$14.96 Buy It Now or Best Offer
free,30-Day Returns
Seller Store brio_clay
(2230) 100.0%,
Location: Fontana, California
Ships to: US,
Item: 186241519869
Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer
All returns accepted:Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within:30 Days
Refund will be given as:Money back or replacement (buyer’s choice)
Subject Area:Military History
Publication Name:Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery Historical Documents, Journals
Publisher:PaperlessArchives.com
Subject:American Indians,History
Publication Year:2022
Series:BACM Research
Type:Textbook
Format:CD-ROM
Language:English
Personalized:No
Author:BACM Research
Educational Level:Adult & Further Education,High School
Level:Beginner,Intermediate,Advanced
Features:1st Edition
Country/Region of Manufacture:United States
Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery Historical Documents, Journals, Books, Maps & Newspapers CD-ROM11,335 pages of material related to the Lewis & Clark Corps of Discovery Expedition of 1804 to 1806. Material includes text, historical volumes, and images of original documents and maps. The collection features Thomas Jefferson papers & correspondences, transcriptions of the journals of Lewis and Clark and others on the Expedition, books, maps, newspapers and more.All computer recognizable text, transcriptions, reproduced printed text, and description sheets in the collection are searchable.In 1803, President Thomas Jefferson was successful in a moving an illustrious foreign diplomacy endeavor through the United States Senate: the purchase of the Louisiana Territory from France. After the Louisiana Purchase Treaty was signed, Jefferson initiated an exploration of the newly purchased land and the territory beyond the «great rock mountains» in the West. The objectives of the mission were the establishment of commercial ties with the indigenous people of the Far West and an increase in the knowledge of the region’s geography. Jefferson chose his personal secretary, Meriwether Lewis to lead the expedition. Lewis in turn solicited the help of William Clark, whose abilities as a draftsman and frontiersman were stronger than those of Lewis. Lewis so respected Clark, that he made him a co-commanding captain of the Expedition, even though Clark was never recognized as such by the government. President Jefferson approved Lewis’ choice of Clark as the co-leader of the planned expedition to the Pacific. The U.S. Army would not reinstate Clark with his former rank of Captain. He received the rank of 2nd Lieutenant of the Corps of Artillerists. Lewis always called Clark by the title of «Captain» and never told the members of the Corps of Discovery to do otherwise. Together they collected a diverse military Corps of Discovery that would be able to undertake a two-year journey to the great ocean.Under the command of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, the Corps of Discovery set forth from St. Louis on May 14, 1804. The party originally consisted of twenty-nine men, including Clark’s black slave York. In the next twenty-eight months, the Corps of Discovery would travel more than 8,000 miles through unfamiliar terrain inhabited by an array of indigenous peoples. Jefferson hoped that Lewis and Clark would find a water route linking the Columbia and Missouri rivers. This water link would connect the Pacific Ocean with the Mississippi River system, thus giving the new western land access to port markets out of the Gulf of Mexico and to eastern cities along the Ohio River and its minor tributaries. At the time, American and European explorers had only penetrated what would become each end of the Lewis and Clark Trail.Both captains kept detailed journals that depicted a culturally and geographically diverse Western landscape, that was rich with natural resources. Their descriptions of vast populations of fur-bearing mammals would spur the extension of the American fur trade into the upper reaches of the Missouri River.The expedition made it as far as the Great Bend of the Missouri by the end of 1804. While camped near the villages of the Mandan and Minnetaree, the Corps enlisted the services of Toussaint Charbonneau and his Shoshone wife Sacagawea. The following year, the expedition journeyed up the Missouri, across the Rocky Mountains, and down the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean. When the spring of 1805 brought high water and favorable weather, the Lewis and Clark Expedition set out on the next leg of its journey. They traveled up the Missouri to present-day Three Forks, Montana, wisely choosing to follow the western-most tributary, the Jefferson River. This route delivered the explorers to the doorstep of the Shoshone Indians, who were skilled at traversing the great rock mountains with horses. Once over the Bitterroot Mountains, the Corps of Discovery shaped canoe-like vessels that transported them swiftly downriver to the mouth of the Columbia, where they wintered (1805-1806) at Fort Clatsop, on the present-day Oregon side of the river. At the newly erected Fort Clatsop, the party suffered through a dismal winter. The following year all