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215

Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century

In Online Rare Books, Maps & Prints and Photograp...

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Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century - Image 1 of 4
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Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century - Image 1 of 4
Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century - Image 2 of 4
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Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century Photographs

This album was hand made in 1996 by Roger Bolton. Full heavy clear plastic protective sleeve. Half-bound in maroon calf, gilt to spine, and maroon cloth sides. Heavy cornfield end-boards attached to the binding with broad maroon cloth tape. Twenty additional white board leaves, similarly attached to the binding, on which are mounted 40 large sepia prints with hand typeset captions. Bolton, whose day job was book-restorer to the Brenthurst Library, sliced the emulsion of the bromides from pages in an original album presented by the Maharajah of Bhavnagar to Richard Proctor-Sims (RPS) and dating from the 1890s. The covers and binding of this original album had deteriorated beyond repair. 


Most of the photographs are of buildings - planned, under construction and completed - and civil engineering works, but include a sequence on the reception for the Prince of Wales and of Bhavnagar's horse-breeding activities, the organisation of which was one of the RPS interests referred to in the obituary below.. There is still a memorial to RPS in Bhavnagar town centre and tours have been arranged to inspect his architectural, building and civil engineering works, which have all been well maintained.


If the album is bought by a buyer in India, the seller will deliver it personally as he intends making a visit during the 70th anniversary of India's independence. 


OVERALL CONDITION. As new. A few very small emulsion chips have not been retouched (see images).


OBITUARY



  • From the Institution of Civil Engineers 1900 obituaries:


"Richard Proctor-Sims ([1840] - 1900) died on 31 May 1900, at Port Albert Victor, in the Bhavnagar State of Kathiawar in Western India. He began his professional career as an Assistant Engineer on the staff of the Bombay Municipality, which post he resigned in 1864 to join the engineering staff of the Back Bay Reclamation Company. On termination of this company’s work, he was appointed in December 1869 Executive Engineer for Local Funds in the Nassick districts, and later, on the abolition of the Local Fund Department, he was transferred to Government service as 4th Grade Executive Engineer in the Bombay Public Works Department. In the year 1875, at the request of the Administrators of the Bhavnagar State, Mr Proctor-Sims’s services were lent as State Engineer, and for the following twenty-five years till the date of his death he devoted himself not only to the engineering, but also to the general welfare of the State of Bhavnagar. One of his first cares was the organization of the State Public Works Department and the introduction of a Public Works code and system of accounts. In addition to the ordinary routine work of a State Engineer, which included the construction of 130 miles of roads with their necessary bridges, and the water-supply and sanitation of Bhavnagar City, the following notable buildings were either designed or carried out by Mr Proctor-Sims: the High School, the Nilambag Palace, the Samaldas College, and the Takhtsingji Hospital, the last named being designed by Mr William Emerson. Mr Proctor-Sims devoted much attention to the harbour works of the state. Having done much to improve the Port of Bhavnagar, he was interesting himself in developing the new Port Albert Victor, and it was during the famine in May 1900, while organising relief works at this port that he fell a victim to cholera which was raging in the district. As the most trusted European official in the state, Mr Proctor-Sims was constantly consulted by the Maharajah on important measures other than those connected with engineering. The horse-breeding operations of the state and the Bhavnagar Imperial Lancers were practically organised by him; and indeed every matter of importance in the state, including its relations with the Imperial Government, were carried out either by him or under his guidance. Perhaps the department in which his work was most important was that of the Board of Control of the Kathiawar system of State Railways, in which the Bhavnagar State has a large interest. Mr Proctor-Sims was a man of great unselfishness, his hospitality was proverbial, and his genial social qualities made him liked everywhere. His untimely death was keenly felt, not only by the Maharajah, but by the people of the state generally, by whom he was universally trusted and respected. Mr Proctor-Sims was elected an Associate of the Institution on 5 May 1868 and he was transferred to the class of Members on 9 May 1876."


