Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Rare Books

The Comte de Paris

Image not available



You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    Pauvre Comte de Paris…

    Visual Materials

    The William H. Helfand Collection contains more than 7,000 European and American prints and ephemera relating to health professions including medical, dental, and mental wellness. The materials date from the 1490s to the early 21st century and contain many social and political cartoons that satirize health practices and practitioners. Noted illustrators represented include French artists Honore Daumier, Gustave Dore, J. J. Grandville, and Emile Vernier; British caricaturists Thomas Rowlandson, George Cruikshank, and James Gillray; and the American cartoonist Thomas Nast.

    priHEL

  • Image not available

    The Comte de Paris' Campaign on the Potomac

    Rare Books

    99238

  • Image not available

    Comte de Paris' Reply to Gen. Pope's Letter

    Rare Books

    63152

  • Image not available

    Paris

    Rare Books

    334462

  • Image not available

    Turon, C. (Observatoire de Paris)

    Manuscripts

    The collection deals primarily with the professional activities of Olin C. Wilson, who was most active from the mid-1930s into the 1980s. Wilson corresponded frequently with astronomers from a variety of universities in the United States and abroad, and the collection is representative of the deeply international and collaborative nature of astronomical and astrophysical research in the second half of the twentieth century. It also contains valuable and insightful material related to the schism between Mount Wilson and CalTech in the 1970s and 1980s, and the near-demise of Mount Wilson during that decade.

    mssWilson papers

  • Image not available

    Berezne, S. (Observatorie de Paris)

    Manuscripts

    The collection deals primarily with the professional activities of Olin C. Wilson, who was most active from the mid-1930s into the 1980s. Wilson corresponded frequently with astronomers from a variety of universities in the United States and abroad, and the collection is representative of the deeply international and collaborative nature of astronomical and astrophysical research in the second half of the twentieth century. It also contains valuable and insightful material related to the schism between Mount Wilson and CalTech in the 1970s and 1980s, and the near-demise of Mount Wilson during that decade.

    mssWilson papers