-B06E-0A55926A90DB.jpeg 1BD3E547-206E-4818-B08E-C0C9DC88BA18.jpeg 3695DAB2-ECAA-40E1-8DE8-2355A0271324.jpeg 8B98D58D-D3EF-4422-A9CE-8203D04DE739.jpeg 1C62E902-2D47-401C-9E11-277AC0C798A1.jpeg
     
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  2. smallaxe

    smallaxe Well-Known Member

    "The union one and inseparable now and forever" Dan Webster
    "Let us have peace" US Grant

    This book was transferred to the undersigned
    F.A.Pettibone
    Feby {<-not sure about that one, but I think it may be abbreviation for February}
     
    Last edited: May 2, 2020
  3. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    neat !
     
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  4. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    A first attempt at the writing in the sixth image that is faded and heavily foxed. I think it might be some sort of directions about rebinding the book. F. A. Pettibone's name is now on the spine and since he (I assume a male) is not the original owner, the book has been rebound.

    “F. A. Pettibone on back” [?]

    “Gilt [?] Book Double [___?]”

    “Full ( T ____y )” OR “Full (L ___y)”

    @2manycats , any ideas about whether this could be some sort of notes on rebinding?
     
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  5. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    I can read "Geneva, Ohio." Lots of Pettibones in that neck of the woods.

    Debora
     
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  6. Crim000

    Crim000 Active Member

    So is the first inscription written by the owner who was captured or a family member? Would it be something he held during captivity?
     
  7. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Could you post a photograph of the original owner's name? It's on the title page. All I can make out is "Enos M." And I would think the brief Civil War history is by a descendent.

    Debora
     
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  8. Crim000

    Crim000 Active Member

    @Debora this little clipping was in the book as well 7B1846F8-D382-4564-B652-124BDD388580.jpeg 0962E410-27DD-49F8-A679-4E23A6203818.jpeg 3B7A1C0F-C63B-474E-9580-63A06477D09C.jpeg
     
  9. say_it_slowly

    say_it_slowly The worst prison is a closed heart

    Am I the only one bothered by the spelling of Shakespeare?
     
  10. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Enos M. Fleetwood is what I see.

    Debora
     
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  11. say_it_slowly

    say_it_slowly The worst prison is a closed heart

  12. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

  13. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Try Thomas Fleetwood.
     
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  14. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    A possibility for Mr. Pettibone --

    Francis (Frank) A. Pettibone. He mostly lived in Ashtabula, Ohio but for a few years right after the Civil War he lived and practiced law in Geneva. He married a woman from Geneva, and I assume that's why he decided to live there for a while.

    Somebody posted two obituaries that I just found. It's not proven that this is the same person but -- he was well educated and I think somebody who would have a book re-bound with his name printed in gold leaf on the spine is likely to have been. To me it seems likely. The only things that give me a little pause are that others of course could have the same initials and surname and... the obituaries don't mention him being captured in the war.

    https://cruelcoulter.com/family/attachment.php?attachment_id=99

    https://cruelcoulter.com/family/attachment.php?attachment_id=97

    One of the obits says he was only 43 years when he died. He was born in Sept. 1843, so died in 1886-1887.
     
    Last edited: May 2, 2020
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  15. 2manycats

    2manycats Well-Known Member

    Yes, I believe you are correct. The second line must be " Gilt Back Double Bands", I think, which would be the raised hubs on the spine which have a gold ornament between two parallel lines; I cannot make out the writing in the third line either, but I think it's some binder's code for the type & style of binding, perhaps known only to him - common types of leather binding would be full (or half or quarter) calf or morocco or sheep or vellum - this one looks like a sort of full morocco, but that's obviously not what it says. Possibly 'Full Tusk' as in Tuscan, if that's where he got some of his leather? The terminology in common use then is not well-known anymore, and has changed - for instance, what they're calling the back, we'd now call the spine.

    Instructions to binders were common at the time, though, when hand-work was cheap - you most often see them in illustrated books where the plates were printed separately and had to be glued in by the binder: a printed page will tell the binder which page to place them opposite. And owner's names on bindings show up fairly often, even into the 1950s, usually on things like yearbooks or club manuals.
     
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  16. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Thank you for replying! I found that very interesting.
     
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