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Considerations Relative to the Sewage of London, and Suggestions for Improving the Sanatory Condition of the Metropolitan... Considerations Relative to the Sewage of London, and Suggestions for Improving the Sanatory Condition of the Metropolitan Districts (Paperback)
Joseph Gibbs
R374 Discovery Miles 3 740 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
A Cotswold Village (Paperback): Joseph Gibbs A Cotswold Village (Paperback)
Joseph Gibbs
R224 Discovery Miles 2 240 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Considerations Relative To The Sewage Of London, And Suggestions For Improving The Sanatory Condition Of The Metropolitan... Considerations Relative To The Sewage Of London, And Suggestions For Improving The Sanatory Condition Of The Metropolitan Districts (Hardcover)
Joseph Gibbs
R739 Discovery Miles 7 390 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
On the Account in the Golden Age - Piracy and the Americas, 1670-1726 (Paperback): Joseph Gibbs On the Account in the Golden Age - Piracy and the Americas, 1670-1726 (Paperback)
Joseph Gibbs
R1,802 Discovery Miles 18 020 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Piracy along American coastlines and in the Caribbean in the late 1600s and early 1700s is often seen today through a colourful set of modern media archetypes. The reality, however, was usually more ugly and frequently lethal. In this book, author Joseph Gibbs goes back to original memoirs, monographs, newspaper articles, and trial records to present a stark picture of piracy in the era of Blackbeard, Bartholomew Roberts, and Ann Bonny and Mary Read. A "prequel" to Gibbs' well received On the Account: Piracy and the Americas, 17661835, this book similarly presents primary sources chosen for authenticity. The contents are introduced, annotated, and carefully edited for modern readers. They offer a glimpse of piracy far removed from, and often more engaging than, the romanticised version provided by later writers and filmmakers. They describe, for example, the ordeal-filled marches of the Caribbean boucaniers, who were tough enough to eat leather while sacking the cities of the Spanish empire. They also shed light on the pirates' tactics at sea and on land; their practice of "forcing" captives to join them; their often-sadistic cruelty; and their ships' "articles" and the primitive democratic standards they upheld. Enhanced with classic maps and illustrations, The Golden Age offers an unvarnished look at those who sailed and often died under the dreaded black and red flags of the era. Readers will see pirates as they actually were -- in pursuit of prey, in battle, and sometimes on the way to the gallows.

Dead Men Tell No Tales - James Jeffers, Privateering, and Piracy in the Americas, 1816-1830 (Hardcover): Joseph Gibbs Dead Men Tell No Tales - James Jeffers, Privateering, and Piracy in the Americas, 1816-1830 (Hardcover)
Joseph Gibbs; Series edited by William N. Still
R927 Discovery Miles 9 270 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Dead men tell no tales, or so the pirate maxim goes. But when facing execution in 1831 for mutiny and murder, the previously enigmatic pirate Charles Gibbs recounted the infamous crimes of his harrowing life at sea in a self-aggrandizing series of ""confessions."" Wildly popular reading among nineteenth-century audiences, such criminal confessions were peppered with the romanticized mythology that informs pirate lore to this day. Joseph Gibbs takes up the task of separating fact from fiction to explicate the true story of Charles Gibbs - an alias for James Jeffers (1798-1831) of Newport, Rhode Island - in an investigation that reveals a life as riveting as the legend it replaces. Jeffers was the child of a Revolutionary War privateer captain with his own history in the ""rough work."" After a heroic career in the U.S. Navy during the War of 1812, Jeffers eschewed military life and took to the privateer trade himself. As Charles Gibbs, pirate, he sailed from the ports of Charleston and New Orleans to wreak havoc in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. Stripping away 170 years of embellishment, Joseph Gibbs maps the still-shockingly violent career of Charles Gibbs across the seas and, in the process, challenges and discredits much of his self-made mythology. Gibbs recounts Jeffers' well-documented role in the infamous mutiny and murders in 1830 aboard the brig Vineyard while the vessel was carrying a load of Mexican silver. The pirate was captured the following year and brought to New York. The case against Jeffers and accomplice Thomas Wansley culminated in a sensational trial, which led to their subsequent executions by hanging on Ellis Island. In addition to recounting the exploits of a ruthless cutthroat, ""The Confessions of ""Charles Gibbs"""" tells the larger story of American piracy and privateering in the early nineteenth century and illustrates the role of American and European adventurers in the Latin American wars of liberation. Carefully researched, engagingly written, and enhanced by twenty illustrations, this is pirate history at its most credible and readable.

Three Years in the "Bloody Eleventh" - The Campaigns of a Pennsylvania Reserves Regiment (Paperback): Joseph Gibbs Three Years in the "Bloody Eleventh" - The Campaigns of a Pennsylvania Reserves Regiment (Paperback)
Joseph Gibbs
R966 Discovery Miles 9 660 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Hailing from the Keystone State's rugged western counties, the Eleventh Pennsylvania Reserves was one of the Civil War's most heavily engaged units. Of more than 2,100 regiments raised by the North, it suffered the eighth highest number of battle deaths, earning it the gruesome sobriquet "Bloody Eleventh."

Three Years in the "Bloody Eleventh" tells the story of this often-overlooked element of the Army of the Potomac from before the war up through 1864. Drawing on letters, diaries, and archival documents, Joseph Gibbs writes of men such as Colonel Thomas Gallagher, who led his troops into battle smoking a cigar, and Samuel Jackson, who became the regiment's commander following Gallagher's promotion. He rediscovers the complexities of the men who commanded the brigades and divisions of which the Eleventh Reserves was a part--figures such as George Meade, John Reynolds, and Samuel Crawford.

While Gibbs writes about the officers, he never loses sight of the men in the ranks who marched into places such as Gaines' Mill, Miller's Cornfield at Antietam, and the Wheatfield at Gettysburg. Nor does he forget the homes, wives, and children they left behind in western Pennsylvania.

With its meticulous research and lucid prose, Three Years in the "Bloody Eleventh" provides both scholars and Civil War enthusiasts with an unprecedented look inside the trials and tribulations of one of the war's most battle-tested units.

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