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How History Unfolds on Paper: Important Americana
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Lot: 1 - [African-Americana] $1,000 Reward Poster for the Capture of the Perpetrators who Lynched an African American Man
[African-Americana] $1,000 Reward Poster for the Capture of the Perpetrators who Lynched an African American Man Proclamation State of Illinois, Executive Department...$1000 Reward Springfield, Illinois, February 28, 1870. Printed reward poster, issued by Governor John M. Palmer, for the apprehension and conviction of those involved in the lynching of an African American man, Anderson Reed. 10 3/4 x 8 3/8 in. (273 x 213 mm). Creasing from old folds, separation along same at center right; soiling and edge-wear; scattered closed tears along edges; old residue on verso from when mounted. In December 1868 (some accounts state 1867), Fritz Lurakee (another account gives the name Frederick Sudikee) was murdered in his home near Venice, Illinois, after an apparent attempted robbery. According to contemporary newspaper reports, following the murder, an African American man named Joe Marshall was arrested for the crime. Shortly after his apprehension, he was seized by a white mob and lynched. His apparent accomplice, an African American man named Anderson Reed, who was reported to go by the alias Bill Wilson, escaped the mob and went on to elude authorities until his capture in St. Louis on February 12, 1870. As reported in the St. Louis Times of February 25, "Henry Lemmert, a constable, came over from Venice and demanded the prisoner [Reed]--without a warrant. Captain Lee refused to deliver him up without the necessary requisition, remarking he was satisfied they meant mischief to him, and if he should surrender Anderson without due process of law and he should be lynched, he would be an accessory to murder." After acquiring the requisite papers, Lemmert took custody of Reed, and took him before a local judge, who convicted him of murder. "Lemmert tied his [Reed’s] hands and feet, placed him in a wagon and proceeded towards Edwardsville. When he had gone about five miles, and as if by preconcerted action, the wagon was surrounded by a mob, who took possession of Reed", who was then summarily murdered. News of the lynching was reported in newspapers throughout the Midwest. In the present poster, Illinois Governor John M. Palmer issues a proclamation stating that the "the murder of the said Reed under the circumstances, is a foul disgrace to the people of the State" and orders "all the officers of the State and particularly the Sheriffs, Coroners, Justices of the Peace and Constables of the Counties of Madison and St. Clair, to exert themselves to bring all persons connected with the outrage of justice, and all good citizens residing in the neighborhood where the killing of said Reed happened, are urged to render every possible assistance to that end." He goes on to offer a $1,000 reward for the "apprehension and conviction of the persons concerned in the killing of said Reed." We cannot locate another copy at auction, nor recorded in OCLC. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 2 - [African Americana] Poem Copied from The Liberator, Mentioning the Murder of Elijah Lovejoy, in a 19th Century American Penmanship Book
[African Americana] Poem Copied from The Liberator, Mentioning the Murder of Elijah Lovejoy, in a 19th Century American Penmanship Book Massachusetts, Bridgewater Normal School, ca. 1844. Oblong 12mo. (36) pp. Manuscript copybook, signed by Charles N. Hall on verso of title-page, and containing 32 pages (recto and verso) of his penmanship studies and other copied passages. Stiff paper wrappers,
Lot: 3 - [African-Americana] [Albany] Small Archive of Manuscript Documents from the Corporation of Albany, Including One Signed by an Abolitionist in the Very Year Slavery was Abolished in New York State
[African-Americana] [Albany] Small Archive of Manuscript Documents from the Corporation of Albany, Including One Signed by an Abolitionist in the Very Year Slavery was Abolished in New York State Group of Five Manuscript Documents, Being Official Receipts Paid by the Corporation of Albany Albany, 1826-32. Comprising five documents, including a receipt for a John G. Smith for carting, signed by architect Phillip Hooker, dated September 13, 1826; a receipt for the printing of 25 copies of amendments to state law, signed by abolitionist John B. Van Steenbergh, dated February 8, 1827 (the year full emancipation occurred in New York State); a receipt for "procuring Subscribers to a memorial to Congress for the Improvement of the navigation of the Hudson River", signed by Conrad Moore, dated May 26, 1830; a donation receipt to the Lancaster School, signed by Charles R. Webster, dated August 10, 1832; a receipt to the "Trustees of African Church", for excavating work, signed by Willian Nordin, dated August 14, 1832. Size and condition varies, but generally fine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 4 - [African-Americana] [American Anti-Slavery Society] Rare Extra Issue of the Emancipator, the Official Newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Published in the Wake of the Group's 1839 Annual Meeting
[African-Americana] [American Anti-Slavery Society] Rare Extra Issue of the Emancipator, the Official Newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Published in the Wake of the Group's 1839 Annual Meeting Emancipator--Extra New-York, June 17, 1839. Printed broadsheet newspaper extra, in four columns, 16 1/4 x 11 in. (413 x 279 mm). Creasing from old folds, a few small closed tears along same; scattered toning. This issue reports on the debate over the "Woman Question" at their recent meeting, and whether or not the names of women should be included as being present in the Society's records. The issue of women's role in the formation of Anti-Slavery societies across the country would lead to a major split in the national movement the following year, with Lewis Tappan and his associates forming the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society in 1840. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 5 - [African-Americana] A Pro-Slavery Reaction to the American Anti-Slavery Society's Postal Campaign of 1835
[African-Americana] A Pro-Slavery Reaction to the American Anti-Slavery Society's Postal Campaign of 1835 "In pursuance of public notice, a very large meeting of the citizens of Shell Point took place on the 19th inst. to express themselves upon the question which has created such universal excitement throughout the slave holding States..." The Shell Point Meeting (Shell Point, Florida
Lot: 6 - [African-Americana] [Anti-Colonization] Reporting on the January 15, 1817 Mass Meeting at Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church in Philadelphia, the First Large-Scale Black Protest in the United States
[African-Americana] [Anti-Colonization] Reporting on the January 15, 1817 Mass Meeting at Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church in Philadelphia, the First Large-Scale Black Protest in the United States The Weekly Recorder Chillicothe, Ohio: John Andrews, September 18, 1817. Volume IV, No. 7, Whole Number 163. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (49)-56. Disbound; library ink stamp at bottom of p. 53; foxing.
Lot: 7 - [African-Americana] An Official Public Appeal Aimed to Defend the American Colonization Society Against Abolitionist Critics and Promote the Mission of Relocating Free Black Americans to Liberia
[African-Americana] An Official Public Appeal Aimed to Defend the American Colonization Society Against Abolitionist Critics and Promote the Mission of Relocating Free Black Americans to Liberia Address of the Managers of the American Colonization Society, to the People of the United States. Adopted at their Meeting, June 19, 1832 Washington: Printed by James C. Dunn, 1832. First edition. 8vo. 16 pp. Drab library-style buckram, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, boards worn and soiled; contemporary ownership signature on title-page, partially trimmed away, numerical notation at same; spotting to sheets. Sabin 81763 In this address, Ralph Randolph Gurley defends the aims of the American Colonization Society, which advocated the relocation of free African Americans to Liberia on the west coast of Africa. Bound with: An Oration Delivered by Hon. Charles Sumner Under the Auspices of the Young Men's Republican Union of New York, November 27, 1861. New York: Printed for the Young Men's Republican Union, 1861. First edition. 8vo. 16 pp. Bound with: The Equal Rights of All...Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, in the United States Senate, February 6 and 7, 1866. Washington: Printed at the Congressional Globe Office, 1866. First edition. 8vo. 32 pp. Together bound with over a dozen assorted pamphlets on various subjects. Several sheets starting or separated; last pamphlet loose. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 8 - [African-Americana] [Black Panthers, etc.] Group of 6 Periodicals, etc.
[African-Americana] [Black Panthers, etc.] Group of 6 Periodicals, etc. 1. Ball & Chain Review San Francisco: Published by Black Journalist, November 1969. Vol. I, No. 2. Printed newspaper. Folio. 6 pp. Creased from when folded, tape repairs at fore-edge of same fold. 2. Free You Palo Alto, California, January 4, 1971. Number 34. Printed newspaper. 4to. 24 pp. Creased from when folded; light wear and toning. 3. The Black Panther Intercommunal News Service San Francisco: The Black Panther Party, 1971. In three issues (Saturday, January 23, Vol. V, No. 30; Saturday, February 20, Vol. VI, No. 4; Saturday, April 17, Vol. VI, No. 12). Printed newspaper. Folio. 12, 20, and 16 pp., respectively. Creased from when folded; toned; light wear. 4. Printed Wanted Poster ("Wanted Terrorists") for Joanna Chesimard (Assata Shakur) and Mutulu Shakur New Jersey: New Jersey State Police Printing Unit, September 9, 1985. Bulletin No. 85-9. Printed broadside; 14 x 8 1/2 in. (356 x 216 mm). The Black Panther Party was founded in Oakland, California by Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton in October 1966, intending to address social inequalities which non-violent resistance appeared to have failed. Following the murder of an unarmed Black man by San Francisco police in 1966 and the Hunter's Point uprising that followed, Newton began to carefully study California gun laws and organize patrols that would follow police through inner-city neighborhoods to monitor their activities. Over time the party began to focus its energies on promoting individual agency to effect larger social changes, beginning with demanding greater education access for inner-city children. The First Free Breakfast for Children program was launched at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in Oakland, as it was believed that hungry children would be less able to keep focused in class. Within a decade similar programs were adopted by school districts nationwide. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 9 - [African-Americana] Broadside of a Confederate Congressional Act Relating to Slaves and Other Property Confiscated by the Union Army
[African-Americana] Broadside of a Confederate Congressional Act Relating to Slaves and Other Property Confiscated by the Union Army An Act to Perpetuate Testimony in cases of Slaves abducted or harbored by the Enemy, and of other property seized, wasted or destroyed by them. No. 270 (Richmond, Virginia), August 30, 1861. Printed broadside. Mounted to lined sheet (excised from a scrapbook); scattered soiling; newspaper clippings on verso. 10 x 8 1/8 in. (254 x 206 mm). Scarce official act passed by the Confederate Congress, establishing a framework for southern slaveholders to keep track of their enslaved "property" lost or confiscated by the Union Army during the war. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 10 - [African-Americana] Buttre, J.C. Engraving of Albany Abolitionist Rev. Francis Burns
[African-Americana] Buttre, J.C. Engraving of Albany Abolitionist Rev. Francis Burns (Cincinnati): Middleton Strobridge & Co., (1859). Engraved portrait, by Buttre, after an ambrotype by Mathew Brady; "Engraved Expressly for the Ladies Repository". Approximately 8 1/2 x 5 5/8 in. (216 x 143 mm) (sight). Unexamined out of frame. A fine example of this bust-length portrait of the Rev. Francis Burns (1809-63), African American deacon in New York and missionary bishop to Liberia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 11 - [African-Americana] Collection of 7 Books, Pamphlets, Newspapers, and Broadsides Related to African Americans, ca. 1807-81
[African-Americana] Collection of 7 Books, Pamphlets, Newspapers, and Broadsides Related to African Americans, ca. 1807-81 Locations vary, ca. 1807-81. Comprising seven items, including: Acts Passed at the Second Session of the Ninth Congress of the United States (1807; 8vo; original wrappers); Christian Advocate and Journal and Zion's Herald (New-York, March 18, 1831, Vol. V, No. 29; Folio); National Intelligencer (Washington, September 28, 1839, Vol. XL, No. 577; Folio); New-York Daily Times (New-York, May 15, 1857, Vol. VI, No. 1764; Folio); The Reports of the Committees of the House of Representatives...Second Session Thirty-Ninth Congress, 1866-67 (Washington, 1867; 8vo; tan calf); Election in Alabama. Affidavits of Discharge From Employment in Alabama for Voting (Washington, ca. 1868; 8vo; disbound); The Free Press (Gunnison, Colorado, December 16, 1881, Vol. I, No. 30; Folio). Content covers a range of topics, including anti-slavery and abolitionism; a report on the ongoing case of the Amistad (National Intelligencer); recounting a meeting and minutes of the American Abolition Society (New-York Daily Times); an account of a lynching in Gunnison County, Colorado (The Free Press); as well as Congressional reports, including a lengthy House report (dated March 26, 1868) with dozens of affidavits from African-American men who were fired for voting in an election in Alabama; Acts passed in the second session of the ninth Congress, including suspension of commerce with Haiti, and an Act to prohibit the importation of slaves in 1808, as per the Constitution, etc. Condition varies, generally very good; wear and soiling; expected wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 12 - [African-Americana] Collection of 13 Autograph Letters, Newspapers, Pamphlets, and Ephemera Related to Abolitionism, ca. 1786-1863
[African-Americana] Collection of 13 Autograph Letters, Newspapers, Pamphlets, and Ephemera Related to Abolitionism, ca. 1786-1863 Location varies, ca. 1786-1863. Comprising 13 items, including: two issues of The London Chronicle (London, August 31-September 5, 1786, Vol. LX, Nos. 4647 and 4648); Epistle From the Yearly Meeting, Held in London...from the 21st to the 31st of the Fifth Month, 1806; The Anti-Slavery Record (February, 1835, Vol. I, No. 2); Herald of Freedom (Concord, New Hampshire, November 4, 1837, Vol. 3, No. 36); Emancipator and Free American (Boston, January 26, 1843, Vol. VII, No. 40); Democratic Standard and Whig of '76 (Cincinnati, July 7, 1846, Vol. I, No. 12); Alton Telegraph-Extra (December 14, 1846), Enoch Long's copy; New-York Weekly Tribune (New York, September 18, 1852, Vol. XII, No. 575); cabinet card of Wendell Phillips (Boston, Warren & Heald, no date); One-page autograph letter, signed by abolitionist George W. Bungay, to Charles H. Morse (October 7, 1854); Two-page autograph letter, signed by George P. Fisher, to Messrs. Walker, Wise & Co. (January 1, 1863); autograph calling card, signed by abolitionist Gerrit Smith. A large and diverse collection of items relating to abolitionism in America, from the post-Revolutionary years to the Civil War. Topics vary, and include an essay on slavery (in The London Chronicle); a Quaker epistle denouncing the slave trade; a compilation of anti-slavery writings (in The Anti-Slavery Record); two abolitionist newspapers, including numerous articles on anti-slavery, some by Elijah P. Lovejoy (Herald of Freedom and Emancipator and Free American); essays on the 3/5ths Compromise, colonization, etc. (in the Democratic Standard); abolitionist Enoch Long's copy of the Alton Telegraph (printing President Polk's second State of the Union Address on the Mexican-American War); a printed letter from Harriet Beecher Stowe to Horace Greeley (in the New-York Weekly Tribune); cabinet card of prominent abolitionist Wendell Phillips; an autograph calling card of abolitionist and financier of Frederick Douglass's newspaper Gerrit Smith; an autograph letter dated the day of the issuance of the final Emancipation Proclamation, regarding a French work on slavery; an autograph letter signed by abolitionist George W. Bungay on a variety of subjects including an upcoming publication. Size and condition vary, generally very good, expected wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 13 - [African-Americana] Du Bois, W.E.B. A Voice of Civil Rights: Typed Letter, Signed by the Co-Founder of the NAACP
[African-Americana] Du Bois, W.E.B. A Voice of Civil Rights: Typed Letter, Signed by the Co-Founder of the NAACP Typed Letter, signed New York, October 15, 1913. Bifolium, 8 3/8 x 5 1/2 in. (213 x 140 mm). Typed letter on The Crisis stationery, signed by W.E.B. Du Bois to Jewish author Jessie E. Sampler of Harlem: "My dear Madam: I thank you very much for your letter which I am handing to some organizations. I am sure they will respond. Very sincerely yours, W.E.B. Du Bois". Creased from old fold; two short closed tears in upper and lower fore-edge of each sheet. The Crisis was the official magazine of the NAACP and was founded in 1910 with Du Bois serving as its first editor. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 14 - [African-Americana] [Enslavement] Group of 3 Slave-Related Documents
[African-Americana] [Enslavement] Group of 3 Slave-Related Documents 1. Manuscript Receipt No place (Possibly Newport, Rhode Island), ca. March 1760. Single oblong sheet, 3 1/4 x 4 1/2 in. (82 x 114 mm). Manuscript receipt from a Mr. William Vernon to Thomas Rogers, noting "To Cash Paid Neagroes for Labour £2..." Docketed on verso. Wear along edges. William Vernon is possibly the same Newport merchant, slave trader, and smuggler (1719-1806), who during the American Revolution outfitted ships for the Continental Navy. 2. Manuscript Appraisal Document Frederick County (Maryland), April 20-May 6, 1789. Single oblong sheet, 5 3/4 x 7 1/2 in. (146 x 190 mm). Manuscript document, being a valuation and appraisal of the "Goods & Chattles of Ludwick Yost Taken by Virtue of fieri facias...One Negro Girl...£15..." Creasing from old folds, separation along same at right side; mat burn. In mat. 3. Partially-Printed Tax Receipt Petersburg, Virginia, December 14, 1861. Single oblong sheet, 6 x 7 1/2 in. (152 x 190 mm). Partially-printed tax receipt for the city of Petersburg, Virginia, for a Mr. William H. Ross, listing taxes for "White Males over 16 years of age... / Slaves that have attained the age of 12 years... / Male Free Negroes... / Horses, Mules... / Pleasure Carriages... / Pianos, Harps..." Creasing from old folds; light edge-wear and soiling. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 15 - [African-Americana] [Enslavement] "Town Property & a Slave!" for Sale. A Human Life Reduced to a Single Line Item: A Rare Slave Broadside
[African-Americana] [Enslavement] "Town Property & a Slave!" for Sale. A Human Life Reduced to a Single Line Item: A Rare Slave Broadside Chancery Sale of Town Property & A Slave! Springfield, Tennessee: Cheap Job Office Print, June 24, (18)58. Printed broadside, 19 x 12 in. (482 x 305 mm). Old manuscript and paper remnants on verso; creasing from old folds; scattered closed tears or loss to margins; moderately foxed. Issued in 1858, this broadside notice of a chancery auction in Springfield, Tennessee, for a house and a young enslaved man, owned by Miles S. Draughon ("Clerk and Master"), offers a stark window into the legal and commercial realities of slavery in antebellum America in the lead up to the Civil War. The broadside devotes far greater attention to the property than to the human being offered alongside it. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 16 - [African-Americana] (Fourteenth Amendment) The State of Minnesota Officially Certifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States
[African-Americana] (Fourteenth Amendment) The State of Minnesota Officially Certifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States..." Partially-Printed Document, signed St. Paul, Minnesota, March 1, 1867. Bifolium, 11 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (286 x
Lot: 17 - [African-Americana] Frederick Douglass' Paper, Devoted to the Rights of all Mankind, Without Distinction of Color, Class, or Clime
[African-Americana] Frederick Douglass' Paper, Devoted to the Rights of all Mankind, Without Distinction of Color, Class, or Clime Rochester, New York, May 4, 1860. Vol. XIII, No. 21, Whole No. 644. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds, toning along same; scattered spotting; two small holes at center of first sheet, repaired tear above same; old ownership signature in pencil at top of first page ("Stephen Reeves"). A scarce issue of this important newspaper, founded and edited by abolitionist and orator Frederick Douglass. In June 1851, at the encouragement of abolitionist Gerrit Smith, Douglass merged his newspaper The North Star with The Liberty Party Paper (of Syracuse), to form the present publication. Issued weekly, it centered on anti-slavery and other social reform causes. The present representative example reports on a variety of issues, including the rescue of fugitive slaves, a visit to the home of John Brown, accounts of lynching in the south, an account of the life of Elijah P. Lovejoy, various reports of anti-slavery measures, letters from African American authors, and a notification that the newspaper will become a monthly. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 18 - [African-Americana] Group of 4 Items Related to Liberia, ca. 1817-1975
[African-Americana] Group of 4 Items Related to Liberia, ca. 1817-1975 1. Group of 2 Congressional Documents. Comprising: Congressional "Joint Resolution For abolishing the traffick in Slaves, and the Colinization (sic) of the Free People of Colour of the United States" (2 pp.); "Report On colonizing the free people of colour of the United States" (5 pp.). Each, (Washington, D.C.), February 11, 1817. 12mo. Disbound; light foxing. 2. The Examiner--Extra. Washington, Pennsylvania, July 25, 1835. Printed broadside, 21 3/4 x 15 1/2 in. (552 x 394 mm). Contemporary ownership signature, recto and verso. Creasing from old folds, uneven toning from same; light edge-wear; scattered spotting. Printing the July 4, 1835 address of David McConaughy, President of Washington College, at the meeting of the Washington County Colonization Society. 3. Liberia As It Is. R.M. Johnson, to the Colored Citizens of the American Republic. Philadelphia, 1853. 8vo. 16 pp. Disbound; dampstaining. Sabin 36276 4. Statute Laws of Liberia From 1957 to 1974-75. Sammelband of nine various acts, etc. related to Liberia. Black pebbled leather, typed cover label ("The Property of E.J.S. Worrell, Counsellor at Law, Monrovia"); wear, soiling, and dampstaining; several sheets starting or sprung; library stamps. Established in 1821 by the American Colonization Society (ACS) to resettle emancipated slaves, Liberia stands as Africa's oldest republic and the only nation on the continent never subjected to colonial rule. In 1822, the first group of 86 Black volunteers, accompanied by white ACS agents, arrived at Cape Montserrado. By 1824, the settlement was renamed "Monrovia" in honor of President James Monroe, an ACS member, and the nation adopted the name Liberia. Over the next four decades, roughly 19,000 African Americans undertook the journey to Liberia. These settlers, known as Americo-Liberians, were joined by approximately 5,000 Africans liberated from intercepted slave ships, along with a smaller number of immigrants from the West Indies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 19 - [African-Americana] Group of 7 Civil War-Era General Orders Related to Black Union Soldiers
[African-Americana] Group of 7 Civil War-Era General Orders Related to Black Union Soldiers Alabama, the Carolinas, Louisiana, January 1864-April 1866. Comprising seven printed General Orders. 12mo. Disbound. Comprising: 1. General Orders No. 7, Department of the South, Folly Island, South Carolina, January 15, 1864. Appointing Col. M.S. Littlefield of the 21st Regiment U.S. Colored Troops,
Lot: 20 - [African-Americana] Hand-colored CDV of Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children
[African-Americana] Hand-colored CDV of Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children (New York: Kimball, 1863). Hand-colored carte de visite; printed caption at bottom "Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children, From the Free Schools of Louisiana". Clipped at corners; trimmed along bottom edge excising imprint; wear in bottom right corner; staining in upper half. 3 3/4 x 2 5/16 in. (95 x 59 mm). A scarce carte de visite depicting Isaac White and Rosina Downs, born into slavery in the South and freed by the Union Army in 1863. One of a series of photographs sold by the Freedman's Bureau to raise money for their schools and hospitals in Louisiana. A January 30, 1864 article in Harper's Weekly provides a biography of the two emancipated children: "The group of emancipated slaves whose portraits I send you were brought by Colonel Hanks and Mr. Phillip Bacon from New Orleans, where they were set free by General Butler. Mr. Bacon went to New Orleans with our army, and was for eighteen months employed as Assistant-Superintendent of Freedmen, under the care of Colonel Hanks. He established the first school in Louisiana for emancipated slaves, and these children were among his pupils. He will soon return to Louisiana to resume his labor...Rosina Downs is not quite seven years old. She is a fair child, with blonde complexion and silky hair. Her father is in the rebel army. She has one sister as white as herself, and three brothers who are darker. Her mother, a bright mulatto, lives in New Orleans in a poor hut, and has hard work to support her family...Isaac White is a black boy of eight years; but none the less intelligent than his whiter companions. He has been in school about seven months, and I venture to say that not one boy in fifty would have made as much improvement in that space of time..." RBH locates only one other example of this photograph at auction, that one without hand-coloring. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 21 - [African-Americana] [King, Martin Luther, Jr.] Printed Handbill for a Mass Civil Rights Rally
[African-Americana] [King, Martin Luther, Jr.] Printed Handbill for a Mass Civil Rights Rally Philadelphia, October 9, 1966. Printed handbill on pink paper: "Come to the Mass Civil Rights Rally Hear Dr. Martin Luther King...Mr. James Meredith...On Sunday, October 9, 1966-7:00 P.M. at The Arena 46th and Market Street..." Wear along edges; small holes in bottom right. 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (216 x 140 mm). Sponsored by the Interfaith Interracial Council, the Sunday, October 9, 1966 civil rights rally was held at The Arena in West Philadelphia, and attracted 1,500 attendees to hear Dr. King speak. Accompanying King at this rally was James Meredith, who in 1962 became the first African-American to integrate the University of Mississippi. His admission resulted in the Ole Miss Riot which had to be quelled by President Kennedy sending in 30,000 troops, the largest mobilization for a single instance in the history of the United States. On June 6, 1966 Meredith began a 220-mile "March Against Fear" from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi to highlight continuing racial discrimination in the South; he was joined by numerous civil rights leaders including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Stokely Carmichael. Meredith was shot on the second day, though he had recovered enough to rejoin the march before it reached Jackson on June 26. Meredith's presence at this rally was one of the great draws, having come so close to death only four months before. Lot includes a group of five items related to the Civil Rights Movement, including: a Saturday Evening Post poster signed by James Meredith, "My Ordeal In Oxford, ca. 1962; and four black and white press phographs, deciptiing mourners at the tomb of Malcom X, a group of the Little Rock Nine holding their diplomas, a sketch of the damage cause in Martin Luther King Jr,'s assasinsation, and scenes from the Apollo Theater. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 22 - [African-Americana] Life Insurance Policy for a West Palm Beach Resident, Issued by One of the Largest Black-Owned Businesses in the State
[African-Americana] Life Insurance Policy for a West Palm Beach Resident, Issued by One of the Largest Black-Owned Businesses in the State The Afro-American Life Insurance Company of Jacksonville, Florida Jacksonville, Florida, June 19, 1939. Single sheet, 15 x 10 3/4 in. (381 x 273 mm). Printed life insurance policy. Ink stamps on recto and verso. Creasing from old folds, small losses and separations along same. Abraham Lincoln Lewis (1865-1947), a pioneering African-American businessman, philanthropist, and Florida's first Black millionaire, co-founded along with six associates the Afro-American Industrial and Benefit Association in Jacksonville in 1901, which later became the Afro-American Life Insurance Company, the first life insurance company in Florida. Lewis was elected president of the company in 1919, and under his direction in 1935, he purchased American Beach, a popular beach destination for Black tourists in Nassau County. This life insurance policy (“Two Hundred and Fifty Dollar Special Complete Protection Whole Life Policy”) including sick, accident and death benefits, was issued on June 19, 1939, to 28-year-old George Scott. The first beneficiary is his wife Helen (Cassel) Scott, however, the two apparently divorced, as she is supplanted by Cassie Scott, in 1955, who in turn is replaced by a cousin, Josephine Fearley, one year later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 23 - [African-Americana] [Nat Turner Rebellion] New-Hampshire Gazette, with a Highly Detailed Front-Page Report on Nat Turner's Rebellion
[African-Americana] [Nat Turner Rebellion] New-Hampshire Gazette, with a Highly Detailed Front-Page Report on Nat Turner's Rebellion New-Hampshire Gazette Portsmouth: Published by Gideon Beck, Tuesday, September 20, 1831. Vol. LXXVI, No. 45. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creased from old fold; scattered foxing; light wear along edges. With a highly detailed report on Nat Turner's Rebellion and its aftermath, reprinted from the Richmond Whig. The rebellion began in the early pre-dawn hours of August 21, 1831, in Southampton County, Virginia, led by Nat Turner (1800–1831), an enslaved man and preacher. First killing his enslaver, Turner and his growing band of men traveled through the Virginia countryside over the next two days, killing upwards of 65 whites. The local militia and volunteers quelled the uprising, and a brutal retaliatory crackdown ensued, during which over 200 Blacks were murdered. Turner managed to escape, and evaded capture for two months, before being discovered on October 30, 1831. He was hanged on November 11. The deadliest slave revolt in the history of the United States, the uprising intensified the national debate over slavery, and resulted in the passage of harsher slave codes throughout the south. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 24 - [African-Americana] Pennsylvania Abolition Society's "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks", Printed in the "Gazette of the United States"
[African-Americana] Pennsylvania Abolition Society's "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks", Printed in the "Gazette of the United States" New York: John Fenno, Saturday, November 28, 1789 (No. LXVI). Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; separations along central vertical fold; foxing. Printed on the front page is the Pennsylvania Abolition Society's (PAS) "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks". Developed by PAS president Benjamin Franklin and put into motion in conjunction with the Free African Society, the Act established the PAS as the "de facto Ministry of Black Affairs" (Library Company of Philadelphia). Created to assist Philadelphia's Free Black community, the Act established committees that focused on education, safety, employment, as well as on moral and social relations. Other articles of note include a May 12, 1784 letter from Franklin to Samuel Mather recounting trips he made to Boston over the course of his life, as well as describing the influence Mather's father, Cotton, made on Franklin through his life; dispatches from France on the Revolution, printing that "The King's government may now be supposed to be at an end. In fact, he is the prisoner, not of the nation, but of the people of France..."; a report on the opening of the first session of the judiciary. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 25 - [African-Americana]
Scarce Issue of The Boston Gazette from the Early Months of the American Revolution, Deriding British Royal Governor Lord Dunmore's Treatment of Freed Slaves within his Army
[African-Americana] Scarce Issue of The Boston Gazette from the Early Months of the American Revolution, Deriding British Royal Governor Lord Dunmore's Treatment of Freed Slaves within his Army The Boston-Gazette and Country Journal Watertown: Benjamin Edes, December 25, 1775. No. 1075. Printed newspaper, with Paul Revere engraved masthead. Folio. 4 pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top left "Joseph Coolidge / Lancaster." Creasing from old folds, small closed tears along same; unevenly toned; small chips or loss to extremities. As the issue describes, "Several persons lately from Norfolk inform that Lord Dunmore was preparing barracks for his army...and that several Scotch tories in that borough commanded black companies, who speak with much confidence of beating us...When his lordship first went down to Norfolk, he gave great encouragement to unwary Negroes, but, such was his baseness, some of them, it is confidently said, he sent to the West Indies, where these unfortunate creatures were disposed of to defray his lordship's expences...Lord Dunmore issued a proclamation inviting the slaves of rebels, as he pleased to say, to repair to his standard. A considerable number at first went to him, but upon their masters taking the oath of allegiance, they were immediately told they must return...such is the barbarous policy of this cruel man..." Virginia royal governor Lord Dunmore (1730-1809) issued a proclamation on November 15, 1775, following a victory at the Battle of Kemp's Landing, promising emancipation to those enslaved in the colony that joined the British Army. While the act was not as successful as he might have hoped, Dunmore was able to form the Royal Ethiopian Regiment from those who joined him. It was the first British regiment during the war to feature Blacks as soldiers, and while it was disbanded not long after its formation, many recruits would go on to serve in other "Black Loyalist" regiments. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 26 - [African-Americana] [Townsend, Elias Stillwell] "The Patriots Who Secured Our Independence": Manuscript of an Anti-Slavery Oration
[African-Americana] [Townsend, Elias Stillwell] "The Patriots Who Secured Our Independence": Manuscript of an Anti-Slavery Oration New Haven, Connecticut, July 4, 1820. 18-page manuscript of an anti-slavery oration. 12mo. Contemporary stiff blue wrappers; old vertical crease. A fine manuscript of an engaging July 4, 1820 anti-slavery oration, delivered only a few months following the passage of the Missouri Compromise. The orator, Elias Stillwell Townsend (1796-1820), opens by praising "the patriots who secured our independence", but then asks, "What were the expectations of the founders of our republic, and how far those expectations have been or will be realised"? He answers by bringing attention to the slavery question that had thus roiled the nation, "The incidents of the past year shew but little to flatter us. A horrid vision has disturbed our halcyon dreams of happiness. Slavery rising from the South like the cloud of Elijah gradually expands itself and portentously threatens us." He goes on to ask, "Let it be supposed that they who proclaimed all men created equal and endowed with certain unalienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness--is it to be supposed they fancied that our country should become a vast prison, a receptacle for slaves? Or that the independence they established at a vast expenditure of blood and treasure should ever be jeopardised from such a source?" Townsend notes that the rising number of enslaved will one day outnumber their oppressors, and will rightly seek revenge, and "attempt their forcible emancipation." Calling to mind the example of the successful slave uprising and revolution in Haiti, the author praises its leaders "Touissant [Louverture], [Alexandre] Petion, and [Henri] Christophe" for their accomplishments in bringing an end to bondage. He then refers to Missouri, a new slave state following the passage of the Missouri Compromise that previous March, "opening a new market for slaves, in vain are all exertions to prevent that abominable traffic, that slave trade." The remainder of his long speech touches on numerous topics, including the economic conditions of the enslaver, the larger economic prosperity of the nation, and Connecticut's larger role within the republic that allows slavery to continue. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 27 - [African-Americana] [Underground Railroad] Autograph Letter, signed, by a Dartmouth Student Who Recounts the Arrival of a Runaway Slave
[African-Americana] [Underground Railroad] Autograph Letter, signed, by a Dartmouth Student Who Recounts the Arrival of a Runaway Slave Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, November 2, 1839. Bifolium. Three-page autograph letter, signed by Timothy Hill to his brother John in Bangor, Maine, thanking him for money he had sent, recounting his studies, and notably, informing him about the arrival of an enslaved man seeking freedom. Addressed on integral leaf. Creasing from old folds; wear from removed seal when opened. A Dartmouth student recounts the arrival of a runaway slave who made a long, arduous, and dangerous over-1,000 mile journey from the Deep South: "A few days ago a runaway slave made his appearance here, said he came from Alabama. The students had him go into the chapel and relate the story of his escape from his master and the reasons why. He said he had been the slave of a man in Virginia was kindly treated by him and lived well as long as he was with him, but he finally sold him and his family one in one direction and another in another, and he soon was away from his second master. He was helped on his way to Canada where he may be safe from the prospect being sold..." Approximately 30,000 to 50,000 enslaved men and women fled bondage to reach Canada before the Civil War. While the Underground Railroad facilitated many escapes, journeys originating from the Deep South were rare due to the immense logistical hurdles and the extreme risks involved. Overland freedom seekers from these regions faced a grueling trek of 800 to 1,300 miles, requiring them to traverse multiple slave states while navigating a sparse and fragmented network of safe houses below the Mason-Dixon line. New Hampshire played a critical role as one of the final northern legs of this route. Hanover, located just 100 miles from the Canadian border, was one of many gateways for those arriving overland. While many enslaved opted for maritime routes, departing from coastal hubs like New Bedford, Massachusetts, to sail directly to Canadian ports, others, including the unnamed individual referenced here, seemingly undertook the arduous journey entirely by land, relying on the clandestine support of abolitionist networks to cross the final stretch into freedom. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 28 - [African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] The First Printed Appearance of Phillis Wheatley's Poem "Recollection"
[African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] The First Printed Appearance of Phillis Wheatley's Poem "Recollection" The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, for the Year 1772 London: Printed for J. Dodsley, 1773. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 105, (1), 65-256, 246, (9) pp. Full contemporary tan calf, stamped in gilt, front board detached, spine dry and worn, rear board starting, boards and extremities rubbed and worn; all edges trimmed, library ink stamps on same; book-plate on front paste-down; contemporary ownership signature on front free endpaper (sheet now detached); library ink stamp on title-page; scattered ink and pencil marginalia; library ink stamp at bottom of D3r. Printed on p. 214 in the second part of the volume is Phillis Wheatley's fourth published poem, "On Recollection", published shortly afterwards in her first book, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (published September 1, 1773). Her poem is prefaced with a short description of the poet, noting, "Verses by a young African Negro Woman, at Boston in New-England; who did not quit her own country till she was ten years old, and has not been above eight in Boston." With contemporary manuscript at same identifying Wheatley by name and amending her age to "eleven". Contemporary pencil at same, "different considerably from published in her Poems since 58 lines longer." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 29 - [African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] Urban, Sylvanus. Phillis Wheatley's Fourth Published Poem "On Recollection"
[African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] Urban, Sylvanus. Phillis Wheatley's Fourth Published Poem "On Recollection" The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle. Volume XLIII. For the Year M.DCCLXXIII London: Printed for D. Henry, and sold by F. Newbery, 1773. First edition. Thick 8vo. (iv), 655, (17) pp. Illustrated with 20 engraved plates. Three-quarter contemporary speckled sheep over drab paper-covered boards, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, rear board detached but holding, front board starting, wear at spine ends, loss at lower front corner, soiling; all edges trimmed; some leaves partially unopened; book-plate of Josiah Harrison on front paste-down; loss in bottom corner of pp. 49/50; scattered closed tears; lower portion of final map separated but present; scattered spotting and soiling. In the September issue (p. 456) is printed Phillis Wheatley's fourth published poem "On Recollection", from her simultaneously published Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (published September 1, 1773). Her poem is followed by a footnote with a short biography and commentary on her: "This piece is taken from a small collection of Poems on Various Subjects, just published, written by Phillis Wheatley, a negro of Boston, who was brought from Africa in 1761, and is now only in the twenty-first year of her age. A testimony in favour of the poems, as the genuine productions of this young person, is signed by the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, seven clergymen, and others eminent for station and literature, and also by her master: and in this it is said, disgraceful as it may be to all that have signed it, that 'this poor girl was brought an uncultivated barbarian from Africa, and has ever since been, and now is--A SLAVE!' Youth, innocence, and piety, united with genius, have not yet been able to restore her to the condition and character with which she was invested by the Great Author of her being. So powerful is custom in rendering thee heart insensible to the rights of nature, and the claims of excellence." Wheatley is again mentioned in the May issue (p. 226), in a letter to the editor from John Wheatley. Reads in part: "...Phillis was brought from Africa to America in the year 1761, between seven and eight years of age, without any assistance from school education; and by only what she was taught in the family, she, in sixteen months time from her arrival, attained the English language, to which she was an utter stranger before, to such a degree as to read any the most difficult parts of the sacred writings, to the great astonishment of all who heard her. As to her writing, her own curiosity led her to it; and this she learned in so short a time, that, in the year 1765, she wrote a letter to the Rev. Mr. Occom, the Indian minister, while in England. She has a great inclination to learn the Latin tongue, and has made some progress in it. This relation is given by her master, who bought her, and with whom she now lives." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 30 - [Alaska] Presentation Copy of Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, on the Cession of Russian America to the United States
[Alaska] Presentation Copy of Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, on the Cession of Russian America to the United States Washington: Printed at the Congressional Globe Office, 1867. First edition. Presentation copy, with a one-page tipped-in autograph letter at front, signed by Charles Sumner to an L.J. Campbell, dated October 30, 1868: "Dear Sir, In reply to yours of 14th Oct. I enclose the only copy of the speech on Russia America which I have in Boston. Faithfully yours, Charles Sumner". 8vo. 48 pp. Illustrated with a large folding frontispiece map of Alaska (second edition "May 1867", as usual; map not found in all copies per Howes). Original limp printed brown wrappers, spine repaired, wear and closed tears along edges; vertical crease at center from when sometimes folded; all edges trimmed; scattered light wear along edges; scattered spotting and soiling to text and map; repair in gutter of map. Best of the West 171; Howes S-1134; Lada-Mocarski 159; Wagner-Camp 163 First edition presentation copy of Charles Sumner's April 9, 1867 speech on the purchase of Alaska. "The discourse by Sumner on the history and state of Russian America, which had just become the American territory of Alaska, was a justification for the purchase of the Territory from Russia, famously known as 'Seward's Folly,' after the Secretary of State who negotiated the purchase." (Best of the West) The large folding map is of particular importance as it is the first published map of the cession area, a land-mass one-third the size of the lower 48 states, and the first map to use the name "Alaska", labeled such across the mainland. Presentation copies are rare to auction, according to RBH, we can find only find two others since 1980. Russian interest in Alaska began in the early 1700s when Czar Peter the Great sent Vitus Bering to explore the territory. Over the following century, Russian traders and explorers established a modest trading network in the resource-rich, but sparsely populated region. However, Russia's financial constraints, coupled with their defeat in the Crimean War in 1856, diminished their commitment to maintaining a presence there. As the United States expanded westward during the 1800s, Russia sought to counter British territorial ambitions in the area. Consequently, in 1859 Russia offered to sell Alaska to the United States, but the sale was delayed until the conclusion of the Civil War. Secretary of State William H. Seward eventually negotiated the purchase for $7.2 million, and President Andrew Johnson signed the treaty transferring ownership on May 28, 1867. The formal transfer of Alaska took place on October 18 of that year. Lot includes two photographs related to Alaska, as well as a printed Congressional session leaf, related to Alaska (40th Congress, 2d Session, No. 130, "Treaty with Russia"). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 31 - [American Centennial] Rare Silk Broadside Celebrating the Centennial Anniversary of the United States in Shanghai, China
[American Centennial] Rare Silk Broadside Celebrating the Centennial Anniversary of the United States in Shanghai, China Celebration of the Centennial Anniversary of the Independence of the United States of America, at Shanghai, China. July 4th, Centennial... Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1876. Printed broadside on silk. Toned; scattered wear along edges; horizontal fraying, affecting some words. A rare broadside on silk announcing the U.S. centennial celebrations in Shanghai, China. The day-long celebration included a "Salute of One Hundred Guns at Sunrise," "Illumination and Fire Works at the Consulate General," "Exercises on Board the Excursion Steamer 'Plymouth Rock'," "Reading of the Declaration of Independence," the singing of the Star-Spangled Banner, followed by "Speeches, Toasts and Songs". Rare, OCLC locates only one other copy, at the Peabody Essex Museum, while RBH locates only two examples at auction. Lot includes four other Centennial-related items, including: an engraved invitation to the International Exhibition of 1876 at Fairmount Park in Philadelphia, a printed program and ticket for the same exhibition; a copy of The Kansas Daily Tribune, "Centennial Issue" (Lawrence, Kansas, July 4, 1876). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 32 - [American Frontier] An Early Northwest Territory Land Indenture Issued to General Washington Johnston
