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Welcome to Trewalla.

For  32 years  creating and growing Bellsouth, I was pretty immersed in everything chooks, from the home backyard to the commercial operators, and vaccine makers. I sold Bellsouth in 2012 because I had some pretty serious health problems.  I survived but after 8 years watching and supporting from the sidelines, I have decided its time to be active again.

I have written a number of books over the years, plus a stack of technical bulletins, and  over the 40 years collected a lot of books and publications. I have started to sell my poultry books, and  information, new and old, ( and maybe I will  buy some more too).  I do some bookbinding as a hobby, make special editions handbound, and I still dabble in some parts of the poultry industry. I look forward to  expanding this site as I am able, and I hope my interests are also a little interesting to you too.

Jim Finger 2020

About the masthead.

Long ago, my wife's mother grew up in the wilds of northern Tasmania, in an area known as Trewalla. The actual name of the area is Trawalla but we have since found the Aboriginal pronunciation is more like Truwella.  The name was made into the house name, and a plaque made from hammered copper many many years ago. When the family migrated to Victoria back before WW2, the sign came to, and adorned the farm of one of the brothers. When he passed away, the farm was sold and the sign came to Merle. She moved into a granny flat in our yard in the 90's.   When Bellsouth was sold, we changed the company name to Trewalla out of  respect for Merle. The masthead  is that sign, which still adorns the house, tough Trewalla the company has now passed itself into history. 

  

Contact US

Trewalla

Po Box 1245 Narre Warren 3805

jimThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

emails responded to often

Also Plucking Fingers,

see

Plucker Industries Pty Ltd

 

 

American Poultry Journal  and Record.

Published By  C.J.Ward  Chicago Illinois

Item 44 of the WLOPS  However it lists as ist ed 1872,

My record starts with  August 1885  Volume 16 No 8. This indicates that the publication was in full calendar years numbered for the months (8= AUGUST) This calculates to the  first publication date as Jan 1869. An error I cant account for

My Book list.

 

Please note Book means each completed binding. Volume is the published year and the issues are names of the months in the bound in lists.

 

 

       

Book 1

Years  1885-1888 is the label on spine.

1885 Vol 16  Commencing at Issue 8  August  Received in from Mr B G R Ward  Library  of Oneida Kansas . (Is this any relation to the Publisher C.J.Ward?) 

This book  has the bookplate of Department of Poultry Science, Leland Call Hall,   Kansas State University. Each year (volume)  in the bound book has a  ist of those missing from each entry as it was bound.

1886 Vol16   Missing  Jan to July, and October missing.

1887  Vol 17  Complete

1889  Vol 18   missing

1890  Vol 19  January only included

1891 Vol 20  January only included.

 

         

 

Book 2

1917 Volume 48  

Bookplate of Austin Windsor. The end papers look like a new addition and not very well  added.

 Nos  1- n0 12. The covers to each issue are faded ass if they were a long time  exposed to light and have the colours faded. These volumes are including lots of photos, and much of the photography and some of the illustrations and artwork bear LS  Lois Stammer as author.

The adds also give a listing of the other book published by APJ 

 1914 Yearbook. How many years did they have these. I have only one and haven’t found a listing of others.( ed  Just found a reference to a 1915 edition)

Newell A revolution in Egg Production  1916,

Practical Lessons   1929 Large format wrappers.

 

 

            

   

 Book 3

1926  Vol 57 Complete 12 issues. in very good condition. Schilling and Stammer are the predominant artists,.

 

 

 

 

These are the individual issues

 in the collection shown as ;

Year, Volume number, monthly issue numbers  for the months of the year.

 

 

 

 

  1. Vol 35, nos 3, 5, 12

 

  1. Vol 47, nos 7, 8, 9

 

  1. Vol 49, nos 4, 5, 10

 

  1. Vol 50. nos 10, 11

 

  1. Vol 51. nos 1, 2, 8

 

  1. Vol 52. nos 1,  5,6,10, 11,  12 ( 5 Duplicate)

 

  1. Vol 53 nos 2, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12

 

  1. Vol 54 nos 4, 5, 6, 8, 12.

 

 

1924 Vol 55 nos 1, 2, 4, 5, 7,8, 9, 10, 11

1925  Vol 56 No 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

 

 

 1926 Vol 58 No 10

 

1927 Vol 58  No 10

 

1928 Vol 59  N0 1

 

The other American Poultry Journal

However WLOPS also lists   42   American Poultry Journal  with a different publisher. Seems there is a competition.   Egg Producers edition  , 43 Turkey Producers ed  41 Broiler prod ed  none of these sighted by me. This is the original and the best ( the claim on the front) it Has a different logo and style. Beware of  mixing the two.  The entries are shown on the picture.

 

 

1933  Vol 64  nos 2, 9, 10

1930   Vol 61  nos 1 and 5

 

 

1936  Vol  62   no 1-12

1937  Vol 63  no 3, 4,7, 8, 9, 12

 

 

 

1938 Vol 64   No 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11

 

 

1939   Vol 65 Nos 1,2,3,4,5,6and 7 combined World Poultry Congress Issue, 10,11, 12. Showing various district issues. ( east, west, central)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Everybodys Poultry Magazine 

 

Cover Pictures Some notes,below the opinion of Jim Finger.

