4 Volumes. Folio (Vols. I and III: 14 3/4 x 11 inches
1833 · Philadelphia; London
by BONAPARTE, Charles Lucian (1803-1857), AUDUBON, John James (1785-1851, Illustrator), LAWSON, Alexander (1773-1846, Engraver) PEALE, Titian R. (1799-1885, Illustrator), RIDER, Alexander (fl.1810-1830, Illustrator)
Philadelphia; London: Philadelphia: Vol. I published by Samuel Augustus Mitchell; Vols. II-III by Carey, Lea and Carey; Vol. IV by Carey and Lea. All volumes printed by William Brown. London: John Miller at 40 Pall Mall, 1833. 4 Volumes. Folio (Vols. I and III: 14 3/4 x 11 inches. Vols. II and IV: 15 1/2 x 11 1/4 inches). First edition, first issue. 27 total hand-colored copper engravings by Alexander Lawson after John James Audubon (1), Titian R. Peale (11), and Alexander Rider (15). Vol. I: vi [vii] [1]-105. 112 pp. 9 hand-colored copper engravings. Vol. II: [i-x] [1]-95 [1]. 106 pp. 6 hand-colored copper engravings. Vol. III: [4] [1]-60. 64 pp. 6 hand-colored
(truncated) copper engravings. Vol. IV: [4] [1]-142. 146 pp. 6 hand-colored copper engravings. Contemporary red straight-grained half morocco over brown and black marbled boards with rolled gilt-tooling uniform across set, spine ruled gilt in five compartments with title gilt-lettered in second and volume numbered in fourth, with gilt foliate printer's device in rest. Vols. II and IV are uncut. Some usual light foxing in the text but the plates are clean.
First edition, first issue of this landmark American ornithological work authored by Napoleon's nephew, containing the first book appearance of any engraving after John James Audubon and 26 other beautifully hand-colored copper engravings.
Bonaparte's important continuation of Wilson's American Ornithology describes sixty birds not in the original work including the Wild Turkey, the Burrowing Owl, and the Zenaida Dove, named after his wife Princess Zénaïde Bonaparte. "A love for the same department of natural science, and a desire to complete the vast enterprise so far advanced by Wilson's labors, has induced us to undertake the present work," Bonaparte writes in the preface, "in order to illustrate what premature death prevented him from accomplishing, as well as the discoveries subsequently made in the feathered tribes of these States." In Frank L. Burns's 1909 article on the completion of American Ornithology, he writes, "The work which had been performed by Wilson's hands alone now gave employment to several individuals. Titian R., the fourth son of Charles Wilson Peale, not only collected many of the birds figured while on the Long expedition, which were credited to Thomas Say, who originally described them in footnotes scattered through the report; or in a subsequent private trip to Florida during the winter and spring of 1825, under the patronage of Bonaparte; but also drew the figures engraved for the first, and two plates for the fourth and last volume. A German emigrant by the name of Alexander Rider, of whom little is known beyond that he was a miniature painter in 1813, and a portrait and historical painter in 1818, was responsible for the remainder of the drawings with the exception of the two figures of plate 4 of Volume I." That exceptional plate, The Great Crow Blackbird, is notable for being the first book appearance of any engraving after John James Audubon. Perhaps the most influential artist involved with the work at that time, however, was Bonaparte's master engraver Alexander Lawson, arguably then the most talented ornithological engraver in America. Three issues of the first edition of Wilson's continuation have been identified. This set is comprised of the rare first issue of Volume I with the Mitchell imprint and containing the first issue of Plate 6 in that volume, with the Latin name given as Pyrrhula Erythrina following Ellis/Mengel. Volumes II-IV are also first issues published first by Carey, Lea and Carey, and then by Carey and Lea, and all were printed by William Brown. Carey and Lea later reissued the first volume, with their own imprint, after purchasing the rights to the publication from Mitchell in 1828. The third issue includes volumes reprinted by T. K. and P. G. Collins - with their imprint replacing that of William Brown - for Carey and Lea with unchanged dates on the titles, but it was actually printed in 1835 after the completion of the final volume.
Anker 47. Bennett 16. Burns, "Alexander Wilson" in The Wilson Bulletin, Vol. XXI, No.4 (December, 1909), pp.176-77. Coues 1:609. Ellis/Mengel 312a-b. Nissen IVB 116. Rhoads, "Note on Bonaparte's Continuation of American Ornithology," in The Auk, (April, 1923), p. 341-2. Sabin 6264. Sitwell, Fine Bird Books, p.78. Wood 247. Zimmer p.64.
(Inventory #: 34816)