[American Frontier] An Early Northwest Territory Land Indenture Issued to General Washington Johnston Manuscript Land Indenture Vincennes, Knox County, Northwest Territory, March 14-15, 1799. Scallop-edge bifolium, approximately 12 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (324 x 197 mm). Manuscript land indenture between Louis Edeline and his wife Marie, granting General Washington Johnston two arpents of land southwest of Vincennes, at the cost of $400; signed by Edeline, his wife (her mark), as well as witnesses Pierre Gamelin and Charles ____; paper seals intact on third-page. Creasing from old folds, several separations traversing same. An early Northwest Territory land indenture, for land in Vincennes, Knox County (in current day Indiana), issued to General Washington Johnston (1776-1833). Born in Culpepper County, Virginia, Johnston came to the Northwest Territory in 1793 at the age of 17, being one of the first Americans to permanently settle in the region. He later served as a private in General William Henry Harrison's Army at the Battle of Tippecanoe (Johnston's legal first name was "General"), and then as an aide to General John Gibson. Johnston studied law in Louisville, and became the first man to be admitted to the bar in the Northwest Territory. He became a member of the first Indiana territorial legislature on April 20, 1810, and was elected Speaker on behalf of the first legislature to ever propose Indiana statehood. Once a state, he served as a member of the state legislature for several terms and was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. He then served as auditor for the Indiana territory and became Treasurer once statehood was achieved. Previously, in 1808, as chairman of a committee debating the question of whether slavery would be allowed in the territory, he supported the anti-slavery platform, which was then unanimously adopted. Louis Edeline (1730-99) was an early French settler of Vincennes. Born in Longueuil, New France (Canada), he moved to Detroit as a young man, and later married Philadelphia-born Marie-Joseph Thomas there, in 1759. Following the fall of Detroit to the British during the Seven Years' War, Edeline and his family moved to the remote outpost of Vincennes, where he became a leading town member. During the American Revolution, he signed an oath of allegiance with the Americans, and served under George Rogers Clarke in the siege of Fort Vincennes. He was then appointed one of Vincennes' four magistrates (alongside Pierre Gamelin, who has signed this indenture), a position he retained for the remainder of his life. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 33 - [American Law] A Comprehensive Library of Bound Legal Pamphlets, ca. 17th-20th Centuries
[American Law] A Comprehensive Library of Bound Legal Pamphlets, ca. 17th-20th Centuries Location and dates vary, largely ca. 1770-1860. In 133 volumes, some containing as few as five pamphlets and some containing as many as 20. Mostly 8vo. Large group of legal tracts on a variety of subjects (largely English-related, the remainder mostly American-related). Each in a library-style buckram binding, many with red and black morocco spine labels; some tracts loose and laid in; each volume with typed contents leaf at front; each pamphlet with ink or blind stamps of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York; some pamphlets with contemporary ownership signatures, or gift inscriptions. Condition varies; wear and soiling throughout, many pamphlets starting or sprung; some possibly imperfect. A very large and extensive legal library formerly belonging to the Bar Association of New York. Legal topics covered include property law, inheritance and wills, marriage, sporting law, copyright, forgery, selection of juries, canon law, and much more. Notable pamphlets include: 1.The Rights of Tithes Asserted by Our Old Saxon Laws... (London: 1653); 2. The Wickedness of a Disregard to Oaths... (London: 1723); 3. Some Considerations on the Game Laws... (London: A. Dodd, 1753); 4. Sharpe, Granville. A Tract on Dueling... (London: B. White 1790); 5. Paulding, James Kirke. The United States and England: Being a Reply to the Criticism, or Ichiquin's Letters (New York: A.H. Inskeep, 1815); 6. Webster, Daniel. Report Upon the Constitutional Rights and Privileges of Harvard College... (Russell and Gardiner, 1821); 7. Pamphlets regarding the Greek Frigates Incident of 1826, such as Report of the Evidence and Reasons of Award..., Refutation of the Reasons Assigned by the Arbitrators..., A Vindication of the Conduct and Character of Henry D. Sedgwick...; 8. An Act to Abolish Imprisonment for Debt... (Albany: Croswell, Van Bethuyson, 1831); 9. Adams, John Quincy. The Jubilee of the Constitution... (New York: Samuel Colman, 1839); 10. (Greely, Horace). Mr. Greely's Letters from Texas and the Lower Mississippi... (New York: Tribune Office, 1871); and many, many others. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 34 - [American Law] First Edition of the Senate Journal for the Second Second Session of the First Congress: Includes the First State of the Union Address
[American Law] First Edition of the Senate Journal for the Second Second Session of the First Congress: Includes the First State of the Union Address Journal of the Second Session of the Senate of the United States of America, Begun and Held at the City of New-York, January 4th, 1790 New-York: Printed by John Fenno, 1790. First edition. Tall 4to. 124 pp. Three-quarter contemporary sheep over marbled paper-covered boards, signature of Augustus Floyd on front board ("Augustus Floyd Esq / New York"), dampstaining to boards, joints and extremities rubbed; all edges trimmed; scattered foxing to text. Evans 22928 First edition of the Senate journal for the second session of the first Congress. Many important issues were settled in the discussions recorded within, and many significant moments in the nation's history are treated in depth. These include the first State of the Union Message, discussions of state surrender of western lands, notices of ratification of the Bill of Rights, and discussions concerning the seat of government, as well as Alexander Hamilton's fiscal proposals. The Augustus Floyd who signed this book is presumed to be the grandson (1795-1878) of Founding Father William Floyd, Signer of the Declaration of Independence from New York. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 35 - [American Law] Group of 3 Senate Journals, 1795-98, Owned by Two Early New York Politicians
[American Law] Group of 3 Senate Journals, 1795-98, Owned by Two Early New York Politicians Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the First Session, of the Fourth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 7th, 1795... Philadelphia: Printed by John Fenno, 1795. First edition. 8vo. 346, vi, xxi pp. Drab library-style buckram, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, boards unevenly toned, scattered soiling; all edges trimmed; ownership signature of Hezekiah L. Hosmer (1765-1814), Congressman from New York, on title-page; additional ownership signature below same; Association of the Bar Library, City of New York, ink stamp on title-page; closed tear traversing P3. ESTC W20581 (locating 14 copies); Evans 31355; Sabin 15552 Bound With: Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the Second Session, of the Fourth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 5th, 1796... Philadelphia: Printed by John Fenno, 1796. First edition. 8vo. 175, (1), iv, 18 pp. Open tear, O1; scattered spotting. ESTC W20585 (locating 14 copies); Evans 32971 Together with: Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the Third Session of the Fifth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 3d, 1798... Philadelphia: Printed by John Ward Fenno, 1799. First edition. From the library of New York lawyer and politician Theodorus Bailey, and with his signature on title-page ("Theodorus Bailey's"). 8vo. 222, vi, xiv pp. Bound as above, similar toning and soiling; same stamp on title-page (twice). ESTC W20588 (locating 15 copies); Evans 36521 Theodorus Bailey (1758-1828) served in the New York militia during the American Revolution, and the New York state militia from 1786-1805, attaining the rank of brigadier general. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1793, serving in the 3rd, 4th, 6th, and 7th Congresses. In 1803 he was elected to the Senate, serving until 1804, when he resigned to become Postmaster of New York City, a position he held until his death. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 36 - [American Law] Group of 2 Volumes of New York Session Laws
[American Law] Group of 2 Volumes of New York Session Laws Laws of the State of New-York...the Eighth Session...(Tenth Session) New-York: Printed by Samuel Loudon, 1785-87. Three volumes in one (with the Ninth and Tenth sessions). Folio. 104; 137 (but 141), (1); 212 pp. Modern quarter blue niger over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; ownership inscription of Christopher P. Yates, Clerk of Montgomery County on verso of final leaf of second work; dampstaining and soiling to first title-page; scattered soiling and spotting throughout. ESTC W14083, W14082, W18046; Evans 19133, 19854, 20578 A run of New York state session laws, including a printing of the state's first statutory bill of rights. Among the earliest state-level declarations of rights of its kind. In 1786, the New York legislature appointed Samuel Jones and Richard Varick to organize and publish all the legal statutes still in force within the state. Acting on this mandate, Jones introduced a Bill of Rights to the Assembly on January 13, 1787. The document consisted of thirteen paragraphs enumerating specific liberties, such as the principle that all power derives from the people and the guarantee of due process, among others. Jones drew upon diverse sources for its creation, including the existing New York Constitution (in which several were already embedded), English common law, the Magna Carta, and the Petition of Right. The bill passed both the Assembly and the Senate without opposition and was signed into law by Governor George Clinton on January 26, 1787. Together with: (Jones, Samuel, and Richard Varick) Laws of the State of New-York, Comprising the Constitution, and the Acts of the Legislature since the Revolution, from the First to the Twelfth Session New-York: Printed by Hugh Gaine, 1789. Volume II only. Folio. (ii), 471, (1), (17) pp. Blue library-style buckram; scattered library ink stamps; gift stamp on title-page, library stamp on same; scattered soiling; wear along edges. ESTC W6820; Evans 22012; Sabin 53735 The second volume only, of the important Varick and Jones edition of New York’s post-Revolutionary laws, from 1778 onward. According to ESTC, the title-page vignette was engraved by Peter Maverick. Lot includes a bound volume of session laws of Nova Scotia, 1767-68. Bound as above. ESTC W41647, W41646, W41645 Condition varies, generally good; scattered soiling, wear, and library stamps. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 37 - [American Law] Group of 4 Volumes of Southern State Session Laws, including an Ordinance Freeing the Family of an Enslaved Black Patriot Spy
[American Law] Group of 4 Volumes of Southern State Session Laws, including an Ordinance Freeing the Family of an Enslaved Black Patriot Spy 1. Acts and Ordinances of the General Assembly of the State of Carolina, Passed in the Year 1783. (Charleston, S.C. : Printed by John Miller, 1783). 4to. Lacking pp. 5-8, 17/18, and errata. Drab library-style binding; scattered library stamps; soiling and toning; scattered dampstaining. ESTC W30624; Evans 18190 Printing an ordinance dated March 12, 1783, freeing and enfranchising the family of a "Negro man named Antigua", who "was employed for the purposes of procuring information of the enemy's movements and designs by John Rutledge, Esq; late Governor of this State; and whereas the said Negro man Antigua, always executed the commissions with which he was entrusted with diligence and fidelity, and obtained very considerable and important information from within the enemy's lines, frequently at the risque of his life..." 2. Acts, Ordinances, and Resolves of the general Assembly of the State of South-Carolina; Passed in March, 1785. Charleston: A(nn). Timothy, 1785. 4to. Bound as above; similar stamps; scattered contemporary marginalia. ESTC W30620; Evans 19250; Sabin 87369. Bound with: A Message From the Governor... (likely Ann Timothy, 1785; Sabin 87536) Ann Timothy (1727-92) was one of only a small number of women printers in North America before and shortly following the American Revolution. She worked alongside her husband, Peter, and following his death, took over control of their printing operations, and later became the official printer of South Carolina. 3. Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia...at an Extra Session in May and June, 1825. Milledgeville: Camak & Ragland, 1825. 8vo. 54, (2) pp. Bound as above; same stamps. Printing the special session regarding the organization and distribution of Creek Indian land. The legislation passed was the Land Lottery Act of 1825, enacting a land lottery to distribute the land. 4. The Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Florida, Passed at its Seventh Session...November 27, 1854. Tallahassee: Dyke & Williams, 1855. 8vo. 101, (1), 10 pp. Bound as above; same library stamps; scattered wear and soiling. Containing dozens of acts that were passed during the Seventh session, including many pertaining to slavery and African Americans. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 38 - [American Law] John Jay's Copy of These English Legal Statutes, in 8 Volumes, all Signed by Him
[American Law] John Jay's Copy of These English Legal Statutes, in 8 Volumes, all Signed by Him An Exact Abridgement of all the Statutes in Force and Use, From Magna Charta, 9 H. 3. to the Beginning of the Reign of King George London: Printed by his Majesty's Printers. And by the Assigns of Edward Sayer, Sold by R. Gosling, 1725-32. In eight volumes. From the library of John Jay, with his
Lot: 39 - [American Law]
Samuel Jones, the Statesman Behind the Newly Discovered "Jones Declaration": His Annotated Set Used in His Working Law Library, Some Almost Certainly Used While Compiling New York State Law
[American Law] Samuel Jones, the Statesman Behind the Newly Discovered "Jones Declaration": His Annotated Set Used in His Working Law Library, Some Almost Certainly Used While Compiling New York State Law Group of 7 Volumes of New York Session Laws, From the Library of Samuel Jones New York: Publishers vary, 1762-1797. Approximately 18 volumes in seven. Comprising: 1. Livingston, William,
Lot: 40 - [American Newspapers] Group of 4 Issues of the Gazette of the United States: The Semi-Official Organ for President Washington's Administration, 1789-93
[American Newspapers] Group of 4 Issues of the Gazette of the United States: The Semi-Official Organ for President Washington's Administration, 1789-93 Philadelphia: John Fenno, 1789-93. In four issues, including: Saturday, July 10, 1790 (Vol. II, No. 26); Saturday, March 30, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 87); Saturday, April 20, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 93); Saturday, May 11, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 99). Some disbound; creasing from old folds; scattered spotting, soiling, and wear. Printing a wide variety of news from the early republic, including an act to hold the first national census in Rhode Island, who had just ratified the Constitution (July 10 issue); debates related to the conduct of Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton (March 30); the first patent act (April 20), etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 41 - [American Newspapers] (Cobbett, William) Porcupine's Gazette And United States Daily Advertiser, Group of Over 100 issues, 1797-99
[American Newspapers] (Cobbett, William) Porcupine's Gazette And United States Daily Advertiser, Group of Over 100 issues, 1797-99 Philadelphia: William Cobbett, March 29, 1797-March 20, 1799. Vol. I, Nos. 22-34, 36, 37-42, 44-64, 240, 241, 247-252, 257, 335, 453-455; Vol. III, Nos. 467-469, 473-478, 481-483, 485, 486, 489-495, 497-503, 505, 507, 510-513, 516-519, 543, 545, 563-566, 569-571, 574, 575, 588-591, 602-604, 526, 528, 529, 537, 548, 552, 554, 558, 560, 578, 576, 585, 587, 607, 605, 608, 610, 612-621; Vol. IV, Nos. 622, 623, 625, 626, 628, 631, 634, and 635. Folio. Volume also bound with one issue of Claypoole's American Daily Advertiser (No. 6053, August 28, 1798); one issue of the Philadelphia Gazette & Universal Daily Advertiser (No. 3138, December 29, 1798), and two other unknown issues. Contemporary three-quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, rebacked, worn; contents foxed with scattered stains; several issues with contemporary ownership signatures; several issues torn or with sections missing. An extensive run of Porcupine's Gazette, a Philadelphia daily newspaper published by English polemicist William Cobbett (1763-1835) during his time in America. Cobbett, a lifelong political writer and instigator, immigrated to Philadelphia at the perfect time in 1793 during the height of power for the political newspaper medium. Papers such as John Fenno's Gazette of the United States, and Benjamin Franklin Bache's Philadelphia Aurora had become battlegrounds for ideas of the Federalist and Democratic Republican parties. Cobbett established Porcupine's Gazette in March of 1797, often defending Federalist positions and British interests, which put him at odds with Bache's Aurora and its Jeffersonian philosophies that supported the French Revolution. Cobbett published the paper early 1800, when he returned to England. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 42 - [American Newspapers] Group of 2 Newspapers Reporting the Deaths the First Three Presidents of the United States
[American Newspapers] Group of 2 Newspapers Reporting the Deaths the First Three Presidents of the United States Village Messenger Amherst, New Hampshire: Samuel Preston, Saturday, January 11, 1800. No. 3, Vol. V. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front page. Creasing from old folds, wear and small separations along same; scattered soiling. On the third page are reports concerning the death of President George Washington, including messages of condolence from the New Hampshire legislature, details of a mourning procession in Exeter, followed by a report of resolutions passed by Congress, directing the erection of a monument to Washington in the capital, for a procession in Washington's honor, and finally, a proclamation issued by President John Adams calling for a 30-day mourning period. Together with: Farmers' Cabinet Amherst, New Hampshire: Published by Richard Boylston, Saturday, July 13, 1826. No. 44, Vol. 24, Whole No. 1230. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; scattered spotting. On the second and third pages report the deaths of Presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, both of whom died July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Followed by reports from across the nation of "Fiftieth Jubilee" celebrations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 43 - [American Newspapers] [Burr-Hamilton Duel] A Scarce Issue of this Connecticut Newspaper Largely Dedicated to the Aftermath of the Fatal Duel Between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr
[American Newspapers] [Burr-Hamilton Duel] A Scarce Issue of this Connecticut Newspaper Largely Dedicated to the Aftermath of the Fatal Duel Between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr The Connecticut Courant Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Goodwin, Wednesday, July 25, 1804. Vol. XL, Numb. 2061. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Printed black mourning border on each page. Disbound; dampstaining at bottom of each sheet; scattered spotting. Printed 13 days after the duel, this black mourning-bordered issue prints the correspondence between the two men and others regarding the duel. Further printed is Hamilton's will, various tributes to him, and his funeral obsequies with a woodcut print of his coffin. At dawn on July 11, 1804, Vice-President Aaron Burr and former Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton met at Weehawken, New Jersey, a popular dueling ground. The meeting was the result of a long-simmering feud between the two men, brought to a climax by what Burr considered to be numerous instances of dishonor against his character, as well Hamilton's interference against Burr in both the 1800 presidential election and in the 1804 election for governor of New York. Eyewitness accounts vary, but what is known is that two shots rang out and Alexander Hamilton lay crumpled on the ground, mortally wounded. The duel is widely regarded as one of the most consequential in American history, as Hamilton's death contributed to end of the influence of the Federalists in American politics. Immediately following the duel Burr was charged with murder in New York and in New Jersey, but never stood trial. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 44 - [American Newspapers] [American Frontier] The First Newspaper Published West of the Allegheny Mountains: Reports on Meriwether Lewis, Native Americans, and Aaron Burr's Alleged Plot
[American Newspapers] [American Frontier] The First Newspaper Published West of the Allegheny Mountains: Reports on Meriwether Lewis, Native Americans, and Aaron Burr's Alleged Plot The Pittsburgh Gazette Pittsburgh: Printed by John Scull, 1806-1809. Group of three newspapers, comprising: Tuesday Evening, August 26, 1806 (Vol. XXI, No. 1040); Tuesday, March 3, 1807 (Vol. XXI, No. 1067); Wednesday, May 10, 1809 (Vol. XXIII, No. 1180). Folio. Each 4 pp. Disbound; one issue creased from when folded; each largely separated along spine; scattered spotting. A group of three of these early Pittsburgh newspapers, including a variety of content, local, domestic, and international, including ads for numerous local tradesmen, reports on conflicts in Europe, domestic news on relations with Native American tribes, reaction to Aaron Burr's alleged plot to form a renegade empire in Louisiana Territory, as well as articles related to Meriwether Lewis, etc. By the first decade of the 19th century, Pittsburgh had evolved from a frontier fort town and flashpoint of the French and Indian War into an emerging industrial powerhouse. Situated at the strategic confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, which merge to form the Ohio River and provide a vital route to the Mississippi, the city served as the gateway to the Western frontier. During the latter half of the decade, the town's population grew to just under 2,000. This growth was further accelerated by the War of 1812, which solidified Pittsburgh's status as a manufacturing hub for steel, brass, glass, and other materials. The present representative group thus provides a fascinating glimpse into this frontier region and its emergent economy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 45 - [American Newspapers] [Fire Insurance] Group of 2 Issues of the Aurora, with a Large Ad for Early Fire Insurance, and Reports on British Impressment of American Sailors
[American Newspapers] [Fire Insurance] Group of 2 Issues of the Aurora, with a Large Ad for Early Fire Insurance, and Reports on British Impressment of American Sailors Philadelphia: Published by Duane & Co., Thursday, March 29-Friday, March 30, 1810. Two printed newspapers. Folio. Two uncut broadsheets. Disbound; scattered soiling and light wear. With reports on British impressment of American sailors and a Congressional bill authorizing the President to arm public ships to protect its merchant fleet. On the recto of the March 29 issue is a half-page ad for the American Fire Insurance Company, one of the first joint-stock fire insurance companies in the United States, first organized only a month prior, on February 28. The Aurora emerged as the single most influential newspaper of its day during the time that Philadelphia served as the nation's capital. Its founder, Benjamin Franklin Bache, the favorite grandson of Benjamin Franklin, was the driving force behind its success with fresh and accurate reporting. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 46 - [American Newspapers] (Adams, John Quincy) Broadside First Printing of President John Quincy Adams' First State of the Union Address
[American Newspapers] (Adams, John Quincy) Broadside First Printing of President John Quincy Adams' First State of the Union Address "Among the First Perhaps the Very First, Instrument for the Improvement of the Condition of Men is Knowledge" President's Message. National Intelligencer....Extra Washington (D.C.), Tuesday December 6, 1825. Printed broadside in six columns; 23 x 19 in. (584 x 483 mm). Newspaper extra of The National Intelligencer, featuring President John Quincy Adams' first State of the Union address. Manuscript docketing on verso, "President's Message 1825." Creasing from old folds; closed tear at center fold; scattered foxing; large dampstaining at center; a few small closed tears to extremities. In his speech of December 6, Adams outlined an ambitious national vision centered on internal improvements, scientific advancement, and cultural development. He advocated for federally supported roads, canals, and a national university, arguing that the United States should promote both intellectual and economic progress alongside territorial expansion. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 47 - [American Newspapers] Bilingual Issue of the "Baton Rouge Gazette"
[American Newspapers] Bilingual Issue of the "Baton Rouge Gazette" Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Saturday, June 2, 1827. Printed in English and in French. Vol. IX, No. 14. Folio. Separated along central vertical fold; foxing and offsetting; scattered wear along edges. A bilingual issue of this Baton Rouge newspaper, printed in English and in French, and reporting on a variety of domestic and international affairs, including notices of court cases, ads for runaway slaves, acts passed by Congress, etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 48 - [American Newspapers] One of the Final Large Electoral Victories by the Declining Whig Party, Printing a Large and Impressive Victory Display
[American Newspapers] One of the Final Large Electoral Victories by the Declining Whig Party, Printing a Large and Impressive Victory Display Albany Journal Albany: Ten Eyck & Co., November 11, 1853. Vol. 24, No. 2473. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page; scattered spotting; wear along edges, including five-inch closed tear in bottom corner of first sheet. The imposing full-page display on the third page announces, "Whig State Ticket / Triumphantly Elected! / Whig Canal Board! / Whig Senate! Whig Assembly!!" all surrounding an American Eagle with a banner in its beak proclaiming "The Whig Banner Again Floats Over The Empire State!!". Despite the triumphant Whig sweep in the 1853 state election as evidenced here, on a national level the party was in its final precipitous decline. Already fracturing due to the question of slavery’s expansion into the western territories, with the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act the following year the Whig party would collapse. From its ashes would emerge the third-party system and, in the Spring of 1854, the ascendant Republican Party. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 49 - [American Newspapers] [Great Depression] The Stock Market Crash of 1929
[American Newspapers] [Great Depression] The Stock Market Crash of 1929 Chicago Daily Tribune Chicago: October 30, 1929. Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 260. Folio. 40 pp. With the headline, "STOCK SLUMP ENDS IN RALLY." Disbound; separations along vertical central fold; creasing from old folds; scattered stains; pinholes at left margin from when bound. The day after Black Tuesday: scarce Chicago Daily Tribune issue reporting on the one-day "recovery" of the stock market in the midst of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. On October 29, known as Black Tuesday, 16.4 million shares were traded, with a loss of $14 billion in market value. Despite the slight recovery reported here, on October 30, the market continued to plummet into November, and would usher the United States and the world into the Great Depression. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 50 - [American Newspapers] Extensive and Consecutive Run of Issues of the National Intelligencer, the Major Newspaper of the Nation's Capital, Printed During the Second Year of the Presidency of James Monroe
[American Newspapers] Extensive and Consecutive Run of Issues of the National Intelligencer, the Major Newspaper of the Nation's Capital, Printed During the Second Year of the Presidency of James Monroe The National Intelligencer Washington, (D.C.): Printed by Gales & Seaton, January 1-November 17, 1818. Vol. XVIII, No. 2696-Vol. XIX, No. 2831. Bound volume of 135 consecutive issues, a tri-weekly paper, including one supplement (March 24, 1818). Folio. Quarter brown cloth over paper-covered boards; issues unevenly trimmed; printed book-plate of Stanford University Library on front paste-down; unsigned contemporary letter laid in; scattered foxing and stains throughout; tear traversing lower half of front-page of No. 2738; lower half of front page of one issue torn away. Notable events include, the first printing of the Flag Act of 1818, officially establishing the layout of the American Flag; notice of the death of adventurer George Rogers Clark; an advertisement for Benjamin Tyler Owen's printing of the Declaration of Independence; events surrounding the First Seminole War and invasion of Spanish Florida; the 1818 Treaty with Great Britain; Illinois statehood; and much more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 51 - [American Radicalism] Group of 14 Issues of the "Proletarian News", and Other Periodicals Related to Communism, Anti-Fascism, etc.
[American Radicalism] Group of 14 Issues of the "Proletarian News", and Other Periodicals Related to Communism, Anti-Fascism, etc. Proletarian News Chicago, 1939-1950. In 14 issues, comprising: November 1, 1939 (Vol. VIII, No. 7, Whole No. 83); September 1943 (Vol. XII, No, 9, Whole No. 126); September 1944 (Vol. XIII, No. 9, Whole No. 138); July 1945 (Vol. XIV, No. 7, Whole No. 148); November 1946 (Vol. XV, No. 11, Whole No. 164); December 1946 (Vol. XV, No. 12, Whole No. 165); November 1948 (Vol. XVII, No. 11, Whole No. 188); January 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 1, Whole No. 190); March 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 3, Whole No. 192); August 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 8, Whole No. 197); December 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 12, Whole No. 201); November 1950, mimeograph (Vol. XIX, No. 11, Whole No. 212); December 1950 (Vol. XIX, No. 12, Whole No. 213); May 1953 (Vol. XXII, No. 5, Whole No. 242). Folio. Each 8 pp.; mimeograph issue 12 pp. Variously toned and soiled. A run of issues of the Proletarian News newspaper, the official organ of the Proletarian Party of America. Originally founded in 1919 as The Proletarian to serve the left wing of the Socialist Party of Michigan, in 1932 it changed its name to the above, and was discontinued in 1960. Lot includes a group of eight other items, including: Puck (New York, October 26, 1887); Special Magazine Supplement The Daily Worker (Chicago, July 26, 1924); The Daily Worker (Chicago, August 30, 1924, Vol. II, No. 140); Demokratia (New York, March 1970, Vol. 3, No. 3); Printed broadside ad for "The Militant" (New York, ca. 1976); People's World (San Francisco, September 3, 1966, Vol. 29, No. 36); an excised front-page from an issue of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper (May 15, 1886), illustrating the aftermath of the bombing at Haymarket Square in Chicago. Sizes and condition varies, generally good; usual wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 52 - [American Revolution] Early Report of the Boston Tea Party, Printed by The Pennsylvania Gazette, One of Most Vocal Voices of Colonial Opposition
[American Revolution] Early Report of the Boston Tea Party, Printed by The Pennsylvania Gazette, One of Most Vocal Voices of Colonial Opposition The Pennsylvania Gazette (Philadelphia: Hall and Sellers), January 5, 1774. No. 2350. Bifolium, (4 pp.) 16 x 10 in. (406 x 254 mm). Printed newspaper. Split at centerfold repaired with archival tape; toned, scattered stains; small closed tears or chips to extremities. Rare issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette, the paper formerly printed by Benjamin Franklin, containing an early contemporary report on the Boston Tea Party. The issue relays a report from a writer of the Boston Gazette, "that the People, tho unanimously determined that the East-India Company's Tea should not be sold nor landed, nor remain in Harbour long enough, to be liable (according to an Act of the British Parliament) to the Payment of the Duty imposed by that Parliament, for the Purpose of raising a Revenue in America...the People, deprived of any other Way to get rid of it, were obliged to destroy it in their own Defence; so that all the Damage the owners owe, &c. sustain by its Destruction, is wholly chargeable upon the Governor, Collector, Owner, &c." On December 13, 1774, a large group of the Boston Sons of Liberty, dressed as Mohawk Indians, boarded three merchant vessels anchored in the harbor. Over the course of three hours, the group dumped over 340 chests of tea owned by the British East India Company overboard, destroying the monetary equivalent of almost two million dollars in today's currency. The action was in response to the passage of the British Tea Act of 1773, one of a string of legislative duties passed by Parliament that increased financial burdens on American colonists. The Tea Act, along with the Townsend and subsequent Intolerable Acts, were seen by American colonists as violations of their rights as Englishmen, since they represented "taxation without representation." The Boston Tea Party proved a key incident of escalation of hostilities between Great Britain and the American colonies, which culminated two years later with the Battles of Lexington and Concord, officially starting the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 53 - [American Revolution]
Early Reports on the Boston Tea Party
[American Revolution] Early Reports on the Boston Tea Party The London Chronicle London: Sold by J. Wilkie, From Thursday, January 20, to Saturday, January 22, 1774. Vol. XXXV, No. 2678. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (73)-80. Disbound; scattered spotting. Reporting of the Boston Tea Party, reprinted from the December 20, 1773 report in the Boston Gazette: "A number of resolute men (dressed like Mohawks or Indians) determined to do all in their power to save their country from the ruin which their enemies had plotted, in less than four hours emptied every chest of Tea on board the three ships commanded by the Captains Hall, Bruce, and Coffin, amounting to 342 chests, into the sea! without the least damage done to the ships, or any other property." A subsequent article reports on, "An inflammatory hand bill" that "was a few days ago distributed in Philadelphia, addressed to the Delaware Pilots, informing them, that a ship loaded with Tea is on her way to that port, being sent out for the purpose of enslaving and poisoning all the Americans...exhorting them to prevent her arrival..." It goes on to report that, "We hear from Philadelphia, that Captain Ayres, in a ship chartered by the East-India Company, to bring their Teas to that place, had arrived at the Cape of Delaware...but that the Pilots had refused to bring her up the river...that if they presumed to come thither, it would be at their peril, and the inevitable destruction of both vessel and cargo..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 54 - [American Revolution]
A Boston Newspaper Reports the Escalating Tensions between America and Great Britain, including the Boston Tea Party
[American Revolution] A Boston Newspaper Reports the Escalating Tensions between America and Great Britain, including the Boston Tea Party "The situation of affairs in America is becoming more truly alarming than ever..." The Boston Evening-Post Boston: Printed by Thomas and John Fleet, Monday, April 25, 1774. Numb. 2013. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page, contemporary marginalia on same and final page. Disbound; residue along spine on final page; creased from old fold; separating along spine; toned. A Boston newspaper reports the escalating tensions between America and Great Britain, including articles on the Boston Tea Party and its aftermath, as well as on Benjamin Franklin's infamous appearance before the Privy Council at the Cockpit in Whitehall, a watershed event that turned him into a fervent Patriot. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 55 - [American Revolution]
George Washington and the Virginia Delegation are Appointed to the First Continental Congress
[American Revolution] George Washington and the Virginia Delegation are Appointed to the First Continental Congress "It being our Opinion that the united Wisdom of North America should be collected in a General Congress of all the Colonies, we have appointed the Honourable Peyton Randolph, Esq; Richard Henry Lee, George Washington, Patrick Henry, Richard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, and Edmund Pendleton, Esquires, Deputies to represent this Colony in the said Congress, to be held at Philadelphia on the first Monday in September next." The Virginia Gazette (Williamsburg); Printed Alex. Purdie and John Dickson, August 11, 1774. Number 1192. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; scattered soiling; toned. A fine and significant copy of The Virginia Gazette, printing numerous reports on events in the lead-up to the American Revolution, most notably, Virginia's nonimportation agreement passed by Virginia's First Revolutionary Convention, and the selection and instructions for the delegates appointed to represent the colony in the First Continental Congress: George Washington, Patrick Henry, Peyton Randolph, Richard Henry Lee, Richard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, and Edmund Pendleton. Other articles report the Quebec Act of 1774, news of English troops headed to Boston, a declaration of loyalty passed by the Pennsylvania Assembly, and other reports from around the colonies relating to nonimportation and the military rule in Boston. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 56 - [American Revolution] An Article on the Publication of Stephen Hopkins's Influential Pamphlet Against the Stamp Act
[American Revolution] An Article on the Publication of Stephen Hopkins's Influential Pamphlet Against the Stamp Act The Aberdeen Journal Aberdeen, (Scotland): Printed and sold by James Chalmers, Monday, December 30, 1765. Numb. 938. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Faint British tax stamp in bottom corner of first page. Creased from old fold; Repaired along spine; wear along edges, scattered small open tears along same. Printed on p. 3 is an article on the publication of Rhode Island Governor Stephen Hopkins's (1707-85) influential pamphlet against the Stamp Act, The Grievances of the American Colonies Candidly Examined (published in America under the title, The Rights of Colonies Examined). Hopkins first delivered this text as a speech before a special session of the Rhode Island Assembly in November 1764, where he emphasized the economic burden on the colonists of Parliament's Revenue Act of 1764, and the passage of the Stamp Act in March of 1765. The Assembly then drafted a petition to the King, detailing their grievances and denying Parliament's right to levy a stamp act on the colony. The legislature than authorized a pamphlet printing of Hopkins's speech, which was published by William Goddard, printer of the Providence Gazette, shortly after, where it was met with wide acclaim and went through to a second edition before the year ended. A London edition was printed in 1766. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 57 - [American Revolution]
A Fascinating Revolutionary War Newspaper, Published Only Eight Days Following the Battle of Bunker Hill
[American Revolution] A Fascinating Revolutionary War Newspaper, Published Only Eight Days Following the Battle of Bunker Hill Dunlap's Pennsylvania Packet or, The General Advertiser Philadelphia: Printed by John Dunlap, Monday, June 26, 1775. Vol. IV, Numb. 192. Folio. 4 pp. Printed newspaper in four columns. Creasing from old folds; edges untrimmed; scattered foxing; paper loss and chips in right margin; bottom margin heavily creased. Featuring British General Thomas Gage's infamous June 12 Proclamation offering amnesty to "all persons who shall forthwith lay down their arms, and return to the duties of peaceable subjects, excepting only from the benefit of such pardon, Samuel Adams and John Hancock, whose offences are of too flagitious a nature to admit of any other consideration than that of condign punishment." Gage's message was ghostwritten by British Lieutenant General John Burgoyne, but it backfired, as Loyalists did not flock to the British side, and the message's patronizing tone rallied Patriot militiamen, who subsequently surrounded Boston to drive out the British, culminating in the Battle of Bunker Hill. Further printed is Captain Elijah Hide's stirring firsthand account of Bunker Hill. He begins, "On Friday night, the 16th inst. fifteen hundred of the Provincials went to Bunker's Hill, in order to intrench there...when two thousand Regulars marched out of Boston, landed in Charlestown, and plundering it of all its valuable effects, set fire to it...then dividing their army, part of it marched up in the front of the provincial intrenchment and began to attack." He goes on to report that as the Regulars inched closer, "Capt. Nolton gave orders to the men not to fire until the enemy were got within fifteen rods, and then not till the word was given." After two hours of fighting Hide reports the suspected casualties, including that, "Dr. Warren is undoubtedly among the slain." On the third page is reported that on the morning of the 26th, Generals George Washington and Charles Lee had left Philadelphia to take command of the newly-established Continental Army, in Massachusetts. Washington was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Army only six days prior to this publication. Printed on the last page is a report from June 21st, of Washington making his first inspection of the 2,000 soldiers in Philadelphia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 58 - [American Revolution] Very Rare First Report of the Battle of Bunker Hill Printed in England
[American Revolution] Very Rare First Report of the Battle of Bunker Hill Printed in England The London Gazette London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, July 22-25, 1775. Numb. 11581. Bifolium, 12 x 7 1/2 in. (305 x 191 mm). Printed newspaper in two columns. Disbound. With the text of an account of the Battle of Bunker Hill by Thomas Gage. In part: "I am to acquaint your Lordship of an Action that happened on the 17th instant between His Majesty's Troops and a large Body of the Rebel Forces. An Alarm was given...that the Rebels had broke Ground, and were raising a Battery, on the Heights of the Peninsula of Charles-Town...Preparations were instantly made for landing a Body of Men...under the Command of Major-General Howe...The Troops formed as soon as landed...the Attack began by a sharp Cannonade from our Field Pieces...Orders were executed with Perseverance, under a heavy Fire from the vast Numbers of the Rebels...the Loss the Rebels sustained must have been considerable...I inclose your Lordship a Return of the killed and wounded of His Majesty's Troops..." Partial ink stamp at bottom of second page. Creased; small sections of loss to left margin; scattered stains. A very rare issue of The London-Gazette, the official mouthpiece of the English Crown, containing the first English appearance of Colonial Governor Thomas Gage's account of the Battle of Bunker Hill, which took place on June 17, 1775. The issue prints the full text of a letter written by Gage eight days after the battle, to the Earl of Dartmouth, Secretary of State for the Colonies, which took a month to arrive in England. Gage offers an inflated account of the conflict, emphasizing rebel losses while downplaying those of the British. Despite his attempts to control the narrative of the conflict, Gage was dismissed from his office three days after his report was received. The text from this issue was used in the following days to print a broadside version of Gage's account. (Evans 13842) Very rare. We can locate no other copies of this issue featuring Gage's initial report in the available auction record. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 59 - [American Revolution]
Broadsheet Newspaper Printing of the First American Articles of War, Signed in Type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson
[American Revolution] Broadsheet Newspaper Printing of the First American Articles of War, Signed in Type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson Supplement to the New-York Journal, or General Advertiser (New York: Printed and Published by John Holt), Thursday, August 10, 1775. Numb. 1701. Printed broadsheet newspaper, 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 in. (394 x 248 mm). Contemporary inscription in top right recto edge ("For John William Hoffman"), and in lower left verso edge; contemporary notation on recto. Toned; wear along edges; repair in upper left edge. Printing Articles 34-68 of the first American Articles of War, passed by Congress on June 30, 1775, and signed in type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson. The Articles followed those passed by the Massachusetts Provincial Court in May of 1775, and were similar in nature to those of the British, which enumerated various military offenses and described the composition of courts-martial. Its deficiencies would lead to an amended and expanded Articles to be passed in the fall of 1776, largely at the behest of General Washington. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 60 - [American Revolution]
English Printing of General Gage's Amnesty Proclamation of 1775, Plus Numerous Articles Pertaining to the Increasing Hostilities in America
[American Revolution] English Printing of General Gage's Amnesty Proclamation of 1775, Plus Numerous Articles Pertaining to the Increasing Hostilities in America The Shrewsbury Chronicle Or, Wood's British Advertising Gazette Shrewsbury: Printed by T. Wood, Saturday, July 22, 1775. Vol. IV, Numb. 133. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. English tax stamp in bottom corner of first page. Disbound; separations along spine. Printed on the second page are numerous reports concerning the Continental Army's siege of Boston, followed by reports from Virginia of Lord Dunmore's escape from Williamsburg. On the third page is reported the intense hunt by the British for John Hancock and Samuel Adams, while on page four is printed General Gage's proclamation offering pardons to all rebels who lay down their arms, "excepting only from the benefit of such pardon Samuel Adams and John Hancock, whose offences are of too flagitious a nature to admit of any other consideration than that of condign punishment." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 61 - [American Revolution] The July 1775 Issue of Thomas Paine's Important Revolutionary-Era Publication, Featuring an Early Printing of the Declaration of the Causes and Necessities of Taking up Arms
[American Revolution] The July 1775 Issue of Thomas Paine's Important Revolutionary-Era Publication, Featuring an Early Printing of the Declaration of the Causes and Necessities of Taking up Arms The Pennsylvania Magazine: Or, American Monthly Museum. For July 1775 Philadelphia: Printed by R(obert). Aitken, 1775. 12mo. (v), 296-338 pp. Edited by Thomas Paine. Disbound; sheets toned; scattered
Lot: 62 - [American Revolution]
The British Reaction to the Battles of Lexington and Concord
[American Revolution] The British Reaction to the Battles of Lexington and Concord The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Benjamin Towne, Saturday, July 29, 1775. Printed newspaper. Bifolium. pp. 327-330. Disbound, untrimmed along other edges; separated along spine; creasing from old folds, small scattered holes along same; toned; offsetting; faint ink stamp at top of first page.
Lot: 63 - [American Revolution] The Boston-Gazette, and Country Journal, Reporting on the Posting of the Declaration of Independence in Boston
[American Revolution] The Boston-Gazette, and Country Journal, Reporting on the Posting of the Declaration of Independence in Boston "Last Lords Day the Declaration of Independence was published in the several Churches in this Town agreeable to an Order of the Honorable Council of this State." Watertown: Printed by Benjamin Edes, Monday, August 19, 1776. No. 1109. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front-page. Disbound; creasing from old fold; scattered light foxing. A fine 1776-dated Boston newspaper, reporting the posting of the Declaration of Independence in several churches throughout the city of Boston. The first public reading of the Declaration in Boston occurred on July 18. The day prior, the Massachusetts Council ordered that the "Declaration of Independence be printed; and a Copy sent to the Ministers of each Parish, of every Denomination, within this State; and that they severally be required to read the same to their respective Congregations, as soon as divine Service is ended...And after such Publication thereof, to deliver the said Declaration to the Clerks of their several Towns, or Districts; who are hereby required to record the same in their respective Town, or District books, there to remain as a perpetual Memorial thereof." It is likely that the Declarations mentioned in the present article were those printed by Ezekiel Russel of Salem, who was commissioned by the Council to print broadsides for their distribution throughout the state. Russell's broadside is notable for its liberal use of capitalization and italics, so as to aid ministers when reading to their congregations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 64 - [American Revolution]
Born in the USA: First Day of Printing in the United States, July 4, 1776!
