Overview
The item is definitively identified by the explicit embossed text on the cover/title page: 'SEVENTH READER. From Butler's New Readers. Printed... at the AMERICAN PRINTING HOUSE FOR THE BLIND. Louisville, 1874.
Identification
Photo reference
1 uploaded photo
Overview
The item is definitively identified by the explicit embossed text on the cover/title page: 'SEVENTH READER. From Butler's New Readers. Printed... at the AMERICAN PRINTING HOUSE FOR THE BLIND. Louisville, 1874.
Story
Printed by the American Printing House for the Blind in Louisville in 1874, this volume represents a critical era in accessible education before Braille became the universal standard. The personalization by student Emma Desplines in 1884 adds a poignant, verifiable layer of social history, elevating it beyond a standard institutional copy.
Maker / Origin
American Printing House for the Blind
Condition & Value
Based on the single visible photo, the embossed title page remains highly legible, and the hand-pressed personalization is distinct. However, the spine appears to have old tape or wear along the left edge, and the completeness of the interior pages is entirely unknown.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
The secondary market for pre-Braille tactile printing, such as Boston Line Type, is highly specialized but robust, driven primarily by institutional archives, medical history collectors, and specialists in the history of education. Swann Galleries frequently handles these items, establishing a clear auction track record. While complete Bibles or famous literary works can exceed $3,000, single volumes and educational texts typically clear between $600 and $1,200 depending on condition.
▲ Printed in Boston Line Type, a highly collectible pre-Braille tactile format
▲ Explicit 1874 American Printing House imprint confirms early institutional history
▲ Unique 1884 hand-pressed personalization by a student adds strong association value
▲ Swann auction comparables establish a firm $600+ floor for single volumes in this format
▼ Unverified interior completeness — missing pages would drop the estimate into the $300-$500 range
▼ Unverified spine stability — severe binding failure or modern tape repairs could discount value
▼ Educational readers generally command less than Bibles or famous literature in the tactile book market
Best Venue
Consign to a specialist auction house with a dedicated printed manuscript or medical history department, such as Swann Auction Galleries. Do not attempt to repair the spine or clean the pages, as amateur restoration will severely depress its historical value.
Upside Potential
If the interior pages are confirmed to be pristine, complete, and free of foxing or tears, and the binding is fully intact without tape repairs, the item could appeal to premium institutional buyers and reach the $1,500-$2,000 range.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.