Who Were the First Builders? 1875 Victorian Natural History Illustrated T Nelson
Who Were the First Builders?
Published by: T. Nelson and Sons, Paternoster Row, London, 1875
Binding: Illustrated decorative cloth hardcover
Pages: 72 pp.
Dimensions: 16.3 × 10.8 × 1 cm
Weight: 119 g
Description
A charming and educational Victorian natural history book exploring the instinctive “architecture” of the animal kingdom – from the dams of beavers to the delicate nests of swallows, martins, and termites.
Lavishly illustrated throughout, including a beautifully coloured frontispiece, the book blends scientific curiosity with moral instruction typical of 19th-century children’s literature. It demonstrates the Victorian fascination with the natural world and the idea of divine design in animal behaviour.
This edition was published by T. Nelson and Sons, a major London publisher known for high-quality illustrated books aimed at schools and family reading, particularly in science, religion, and travel.
Exterior Condition
Bound in brown decorated cloth over boards and spine, featuring blind-stamped floral motifs and a colour illustrated plate to the front showing birds and flowers.
The cover is intact and robust, with expected age wear:
- Bumping and small rips to corners
- Light rubbing and surface marks, mainly at edges
Overall, a good and attractive Victorian binding that presents well.
Interior Condition
- Pages lightly and evenly tanned, with darker patches on the endpapers
- Neat and clean throughout, with only the occasional light mark that does not obscure text or images
- Small pen note on page 8
- Bookseller/stationer sticker on the front pastedown
- Pages are securely bound with no rips and only a few very light creases
All 72 pages are present and complete.
Historical Context
Books such as Who Were the First Builders? were part of a wave of Victorian educational natural history designed to teach children about nature while reinforcing moral or theological lessons. The title’s question – “Who were the first builders?” – reflects both a scientific curiosity about animals and a spiritual view of the natural world’s order.