[American Revolution] Born in the USA: First Day of Printing in the United States, July 4, 1776! The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Benjamin Towne, Thursday, July 4, 1776. Vol. II, Num. 227. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. The Pennsylvania Evening Post was founded by Philadelphia printer Benjamin Towne, its first issue published on January 24, 1775, with paper borrowed from James Humphreys. Initially supportive of American independence, the paper was published on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday evenings, with its headquarters mere blocks away from the Pennsylvania State House, which served as the central meeting place for the Second Continental Congress. The paper was the first daily newspaper published in the United States and is best known for publishing the first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence, with it taking up the front page on July 6, 1776. In 2013, a copy of the July 6 newspaper sold at auction for $632,500, the highest price ever at the time for a historic newspaper. The present example is significant for being one of only two newspapers printed in the United States on July 4, 1776 (the other being The Maryland Gazette, likely printed in the very early hours of the 4th), with this example certainly being the first to be printed after the United States formally declared its independence from Great Britain, marking a truly watershed moment in world history. Exceedingly rare: This is the only copy of this July 4th newspaper we could locate appearing at auction (we could not locate a copy of The Maryland Gazette). According to online records, we identified only one other surviving copy, held by the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 65 - [American Revolution] The Continental Journal and Weekly Advertiser, with a Front Page Printing of "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army"
[American Revolution] The Continental Journal and Weekly Advertiser, with a Front Page Printing of "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army" Boston: Printed by John Gill, Thursday, December 5, 1776. Numb. XXVIII. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Docketed in contemporary ink at bottom of front-page. Creasing from old folds; separated along spine; top edge of each sheet repaired; two small holes at center folds of first leaf; small repaired hole at top of first leaf; scattered spotting. A fine 1776-dated Boston newspaper. On the front-page is a printing of the Massachusetts law, "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army," followed on the second-page by an act to prevent the counterfeiting of bills of public credit. This is followed by various reports from around the country on matters relating to the Revolutionary War, including news from France; a treaty of alliance between American officials and members of the Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee tribes; and the return of Massachusetts statesman James Lovell from British incarceration. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 66 - [American Revolution] A Fine Patriot Newspaper with a Paul Revere Masthead, Printing the Final Sections of the 1776 American Articles of War, Passed by Congress on September 20, 1776
[American Revolution] A Fine Patriot Newspaper with a Paul Revere Masthead, Printing the Final Sections of the 1776 American Articles of War, Passed by Congress on September 20, 1776 The Essex Journal: Or the New-Hampshire Packet, and the Weekly Advertiser Newbury-Port: Printed by John Mycall, Thursday, December 5, 1776. Vol. III, No. 153. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. With woodcut masthead by Paul Revere. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page. Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling; wear along edges. First passed the previous year, this revised Articles was largely the result of General George Washington's dogged effort to institute a stricter code among the fledgling Continental Army's ranks to help institute a more professional and permanent army. Thirty-three new articles were added to the preexisting code, such as increasing the severity of punishment for various military infractions, greater protection for civilians from plunder and property destruction, and more regulation of the court martial process. The articles are followed by a resolution of Congress, declaring that "all persons not members of, nor owning allegiance to any of the United States of America...who shall be found lurking as spies in or about the fortifications or encampment of the armies of the United States...shall suffer death according to the law and usage of nations..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 67 - [American Revolution] (Hale, Nathan). A Short-Lived and Rarely Seen Biweekly Periodical Featuring a Report of the Execution of American Spy, Nathan Hale
[American Revolution] (Hale, Nathan). A Short-Lived and Rarely Seen Biweekly Periodical Featuring a Report of the Execution of American Spy, Nathan Hale The Selector London: Printed and Sold at Laidler's-Office, 1776. Number II. First edition. 8vo. (ii), 86 pp. Disbound; scattered minor soiling and spotting. ESTC P3129 (locating three copies in two libraries). Rare and short-lived biweekly periodical with reports on the American Revolution, including an early report on the death of American spy Nathan Hale (p. 78) in a September 25 letter from New York: "On the 22d we hanged a man who was sent as a spy by Gen. Washington." Nathan Hale (1755-1776) was an American soldier and spy for the Continental Army. On September 8, 1776 he volunteered to go behind enemy lines on behalf of the Continental Army to gather intelligence on British troop movements in New York City. According to Connecticut shopkeeper and loyalist Consider Tiffany, Hale was recognized by Major Robert Rogers of the Queen's Rangers at a tavern, who tricked him into betraying his allegiance to the American cause. Hale was promptly arrested and sentenced to death by hanging. According to British Captain John Montresor, as recorded in the memoirs of American Brigadier General William Hull, "Captain Hale...was calm, and bore himself with gentle dignity, in the consciousness of rectitude and high intentions. He asked for writing materials, which I furnished him: he wrote two letters, one to his mother and one to a brother officer. He was shortly after summoned to the gallows. But a few persons were around him, yet his characteristic dying words were remembered. He said, 'I only regret, that I have but one life to lose for my country.'" Though the veracity of the quote itself has been disputed in years since, it has became an iconic rallying cry for American freedom and is today regarded as one of the most consequential in American history. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 68 - [American Revolution] Printed Broadside: A Call to Arms for the Continental Army
[American Revolution] Printed Broadside: A Call to Arms for the Continental Army (Boston: Printed by Benjamin Edes, 1777). Printed broadside, 13 7/8 x 8 3/4 in. (352 x 222 mm). Ownership signature of Col. William Howard at top. Docketed on verso, additionally signed same ("Winslow"). Creasing from old folds, losses along same at bottom affecting some letters; wear and soiling along left edge. Evans 15425; Ford 2074; Wright, A Guide to Pre-Federal Records in the National Archives, 1989, p. 191 "The Perseverance of Britain in her Attempts to subjugate the Free States of America to an unconditional Submission to their arbitrary Impositions, demands a vigorous Perseverance in the Inhabitants of these States, to frustrate the barbarous Design. For this End the Supreme Council of the Continent, convinced of the fatal Impolicy of short Inlistments, have called for Eighty-Eight Battalions, to serve during the War or for the Term of Three Years, and for Fifteen of them from the Massachusetts-Bay. The Necessity and Wisdom of the Measure, must meet the Approbation of every Friend to his Country...And whereas it is the Judgment of this Court, that a Number amounting to One Seventh Part of all the Male Inhabitants, from Sixteen Years old and upwards, at home and abroad, belonging to this State, will compleat our Quota of the Continental Army...save the People called Quakers." The Continental Army that emerged beginning in 1777 was the result of critical legislation passed by the Continental Congress to maintain a more regular army to meet the increasing number of British troops sent to America to crush the nascent rebellion. On September 16, 1776, Congress passed the "Eighty-Eight Battalion Resolve", that authorized the creation of eighty-eight battalions of the Continental Army for the duration of the war, apportioned among the states based on population, who were to recruit their soldiers and appoint officers (as seen above). The act also extended enlistments for three-year terms (thus to avoid year-end terms that threatened to hobble the army), and subsequently gave General Washington the authority to raise an additional 16 regiments. The legislation also provided land bounties and bonuses for military service, and provided soldiers with a yearly uniform allowance. Col. William Howard is presumably the same born in Augusta, Maine, in 1740, who served as a lieutenant colonel in the Maine militia, and later as a colonel in the Massachusetts state militia. He died in Augusta in 1810. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 69 - [American Revolution] Group of 3 Revolutionary War-Era Newspapers and Periodicals, 1779-83
[American Revolution] Group of 3 Revolutionary War-Era Newspapers and Periodicals, 1779-83 1. The Remembrancer; or, Impartial Repository of Public Events. For the Year 1778, and Beginning of 1779 London: J. Almon, 1779. First edition. 8vo. (ii), 400, (6) pp. Modern quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards; all edges gilt; scattered spotting. Sabin 955; Church 1115; Howes A-182 2. The Independent Ledger and the American Advertiser (Boston): Draper and Folsom, April 8, 1782. Vol. IV, Num. 205. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; partially separated along central vertical fold; wear along edges, including closed tears; scattered spotting. Printing various war news, including Henry Laurens's letter from the Tower of London. 3. The Royal Gazette New-York: James Rivington, February 8, 1783. No. 663. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Dampstaining and spotting; light edge-wear. Loyalist newspaper, printing various war news, including the description of a monument erected in memorial of John Andre, executed for his assistance to Benedict Arnold. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 70 - [American Revolution] Acts and Laws Made and passed by the General Court or Assembly of the States of Connecticut...on the 18th Day of December...1776 and second Thursday of May...1777
[American Revolution] Acts and Laws Made and passed by the General Court or Assembly of the States of Connecticut...on the 18th Day of December...1776 and second Thursday of May...1777 New London: Printed by Timothy Green, 1777. Folio. pp. 441-471. Each disbound; toned and spotted. ESTC W10875 (first state), W7278 (first state); Evans 15258, 15259 Revolutionary War-era Connecticut session laws, printing acts related to regulating the militia, prescribing an oath of allegiance to the state, and the articles of war for the state militia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 71 - [American Revolution] A Rare and Early Continental Army Recruitment Poster
[American Revolution] A Call to Arms in the Months Following the Declaration of Independence: An Early Continental Army Recruitment Poster An Abstract from Resolves containing the Encouragement offered by the Continental Congress, and by the State of Massachusetts-Bay, to such as shall inlist into the Continental Army (Boston: Benjamin Edes), ca. January 28, 1777. Printed broadside, untrimmed, 13 3/4 x 8 1/4 in. (349 x 209 mm). Signed in type by Speaker Pro Tempore Samuel Freeman, and Deputy Secretary John Avery. Docketed on verso, additional manuscript on same ("Winslow"). Creasing from old folds, expertly repaired along upper horizontal fold; short separation at left side of central horizontal fold; dampstaining at right edge; in quarter green morocco slip case and chemise. Evans 15418; Heartman P15:4; Ford 2076; ESTC W34149; Cushing 981 A rare and early Continental Army recruitment poster, issued only months after the Declaration of Independence, seeking to entice men from Massachusetts to join the fight for independence. Printing the resolutions of the Continental Congress and the Massachusetts Legislature, this broadside lists the inducements offered to potential recruits, including a $20 bounty, 100 hundred acres of land, a new suit of clothing, consisting of two linen hunting shirts, two pairs of overalls, a leather or woolen waistcoat, one pair of breeches, a hat or leather cap, two shirts, and two pairs of shoes. It goes on to offer soldiers "disabled in the Service of the United States of America" a disability pension, as well as a further $20 if they enlist with a "good effective Fire-Arm, and also a Bayonet, or in Lieu thereof, a Sword, Hatchet or Tomahawk, a Cartridge Box and Knapsack". Finally, every recruit shall receive "a good Blanket", or a reimbursement of 18 shillings if they provide their own. This poster reflects crucial reforms enacted by the Continental Congress in late 1776 to transform the fledgling Continental Army into a more professional force capable of a sustained fight against the British. Orchestrated by John Adams at George Washington's behest, the revisions reorganized the American Articles of War along the lines of British military law. Key changes included extending enlistment terms, professionalizing the officer corps, enhancing monetary and land incentives for service, and instituting stricter penalties for disciplinary infractions. These measures were instrumental in evolving the American army into a more permanent and stable institution, reducing its dependence on often transient state militias. Rare. ESTC locates only eight institutional copies, while RBH locates only two other copies at auction in over a century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 72 - [American Revolution] A Detailed Report of Benedict Arnold's Treason in "The Annual Register"
[American Revolution] A Detailed Report of Benedict Arnold's Treason in "The Annual Register" The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, For the Year 1781 London: Printed for J. Dodsley, 1782. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 202, (2), 161-339, (1), 207, (12) pp. Full contemporary tan calf, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, front board detached but holding, rear board starting, wear and soiling to boards and extremities; red speckled edges; marbled endpapers; scattered spotting. Featuring accounts of the ongoing Revolutionary War, with a detailed report on the treason of Benedict Arnold and the execution of John Andre. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 73 - [American Revolution] Group of 3 Issues of "The American Journal and General Advertiser", November 1779
[American Revolution] Group of 3 Issues of "The American Journal and General Advertiser", November 1779 1. Providence: Southwick and Wheeler, Thursday, November 4, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXIV. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; scattered spotting. 2. (Providence: Southwick and Wheeler), Thursday, November 18, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXVI. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; foxing. 3. (Providence: Southwick and Wheeler), Thursday, November 25, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXVII. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Scattered spotting. Printing numerous reports on the Revolutionary War, as well as a front-page printing of Congress's October 20, 1779 proclamation appointing December 9, 1779, a day of public Thanksgiving and prayer. Bennett Wheeler (1753-1806) was originally from Halifax, Nova Scotia, and arrived in Providence, Rhode Island in September 1776. After several months, he began working for the Providence Gazette, where he remained until December 1778. In March 1779, Wheeler partnered with Solomon Southwick to publish The American Journal; and General Advertiser in Providence. Southwick departed the partnership in December 1779, and Wheeler continued publishing the newspaper until August 1781, after which he worked as a journeyman printer. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 74 - [American Revolution]
A Scarce and Completely Untrimmed Revolutionary War Broadsheet Related to the Rhode Island Militia
[American Revolution] A Scarce and Completely Untrimmed Revolutionary War Broadsheet Related to the Rhode Island Militia (Providence, Rhode Island): John Carter, (1779). Printed broadsheet. Folio, 15 x 10 1/8 in. (381 x 257 mm). Text printed in three columns, signed in type by Deputy Secretary William Mumford. Untrimmed; scattered light spotting. Alden 800; Bristol B4956; Shipton & Mooney 43698 Issued by the Rhode Island General Assembly during their October session of 1779, being "An Act for the better forming, regulating and conducting the military Force of this State". Originally introduced in the Assembly's June session, this act greatly reorganized the Rhode Island state militia, creating a new hierarchy of command and the restructuring of battalions, brigades, and regiments across Rhode Island's various counties. RBH locates only four other copies sold since 1935. OCLC locates only copies at the Rhode Island Historical Society and the American Antiquarian Society. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 75 - [American Revolution] Rhode Island Five-Dollar Note, Signed by a New England Physician and Statesman
[American Revolution] Rhode Island Five-Dollar Note, Signed by a New England Physician and Statesman State of Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations: Hall and Sellers, July 2, 1780. Five dollar currency, No. 1054; signed by A(dam). Comstock and physician Jonathan Arnold. 3 5/8 x 2 3/4 in. (92 x 70 mm). Jonathan Arnold (1741-93) was a New England physician and statesman. During the American Revolution he served as a surgeon in the Continental Army and was head of the military hospital in Providence, and served in the Continental Congress, from 1782-83.
Lot: 76 - [American Revolution] A Special Issue of the London Gazette, Printing News of British General Cornwallis's Victory Over General Horatio Gates at Camden, South Carolina
[American Revolution] A Special Issue of the London Gazette, Printing News of British General Cornwallis's Victory Over General Horatio Gates at Camden, South Carolina The London Gazette Extraordinary London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, Monday, October 9, 1780. Printed newspaper. Folio. (3) pp. Contemporary manuscript on first and second pages. Disbound; creasing from old folds, small separation along same at fore-edge; scattered light soiling. "It is with great Pleasure that I communicate to your Lordship an Account of a complete Victory obtained on the 16th Instant, by His Majesty's Troops under my Command, over the Rebel Southern Army commanded by General Gates." The official mouthpiece of the English Crown reports Cornwallis's victory over General Horatio Gates at the Battle of Camden. The Battle of Camden (August 16, 1780) was a devastating defeat for the American army in the early stages of the British offensive in the south, resulting in 900 American casualties and the capture of 1,000 American soldiers. Gates's defeat cleared South Carolina of any organized American resistance, and paved the way for the British invasion of North Carolina. Following the battle, Congress recalled Gates, who was replaced by General Nathanael Greene. The present newspaper prints Cornwallis's letter to Lord Germain announcing his victory, followed by a summation of his troops, casualties, and field pieces used in the battle. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 77 - [American Revolution]
The English Crown Reports Lord Cornwallis’s Surrender at Yorktown
[American Revolution] The English Crown Reports Lord Cornwallis’s Surrender at Yorktown ”I have the Mortification to inform your Excellency...” The London Gazette London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, From Saturday December 15, to Tuesday December 18, 1781. Printed newspaper. (8) pp. Tax stamp at top of first page and at bottom of fifth page. Contemporary manuscript at top of first page, in left margin of second page ("Lord Cornwallis and Army takin (sic) at York Town and Gloucester: by Washington & Rochambeau."), left margin of p. 6 ("the Ship Savage was taken by an American Ship of Warr (sic)."), and on the following page. Partially separated along central vertical fold; scattered spotting ; chip in lower fore-edge of final two leaves. The British reception of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown and the beginning of the end of the American Revolution, printed in the official mouthpiece of the English Crown. Likely the first British newspaper to publish Cornwallis "Mortification" letter and the full articles of capitulation. Printed on the second page is Cornwallis's letter to British General and Commander-in-Chief in North America Sir Henry Clinton, announcing his surrender to General Washington, "I have the Mortification to inform your Excellency, that I have been forced to give up the Posts of York and Gloucester, and to surrender the Troops under my Command, by Capitulation, on the 19th Instant, as Prisoners of War to the Combined Forces of America and France." This is followed by printings of letters between Cornwallis and General Washington negotiating surrender, and then the full articles of capitulation, signed in type by Cornwallis, Washington, et al. News of Cornwallis's surrender on October 19, 1781, after a three-week siege by American and French forces, reached British shores by late November 1781. The news sent reverberations through the English public and political circles, amplifying opposition voices within Parliament and entrenching a sense of disgust over the whole American affair. The British press placed most of the loss on the shoulders of Clinton, for his inability to stop Washington's march south, and then his refusal to reinforce a cornered Cornwallis. Finger pointing continued in the British press in the months that followed, and over time a sense that America was lost became more clear. A preliminary treaty to end the eight-year-long war was signed in November of 1782. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 78 - [American Revolution] A Comprehensive Revolutionary War Manuscript Ledger, Recording Monies Paid to Suppliers and Other Volunteers for the Continental Army, by Paymaster John Squire, in Fairfield, Connecticut, 1780-82
[American Revolution] A Comprehensive Revolutionary War Manuscript Ledger, Recording Monies Paid to Suppliers and Other Volunteers for the Continental Army, by Paymaster John Squire, in Fairfield, Connecticut, 1780-82 Manuscript Account Ledger Connecticut, May 15, 1780-December 10, 1782. Tall 4to. Six leaves. Eight-page manuscript account ledger, being "The State of Connecticut in Acct. with John Squire ACP. of Fairfield". Stab-sewn gatherings; scattered soiling. "A requisition from Congress upon the States for supplies for the army was also granted during the sitting of the April Assembly. The proportion called for from Connecticut was 78,400 weight of beef, 1,011 bushels of salt, 68,558 gallons of rum, 500 tons of hay. John Squire was appointed to purchase the proportion of supplies to be furnished within the limits of Fairfield and Stratford." (Schenck, The History of Fairfield County, Vol. II, pp. 410-411) A revealing record of those who supported the cause of independence. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 79 - [American Revolution] Possibly the First Printed Announcement of the Definitive Treaty of Peace Ending the American Revolution, September 5, 1783
[American Revolution] Possibly the First Printed Announcement of the Definitive Treaty of Peace Ending the American Revolution, September 5, 1783 Supplement a la Gazette Paris: Imprimerie Royale, Friday, September 5, 1783. Printed broadside; 9 1/2 x 7 1/8 in. (241 x 181 mm). No. 71, p. 317. Bound into full marbled paper-covered boards, green paper spine label, stamped in gilt. A rare and
Lot: 80 - [American Revolution] Thomas Jefferson at the Birth of a New Nation: An Important Letter Carried by a Jewish Patriot Communicating the Definitive Treaty of Paris, Projecting American Stability, and Preparations for the Publ
[American Revolution] Thomas Jefferson at the Birth of a New Nation: An Important Letter Carried by a Jewish Patriot Communicating the Definitive Treaty of Paris, Projecting American Stability, and Preparations for the Publication of His “Notes on the State of Virginia”, January 16, 1784 Autograph Letter, signed Annapolis, Maryland, January 16, 1784. Bifolium. Fine two-page
Lot: 81 - [American Revolution] Group of 2 Documents Related to Revolutionary War Pensions: For a Soldier who Helped Establish West Point Military Academy and a Soldier who Defended West Point as a Fortress
[American Revolution] Group of 2 Documents Related to Revolutionary War Pensions: For a Soldier who Helped Establish West Point Military Academy and a Soldier who Defended West Point as a Fortress Printed Broadside Philadelphia: (Francis Childs and John Swaine), April 30, 1794. Printed broadside, 13 1/4 x 8 in. (336 x 203 mm). Small chipping and light scattered wear along edges. Evans 27848
Lot: 82 - [Atomic Energy Commission] Collection of Press Releases and Reports, 1948-52
[Atomic Energy Commission] Collection of Press Releases and Reports, 1948-52 Washington, D.C.: United States Atomic Energy Commission, April 2, 1948-April 7, 1952. Comprising approximately 37 mimeographed press releases and reports issued by the Atomic Energy Commission. In blue cloth ring binder; some reports stapled at top corner; scattered wear; "Mr. Fiedler" in pencil in top corner of a report at rear. The Atomic Energy Commission was created in 1946 following the end of World War II to manage the development, use, and control of atomic, or nuclear, energy for military and civilian purposes. Signed into law by President Harry Truman, it transferred control of nuclear energy from military to civilian hands. Following increasing criticism regarding its regulations, it was abolished in 1974, and its operations were subsumed with the creation of the Department of Energy by President Jimmy Carter in 1976. The present collection contains reports from the critical years immediately following the agency's creation, including those by Lewis L. Strauss, W.W. Waymack, David E. Lilienthal, Robert F. Bacher, Lawrence R. Hafstad, among others. Topics covered include those on the nature of atomic energy, on uranium supplies, the Colorado plateau program, the creation of nuclear reactors, plutonium production, foreign distribution of radioisotopes, reports from Congressional committees, minutes of press conferences, a statement on the arrest of German-born British scientist Klaus Fuchs for passing top-secret information about the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union, the application of atomic energy, the discovery of element 98 Californium, the revisal of security clearance procedures, the creation of production plants, weapons tests in Nevada, the creation of nuclear submarines, etc. One report mentions J. Robert Oppenheimer by name. Lot includes an issue of Prevent World War III (New York: Society for the Prevention of World War III, Inc., Summer 1965, No. 66). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 83 - [Aviation] Earhart, Amelia. Rare Signed Cover From Her Ill-Fated Round-the-World Flight
[Aviation] Earhart, Amelia. Rare Signed Cover From Her Ill-Fated Round-the-World Flight No place, 1937. Unused red and blue cacheted cover, signed by Amelia Earhart in top left. 3 5/8 x 6 5/8 in. (92 x 168 mm). Lot includes a photograph of Earhart. A rare cover signed by Amelia Earhart, created for her ill-fated 1937 round-the-world flight. To raise money for her flight, Earhart's husband, George Putnam, arranged with Gimbel Brothers department store in New York to create these special blue and red cacheted covers featuring a portrait of the aviatrix. Around 10,000 were apparently created, several of which were prepaid and addressed, and were to be carried in the nose compartment of her Lockheed Electra. These were signed by Earhart, who then intended to add postage stamps as the flight progressed, and were then to be delivered to collectors following the completion of her journey. Earhart's first attempt at an around the world flight began in Hawaii in March 1937, but "during the takeoff attempt in Honolulu, the plane went into a loop (type of fishtail), its landing gear gave way and it crashed. When the plane was sent back to Burbank for repairs, the mail was placed in the custody of the Honolulu postmaster." (Bowman, Amelia Earhart Philately, p. 4) The present cover, which was flown to Hawaii in preparation for the first attempt, and was signed but never used or addressed, is one of only a few that are known to survive. For her second attempt, newer covers were created, which took off from Miami on June 1. On that flight she carried approximately 7,500 covers, which then disappeared along with Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Rare. According to RBH, this is only the fourth example of this signed cover to come to auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 84 - [Baseball] Group of 2 Items Related to Early Philadelphia Baseball
[Baseball] Group of 2 Items Related to Early Philadelphia Baseball Ballantine Beer Advertising Sign for the Philadelphia Phillies and Athletics Newark, New Jersey: Ballantine & Sons, ca. 1940s-50s. Printed easel-back cardboard display sign. 18 x 14 in. (457 x 356 mm). Wear along edges with some loss. Together with: 1905 Philadelphia Athletics Score Card Philadelphia: Chas. C. Douglass Printing House, 1905. 8vo. Original limp pictorial stapled self-wrappers; contemporary manuscript notations recording box score. scattered light wear. 1905 American League official score card for the first game of a double-header between the Philadelphia Athletics and the Washington Nationals. The A's shut out the Nationals 5-0, with their future Hall of Famer Chief Bender recording the shutout while only giving up two hits over nine innings. He walked only one batter and struck out seven. The A's would go on to sweep the Nationals that day. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 85 - [Baseball] [Bender, Chief] Cabinet Card of Native American Pitcher Albert "Chief" Bender
[Baseball] [Bender, Chief] Cabinet Card of Native American Pitcher Albert "Chief" Bender Biddle Field, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, August 28, 1930. Cabinet card photograph of Charles Albert "Chief" Bender, signed in pencil on mount "N. Guth / .30" at right below image. 7 3/4 x 5 3/4 in. (197 x 146 mm) print on 14 x 10 in. (356 x 254 mm) card. Scattered minor wear to mount. Charles Albert "Chief" Bender (1884-1954) was a Native American professional baseball pitcher, who is credited with the invention of the slider. Bender spent most of his career pitching for the then powerhouse Philadelphia Athletics (1903-14), where he won nearly 200 games and six World Series, and led the American league in winning percentage. As iconic Athletics manager Connie Mack stated about Bender, "If I had all the men I’ve ever handled, and they were in their prime, and there was one game I wanted to win above all others, Albert would be my man." In 1915, Bender left Philadelphia to play for the Baltimore Terrapins in the short-lived Federal League, but returned to play for the National League Philadelphia Phillies in 1916 and 1917. During his career he pitched 3,017 innings with an earned run average of 2.46, and a record of 212-127. In the years that followed he worked for a variety of teams as a coach, scout, and manager. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1953. The present photograph shows Bender with Frederick Fegan at Biddle Field, at Dickinson College, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Bender first started playing baseball at Carlisle Indian School, which he attended from 1896-1902. Following his graduation he briefly attended Dickinson College's prep school, while also playing for the semipro Harrisburg Athletic Club, before he got his start in the majors for the Philadelphia Athletics. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 86 - [Baseball] (Brooklyn Dodgers) Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up!
[Baseball] (Brooklyn Dodgers) Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up! (New York, ca. 1913 or later). Large sepia photograph, depicting the Brooklyn Dodgers walking on the field behind a marching band; small inset of the newly completed Ebbets Field at top right. Printed caption mounted to verso reads in part, "Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up! They are going to charge more this season for baseball seats than ever. The day of the 25 cent bleacher seat is fast departing. Why? Costly stadiums and costly players. The New Ebbets field, Brooklyn, is an example..." Lightly creased; some soiling to image; scattered stains on verso. 14 x 17 in. (355 x 432 mm). Very rare, large format sepia photograph of the Brooklyn Dodgers strolling behind a marching band on the recently completed Ebbets Field. The printed caption mounted to the back laments the rising price of seat tickets, due to the heightened popularity of baseball. Dodgers' owner Charles Ebbets began acquiring property for the construction of a new stadium in 1908, and ended up spending a total of $750,000 over five years on the project. The stadium officially opened on April 5, 1913 with an exhibition game against their rivals, the New York Yankees. The Dodgers won 3-2, and outfielder Casey Stengel recorded the first ever home run at the stadium, scoring on an inside-the-park hit. The New York Tribune reported on the opening of Ebbets Field in their April 6 issue, stating, "the park includes everything that could be thought out by the fertile mind of a master in baseball...The admissions rates will be as follows: general admission, 75 cents...box seats, $1.50...Pavilion general admission 50 cents, North end pavilion 25 cents...Brooklyn owes the fact that she can boast of the finest ball park in the country to Charles H. Ebbets, after whom the park is named..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 87 - [Baseball] Clarke Bros. Whiskey "All Star" Lineup Advertisement Poster, ca. 1917
[Baseball] Clarke Bros. Whiskey "All Star" Lineup Advertisement Poster, ca. 1917 "Take a Chance and Win a Bottle 2 of the World's Greatest Ball Teams 2 of the World's Greatest Whiskies" Peoria, Illinois, ca. 1917-18. Printed broadside advertisement for Clarke Bros. & Co.; 11 x 9 in. (279 x 227 mm). With images of whiskey bottles, a distillery, and a fantasy lineup card for the National and American league "all-star" teams. Lacking two original printed small paper tabs. Toned; scattered stains; soiling and small chips to extremities. Very rare promotional broadside for Clarke Bros. & Co. Whiskey, featuring a list of baseball players from the American and National leagues, including many Hall of Famers. Lacking two mounted printed tags that would have covered both columns of numbers and the name "Schalk" at center. This poster would have encouraged customers to "Pay amount under tab" by placing their name opposite their favorite player from either column, and the number revealed would be the price for the whiskey that they had to pay (between 1-18 cents). The National league squad included: Grover Cleveland Alexander, Philadelphia Phillies (pitcher); Bill Raridan, New York Giants (catcher); Jack Daubert, Brooklyn Dodgers (first base); Johnny Evers, Boston Braves (second base); Heine Zimmerman, New York Giants (third base) Honus Wagner, Pittsburgh Pirates (shortstop); Sherry Magee, Boston Braves (left field); Dave Robertson, New York Giants (right field); Cy Williams, Chicago Cubs, (centerfield). For the American league: Walter Johnson, Washington Senators (pitcher); Ray Schalk, Chicago White Sox (catcher); Dick Hoblitzel, Boston Red Sox (first base); Eddie Collins, Chicago White Sox (second base); Frank "Home Run" Baker, New York Yankees (third base); Donnie Bush, Detroit Tigers (shortstop); Shoeless Joe Jackson, Chicago White Sox (right field); Tris Speaker, Cleveland Indians (left field); Ty Cobb, Detroit Tigers (right field) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 88 - [Baseball] Poster of Douglass Crockwell's Iconic Up at Bat Image for the August 10, 1940 cover of The Saturday Evening Post
[Baseball] Poster of Douglass Crockwell's Iconic Up at Bat Image for the August 10, 1940 cover of The Saturday Evening Post No place, 1940. Off-set color lithographic poster. 27 5/8 x 21 3/8 in.. (702 x 543 mm). Linen backed. Bright example of this charming poster of a young girl up at bat. Douglass Crockwell (1904-1968) was an American illustrator and commercial artist, best known for his cover illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post, and was often compared to Norman Rockwell for his nostalgic depictions of American life. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 89 - [Baseball] "The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks": A Striking Type 1 Press Photograph of Lou Gehrig's Hands
[Baseball] "The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks": A Striking Type 1 Press Photograph of Lou Gehrig's Hands No place, 1927. Press photograph of Lou Gehrig; typed newsreel slip mounted on verso ("The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks"), dated July 3, 1927. 7 x 5 in. (178 x 127 mm). A fine and powerful Type 1 press photograph of baseball legend Lou Gehrig, focusing closely on the powerful hands that helped make him one of the most celebrated baseball players of all time. The image recalls the strong tonal contrasts and intimate compositions associated with the work of noted baseball photographer Charles Conlon (1868-1945), whose best-known image of Gehrig was a close-up photograph of his eyes. Over sixteen years with the New York Yankees, Gehrig amassed a lifetime batting average of .340, with 2,721 hits, and 493 home runs. The 1927 season in particular was noteworthy both for Babe Ruth achieving a record 60 home runs and for Gehrig's strong showing of a .373 batting average, 218 hits, and 175 RBIs (breaking Ruth's 1921 record of 168), one of the greatest showings of any batter in baseball history. That year the Yankees swept the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0 to win the World Series, with Gehrig named MVP. Gehrig's record of playing in 2,130 games stood until 1995, when passed by Cal Ripken, Jr. On July 4, 1939 the Yankees retired Gehrig's number 4 in an elaborate ceremony. Almost two years later, he succumbed to the disease that now bears his name. During his illness, while at the Mayo Clinic, Gehrig had his hands x-rayed. It was found that he had seventeen healed fractures, including each of his fingers having been broken at least once, a testament to the incredible power and strength he'd displayed throughout his legendary career. We can trace no other examples of this powerful photograph ever being offered on the market, nor can we locate an image of it in online resources or contemporary newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 90 - [Baseball] Group of 18 Press Photographs of Baseball Legends, including Mickey Mantle, Ty Cobb, Roberto Clemente, and more
[Baseball] Group of 18 Press Photographs of Baseball Legends, including Mickey Mantle, Ty Cobb, Roberto Clemente, and more Locations and dates vary. Group of 18 black and white press photographs depicting baseball legends including Mickey Mantle, Roberto Clemente, Daffy Dean, Carl Erskine, Casey Stengel, Ernie Banks, Rogers Hornsby, Ty Cobb and Connie Mack, Roy Campanella, Billy Martin, Whitey Ford, Casey Stengel, Carl Hubbell, Red Rolfe, Bill Terry, et al. Many with copyright stamps and printed labels on verso. Condition varies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 91 - [Baseball] Group of 4 Periodicals Related to Baseball, Including an Early 19th Century Illustration of the Game and a Front-Page Image of Willie Mays in an African American Newspaper
[Baseball] Group of 4 Periodicals Related to Baseball, Including an Early 19th Century Illustration of the Game and a Front-Page Image of Willie Mays in an African American Newspaper 1. The Gift of Friendship; Seasoned with Instruction, Both for the Mind and the Eye New Haven: S. Babcock, n.d. [1835]. Woodcut vignettes throughout. Original pictorial yellow wrappers. The front wrapper depicts an early rendition of children playing baseball. Although variants of the game had existed for decades, modern baseball was not formally codified until 1845, when Alexander Cartwright helped establish the rules for the New York Knickerbockers. 2. National Chronicle Journal of American Sports and Amusements Boston, May 28, 1870. Vol. II, No. 21. Printed newspaper. Folio. pp. (161)-174. Disbound. Numerous reports and scores of early baseball matches. 3. The Chicago Evening Post Chicago, Monday, July 25, 1921. Printed newspaper. Folio. (ii), 12 pp. Toned and very brittle; wear along edges; worn with losses. Reporting on the 1919 Black Sox game-fixing scandal in a local Chicago newspaper. 4. Chicago Daily Defender Chicago, May 1, 1961. Vol. VI, No. 49. Printed newspaper. Folio. 24 pp. Slightly toned. African American newspaper with a front and rear page image and a report on Willie Mays. With an article titled "What Happened to Negro Baseball?" This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 92 - [Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Pitcher Walter Johnson
[Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Pitcher Walter Johnson "The Big Train Socks 'Em Out" (New York: International Newsreel, ca. March 19, 1929). Black and white photograph, 8 x 5 3/4 in. (203 x 146 mm). Type 1 photograph depicting Washington Senators' pitching legend Walter Johnson at bat. Original typed caption mounted to verso, copyright stamp on same. Lightly creased. With accompanying PSA Letter of Authenticity. Walter Johnson (1887-1946) was a Hall of Fame right-handed pitcher, who played for the Washington Senators from 1907-27, and later became their manager in 1929. Generally regarded as one of the greatest to ever throw a baseball, to this day Johnson remains the all-time leader in shutouts (110), second in wins (412), and fourth in complete games (531).
Lot: 93 - [Baseball] Keeler, William Henry. 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red
[Baseball] Keeler, William Henry. 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red “Keep your eyes clear and hit them where they ain’t” 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red Cabinets, of Wee Willie Keeler, #101; checklist back (offer); SGC VG-EX 4. Corners lightly worn; small abrasion in upper edge. A handsome example of New York Giants Hall of Famer Wee Willie Keeler, from the T3 Turkey Red set. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 94 - [Baseball] [Mantle, Mickey] Mickey Mantle's First Cover: The Earliest Front-Page Newspaper Image of Mickey Mantle, "Something Good from Joplin"
[Baseball] [Mantle, Mickey] Mickey Mantle's First Cover: The Earliest Front-Page Newspaper Image of Mickey Mantle, "Something Good from Joplin" The Southwestern Joplin, Missouri, Friday, March 30, 1951. Vol. 17, No. 6. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creased from original fold. Toned. On the cusp of entering the majors to play for the New York Yankees, a young Mickey Mantle is profiled here in Joplin, Missouri's hometown newspaper. Featuring a front-page, above-the-fold, image of young Mick, the earliest front-page newspaper image of the baseball legend and Hall of Famer, followed by four columns dedicated to the rising star. Named after the Yankee legend Mickey Cochrane, Mickey Mantle's upbringing is described within as being "steeped in Yankee lore." The paper notes that his formal baseball education started as soon as he could lift a bat and throw a ball, creating a year-round atmosphere of baseball heavily infused with "Yankeeism." Mantle began his professional career in 1948 in Kansas with the Baxter Springs Whiz Kids. His talent was quickly spotted by Yankees scout Tom Greenwade, leading to a rapid promotion to the minor leagues. In 1949, he was assigned to the Yankees' Class-D Independence team in the Kansas–Oklahoma–Missouri League, where he played shortstop and posted a .313 batting average. The following year, he was promoted to the Class-C Joplin Miners of the Western Association. As depicted in the accompanying image from the 1950 spring training in Branson, Mantle excelled in Joplin, winning the Western Association batting title with a .383 average. Recognized as "baseball's most publicized rookie," Mantle was invited to the Yankees' instructional camp prior to the 1951 season. He subsequently joined the major league roster that year, playing right field. As the lengthy profile concludes, "We predict that the young, hopeful ballplayers of America are going to have a fine hero to pattern after." Exceedingly rare: According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy of this paper at auction, and it is perhaps the only obtainable copy in private hands. Together with: The Sporting News The Base Ball Paper of the World St. Louis, April 25, 1951. Volume 131, Number 12. Folio. 37, (3) pp. Toned; wear along edges; closed tear traversing center of pp. 3/4. Featuring an early cover illustration of Mantle as a young Yankees rookie, dated only four weeks after the above paper. Together with: The Sporting News The Base Ball Paper of the World St. Louis, January 31. 1951. Volume 130, Number 26. Folio. 26, (2) pp. Toned; foxing and wear along edges. On p. 5 is an early report on Mantle: "Yanks to Take Early Look at Mantle, Rated Top Prospect in Minors at 19". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 95 - [Baseball] [Negro League] Partially-Printed Tax Document for the New York Black Yankees
[Baseball] [Negro League] Partially-Printed Tax Document for the New York Black Yankees New York, September 10, 1946. Single oblong sheet, 5 x 8 in. (127 x 203 mm). Partially-printed Internal Revenue Service tax document ("Notification to Collector by Lessor Where Lessee is Responsible for Collection of Federal Tax on Admissions"), for ticket sales for games played by the New York Black Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Type on verso, listing dates of related games. Perforated stamps along top; scattered light soiling. An IRS tax document for the New York Black Yankees baseball club, issued for taxes collected on ticket sales for games played by them at Yankee Stadium, from July-October 1946. Originally known as the Harlem Stars, the New York Black Yankees were a professional Negro League baseball team established in 1932, and based in New York City, Paterson, New Jersey, and Rochester, New York. Their early years saw them play the often grueling baseball circuit, and in 1936 they joined the Negro National League. Notable players include legends like Satchel Paige, George “Mule” Suttles, Willie Wells, Clarence “Fats” Jenkins, and Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe. They played their last game in 1948 when the Negro National League dissolved. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 96 - [Baseball] [Reese, Pee Wee] Telegram to Brooklyn Dodger Hall of Famer Pee Wee Reese Congratulating Him on Winning the World Series
[Baseball] [Reese, Pee Wee] Telegram to Brooklyn Dodger Hall of Famer Pee Wee Reese Congratulating Him on Winning the World Series No place, October 4, 1955. Single oblong sheet 6 1/4 x 8 in. (159 x 203 mm). Telegram from Van Lingle Mungo to Pee Wee Reese. Creasing from old folds, scattered light stains. Western Union Telegram sent to Hall of Fame shortstop Pee Wee Reese, from his former Brooklyn Dodger teammate pitcher Van Lingle Mungo and his wife Elouise, congratulating Reese on winning the first World Series in Dodgers franchise history. The telegram was received at 4:17 P.M, only 30 minutes after the conclusion of Game 7, where the Dodgers beat their rival Yankees 2-0. Brooklyn scored the game's only runs off of a fourth-inning RBI single and a sacrifice fly in the sixth, both by Gil Hodges, with Reese and catcher Roy Campanella scoring. Dodgers pitcher Johnny Podres recorded the shutout and was subsequently named the series MVP for his performance here as well as in Game 3. The 1955 contest had been the fifth time in nine years that the Yankees and Dodgers met in the World Series, with the Yankees having won in 1947, 1949, 1952, and 1953. The two teams met again at the end of the 1956 season, but Brooklyn ended up losing the rematch. Brooklyn's beloved "bums" moved to Los Angeles after the 1957 season. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 97 - [Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] An Uncut Panel of 1926 W512 Strip Cards
[Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] An Uncut Panel of 1926 W512 Strip Cards No place, 1926. Single sheet, 11 1/4 x 7 in. (286 x 178 mm). Chip in top and bottom left corners, partially affecting outer border of Babe Ruth image. This rare uncut sheet captures the energy and star power of the Roaring '20s, showcasing some of the era’s most iconic figures—led by none other than Babe Ruth. Unlike the more commonly found single hand-cut cards or five-card strips, this full uncut sheet is a seldom-seen gem. It also features baseball legends Rogers Hornsby and Frankie Frisch, silver screen icons Douglas Fairbanks and Lon Chaney, tennis great Bill Tilden, swimming champion Johnny Weismuller, and golf champion Walter Hagen—bringing together the biggest names in sports and entertainment from a golden age. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 98 - [Baseball] [Ruth, Babe]
A Very Early Report Mentioning Ruth, then in the Minor Leagues Playing for the Baltimore Orioles
[Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] A Very Early Report Mentioning Ruth, then in the Minor Leagues Playing for the Baltimore Orioles The Baltimore News Baltimore, Sunday Evening, June 14, 1914. Vol. LXXXV, No. 41. Printed newspaper. Folio. Toned; paper brittle and chipping; separated along central vertical fold. With a very early report of Babe Ruth while in the Minor Leagues playing for the Baltimore Orioles: "The opening setto yesterday was a corker, and Babe Ruth was forced to give the best he had, for the Orioles offered him little to work on." Together with: 1. The National Police Gazette. New York, Saturday, May 12, 1923. Vol. CXXII, No. 2387. Folio. Scattered soiling and wear. Full-page coverage of the opening of the new Yankee Stadium, including a photo of Ruth crossing home plate after hitting his first homer there. 2. The New York Times. New York, Monday, August 12, 1929. Vol. LXXVIII, No. 26,133. Printed newspaper, on rag paper. Folio. Disbound. Reporting Ruth's 500th home run. 3. The New York Times. New York, Monday, October 1, 1934. Vol. LXXXIV, No. 28,009. Printed newspaper, on rag paper. Folio. Reinforced along central vertical fold. Special rag printing reporting on Ruth's last at bat as a regular player. A fine lot covering the entire career of the "Great Bambino". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 99 - [Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Shortstop Joe Tinker
[Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Shortstop Joe Tinker No place, ca. 1900s. Black and white photograph, 7 1/2 x 5 in. (191 x 127 mm). Type 1 photograph depicting Hall of Fame Chicago Cubs shortstop Joe Tinker, dressed in civilian garb. Sticker at top right of image, "Playing Exclusively for John W. Considine" Lightly creased; contemporary stamp on verso, adhesive residue from mounting on same. Accompanied by PSA Letter of Authenticity. Joe Tinker (1880-1948) was a Hall of Fame shortstop who played the majority of his Major League career with the Chicago Cubs, from 1902-16, winning four pennants and two World Series championships. He now is best remembered for his inclusion in Franklin P. Adams' 1910 poem "Baseball's Sad Lexicon", and its refrain, "Tinker to Evers to Chance".
