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Commerce Of The Prairies: Or The Journal Of A Santa Fe Trader, During Eight Expeditions Across The Great Western Prairies, And A Residence Of Nearly Nine Years In Northern Mexico. Illustrated With Maps And Engravings. Two Volumes JOSIAH GREGG

Commerce Of The Prairies: Or The Journal Of A Santa Fe Trader, During Eight Expeditions Across The Great Western Prairies, And A Residence Of Nearly Nine Years In Northern Mexico. Illustrated With Maps And Engravings. Two Volumes

JOSIAH GREGG

Other works by JOSIAH GREGG

Publication: Henry G Langley, 1844, New York

First edition, first issue. 12mo. Two volumes. Volume I: Original brown, embossed, gold gilt, pictorial cloth, with spine stamped in gilt, xvi - 17 - 320 pp., frontispiece, preface, illustrated, plates, map. Early small bookplate of David Morgan Hildreth on front pastedown sheet, and ownership signature of J. C. Reynolds on front fly leaf. Volume II: Original brown embossed, gold gilt, pictorial cloth, with spine stamped in gilt, viii -9 - 318 pp., frontispiece, illustrated, plates, map. Early small bookplate of David Morgan Hildreth on front pastedown sheet, and ownership signature of J. C. Reynolds on front fly leaf. First edition, first issue of a classic of Western Americana and an authoritative, firsthand description of the Santa Fe Trail, New Mexico before the American conquest, and the Native tribes of the southern Plains. "Gregg wrote as a man of experience and not as a professional writer. He wrote not only the classic of the Santa Fe trade and trail but one of the classics of bedrock Americana" - Dobie. "Gregg made his first trip over the Santa Fe Trail in 1831; his last trip to Santa Fe was in 1839. The work stands as a cornerstone of all studies on the Santa Fe Trail in the early period, describing the origin and development of the trade, Gregg's own experiences, and useful statistics for 1822-1843" - Rittenhouse. A native of Tennessee, Josiah Gregg initially went to Santa Fe in 1831 to improve his health, and became an active trader on the Santa Fe Trail for the next decade. Largely self-taught, though with an early interest in mathematics, he was an excellent observer of his surroundings and recorder of his experiences, and he tells his story in a forthright narrative that, if it lacks literary flourishes, abounds in facts and details. Gregg describes the daily activities of a Santa Fe trader, life on the prairie and the trail, camping, dealing with Mexican customs officials, the history and natural history of the region, native tribes, and much more. His mathematical ability led him to master surveying, a talent that aided him in producing the best map of the Santa Fe Trail and the surrounding country, what Carl Wheat has called "a cartographic landmark." Printed in black and green, the "Map of the Indian Territory of Northern Texas and New Mexico showing the Great Western Prairies" shows various routes through the southwest to Santa Fe, towns and villages, forts and trading posts, Indian villages and hunting grounds, rivers, and the Llano Estacado (staked plain) of Texas. The single-page map is of the interior of northern Mexico. "An important Texas book as well as one of the great books on the West" - Streeter. "Chief authority on the Santa Fe trade-route and traffic." - Howes. A bit of light foxing, heaviest on title page and frontispiece of second volume, some of the plates slightly darkened, some light cosmetic restoration to the spine ends and corners, else very good, bright copies with the map in near fine condition. Housed in a cloth slipcase with a leather spine label and titles stamped in gold gilt.

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