Unique copy
Fine
600 x 450 x 60; 4.5 kg
To bid please visit AntiquarianAuctions.com
Anonymous Bhavnagar (India) Album of Captioned Architectural and Other Nineteenth Century Photographs

This album was hand made in 1996 by Roger Bolton. Full heavy clear plastic protective sleeve. Half-bound in maroon calf, gilt to spine, and maroon cloth sides. Heavy cornfield end-boards attached to the binding with broad maroon cloth tape. Twenty additional white board leaves, similarly attached to the binding, on which are mounted 40 large sepia prints with hand typeset captions. Bolton, whose day job was book-restorer to the Brenthurst Library, sliced the emulsion of the bromides from pages in an original album presented by the Maharajah of Bhavnagar to Richard Proctor-Sims (RPS) and dating from the 1890s. The covers and binding of this original album had deteriorated beyond repair. 


Most of the photographs are of buildings - planned, under construction and completed - and civil engineering works, but include a sequence on the reception for the Prince of Wales and of Bhavnagar's horse-breeding activities, the organisation of which was one of the RPS interests referred to in the obituary below.. There is still a memorial to RPS in Bhavnagar town centre and tours have been arranged to inspect his architectural, building and civil engineering works, which have all been well maintained.


If the album is bought by a buyer in India, the seller will deliver it personally as he intends making a visit during the 70th anniversary of India's independence. 


OVERALL CONDITION. As new. A few very small emulsion chips have not been retouched (see images).


OBITUARY



  • From the Institution of Civil Engineers 1900 obituaries:


"Richard Proctor-Sims ([1840] - 1900) died on 31 May 1900, at Port Albert Victor, in the Bhavnagar State of Kathiawar in Western India. He began his professional career as an Assistant Engineer on the staff of the Bombay Municipality, which post he resigned in 1864 to join the engineering staff of the Back Bay Reclamation Company. On termination of this company’s work, he was appointed in December 1869 Executive Engineer for Local Funds in the Nassick districts, and later, on the abolition of the Local Fund Department, he was transferred to Government service as 4th Grade Executive Engineer in the Bombay Public Works Department. In the year 1875, at the request of the Administrators of the Bhavnagar State, Mr Proctor-Sims’s services were lent as State Engineer, and for the following twenty-five years till the date of his death he devoted himself not only to the engineering, but also to the general welfare of the State of Bhavnagar. One of his first cares was the organization of the State Public Works Department and the introduction of a Public Works code and system of accounts. In addition to the ordinary routine work of a State Engineer, which included the construction of 130 miles of roads with their necessary bridges, and the water-supply and sanitation of Bhavnagar City, the following notable buildings were either designed or carried out by Mr Proctor-Sims: the High School, the Nilambag Palace, the Samaldas College, and the Takhtsingji Hospital, the last named being designed by Mr William Emerson. Mr Proctor-Sims devoted much attention to the harbour works of the state. Having done much to improve the Port of Bhavnagar, he was interesting himself in developing the new Port Albert Victor, and it was during the famine in May 1900, while organising relief works at this port that he fell a victim to cholera which was raging in the district. As the most trusted European official in the state, Mr Proctor-Sims was constantly consulted by the Maharajah on important measures other than those connected with engineering. The horse-breeding operations of the state and the Bhavnagar Imperial Lancers were practically organised by him; and indeed every matter of importance in the state, including its relations with the Imperial Government, were carried out either by him or under his guidance. Perhaps the department in which his work was most important was that of the Board of Control of the Kathiawar system of State Railways, in which the Bhavnagar State has a large interest. Mr Proctor-Sims was a man of great unselfishness, his hospitality was proverbial, and his genial social qualities made him liked everywhere. His untimely death was keenly felt, not only by the Maharajah, but by the people of the state generally, by whom he was universally trusted and respected. Mr Proctor-Sims was elected an Associate of the Institution on 5 May 1868 and he was transferred to the class of Members on 9 May 1876."


Unique copy
Fine
600 x 450 x 60; 4.5 kg
To bid please visit AntiquarianAuctions.com

Online Rare Books, Maps & Prints and Photography Auction

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