Lot: 100 - [Basketball] An Early Women's Basketball Team Photograph
[Basketball] An Early Women's Basketball Team Photograph Washoe County, Nevada, ca. 1890s-early 1900s. Silver gelatin print on original cardstock. Corners slightly worn; some scattered stains to mount; dampstaining to verso. Photo: 7 3/16 x 9 3/8 (182 x 238 mm); mount: 10 1/4 x 12 1/2 in. (260 x 317 mm). An early photograph of a women's basketball team from Washoe County, Nevada. In the United States, basketball was the first women’s team sport. First played by women at Smith College in 1892, a year after the sport’s creation, it quickly spread throughout the country over the ensuing decade. The early history of the sport was dominated by Senda Berenson, known as the “founding mother of women’s basketball”, who taught the sport at Smith. In line with Victorian norms, she modified the rules of the game to meet social expectations relating to women, such as increasing the number of players and prescriptions on types of playing and maneuvers, in order to reduce physicality and keep physical exposure to a minimum. This is reflected in the present photo by their concealing uniforms, typically comprised of long skirts or bloomers. The first inter-collegiate game was played in 1896, and the first high school game the following year. In 1899, Berenson published the first rules guide for women’s basketball, which was largely adhered to until the 1960s. Over the following decades the rules restraining the types of play were loosened, and in 1978, the first professional league was formed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 101 - [Basketball] [Jordan, Michael] Sissac, Carl V. Type 1 Photo of Michael Jordan
[Basketball] [Jordan, Michael] Sissac, Carl V. Type 1 Photo of Michael Jordan Circa 1995-1996. Original PSA Type 1 color photograph; 6 x 4 in. (152 x 102 mm). Encapsulated. Copyright stamp on verso. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 102 - [Bill of Rights] Madison Proposes the Bill of Rights in a Local New York Newspaper
[Bill of Rights] Madison Proposes the Bill of Rights in a Local New York Newspaper The New-York Journal and Weekly Register New-York: Printed and Published by Thomas Greenleaf, Thursday, June 11, 1789. Vol. XLIII, No. 29, Total Numb. 2404. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound. One of the earliest newspapers--possibly only the second--to report on James Madison's proposed Bill of Rights. On the second page, second column is a report on Madison's landmark June 8 speech to Congress, where he asked his colleagues "to take into consideration the subject of amendments." It is followed by a report of debates between members of Congress on the matter, and Madison's submission of nine proposed amendments. Madison's nine proposed amendments, drawn from numerous sources, grew to seventeen, but was then narrowed to twelve. Ten were ultimately ratified by 1791, becoming what would later be referred to as the Bill of Rights. This newspaper reporting is evidently preceded only by the June 10 report in the Gazette of the United States, the semi-official Federalist Party newspaper also based in New York. According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy of this issue at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 103 - [Bill of Rights] An Early Printing of the Bill of Rights in Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America
[Bill of Rights] An Early Printing of the Bill of Rights in Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America: Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia...the Twenty-Fourth of October, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Ninety-One... Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Childs and John Swaine, (1793). First edition. 8vo. 175, iii, (1), 178-291, ii, (25) pp. Full contemporary brown calf, stamped in gilt, blind stamp of the Library of the New York Law Institute on front and rear board, rebacked, boards and extremities rubbed and worn; all edges trimmed; scattered spotting and soiling. Evans 26295; ESTC W14416; Sabin 15499 Printing the Acts passed at the Second United States Congress, held from March 4, 1791-March 4, 1793. Opening with an early printing of the Bill of Rights, and their ratification by the states, on pp. 3-19. Other important Acts passed include the Postal Services Act, the Coinage Act of 1792, the Fugitive Slave Act, etc. Rare. ESTC locates only seven institutional copies. RBH locates four copies at auction since 2013. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 104 - [Boone, Daniel] Group of 3 Items Related to Daniel Boone
[Boone, Daniel] Group of 3 Items Related to Daniel Boone 1. The Weekly Register (Baltimore): H. Niles, (March 13, 1813). Supplementary to No. 2, Vol. IV. 8vo. (i), 34-40 pp. Disbound; first and last leaf separated; foxing. Featuring an excerpt from a memoir on Daniel Boone on the first four pages. 2. Acts Passed at the Second Session of the Thirteenth Congress of the United States (Washington, D.C., 1814). First edition. 8vo. (iii), 244-429, (1), 6 pp. Original stiff blue wrappers, worn, contemporary and later manuscript on spine; text unopened; scattered spotting; library ink number on title-page. Includes an "Act for the relief of Daniel Boone", granting him rights to land in Missouri received by the Spanish government (p. 266). 3. The Yankee Boston: Published by Rowe & Hooper, Friday, June 21, 1816. Vol. V, No. 26. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; creasing from when folded; scattered spotting. Printed on the front page is a letter from an officer at Fort Osage, recounting their meeting Boone. Daniel Boone (1734-1820) was an American frontiersman who is considered one of the first folk heroes of the United States. Born in Pennsylvania, he steadily made his way west, eventually becoming one of the first white settlers to explore what is now the Kentucky region. Within two decades over 200,000 settlers had made their way into the area through routes established by Boone. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 105 - [Boxing] Group of 11 Items Related to Boxing, Including Press Photos, etc.
[Boxing] Group of 11 Items Related to Boxing, Including Press Photos, etc. Locations and dates vary. Group of 11 items related to boxing, including, eight press photographs of boxing greats such as Muhammad Ali (4), Joe Louis (1), Jack Dempsey (1), and Floyd Patterson (1), and Max Baer (1); an issue of the French magazine La vie au grand air (1910), featuring a story on a fight between Jack Johnson and James Jefferies; a small printed ad listing ticket prices for the Tunney-Dempsey match of 1926 in Chicago; a printed color poster, ca. 1894, depicting a fight between James J. Corbett and Peter Jackson. Sizes vary. Conditions vary but generally fine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 106 - [Canal Building] The Predecessor of the Erie Canal
[Canal Building] The Predecessor of the Erie Canal Report of a Committee, Appointed to Explore the Western Waters in the State of New-York: For the Purpose of Prosecuting the Inland Lock Navigation Albany: Printed by Barber and Southwick, 1792. First edition. 16mo. 24 pp. Disbound; corners of title-page clipped, affecting some letters, two library ink stamps on same ("Library of the New York Law Institute"), same ink stamps on pp. 2 and 24; text trimmed close affecting some page numbers at top; creasing and small chip in bottom corner of pp. 3/4; scattered spotting and soiling. In black cloth fall-down-back box. Evans 24604; ESTC W8575; Sabin 22754; Streeter Sale 883 Rare first edition detailing the Western Inland Lock Navigation Company, which constructed New York's first major canal system along the Mohawk River to Lake Oneida. Incorporated by the New York state legislature in 1792 with General Philip Schuyler (Alexander Hamilton's father-in-law) as its president, the company was established to enhance navigation and commerce on waterways west of Albany. Construction commenced in 1793, and within a decade the company had successfully built a network of canals designed to bypass difficult portages at locations such as Little Falls and Rome. Although these improvements revolutionized water transportation in New York, the company's infrastructure was rendered obsolete by 1825 following the completion of the much larger Erie Canal. According to RBH, this is the first copy to come to auction since the Streeter Sale. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 107 - [Civil War] A Rare, Large, and Unusually Bright Patriotic Civil War Poster
[Civil War] A Rare, Large, and Unusually Bright Patriotic Civil War Poster Military Portraits Map of the Seat of War, Uniforms, Arms, &c. New York: Published by H.H. Lloyd & Co., 1861. Hand-colored engraved poster. Printed by Waters & Son, New York. Small portion of inpainting to copyright line in bottom left. Linen backed; wear along edges. 39 x 29 in. (991 x 737 mm). Showing military uniforms and dress, 16 large portraits of prominent Union Army leaders (Winfield Scott, George McClellan, John C. Fremont, Benjamin F. Butler, et al.) and a map illustrating the regions of Maryland, Virginia, and the Chesapeake Bay. Henry Huggins Lloyd (1828-68) was a New York City-based publisher and mapmaker, operating before, during, and after the Civil War. Their extensive output included posters such as these, as well as military campaign charts, patriotic portraits of military leaders, regional and state maps, etc. Rare to auction, we cannot find a similar example in online records. OCLC locates only two similar examples, at Harvard University and in the David Rumsey Map Collection at Stanford University (the latter depicting fewer military leaders). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 108 - [Civil War] The National Lines Before Washington: Broadside Supplement to The New York Times
[Civil War] The National Lines Before Washington: Broadside Supplement to The New York Times New-York, December 7, 1861. Printed broadside; 22 x 15 in. (550 x 385 mm). Illustrated with two engraved battlefield maps. Creasing from when folded, separations along folds; unevenly toned; closed tear in bottom edge; wear along right edge. An early Civil War map exhibiting the defenses of the national capital, and positions of the several divisions of the Grand Army, part of a series sent free to New-York Times subscribers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 109 - [Civil War] Group of 7 Newspapers with Important Content Related to the Battle of Antietam, a "Negro Confederacy", the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, and more, 1861-65
[Civil War] Group of 7 Newspapers with Important Content Related to the Battle of Antietam, a "Negro Confederacy", the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, and more, 1861-65 1. Daily Appeal. Marysville, California, Thursday Morning, May 23, 1861. Vol. 3, No. 122. Folio. 4 pp. With an anti-Union article on the "Negro Confederacy". 2. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Monday, September 22, 1862. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting to separate. Front-page report on the Battle of Antietam. 3. Daily Richmond Examiner. Richmond, Virginia, Tuesday Morning, October 7, 1862. Vol. XVI, no. 183. Folio. 4 pp. Text faded. Confederate newspaper, with Confederate-related news. 4. The Tri-Weekly Telegraph. Houston, Texas, Monday, March 2, 1863. Vol. XXVIII, No. 150, Whole No. 8647. Broadsheet. Small holes along central vertical fold. Confederate newspaper, with Confederate-related content. 5. The Commonwealth. Boston, Friday, May 15, 1863. Vol. I, No. 37. Folio. 4 pp. Scattered soiling. With a report on the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, one of the first African American regiments in the Civil War. 6. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Thursday, May 25, 1865. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting or separated. "The Armies of the Republic. Their Triumphant Return to the National Capital..." 7. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Monday, June 12, 1865. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting or separated, last leaves torn. "Philadelphia's Welcome to Her Returning Volunteers..." Condition varies, generally good, with expected creasing, wear, and tears. An illuminating set of eight Civil War-era newspapers, offering a trans-continental perspective on the conflict. Lot also includes six cartes de visite of Civil War figures, including of President Lincoln and his son Tad. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 110 - [Civil War] General Benjamin F. Butler's Farewell Address to the Army of the Gulf in New Orleans
[Civil War] General Benjamin F. Butler's Farewell Address to the Army of the Gulf in New Orleans Printed Document, General Orders No. 106 New Orleans: Headquarters Department of the Gulf, December 15, 1862. Printed document, being Benjamin F. Butler's General Orders No. 106, his farewell address to his troops. 12mo. Disbound; reinforced with sello tape along spine. Butler praises his army for their service and for illustrating the "best traits of the American soldier". He expresses his admiration for their having "fed the starving poor, the wives and children of your enemies, so converting enemies into friends...you have won the confidence of the 'oppressed race' and the slave. Hailing you as deliverers, they are ready to aid you as willing servants, faithful laborers, or, using the tactics taught them by your enemies, to fight with you in the field..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 111 - [Civil War] Dedication Copy of "The Draft Riots in New York", Presented to Police Commissioner Thomas C. Acton, Who Led New York's Police Force to Stamp Out the New York Draft Riots
[Civil War] Dedication Copy of "The Draft Riots in New York", Presented to Police Commissioner Thomas C. Acton, Who Led New York's Police Force to Stamp Out the New York Draft Riots "To Commissioner Acton are our Citizens indebted in a large degree for the prompt and successful assaults upon the rioters, and to his judicious and energetic action for their subsequent entire defeat and
Lot: 112 - [Civil War] Scarce Confederate Newspaper, Reporting Sherman's March on Augusta, as well as the "Last Great Battle of the War"
[Civil War] Scarce Confederate Newspaper, Reporting Sherman's March on Augusta, as well as the "Last Great Battle of the War" The Camp Illuminator Bridgeport, (Alabama), Tuesday, March 7, 1865. Vol. I, No. 9. 8vo. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; a few short splits along horizontal folds; scattered toning and soiling. A scarce Confederate newspaper, printing reports in the waning days of the Civil War, including Sherman's march on Augusta. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 112A - [Civil War] Bound Volume of Over 70 Issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, October-December, 1864
[Civil War] Bound Volume of Over 70 Issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, October-December, 1864 Philadelphia, Saturday, October 1-December 31, 1864. Printed newspapers in five columns. Bound, non-consecutive run of The Philadelphia Inquirer, a daily paper, comprised of approximately over 70 issues. Covers perished, leather spine remnants, endpapers torn; issues generally worn, margins torn or chipped; many issues with sections torn or excised. An extensive bound volume of war-dated issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, providing contemporary commentary on major events of the Civil War and the Presidential Election of 1864. Notable issues feature headlines regarding President Lincoln's campaign and reelection, the Siege of Petersburg, Sherman's March to the Sea, the Battle of Nashville, the raids of Confederate Colonel John S. Mosby, the Siege of Fort Fisher, and much more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 113 - [Civil War] Field Press Printing of General Robert E. Lee's Farewell Address, April 10, 1865
[Civil War] Field Press Printing of General Robert E. Lee's Farewell Address, April 10, 1865 Head-Quarters, Army of Northern Virginia, April 10, 1865. Letterpress circular of General Orders No. 9, signed in type by Robert E. Lee. Creasing from old folds. 8 1/4 x 5 1/2 in. (209 x 140 mm). Following the surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865, Lee and his lieutenants retired to his tent, where they sat before a fire and discussed the day's events and Lee's own feelings towards his soldiers. It was decided that Lee would draft an address to be distributed to his troops thanking them for their service but acknowledging the Confederate cause was lost, the South defeated. According to Lee's aide-de-camp, Colonel Charles Marshall, Lee gave him the use of his ambulance in which to draft the letter, going so far as to place an armed guard before it in order to prevent any distraction on Marshall's part from the task at hand. Lee then read over the draft, made a few changes, and ordered that it be printed and distributed. While numerous copies were printed as broadsides and sold throughout the South following the war, original field copies are considered quite scarce. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 114 - [Colonial America] Rishworth, Edward. Group of 3 Autograph Legal Documents, signed
[Colonial America] Rishworth, Edward. Group of 3 Autograph Legal Documents, signed 1. Boston, May 12, 1670. Single sheet, 12 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (311 x 216 mm). One-page autograph document, signed by Edward Rishworth, being a petition to the General Court seeking a pardon for accepting a commission contrary to the law. Docketed on verso. Reinforced along edges on verso; creasing from old folds. Mounted along left edge with two below documents. 2. (Province of Maine), May 6, 1681. Single sheet, 5 1/2 x 7 in. (140 x 178 mm). Autograph document, signed twice by Rishworth as Recorder of Maine Province, being a sworn deposition by a Richard Hunnewell (1645-1703), regarding a land claim in relation to Ambrose Boaden's plantation. Creased from old folds; laid down on larger sheet. 3. Province of Maine, December 11, 1680. Two sheets, each 11 5/8 x 7 1/2 (295 x 190 mm). Three-page autograph document, signed by Rishworth as Recorder of the Province of Maine, being a copy of a libel suit brought by Collector and Surveyor of New England Edward Randolph (1632-1703) against Ely Nicoll, Master of a Barque. Creasing from old folds; repairs along edges; scattered spotting. Based primarily in Maine, then part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Edward Rishworth served in a variety of civic roles, including as a member of the Governor's Council and as a justice of the courts. He is perhaps best remembered for his involvement in documenting King William's War and the frontier conflicts between English settlers and French-allied Indigenous groups in northern New England. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 115 - [Colonial America] Rare First Edition of the Treaty of Whitehall, King James II's First Treaty and Among the Earliest Between England and France in Relation to America
[Colonial America] Rare First Edition of the Treaty of Whitehall, King James II's First Treaty and Among the Earliest Between England and France in Relation to America Treaty of Peace, Good Correspondence & Neutrality in America, Between the most Serene and Mighty Prince James II...And the most Serene and Mighty Prince Lewis XIV...Concluded the 6/16th Day of Novemb. 1686 (London), In the Savoy: Printed by Thomas Newcomb, 1686. First edition. 12mo. 19, (1) pp. Full tan calf, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, loss in lower spine with wear to front and rear joints; gilt edges; gilt dentelles; small repair at bottom of title-page; bottom corners of B2 and C2 repaired; scattered spotting. ESTC R477000; Sabin 96532 In this treaty, England and France pledged neutrality in North America, as well as renouncing illegal trade and fishing within the boundaries of each other's colonies, as well as the aiding of pirates and Native Americans. Despite this, the Treaty was short lived, as King Williams's War broke out in 1688 (the first of several North American conflicts between the two nations that would culminate in the French and Indian War), and King James II was shortly after deposed. According to RBH, this is only the second copy to come to auction since 1991. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 116 - [Colonial America] A London Newspaper with Front-Page Addresses from Plymouth Colony
[Colonial America] A London Newspaper with Front-Page Addresses from Plymouth Colony The London Gazette London: Thomas Newcomb, From Thursday June 14, to Monday June 18, 1688. Numb. 2356. Printed broadsheet newspaper. Light marginal chipping and soiling. "Nothing can be more valued by a People who on the mere account of Religion left their Native Land, and Transplanted themselves into a Desart..." With a front-page address from Plymouth Colony and several congregations in New England praising King James II, and reaffirming their loyalty and gratitude to him. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 117 - [Colonial America] Plymouth Colony Seeks a Royal Charter: A Rare and Important Plymouth Colony Document
[Colonial America] Plymouth Colony Seeks a Royal Charter: A Rare and Important Plymouth Colony Document Manuscript Document Plymouth, Massachusetts, March 3, 1690/91. Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (248 x 197 mm). Draft manuscript document, signed by Samuel Sprague, Secretary of Plymouth Colony, regarding negotiations on behalf of the Colony to obtain a separate, independent charter following the dissolution of the Dominion of New England in 1689. Creasing from old folds; small separations and holes along same. In 1689, after the collapse of the Dominion of New England and the arrest of Governor Edmund Andros, northeastern colonies struggled to re-establish ties with the English Crown. Plymouth Colony, who lacked a royal charter, sent Ichabod Wiswall to England, alongside Massachusetts's Increase Mather, to negotiate a new and distinct charter that would preserve its political separation from Massachusetts Bay. This manuscript, possibly an early draft, instructs Wiswall, Mather, and Sir Henry Ashurst to secure "Ancient Civill and Religious Liberties" for Plymouth. A deleted clause, that does not appear in the final document, demands orthodox religious preaching, and suggests an attempt to moderate the colony's Puritanical image. Ultimately, Plymouth did not receive a separate charter. Instead, the 1691 Charter of the Province of Massachusetts Bay merged the two colonies, preventing Plymouth's absorption into New York, but ending its political independence. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 118 - [Colonial America] Group of 7 Items Related to Colonial America, Queen Anne's War, The Crown Point Expedition, the French and Indian War, and more, ca. 1703-59
[Colonial America] Group of 7 Items Related to Colonial America, Queen Anne's War, The Crown Point Expedition, the French and Indian War, and more, ca. 1703-59 1. The Present State of Europe, or the Historical and Political Monthly Mercury... London: Printed for Henry Rhodes, and Elizabeth Harris, 1703. Vol. XIV. 12mo. (ii), 419-456. Disbound. Reporting news on the ongoing Queen Anne's War, including mention of Massachusetts-Bay and relations with the Native Americans of the region. 2. Acts and Laws, Passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of Her Majesties Province of Massachusetts-Bay...Held at Boston upon Wednesday the Thirty-first of May, 1704 (Boston: B. Green), 1704. Folio. pp. 263-266. Disbound; lightly worn and soiled. ESTC W8052; Evans 1167 With two acts related to Queen Anne's War, including an "Act in further Addition to the Act for Levying Souldiers" and "An Act directing, That the Militia of the Frontiers be provided with Snow Shoes". 3. The Post Boy, With the Freshest Advices, Foreign and Domestick London: Printed for B. Beardwell, May 27-29, 1707. Numb. 1878. Printed broadsheet newspaper. Scattered soiling. Reporting news on the ongoing Queen Anne's War. 4. The Kentish Post: or Canterbury News-Letter Canterbury: Printed and Sold by J. Abree, June 10-14, 1727. Numb. 945. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Tax stamp in bottom right corner of front-page. Disbound; separating along central vertical fold. With a report on the last page on the death of Samuel Mills (abt. 1632-1727) of Jamaica, Long Island, aged 95 years. 5. Unaccomplished Printed Massachusetts-Bay Indenture Massachusetts-Bay, no date (after 1720). Printed unaccomplished indenture, "for the Purchasing Houses, and Lands for the Perpetuating the Charity of the Honourable Edwad (sic) Hopkins..." Folio. Two sheets. Disbound, light spotting. 6. Manuscript Receipt Province New Hampshire, no date (ca. 1756 or after). Single oblong sheet, 3 x 3 5/8 in. (76 x 92 mm). Manuscript receipt, for £111, "Rec'd of the province for my service in the Expedition against Crown pointe." Creased from old folds. In frame. The Crown Point Expedition was a failed 1756 English siege of the French stronghold of Fort Saint-Frédéric on Lake Champlain during the French and Indian War. 7. A View of Niagara Fort, taken by Sir William Johnson, on the 25th of July 1759. Drawn on the Spot in 1758. (London), September 1759. Engraving. Excised from the Royal Magazine. View of the highly strategic fort at the juncture of Lake Ontario and the Niagara River, taken by the British during the French and Indian War on July 25, 1759 under the leadership of William Johnson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 119 - [Colonial America] Church, Benjamin. A Rare Autograph Document, Signed by Benjamin Church, America's First Ranger
[Colonial America] Church, Benjamin. A Rare Autograph Document, Signed by Benjamin Church, America's First Ranger (Likely Little Compton, Rhode Island), October 17, 1709. Single sheet, 5 7/8 x 3 5/8 in. (149 x 92 mm). Autograph document in 18 lines, signed by Benjamin Church, reads in part: "Hanna Woodary on herself apprd this 17 day of October 1709...that Jonathan...hisself a Jun. was the father of afsd child that she is now...with and that it was begot sum time in the beginning of February last past and that he had to...with her at that time and no other...on oth. as aforesaid before me Benjamin Church Just."; ten-line autograph fragment in Church's hand on verso and crossed out. Creasing from old folds, separations along same; wear along edges; soiling to recto and verso. Benjamin Church (1639–1718), recognized as America's first ranger, was born in Plymouth Colony. He became an early settler of present-day Little Compton, Rhode Island, where he established friendly ties with the local Sakonnet tribe. During King Philip's War (1675-78), Church commanded a force of English colonists and Native American allies against Sachem Metacom (known to the English as King Philip) and his warriors, who were devastating frontier settlements in New England. Breaking from traditional European tactics, Church adopted indigenous strategies to create a small, highly mobile unit composed of both English and Native soldiers. This mixed force specialized in targeting enemy leadership. In a decisive surprise attack, Church's men cornered Metacom, leading to the Sachem's death and effectively ending the war. Church's military service continued after the conflict, as he fought for the English in both King William's War and Queen Anne's War. He dedicated himself to training soldiers in the "ranger" style of warfare he had learned from Native tribes, cementing his legacy as one of the most influential military leaders of the colonial era. His innovative tactics were later refined by Ranger Robert Rogers during the French and Indian War and remained a component of American military strategy during the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 120 - [Colonial America] [Hunter, Robert] A Scarce Summary of Legal Fees Present in the Colonies of New York and New Jersey, from the Press of the First Printer of New York
[Colonial America] [Hunter, Robert] A Scarce Summary of Legal Fees Present in the Colonies of New York and New Jersey, from the Press of the First Printer of New York An Ordinance For Regulating & Establishing Fees (New York: William Bradford), 1710. First edition. 4to. 20 pp. Disbound. Signed in type by colonial governor R(obert). Hunter. Scattered toning; some wear to extremities; final leaf loose. ESTC W42635; Evans 1482 William Bradford (1663-1752) began his printing career in London before emigrating to the colonies in 1685, where he established the first printing press in Pennsylvania that year and the first in New York eight years later. A prolific printer of almanacs, newspapers, books, pamphlets, broadsides, and legal notices, in 1689 Bradford was hired to print William Penn's first charter of Pennsylvania, an incident which resulted in official reprimand from Governor John Blackwell. A year later Bradford partnered with German paper maker William Rittenhouse to establish the first paper mill in North America. For nearly two decades, Bradford's was the only operating paper mill in the country. In 1709, he printed the very first example of paper currency for the province of New York. Bradford's grandson, also named William, was a well-known printer and soldier during the Revolutionary period. In December 1742 he established The Pennsylvania Journal, later famous for featuring numerous essays and letters by Thomas Paine. In 1774 he was named the official printer for the first Continental Congress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 121 - [Colonial America] One of the Earliest Works Printed in Connecticut: "Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England"
[Colonial America] One of the Earliest Works Printed in Connecticut: "Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England" Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England New-London: Re-printed and Sold by Timothy Green, 1715-ca. 1743. Mixed edition. 4to. (xii, "The Table"), (ii), 376 pp. Full modern brown calf, red and black leather spine labels, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; scattered spotting, toning, and soiling. A large and consecutive run of early colonial Connecticut laws. The 1715 imprint is very rare, and is among the earliest printed works in Connecticut. According to RBH, this is only the third copy of early colonial laws, with the 1715 imprint, to come to auction in the past 30-plus years. Comprising: Table: ESTC W28023 (variant); 1715, first edition: ESTC W35238, Evans 1738 (without table of contents or Charter); 1716, first edition: ESTC W7110, Evans 1808; 1716, first edition: ESTC W7112, Evans 1809; 1717, first edition: ESTC W7113, Evans 1876; 1717: ESTC W7122, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1718: ESTC W7124, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1718, first edition: ESTC W7141, Evans 1951; 1719: ESTC W7125, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1719, first edition: ESTC W7118, Evans 2021; 1720, first edition: ESTC W7142, Evans 2107; 1720: ESTC W7128, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1727-33); 1721: ESTC W7130, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1721: ESTC W7131, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1722: ESTC W7132, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1722: ESTC W7133, Not in Evans (presumed reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1723, first edition: W7146, Evans 2423; 1723, first edition: ESTC W7147, Evans 2424; 1724: ESTC W7137, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1728-33); 1724, first edition: ESTC W7121, Evans 2516; 1725, first edition: ESTC W7150, Evans 2621; 1725, first edition: Evans 2622, Not in ESTC; 1726, first edition: Evans 2738, Not in ESTC; 1726, first edition: Evans 2739, Not in ESTC; 1727, first edition: Evans 2856, Not in ESTC; 1727, first edition: ESTC W7154, Evans 2857; 1728, first edition: Evans 3012, Not in ESTC; 1728, first edition: ESTC W7156, Evans 3013; 1729, first edition: ESTC W7157, Evans 3150; ESTC W7271, Evans 3151; 1730, first edition: Evans 3264, Not in ESTC. Trumbull 503 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 122 - [Colonial America] An Important Work of Connecticut History, Printed by the Pioneering Colonial Printer Timothy Green
[Colonial America] An Important Work of Connecticut History, Printed by the Pioneering Colonial Printer Timothy Green The Charter Granted by his Majes(ty) King Charles (II.) To the Governour & Company of the English Colony of Connecticut in New-England... New-London: Printed and Sold by Timothy Green, 1718. First edition. 4to. (ii), 6 pp. Full modern brown calf, red and black leather spine labels, stamped in gilt; portions in upper right of title-page excised, touching some letters, edges of same with scattered wear; light wear along text leave edges. Evans 1952; ESTC W3774; Sabin 15726; Streeter Sale 669; Trumbull 453 An important work of Connecticut history, printed by the pioneering colonial printer Timothy Green. Green was the son of Samuel Green, one of the earliest printers in British North America, who operated the former press of his father at Harvard's Indian College--the first printing press established in what would become the United States devoted in part to indigenous-language printing. In 1713, Timothy Green was appointed official printer to the Colony of Connecticut and relocated the family press to New London, where he became responsible for printing many of the colony's laws, proclamations, sermons, and foundational historical texts. Very rare, according to RBH only two other copies of this first edition have come to auction since 1915 (one bound in session laws, in 2015, and the Streeter-Reese copy, in 2022 and 1967). ESTC records only 11 copies (some bound with session laws). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 123 - [Colonial America] Colonial Massachusetts Document Related to a Case of Fornication, Levied Against an Unmarried Woman Named Elizabeth Wilcox
[Colonial America] Colonial Massachusetts Document Related to a Case of Fornication, Levied Against an Unmarried Woman Named Elizabeth Wilcox Partially-Printed Document, signed Dartmouth, August 5, 1729. One sheet, 12 1/2 x 8 in. (317 x 203 mm). Partially-printed document, signed by Bristol County Justice of the Peace Silvester Richmond, being a writ of recognizance, certifying the release of Elizabeth Wilcox, who "Confessed that she is Guilty of fornication & she was begott with Child by Ebenezer Briggs of Dartmouth..." Creasing from old folds; scattered toning and stains. Fornication, or the act of nonmarital sex, was enacted as a crime in Massachusetts in 1692, at the beginning of the Salem Witch Trials. Throughout much of the 18th century, the law was prosecuted almost exclusively against women, indictments for men hardly ever being charged. Punishments could include fines, flogging, and even public shame by being sentenced to the pillory. The criminal charge of fornication was officially repealed by the Governor of Massachusetts in 2018, although a conviction of it had not occurred since the mid-twentieth century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 124 - [Colonial America]
The King of England Declares War Against Spain, Igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear
[Colonial America] The King of England Declares War Against Spain, Igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear His Majesty's Declaration of War against the King of Spain London: Printed by John Baskett, 1739. Printed broadside, 20 1/2 x 16 1/2 in. (521 x 419 mm). Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, 4 1/4 in. closed tear along lower central vertical fold; small worming in each corner from when folded; scattered minor edge-wear. ESTC T36245 The King of England declares war against Spain, igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear. Rooted in trade disputes and colonial ambitions in the Caribbean and North America, George II cites the "unjust Seizures...and Depredations carried on for several Years in the West Indies" by Spanish vessels, and provides an extensive and detailed list of the grievances that led to his commencement of hostilities. The War of Jenkins' Ear began in October 1739 and eventually merged with the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48, known as King George's War in North America). It received its name after an incident involving English smuggler Robert Jenkins, who alleged in 1738 before the House of Commons that marauding Spaniards had cut off his ear in 1731 off the coast of Florida (according to some accounts he brought the preserved ear along with him for display). The altercation was used as propaganda by those opposed to Prime Minister Robert Walpole's government, and helped fan the flames of public anger over Spanish actions and pushed the nation into conflict. Although the English saw initial success, including Admiral Edward Vernon's capture of Puerto Bello, subsequent campaigns, including the 1741 attempt to take Cartagena were met with disaster. Minor skirmishes were met throughout the region, including in North America, such as James Edward Oglethorpe's failed siege at St. Augustine in 1740, and the Spanish's failed attack on Georgia in 1742. With the merger into the larger War of Austrian Succession, the conflict shifted attention toward Europe, and ended with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748. Rare. RBH locates only one other copy at auction, in 2011. ESTC locates nine copies, including only three in the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 125 - [Colonial America] An Andrew Bradford-Printed Power of Attorney, for a Suit Against William Bladwell, Commander of the Swift, a Man of War Stationed in North Carolina
[Colonial America] An Andrew Bradford-Printed Power of Attorney, for a Suit Against William Bladwell, Commander of the Swift, a Man of War Stationed in North Carolina Partially-Printed Document Philadelphia: Andrew Bradford, June 5, 1742. Single sheet, 12 1/2 x 7 3/4 in. (317 x 197 mm). Partially-printed document, accomplished in manuscript, and signed by mariner Robert Georges of Philadelphia, being a power of attorney granting John Shewbart authority to collect money, etc. from a William Bladwell, commander of the man of war Swift, in North Carolina. Chipped with losses near the upper corner margin, not affecting text, tiny chip to the lower margin, just below the imprint, and a horizontal crease at the center. Andrew Bradford was the son of William Bradford, the first printer in Pennsylvania. After his father resettled in New York in 1692, Andrew returned to Philadelphia in 1712 and opened his own print shop, likely making him the only printer in the Pennsylvania colony until competition emerged in 1728. Andrew issued the first newspaper in Pennsylvania and the Middle Colonies, the American Weekly Mercury, which began on December 22, 1719. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 126 - [Colonial America]
Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania Province, James Hamilton, Grants Clemency to a Butter Thief, 1761
[Colonial America] Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania Province, James Hamilton, Grants Clemency to a Butter Thief, 1761 Manuscript Document, signed Easton, Pennsylvania, March 19, 1761. Bifolium, 12 3/8 x 7 5/8 in. (314 x 194 mm). Manuscript document, being a petition for clemency for a Peter Wannamacker of Northampton County, signed by Wannamacker with his mark ("X"), as well as four justices of the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace of Northampton (Lewis Klotz, Jacob Arndt, Aaron Dupui, and Conrad Hess); inscribed, signed, and dated (April 3, 1761) at bottom by Lieutenant Governor of the Province of Pennsylvania, James Hamilton, granting Wannamacker clemency. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, two small open tears at center folds; scattered light soiling. Peter Wannamaker was found guilty on March 17, 1761 of stealing 40 pounds of butter belonging to Jacob Haak, and was sentenced to receive 12 lashes and to restore the stolen butter or compensate the owner for the value thereof. A petition was drawn up by Wannamaker's family (not present), attesting to his character, which was submitted to the Northampton Justices of the Peace, and then sent to Lieutenant Governor of the Province, James Hamilton, which he approved. James Hamilton (1710-83) served two terms as deputy governor of Pennsylvania, from 1748-54, and from 1759-63. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly from 1735-40, and as mayor of Philadelphia from 1745-47. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 127 - [Colonial America] Manuscript Pay Order for Transporting a Transient Woman to New London, Connecticut
[Colonial America] Manuscript Pay Order for Transporting a Transient Woman to New London, Connecticut Killingworth, Connecticut, March 3, 1765. Single oblong sheet, 2 3/4 x 8 1/4 in. (70 x 209 mm). Manuscript pay order, signed by Justice of the Peace Elnathan Stevens, requesting Connecticut Treasurer Joseph Talcott pay Killingworth Constable Nathan Griswold 11 shilling and two pence for "Transporting a Trancient (sic) woman calld. Marcy Siskil last February Sent here by a Ebz. Hill of Gilford (sic) in order to be sent to New London & by order of yr. subscribers to yr next Constable at Saybrook..." Docketed on verso, signed on same by John Pierson. Creasing from old folds. A "transient woman" is an archaic term which was particularly common during the 18th and 19th centuries; it generally refers to women suspected or convicted of prostitution. In colonial America prostitution was relatively rare, as its practice was usually confined to port cities. Philadelphia in particular was notorious for prostitution in its "Hell Town" district, today considered to be America's first red-light district. During this period it was common for authorities in smaller communities to simply transport women suspected of prostitution to other towns, being of the mind that prosecuting them in a smaller town would be a waste of local resources. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 128 - [Colonial Americana] Partially-Printed Invitation From the First Governor of the Leeward Islands, West Indies, to a Philadelphia Quaker
[Colonial Americana] Partially-Printed Invitation From the First Governor of the Leeward Islands, West Indies, to a Philadelphia Quaker Partially-Printed Invitation Philadelphia, ca. 1760s-70s. Oblong card, given to Mr. Pattison Hartshorne of Philadelphia, likely during an official visit from Woodley. Manuscript notations on verso. 2 1/2 x 3 11/16 in. (63 x 94 mm). Toned. William Woodley (1728-1793) was appointed Governor of the Leeward Islands in the West Indies, and first served in that role from 1766 to 1771, then again from 1791 until his death. His office covered a wide range of governance issues. His formal instructions of 1767 addressed matters including the council, legislation, trade, finance, currency, customs, religion, fortification, piracy, and the administration of justice across St. Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, Antigua, Barbuda, and Anguilla. Pattinson Hartshorne (1745-1828) was a Philadelphia Quaker merchant, son of Hugh and Hannah Hartshorne, and husband of Susannah Waln. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 129 - [Colonial America] Allen, Andrew. Autograph Legal Document Related to a Money Counterfeiter
[Colonial America] Allen, Andrew. Autograph Legal Document Related to a Money Counterfeiter Northampton County, Pennsylvania, July 11, 1770. Single sheet, approximately 9 1/4 x 8 1/4 in. (235 x 209 mm) (sight). Manuscript legal document, in the hand of Provincial Attorney General Andrew Allen, being an indictment against Salisbury Township yeoman Jacob Johe, for "contriving and fraudulently
Lot: 130 - [Comics] A Payment Receipt for American Comic Book Writer Jerry Siegel for the Creation of Three Issues of Superman