members of the Corps of Discovery returned along roughly the same route. During the journey only one person, Sergeant Charles Floyd, lost his life, while another, Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, was born to Sacagawea.With journals in hand, Lewis, Clark, and the other members of the Expedition returned to St. Louis by September 1806 to report their findings to President Jefferson. Along the way, they continued to trade what few goods they still had with the Indians and set up diplomatic relations with the Indians. Additionally, they recorded their contact with Indians and described the shape of the landscape and the and the animals in western North America, new to the white man. In doing so, they fulfilled many of Jefferson’s wishes for the Expedition. Along the way, William Clark drew a series of maps that were remarkably detailed, noting and naming rivers and creeks, significant points in the landscape, the shape of river shore, and spots where the Corps spent each night or camped or portaged for longer periods of time. Later explorers used these maps to further probe the western portion of the continent.Meriwether Lewis in 1807 was appointed Governor of the Louisiana Territory and stationed in St. Louis. Lewis had made many of the arrangements needed to illustrate and publish his journals of the expedition, but he was never able to work on or provide the manuscript. By 1809, he faced political difficulties and financial problems, as well as family and personal disappointments. Lewis committed suicide in October of 1809.William Clark was appointed by President Jefferson to be Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Louisiana Territory with the rank of Brigadier General of the Militia. In 1808, Clark became one of the partners in the St. Louis Missouri River Fur Company. Clark was appointed Governor of the Missouri Territory in 1810. William Clark died on September 1, 1838.Collection Includes:Thomas Jefferson Papers & Correspondences266 pages of transcriptions and images of Thomas Jefferson papers and correspondences dealing with the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Included are Thomas Jefferson’s January 18, 1803, secret message to Congress proposing a westward expedition, a February 28, 1803, letter to Casper Wistar discussing Meriwether Lewis as leader of the expedition, an April 27, 1803, letter to Lewis outlining instructions for the trip, and a June 20, 1803 letter from Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis giving Lewis detailed instructions for his trip.Journals of Lewis and Clark853 pages of text transcription copied from the writings in the Journals of Lewis and Clark, written mostly by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, 1804-1806. Other contributors to the journals are Sergeants Charles Floyd, Patrick Gass, John Ordway, and Private Joseph Whitehouse. Includes transcriptions of the raw journal entries made between May 14, 1804, the day the expedition left the Mississippi River, to September 26, 1806, a day or two after they arrived back in St. Louis. Includes all possible Journal entries of Lewis and Clark. Most of the «courses and distances» and «celestial observations» have been omitted. These transcripts of the journals include their original misspellings, period spellings, and abbreviations.After the Corps of Discovery disbanded in 1806, many of Lewis and Clark’s journals were deposited in the collections of the American Philosophical Society at Jefferson’s urging. Some editors of the journals argued that the excellent condition of these journals indicates that they were fair copies made after the end of the expedition in September of 1806, and prior to Jefferson’s receiving them at the end of the year. However, others suggest that the story is more complex. The American Philosophical Society collection consists of 18 small notebooks, approximately 4 by 6 inches of the type commonly used by surveyors in field work. Thirteen of these are bound in red Morocco leather, four in boards covered in marbled-paper, and one in plain brown leather, and there are loose pages and rough notes as well. The available evidence suggests that Lewis and Clark carried their notebooks sealed in tin boxes that were intended to protect the relatively fragile journals from the elements. If nothing else, with Jefferson’s advising, that the journals were considered invaluable as the only reliable record of data gathered on the expedition. It seems likely, therefore, that great care would be taken in their preservation. From a close examination of the journals and sets of loose notes, noted Lewis and Clark historian Gary Moulton, among others, has concluded that Lewis and Clark often worked from rough notes compiled daily, then periodically transcribed these into more polished form in the bound volumes, however in most cases, the time between taking the notes and transcribing them must have been very brief. On many occasions, the explorers clearly wrote directly into the bound volumes. The journals contain huge volumes of data, going beyond geographical notes and records of temperature and weather.Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806 Volumes 1-8 3,322 pages in 8 volumes first published 1904-1905, reprinted by Antiquarian Press LTD., New York in 1959.Abstract: Printed from the original manuscripts in the Library of the American Philosophical Society and by direction of its Committee on Historical Documents, together with manuscript material of Lewis and Clark from other sources, including notebooks, letters, maps, etc., and the journals of Charles Floyd and Joseph Whitehouse. Edited, with Introduction, Notes, and Index, by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL.D. History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark Volumes 1 & 2 (1814)A digitally reproduced copy of an original 1814 printing of the book: History of the Expedition Under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, to the Sources of the Missouri, Thence Across the Rocky Mountains and Down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean: Performed During the Years 1804-5-6 by Order of the Government of the United States/Prepared for the Press by Paul Allen; Volumes 1 & 2. With a preface written by Thomas Jefferson.After the suicide of Lewis, Clark, who felt that he was not up to the task, persuaded Nicholas Biddle to prepare a manuscript for publication of both Lewis’ and Clark’s journals from the expedition. With the help from Clark and George Shannon, one of the enlisted men on the expedition, the work took Biddle two years to complete. Royalties from the sale of the published journals were to go to Clark, but he never received a penny. Using the captains’ original journals and those of Sergeants Gass and Ordway, Biddle completed a narrative by July 1811. After delays with the publisher, a two-volume edition of the Corps of Discovery’s travels across the continent was finally available to the public in 1814. More than twenty editions appeared during the nineteenth century, including German, Dutch, and several British editions.The Trail of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1904, Volumes I & II by Olin D. Wheeler, (1904)Kathryn Hamilton Wang commented in her book «200 Books, 200 Years» (2008) on this book, “Although dated, the value of this publication lies with Wheeler’s travels along the Trail a mere 100 years after the Corps’ journey.”A digital reproduction of the book: The Trail of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1904: A Story of the Great Exploration Across the Continent in 1804-1806, with a Description of the Old Trail Based Upon Actual Travel Over It, and of the Changes Found a Century Later. New York: Putnam’s, 1904. Topographer, author, and railroad executive Olin D. Wheeler used the journals of Lewis & Clark as a guide to follow their trail. He followed the Lewis & Clark trail giving insight to the original journey, noting the important and interesting places visited by Lewis and Clark, then by tourists and travelers 100 years later. Volumes contains photographs, sketches, and maps.Message from the President of the United States, Communicating Discoveries Made in Exploring the Missouri, Red River, and Washita, by Captains Lewis and Clark, Doctor Sibley, and Mr. Dunbar, with a Statistical Account of the Countries Adjacent132-page printed copy published in 1806 of «Message from the President of the United States, Communicating Discoveries Made in Exploring the Missouri, Red River, and Washita, by Captains Lewis and Clark, Doctor Sibley, and Mr. Dunbar; with a Statistical Account of the Countries Adjacent» (New-York: Printed by Hopkins and Seymour, 1806).The Original Journal of Sergeant Charles FloydContains scans of the original journal and their transcription as found in the book, «The New Found Journal of Charles Floyd, a Sergeant under Captains Lewis and Clark, by James Davie Butler (1894).The Floyd diary dates from May 14 through August 17, 1804. Charles Floyd (1782 – August 20, 1804) was an American explorer, a noncommissioned officer in the U.S. Army, and the quartermaster of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. A native of Kentucky, he was a son of Robert Clark Floyd, a nephew of James John Floyd, a cousin of Virginia governor John Floyd, and possibly a relative of William Clark. He was one of the first men to join the expedition, and the only member of the Corps of Discovery to die during the expedition. It is believed he died from peritonitis caused by a ruptured appendix. First Across the ContinentAn electronic book and text of First Across the Continent: The Story of Lewis and Clark Expedition, by Noah Brooks. Published in 1901, Brooks draws a narrative of the expedition using excerpts from the original journals of the expedition.The Travels of Capts. Lewis and Clarke from St. Louis, by Way of the Missouri and Columbia Rivers, to the Pacific Ocean; Performed in the Years 1804, 1805 & 1806 (1809)Complete title, «The Travels of Capts. Lewis & Clarke, by order of the government of the United States performed in the years 1804, 1805, & 1806: being upward of three thousand miles, from St. Louis, by way of the Missouri, and Columbia Rivers, to the Pacifick Ocean: containing an account of the Indian tribes, who inhabit the western part of the continent