The Treaty of Paris
The Treaty of Paris
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The Library of Ernest E. Keet Sold on behalf of the Cloudsplitter Foundation
The Treaty of Paris

London, 1763

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The Treaty of Paris
London, 1763
TREATY OF PARIS – The Definitive Treaty of Peace and Friendship between His Britannick Majesty, the Most Christian King, and the King of Spain, Concluded at Paris, the 10th Day of February, 1763. London: by Authority, printed by E. Owen and T. Harrison, 1763.

The first edition: giving possession of the whole present-day U.S. territory east of the Mississippi to England. "These final terms, by which France relinquished her North American claims and Spain ceded Florida, gave England undisputed possession of the territory of the present United States from the Mississippi to the Atlantic" (Howes). The signatories were Great Britain, France and Spain. Of the ones vast holdings of New France, France retained only the tiny archipelago of St. Pierre and Miquelon and some fishing rights. Howes D-213; Kress 9829; Sabin 19275; Waldon, p.508.

Quarto (229 x 172mm). Printed in two columns, parallel French and English. 19th-century half roan, spine gilt-lettered (spine ends chipped, hinges cracked after endpapers). Provenance: Oscar Benjamin Cintas (bookplate) – Alberto Parreño (bookplate; his sale, Swann Galleries, 9 March 1978, lot 833) – Swann Galleries, 18 March 2010, lot 121 – Ernest E. Keet (bookplate).

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Peter Klarnet
Peter Klarnet Senior Specialist, Americana

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