[Comics] A Payment Receipt for American Comic Book Writer Jerry Siegel for the Creation of Three Issues of Superman Partially-Printed Payment Receipt No place, May 1941. Single oblong sheet, 4 7/8 x 7 1/4 in. (124 x 184 mm). Partially-printed receipt ("Payments to Artists") for Jerry Siegel for three issues of the Superman comic book, accomplished in pencil and pen: "Superman (Defense) / Superman (Archer) / Superman (Light)", each listed in manuscript as 13 pp.; price column left blank. Residue from now removed paperclip at top. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman in the early 1930s while still high school students in Cleveland, Ohio. Influenced by pulp science fiction, newspaper adventure strips, and the hardships of the Great Depression, the pair conceived Superman as a heroic champion of the oppressed endowed with extraordinary strength and moral clarity. After years of rejection, the character made his first appearance in Action Comics No. 1 in June 1938, marking the beginning of the modern superhero genre and the rise of the American comic book industry. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 131 - [Constitution] Printing of the Proposed Constitution in the Journals of Congress, Uncut and in Original Boards, 1787
[Constitution] Printing of the Proposed Constitution in the Journals of Congress, Uncut and in Original Boards, 1787 (Journal of the United States in Congress Assembled: Containing the Proceedings From the Sixth Day of November, 1786, to the Fifth Day of November, 1787...Published by Order of Congress) (New-York, 1787). Vol. XII. First edition. 8vo. (3)-255, (1), (9) pp.; lacking title-page. Original paper-covered boards, rebacked, contemporary manuscript on lower front board; all edges untrimmed; text unopened; light spotting to text. Evans 20772 Containing the printing of the proposed Constitution, on pp. 149-163, followed by the Constitutional Convention's resolutions and George Washington's letter to Congress, as well as Congress's resolutions submitting the proposed charter to the states (pp. 163-166). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 132 - [Constitution] Full-Printing of the United States Constitution in Isaiah Thomas' Almanack, 1787
[Constitution] Full-Printing of the United States Constitution in Isaiah Thomas' Almanack, 1787 Thomas's Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode-Island, New-Hampshire & Vermont Almanack, With an Ephemeris, for the Year of Our Lord 1788... Worcester, (Massachusetts): Isaiah Thomas, (1787). 12mo. Unpaginated (24 leaves). Stab-sewn gatherings; thread likely sometime renewed. Dampstaining; scattered chipping and short closed tears along edges. Drake 3400 Includes a full, five-page, printing of the Constitution, headed, ''Proceedings of the Federal Convention", as well as George Washington's transmittal letter to Congress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 133 - [Constitution]
Rare First Edition of this Pamphlet Published in Support of the Constitution's Ratification, Containing One of the Earliest Printings of the Proposed Federal Charter
[Constitution] Rare First Edition of this Pamphlet Published in Support of the Constitution's Ratification, Containing One of the Earliest Printings of the Proposed Federal Charter Debates of the Convention, of the State of Pennsylvania, on the Constitution, Proposed for the Government of the United States...Taken accurately in Short-Hand, by Thomas Lloyd Philadelphia: Printed by Joseph
Lot: 134 - [Constitution] [Hamilton, Alexander] Very Rare First Edition of the Debates of the New York Ratifying Convention, Featuring the First Appearance of Alexander Hamilton's Speeches in Favor of the Adoption of the United States Constitution
[Constitution] [Hamilton, Alexander] Very Rare First Edition of the Debates of the New York Ratifying Convention, Featuring the First Appearance of Alexander Hamilton's Speeches in Favor of the Adoption of the United States Constitution The Debates and Proceedings of the Convention of the State of New-York, Assembled at Poughkeepsie, on the 17th June, 1788. To deliberate and decide on the Form of Federal Government recommended by the General Convention at Philadelphia, on the 17th September, 1787... New-York: Printed and Sold by Francis Childs, 1788. First edition. 12mo. (ii), 144 pp. Full modern buckram, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt; speckled edges; two ink stamps of the Library of the New York Law Institute on title-page, same ink stamp on pp. (i) and recto of rear blank; ownership inscription of Gardiner Baker on title-page ("Gardiner Baker Museum March 27th 1795"); contemporary manuscript corrections and notations, on pp. 115, 143, and 144; sheets toned; scattered foxing and dampstaining. Evans 21310; ESTC W4576; Ford 129; Sabin 53634; Streeter Sale 1054 Based on short-hand notes taken by the printer and publisher, Francis Childs. Despite being outnumbered 47-20, the Federalist faction of the New York convention, led by Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, managed through impressive oratorical skill to overcome the arguments of their Anti-Federalist colleagues, and win favor of the charter in the closest margin of any state, 30-27. Very rare to auction, this is only the fourth copy offered since the Streeter Sale in 1967. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 135 - [Constitution] A Scarce and Early English Printing of the United States Constitution in The New Annual Register, 1788
[Constitution] A Scarce and Early English Printing of the United States Constitution in The New Annual Register, 1788 London: Printed for G.G. J. and J. Robinson, 1788. Three parts in one volume. First edition. 8vo. (ii), ii, (iv), xxviii, 184, 159, (1), 299 pp. Full contemporary tree calf, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, joints worn, extremities rubbed, loss at head of spine; scattered minor spotting. ESTC N20035 A scarce and early English printing of the United States Constitution, on pp. 99-109. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 136 - [Crime & Punishment] Group of 3 CDVs of a Murderer, His Victim, and the Detective who Brought Him to Justice
[Crime & Punishment] Group of 3 CDVs of a Murderer, His Victim, and the Detective who Brought Him to Justice Lisbon, New Hampshire: W.B. Gleason, ca. 1867. Group of three cartes de visite, of George Maxwell, Samuel Mills, and Moses Sargent; each with printed captions (Maxwell on recto, Mills and Sargent on verso). Scattered soiling. A group of three cartes de visite showing murder victim George Maxwell, his murderer Samuel Mills, and the detective that brought him to justice, Moses Sargent. Samuel Mills murdered George Maxwell in Maxwell's Franconia, New Hampshire home the night of December 8, 1866, purportedly after attempting to seek shelter. Mills then stole Maxwell's horse, and fled first to Montreal and then elsewhere in Canada. New Hampshire authorities hired Boston private detective Moses Sargent to track down the assailant, who traced him to Canada and then proceeded to trail him through the provinces. Eventually, on January 20, 1867, Sargent arrested Mills in Galena, Illinois and returned him to New Hampshire where he stood trial. In April of 1867 he was found guilty of murder in Haverhill, and sentenced to death. On May 6, 1868, in the last public hanging in New Hampshire, Mills was executed before a crowd of thousands. His last words were "Samuel Mills is guilty of this crime, and I have made my peace with God..." Following mounting criticism of the public practice of execution, within a year the New Hampshire legislature passed a law mandating that they be carried out only within prison walls, resulting in Mills being the last convicted felon in the state to be publicly executed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 137 - [Crime & Punishment] Group of 17 Items Related to Crime and Punishment
[Crime & Punishment] Group of 17 Items Related to Crime and Punishment Locations and dates vary. Comprising 11 press photographs and six publications, etc., relating to famous crimes and murderers, etc. Images include an 1895 lynching of four men in Yreka, California; a 1936 hanging in Kentucky; murderers and criminals, such as Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Charles Manson, Susan "Sexy" Sadie, and more. Publications including two issues of The Illustrated American, with descriptions of the Lizzie Borden murder trial; The Sham-Robbery Committed by Elijah Putnam Goodridge (Concord, New Hampshire, 1819; 12mo); an issue of The Days Doings, with a description of the trial of Edward S. Stokes; an issue of The Post Enquirer (Oakland, November 27, 1933), reporting on the lynching of two men; one printed pass to witness an execution (New Mexico, June 6, 1916). Condition varies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 138 - [Crockett, Davy] The First American Comic Book: Group of 2 Items Related to Davy Crockett, Including Likely the First Mention of Him in an American Magazine
[Crockett, Davy] The First American Comic Book: Group of 2 Items Related to Davy Crockett, Including Likely the First Mention of Him in an American Magazine Galaxy of Comicalities Philadelphia: Printed by Lesher & Shelly, Wednesday, November 27, 1833. Vol. 1, No. 9. 8vo. pp. (65)-72. Disbound; spine repaired; scattered soiling. Likely the first mention of Davy Crockett in an American magazine, featuring a review of, and an excerpt from, Sketches and eccentricities of Col. David Crockett, of the West Tennessee--an unauthorized biography of Crockett, whose authorship has not been definitively determined, and from which some of the frontiersman's lasting legends originated. The Galaxy of Comicalities was published in Philadelphia from 1833-34. Each issue profusely illustrated with woodcuts, it is considered to be the first American comic book. The present issue Together with: The Albany Journal New York: Hoffman & White, Friday, May 2, 1834. Volume IV, Number 428. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Edited by Thurlow Weed. Creasing from old folds, some separations and open tears along same; scattered foxing.. Old ownership signature in right margin of front-page. Printed on the second page is an excerpt from a speech given by Crockett at the Philadelphia Exchange, on May 1, 1834, criticizing President Andrew Jackson and his administration: "seven months ago this was the most flourishing country in the world. Look at it now; and what do you see? You behold your commerce suspended; your laborers wandering about for employment; your mechanics starving; and above all, you see the best currency in the world deranged!...what is all this for? To gratify the will of a superannuated old man!! A man whose popularity, like the lightning of heaven, blasts and withers all that comes within its influence. His leading object, in all the mischief he has done, has been to destroy the best monied institution on earth..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 139 - [Curiosa] Group of 6 Items Related to Magic, Circuses, Minstrels, and Sideshows
[Curiosa] Group of 6 Items Related to Magic, Circuses, Minstrels, and Sideshows 1. Printed Broadside for Christy's Minstrel Show Philadelphia: U.S. Job Print, 1860. Tall printed broadside, for the "First Night of the Brief Season of Geo. Christy's Minstrels. Under the Immediate Personal Supervision of George Christy! ... Mammoth Company! ..." Creasing from old folds, largely separated along central horizontal fold, smaller separations along other folds; toned; faint dampstaining along edges; open tear in lower bottom left. 23 5/8 x 9 1/2 in. (600 x 241 mm). 2. Harper's Weekly. A Journal of Civilization New York, Saturday, February 21, 1863. Vol. VII, No. 321. Folio. pp. (113)-128. Disbound; Scattered toning and spotting. With an engraved portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) and his wife on the front page, after the photograph by Mathew Brady, and with an article about them on the second page. General Tom Thumb (1838-83) was an American showman with dwarfism and the first major attraction promoted by P.T. Barnum. 3. Carte de visite of Millie-Crissie, the Two-Headed Girl St. Louis, Missouri: J.H. Fitzgibbon, (ca. 1870). Carte de visite on captioned mount, 4 x 2 1/2 in. (102 x 63 mm). Spotting and soiling along mount edges. Millie and Christine were born in Whiteville, North Carolina on July 11, 1851, to Jacob and Monemia McKoy, who were enslaved to Jabez McKay. Various enslavers and managers exhibited the twins nationally and internationally, and in 1870, the sisters traveled and performed throughout the Midwest. 4. Tall Printed Broadside for the 5th Annual Tour of B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show No place, ca. 1877. Tall printed broadside for B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show, 28 x 7 in. (711 x 178 mm). With a wood engraved portrait of Bamber at top and of Hermes at center. Old fold at center; 2 3/4 in. closed tear in upper left edge. Tall printed broadside for the 5th Annual Tour of B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show, featuring exhibitions on "Grand Stereoptical Dissolving Views", including "scenes in Many Lands From Greenland's Icy Mount, to India's Coral Strand", as well "The Planetarium," "Natural Scenery," "The Ill-Fated Ship," "The Highland Lover's Courtship for Marriage", etc. 5. Printed Broadside for a Magic Show Minneapolis, Minnesota: Sutherland Opera House, July 1911. Printed broadside, 13 x 5 3/4 in. (330 x 146 mm). Mounted to card, and in mat. Advertising the magic show for "The Peerless Magician" Warrington Jones, and F. Littlefield Cobb. 6. Printed Handbill for a Harry Kellar Magic Show Madison, Wisconsin: Fuller Opera House, January 24, (1902). Printed handbill program, 8 5/8 x 4 1/4 in. (219 x 108 mm). Toned. Printed program for famed globe-trotting American magician Harry Kellar's (1849-1922) January 24, 1902 magic show at the Fuller Opera House in Madison, Wisconsin. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 140 - [Curiosa] Indian Medicine Show Co. "Come, Laugh With Us" Poster
[Curiosa] Indian Medicine Show Co. "Come, Laugh With Us" Poster Cincinnati, Ohio: Russell-Morgan Print, The U.S. Printing Co., (ca. late 1890s-early 1900s). Color lithographed poster; comprised of two conjoined sheets. Unevenly toned; wear and losses along edges; top edges worn; repaired horizontal separation traversing upper edge, other repairs at same; creasing from old folds. A rare example of this poster advertising a traveling Indian Medicine Show. We cannot locate another example of this fragile survival. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 141 - [Cycling] A Photo-Finish: Possibly the Earliest Extant American Photo Finish Race Image and Among the Earliest Action Sport Photos
[Cycling] A Photo-Finish: Possibly the Earliest Extant American Photo Finish Race Image and Among the Earliest Action Sport Photos Rowe on Columbia Racer Defeating Temple Hartford, Connecticut: F.O. Tucker, 1888. Albumen print, mounted to captioned card, "Finish of One Mile Professional America's Championship Race, Hartford, Sep. 13, 1888. Instantaneous Photograph / Rowe on Columbia Racer
Lot: 142 - [Declaration of Independence] The Important and Increasingly Rare Robert Aitken Issue of the Journals of Congress for the Pivotal Year of 1776, Containing an Early and Complete Printing of the Declaration of Independence, 1777
[Declaration of Independence] The Important and Increasingly Rare Robert Aitken Issue of the Journals of Congress for the Pivotal Year of 1776, Containing an Early and Complete Printing of the Declaration of Independence, 1777 Journals of Congress. Containing the Proceedings In the Year, 1776 Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by R. Aitken, 1777. Volume II. First edition, first issue. 8vo. (ii),
Lot: 143 - [Declaration of Independence] Pratt, Luther. Connecticut Republican Magazine. Number 1, Volume 1, 1802
[Declaration of Independence] Pratt, Luther. Connecticut Republican Magazine. Number 1, Volume 1, 1802 Suffield,(Connecticut), 1802. 8vo. Original printed wrappers, soiled and worn; uncut; foxing and soiling. Includes a printing of the Declaration of Independence. Rare: We trace only two copies that have appeared at auction in the past century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 144 - [Declaration of Independence] The First Scottish Printing of the Declaration of Independence
[Declaration of Independence] The First Scottish Printing of the Declaration of Independence The Edinburgh Advertiser Edinburgh: Printed by and for James Donaldson, From Friday August 16, to Tuesday August 20, 1776. Vol. XXVI, No. 1319. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (113)-120. Disbound. Not in Matyas "General Howe having in his last dispatches mentioned that the Continental Congress had declared the united colonies free and independent states, the following is a copy of the declaration by the representatives of the united states of America, in General Congress assembled, July 4. When in the course of human events..." The first printing of the Declaration of Independence in Scotland, fully printed on pp. 116-117, six weeks after its adoption by the American Congress. On August 10, news of the Declaration of Independence reached London, and was first printed in newspapers there by August 16. From there, news traveled north, with the present printing believed to be the first in Scotland, which was then closely followed by printings in The Caledonian Mercury and in The Scots Magazine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 145 - [Declaration of Independence] Rare Issue of the Pennsylvania Evening Post Reporting the Second Reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York City
[Declaration of Independence] Rare Issue of the Pennsylvania Evening Post Reporting the Second Reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York City The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Printed by Benjamin Towne, July 23, 1776. Vol. II, Num. 235, Folio. 4 pp. Printed newspaper in two columns. Disbound. Featuring a report on the second reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York: In full: "Thursday last the Declaration of the Independancy of the United States of America was published at the Courthouse; where a number of people, true friends to the rights and liberties of this country, attended, and signified their approbation to it by loud acclamations. After which the coat of arms of his Majesty George the III. was torn to pieces and burnt in the presence of spectators..." Scattered foxing and pencil marginalia. Lot also includes an 8 1/2 x 5 in. (216 x 127 mm) engraved portrait of John Hancock. By order of General George Washington, the Declaration was first read publicly in New York on July 9, 1776. The ensuing fervor of soldiers and civilians lead to the destruction of an equestrian statue of George III on Bowling Green. On July 18, following a resolution passed by the New York City Committee, the Declaration was read again on the steps of City Hall. After being met with thunderous applause, spectators from the crowd removed the King's coat of arms from the legislative chamber, and burnt it in celebration. An ensuing mob scoured the city destroying similar insignias of Royal authority. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 146 - [Declaration of Independence] One of the Earliest Printed Announcements of American Independence, in the Exceedingly Rare Original Wrappers, 1776
[Declaration of Independence] One of the Earliest Printed Announcements of American Independence, in the Exceedingly Rare Original Wrappers, 1776 The Pennsylvania Magazine: Or, American Monthly Museum for June 1776 Philadelphia: Printed by R. Aitken, 1776. Number VI, Volume II. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 253-296 pp. Manuscript on front wrapper ("Mr Ebenezer Hazard / N.C. Co."). Edited by Thomas Paine. Illustrated with one folding map. Original limp printed wrappers, original thread intact, rear wrapper detached, front wrapper nearly detached, scattered foxing, wear along edges; all edges untrimmed; sheets moderately toned; wear along edges. Sabin 60346 Among the earliest of any type of publication to announce American independence. Although dated June 1776, the monthly issues were traditionally published the first Wednesday of the following month, which would have been on July 3. Due to a temporary paper shortage ("Our customers will excuse us, though the day of publication be sometimes delayed: The great difficulty we have procuring printing paper, renders it impossible for us to publish always on the first Wednesday of the month.", as printed in the apologia within), the printing was delayed until no later than July 4 or 5, allowing enough time to add at the end of the "Monthly Intelligence" section the important Congressional announcement, that on, "July 2. This day the Hon. Continental Congress declared the UNITED COLONIES FREE AND INDEPENDENT STATES." In the column immediately preceding the above news, the text of Pennsylvania’s own declaration of independence reads, in part: “Whereas George the Third... in violation of the principles of the British constitution, and of the laws of justice and humanity... We the DEPUTIES of the people of Pennsylvania, assembled in FULL Provisional Conference for forming a plan for the executing the resolve of Congress of the 15th of May last, for suppressing all authority in this province derived from the crown of Great-Britain, and for establishing a government upon the authority of the people only, DO in this public manner... UNANIMOUSLY declare our willingness to concur in a vote of the Congress declaring the United Colonies free and independent STATES....” This periodical is preceded by four other printed announcements: Pennsylvania Evening Post, July 2; Die Germantowner Zeitung, July 3; Pennsylvania Journal, July 3; Pennsylvania Gazette, July 3. Rare to auction, especially in the original wrappers. According to RBH, only three other copies have come to auction since the Laird Park sale in 2000. Lot includes an engraved portrait of John Hancock, and engraved print of the Declaration after John Trumbull. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 147 - [Early American Museum] A Very Early Philadelphia Museum Trade Card for Bowen's Exhibition of Wax-Work and Paintings
[Early American Museum] A Very Early Philadelphia Museum Trade Card for Bowen's Exhibition of Wax-Work and Paintings Philadelphia, ca. 1792-93. Printed card, 2 1/2 x 3 3/4 in. (63 x 95 mm). Ornamental letterpress border (Reilly 585, 652, and 784). Two-inch vertical closed tear in top right side; scattered wear along edges; toned and spotted. A very early museum promotional card, advertising pioneering American museum proprietor and showman Daniel Bowen's (1760-1856) Philadelphia exhibition of wax-works and paintings. Born in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Bowen served in the Revolutionary War under Captain Silas Talbot, and was captured by the British while serving aboard the privateer General Washington. After his release and the conclusion of the war, Bowen was inspired by the pioneering waxworks of Patience Wright, and began a career as a museum proprietor, showman, and artist. He acquired the Wright family's collection of figures and began touring the Atlantic coast in the late 1780s, exhibiting wax figures of prominent Americans and allegorical scenes. In the fall of 1792, Bowen opened a museum at No. 9 Eighth Street in Philadelphia, located in the former home of English painter Robert Edge Pine. A friend of fellow Philadelphia museum owner Charles Willson Peale, Bowen's establishment advertised over 100 paintings (many by Pine) and 30 wax figures depicting "principal characters in America," including George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and John Hancock. He also sold his own sculpted wax likenesses of President Washington. Contemporary newspapers indicate that this Philadelphia exhibition closed in late 1793, likely so Bowen could concentrate on his new venture, the Columbian Museum in Boston, his most well-known endeavor. This institution cemented his reputation as one of America's earliest leading museum proprietors. Expanding the format of his Philadelphia show, the Columbian Museum eventually featured a vast array of curiosities and natural specimens, as well as hosting lectures, musical and dramatic performances, and circus-like acts. After enduring a series of fires and relocations, Bowen sold his interest in the museum in 1815 and retired. Rare. While Evans lists two broadsides advertising Bowen's Columbian Museum, and ESTC locates one broadside for this Philadelphia exhibition, at Yale, neither (nor OCLC) locate promotional cards like the present example. Furthermore, according to RBH, we cannot locate other copies ever having been sold or offered at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 148 - [Early American Trades] A Full Front-Page Ad by an 18th-century American Bookseller for a "Large and Elegant Collection of Books"
[Early American Trades] A Full Front-Page Ad by an 18th-century American Bookseller for a "Large and Elegant Collection of Books" The Connecticut Gazette; and the Universal Intelligencer New-London: Printed by Timothy Green, Friday, July 1, 1785. Vol. XXII, Numb. 1129. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds, sello tape repairs to same; scattered soiling; unevenly toned; wear along edges. With a large front-page ad for Geary, Champion, and Co., of Norwich Landing, for a "large and elegant Collection of Books", including titles on divinity, surgery, medicine, philosophy, literature, etc. Followed by a list of various medicines and drugs also sold by them, including opium, as well as other dry goods, such as hats, shoes, and hard wares. The second page reports a resolution passed by the Confederation Congress for the paying of invalid officers and soldiers from the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 149 - [Early American Trades] Early Printed Boston Furrier Trade Card
[Early American Trades] Early Printed Boston Furrier Trade Card Boston, Massachusetts, ca. 1800-10. Single oblong sheet, 3 3/4 x 5 in. (95 x 127 mm). Wood-engraved and letterpress trade card for furrier Samuel Crease. Inscribed and notated by Crease on verso (possibly a receipt). Creasing from old folds; lightly worn. An early trade card for a Boston furrier and leather dresser. Samuel Crease (1765-1816) operated a store at No. 74 Newbury Street, offering furs, muffs, tippets, trimmings, caps, gloves, and more, while also accepting furs for cash. Crease first appears in the Boston city directory in 1798 at No. 63 Newbury St., and then at the above address from 1800-1810. By 1813 he relocated to Jarvis Row, and does not appear listed in subsequent directories. According to The Ancestors, Kin and Descendants of John Warden and Narcissa (Davis) Warden, His Wife (1901), Crease was successful in business, but lost most of his property due to the Embargo Act of 1807. Crease's second son, also named Samuel, likewise became a furrier and leather dresser, before his death in 1822 at the age of 31. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 150 - [Early American Trades] Rare Early Baltimore Druggist's Broadside
[Early American Trades] Rare Early Baltimore Druggist's Broadside Baltimore: Printed by G. Dobbin & Murphy, May 1, 1807. Printed broadside, 10 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (267 x 216 mm). Toned and soiled; old glue and paper residue from when removed from album; old manuscript on verso. An early nineteenth century broadside for a Baltimore druggist, advertising the "Drug and Chemical Business" of William P. Mathews. Mathews informs his customers that, "He will be constantly supplied with a large and general assortment of fresh and genuine Drugs and Medicine, Shop Furniture and Vials, Surgeon's Instruments, Patent Medicine, Dye Stuffs, and Fine Painter's Colours...all of which he will sell at the most reduced prices, on his usual credit, or a discount for cash." OCLC locates only one other copy, at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 151 - [Early American Trades] Early Printed Broadside for a Vermont Dentist
[Early American Trades] Early Printed Broadside for a Vermont Dentist Chelsea, Vermont, May 1, 1835. Printed broadside, mounted to old wood, 15 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. (394 x 292 mm). Printed by Kimball's Dartmouth Press, Hanover, New Hampshire. Toned; soiling and dampstaining along edges. "Sebre Gustin, Jr., Surgeon Dentist, of Chelsea, Vt., Would respectfully inform the citizens of Rutland that he has taken Rooms at 11 Main Street where he is prepared to perform any operation on the Teeth...Cleansing, Filling, and Insertion of Artificial Teeth..." An early 19th-century broadside advertising the services of an itinerant Vermont dentist, containing a testimonial from several prominent citizens and patients attesting to his skills. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 152 - [Emancipation Proclamation] One of the Earliest Printings of the Final Emancipation Proclamation, in the "Official Paper" of the U.S. Congress
[Emancipation Proclamation] One of the Earliest Printings of the Final Emancipation Proclamation, in the "Official Paper" of the U.S. Congress The Daily Globe Washington, (D.C.): John C. Rives, ca. December 2, 1862-April 18, 1863. New Series, Vol. XVI, No. 1-96 (duplicate issues of 94, 95, 96). Folio. Bound volume of 99 issues. Quarter brown cloth over paper-covered boards; printed book-plate of Stanford University Library on front paste-down; scattered foxing and stains. Eberstadt, p. 17 An extensive volume of the "Official Paper" of the United States Congress, The Daily Globe, printed by John Rives. Importantly, this volume includes a January 2, 1863 issue featuring one of the earliest printings of the final Emancipation Proclamation, issued by President Abraham Lincoln the day before, on January 1st. According to Charles Eberstadt, "We have seen that the (Washington) Star obtained by irregular means and printed the text of the final proclamation during the early afternoon of January 1st...A number of newspapers did not issue on January 2nd because of the previous day's holiday, but most of those that did carried the final proclamation. Many of the others printed it on January 3rd...(p. 17) Other news details Congressional minutes and debates, as well as updates on the Civil War as well as other world events, such as, news of the Battles of Fredericksburg, Stones River, Arkansas Post, and a variety of skirmishes; events leading up to the Siege of Vicksburg; the passing of legislation such as the Conscription Act, and much more. A well-preserved and extensive record of Congressional activity during the height of the Civil War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 153 - [Emancipation Proclamation] "Slaves of Rebels Proclaimed Free": Front-Page Printing of Lincoln's Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation
[Emancipation Proclamation] "Slaves of Rebels Proclaimed Free": Front-Page Printing of Lincoln's Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia, Tuesday, September 23, 1862. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; old crease from when folded; scattered spotting; three-inch closed tear in top left edge. In the summer of 1862, New-York Tribune editor Horace Greeley published a scathing editorial entitled “The Prayer of Twenty Millions,” which harshly criticized President Abraham Lincoln for what Greeley viewed as his not being aggressive enough in defeating the Confederacy and freeing the slaves within its borders. At one point, the fiercely abolitionist editor wrote, “We complain that you…elected as a Republican, knowing full well what an abomination Slavery is…seem never to interfere with its atrocities, and never give a direction to your military subordinates…” Lincoln, who had spent the last few months secretly drafting a preliminary proclamation formally emancipating all slaves in Confederate-held territories, was nonetheless incensed by Greeley’s editorial. Wanting to keep his cards close to his vest, Lincoln’s response as published in the Tribune on August 22, 1862 forcefully asserted, “If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.” The preliminary draft was first read to the cabinet on July 13, and many expressed horror at the idea, believing that emancipating at such a fragile moment in the conflict would either signal weakness or attract additional foreign support for the Confederacy. It was agreed that such a proclamation could be issued only following a major Union victory, which finally came on September 17 with the Confederate defeat at Antietam. Five days later, Lincoln convened his cabinet and announced that he would be issuing the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, saying that "I made a solemn vow before God, that if General Lee was driven back from Pennsylvania, I would crown the result by the declaration of freedom to the slaves." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 154 - [Emancipation Proclamation] The Emancipation Proclamation, Printed in Full in the New-York Tribune
[Emancipation Proclamation] The Emancipation Proclamation, Printed in Full in the New-York Tribune New-York, Thursday, January 1-Saturday, January 10, 1863. In eight issues (Vol. XXII, Nos. 6,785-6,792). Printed newspaper. Edited by Horace Greeley. Folio. Each 8 pp. Disbound; creased; scattered soiling. The issue of January 1, announces on p. 5, "Those who will lay down The Tribune to-morrow with disappointment, not finding the New-Year's Proclamation of Freedom in it, may be assured of reading the paper before sunset. The subject was considered at a Cabinet meeting holden at the usual hour of 11, and adjourned before noon to-day. After its adjournment, the President denied himself to all visitors, and devoted the residue of the day to the composition of the Proclamation to be issued to-morrow..." On page four of the following issue, dated January 2, is printed the entire Emancipation Proclamation in large font, and is signed in type by President Lincoln. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 155 - [Emancipation Proclamation] The Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamation, in "The Evening Journal Almanac. 1863"
[Emancipation Proclamation] The Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamation, in "The Evening Journal Almanac. 1863" Albany, New York: Weed, Parsons & Company, 1863. First edition. 8vo. 143, (1) pp. Original limp blue wrappers, scattered spotting, unevenly toned, wear and creasing in lower front corner, small tear in fore-edge of front wrapper; all edges trimmed; scattered light foxing; small loss in bottom corner pp. 83/84, but not affecting text. Printed on facing pp. 128 and 129 are President Abraham Lincoln's Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 156 - [Film] Dingillian, Bob. Press Release for Star Wars
[Film] Dingillian, Bob. Press Release for Star Wars Los Angeles, California, 1977. Three sheets, each measuring 11 x 8 1/2 in. (279 x 216 mm); stapled in top left corner. In the months leading up to its May 1977 release, Star Wars experienced numerous production delays including incomplete special effects, an edit that director George Lucas was initially unhappy with, and the film having gone over budget. To ensure that these delays did not cause the public to forget about the film, 20th Century Fox drafted a press release describing the film from the perspectives of its filmmaker and its stars. Lucas managed to complete the film only one week before its May 25, 1977 release date. According to Lucas, he had completely forgotten that the film was being released on that day and remembered only when he and his wife Marcia went out for dinner that night and saw crowds stretching around the block outside of Mann's Chinese Theatre to see it. It was the first indication of how it would become one of the most successful franchises in film and popular culture history. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 157 - [Film] Manuscript Register from a Silent Film Movie Theater, 1925
[Film] Manuscript Register from a Silent Film Movie Theater, 1925 Possibly New Jersey, ca. July-December 1925. Partially printed manuscript register, titled "Daily Statement of Business..." (accomplished in "N.C.R. Statement Book No. 39"; printed Dayton, Ohio: The National Cash Register Company, no date). 4to. Unpaginated. Register of accounts for an unnamed movie theater, detailing film titles, studios, employee names and wages, and other expenses, from July-December 1925. Quarter brown cloth over black cloth-covered boards, title stamped in white, heavily worn and soiled; dampstain affecting lower margin of most pages. Fascinating account register of a 1920s movie theater, in the glory years of the silent film era. Notes in the rear of the book suggest the theater could be The Darress Theater in Boonton, New Jersey, which first opened in 1919 and closed by the 1970s. Notable films shown include: Kiss in the Dark; Her Market Value, Lilies of the Street, The Ten Commandments, and many more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 158 - [Football] Large Format Silver Print of ca. 1910 Harvard v. Dartmouth Football Game
[Football] Large Format Silver Print of ca. 1910 Harvard v. Dartmouth Football Game No place, ca. 1910. Large format silver print, 11 x 14 1/4 in. (279 x 362 mm), mounted to board, 16 x 20 in. (406 x 508 mm). Manuscript on lower mount: "Harvard-Dartmouth / Frothingham stops Dartmouth's Forward / Pass and gains 35 Yards". Very small pinholes in corners of print, small wear at same; wear along mount edges. Likely showing the 1910 or 1911 match between Ivy League rivals Harvard and Dartmouth. T. Frothingham matriculated into Harvard in 1908, and played for the Harvard Crimson as a halfback from 1910-11. Harvard would go on to win both the 1910 and 1911 games. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 159 - [Football] "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29": Mock Wanted Poster for The Famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale Football Game
[Football] "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29": Mock Wanted Poster for The Famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale Football Game Wanted the Harvard Killers for Massacring Yale's Offensive Football Team... (Cambridge, Massachusetts), ca. November 1968. Printed mock wanted poster, 18 x 12 in. (457 x 305 mm). Toned; scattered soiling; pinholes in each corner; tape remnants at top; scattered closed tears along edges. In mat. A very rare--possibly one of the only extant--mock wanted posters for the famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale football game. Dubbed "The Miracle" and "The Tie", Harvard scored 16 points in the final 42 seconds to tie the game 29-29, inspiring the famous Harvard Crimson headline, "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29". This poster was, according to George Howe Colt, one of many at the time that were tacked up around Harvard's campus in anticipation of the November 23 game. The poster shows mug shots of each Harvard player (formal coat and tie photos culled from the game program) accompanied by gangster-style nicknames like "Two Gun," "Mad Dog," "Scar Face," "Potato Nose," "Baby Face," "Pretty Boy," "Machine Gun," and more. The large text reads, "Wanted the Harvard Killers For Massacring Yale's Offensive Football Team on Sat., Nov. 23, 1968 Warning These Men are Considered the Most Dangerous Deffensive Team in the N.C.A.A. Reward Free Trip to Sing Sing". Played against the backdrop of deep social unrest and college protests over the Vietnam War, this was the 85th edition of the two teams' longstanding annual rivalry. Each entered the game 8-0, with Harvard's formidable defense pitched against Yale's league-leading offense. By the final three minutes of the game Yale had advanced a seemingly insurmountable 29-16 lead. With only minutes remaining, Harvard's prospects dramatically changed, precipitated by a fumble by Yale fullback Bob Levin, which then saw Harvard score two consecutive touchdowns and two two-point conversions, tying the game and sending the crowd into a frenzy. The two teams would go on to share the Ivy League title, the last tied game in their series history. In 2024, the Harvard Crimson ranked this match as the greatest game in the 149-year history of the Harvard-Yale football rivalry. Lot includes a typed postcard, postmarked Nov. 8, 1909, informing a Theodore Chadwick of Cambridge, Massachusetts of the status of his application for tickets to the Harvard/Yale football game. 3 1/4 x 5 1/2 in. (82 x 140 mm). Lot also includes five press photos related to professional football. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 160 - [Fraktur] A Pennsylvania German Fraktur Book-Plate
[Fraktur] A Pennsylvania German Fraktur Book-Plate Bethel, Pennsylvania, January 20, 1827. Manuscript fraktur book-plate, in Die Bibel, oder die ganze heilige schrift des alten und neuen testaments...D. Martin Luthers (Bremen: Carl Schunemann, 1822). Thick 8vo. Original brown sheep, clasps perished, scuffed and moderately worn; all edges trimmed; spotting and soiling. A Pennsylvania German fraktur book-plate: "This Book Belongs to me Maria Lesch" Lot includes a copy of almanac, Der Hoch-Deutsche Americanische Calender...1827 (Germantown: M. Billmeyer, 1827). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 161 - [Franklin, Benjamin] A Great American Patriot Isaiah Thomas Reports on the Death of Another: Group of 2 Periodicals Reporting the Death of Benjamin Franklin, April-May, 1790
[Franklin, Benjamin] A Great American Patriot Isaiah Thomas Reports on the Death of Another: Group of 2 Periodicals Reporting the Death of Benjamin Franklin, April-May, 1790 Thomas's Massachusetts Spy: Or, The Worcester Gazette Worcester: Isaiah Thomas, Thursday, May 6, 1790. Vol. XIX, No. 892. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Light scattered spotting; light wear along edges. Printed on p. 3 is a report on the death of Franklin and details of his funeral service. Together with: The Universal Asylum, and Columbian Magazine, for April, 1790 Philadelphia: Printed, for the Proprietors, by William Young, 1790. 8vo. (ii), (203)-262, (2) pp. Disbound; red speckled edges; short tear in top edge of final rear leaves. Containing three articles related to Franklin: his February 22, 1756 letter on the death of his brother (p. 208); his article, "Precautions to be used by those who are about to undertake a Sea-Voyage" (pp. 245-248); and a report on Franklin's death and funeral (pp. 261-262). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 162 - [Franklin, Benjamin] Scarce Issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette for November 28, 1745, With the Burning of Saratoga, Printed by Benjamin Franklin
[Franklin, Benjamin] Scarce Issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette for November 28, 1745, With the Burning of Saratoga, Printed by Benjamin Franklin The Pennsylvania Gazette Philadelphia: Printed by B. Franklin, November 28, 1745. Numb. 885. Bifolium, 12 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (305 x 216 mm). Printed newspaper in three columns. Disbound; worming to top and left margins; edges unevenly trimmed; scattered foxing. Miller 378 A scarce issue of this Benjamin Franklin newspaper. This issue contains a report of the raid and subsequent burning of Saratoga, New York, by French and Indian forces, as part of the ongoing King George's War. Also included are advertisements for Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack, 1746, various plantations for sale around both Philadelphia and Baltimore, as well as a number of runaway servants or enslaved persons. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 163 - [Franklin, Benjamin] Urban, Sylvanus. The Gentleman's Magazine For October 1752, in the Rare Original Wrappers with Articles on Benjamin Franklin's Electrical Experiments
[Franklin, Benjamin] Urban, Sylvanus. The Gentleman's Magazine For October 1752, in the Rare Original Wrappers with Articles on Benjamin Franklin's Electrical Experiments London: Printed by E. Cave, 1752. 8vo. (ii), (439)-481, (1) pp. Illustrated with woodcut vignette on title-page, two engraved plates (one folding), one page of engraved sheet music, and one in-text engraving after Catesby. Rare original limp blue wrappers, losses along spine, wear along extremities; scattered spotting. Printed four months after Franklin's famous kite and key experiment, this magazine features a discussion on Benjamin Franklin's famous electrical experiments and their applications, on pp. 450-452. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 164 - [French and Indian War] Vaugondy, Robert de. Carte de la Virginie et du Maryland...