unexplored, and unknown before : with copious delineations of the manners, customs, religion, &c. of the Indians.»TimelineA detailed 22-page timeline of the history of the Lewis & Clark expedition.Maps8 maps created before and after the Lewis & Clark expedition. Includes maps used by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark in their 1804 expedition up the Missouri River, with annotations in ink by Meriwether Lewis. Also includes maps made after the expedition utilizing information gained by Corps of Discovery.National Park Service Documents1,178 pages of material from the Department of the Interior’s National Park Service covering the history of the Corps of Discovery and sites related to Lewis & Clark and the sites’ historical preservation. Highlights include:Lewis and Clark Historic Places Associated with their Transcontinental Exploration (1804-06) by Roy E. Appleman (1975)This book contains 242 pages relaying the historic background of the Lewis and Clark Expedition and 105 pages of survey of 41 Historic sites and buildings related to the Expedition.The National Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings the Lewis and Clark Expedition Sites (1958)The 1958, 177-page report titled, «United States Department of the Interior National Park Service The National Survey of Historic Sites And Buildings 1958 survey of several sites including: Three Forks of the Missouri, Montana; Lemhi Pass, Montana-Idaho; Travelers Rest, Montana; Lolo Trail, Idaho; Sergeant Floyd Grave Site and Monument, Iowa.»Abstract: This study represents the work of the National Park Service field staff assigned to The National Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings. In the process of evaluating the sites treated in the several themes, the Consulting Committee for the Survey and the Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments have screened the findings of the field staff. Some sites recommended by the field staff for classification of exceptional value have been eliminated, and in a few cases sites and buildings have been added to the lists of exceptionally valuable sites.Newspapers217 full newspaper sheets dating from 1803 to 1827 with coverage related to the Lewis and Clark Expedition.Additional Books, Reports, and MonographsAn additional 18 books, reports, theses, and monographs comprising 2,463 pages on the Expedition. Highlights include:NOAA National Weather Service – The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition 1803-1806 Weather, Water & Climate (2004) A 123-page report produced in 2004 by the National Weather Service, describes the systematic climatological, hydrological, and meteorological events during the Lewis & Clark journey.Into the Unknown the Logistics Preparation of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (2003)Abstract: Captain Meriwether Lewis’s task was to equip and man a party to traverse the unmapped middle third of the United States. Most studies of the expedition begin with the party’s departure from Camp Dubois in the spring of 1804. This starting point ignores the important logistics planning, preparation and training that commenced with Lewis’s appointment as personal secretary to President Thomas Jefferson in the spring of 1801. Under President Jefferson’s watchful eye Lewis conducted extensive preparations at Washington D.C., Harper’s Ferry, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis. Expedition journals, personal correspondence and equipment receipts are used to provide insight into the effectiveness of the endeavor’s logistics support plan. The study concludes by identifying four themes evident in the expedition’s planning and execution that are useful to modern logisticians: the value of innovation, the significance of support received from indigenous peoples, the employment of civilian contractors and the seemingly obligatory discovery that transportation capabilities rarely meet requirements.The U.S. Army and the Lewis and Clark Expedition (2002)Abstract: The U.S. Army and the Lewis and Clark Expedition, prepared as part of the Army’s contribution to the observance of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Commemoration (2003-2006), is an engaging account of a stirring and significant event in American military heritage. While most Americans have some inkling of the importance of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, officially designated the «Corps of Volunteers for Northwestern Discovery,» relatively few recognize that it was an Army endeavor from beginning to end.
Frequently Asked Questions About Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery Historical Documents, Journals, Books, Maps in My Website
quediade.com is the best online shopping platform where you can buy Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery Historical Documents, Journals, Books, Maps from renowned brand(s). quediade.com delivers the most unique and largest selection of products from across the world especially from the US, UK and India at best prices and the fastest delivery time.
What are the best-selling Lewis & Clark – Corps of Discovery Historical Documents, Journals, Books, Maps on quediade.com?
