Histoire de Kentucke

Filson, John
Paris, Buisson, 1785.
Prix : 6 500 €

Première édition française, traduite par Parraud.

Bel exemplaire conservé dans sa remarquable et intéressante reliure révolutionnaire ornée de 4 bonnets phrygiens dorés de l’époque.

In-8 de 2 ff., XVI, 234 pp. et 1 carte dépliante. Reliure révolutionnaire de l’époque en demi-basane ornée de 4 bonnets phrygiens dorés, tranches jaunes.

196 x 121 mm.

Filson, John. Histoire de Kentucke, nouvelle colonie à l’Ouest de la Virginie ; contenant, 1° La Découverte, l’Acquisition, l’Etablissement, la Description topographique, l’Histoire Naturelle, &c. du Territoire : 2° La Relation historique du Colonel Boon, un des premiers Colons, sur les guerres contre les Naturels : 3° l’Assemblée des Piankashaws au Poste Saint Vincent : 4° un exposé succinct des Nations Indiennes qui habitent dans les limites des Treize Etats-Unis, de leurs Mœurs & Coutumes, & des Réflexions sur leur Origine ; & autres Pièces : Avec une carte. Ouvrage pour servir de suite aux Lettres d’un cultivateur Américain. Traduit de l’Anglois, de M. John Filson ; Par M. Parraud, de l’Académie des Arcades de Rome.
Paris, Buisson, M.DCC.LXXXV (1785).

Première édition française, traduite par Parraud. 
Church 1212; Field 537; Howes F129; Jones 590; Littell 351; Sabin 24338.

John Filson (1753-1788) est le premier historien du Kentucky. Dans son ouvrage, paru pour la première fois à Wilmington (Delaware) en 1784, il retrace la découverte et l'acquisition de ce vaste territoire encore inconnu, parle de ses diverses ressources naturelles et en fournit une description topographique très détaillée. On y trouve aussi la première relation des aventures de Daniel Boon, célèbre pionnier de la conquête de l'Ouest, et un exposé succinct sur les nations indiennes qui vivent à l'est du Mississipi et à l'ouest de l'Ohio.

First French edition, first published in Wilmington Delaware the previous year, and without a map, which was published simultaneously and separately by Pursell and Rook of Philadelphia, and reprinted eight times between 1784-1793. The map in this volume was engraved and published in France. Filson arrived in Kentucky in 1783 and soon settled in Lexington, where he became a teacher and surveyor. "Relative peace had corne to the Kentucky frontier in 1782 after the battle of Blue Licks, which in part diminished the omnipresent menace from Native Americans. Filson quickly seized on an idea to publish an account of the dramatic story of Kentucky's settlement and its natural history that would attract settlers and thereby increase the value of his landholdings. As he conducted land surveys and traveled throughout the central bluegrass region, he began intensively interviewing prominent frontiersmen such as Daniel Boone, James Harrod, and others about their Kentucky expériences" (Hay).

"The Discovery, Settlement, and Pre sent State of Kentucke, and an Essay towards the Topography and Natural History of That Important Country: To Which Is Added an Appendix" was the first written history of Kentucky, and because there were no printers in Kentucky, Filson traveled to Wilmington, Delaware, where James Adams printed it. "The main work consists of brief descriptive essays on topics such as the nature of the soil, discovery of Kentucky, air and climate, inhabitants, and rights of land (the three ways one can acquire land in Kentucky). Written in a vivid and colorful style with occasional factual errors, the book extolls the Eden-like qualities of Kentucky, an environment conducive to republican virtues and blessed with material riches. Aside from his personal observations, Filson cleverly used testimonies of leading Kentucky frontiersmen as endorsements in the book. The most important and enduring part of the volume, in the appendix, is "The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boon," which traces the pioneer's life from the time he entered Kentucky in 1769 to 1784. Although written as an autobiography and signed by Boone, the pedantic writing style is clearly Filson's. Readers in America and Europe eagerly read of Boone's heroic exploits as an advance agent of progress, a natural man, who tamed the rugged frontier for civilization, and Filson's book became a major vehicle in publicizing and stimulating migration to Kentucky. "While Adams was printing the book, Filson employed Philadelphia engraver Henry Pursell and printer Ternon Rook to produce a map Filson had drawn to encourage settlement of Kentucky

Composed primarily from secondhand accounts of Boone and other explorers and Filson's own knowledge of the region, the map is well drawn but not completely accurate. It depicts the state's rivers and creeks, mountains and hills, towns and forts, and canebrakes, and clearly marks the location of the land surveyor's office. As was the cartographer's intention, the map conveys a sense of civilization and progress". (Charles C. Hayfor ADNB).

Bel exemplaire conservé dans sa remarquable reliure révolutionnaire de l’époque ornée de 4 bonnets phrygiens dorés.