[French and Indian War] Vaugondy, Robert de. Carte de la Virginie et du Maryland... Paris, 1755. Engraved map with hand-colored outlining. First state (of five). Old ink stamps at top left and right verso, "Virginie & Maryland." Creasing from old folds, separations at top and bottom of same vertical central fold; scattered light edge-wear; shallow tidemark in top edge; faint dampstaining in bottom corners. A handsome first state of this important French map depicting Virginia and Maryland, derived from Peter Jefferson and Joshua Fry's landmark 1751 map "A Map of the Most Inhabited part of Virginia", considered the most important map of the region in the 18th century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 165 - [Gangsters] (Buchalter, Lepke) Original NYPD $25,000 Reward Poster for a Jewish Gangster
[Gangsters] (Buchalter, Lepke) Original NYPD $25,000 Reward Poster for a Jewish Gangster New York: Police Department City of New York, Detective Division, August 8, 1939. Circular No. 11. Printed broadside; 14 1/2 x 7 3/4 in. (368 x 197 mm). Wanted poster for Jewish gangster Lepke Buchalter, headed "$25,000 Reward Dead or Alive", with printed facsimile of his fingerprints, a description of appearance, and his mugshot. Creasing from old folds, scattered light stains along same. In mat. Rare NYPD wanted poster for Lepke Buchalter, head of the infamous Mafia hit squad, Murder, Inc. For most of the 1930s, Buchalter (1897-1944) operated an independent hit squad for various crime families across the country, referred to in later years as "Murder, Inc." In 1936, he ordered the murder of a Brooklyn candy store owner named Joseph Rosen, whom he suspected of working with New York District Attorney Thomas Dewey. While no convictions were made at the time, Buchalter was soon charged with violating federal anti-trust laws in one of his businesses, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. Buchalter became a fugitive for almost two years and by mid-July 1939, Dewey requested a $25,000 reward for his capture, due to a recent string of gang-related murders. On August 25, 1939, Buchalter surrendered to FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover, the result of a surrender deal supposedly facilitated by the help of radio broadcaster Walter Winchell. Buchalter was indicted on charges of narcotics trafficking and extortion, but while imprisoned, he was arraigned and indicted by New York authorities for the murders of Joseph Rosen and three others. He and two accomplices were sentenced to death, and Buchalter was executed by electric chair on March 4, 1944, at Sing Sing Prison. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 166 - [Gangsters] Group of 9 Press Photos of American Gangsters and Criminals
[Gangsters] Group of 9 Press Photos of American Gangsters and Criminals Locations vary, ca. 1926-60s. Group of nine press photos of American gangsters and criminals, depicting Vito Genovese (leader of the Genovese crime family); Gerald Chapman ("The Count of Gramercy Park"); Frank Nitti (Al Capone's bodyguard); George R. "Machine Gun" Kelly; Johnny Torrio (leader of the Chicago Outfit); Frankie Yale (Brooklyn crime boss); Jack "Legs" Diamond (Irish-American Philadelphia gangster); scene of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre; and of John Dillinger as a child. Sizes and condition varies, generally very good. Copyright ink stamps and typed slips on versos. Lot also includes a copy of the Bulletin of the Chicago Crime Commission, dated July 23, 1924 ("Murder Check Needed Public Safety Demands Immediate Action by all Responsible Authorities..."). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 167 - [Garfield, James] Group of 3 Items Related to Presidential Assassin Charles J. Guiteau, Previously Owned by Dr. Edward Charles Spitzka
[Garfield, James] Group of 3 Items Related to Presidential Assassin Charles J. Guiteau, Previously Owned by Dr. Edward Charles Spitzka 1. Copy of a Drawing of the Skull of Charles J. Guiteau No place, no date (likely ca. 1880s-90s). Printed copy of a drawing; manuscript at bottom, "Skull of Guiteau / by Dr Lamb of Army Med Museum". Unevenly toned; soiling and creasing; foxing; scattered closed tears along edges. 12 3/4 x 10 1/4 in. (324 x 260 mm). 2. Four-Portrait Mugshot of Guiteau Label on verso "Copyright, 1882 by C.M. Bell. Forbes Albertype, Boston". Printed caption at bottom recto, "Charles J. Guiteau. / From Photographs Taken by C.M. Bell, Washington, D.C., July 4, 1881." Mounted to board. Soiling and wear. Image: 8 3/4 x 6 1/4 in. (222 x 159 mm). 3. Cabinet Card of Guiteau's Brain No place, no date. Cabinet card, manuscript in pencil on verso, "Guiteau". Light foxing and soiling. 4 1/2 x 6 1/2 in. (114 x 165 mm). On July 2, 1881, Charles Guiteau stepped out of a crowd at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station in Washington, D.C., and fired two shots from behind into the body of President James A. Garfield. For months Guiteau had been stalking President Garfield, believing that he had played an outsized role in the president's victory in the 1880 election and was therefore owed a position in the administration. Over two months Garfield's condition, exacerbated by poor medical treatment, gradually deteriorated, until he finally expired on September 19. In the lead-up to Guiteau's trial, his defense hired Dr. Charles Edward Spitzka as an expert witness to bolster their claim that Guiteau was not guilty by reason of insanity. Dr. Spitzka testified that Guiteau was not only insane, but a "moral monstrosity." Despite this analysis, Guiteau was found guilty and executed by hanging on June 30, 1882. Guiteau's remains were then dissected in the hopes of finding some trace of abnormality in his brain or in the shape of his skull. An alienist, neurologist, and anatomist, Spitzka likely kept these materials after the trial as mementos and reference materials. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 168 - [Georgia] [Moore, Francis] Manuscript Document by the Secretary of James Oglethorpe, Founder of the Colony of Georgia
[Georgia] [Moore, Francis] Manuscript Document by the Secretary of James Oglethorpe, Founder of the Colony of Georgia Frederica, Georgia, ca. July 1736. 2 pp. on bifolium. Docketed on verso, "Copy Deposition of John Latter, John Barber, Rice Pyke, David Holmes, Darby Kellihorne, taken 13. Apl. 1736. In D(uke). of Newcastle July 2d. 1736." 12 x 7 5/8 in. (305 x 194 mm), old folds. A secretarial copy (presumably in the hand of Francis Moore, secretary of James Oglethorpe) of a deposition of John Latter, John Barber, Richard Pike, David Holmes, and Darby Kallihorne[?], all of Georgia, taken at Frederica on April 13, 1736. Attesting that they traveled with Tomochichi to the Altamaha and St. Johns Rivers and encountered no Spanish settlements in the area, and that the territory north of the St. Johns was in possession of “the Indians.” In 1736, James Oglethorpe and the Yamacraw leader Tomochichi stood at the center of the increasingly fraught dispute between British Georgia and Spanish Florida over the southern limits of the English settlement. Oglethorpe maintained that Georgia’s boundaries extended to the St. Johns River, citing English charters and agreements negotiated with Native leaders allied to the colony. Tomochichi, whose earlier visit to London with Oglethorpe had lent legitimacy to the Georgia enterprise before the Trustees and the Crown, remained a crucial diplomatic figure in relations between the British and the region's Indigenous peoples. In a letter dated April 17, 1736, Oglethorpe warned the Duke of Newcastle that the Spanish governor intended to demand that Britain abandon not only Georgia but also territory extending even into Carolina. As the correspondence of the period makes clear, British officials regarded Native alliances as indispensable to securing their claims against mounting Spanish opposition from St. Augustine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 169 - [Gettysburg Address]
First Day Printing of the Gettysburg Address in The New York Herald
[Gettysburg Address] First Day Printing of the Gettysburg Address in The New York Herald New York, Friday, November 20, 1863. Whole No. 9926. Printed newspaper. Folio. 10 pp. Creased from old fold, loss at fore-edge of same on first leaf, affecting some text, closed tear at same on subsequent leaves; central fold repaired, with loss at lower half, affecting some letters at bottom; scattered spotting and toning. Scarce first-day printing of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, printed at the bottom of final page ("Dedicatory Speech of the President"). This newspaper also features Edward Everett’s entire speech, as well as reports on the dedicatory ceremonies. The transcript that gave the world Lincoln's speech was taken by Associated Press freelancer Joseph L. Gilbert, who was seated on the speaker's platform. As Gilbert recalled in 1917, during Lincoln's brief two-minute 272-word speech, he became "fascinated by his intense earnestness and depth of feeling," and "unconsciously stopped taking notes and looked up at him." Luckily for Gilbert, Lincoln allowed him to copy his text, from which the press report featured here was made. Lincoln's speaking copy has since been lost, and the definitive text has been pieced together, from Gilbert's account, and additional sources. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 170 - [Gold Rush] Autograph Letter, Featuring a Mention of Frontiersman Kit Carson and the Arizona Gold Rush
[Gold Rush] Autograph Letter, Featuring a Mention of Frontiersman Kit Carson and the Arizona Gold Rush "The news we have from Arizona is almost fabulous, and if the accounts are half true, the mines are richer than those of California in 1848...the Navajos are now being drove out by Kit Carson..." Fort Union New Mexico, November 8, 1863. Bifolium; 9 x 6 1/2 in. (228 x 165 mm). Four-page autograph letter, signed by an unknown Union soldier stationed at Fort Union, New Mexico during the Civil War. In part: "I have no conveniences for writing now, and you must wait till I get to Santa Fe for a good long letter...We had a very severe snow storm while encamped at Ft. Lyon and I took cold, and the result was, I had an attack of pleurisy...the weather was very cold with four inches of snow on the ground and we had to shovel off a place to sleep at night. We lost one or two mules and five or six horses, but continued on our march without a halt, as we were very anxious to get through the mountains. The Raton Mountains are very high, and are apt to be impassable at this season of the year... Gov. Arny, of New Mexico, gave me a place in his ambulance while I was sick, and arranged his blankets and robes so that I could lie down...The weather is now mild and pleasant and I feel almost as good as new, and am now doing my usual camp duty, and devouring an enormous amount of provisions....The news we have from Arizona is almost fabulous, and if the accounts are half true, the mines are richer than those of California in 1848. The rush there will be very great in the Spring...It is said that gold can be found four inches from the surface, and can be dug with a butcher knife. Gov. Arny took with him to Washington some specimens of gold and also gold bullets which he procured from the Navajo Indians; the Indian was sharp, and would not tell him where the gold was to be found, but a military expedition into their country revealed the location of the mines, and the Navajos are now being drove out by Kit Carson..." Creasing from old folds, A few small closed tears along same; scattered toning. An illuminating letter by a Union soldier stationed at Fort Union describing the ongoing gold rush in the Territory of Arizona, and mentioning frontier legend Kit Carson driving Navajo Indians from the land. Arizona had been a major stopping off point for settlers making their way to California during the Gold Rush of 1848, but during the late 1850s, major deposits were discovered around the Gila River, leading to a major surge in population for the territory. Fort Union was an important military outpost for Northern forces, and was the base of operations for General Kit Carson, who took command there in 1862, and defended the western frontier from Confederate incursions until 1865. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 171 - [Gold Rush] Scarce Issue of The Illustrated California News
[Gold Rush] Scarce Issue of The Illustrated California News The Illustrated California News San Francisco: Cook & Le Count, November 1, 1850. Vol. 1, No 4. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. 25-32. Disbound; scattered minor spotting. The first illustrated newspaper printed on the West Coast, and one of the earliest illustrated newspapers ever printed in America. An important and scarce California Gold Rush-era illustrated newspaper, The Illustrated California News was a semi-monthly periodical which began publication in September 1850 under the editorship of J.M. Carleton. Over the course of three months, six issues were published before Carleton folded operations, with the focus kept exclusively on recording current events and presenting images and descriptions of the new state's unique geography. The present issue features a long editorial by Carleton discussing the benefits of bringing more women to California, arguing, "It is upon the solid and substantial weight of those whose family ties bind them to social order which we must depend...The youth who is loose upon the world is an anarchist by nature." Of particular interest is a rare pre-settlement view (likely the first ever printed) of Vallejo, then slated to become the first capital of the state of California, of which Carleton writes, "This is a view...[of] Vallejo, the proposed permanent seat of Government for the State of California, and on that account will probably be considered as one of the most interesting subjects that could have been offered our readers." Though the legislature met here in 1851, the decision was made to move the State Government to Sacramento in 1854; despite the move, Vallejo continued to grow and is today the second-largest city in the Bay Area. The present issue also features views of Portsmouth Square Park, the first public park in San Francisco, and of Dead-Man's Bar, one of the most gold-rich (and hazardous) areas in the region. Wagner 80. Together with: Manuscript Document No place, no date. Single sheet, 10 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (260 x 216 mm). Two-page manuscript document in an unidentified hand, titled "The actual & prospective effects of the California gold mines on the United States." Creasing from old folds; light soiling. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 172 - [Guns & Artillery] A Late 19th Century Photograph Album of Ordnance and Artillery from "Freedom's Fortress" Fort Monroe
[Guns & Artillery] A Late 19th Century Photograph Album of Ordnance and Artillery from "Freedom's Fortress" Fort Monroe No place, no date ca. 1880s. Comprising 23 albumen prints mounted to card; some with manuscript captions. Oblong 4to. Black pebbled cloth-covered boards, spine perished, boards and extremities moderately worn and soiled; Fort Monroe library book-plate ("Coast Artillery School") on front paste-down; cards loose; foxing and soiling to cards; several with Fort Monroe Artillery School ink stamps. Fort Monroe was constructed between 1819 and 1834 at Old Point Comfort in Hampton, Virginia to guard the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay. The largest stone fort ever built in the United States, it played a vital role in American coastal defense for nearly two centuries. During the Civil War, Fort Monroe remained under Union control and became known as "Freedom's Fortress" after serving as a refuge for thousands of formerly enslaved people escaping Confederate territory. Following the war, Confederate president Jefferson Davis was briefly imprisoned there. Lot includes two excised printed Congressional acts, 1860s, related to fire-arms, as well as sheets from issues of Harper's, etc., related to guns. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 173 - [Hancock, John] 1-of-1 Trading Card with Cut Signature of John Hancock and an 1876 $20 Gold Coin, From the "1776: The Freedom Fighters" Card Set, Created by Eric C. Caren
[Hancock, John] 1-of-1 Trading Card with Cut Signature of John Hancock and an 1876 $20 Gold Coin, From the "1776: The Freedom Fighters" Card Set, Created by Eric C. Caren Special one-of-one trading card (2026), with a fine cut signature of John Hancock (excised from a December 20, 1787 military commission), approximately 1 3/4 x 4 in. (44 x 102 mm); with a mounted 1876 Liberty Head $20 gold coin. Together in pictorial presentation card, with fragment of document ("Reasons assigned by the Continental Congress, for the North American Colonies and provinces withdrawing their Allegiance to the King of Great Britain. In Congress, July 4, 1776. A Declaration...") Housed in wooden pictorial presentation box, with presentation stand. A fine one-of-one trading card, with a bold cut signature of John Hancock and a Centennial Liberty Head $20 gold coin. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 174 - [Harrison, William Henry] The Death of American President William Henry Harrison is Announced in his own Newspaper, "The Log Cabin"
[Harrison, William Henry] The Death of American President William Henry Harrison is Announced in his own Newspaper, "The Log Cabin" The Log Cabin New-York: (Horace Greeley), Saturday, April 10, 1841. Vol. I, New Series, No. 19. Printed newspaper; black mourning border on each page. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front page. Disbound; old crease from when folded; separations along central vertical fold; scattered edge-wear; light foxing. "Death of President Harrison! We are constrained to confirm the painful tidings which have already been borne on the wings of the wind to every portion our land. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON IS NO MORE!" The Log Cabin was published from May 1840 to November 1841 to support the candidacy of William Henry Harrison, who unexpectedly died six-days prior to this issue, on April 4, after a brief illness. He was the first President to die in office. This paper's wild popularity caused Greeley to establish his most well-known paper, the New-York Tribune. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 175 - [Harrison, William Henry] Handbill for the Funeral Service for the First President to Die in Office, April 16, 1841
[Harrison, William Henry] Handbill for the Funeral Service for the First President to Die in Office, April 16, 1841 Arrangements for the Observation of Funeral Solemnities, on the Death of the late President of the United States... Middletown, (Connecticut), April 16, 1841. Tall printed handbill, 14 7/8 x 3 1/8 in. (378 x 79 mm). Docketed on verso. Creased from old fold; scattered soiling; light foxing. Handbill for a memorial service for President William Henry Harrison, the first president to die in office. Held in Middletown, Connecticut, on April 17, 1841, two weeks after his sudden death on April 4, the present handbill lists the various ceremonies arranged by the town, including a procession to the city courthouse and a service held by the town's clergy. Harrison's unexpected death after only a month in office shocked the nation, and commenced a 30-day period of mourning across the nation, with similar ceremonies being held in most cities and towns. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 176 - [Hawaii] An Early Hawaiian Newspaper, Sent From Hawaii to California in 1841
[Hawaii] An Early Hawaiian Newspaper, Sent From Hawaii to California in 1841 The Polynesian Honolulu, Saturday, March 20, 1841. Vol. I, No. 41. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Ownership inscription of American diplomat and businessman Thomas O. Larkin ("Thomas O. Larkin / Monterey, California") at top of front-page. Disbound; creased from old fold. Thomas O. Larkin (1802–1858) was a Massachusetts-born American diplomat, merchant, and financier, who relocated to California in the early 1830s. Based in Monterey, then part of Alta California, Mexico, he established extensive commercial ties with Mexico and the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii). During the 1840s, Larkin played a significant diplomatic role in the transition of California from Mexican to American control, serving from 1843 to 1848 as the American Consul to Alta California (the only person to hold this title). During the Mexican-American War he acted as a confidential agent for President James K. Polk and used his influence to support the transfer of California to the United States. In 1849, Larkin also served as a delegate representing San Francisco at California’s Constitutional Convention. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 177 - [Hawaii] Group of 4 Early Newspapers and Documents Relating to Hawaii, 1826-80s
[Hawaii] Group of 4 Early Newspapers and Documents Relating to Hawaii, 1826-80s 1. The Missionary Herald. For the Year 1826. Vol. XXII. Boston: Crocker and Brewster, 1826. 8vo. Illustrated with an engraved folding map of Hawaii. Brown library-style buckram, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; scattered foxing; gutter split at pp. 296-297. 2. The Friend. Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii, June 15, 1846. Vol. IV, No. XII. Printed newspaper. 4to. 8 pp. Disbound; bottom left corner torn. 3. Ka Nupepa Kuokoa. Honolulu, November 22, 1862. Vol. I, No. 52. Printed newspaper in Hawaiian. Folio. 4 pp. Toned and worn; scattered worming and tears. 4. Engraved Hawaiian Bell Telephone Company Stock Certificate. Honolulu, ca. 1880s. Unaccomplished. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 178 - [Hollywood] (Dean, James). Unsigned Carbon Copy of a Legal Agreement
[Hollywood] (Dean, James). Unsigned Carbon Copy of a Legal Agreement (New York), ca. March 1955. Three stapled sheets, 13 x 8 1/2 in. (330 x 216 mm). Unsigned carbon copy of a legal brief, regarding the settlement of a suit between James Dean and Rogers Brackett, in which Dean agrees to pay an outstanding debt. Creasing from old folds; scattered foxing. Lot also includes four black and white press photographs of Dean in various roles. Legal brief outlining the settlement of a debt between American actor James Dean (1931-55), and radio director Rogers Brackett. The two first met in the early 1950s, with Brackett credited as introducing Dean to a number of executives in the entertainment industry, while also acting as an advisor through much of Dean's short career. The present document, which resolves small loans and hotel room bills, is dated March 1955, the month that East of Eden premiered, and just six months before Dean's untimely death. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 179 - [Horse Racing] An Early and Possibly the Only Extant Example of this 19th Century Broadside Advertising the Stud Services of the Celebrated American Thoroughbred Racehorse Wild Medley
[Horse Racing] An Early and Possibly the Only Extant Example of this 19th Century Broadside Advertising the Stud Services of the Celebrated American Thoroughbred Racehorse Wild Medley The Thorough Bred Horse Wild Medley... Greenup County, Kentucky, ca. October 1, 1809. Printed broadside, 15 3/8 x 11 1/2 in. (390 x 292 mm). Creasing from old folds, losses along central vertical fold, affecting some text; foxed and dampstained; wear along edges; closed tear and small loss in top right corner; manuscript on verso. This broadside, published for a John Hockaday of Kentucky, advertises that Wild Medley "will stand the ensuing season at my stable on the Ohio, one mile above the mouth of Little Sandy, Greenup country, commencing on the first day of May, and ending on the last day of July--will cover Mares at Five Dollars the season, Eight Dollars to insure, and Three Dollars the single leap..." Printed below is a testimony from a John Wood attesting to Wild Medley's pedigree, bred by him in Gloucester County, Virginia, "got by the old imported horse Medley, and came out of a full bred Wild Air mare." A summation of Wild Medley's performance is printed at the bottom, and certified by eight acquaintances of Mr. Wood. Rare, we cannot locate another example on RBH or OCLC. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 180 - [Illustration Art] Davies, Wynne W. Color Separation Proof for Cover of "Scarlet Adventuress"
[Illustration Art] Davies, Wynne W. Color Separation Proof for Cover of "Scarlet Adventuress" No place, (ca. February, 1936). Offset-lithograph, 13 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. Lightly creased; evenly toned; scattered light stains. Color separation proof cover illustration for the pulp novel series Scarlett Adventuress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 181 - [Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] Custer's Own Copy of Territorial General Orders, Two Years Before the Battle of Little Bighorn
[Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] Custer's Own Copy of Territorial General Orders, Two Years Before the Battle of Little Bighorn Headquarters Department of Dakota, August 17, 1874. One sheet, 7 1/2 x 5 in. (191 x 127 mm). Printed U.S. Army General Orders No. 59, issued by command of Brigadier General Alfred Terry, signed at conclusion by Capt. R.P. Hughes and addressed by him to recipient, "Lieut. Col. G.A. Custer. 7th Cavalry." Order reads in part: "The 'Middle District' of this Military Department will, until further order, comprise the following named posts, viz: Forts Stevenson, Abraham Lincoln and Rice, Camp Hancock and Grand River Agency. The headquarters will be established at Fort Abraham Lincoln, and Lieutenant-Colonel G. A. Custer, 7th Cavalry, is assigned to the Command..." Creasing from old folds; ink stain not affecting text; light foxing. George A. Custer's copy of army General Orders No. 59, establishing Fort Abraham Lincoln as headquarters of the Middle District of the Department of the Dakota. The Black Hills Expedition led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer departed Fort Abraham Lincoln on July 2, 1874 with orders to find a suitable location for a fort and to investigate the possibility of mining for gold. This expedition was in direct violation of the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 which guaranteed that white settlement would be off-limits in the Black Hills, as the region was considered sacred ground to the various Indigenous tribes of the area. While Custer and his soldiers searched for a location for their fort, the citizens who accompanied them began to prospect for gold. Custer received orders to return to Fort Abraham Lincoln on August 15, and two days later received the present message informing him that the fort was now the central headquarters of the Middle District of the Department of the Dakota, with Custer officially appointed commander. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 182 - [Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] A Secretary of State's Copy of This St. Louis Newspaper, Reporting on the Recent Battle of Little Big Horn: "The Horrible Story...Confirmed"
[Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] A Secretary of State's Copy of This St. Louis Newspaper, Reporting on the Recent Battle of Little Big Horn: "The Horrible Story...Confirmed" St. Louis Globe-Democrat, July 7, 1876 St. Louis, July 7, 1876. Vol 2. No. 49. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds; very small printed tag mounted at top right ("Sec. of State"). With another issue of the same paper, dated July 5, 1876, bearing the same mounted stamp. The front-page column reads in part: "Gen. Custer Attacks Sitting Bull in His Camp...Who Massacre Him and His Entire Force...How Awful the News was Received in this City." In late 1875 the Grant administration sent an official notification to all tribes in the Dakota Territory that they were to report to designated reservations no later than January 31, 1876 or be deemed "hostile." Few acceded to this order. In the spring and early summer, Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull called a large gathering of Plains tribes together to create a united encampment of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho on land already belonging to the Crow, who sided with the United States Army to expel them from their lands. On June 25, the 7th Cavalry, led by General Custer, came upon their encampment. Upon realizing his position had been discovered, he ordered his men to attack. What followed was nothing short of a massacre which ended with over fifty-two percent of the 7th Cavalry dead, including Custer himself. This engagement became known as the Battle of Little Bighorn, or "Custer's Last Stand." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 183 - [Immigrants] Group of Items Related to the Asian American Immigrant Experience
[Immigrants] Group of Items Related to the Asian American Immigrant Experience Locations and dates vary. Group of 20 items related to the Asian Immigrant experience in America, including government reports, newspapers, photographs, and postcards. Highlights include a printed proclamation by the County of Los Angeles apologizing for Japanese Internment; a stereoview by J.J. Riley of a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco; a postmarked mailing cover from the Topaz Japanese Internment Camp; and The Heathen Chinee by Brett Harte (Boston: James Osgood, 1871). Size and condition vary. The first major wave of Asian immigration to the United States began around 1850, largely in response to the discovery of gold in California. Many Chinese immigrants arrived hoping to escape economic inequality and the fallout from the First Opium War. Following the end of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery in the United States, plantation owners in the South began to recruit Asian laborers as a cheap source of labor to replace their former slaves. This exploitation led to tensions between Asian immigrants and nativist groups. Over subsequent years numerous skirmishes broke out, the most infamous being the Rock Springs Massacre which in turn led to Congress passing the Page Act of 1875, the first restrictive immigration bill in United States history. Despite the repeal of restrictive immigration laws targeting Asian countries over subsequent years, following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which established a series of internment camps specifically targeting citizens of Japanese descent. Following the 1944 presidential election Roosevelt suspended the order, effectively ending the forced internment program. President Gerald Ford terminated the order in 1976, and in 1989 reparations began to be issued to survivors of the camps. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 184 - [Immigrants] Large Group of Items Related to the European-American Immigrant Experience
[Immigrants] Large Group of Items Related to the European-American Immigrant Experience Locations and dates vary. Group of approximately 100 items related to the European immigrants' experience in America. Nationalities represented include Irish, Italian, Hungarian, Polish, Lithuanian, Armenian, Swedish, and more. Items include newspapers, pamphlets, photographs, postcards, posters, a photo album, etc. Highlights include an autograph letter signed by American businessman George Francis Train, a movie poster featuring Alice Brady, for the lost silent film Little Italy, and dime novel, Pluck and Luck. Condition varies, although generally fine. Between 1492 and 1930 it is estimated that over 60 million Europeans emigrated to the Americas. This wave reached its crest during the late 19th-and early 20th centuries, as a series of economic, agricultural, and social upheavals led to more Europeans seeking better lives on the other side of the Atlantic. The effects of this migration are many and include the near-total annihilation of the Indigenous populations and led to the beginning of a globalization trend which has had profound effects on commerce, culture, and geopolitics. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 185 - [Jackson, Andrew] Group of 2 Newspapers, Reporting on Jackson's Victory Over the British at New Orleans and His Fourth State of the Union Address
[Jackson, Andrew] Group of 2 Newspapers, Reporting on Jackson's Victory Over the British at New Orleans and His Fourth State of the Union Address Political and Commercial Register Philadelphia: Published by W. Jackson, Monday Evening, February 6, 1815. Vol. XXII, No. 30. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; scattered minor spotting. Printed on page two is the "Glorious News" of General Andrew Jackson's victory over the British at New Orleans, the final battle of the War of 1812, with detailed reports on the engagement. Together with: National Intelligencer Washington: Gales & Seaton, Thursday, December 6, 1832. Vol. XXXIII, No. 4840. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; dampstaining at top and along right edge; scattered edge-wear. Printed on the front page is President Andrew Jackson's fourth State of the Union Address, where he critically addresses the ongoing Nullification Crisis. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 186 - [Jacksonian Era] A Fascinating Contemporary Letter by an American Farmer Written Amid the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat Affair
[Jacksonian Era] A Fascinating Contemporary Letter by an American Farmer Written Amid the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat Affair Autograph Letter, signed Wilcox County, Alabama, July 4, 1832. Bifolium, 12 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (324 x 197 mm). Three-page autograph letter, signed by Charles and Jane Connor to his brother William Connor of Fairfield Corner, Maine, regarding family matters, and mentioning the political climate of the United States that has "run mad with nulification", and mentioning the Petticoat Affair and Peggy Eaton, wife of President Jackson's Secretary of War. Integral leaf addressed in Connor's hand. Creasing from old folds; wear and small loss (affecting some text) at fore-edge from seal when opened. A National Crisis from the Viewpoint of an Everyday Farmer and his Family Penned by a Charles Connor, and his wife Jane, of Wilcox County, Alabama, to his brother William, in Fairfield Corner, Maine. Connor touches on a variety of family affairs, including the state of his family and farming. In particular, he goes on to mention the Nullification Crisis that then threatened the federal government's sovereignty as South Carolina sought to void federal law by rejecting the hated Tariff of 1828. The first major test against federal sovereignty, the confrontation nearly led to armed conflict, but was avoided with the passage of the Force Bill and the Compromise Tariff of 1833. Connor states that the "politicks of this country they are run mad with nulification and dont now where it will end but i am in hopes that it will end in the ellection of Henry Clay to Presidentcy". Connor goes on to make reference to Peggy Eaton, wife of President Jackson's Secretary of War, and what would be called the Petticoat Affair--a scandal involving Jackson's cabinet and their wives, who ostracized Mrs. Eaton for what they deemed her loose morals. The scandal resulted in the resignation of Vice President John C. Calhoun and the replacement of Jackson's cabinet. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 187 - [Jefferson, Thomas, and Sally Hemings]
John Quincy Adams' Racist Satirical Poem Mocking Thomas Jefferson After his Scandalous Affair with his Slave
[Jefferson, Thomas, and Sally Hemings] John Quincy Adams' Racist Satirical Poem Mocking Thomas Jefferson After his Scandalous Affair with his Slave Boston Gazette. Commercial and Political Boston: Published by John Russell and James Cutler, Monday, December 27, 1802. Vol. XIII, No. 34. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds; wear along edges, affecting some text; separations along central vertical fold; spotting and mild dampstaining. On the second page is printed John Quincy Adams' satirical poem mocking Thomas Jefferson, following reports of Jefferson's scandalous affair with his slave, Sally Hemings: "Dear Thomas, deem it no disgrace With slaves to mend thy breed, Nor let the wench's smutty face Deter thee from the deed..." In an early September 1802 issue of The Richmond Recorder, journalist James Callendar made the shocking accusation that President Thomas Jefferson had for nearly a decade been engaged in a sexual relationship with one of his slaves, Sally Hemings. Though Callendar claimed to have come to this conclusion after observing several light-skinned enslaved children at Monticello, similar rumors had been whispered about for years, notably during the bitter 1800 presidential contest between Jefferson and then-President John Adams. What few knew was that the original source for these rumors may have been Adams himself, who had possibly hinted about the relationship in letters to his son, John Quincy Adams, following Jefferson's resignation from George Washington's cabinet as Secretary of State in 1794. Federalist newspapers across the country eagerly reprinted the story. Though aligned with Jefferson politically, the BostonGazette nonetheless reprinted a racist poem penned by the son of Jefferson's predecessor and one-time friend, openly mocking the scandal. Originally published in October, the poem was reprinted multiple times. Jefferson denied paternity of Hemings's children, as did his children and grandchildren, however DNA evidence has since proven that Jefferson fathered six children with Hemings, four of whom survived to adulthood. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 188 - [Jefferson, Thomas] The Formation of the Library of Congress: Scarce Official Senate Report Pertaining to the Sale of Former President Thomas Jefferson's Library to the United States Congress
[Jefferson, Thomas] The Formation of the Library of Congress: Scarce Official Senate Report Pertaining to the Sale of Former President Thomas Jefferson's Library to the United States Congress Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman, 1814. First edition. 8vo. (4) pp. Likely disbound; separated along center fold; wear and light creasing along edges; light foxing. Scarce official Senate report pertaining to the sale of former President Thomas Jefferson's library to the United States Congress. During the War of 1812, the British entered Washington, D.C. and set fire to the Capitol building, destroying nearly all of the 3,000-plus-volume-library within. Jefferson was particularly distressed at the news and offered to sell his library to Congress to help them rebuild. At the time, Jefferson had the largest personal collection of books in the country, held at his plantation, Monticello, in Virginia. He had planned to offer this library to Congress upon his death, but considering the circumstances, and Congress's likely inability to rebuild on their own, he offered his at any valuation and payment terms Congress saw fit. His only stipulation was that they accept the library in full. This report, dated November 28, 1814, presents the bill to the Senate for Jefferson's 6,487-volume library, for a price of $23,950. The books were shipped beginning in April 1815, with the last wagonload arriving in Washington that May. Scarce, according to online records, only two other copies of this report have come to auction since the Streeter Sale, the last copy in these very rooms in 2023. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 189 - [Judaica] One of the Earliest Printed References to Jewish Individuals Living in the New World, 1698
[Judaica] One of the Earliest Printed References to Jewish Individuals Living in the New World, 1698 The Continuation of the Laws of Jamaica, Passed by the Assembly, And Confirmed by his Majesty in Council, December 26th 1695. Being the Second Volume of the said Laws. London: Printed for Charles Harper, and Samuel Crouch, 1698. First edition. Folio. (iv), 101, (3) pp. Full contemporary brown calf, stamped in blind, boards worn, scuffed, dry, and soiled, spine and joints dry and worn; all edges trimmed; ink stamps of the Library of the New York Law Institute on title-page and Index. ESTC R42084 One of the earliest printed references in English to members of a Jewish community living in the new world, listing them by name in the collected volume of laws of Jamaica. On pp. 8-10 is printed, "be it further Enacted and Ordained by the Authority aforesaid, that the Nation and People of the Jews Residing within this Island, Pay or cause to be Paid, toward the Raising of the said Sum of Mony (sic)...the full Sum of Seven Hundred and Fifty Pounds Currant Mony of this Island, to be rated, Assessed, Taxed, Collected and Paid in by Solomon Ararii, Jacob de Leon, Moses Toiro, Jacob Mendez Guteres, Jacob Henriques, Jacob Rodrigues de Leon, Moses Jesuram Cardoso, Samuel Gabay, Jacob Lopes Torres, Isaac Coutinho, Isaac Nunes Gonsales and Abraham Nunes..." While Jews, or those of Jewish descent, had been living in Jamaica since at least the 16th century, mainly of Portuguese and Spanish descent, it was not until the English capture of the island in 1655 that a more organized and intentional community began to take root. Other Jewish communities in the New World had sprung up earlier in the 17th century, among the first considered to be in Recife, Brazil in the latter 1630s, with others in Barbados, Suriname, and Martinique, but it was Jamaica that increasingly became a safe haven for them to openly practice their faith and customs, attracting settlers from Europe and elsewhere. Bolstering this emigration was the island’s religious tolerance, and the English Crown’s granting of citizenship. As the above law demonstrates though, while the Jewish community maintained civic rights, they were nonetheless discriminated against and taxed at a higher rate than their Christian neighbors. The above act relates to the repulsion of a French attack on the island in 1693, with four thousand pounds being subsequently levied, a fifth of which was requisitioned by the Jewish community on the island, and to be paid by their wealthiest and most prominent members (the 12 listed). Failure to pay by the designated date would result in a fine, the confiscation of slaves or other property, or arrest. Other similar taxes followed in the years hence. Despite this oftentimes onerous taxation, the Jewish community continued to thrive, reaching nearly 3,000 in the early 18th century. Rare. ESTC locates only two other copies, at Harvard University and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 190 - [Judaica] Thorpe's Original House of David Baseball Club of Benton Harbor, Michigan World's Champion Traveling Baseball Team
[Judaica] Thorpe's Original House of David Baseball Club of Benton Harbor, Michigan World's Champion Traveling Baseball Team Pensacola, Florida: Mayes Printing Co., ca. 1929. Printed broadside; 22 x 11 1/4 in. (559 x 286 mm). Laid down on card; creasing from old folds. Formed in 1913 by members of the Adventist commune the Israelite House of David, the House of David Baseball Club was a sensational barnstorming baseball team, known for their long unkempt hair and trick plays a la the Harlem Globetrotters. Headquartered in Benton Harbor, a small town in southwest Michigan, the Israelite House of David was founded in 1903 by the preacher couple Benjamin and Mary Purnell. Members of this communal society renounced personal property and adhered to strict prohibitions against sex, meat, alcohol, drugs, tobacco, and shaving. The group's baseball team emerged from Benjamin's passion for the sport and his belief that physical activity was essential to spiritual discipline. By the 1920s, the team had become a staple of the American barnstorming circuit, competing against both amateur and semi-professional clubs. During the team's lifetime they achieved remarkable success, drawing massive crowds, due not only to their wild looks, but to their adept playing skills and trick maneuvers. Toward the end of the decade, the team began recruiting professional talent, signing legends such as Grover Cleveland Alexander, Chief Bender, and Satchel Paige. They even occasionally featured Babe Ruth, who would humorously don fake facial hair to blend in with the bearded members of the team. This rare broadside dates to the year following the death of founder Benjamin Purnell, a period marked by the fallout from his scandalous trial and a subsequent schism within the commune. The split resulted in two factions: one loyal to Mary Purnell and the other remaining faithful to the original leadership. This poster features a full team photograph, an image of manager Francis Thorpe at center left, star player J.L. Tally--dubbed "The Babe Ruth of the Colony Team"--at center right, and John Tucker, known as the "Elongated First Baseman," at the bottom. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 191 - [Judaica] Early Front-Page report Warning Against Adolf Hitler, 1929
[Judaica] Early Front-Page report Warning Against Adolf Hitler, 1929 Jewish Daily Bulletin New York: Wednesday, January 2, 1929. Printed newspaper. Vol. V, No. 1256. 4to. 4 pp. Disbound; small chipping and wear along edges. With an early front-page report warning against Adolf Hitler: "Warns of Danger in Hitler Agitation Among German Peasants...A warning that if not checked, the anti-Semitic Hitler agitation among German peasants will lead to acts of violence..." Between 1928 and 1930 the Nazi Party in Germany began a sharp rise in popularity, propelled by their eagerness to blame minority groups for the country's economic instability. Hitler's scapegoat of choice was the Jewish people, which would eventually result in the Holocaust which saw over 6 million Jews murdered by Hitler's fascist regime. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 192 - [Know Nothing Party] Hurd, Charles, et al. Archive of Over 200 Manuscripts and Documents
[Know Nothing Party] Hurd, Charles, et al. Archive of Over 200 Manuscripts and Documents Locations vary, ca. 1830s-1930s. Archive of 218 documents related to Charles Hurd of Londonderry, New Hampshire, as well as his relatives or descendants. Including 165 manuscript pages of speeches and essays by Hurd; approximately 53 manuscript letters, bills, or receipts, by Hurd or his relatives; a small albumen postcard glossed "Hurd Family Farm"; a printed newspaper The Native American (Vol. I, No. I, February 22, 1844). Many documents housed in paper folders, and in green cloth binder titled, "Miscellaneous Writings of Charles Hurd Circ. 1850..." Size and condition varies; some documents heavily soiled. An extensive archive of original manuscripts, essays, and speeches, by Charles Hurd (1791-1873), an active participant in the Native American political party (also known as The Know Nothings) in the 1840s-60s. His writings cover both his personal and party views on topics such as temperance, nativism, biblical truths or philosophies, anti-Catholic rhetoric, democracy, the Whig Party, tariffs, the Fillmore administration, and much more. During the 1840s and 50s, as the Whig Party declined in political power, and the Republican Party was still in its beginning stages, the Native American Party or "Know Nothings" rose as an alternative faction to the Democrats. The Know Nothings preached a nativist stance against the growing trend of European immigration, specifically from Roman Catholic nations, while promoting traditional religious and political values, advocating temperance, and taking a neutral position on slavery. In 1856 the Know Nothings nominated former President Millard Fillmore to run on their ticket for the Presidency, but his loss that year to James Buchanan led to the party's rapid decline and eventual disappearance during the American Civil War. An extensive archive offering an in-depth look at the ideology of a 19th century American political party. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 193 - [Judaica] Large Archive of Items Related to Jewish Americans, etc., ca. 1820s-1960s
[Judaica] Large Archive of Items Related to Jewish Americans, etc., ca. 1820s-1960s Locations vary, ca. 1820s-1960s. Comprising over 40 items, including books, pamphlets, newspapers, government reports, printed invoices, etc., as well as three press photos. Publications relate to Zionism or Jewish American immigrants, their businesses, celebrations, and more. Notable content includes: The Anglo-Saxon, March 1899, issue "Devoted to the Identity of the Anglo-Saxon Race with the House of Israel..."; The Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 18, 1929, featuring an article on Albert Einstein; various Jewish publications such as The Jewish Mail, Yugnt, The Workmen's Circle, Young Maccabee, Digest and Review...of the American Jewish Congress, Zionist Organization of America, and others (1930s-50s); an 1893 Congressional Report recognizing the service of Haym Solomon during the American Revolution; Jewish Buyers' Guide, Spring 1954, etc.; Size and condition vary, generally very good. The first immigrant to the Americas of Jewish descent, Luis de Carabajal y Cueva, arrived at what is now Texas in 1570. During the lead-up to American independence around 2,000 Jews lived in the colonies, many of them supportive of the Patriotic cause. In a 1790 letter to a Jewish congregation, President George Washington wrote, "May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in the land continue to merit and enjoy the goodwill of the other inhabitants. While everyone shall sit safely under his own vine and fig-tree and there shall be none to make him afraid." Jewish immigration increased during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, largely to escape European persecution, and following the Second World War many more European Jews emigrated to the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 194 - [Labor] Group of 9 Items Related to American Labor and Manufacturers
[Labor] Group of 9 Items Related to American Labor and Manufacturers Locations vary, ca. 1820-1992. Comprising nine items, including, Printed Senate Report ("Plan for the Defence of our Commerce"). Washington, D.C., April 3, 1820. 8vo.; Patron of Industry. New York, Saturday, July 29, 1820. Printed newspaper. Folio; Printed Congressional Report ("Kentucky--Protect American Manufactures"). Washington, D.C., April 26, 1832. 8vo; Profits on Manufactures at Lowell. A Letter From the Treasurer of a Corporation to John S. Pendelton, Esq., Virginia. Boston: Little & Brown, 1845. 8vo; The Coal Calamity Supplement to Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. September 25, 1869. Folio; Printed Senate Report ("Memorial of the Laboring Men of the United States"). Washington, D.C., December 15, 1869. 8vo; Group of two stereoviews depicting Pennsylvania miners, ca. 1880s; Paxton, A.B. Cabinet card depicting Oregon laborers. Condition varies, generally very good; documents all disbound; photographs worn. The roots of the American labor movement stretch all the way back to 1619, when Polish craftsmen organized a strike to protest their being barred from voting in the first elections held in the Virginia colony. Subsequent strikes did little to achieve the goals of the strikers, largely due to a lack of organization and a lack of legal recourse. It was not until the Industrial Revolution came into full swing, as craftsmen found themselves losing their jobs to machines, that workers began to organize and demand protections for their livelihoods. The legality of labor unions was decided by the United States Supreme Court in the 1842 landmark case of Commonwealth v. Hunt. Over subsequent years the debate over worker rights has been played out again and again, often with bloody results, as in the case of the Haymarket Affair and the Pullman Strike. After a decline in union membership during the latter half of the twentieth century, the labor movement has seen a dramatic resurgence over the last two decades, largely in response to concerns over economic inequality and high costs of living. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 195 - [Labor] Partially-Printed Indentured Servitude Agreement, Baltimore, 1790
[Labor] Partially-Printed Indentured Servitude Agreement, Baltimore, 1790 Baltimore: Printed by John Hayes, November 3, 1790. Single sheet, 13 x 8 in. (330 x 203 mm). Partially-printed document, being an agreement of indentured servitude between John William Barkle, and James Dunwoody, the former agreeing to serve the latter for two and a half years; signed by both at conclusion ("Johan Willem Bartels" and "Jas. Dunwadey"), and witnessed by future Mayor of Baltimore James Calhoun. Autograph endorsement signed by Calhoun on verso. Wax seals present. Creasing from old folds, closed tears along same; scattered foxing and stains. James Calhoun (1743-1816) served as Deputy Commissary General of Maryland during the American Revolution, and later served as the first Mayor of Baltimore from 1794-1804. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 196 - [Labor] Report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, the Deadliest Industrial Disaster in United States History: "140 Girls Perish in Big Factory Holocaust"