quediade.com helps you to shop online and delivers Rayban to your doorstep. The best-selling Rayban on quediade.com are: Ray Ban 601/9A Black WRAP Gray Polarized Sunglasses Italy Ray Ban RB 4181 Polarized Sunglasses, 710/83 Havana / Brown (BAD LENSES) #G06 RAY BAN RB8313 001 51 Gold Arista Men’s 58 mm Sunglasses Brand New Sealed Ray-Ban RB 4440-N-F Blaze Wayfarer in Blue Violet Gradient Lens NEW Ray Ban Polished Black POLARIZED Gray Green Lens Sunglass RB 3516 006/9A Ray Ban Sunglasses Classic Wayfarer RB2151 Brown Made In Italy NEW* Ray Ban AVIATOR SILVER 64mm w Brown Purple Gradient Sunglass RB 3387 003 Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB3023 Highstreet MSW W3132 Brown Oval Frames Only 55[]00 3N RAY BAN RB3016 133751 Pink Havana Unisex 49 mm Sunglasses Ray-Ban RB2132 New Wayfarer Square Polarized Sunglasses Black With Divots Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB3025 Aviator Classic Gold Frame Polarized Brown Lens 58mm Ray-Ban Gatsby I RB4256 Round Sunglasses 6092/55 Havana Brown Blue Mirror Lens Ray Ban Italy RB4640 601/31 50[]20 Black Sunglasses “ READ” Sunglasses Ray Ban AVIATOR; Light GRAY GRADIENT Lens: RB3025; Size 58 standard Ray-Ban Wayfarer Black On Yellow /Light Gray Lens Discounted Model 2140 1000/32 RAY BAN RB3721CH 9144A1 Black Blue Mirror Polarized Men’s 59 mm Sunglasses Ray Ban Polarized Sunglasses Only Worn Once used rb3721ch RAY BAN RB3016F W0366 Tortoise on Arista Square 55 mm Unisex Sunglasses RAY BAN RB3016 114517 Sand Havana on Arista Square 51 mm Unisex Sunglasses Ray Ban RB 4078 642 Brown Striped Rectangle Sunglasses Frames Italy Designer Ray-Ban Titanium Chromance RB8062 Sunglasses Arista Gold w/ Polarized Blue Ray-Ban Caribbean Sunglasses Striped Grey w/ Dark Grey Lenses RB2248 Ray-Ban New Wayfarer Matte Black Rubber l Green G-15XLT RB2132 622 58mm Ray-Ban Boyfriend Reverse Sunglasses RB R0501S Polished Black Green Tint w/case Ray Ban Sunglasses Frames RB3293 004/9A 67-13 3P Nice RAY BAN RBR0502S 6707GR Transparent Dark Grey Unisex 53 mm Sunglasses RAY-BAN RB3273 Mens Aviator Sunglasses Polarized Lenses Clamshell Hard Case Ray Ban RB 4184 Black Sunglasses Ray-Ban AVIATOR RB3025 112/4L MATTE GOLD W/ 58-14 58mm BLUE MIRROR POLARIZED D78 Ray-Ban RB 4057 601 3N Sunglasses Mens Black Full Frame 15156 RAY BAN RB4165 651287 Transparent Dark Grey Men’s 55 mm Sunglasses Ray-ban RB4331 601 S 80 Black Mens Rectangle Sunglasses 59-17 3N “ READ” RAY BAN RB2132 865 B1 Rubber Havana Dark Grey Unisex 58 mm Sunglasses RAY BAN RB3016F W0365 Black on Arista Square 55 mm Unisex Sunglasses New Ray-Ban Round Gray Gunmetal Green Mirror Sunglasses RB4243 6262B4 49 $153 Ray-Ban Gatsby II RB4257 Round Sunglasses 601/71 Black Gold Frame Green Lens 50 [RB4188-600/783_63] Mens Ray-Ban Rectangle Polarized Sunglasses Ray-Ban RB3527 Sunglasses 029/9A Matte Gunmetal Frame Green Polarized Lens 61mm Sunglasses Ray Ban CLUBMASTER RB3016 / SILVER MIRRORED Lens / Standard Size Ray-Ban RB4171 Black Matte/ Mirrored Erika Sunglasses RAY-BAN Sunglasses RB4162 601/32 Polished Black/Gray Aviator NEW Italy RAY-BAN RB3387 POLARIZED Sunglasses 002/9A Black/Green Gray NEW Aviator 🔥 Ray-Ban RB3549 POLARIZED Sunglasses | 006/9A – Black / Classic G-15 Lens $188 Vintage RAY BAN B&L Sunglasses PREDATOR CATS Black Plastic Frame Ray-Ban RB3717 002/B1 57-18, Polished Black Frame, Dark Grey Lens, NEW! RAY BAN RB 8301 Aviator Sunglasses 61 14 140 Made In Italy Ray Ban Justin Rb4165 622/T3 Black Rubber Matte Sunglasses Frame Only RAY-BAN CATS 4000 SUNGLASSES LIGHT HAVANA / CRYSTAL BROWN GRADIENT RB4128 710/51 Open Box Ray-Ban 0RB4428 Sunglasses, Havana Frame, Blue Lens RAY BAN RB2210 901 58 Black Green Polarized Unisex 53 mm