When navigation meant the stars, accuracy was survival. A working handbook for seafarers. The American Ephemeris And Nautical Almanac For The Year 1868 gives direct access to the precise astronomical data tables and historical navigation tables that guided nineteenth-century voyaging. This nautical almanac 1868 functions as a maritime astronomy reference and a celestial navigation guide: a compact 19th century ephemeris of daily positions, lunar computations and tabulations that underpinned every sight taken at sea. Designed for practical use, the Almanac's ordered tables translate sky observations into courses and time, making it an enduring sailors navigation resource as relevant to museum researchers and navigational restorers as to enthusiasts of antique nautical charts. Readable and richly informative, it also stands as a classic maritime compendium and a compelling vintage astronomy book for display or study. As a contemporary record of technique and measurement it carries significant historical weight: the Almanac documents the precision expected of officers and the astronomical foundations of navigation in the Victorian age, making it a vital Victorian-era reference for scholars. Casual readers find a vivid portal into the daily discipline of seamanship; classic-literature collectors and maritime history collectors will value the volume's authenticity and usefulness for research or curation. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Readable by anyone with curiosity, the Almanac rewards both casual browsing and rigorous study. Navigational historians will appreciate its empirical record of techniques; instrument enthusiasts can match tables to sextant practice; museum curators and maritime history collectors will find it a credible companion to antique nautical charts and logbooks. As a vintage astronomy book it offers more than nostalgia: it is a working document of nineteenth-century science and a tangible reminder of the skill at sea. Hand it to a student, display it on a shelf, or consult it in research - its value is practical, cultural and historical.