[Labor] Report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, the Deadliest Industrial Disaster in United States History: "140 Girls Perish in Big Factory Holocaust" The Call San Francisco, March 26, 1911. Vol. CIX, No. 116. Folio. pp. 17-52. Printed newspaper. With a front-page report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. Disbound; leaves brittle; creasing from old folds; scattered loss to extremities; moderately toned. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire occurred on March 25, 1911 in New York City, resulting in 146 deaths, the majority of which were Jewish and Italian girls. The sweatshop occupied three floors of a building located in Greenwich Village, and was not outfitted with any sort of sprinkler system. Additionally, the doors to many stairwells had been locked by managers to prevent workers from stealing or taking breaks. The disaster led to a major push by reform groups, especially the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) advocating for improved safety protection and better working conditions for laborers across the country. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 197 - [Lafayette, Marquis de] Sheet Music for The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Boston Brigade Band During the Marquis de Lafayette's Visit During his Triumphal Return and Tour of America in 1824-25
[Lafayette, Marquis de] Sheet Music for The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Boston Brigade Band During the Marquis de Lafayette's Visit During his Triumphal Return and Tour of America in 1824-25 The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Brigade Band at the Reception of Genl. Lafayette... Boston and New York: Published by James L. Hewitt, (ca. 1824). Second state (of two). Printed sheet music. 4to. Two conjoined sheets. Disbound; ink stamp on first leaf ("Hewitt's Store"); foxing along edges; dampstaining in top edge. Wagner, James Hewitt Selected Compositions, 22a; Wolfe 3684A Sheet music for a performance by the Boston Brigade Band during the Marquis de Lafayette's visit to Boston during his triumphal return and tour of America in 1824-25. Lafayette first visited Boston from August 25-September 2, 1824, where he was greeted by over 100,000 people. During his stay he visited Harvard University, the sites of the Battles of Bunker Hill, Lexington, and Concord, and met with former president John Quincy Adams in Quincy, Massachusetts. He returned nearly a year later, in June 1825, after touring the rest of the United States, and laid the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument during the 50th anniversary of the battle, which was attended by 200,000 people. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 198 - [LGBTQ+] Group of 6 LGBTQ+ Related Periodicals, 1784-1978
[LGBTQ+] Group of 6 LGBTQ+ Related Periodicals, 1784-1978 1. The Boston Magazine for June, 1784. Boston: Norman, White, and Freeman, 1784. 8vo. pp. 317-358, lacking pp. 313-316. Illustrated with two engraved plates, including a portrait of Chevalier D'Eon, a French soldier, spy, and diplomat, and "arguably the most famous male crossdresser in history..." (Bolich, Crossdressing in Context, p. 105). Disbound. 2. The Furies Lesbian/Feminist Monthly Washington, D.C., January 1972. Vol. I. Printed newspaper. Folio. 16 pp. Creased from when folded; wear along edges and at fold. 3. Bitch The Only Newspaper For Women New York: Milky Way Productions, March 1974. Vol. I, No. 2. Printed newspaper. Folio. 24 pp. Creased from when folded; lightly worn. 4. GayLife The Midwest Gay Newsletter (Chicago): YourStyle Publishers Inc., Friday, December 8, 1978. Volume 4, Number 25. Printed newspaper. Folio. 28 pp. Folded; toned. With a front page report on the aftermath of the November 27 murder of San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, and notification of a memorial service for him in Chicago. Lot includes an issue of Homophile Studies (Fall 1959), and Expose (November 1, 1951). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 199 - [LIFE Magazine] Dummy of the First Issue of LIFE Magazine, 1936
[LIFE Magazine] Dummy of the First Issue of LIFE Magazine, 1936 New York: Time Inc., ca July 30, 1936. Light creasing to covers. This first dummy issue was prepared for prospective advertisers and produced and distributed by Time Inc. four months prior to the November 23, 1936 publication of the magazine's premiere issue. One of the most important publications in the history of photojournalism, and arguably the most iconic American magazine of the twentieth century, LIFE was among the most widely read periodicals in the United States from its debut in 1936 through the 1960s. First issued as a weekly magazine on November 23, 1936, LIFE revolutionized modern journalism through its emphasis on large-format photographic essays, bringing world events, war, politics, celebrity, and everyday life into American homes with unprecedented immediacy. The magazine continued its weekly run until December 29, 1972, when it ceased regular publication and thereafter appeared only in occasional special editions. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 200 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Early Mention of Abraham Lincoln as a State Legislator
[Lincoln, Abraham] Early Mention of Abraham Lincoln as a State Legislator Illinois Sentinel Vandalia, Illinois, December 5, 1840. Vol. 1. No. 52. Bifolium sheet, 21 1/2 x 16 in. (546 x 406 mm). Printed newspaper, featuring an early mention of Abraham Lincoln when an Illinois State Congressman. Creasing from old folds, separated at vertical central fold; closed tears repaired with cello tape; small chips to extremities; scattered soiling; ownership signature at top right, "Dept. of State." A scarce issue of the Illinois Sentinel, listing the names of those appointed to standing committees within the state House of Representatives, among them a 31-year-old Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln is listed as a member of the Committee on Canals and Canal lands. Later in his political career, he would have a long-standing commitment to what he called "internal improvements", for infrastructure projects such as canals, railroads, and other pieces of infrastructure. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 201 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Lincoln's Famed "Spot Resolutions" in His Local Newspaper: Printing of a Rebuke to the First Major Speech Given by Him as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives
[Lincoln, Abraham] Lincoln's Famed "Spot Resolutions" in His Local Newspaper: Printing of a Rebuke to the First Major Speech Given by Him as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives Illinois State Register Springfield, January 14, 1848. Bifolium, 26 x 19 in. (660 x 483 mm). Printed newspaper. Creasing from old folds, scattered wear to extremities, a few small closed tears; light dampstaining affecting half of text; contemporary inscription at top left of front page. Printing a rebuke to the first major speech given by Abraham Lincoln as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives. Delivered two days prior on January 12, Lincoln's "Spot Resolutions" speech argued against the wantonness of the Polk administration whom he claimed incited an unnecessary war with Mexico. The author of this article, charges "Thank Heaven, Illinois has eight representatives who will stand by the honor of the nation. Would that we could find Mr. Lincoln in their ranks doing battle on the side of his country as valiantly as did the Illinois volunteers upon the battle fields of Buena Vista and Cerro Gordo. He will have a fearful account to settle with them..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 202 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Front-Page Ad for Lincoln & Herndon's Law Practice, July 14, 1858
[Lincoln, Abraham] Front-Page Ad for Lincoln & Herndon's Law Practice, July 14, 1858 Daily Illinois State Journal Springfield, (Illinois): Bailhache & Baker, July 14, 1858. Volume XI, Number 26. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; separated along central vertical fold; wear and creasing along edges. Featuring an ad for Abraham Lincoln's law practice on the front page: "Lincoln & Herndon Attorneys and Counsellors at Law..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 203 - [Lincoln, Abraham, and Stephen Douglas] Very Rare Pamphlet Containing the Text of the Last Debate Between Lincoln and Douglas, the Only Separate Printing of any of Their Historic Debates
[Lincoln, Abraham, and Stephen Douglas] Very Rare Pamphlet Containing the Text of the Last Debate Between Lincoln and Douglas, the Only Separate Printing of any of Their Historic Debates Washington (D.C.): Lemuel Towers, 1858. First edition. 8vo. 32 pp. Printed from text in the Chicago Daily Times, October 17, 1858. Limp printed wrappers, foxed; edges unevenly trimmed, small closed tears to extremities; scattered manuscript numbering, foxing throughout. Monaghan 10 Very rare pamphlet containing the text of the final debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, the only separate printing of any of their historic debates. After winning the 1858 Republican nomination for the Senate from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln delivered his famous "House Divided" speech and prepared for a hard-fought campaign against Douglas, who continued to oppose any meddling whatsoever with the institution of slavery. Lincoln and his campaign team began following Douglas across the state, delivering campaign speeches immediately after him, until he finally agreed to a series of seven debates with Lincoln between August 21-October 15, 1858, and now remembered as the Lincoln-Douglas Debates. The present example is only the fourth copy to appear in the available auction record in the last 50 years. Lot also includes a small tintype portrait of Douglas, and an issue of the Campaign Plain Dealer and Popular Sovereignty Advocate (July 14, 1860); This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 204 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Unrecorded Anti-Lincoln Handbill: Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row
[Lincoln, Abraham] Unrecorded Anti-Lincoln Handbill: Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row No place, no date (ca. 1860-64]. printed handbill. Wood-engraved vignette depicting enslaved men; 3 15/16 x 5 1/2 in. (100 x 140 mm). "Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row. The 'Black Republicans' driven into Retirement! Bought nominations with Brokers and Office Holders money gone to Salt River." An apparently unrecorded anti-Lincoln handbill. "Black Republicans" was an epithet coined by pro-slavery Democrats and Southern critics to tar the party with the brush of racial radicalism, implying that Republicans sought not merely to contain slavery's expansion but to overturn the entire racial order of American society. "Gone to Salt River," meanwhile, was a well-worn idiom in antebellum political culture, invoking total electoral humiliation. To be sent up Salt River was to be finished, repudiated, swept from the field by the voters. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 205 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Group of 4 Items Related to President Abraham Lincoln, 1860-65
[Lincoln, Abraham] Group of 4 Items Related to President Abraham Lincoln, 1860-65 Locations vary, ca. 1860-65. Comprising four items, including, jugate letterhead of Lincoln and Hamlin, ca. 1860 (Milgram AL-107); Message of the President of the United States, July 17, 1862, announcing that Cornelius Vanderbilt has presented the ocean steamer Vanderbilt for service to the government (single sheet, disbound); The Presidential Election. Appeal of the National Union Committee to the People of the United States, September 9, 1864, urging the reelection of President Lincoln (single sheet, 11 1/4 x 8 1/8 in.); American Phrenological Journal and Life Illustrated, New York, May, 1865, Vol. 41, No. 5, Whole No. 317 (4to, original printed wrappers), with an article on the death of President Lincoln. Condition varies, generally good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 206 - [Lincoln, Abraham]. The First Conspiracy to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln, Breaking News in The New York Herald, 1861
[Lincoln, Abraham]. The First Conspiracy to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln, Breaking News in The New York Herald, 1861 The New York Herald New York, Sunday Morning, February 24, 1861. Whole No. 8934. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Creasing from old folds; separations along center vertical fold, some repairs to same. Breaking front-page news of a conspiracy to prevent President-elect Abraham
Lot: 207 - [Lincoln, Abraham] "With Malice Toward None, with Charity for All": Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address
[Lincoln, Abraham] "With Malice Toward None, with Charity for All": Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address The New-York Times New-York, Monday, March 6, 1865. Vol. XIV, No. 4195. Printed newspaper on rag paper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds, unevenly toned from same; short separation at fore-edge of central horizontal fold. Printed in full on the front page is Lincoln's second inaugural address, followed by reports on the inauguration ceremonies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 208 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Contemporary Manuscript Copy of Special Field Order No. 56, Announcing the Assassination of President Lincoln, April 17, 1865
[Lincoln, Abraham] Contemporary Manuscript Copy of Special Field Order No. 56, Announcing the Assassination of President Lincoln, April 17, 1865 "The General Commanding announces with pain and Sorrow that on the evening of the 11th inst. at the Theater in Washington City His Excellency the President of the United States Mr. Lincoln was assassinated by one who uttered the State motto of Virginia..." Head Quarters Mil(itary). Div(ision). of the Miss(issippi). in the Field Raleigh, N(orth).C(arolina)., April 17, 1865. Lined bifolium, 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (248 x 197 mm). Manuscript document, signed by Captain and Assistant Adjutant General Hubert S. Brown, of the Second Division of the Fifteenth Army Corps, being a contemporary copy of General William T. Sherman's Special Field Order No. 56. , announcing to the Union Army the assassination of President Lincoln. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, small separations along same; largely separated along central vertical fold; scattered light soiling. On the morning of April 17, 1865, General William T. Sherman, commander of the Military Division of the Mississippi, was traveling from Raleigh, North Carolina to Durham to negotiate the surrender of Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston. When he was about to depart he received an urgent telegraph from Secretary of War Edwin Stanton: "The following order of the Secretary of War announces to the Armies of the United States the untimely and lamentable death of the illustrious Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States...at 7.22 o’clock on the morning of Saturday, the 15th day of April, 1865, Abraham Lincoln...died of a mortal wound, inflicted upon him by an assassin. The Armies of the United States will share with their fellow-citizens the feelings of grief and horror inspired by this most atrocious murder..." Following the meeting and his return to Raleigh, Sherman showed the message to his staff, and cautioned them to keep close observance of the soldiers when the news was broke, as they might retaliate against the civilian population of the city in a fit of emotion. As a precaution, he strengthened the garrison and guard at the roads leading into the various camps, ordered all soldiers on leave to immediately return to their commands, and placed the city on lockdown. Following these preparations, Sherman released his Special Order that evening. "The startling proclamation that Lincoln was dead brought varied reactions from the Federal troops. Fortunately, accompanying Special Field Order No. 56 was the announcement of the first day's truce talk between Sherman and Johnston. This helped turn the thoughts of soldiers from vengeance to peace." (Barrett, p. 236) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 209 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Abraham Lincoln Funeral Program with Order of Procession for Washington, D.C., April 17, 1865
[Lincoln, Abraham] Abraham Lincoln Funeral Program with Order of Procession for Washington, D.C., April 17, 1865 Washington, D.C.: War Department, Adjutant General's Office, April 17, 1865. 12mo. (1), 2-3 pp. Printed mourning border, with diagram of hearse and pallbearers. Signed in type by Assistant Adjutant General W.A. Nichols. Disbound; remnants of original thread. A scarce and fine example of the official arrangements for Abraham Lincoln's Washington, D.C. funeral procession. The program lists in detail the several military units, civic and religious figures, family and relatives, as well as cultural and institutional officers that took part in the solemnities, with a printed diagram showing the hearse and pallbearers. It is followed by a description of the procession's movements, which was to begin at precisely 2 o'clock P.M. on Wednesday, April 19th, following the conclusion of the religious services at the Executive Mansion. The start of the procession was met with the firing of several guns from St. John's Church, City Hall, and the Capitol, and the ringing of church bells throughout Washington, Georgetown, and Alexandria. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 210 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Rare New York Times New Year's Broadside Commemorating the end of the Civil War and the Assassination of President Lincoln
[Lincoln, Abraham] Rare New York Times New Year's Broadside Commemorating the end of the Civil War and the Assassination of President Lincoln Carrier's Address. 1866. Happy New Year. The New York Times. To our Patrons New York: Printed by E.S. Dodge & Co., 1866. Printed broadside, 23 x 16 3/4 in. (584 x 425 mm). Printed in brown ink; text in four columns; printed decorative border; vignette at top and bottom. Creasing from old folds; scattered light spotting; repairs on verso edges; scattered edge-wear. A rare New Year's carrier's address broadside printed for the patrons of The New York Times, commemorating in verse the end of the Civil War and the assassination of President Lincoln: "Another tale will old men oft relate, / Of how our Lincoln fell 'neath traitor hate; / How he we loved so much, with so much pride, / Struck by th' assassin's fatal bullet, died." Rare. OCLC records only two other copies, at the New York Historical Society (imperfect), and at the New Jersey Historical Society. According to RBH, no other copy of this broadside has sold at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 211 - [Louisiana Purchase] President Thomas Jefferson Announces the Louisiana Purchase
[Louisiana Purchase] President Thomas Jefferson Announces the Louisiana Purchase Connecticut Herald New-Haven: Printed and Published by J. Woodward and M. Potter, November 1, 1803. Vol. I, No. I. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds, small holes along central horizontal fold of each sheet; creasing and wear along edges; scattered soiling and minor dampstaining. One of the most significant and far-reaching Presidential addresses to Congress, Jefferson's October 17, 1803 message announcing the Louisiana Purchase: "The enlightened government of France saw, with just discernment, the importance to both nations of such liberal arrangements as might best and permanently promote the peace, friendship and interests of both; and the property and sovereignty of all Louisiana, which had been restored to them, has on certain conditions, been transferred to the United States by instruments bearing date the 30th of April last." He goes on to stress, "With the wisdom of Congress it will rest to take those ulterior measures which may be necessary for the immediate occupation and temporary government of the country; for its incorporation into our union; for rendering the change of government a blessing to our newly adopted brethren; for securing to them the rights of conscience and of property; for confirming to the Indian inhabitants their occupancy and self-government, establishing friendly and commercial relations with them, and for ascertaining the geography of the country acquired." The latter a reference to the Lewis and Clark expedition that was then ongoing, tracing the source of the Missouri River. Other news reported is the passage of the 12th Amendment, to be sent to the individual states for ratification, and which altered the procedure for electing the president and vice president (that led to the contentious election of Jefferson as vice-president during John Adams' term). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 212 - [Louisiana Purchase] Report Regarding the Louisiana Purchase in the National Intelligencer, and Washington Advertiser
[Louisiana Purchase] Report Regarding the Louisiana Purchase in the National Intelligencer, and Washington Advertiser Washington City: Printed by Samuel Harrison Smith, Wednesday, October 26th, 1803. Vol. III, No. CCCCLXX. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front page. Disbound, old stub along spine; creasing from old folds, separations along same; chipping and wear along fore-edge. On the front-page is a report regarding the Louisiana Purchase, prefaced with, "The House of Representatives have taken off the injunction of secrecy respecting the following proceedings of the last session, and ordered them to be printed." Following is a resolution passed by Congress on January 12, 1803, appropriating $2 million for the purchase of New Orleans and East and West Florida from the Spanish and French. On the fourth page is a report from Congress requesting the President provide a copy of the Spanish and French treaty, ceding Louisiana Territory to France. Congress ratified the Louisiana Purchase a week prior to this newspaper, on October 20. A lengthy article on the second and third pages prints the debates around the passage and ratification of the 12th Amendment to the Constitution. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 213 - [Louisiana Purchase] The Return of Lewis and Clark
[Louisiana Purchase] The Return of Lewis and Clark The Connecticut Courant Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Goodwin, Wednesday, November 5, 1806. Vol. XLII, Numb. 2180. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front-page. Creasing from old folds. Printed at the top of the second-page is an October 27 report from Washington, D.C., announcing the return of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark following their over two-year-long expedition into the Louisiana Territory. The article recounts the final leg of their journey, over the Rocky Mountains and along the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean, and Lewis's expected journey to Washington, D.C. to be received by President Thomas Jefferson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 214 - [McKinley, William] Pair of General Orders on the Death of President William McKinley
[McKinley, William] Pair of General Orders on the Death of President William McKinley Washington, D.C., September 14-November 14, 1901. Group of two printed documents, each 7 7/16 x 4 7/16 in. (189 x 113 mm). One printed with mourning border. Chip in bottom edge of September document. The first document (General Orders #123) was issued by Secretary of War Elihu Root on September 14, 1901, announcing to the United States Army, the death of President McKinley. The second (General Orders #150) was issued by Theodore Roosevelt two months later, on November 14, 1901. "This Thanksgiving finds the people still bowed with sorrow for the death of a great and good President. We mourn President McKinley because we so loved and honored him; and the manner of his death should awaken in the breasts of our people a keen anxiety for the country, and at the same time a resolute purpose not to be driven by any calamity from the path of strong, orderly, popular liberty which as a nation we have thus far safely trod..." William McKinley was assassinated in Buffalo, New York on September 6, 1901, while attending the Pan-American Exposition. He was shot twice at close range by anarchist Leon Czolgosz, while inside the Temple of Music building during a public receiving line where the President was greeting visitors. McKinley died eight days later on September 14. Following his death, Vice President Theodore Roosevelt assumed the office. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 215 - [Monroe, Marilyn] Group of 5 Documents Relating to the Divorce of Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio
[Monroe, Marilyn] Group of 5 Documents Relating to the Divorce of Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio Locations vary, ca. 1955. A small group of papers related to Monroe's divorce from Joe DiMaggio, comprising two telegrams from Monroe's attorney Jerry Giesler to attorney Frank Delaney (including one with receipt), a carbon of one typed letter (from Delaney to Monroe, dated February 3, 1955, transmitting a copy of her divorce judgement, the latter not present), and one typed memo, presumably from Delaney, being a list of the locations of her divorce judgement. Lot also includes a press photograph of Monroe and DiMaggio, ca. January 16, 1954. Condition varies, generally fine. The marriage between film star Marilyn Monroe and baseball legend Joe DiMaggio lasted only 274 days, with the filming of Monroe's infamous subway grate scene from The Seven Year Itch widely believed to have been the main cause for the couple's separation; in the divorce proceedings Monroe was represented by Jerry Giesler, who worked closely with Monroe's legal counsel Frank Delaney to finalize the settlement. Delaney would later prove crucial in establishing Monroe's independent production company in 1955. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 216 - [Mexican-American War] A U.S. Soldier Writes to His Love Interest Following the March on Matamoros
[Mexican-American War] A U.S. Soldier Writes to His Love Interest Following the March on Matamoros Matamoros, Mexico, September 8, 1846. Bifolium. Two-page autograph love letter in blue ink, signed by a United States Army soldier to his love interest, recounting his unit's march on Matamoros. Addressed on integral leaf, with additional manuscript in another hand, "Miss Eliza Whiting Eagleville". Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling. Early in the Mexican-American War, a United States Army soldier, stationed in Matamoros, Mexico, writes to his love interest, recounting his march on the city: "I'm thinkin that would done your very soul good to see us when we lumbered thiseer town. If we didn't make a noise equal to almost any thunder clap you ever hearn, and made it as lite a day in the night, then i'll be hanged. We worked plenty hard, for so much gunpowder burnt down in thiseer hot-clymit don't make it none the cooler, When yeller Mexicans tried to blow us up but they couldn't cum it, for all them ateen pownders of ours went made for nothin, and they sent a lot of balls in amongst em and they made turin work for we put in the catriges full into em and when we tuched em of they bellerd like a made Ruffler. B____ they giv up and then we marched in and took possession on em. Tween you and me Kate I didn't feel none the wurs for the fite fur Jineral marched us into the town with all dignity, and sooty Mexican gals lookin as iff they was skeered haf to deth looked at us wen we cum in but I didn't see none I liked so much as you Kate. I kep my head up and looked as smart as I could..." General Zachary Taylor marched on Matamoros, Mexico in mid May 1846, following his victories at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma that ended the Mexican Army's siege of Fort Texas on the Rio Grande River. The city would remain occupied by U.S. forces for the remainder of the war, and serve as a critical staging ground and supply depot for Taylor's troops as they advanced into the interior of Mexico. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 217 - [Mexican-American War] Contemporary Manuscript Naval Document of Instructions for the First Large-Scale Amphibious Invasion in American Military History
[Mexican-American War] Contemporary Manuscript Naval Document of Instructions for the First Large-Scale Amphibious Invasion in American Military History No place, (presumably off Lobos Island, Gulf of Mexico), no date (presumed ca. February 1847). Bifolium, 12 1/2 x 8 in. (317 x 203 mm). Three-page manuscript document, being a contemporary copy of General Orders No. 28, detailing naval directions and signals "prescribed by the Genl. in Chief [Winfield Scott]...strictly observed on board of all vessels belonging to his expedition..." Docketed on verso, with further manuscript below, "A copy of G.O. No 28 & sailing directions to be furnished to each master of a vessel--New vols. are already furnished"; creasing from old folds; small stain in lower central fold. A fascinating contemporary copy of General Orders No. 28, issued by Major General Winfield Scott in preparation for the siege of Veracruz, Mexico during the Mexican-American War--the largest amphibious invasion in American history before the D-Day landings during World War II. Issued from Army Headquarters aboard the USS Massachusetts, an auxiliary steam-powered packet ship, the present Order details numerous flag signals and directions for vessels to use during the invasion. Aided by Commodore David E. Conner's Home Squadron, Scott's 15,000-strong force prepared for their operation off the Island of Lobos in early March 1847. The operation took place on March 9, and in less than 24 hours, facing little resistance, Scott landed 12,000 soldiers onto Mexican shores. Veracruz, the largest port in Mexico, served as a critical and strategic gateway to the capital of Mexico City, whose capture Scott hoped would force Mexico's surrender. Protected by the San Juan de Ulúa fortress, Scott chose to surround Veracruz for bombardment instead of the potential risk of taking the fort outright. Bombardment began on March 22, and by the 29th Mexican forces surrendered. The invasion opened the interior of Mexico, and began Scott's successful campaign toward Mexico City, arriving on the outskirts by August. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 218 - [Monroe Doctrine]
One of The Earliest Printings of the Monroe Doctrine
[Monroe Doctrine] One of The Earliest Printings of the Monroe Doctrine "The American continents, by the free and independent condition they have assumed and maintained, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers" National Journal [Extra] Washington, D.C.: Published by Peter Force, December 3, 1823. Vol. I, No. I. 4to; 12 5/8 x 9 3/8 in. (321 x 238 mm). Six leaves, printed in two columns. Disbound from the National Government Journal, and Register of Official Papers...From December, 1823, to December, 1824; leaves separated; toned; wear and chipping along edges. Library of Congress ink stamp on recto and verso of first leaf ("Surplus Duplicate"). Sabin 25057 A very rare printing of President Monroe's December 2, 1823 message to Congress, now known as the Monroe Doctrine, one of the most important American state papers and the guiding foreign policy for America's relations in the Western Hemisphere. Printed in Peter Force's National Government Journal, and Register of Official Papers, an early predecessor of the Congressional Record. Force produced this special "Extra" edition of his daily newspaper (National Journal, 1823-30) to chronicle the sessions of the federal Congress. It contains the debates in the House and Senate, bills introduced, discussions and votes, and other government business. Although Force's venture failed after one year (only December 1823-December 1824 was printed), it was the first major separate publication dedicated solely to the printing of Congressional activity, and preceded by a year Joseph Gales, Jr. and William W. Seaton's Register of Debates (1824), printers of Force's rival newspaper, the National Intelligencer. The National Intelligencer, and Force's National Journal, were the de facto and semi-official newspapers of the federal government. This printing is preceded only by the very rare broadside newspaper "extra" printed by the National Intelligencer, published the day prior, on December 2. Gales and Seaton also published President Monroe's message to Congress in their Daily National Intelligencer on the same day as this extra by Force. Very rare to market, according to RBH, we can locate no other copy of this printing having been sold or offered at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 219 - [Mormonism] Group of 13 Printed Items Related to Mormonism, ca. 1842-1879
[Mormonism] Group of 13 Printed Items Related to Mormonism, ca. 1842-1879 Locations vary, ca. 1842-1879. Group of 13 printed items related to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, including, five issues of the printed periodical Times and Seasons (Nauvoo, Illinois: 1842-46); printed periodical American Penny Magazine and Family Newspaper (Vol. 1, No. 47, December 27, 1845); printed newspaper Life Illustrated (August 15, 1857, Vol. IV, No. 16); printed pamphlet Circular of the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1877); printed newspaper Salt Lake Daily Review (August 9, 1871, Vol. 1, No. 1); three issues of the printed newspaper Woman's Exponent (Salt Lake City, 1877-79); printed newspaper The Sun, (August 30, 1877, Vol. XLIV, No. 364). Size and condition varies. Following the 1838 Mormon War and their expulsion from the state of Missouri, Joseph Smith led his church to Illinois, where they bought a small town which they renamed Nauvoo and settled into what proved to be a short-lived period of relative tranquility. Within a few years, however, tensions arose between the Mormons and their neighbors once again. Joseph Smith was murdered by a mob in 1844 and the largest sect of his followers, now led by Brigham Young, fled to the Utah Territory. For the next forty years the Mormon Church remained locked in a statehood dispute with the United States government, mainly over the church's practice of polygamy. This dispute is generally acknowledged to be the main reason why Utah was not admitted as a state until a formal ban was written into the state's constitution, a practice which all other western states were forced to add into their own constitutions as well. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 220 - [Mormonism] A Unique Contemporary Manuscript Account of Joseph Smith's Final Words to His Followers, the Day Before his Violent Death, on the Interior of a Postal Cover
[Mormonism] A Unique Contemporary Manuscript Account of Joseph Smith's Final Words to His Followers, the Day Before his Violent Death, on the Interior of a Postal Cover "The prophet told his people the day before he was killed, to read the 6th Ch. Revelation; as a part was already fulfilled, and the remainder will shortly be..." (Nauvoo, Illinois, July, 27, 1844). Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 7 1/2
Lot: 221 - [Mormonism] Substantial and Nearly Consecutive Run of an Anti-Mormon Newspaper
[Mormonism] Substantial and Nearly Consecutive Run of an Anti-Mormon Newspaper Corinne Daily Reporter Corinne, Utah: Dennis J. Toohy, Monday, July 1, 1872-December 30, 1872. Vol. V, Nos. 181-343 (Nos. at rear misnumbered beginning after No. 289). Comprising 145 near-consecutive issues, lacking Nos. 183, 200, 206, 216, 218, 219, 228, 273, 278, and 308. Folio. Each issue 4 pp. Bound together in worn stiff paper wrappers, typed paper spine labels; contemporary ownership signature at top of each front-page ("L.P. Fisher"); scattered tape repairs and pencil or crayon scrawls; scattered creasing and wear along edges; some issues faded. A substantial and nearly consecutive run of this anti-Mormon newspaper, founded in 1869 by Dennis J. Toohy, an Irish attorney and prominent leader of Utah's anti-Mormon Liberal Party. The publication was launched in March of that year in Corinne, a town situated along the Pacific Union railroad. Established by non-Mormon settlers, Corinne earned the nickname "Gentile City" as its founders sought to create a rival economic and political hub to challenge Salt Lake City. This newspaper offered a diverse mix of content, including local, domestic, and international news, advertisements for local businesses, and a significant number of humorous pieces, many targeting and mocking the Mormon Church. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 222 - [Mormonism] Signed Autograph Quote from Ann Eliza Young, Nineteenth Wife of Mormon Leader Brigham Young, Signed During her Divorce Proceedings Against him, 1874
[Mormonism] Signed Autograph Quote from Ann Eliza Young, Nineteenth Wife of Mormon Leader Brigham Young, Signed During her Divorce Proceedings Against him, 1874 No place, January 13, 1874. Single sheet, 7 1/4 x 4 7/8 in. (184 x 124 mm). Autograph quote, signed by Ann Eliza Young: "God grant your sufferings may never / equal mine. / Ann Eliza Young. / January 13th 1874". Inscription in purple ink in another later hand at top. Scattered light spotting; faint erased pencil inscription at top; likely excised from an album. An autograph quote from Ann Eliza Young (1844–1917), the nineteenth wife of Mormon leader Brigham Young, signed during her divorce proceedings against him. Born into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Nauvoo, Illinois, she married Young on April 7, 1869; at the time, he was 67 and she was a 24-year-old divorcee. In 1873, Ann Eliza filed for divorce, citing neglect, cruel treatment, and desertion. The divorce was granted in 1875. In the years that followed, she became a vocal critic of the Mormon Church, particularly its practice of polygamy. Her activism included testifying before Congress in April 1874 and lecturing in Washington, D.C. about her experiences. Her efforts contributed to the passage of the Poland Act in 1874, which reorganized the Utah Territory and transferred civil and criminal cases from Mormon probate courts to federal jurisdiction. In 1876, she published Wife No. 19, an autobiography detailing her life with Young and her broader critique of Mormonism. Her lectures on her marriage and religion captivated the American public for years and helped shape public opinion and legislation. Her pressure is considered to have influenced the church's 1890 Manifesto, which advised members to cease marriages forbidden by U.S. law. Polygamy itself was federally outlawed through the Edmunds Act of 1882 and the Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 223 - [Motor Racing] Early Race Car Crash at the Daytona Beach Race Course
[Motor Racing] Early Race Car Crash at the Daytona Beach Race Course New York: Burr McIntosh Studio, 1905. Photograph mounted to original card, studio blindstamp in lower right corner of photograph; studio imprint in gilt in lower left corner of card; contemporary typed card stapled to verso, "Both Driver and Mechanic Were Killed in this Wreck at Daytona Beach, Fla. 1905. Mechanic was Killed Instantly; Croker Died Shortly Afterward. Car was Built for Richard Croker Jr. of New York City." Chipping and small losses to edges of mount, closed tear in bottom of same. An early and scarce Daytona Beach auto race photograph, showing the fatal wreckage of Frank H. Croker's (1878-1905) Simplex race car. At the time of his fatal crash on the afternoon of Saturday, January 21, 1905, Croker was preparing for the Sir Thomas Dewar Trophy race, the top event at the third annual Daytona-Ormond Beach Speed Carnival competitions, held from January 23-28. While practicing the course at Ormand Beach in his 75-horsepower Simplex racecar he attempted to avoid a crash with motorcycle racer Newton Stanley, who was also using the course. Croker's car turned over several times after hitting a sand dune, ejecting Croker, and instantly killing his mechanic, Alexander Raoul, before coming to rest partially in the sea. Croker suffered critical head and body injuries and was taken to the Hotel Ormond, where he was cared for by numerous doctors, but died the following morning. Croker was the son of Richard Croker, Jr., a one-time coroner in New York City, and leader of Tammany Hall and New York's Democratic Party. At the time of his death, Frank was preparing to compete in 15 races over the week-long Speed Carnival, and had raced the pictured Simplex for the first time the previous October at the Vanderbilt Cup race on Long Island. Over 8,000 people attended his funeral in New York City, including the Mayor, and several people from the Democratic Club and Tammany Hall. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 224 - [Music] [The Beatles] Scarce Poster Advertising the First Polish Release of The Beatles Film A Hard Day's Night
[Music] [The Beatles] Scarce Poster Advertising the First Polish Release of The Beatles Film A Hard Day's Night Poland: United Artists, 1964. Off-set color lithographed poster. Text in Polish. Designed by Waldemar Swierzy. 33 3/4 x 24 in. (857 x 610 mm). Scattered surface wear and creasing; wear along edges; small loss in top right corner; dampstaining and soiling in top edge; pinholes in corners; large repaired vertical closed tear in top edge, other smaller repaired closed tears along edges. A scarce poster advertising the first Polish release of the classic 1964 Beatles' film, A Hard Day's Night, directed by Richard Lester. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 225 - [Music] [Country Joe and the Fish] Group of 2 Psychedelic Concert Posters, 1966-1975
[Music] [Country Joe and the Fish] Group of 2 Psychedelic Concert Posters, 1966-1975 Country Joe and the Fish Likely Berkeley, California, November 1966. Color lithograph designed by "Weller"; photograph by Paul Kagan. Loss in lower right corner. 22 9/16 x 17 5/8 in. (573 x 448 mm). Promotional poster for Country Joe and the Fish's performance schedule for November 1966. Together with: Be-In A Day to Be-In the Park Presented by Radio Free Madison and the Mad City Be-In Committee...featuring Hemisphere Recording Artists...Derringer... Madison, (Wisconsin), September 7, 1975. Screen-print. Hole in upper left side; closed tear upper right side. 17 x 11 (432 x 279 mm). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 226 - [Music] [Hendrix, Jimi] Early Concert Contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience
[Music] [Hendrix, Jimi] Early Concert Contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience London: Harold Davison Agency Ltd, December 5, 1966. Unsigned carbon of a contract between manager Philip Haywood and Chas Chandler for "The Jimmy Hendrix Experience", for a show at the Ricky Tick Club in Windsor, Berkshire, England, on December 23, 1966. Creasing from old folds; stain in bottom left corner; small holes in top left corner from removed staple. 13 x 8 in. (330 x 203 mm). A very early and scarce carbon of a concert contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience, for a two-set show at the Ricky Tick night club in Hounslow, England, on December 23, 1966. By May of 1966, Hendrix had been playing circuit gigs in America for months, earning scant attention and struggling to earn a living. That summer his luck began to change. When playing with Curtis Knight and the Squires at New York’s Cheetah Club, his playing caught the attention of Linda Keith, then girlfriend of the Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards. They became quick friends, and Linda soon referred Hendrix to Chas Chandler, bassist for The Animals who was looking to transition to managing artists. During his final tour with The Animals, Chandler saw Hendrix play at Cafe Wha? Nightclub in Greenwich Village, and mesmerized by his performance of “Hey Joe”, invited Hendrix to London and signed him to a management contract. By the early fall they began to search for members to fill out a band, and quickly recruited guitarist Noel Redding on bass, and Mitch Mitchell on drums. By mid-October Chandler arranged for the band, now called The Jimi Hendrix Experience, to support French star Johnny Hallyday for a brief tour of France. They played their first-ever live show on October 13 at the Novelty, in Evreux. Shows in Germany and England followed through the fall and winter. Their first single, “Hey Joe” backed by “Stone Free”, was released on December 16, less than two weeks after this contract. Television performances followed, and their single entered the UK charts on December 29 and peaked at #6. It was the beginning of an arc that would catapult the group to the forefront of Rock and Roll, and immortalize Hendrix as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 227 - [Music] [Hendrix, Jimi, and Janis Joplin] Winner?/Winner?
[Music] [Hendrix, Jimi, and Janis Joplin] Winner?/Winner? No place: L & S Productions, 1970. Offset color lithographic poster. 36 1/4 x 14 1/4 in. (921 x 362 mm). Scattered light edge-wear. A handsome and uncommon example of this powerful anti-drug poster, depicting musicians Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, both of whom died from drug overdoses in 1970 at the age of 27. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 228 - [Native-Americana] Bell, Charles M. White Eagle, Ponca Chief, ca. 1877
[Native-Americana] Bell, Charles M. White Eagle, Ponca Chief, ca. 1877 Washington, D.C., ca. 1877. Mammoth plate albumen photograph on original card; 20 x 18 in. (508 x 457 mm). Scattered foxing and stains. A striking and large studio portrait of Ponca Chief White Eagle, taken by Charles M. Bell. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 229 - [Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] The Athenian Mercury, with a Postscript Honoring John Eliot
[Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] The Athenian Mercury, with a Postscript Honoring John Eliot London: Printed for John Dunton, Saturday, November 28, 1691. Vol. 4, Numb. 18. Printed newspaper. Broadsheet. Disbound; wear along left edge, dampstaining along same. With a postscript honoring Puritan missionary to the Native Americans in Massachusetts Bay colony, John Eliot (1604-90), who was "so very earnest for the bringing poor Children under the Bond of the Covenant, that he very openly and earnestly maintain'd the Cause of Infant Baptism..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 230 - [Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] Leaf From the Eliot Indian Bible, the First Bible Printed in America
[Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] Leaf From the Eliot Indian Bible, the First Bible Printed in America (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Samuel Green and Marmaduke Johnson, 1663). Single disbound leaf, 7 3/8 x 5 3/4 in. (187 x 146 mm). Printed in two columns. Lightly soiled; small repair in top and bottom edge. Leaf 5L3 from the first Bible printed in America, and translated into a Native American language, by John Eliot. Featuring portions of Chaps. 9-10 of Zechariah, as well as some surrounding text. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 231 - [Native-Americana] Group of Nine Photographic and Printed Items Related to Native Americans, ca. 1807-1900
[Native-Americana] Group of Nine Photographic and Printed Items Related to Native Americans, ca. 1807-1900 Locations vary, ca. 1807-1900. Group of nine items related to Native Americans, including: a William Henry Jackson albumen print, "Dance in the Pueblo San Juan"; a cabinet card by D.B. Chase, Santa Fe, "Indian Ghost Dance"; a printed circular of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, April 17, 1807, discussing Indian advancements in agriculture; two printed Senate of the United States reports, July 24, 1846 and June 23, 1852, regarding the proposed purchase of George Catlin's collection of paintings; printed pamphlet, Missionary Paper. Number Sixteen. By the Bishop Seabury Mission. July, 1861. Faribault, Minnesota.; printed pamphlet, Report of a Visit to the Sioux and Ponka Indians on the Missouri River, Made by William Welsh... (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1872); printed pamphlet, A True History of the Massacre of Ninety-six Christian Indians... (Gnadenhuetten, Ohio: R.C. House, 1882); color photochrome after William Henry Jackson, 1900, depicting "Ute Chief Sevara and Family". Condition varies, generally very good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 232 - [Native-Americana] Gurney, Jeremiah. Tak-Kee-O-Mah "Little Robe" Chief of the Cheyennes
[Native-Americana] Gurney, Jeremiah. Tak-Kee-O-Mah "Little Robe" Chief of the Cheyennes New York: J. Gurney & Son, 1871. Albumen print, mounted to captioned card, 12 x 10 in. (305 x 254 mm). Scattered soiling to mount, uneven toning to same. A fine portrait of prominent Cheyenne warrior turned peace advocate, Little Robe (Takkeomah). Born in 1828, Little Robe gained distinction as a warrior during the 1850s in battles against the Pawnee and Ute. He rose to a leadership position within his tribe, and survived the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre, where United States troops slaughtered around 200 Cheyenne and Arapaho. Following this, he waged war against white settlers, but soon came to the conclusion that such actions were hopeless and subsequently became an advocate for peace. He signed treaties at both the Little Arkansas in 1865, and Medicine Lodge in 1867, and became a leader of the peace faction of the Southern Cheyenne. He was a delegate to Washington, D.C., in 1871 and 1873, where he met with President Ulysses S. Grant and Congressional leaders, and then retired to his home on the North Canadian River. He died there in 1886. From Jeremiah Gurney's portfolio of Native Americans, created for the Trustees of the Blackmore Museum, in Salisbury, England. The Blackmore portfolio contained 12 albumen portraits of Cheyenne, Arapaho and Wichita leaders. Gurney boasted of being the oldest and most extensive photographic establishment in the world, a claim that may well have been true. Born in 1812, he was trained as a jeweler, an occupation he engaged in until 1840 when he took up photography, soon after its invention. He was one of the first to take up the new craft, and as such, had to have French journals translated for instruction, and had to make much of his own equipment. His affable nature combined with great skill made his New York City business a great success. By 1869 he had several studios, including one at 707 Broadway, trading as Gurney & Son, which was described as the most expensive photographic establishment in the world. It was to this studio that this delegation of Native Americans was brought to in June of 1871. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 233 - [Native-Americana] Kelly, R.L. Cabinet Card Portrait of Spotted Eagle
[Native-Americana] Kelly, R.L. Cabinet Card Portrait of Spotted Eagle Pierre, Dakota: Kelly & Odell, ca. 1880s. Cabinet card portrait of Sioux Chief Spotted Eagle, on gilt-bordered cardstock mount, Kelly & Odell imprint below image. Contemporary manuscript on verso: "Spotted Eagle / Sioux Chief / Engaged in the Custer Massacre / in 1876". Light wear along edges; spotting. 6 1/2 x 4 1/4 in. (165 x 108 mm). Spotted Eagle, a leader of the Sans Arcs Lakota Sioux, fought at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876, and played a key role in the defeat of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry. After the battle, he fled to Canada with Sitting Bull before surrendering to U.S. authorities at Fort Keogh, Montana, in October 1880. By the summer of 1881, he had been moved to Standing Rock in the Dakota Territory and later to Cheyenne River. R.L. Kelly was a Canadian photographer who operated a studio in Hamilton, Ontario, before moving to Pierre in the Dakota Territory. In 1881, he co-founded a studio there with M.B. Odell. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 234 - [Native-Americana] Scarce Bound Volume of 5 Issues of Early English Periodical The Political State of Great Britain, Including a Report of Native American Violence in the Colony of South Carolina, etc.
