Association Internationale des receveurs de La Poste "Les plus grands timbres de…
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Association Internationale des receveurs de La Poste "Les plus grands timbres de France en argent massif" box set Set of 50 silver stamps 925°/°° (complete) With certificate of authenticity

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Association Internationale des receveurs de La Poste "Les pl

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HAMPTON MOORE, Joseph. Congres du Caire. Association des voies navigables les plus profondes de l'Atlantique. Lettre du President. Rapport du Congres de Navigation. Ier Fevrier 1927. Typescript, 1927 Folio, 310x210 mm. 21 cc, 1 blank. Very good conservation. Typescript document. Account of speeches at the International Navigation Congress held in Cairo in December 1926. In the report, sent to the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association, of which he was president, Hampton Moore discusses the problems of both inland navigation, via canals, and ocean navigation. Joseph Hampton Moore, 1864 - 1950, prominent American politician, was mayor of Philadelphia and a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. In January 1905, he was appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt as the first chief of the Bureau of Manufactures, Department of Commerce and Labor, but resigned after six months of service to become president of a Philadelphia bank. He was president of the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association for forty years, from 1907 to 1947.See The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Collection 1541. J. Hampton Moore Papers 1786-1952, June 2005. Folio, 310x210 mm. Leaves 21, 1 blank. Very nice condition. Typewritten document. Report of the speeches at the International Navigation Congress held in Cairo in December 1926. In the report, sent to the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association, of which he was President, Hampton Moore talks about the problems of both internal navigation, via canals, and oceanic navigation.Joseph Hampton Moore, 1864 - 1950, prominent American politician, was mayor of Philadelphia and Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. In January 1905, he was appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt as the first chief of the Bureau of Manufacturing, Department of Commerce and Labor, but he resigned after six months of service to become president of a Philadelphia bank. He was president of the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association for forty years, from 1907 to 1947.