Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book
Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book Dame Trot Comical Cat  sews drums 1869 McLoughlin color litho moral picture book
$ 125.00

Poor condition- Cover with closed tears and edge chips, covers and pages loose, rear cover detached, spine stitched with thread long ago.

Joyful Tales of Dame Trot and her Comical Cat.

Published NY, 1865-80 by McLoughlin Bros.

16 pp. [counting covers], color litho cover, seven color plates (one double page centerfold) by Cogger, sc.

A scarce McLoughlin imprint of this classic but not often printed story.

Poor condition but still fun example. 

Spine repaired long ago with thread stitching, some corner chipping and edge tears (now closed with archival tape to prevent further damage) to covers. lightly rubbed, assorted moderate small age spotting or soiling, signs of handling, etc. Still, plates are all clean, pencil scribbling in blank margins, some soiling, edge split into plates, assorted signs of handling. Scarce title in any condition.

Old fragile juvenile paper booklet from the middle of the 19th century, so over 150 years old. The format, audience and approach is a precursor to modern comic books of the 1930's and then Golden Age on.

The survival rate of 19th century color paper juvenile books such as this is very low, a minuscule percentage (almost certainly under 10% in most cases, probably 1-5% of half of all those originally produced. Some issues scattered all over the place in publishing history may all but no longer exist as copies.

So even if it were “a lot” made then, it would still be very modest by most modern standards of production.

Meaning the actual sales run of hand made books like this would have to be measured in low thousands, thus meaning survival rates probably below 100 -200 per title, with variations of course depending upon factors such as size, title, orig. price, condition, etc.

Therefore, all surviving examples of 19th century color juvenile books should be considered inherently scarce and worthy of acquisition on some level, their actual comparative rarity being mostly invisible to the uninformed observer.

Book measures c. 9 1/8“ H x 5 3/4“W.

B15212