Sunglasses Ray-Ban RB3576N 043/71 Blaze Polished Gold Frame With Dark Green Lenses Ray-Ban New Aviator Sunglasses RB 3625 002/B1 Polished Black Metal 62mm w/case Ray Ban Sunglasses Blaze Shooter RB3581N 1537V Demi gloss Black 32mm Blue Lens Ray Ban RB3447 001 ROUND METAL Gold/ Green Classic G-15 AUTHENTIC ITALY Ray-Ban RB2027 Black l Polarized Mirror Grey RB2027 601/W1 62mm Ray-Ban Wayfarer Folding Classic RB4105 601 50 Ray-Ban Original Wayfarer Style Classic Sunglasses – Black 2140 Aftermarket Silicone RayBan Replacement Temple (Arm) Tips BROWN 3217 Ray Ban Ray Ban RB R0101S Ray-Ban Aviator Reverse 001/VR 62011 145 3N Italy Ray-Ban Aviator Classic Gold Framed Sunglasses Great Used Condition Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB4395 Kiliane 667771 Black green Man Woman [RB3293-001/13_63] Mens Ray-Ban Aviator Sunglasses Ray-Ban Boyfriend Reverse Brown Transparent Sunglasses RBR0501S 6709CB 56 Ray Ban Sunglasses Frames RB 4107 601/58 Rectangle Black Sunglasses Italy 3P RAY BAN Clubround Classic Sunglasses 51-19 Tortoise Black Unisex w Case Ray Ban RB3447 112/Z2 ROUND FLASH LENSES Copper Flash lenses; Gold AUTHENTIC NEW Men’s Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB4331 710/73 Havana brown, FREE SHIPPING Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB 3254 Pilot Black Full-Rim With Case Frames Only New Ray Ban Sunglasses 3016 W0365 Clubmaster Black and Gold G-15 Lens 51mm Ray Ban RB2447 1159/4E Round Fleck Black Havena Unisex Italy W/ Case Rayban RB3588 55 19 140 Sunglasses 9014/80 3N READ DESCRIPTION Ray Ban RB4089 Balorama Sunglasses Polarized Ray Ban rb3162 006 Sleek Black Metal Sunglasses Frame Only 52-19 NO LENSES Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB3016 Clubmaster Classic Black Frame Green Lens 49mm Unisex Ray-Ban RB3664CH Chromance Square Sunglasses Light Brown w/ Brown Rayban Mens Sunglasses RB4184 Black Gray Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB 4194 601-53-17 Unisex Black Plastic Frames Ray-Ban Olympian Aviator Sunglasses Gray Gradient Havana Green Lens Case Cloth Ray-Ban Sunglasses Junior RJ9548SN Ray-Bans Black New Wayfarar Polarized Sunglasses 😎 Ray Ban RB3198 014/83 Sleek Brown Wrap Polarized Sunglasses 55-18 Read RAY-BAN RB 4387 601/71 BLACK AUTHENTIC FRAMES SUNGLASSES 56-18 Rayban RB3689 Aviator Sunglasses 001/GE Gold Frame Blue To Peach Gradient 62mm Ray-Ban Mega Wayfarer Sunglasses RB 0840S Polished Transparent Dark Gray w/case Ray-Ban Sunglasses RB4416 NEW CLUBMASTER 601/31 Black Gold Frames G-15 Lenses Ray-Ban RB 3364 014 Brown / Tortoise Wrap Sunglasses 59[]17 MADE IN ITALY Ray-Ban RB3025 019/W3 Aviator Sunglasses Matte Silver / Polarized Silver Mirror Aftermarket Silicone RayBan Replacement Temple/Arm Tips RB 3506 BROWN Ray Ban Ray-Ban RB 3490 Brown Copper Sunglasses Dark Brown Lens 62-16-140 Italy Eyewear Ray Ban RB3025 AVIATOR 58mm Blue Flash POLARIZED/Silver AUTHENTIC ITALY Ray-Ban Aviator Reverse Gold Frame, Green Lens Sunglasses RBR0101S 001/82 59 Pre-Owned Ray-Ban RB3447 112/17 Round Metal Gold Frame / Blue Mirrored Lenses Ray-Ban RB3025 002/58 Black Aviator Green Classic Polarized 58mm Sunglasses Ray Ban Italy RB 4285 710/14 55-20-140 3N Tortoise/Brown Sunglasses Frame UY81 Men’s Rayban Sunglasses | Used Condition Dark Blue Made In Italy RAY BAN ANDREA BLACK SUNGLASSES WITH DARK BLUE LENSES AVIATION RB3595 901480 Ray-Ban RB3119 001 Olympian Gold/Green G15 Men’s Sport Sunglasses Sizes 59 & 62 Ray-Ban Boyfriend Light Grey Lens Black Frame Unisex Sunglasses RB4147 601/32-60 Ray-Ban Classic Aviators RB3025 Total Silver Sunglasses (Open Box, Never Used) Sunglasses 2132 Ray Ban NEW WAYFARER / CLASSIC Lens / Standard Size Mens Pullover Fleece Hoodie