Everybod

 

 

 

 

Everybodys Poultry Magazine  Some notes,below the opinion of Jim Finger.

The name was copyright in 1915 but I am unable to locate my Bibliography of Serials to confirm the commencement and final date. I think 1885 is the first edition.  I have also never seen a complete set of this mag.

The Editorial staff reads like a who’s  who of the  poultry fancy and industry of the day min the USA. Predominantly aimed at the fancier and small farmer, the articles are well written, sometimes controversial, and represent writing team that is excellent. One could do worse to base a book collection on the books written by the staff editors, and the contributors,  and  collect the art of these magazine artists.

Edwin Megargee did much of the cover art and was also instrumental in the art of  ICS poultry school, and  McGrews books. Louis Stamer and Louis Paul Graham also featured in the art of many poultry books of the day and several of the magazines. In fact, the articles index is a list of names well known in the trade for articles and books in their own right. The indexes are a useful source as to what books are of value in collections.

 However,   Everybodys did not have a strong game presence.

Group 1  Edwin Megargee front Covers

From the Library of Albert Brust

Condition fair/good reading

1916  Oct

1917  Jan   Feb April Sept

1918  June  Nov

1919  May  Aug

1921 Jan April  May July Aug   Sept  Dec

1922  Jan  Feb  Mar Oct

 

Group 2  Louis Stamer Front Covers Possible from Jimmy Gwin Condition Poor

1923  Nov  Dec

1924  April Nov, Dec

!925  Jan, Feb, Mar. Apr, May, June  Sept. Oct, Nov, Dec

1926    Jan, Feb, Mar, April, June, July, September

1927 May

 

Group 3   New magazine layout( change of management?)

1928  with Megargee covers  Mar Oct Dec

1929  With Louis Paul Graham Covers Jan Feb

 

 

 

First Group Frontis Artwork  Edwin Megargee Watercolor Print on cover. Megargee was both an author in his own right but also  renowned for his plates in  T F Mcgrew’s  Book Of Poultry. Interesting that both McGrew as breed specialist and Megargee as artist were active in the Everbodys magazines.

Several of these copies have names on the back that look like the newsagents record of who has ordered. Albert Brust. I have several books with his bookplate.

The second Group  Frontis artwork Lous Stammer. These are in much poorer condition.

Regarding provenance.

These copies came to me from John Skinners collection, and they are in two separate groups the earlier ones 1917-22 are the group from Albert Brust, though not all are named. I think they arrived to John from Albert Brust , but I cant be sure if there was someone else in the path. They are clean and bright. One copy shows signs of having been bound in a group.

 

The second group  came via John Skinner. I have related elsewhere where Jimmy Gwin’s archive caught fire and many of the books were saved. Several collections of books arrived to me via John Skinner who was a witness to the fire. I attribute those with scorch marks or smoke damage from the Jimmy Gwin collection. Jimmy Gwin’s collection was rated the largest in the USA, but it did feature very heavily on commercial and research materials. In John Skinners large collection including virtually complete bound set of Poultry Tribune, and these Everbodys showing smoke and damage  and a number of books showing  signs of smoke or fire. I am happy to quote the provenance of these books as via Jimmy Gwin and John Skinner finally to myself in the 1980’s.

The third group have the new management covers, coinciding with a new address of the company . Very good condition . Provenance   From John Skinner to myself  but otherwise unknown.

I have also a few water damaged books  in my collection from John Skinner, that I also attribute to Jimmy Gwin.

 

 

From dogcrazybooks.com   ( about Megargees other works)

Megargee’s first big break came in 1911 when he was hired by the International Correspondence Schools, in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The company had developed a correspondence course for those interested in raising poultry. A total of 32 booklets were sent to those who enrolled in the course. Two of those booklets illustrated various types of fowl, from common breeds of chicken to pheasants to exotic fowl from around the world. Megargee’s illustrations are glorious. While some are simple depictions showing the differences between a cock and a hen, we begin to see one of the signature elements of Megargee’s later dog work. Megargee begins to paint his subjects in appropriate backgrounds: scratching the ground for food, poised before a farm gate, assembled around a water dish and atop a barnyard fence. The plates from these booklets are still highly collectible. They bear the 1911 date on the plates below Megargee’s signature, though the booklets were actually published in 1912. One can occasionally find surviving copies of these booklets which have been rebound in leather.  In 1921, the project was expanded and republished as The Book of Poultry, by Thomas McGrew, with 70 colored plates by Megargee. The brilliance of his correspondence school illustrations would also be noted across the Atlantic.

 

 

 

 

 For Sale 

53  Issues  Everybodys Poultry Magazines  various from 1916 to 1929.

Prefer to sell as a whole.   $1000   plus post.  

Variable condition

For  More extensive details This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

  1. The Works Of Herbert Atkinson, with some personal notes
  2. Poultry books for sale on Facebook
  3. Penobscot Poultry
  4. Japanese Encyclopaedia Of Poultry
  5. Making Sense of the International Correspondence School

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My Interests

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