[Native-Americana] Scarce Bound Volume of 5 Issues of Early English Periodical The Political State of Great Britain, Including a Report of Native American Violence in the Colony of South Carolina, etc. London: Sold by T. Warner, January-June, 1724-25. Five issues bound in one (April issue wanting). 8vo. Full contemporary speckled brown calf, gilt armorial crest of the Scottish Duke of Buccleuch on front and rear board, black morocco spine label, both boards worn and soiled, joints split but holding; scattered foxing and offsetting. A scarce volume of five issues of an early English periodical. Highlights include a report of Native American violence in the colony of South Carolina, a notice of the death of Czar Peter the Great, an early account of smallpox inoculation performed by Dr. James Jurin, and the Treaty of Vienna between the Spanish and Holy Roman Empires. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 235 - [Native-Americana] Rinehart, Frank A. White Buffalo, 1898
[Native-Americana] Rinehart, Frank A. White Buffalo, 1898 Omaha, Nebraska: F.A. Rinehart, 1898. Silver gelatin print, 9 1/8 x 7 1/4 in. (232 x 184 mm). No. 785. Official photograph of White Buffalo of the Cheyenne, taken during the Trans-Mississippi Exposition and Indian Congress. Mounted to board above printed label, lightly foxed; In mat and in frame, 19 x 16 1/4 in. (483 x 413 mm). White Buffalo (1862-1929) was a Cheyenne chief and an early attendee of the infamous Carlisle Indian School. The Indian Congress, held concurrently with the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition in Omaha, Nebraska, was the largest gathering of Native Americans at that point in history. The portraits taken by official photographer Frank A. Rinehart (1861-1928) are regarded as some of the best representations of traditional Native dress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 236 - [Native-Americana] Penhallow, Samuel. The History of the Wars of New-England with the Eastern Indians..., 1726 (but 1859), with 2 Extremely Rare Colonial American Military Signatures Tipped-in
[Native-Americana] Penhallow, Samuel. The History of the Wars of New-England with the Eastern Indians..., 1726 (but 1859), with 2 Extremely Rare Colonial American Military Signatures Tipped-in Cincinnati: Re-printed from the Boston Edition of 1726...for Wm. Dodge, by J. Harpel, 1859. One of 150 copies privately printed. 4to. 7, (4), 10-138, 36 pp., including Appendix (not always found). With two cut signatures mounted to front paste-down ("Samuel Penhallow" and "John Lovewell"). Original quarter linen over blue paper-covered boards, extremities and boards rubbed and worn, spine label perished; text partially unopened; foxing to text. "The best early summary of New England's Indian troubles." (Howes) Samuel Penhallow (1665-1726) was a Maine colonist and historian during Queen Anne's and Dummer's War, who served as commander of Fort Menaskoux during the latter, where he was wounded during the Northeast Coast Campaign (1724). John Lovewell (1691-1725) was an American militia captain who fought in Father Rale's War (1722-25), and led three expeditions against the Abenaki in Maine, and killed in the last during the Battle of Pequawket (also known as Lovewell's Fight). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 237 - [Native-Americana] [Sitting Bull] Autograph Letter, Signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Offering an Account of the Encounter that Ended with the Death of the Famed Lakota Warrior, Sitting Bull, 1890
[Native-Americana] [Sitting Bull] Autograph Letter, Signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Offering an Account of the Encounter that Ended with the Death of the Famed Lakota Warrior, Sitting Bull, 1890 Fort Yates, North Dakota. December 30, 1890. One sheet, 10 x 7 3/4 in. (254 x 197 mm). Autograph letter, signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th US Cavalry, to Isaac N. Roland. In part: "I am sorry that I cannot comply with your request, as I have nothing of my own to send you. I was too busy when I drove off Sitting Bulls followers from when they had the Indian police penned up, to secure any trophies myself. After the fight was over, some of the police brought me as a present a beautiful buffalo robe, embroidered with porcupine quills which they gave me as a present as it had been the finest Sitting Bull had. I start out with the Cavalry at day light to try and capture the balance of Bull's band, when I come in again I will see if I cannot get hold of something for you..." Creasing from old folds, closed tears along same; scattered stains. Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry offers an account of the encounter that ended with the death of famed Lakota warrior, Sitting Bull (1831-1890). In 1890 Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers had been living on the Standing Rock Reservation, overseen by United States Indian Agent James McLaughlin based at Fort Yates. A year before, the Ghost Dance ceremony began being adopted by many Plains Indian tribes, advocating an end of American westward expansion. United States officials were wary it would lead to a coordinated Indian rebellion, so McLaughlin, fearing that Sitting Bull might join, ordered his arrest that December. On December 15, over 40 armed police officers entered Sitting Bull's village, informed him that he was under arrest, and attempted to usher him to Fort Yates. The other Sioux nearby began to surround the officers, and when Sitting Bull refused to comply the tensions erupted. A member of the Sioux fired on the officers, who in turn shot Sitting Bull. Within minutes 14 men were killed or wounded. Sitting Bull's body was buried at Fort Yates until 1953, when it was exhumed for reinternment near his birthplace in Mobridge, South Dakota. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 238 - [Native-Americana] [Wounded Knee Massacre] Photograph of the Body of Chief Big Foot, ca. 1891
[Native-Americana] [Wounded Knee Massacre] Photograph of the Body of Chief Big Foot, ca. 1891 Chadron, Nebraska: Northwestern Photographic Company, ca. 1891. Sepia photograph; 5 1/2 x 7 3/8 in. (140 x 187 mm). Depicting the frozen body of Big Foot on the snow-covered ground at the site of the Wounded Knee Massacre, on January 1, 1891. Titled in the negative, "Big Foot." Scattered toning and stains. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 239 - [Old West] Group of 5 Frontier Newspapers Related to the American West, 1860-86
[Old West] Group of 5 Frontier Newspapers Related to the American West, 1860-86 1. Sacramento Daily Union. Sacramento, California. Two issues: June 26 and August 2, 1860 (Vol. XIX, Whole Nos. 2886 and 2917. Folio. Each 4 pp. Each disbound; scattered wear and soiling. 2. Arizona Citizen. Tucson, Arizona. March 15, 1873. Vol. III, No. 23. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound. Old ownership inscription in pencil at top of first page. 3. The Montanian. Virginia City, Montana Territory, February 10, 1876. Vol. 6, No. 29, Whole No. 290. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; toned; wear and loss along edges; some leaving started or separated. 4. The Daily Tombstone. Tombstone, Arizona, April 29, 1886. Volume V, No. 177. 4 pp. Disbound; toned; wear and losses along edges. With an ad for the O.K. Corral Livery and Feed Stable. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 240 - [Old West] A Rare Variant Buffalo Bill Program Insert and a Very Early CDV
[Old West] A Rare Variant Buffalo Bill Program Insert and a Very Early CDV Printed Program Insert for Buffalo Bill's Wild West (Hartford, Connecticut: The Calhoun Printing Company, 1884). Single sheet, being a printed program insert, with lithographed portrait of Cody on verso. Old horizontal crease along center; unevenly toned; abrasions in top edge and top left corner. 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (216 x 140 mm). Originally included as an insert in a larger chromolithographed program (not included) for Buffalo Bill's Wild West show for 1884. Also known as a "tip in", the front features the full program of the show, with events including the grand parade, grand equestrian entree, a Pony Express exhibition, shooting demonstrations by Captain Bogardus and his four sons, a stage coach attacked by Native Americans, a buffalo chase by Cody and Pawnee Indians, and a Native American attack on a settler's cabin with a rescue by Cody and his men. The program represents the second season of Buffalo Bill's Wild West with Nate Salsbury as a partner. Together with: Early CDV of a Young Buffalo Bill Circa 1870s. Carte de visite of a young and hatless William "Buffalo Bill" Cody; on captioned mount. 4 x 2 3/8 in. (102 x 60 mm). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 241 - [Old West] Group of 5 Items Related to Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and other Western Outlaws, ca. 1875-1907
[Old West] Group of 5 Items Related to Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and other Western Outlaws, ca. 1875-1907 1. Partially-Printed Western Union Telegram. Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 7, 1875. Partially-printed telegram on The Western Union Telegraph Company stationery, accomplished by United States Marshal John Pratt, appointing Henry M. Porter, and Alexander G. Irvine, U.S. Marshals for New Mexico, in order to "preserve pease (sic) and order". 2. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. St. Louis, Friday Morning, September 15, 1876. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Small Secretary of State label on front page; heavily worn along central vertical fold. Reporting on p. 5 the famous Northfield Bank robbery by the notorious James-Younger Gang. Jesse and Frank James and company (Cole Younger, Jim Younger, Bob Younger, Clell Miller, Bill Chadwell, and Charlie Pitts) attempted the brazen daylight bank robbery in Winona, Minnesota, on September 14. Local citizens, who realized what was happening, sprang into action and a gun fight ensued, with the robbers fleeing. What resulted, as recounted within, was one of the largest manhunts in the history of the United States and the eventual capture of the Younger brothers. 3. Daily Evening Post. San Francisco, Saturday, April 15, 1882. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Separated along folds; toned and brittle, chipping and closed tears along edges. Featuring a front-page two-column report on the exploits of Jesse James and co.: "The James Boys. An Extraordinary Career of Crime. Robbing for Profit and Murder for Pastime. Some of the More Notable Exploits of the Desperadoes." 4. Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. New York, For the Week Ending April 22, 1882. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 leaves (pp. 129-144). Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling; scattered wear along edges. With a full front-page engraved portrait of Jesse James; a report on his funeral on p. 135; and a full-page engraving depicting the conveyance of his remains, with portraits of the Ford brothers, Robert and Charley. 5. LaCroix, Arda. Billy the Kid. A Romantic Story Founded Upon the Play of the Same Name. New York: J.S. Ogilvie Publishing Company, (1907). 12mo. 128 pp. Original stiff illustrated wrappers. A fine copy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 242 - [Old West] [O.K. Corral] "A Lively Fight at Tombstone": California Newspaper Reports the Legendary Gun Fight at the O.K. Corral, 1881
[Old West] [O.K. Corral] "A Lively Fight at Tombstone": California Newspaper Reports the Legendary Gun Fight at the O.K. Corral, 1881 Stockton Daily Independent Stockton, California, Friday Morning, October 28, 1881. Vol. XLI, No. 72. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; light edge-wear and toning. Tucked away on the third page is a report on the legendary October 26, 1881 shootout between the Earp brothers and the Clanton-McLaury gang at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona: "A Tombstone dispatch of the 26th says: A sanguinary shooting affray occurred on Fremont street this afternoon. Four cow-boys had been in town for a few days past, drinking heavily and making themselves obnoxious by their boisterous conduct. This morning, the City Marshal, V.W. Earp, arrested one for disorderly conduct, and he was fined $25 and disarmed in the Justice's Court. He left, swearing vengeance on the Sheriff and Marshal Earp ... About three o'clock P. M., the Earp brothers and J. H. Halliday [Doc Holliday] met the four, who drew upon them at once, when a lively fire commenced from the cow-boys against the three citizens. About thirty shots were fired, rapidly. When the smoke of battle cleared away... Jim and Frank McLoury were gasping in the agonies of death. Bill Clarton was mortally wounded and died shortly after. Morgan Earp was wounded in the shoulder...V.W. Earp had a flesh wound...Halliday escaped unhurt...There was great excitement, but no further trouble is anticipated...The Sheriff's posse is now under arms..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 243 - [Old West] Tombstone, Arizona $50 Reward Poster for the Arrest of A.B. Taylor, Alias A.B. Clegg, for Forgery and Horse Theft, Issued by Tombstone Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler, with Reference to Early American Cinema
[Old West] Tombstone, Arizona $50 Reward Poster for the Arrest of A.B. Taylor, Alias A.B. Clegg, for Forgery and Horse Theft, Issued by Tombstone Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler, with Reference to Early American Cinema Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona, April 12, 1912. Printed handbill poster, 8 3/4 x 5 3/4 in. (222 x 146 mm). Toned. A $50 reward handbill for the arrest of A.B. Taylor, alias A.B. Clegg, for forgery and horse theft, issued by Tombstone sheriff Harry C. Wheeler. The handbill provides a detailed description of Taylor, noting him as "Age 23 to 25 years old. About 5 feet 5 inches tall. Dark eyes. Dark hair. Swarthy complexion. Some Indian blood." The handbill further notes that Taylor had "worked for Lubin Moving Picture Show...Forged two checks...stole horse and saddle..." and then made his way to New Orleans, where he continued to present himself as a representative of the Lubin Moving Picture Show. Wheeler states, "I hold warrant. Arrest, hold and wire me, I will come at once with extradition papers, and will pay a reward of $50.00 when he is given into my custody." A rare survival. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 244 - [Old West] Autograph Notes on "Wild Bill" Hickok and the McCanles Gang, by Historian William E. Connelley, 1925
[Old West] Autograph Notes on "Wild Bill" Hickok and the McCanles Gang, by Historian William E. Connelley, 1925 Topeka, Kansas, December 14, 1925. Autograph notes on rectos only of six lined sheets, signed by Connelley on final sheet. Residue from removed paperclip in top left corner of first sheet. William E. Connelley (1855-1930), an American writer, historian, and school teacher, spent 42 years collecting and researching material on James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok (1837-76), for his posthumously published book, Wild Bill and His Era. As President, and then Secretary, of the Kansas State Historical Society, Connelley had access to a wide trove of documents related to the old American West and gunslinger and folk hero Wild Bill Hickok. Upon Connelley's death in July 1930, he left behind an extensive manuscript on the frontiersman, which was then completed and published by his daughter. As she indicated in the editor's note for the book, "Much that is valuable has been removed, and much that was left has been condensed." The notes above, penned by Connelley, appear to possibly be one of many vignettes he gathered while researching Wild Bill Hickok (which involved extensive interviews with individuals who knew Hickok directly or indirectly). In this account, Connelley retells the recollections of a Curtis Phillips of Sapulpa, Oklahoma. As a young man, Phillips lived at Rock Creek Station in Jefferson County, Nebraska, the site of Wild Bill's notorious July 1861 gunfight with the McCanles Gang. Phillips's story offers perhaps an alternative motive for the shooting. According to Curtis, a man named Hughes lived at the station at the time, along with his "trifling brother-in-law," Mason. Mason had established a nearby homestead and borrowed cattle from the McCanles brothers. The subsequent events are somewhat unclear, but it appears a postal worker in the area, who had also wanted the cattle, was refused by the McCanles gang. In response, the gang had Mason arrested for cattle theft. This arrest enraged Mrs. Hughes, Mason's sister. Connelley notes that she and Wild Bill were close friends. Feeling scandalized by her brother's arrest, she urged Bill to seek revenge, and Bill obliged by killing McCanles a few days later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 245 - [Opium] Fine Engraved IRS Special Tax Document for the Sale of Opium, ca. 1918-1919
[Opium] Fine Engraved IRS Special Tax Document for the Sale of Opium, ca. 1918-1919 Bennington, Vermont, 1918-1919. Engraved Internal Revenue Service $1 special tax document on "Manufacturer, Distributor, Etc. of Opium, Etc.", received from a dentist Dr. Peleg A. Matteson of Bennington, Vermont, stamp dated June 29, 1918; additional oblong IRS printed slip adhered to recto, "Notice and Receipt--Additional Special Taxes--Revenue Act of 1918", stamped dated April 19, 1919, and totaling $3. Creasing from old folds, scattered edge-wear. A fine IRS special tax certificate for the sale of opium. The Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914 required individuals producing, importing, manufacturing, or dispensing (such as physicians or doctors) opium or cocoa leaves to register with the IRS and pay a special tax. The Revenue Act of 1918 raised the tax rate for the same, and removed exemptions for doctors. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 246 - [Penn, William] Engraved Armorial Book-Plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania, ca. 1703
[Penn, William] Engraved Armorial Book-Plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania, ca. 1703 (Philadelphia), ca. 1703. Engraved armorial book-plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania. 3 1/2 x 3 in. Scattered light stains; mounted to a larger card. William Penn (1644-1718) was an English writer and theologian who in 1681 was granted a land charter by King Charles II to repay a debt owed by the king to Penn's father, creating what the King would name Pennsylvania. The following year Penn founded Philadelphia, which in later years would become the birthplace of the United States of America. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 247 - [Philadelphia Independence Hall] Pay Order for the Doorkeeper of Independence Hall in the Heat of the American Revolution, Signed by Joseph Reed
[Philadelphia Independence Hall] Pay Order for the Doorkeeper of Independence Hall in the Heat of the American Revolution, Signed by Joseph Reed Philadelphia, May 2, 1780. Single sheet, 11 1/2 x 7 1/4 in. (292 x 184 mm). Manuscript document, signed by President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania Joseph Reed ("Jos. Reed Presidt"), ordering Treasurer David Rittenhouse to pay Frederick Sneider for his wages ("three hundred and fifty five pounds twelve shillings and six pence") for his services as doorkeeper to the Council Room at the Pennsylvania State House; listing at top his various sundry expenses. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds; chipping along bottom edge affecting some letters, including of "Presidt" in Reed's signature; sheet toned. Joseph Reed (1741-85) was an American politician who in 1778 was one of the first signatories of the Articles of Confederation. Later that year he was elected President of the Supreme Executive Council, or governor, of Pennsylvania, where he oversaw the gradual abolition of slavery. During this time Reed also became involved in a vicious and highly public dispute with Benedict Arnold, who Reed accused of using his position as military commander of Philadelphia to profit from war-related shipments and supply movements. Eventually, Reed publicly charged Arnold with corruption, leading to Arnold requesting a court-martial from Washington to clear his name. Though Arnold was able to do so, the trial damaged his reputation and led to Arnold committing treason against the United States. During this time Reed also waged a fierce campaign against Loyalist citizens of Pennsylvania, advocating that their property be seized and treason charges be levied against them. He was elected to the Continental Congress a second time in 1784 but declined due to ill health. He died the following year at the age of 43. Construction began on the Pennsylvania State House in 1732 after a design by Edmund Woolley and Andrew Hamilton. It was completed nearly twenty-one years later, largely due to payments being made in installments over such a long period of time. On June 14, 1775, delegates of the Continental Congress established the Continental Army, and a little over a year later the Declaration of Independence was unanimously approved within its walls, with the Declaration read for the first time just outside in what is now Independence Square. The Continental Congress continued to meet there until December 12, when the approaching British Army forced their evacuation. They returned briefly in 1777 and permanently, from 1778 to 1781. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 248 - [Perry, Commodore Matthew C.] Manuscript Plan of the Berth Deck of the USS Macedonian, 1852
[Perry, Commodore Matthew C.] Manuscript Plan of the Berth Deck of the USS Macedonian, 1852 (Possibly Brooklyn, New York), 1852. Single oblong sheet of translucent paper, 10 1/4 x 36 in. (260 x 914 mm). Manuscript plan of the "Berth Deck" of the USS Macedonian, in black, red, and brown ink, as well as pencil; manuscript notations in ink and pencil; initialed at top; scattered soiling. In 1852, the USS Macedonian was docked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard to be converted to a sloop-of-war for an expedition to Japan to open foreign trade. The ship was assigned to Commodore Matthew C. Perry's East India Squadron and put under the command of Captain Joel Abbott. She was one of the American ships to arrive off Uraga, Japan on February 13, 1854, during Perry's second expedition to Japan. The Treaty of Kanagawa, negotiated by Perry and the Tokugawa Shogunate, was signed on March 31, 1854, and ended Japan's 220-year-old policy of isolation. Following this, the Macedonian patrolled the north Pacific, from 1854-61, and served with the Home Squadron in the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 249 - [Piracy] Autograph Letter, Signed by a Representative of Cape May County to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, Regarding Enemy Privateers Along the Coast of North America and Cape May, 1747
[Piracy] Autograph Letter, Signed by a Representative of Cape May County to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, Regarding Enemy Privateers Along the Coast of North America and Cape May, 1747 Burlington, New Jersey, August 20, 1747. Single sheet, 12 1/2 x 7 1/2 in. (317 x 190 mm). Autograph letter, signed by Jacob Spicer, representative of Cape May County in the New Jersey House of Assembly, to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, regarding enemy privateers along the coast of North America and Cape May, and requesting the Governor to take action to help ameliorate the situation. Creasing from old folds, largely separated along central vertical fold; scattered soiling and edge-wear. Jacob Spier (1717-65) was a prominent Cape May County merchant and farmer who represented Cape May County in the New Jersey House of Assembly from 1744 until his death in 1765. This letter, regarding enemy privateers, relates to the then ongoing King George's War (1744-48), the third great colonial North American conflict between Great Britain and France. Here, Spicer, on behalf of his constituents, urges New Jersey Governor Belcher to take action against the privateers. Lot includes two volumes with articles related to piracy and privateers: The Political State for the Month of August, 1729 (see pp. 127-128), 12mo, disbound; Hall, John E. The American Law Journal and Miscellaneous Repertory (Philadelphia: Farrand and Nicholas, 1810), 8vo, library buckram. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 250 - [Piracy] Scarce Contemporary Account of the Death of Infamous Pirate Blackbeard, 1719
[Piracy] Scarce Contemporary Account of the Death of Infamous Pirate Blackbeard, 1719 The Political State of Great-Britain London: Printed for the Author, and Sold by Tho. Warner, and A. Rocayrol, 1719. Volume XVII; six monthly issues, January-June. First edition. 8vo. (x), 658 pp. (erratic pagination). Full contemporary partially speckled brown calf, red morocco onlay on front board, the
Lot: 251 - [Piracy] Rare Royal Proclamation Broadside, Issued by King Charles II During the Golden Age of Piracy, Establishing Strict Regulations for Maritime Trade and Navigation to curb the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insol
[Piracy] Rare Royal Proclamation Broadside, Issued by King Charles II During the Golden Age of Piracy, Establishing Strict Regulations for Maritime Trade and Navigation to curb the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insolences of Private Men of War, March 12, 1683/84 London: Printed by the Assigns of John Bill, and by Henry Hills, and Thomas Newcomb, March 12, 1683/84. Printed broadside, comprised of two sheets; 22 x 15 in. (559 x 381 mm). Large woodcut initial and woodcut royal arms. Creasing from old folds; upper and lower left edge trimmed to text, repair at center of same. Steele, I 3757; ESTC R213166 This rare royal proclamation, issued by King Charles II during the golden age of piracy, establishes strict regulations for maritime trade and navigation in order to curb "the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insolencies (sic) of Private Men of War, and others pretending Commission." Although applicable throughout the English realm, the decree was prompted by a surge of unsanctioned piracy in the Caribbean and along the North Atlantic, which was disrupting English commerce and threatening to violate the 1670 treaty between England and Spain that had resolved territorial disputes in the Americas. This document outlines seven specific mandates, such as requiring neutrality within ports and areas under British protection, forbidding men of war from cruising near English coasts, dictating how warships must behave toward merchant vessels while in port, and ordering Vice Admirals and other officers to inspect and confiscate ships suspected of privateering. The proclamation also clarifies the rights of foreign privateers and their cargo, while forbidding English subjects from trading with unauthorized vessels, and banning English citizens from serving on ships belonging to foreign princes or states, commanding any currently doing so to return to English service immediately, "upon pain of being Reputed and Punished as Pirats (sic)." We cannot locate another copy on RBH as having come to auction. ESTC locates only four other copies in the United States, and 14 copies in the United Kingdom and Ireland. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 252 - [Queen Anne's War] Extraordinarily Large Manuscript Petition Signed by a Who's Who of Colonial New York Accomplished on Vellum to Queen Anne from the Colony of New York Seeking Reimbursement for a Failed Conquest of New France
[Queen Anne's War] Extraordinarily Large Manuscript Petition Signed by a Who's Who of Colonial New York Accomplished on Vellum to Queen Anne from the Colony of New York Seeking Reimbursement for a Failed Conquest of New France, November 12, 1709, With Reference to William Penn's Proprietary Colony of Pennsylvania "We your Majesties most Dutifull and Loyall Subjects...fore securing the frontier
Lot: 253 - [Red Scare] Group of 6 Items Related to Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, 1946-54
[Red Scare] Group of 6 Items Related to Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, 1946-54 Locations vary, ca. 1946-54. Group of six items related to Senator Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, including, a 1954 Christmas card signed in print by McCarthy and his wife, with a mounted black and white image of them; The Red-Baiters Menace America, by Eugene Dennis, a twelve page political pamphlet, ca. 1946; a 59-page typescript titled "Statement of Senator William Benton Before the Subcommittee on Privileges and Election of the Senate Rules Committee, September 28, 1951, Relation to Senate Resolution 187."; three black and white press photographs of Joseph McCarthy. Condition varies, generally fine. Beginning in 1950, Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy (1908-1957) became the most visible opponent of communism in America through his accusations of and hearings on widespread communist subversion in the U.S. Government. This period of "McCarthyism" was defined by the senator's often-unfounded accusations against his social and political opponents, resulting in one of the most notorious periods of American paranoia in the country's history, ruining thousands of lives and careers and in the estimation of many, including Reagan Administration Secretary of Education William Bennett, "cause[d] untold grief to the country he claimed to love... McCarthy besmirched the honorable cause of anti-communism. He discredited legitimate efforts to counter Soviet subversion of American institutions." Senate Resolution 187 was introduced by Senator William Benton of Connecticut, called for McCarthy's ouster from the Senate, specifically to "make such further investigation with respect to the participation of Senator Joseph McCarthy in the 1950 Senatorial campaign of Senator John Marshall Butler and such investigation with respect to his other acts since his election to the Senate as may be appropriate to enable such committee to determine whether or not it should initiate action with a view toward the expulsion from the United States Senate of said Senator McCarthy." Ultimately the Senate Rules Committee investigated, but did not remove McCarthy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 254 - [Religion] Group of 6 American Pamphlets on Religious Subjects, 1743-1844
[Religion] Group of 6 American Pamphlets on Religious Subjects, 1743-1844 Locations vary, 1743-1844. In six volumes, comprising: The Christian History... (Saturday, August 6, 1743); Lord, Benjamin. A Sermon Preached at the Ordination of the Reverend Mr. John Huntington... (Boston: Edes and Gill, 1763; half-title loose, lacking final blank; ESTC W26200); Pemberton, Ebenezer. A Sermon Preached at the Ordination of the Reverend Mr. Isaac Story... (Salem: Samuel Hall, 1771; ESTC W3200); The character and best exercises of unregenerate sinners set in a scriptural light, in a Discourse Delivered by David Tappan... (Newbury-Port: John Mycall, 1782; ESTC W14016); A Roland for an Oliver. Letters on Religious Persecution... (Philadelphia: Bernard Dornin, 1826); The Truth Unveiled; or, a Calm and Impartial Exposition of the Origin and Immediate Cause of the Terrible Riots and Rebellion in Philadelphia... (Baltimore: Metropolitan Tract Society, 1844). Each 8vo. Disbound; scattered wear. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 255 - [Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Official Program For Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inauguration, Boldly Signed by FDR
[Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Official Program For Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inauguration, Boldly Signed by FDR Washington, D.C.: Published by Ransdell Incorporated, 1933. First edition. Boldly signed by Roosevelt on front wrapper. 4to. 64 pp. Original stiff staple-bound pictorial wrappers, lightly worn and soiled; pp. 31-34 sprung. A handsome copy. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was inaugurated as the 32nd President of the United States on March 4, 1933, amidst one of the most turbulent periods in American history since the Civil War. That year, the American unemployment rate peaked at 24.9%, the highest in U.S. history. His inaugural speech was broadcast into millions of homes, with his words, "let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is...fear itself" instantly becoming one of the most memorable phrases of any presidency. Lot also includes a press photograph of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 256 - [Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Mimeographed Typescript Press Copy of the First Fireside Chat
[Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Mimeographed Typescript Press Copy of the First Fireside Chat Washington, D.C., March 12, 1933. Three mimeographed sheets, titled in type "Address of President Roosevelt by radio, delivered from the President's study in the White House at 10 P.M. today." Each sheet measuring 14 x 8 1/2 in. (356 x 216 mm); stapled at top. Noted in type "For the Press" at top of first sheet, and below of same, "Caution: Not to be Released by the Press in editions appearing on the streets before 10 P.M. today.", with manuscript at top of same, "Roosevelt-Address / Radio Desk No. 1-Banking". Scattered soiling; scattered wear along edges. Scarce original press release typescript of the first fireside chat delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. One of the most celebrated and innovative achievements of his presidency, Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his first "fireside chat" just eight days into his first term, amidst a severe month-long banking crisis that had triggered bank runs and closures nationwide. The broadcast aimed to inform and reassure the distressed public, with Roosevelt explaining what his administration had done in the preceding days, the reasoning behind those actions, and the steps planned for the future. Using direct and accessible language, Roosevelt addressed the events that had eroded public trust in the banking system and outlined his strategy to restore economic stability. His plan included declaring a national bank holiday to temporarily shut down the banking system and stock market, passing the Emergency Banking Act, which established federal deposit insurance, and gradually reopening only those banks deemed financially sound by federal inspectors. As Roosevelt assured listeners, "It is safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than under the mattress." The fifteen-minute address reached over 60 million Americans and helped restore public confidence, such that in the two weeks that followed, Americans deposited more than half of the currency they had previously withdrawn during the panic. Over the next ten years Roosevelt would go on to deliver approximately 30 more fireside chats that covered topics ranging from New Deal initiatives, economic recovery, to foreign policy and the unfolding events of World War II, and have since been recognized as one of the defining moments of his presidency. Rare to auction, according to RBH, we can not locate another example at auction. OCLC locates only one other example, at the Hagley Museum and Library. Lot also includes a press photograph of FDR. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 257 - [Sacco and Vanzetti] Press Photo of a San Francisco Protest in Support of Italian Anarchists, Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927
[Sacco and Vanzetti] Press Photo of a San Francisco Protest in Support of Italian Anarchists, Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927 San Francisco, August 23, 1927. Press photo, 6 3/8 x 11 1/4 in. (162 x 286 mm). Crease in lower left edge; scattered abrasions; ink addition in top left; manuscript on verso, "Sacco Vanzetti Demonstration S.F.", date stamped below same, "Aug 23 1927". By 1927, the prosecution and possible innocence of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti had become a worldwide cause celebre. Protests were held in every major city in the United States, as well as across Europe, South America, and as far away as Australia. The present photo, showing a demonstration in San Francisco is date-stamped August 23, 1927, the day both men were executed by electric chair. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 258 - [Salem Witch Trials] Printed Ad for Increase Mather's "Tryals of the New-England Witches", in The Athenian Mercury
[Salem Witch Trials] Printed Ad for Increase Mather's "Tryals of the New-England Witches", in The Athenian Mercury London: Printed for John Dunton, Tuesday, June 20, 1693. Vol. 10, Numb. 12. Printed broadsheet newspaper, 12 1/4 x 7 1/2 in. (311 x 190 mm). Light toning and wear long edges. On the second page is an ad for Increase Mather's A Further Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches, the earliest printed book on the Salem Witch Trials. Increase Mather (1639-1723) was a Puritan minister who was a highly influential religious and political figure during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692-93. Mather had published a book on witchcraft in 1684 and his son Cotton had written one shortly afterwards in which he defended the courts which had condemned twenty people to death. Mather's A Further Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches was often bound with copies of his son's account, entitled Wonders of the Invisible World. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 259 - [Sauer, Christoph] The First Book Printed in German in America: Zionitischer Weyrauchs Hugel oder: Myrrhen Berg, 1739
[Sauer, Christoph] The First Book Printed in German in America: Zionitischer Weyrauchs Hugel oder: Myrrhen Berg, 1739 Germantown: Christoph Sauer, 1739. First edition, second issue (with the correct imposition of signature B). 8vo. (xii), 792, (14) pp. Likely contemporary boards, spine perished, original leather removed, boards detached but holding; all edges trimmed; marbled paste-downs (free endpapers perished), partially exposed contemporary waste-paper under same; spotting and toning; one leaf of manuscript at rear. Evans 4466; Hildeburn 617; Sabin 106364 The first book from the press of Christoph Sauer, and the first book printed in German in America. Christoph Sauer (1695-1758) was the first German printer and publisher in America. Emigrating from Schwarzenau, Germany (now Berleburg) to Germantown, Pennsylvania in 1724, he established a press there in 1738 to serve the needs of the growing German-speaking population in the colonies. The present volume, comprised of hymns created by Johann Conrad Beissel (founder of the Ephrata Community in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania) and others, was compiled for the use by the Ephrata Community, and is considered the Community's "largest and most important collection of the hymns". "As the edition was small and the book was in common use for devotional purposes, it has become extremely scarce, nearly all of the few known copies being imperfect." (Hildeburn) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 260 - [Science & Technology] Thomas Edison's Laboratory Copy of a Patent for an Electric Light, 1881
[Science & Technology] Thomas Edison's Laboratory Copy of a Patent for an Electric Light, 1881 (Washington, D.C.: United States Patent Office), February 15, 1881. Printed patent for Thomas A. Edison's Electric Light, patent No. 237,732. Two conjoined sheets. 4to. Illustrated with lithographed diagram of an electric light. Disbound; toned along edges. From the collection of Charles L. Clarke and extracted from his bound collection of U.S. Patents granted to Edison. Clarke (1853-1941) was Chief Engineer and first President of the Edison Electric Light Company and was responsible for the Pearl Street Station in New York, the world's first commercial power plant. In February 1881, Edison established the headquarters of the Edison Electric Light Company in New York City, seeking to power lower Manhattan, which was achieved through the work of his engineers like Clarke. The Edison Electric Light Company began operations on October 15, 1878. It was one of many business entities founded by Edison, and was a patent-holding corporate entity, backed by J.P. Morgan and the Vanderbilt family, for the purpose of funding Edison's experiments with the incandescent bulb and electric lighting. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 261 - [Space] Neil Armstrong's 1962 Astronaut Training Certification in the Flight Controllers Course, from the Armstrong Family Collection
[Space] Neil Armstrong's 1962 Astronaut Training Certification in the Flight Controllers Course, from the Armstrong Family Collection No place, October 22, 1962. Printed oblong sheet, 8.5 x 11 in. (216 x 279 mm). Official NASA-printed document, accomplished in type, certifying that "Neil Armstrong Has Completed The Course of Study In The Flight Controllers Course Number 104..." With facsimile signatures of Christopher Kraft, John Hodge, and one other. Lightly creased; scattered foxing; two bands of offsetting. Encapsulated and certified by Collectibles Authentication Guaranty. First man on the Moon, Neil Armstrong's personal certification for the completion of the Flight Controllers Course, issued just one month after his joining the NASA Astronaut Corps. After his graduation from Purdue, Armstrong became an experimental test pilot for the National Advisory Committee of Aeronautics (NACA). He officially became an employee of NASA when it was established in 1958. When Project Mercury began to take applications for the program, Armstrong was not eligible due to his status as a civilian test pilot. This requirement was waived in 1962 for Project Gemini, and he was selected alongside Elliot See as the first civilians recruited for a NASA program. He would serve on, or in the backup crews of, Gemini 5, 8, and 11, as well as Apollo 9, before his appointment to the command of Apollo 11, in December of 1968. A remarkable piece of space memorabilia, from the Armstrong Family Collection. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 262 - [Space] Group of 6 Items Related to the Apollo 11 Moon Landing
[Space] Group of 6 Items Related to the Apollo 11 Moon Landing 1. Mimeographed NASA Press Release. Washington, D.C., July 6, 1969. Release No: 69-83K Apollo 11. 35 stapled sheets. "The United States will launch a three-man spacecraft toward the Moon...with the goal of landing two astronaut-explorers on the lunar surface..." 2. NASA Apollo Blueprint. New York: Farrand Optical Co., Inc., ca. 1967. Blueprint, apparently related to the Apollo Command Module, titled at bottom "LEM Correlation Chart Electrical Drawings (L&A Electronics & Probe)", drawing No. 120999. Kennedy Space Center Simcom Library Master Copy, stamped at bottom right (possibly in image). Creasing from when folded, small hole at center; unevenly toned. 3. Lunar Module Ascent Monitoring Chart for the Apollo 11 Mission. Washington, D.C.: Prepared Under the Direction of the Department of Defense by the Aeronautical Chart and Information Center, July 21, 1969. Sheet 3B, showing landing site No. 5. 12 1/2 x 36 in. (317 x 914 mm). 4. Printed Braun Electric Canada Report. Two stapled sheets; original photograph of the moon landing mounted to first sheet (copyright stamp on verso "Hasselblad"). "'Stars and Stripes' Billows on a Windless Moon". 5. Aldrin, Buzz. Signed "First Man on the Moon Apollo 11" Cover. With postal stamps. Lot also includes a small photograph of an astronaut disembarking a lunar module. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 263 - [Star Trek] William Shatner-Signed Script of the Pilot Episode of Star Trek
[Star Trek] William Shatner-Signed Script of the Pilot Episode of Star Trek No place, November 30, 1964 (but later reprint). Star Trek "Final Draft" of pilot episode "The Cage", signed by William Shatner on front wrapper. (iv), 81 pp. Original stiff blue printed wrappers. A William Shatner-signed final draft script for the pilot episode of Star Trek. Written by Gene Roddenberry and completed in January of 1965, the pilot was rejected by NBC for being too cerebral. Another pilot was ordered, and the footage for the present episode was worked into the season one two-part episode "The Menagerie". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 264 - [Star-Spangled Banner] Eyewitness Account of the Shelling of Fort McHenry in the War of 1812, in a Manuscript Logbook from the HMS Trave, Present at the Battles of Baltimore and New Orleans, 1814-16
[Star-Spangled Banner] Eyewitness Account of the Shelling of Fort McHenry in the War of 1812, in a Manuscript Logbook from the HMS Trave, Present at the Battles of Baltimore and New Orleans, 1814-16 “Bombs and Frigates weigh and stand in...commenced a tremendous heavy fire on the batteries near Baltimore...Midnight squally with rain Bombs &c keeping up a heavy bombardment on Fort
Lot: 265 - [Star-Spangled Banner] The First Magazine Appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", 1814
[Star-Spangled Banner] The First Magazine Appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", 1814 The Analectic Magazine Philadelphia: Published and Sold by Moses Thomas, 1814. Vol. IV only. First edition. 8vo. iv, 524 pp. Illustrated with an engraved frontispiece portrait, engraved vignette title-page, and four engraved portraits. Contemporary three-quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt, boards and extremities rubbed; yellow-stained edges; foxing to endpapers and leaves at front and rear; scattered offsetting. BAL 11081G; Filby B18; Streeter Sale II:1070 The first magazine appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", printed on pp. 433-434 in the November issue. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 266 - [Star-Spangled Banner] One of the Earliest Obtainable Newspaper Printings of the Star-Spangled Banner, September 27, 1814
[Star-Spangled Banner] One of the Earliest Obtainable Newspaper Printings of the Star-Spangled Banner, September 27, 1814 The National Advocate New-York: N. Phillips, Tuesday Morning, September 27, 1814. Vol. II, No. 120. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; scattered spotting; closed tears in bottom edge of each leaf; light edge wear; scattered small repairs; printing defect in top of central vertical fold. Filby N-13 A very early newspaper printing of the Star-Spangled Banner. Reprinted from the Baltimore Patriot, the editor prophetically introduces Francis Scott Key's poem--printed anonymously with its original title the "Defence of Fort M'Henry"--as "destined long to outlast the occasion, and outlive the impulse, which produced it." They go on to provide some detail to the poem's creation, stating, "A gentleman had left Baltimore, in a flag of truce for the purpose of getting released from the British fleet a friend of his, who had been captured at Marlborough. He went as far as the mouth of the Patuxent, and was not permitted to return lest the intended attack on Baltimore should be disclosed. He was therefore brought up the bay to the mouth of the Patapsco, where the flag vessel was kept under the guns of a frigate, and he was compelled to witness the bombardment of Fort M'Henry, which the Admiral had boasted that he would carry in a few hours, and that the city must fall. He watched the flag at the Fort through the whole day with an anxiety that can be better felt than described, until the night prevented him from seeing it. In the night he watched the Bomb Shells, and at early dawn his eye was again greeted by the proudly waving flag of his country." Key's identity was first published in the September 24 issue of the Frederick-Town Herald, but that news had evidently not yet reached the editors of this newspaper. Key's poem was widely printed at the time, and was first published in a newspaper a week prior to this printing, on September 20, in the Baltimore Patriot & Evening Advertiser. Five other newspapers and some broadsides precede this newspaper, all quite rare, while this printing precedes the first magazine appearance (November 1-3, 1814), the first sheet music appearance (ca. October 19, 1814), and the first book appearance (later 1814). According to online records, we cannot locate another copy of this issue at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 267 - [Star-Spangled Banner] Early Example of Printed Sheet Music for the Star-Spangled Banner
[Star-Spangled Banner] Early Example of Printed Sheet Music for the Star-Spangled Banner Baltimore: John Cole, (ca. 1825). Printed sheet music. Two joined sheets, printed on rectos only. 4to. Disbound; foxing and soiling. Filby S-18 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 268 - [Statue of Liberty] Group of 6 Items Related to the Statue of Liberty, ca. 1883-87
[Statue of Liberty] Group of 6 Items Related to the Statue of Liberty, ca. 1883-87 Locations vary, ca. 1883-87. Group of items related to the Statue of Liberty, including, a Merrick Thread Co. trading card, "Liberty Enlightening the World" (encapsulated by SGC, 3.5 VG+); Bartholdi Statue of Liberty. Liberty Enlightening the World (1884, 24mo), a series of small black and white illustrations; an 1887 German edition of Puck magazine discussing the Statue; three manuscript letters, New York, August-September 1883, discussing moulds for the Statue of Liberty. Size and condition varies, but generally fine. The idea of presenting the American people with a monumental statue representing liberty was first proposed in 1870 by French president of the Anti-Slavery Society Édouard René de Laboulaye, who wanted to honor the Union's victory in the Civil War. Laboulaye also hoped to inspire the French people with the great strides in human rights achieved by their compatriots in the United States to demand a democracy of their own. Architect Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi was inspired by depictions of Columbia and of Libertas, Roman goddess of freedom. Original designs included Liberty holding a broken chain to symbolize the end of slavery, however it was decided that this was too divisive a message so soon after the end of the Civil War. Construction began in Paris in 1877, with the statue's head completed just in time to be displayed at the Paris World's Fair the following year. While this was going on, a pedestal was constructed on Bedloe's Island, in Manhattan harbor. On July 17, 1885 the French ship Isère arrived in New York carrying the parts of the statue. Upon completion of the pedestal, the statue was assembled and a dedication ceremony presided over by President Grover Cleveland, was held on October 28, 1886. Poet Emma Lazarus was commissioned to compose a short verse to be included on the statue which reads in part, "Give me your tired, your poor / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." Lazarus had been heavily involved in relief efforts for immigrant communities in New York and elsewhere, and she would later write that she wished to "dedicate" the statue as a welcoming beacon to those seeking safety from persecution in the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 269 - [Strauss, Levi]. The Birth of Iconic American Blue Jeans: The First Ad for Levi Strauss & Co.
[Strauss, Levi]. The Birth of Iconic American Blue Jeans: The First Ad for Levi Strauss & Co. "Important To The Working Man, Mechanic, Drayman and Miner. Buy Levi Strauss and Co.'s celebrated Patented Riveted Duck and Denim Overalls..." The Daily Independent Helena, Montana. May 7, 1874. Vol. I, No. 37. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; scattered foxing; contemporary ownership signature at top right of first page; four-inch closed tear at same, affecting signature. A fine example of this Montana newspaper, featuring the first ad for German-American businessman Levi Strauss's iconic blue jeans, printed during the company's inaugural ad campaign. Levi Strauss (1829–1902) emigrated from Germany to the United States in 1847. By 1853, he had established a dry goods store in San Francisco to supply miners during the California Gold Rush with durable workwear and provisions. Recognizing the demand for sturdier trousers, Strauss partnered with tailor Jacob Davis in 1871. Davis had developed a method of reinforcing denim pants with metal rivets. Two years later, the pair secured a patent for the garment, effectively creating the first modern blue jeans. As evidenced by this advertisement, the product was initially marketed to working-class laborers, however, its durability and comfort quickly propelled propelled it as a popular choice across all social classes and professions. Today, Levi's is a global fashion staple, yet retains its status as a symbol of rugged American heritage. According to online records, the above ad began circulation in newspapers in California, Nevada, Montana, and Idaho in early April of 1874 (the oldest evidently being an April 10 ad in the San Francisco Chronicle, headquarters of Levi Strauss & Co.). According to the same records, we cannot locate earlier ads with different content. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 270 - [Technology] Group of 2 Items Related to the Atlantic Cable
[Technology] Group of 2 Items Related to the Atlantic Cable Printed Handbill No place, ca. September 2, 1858. Printed handbill; 7 7/16 x 5 in. (189 x 127 mm). Likely disbound; scattered stains and toning. The Atlantic telegraph cable of 1858 marked the first successful submarine telegraphic connection between Europe and North America, an achievement widely heralded as a triumph of modern science and engineering. Promoted by Cyrus West Field and undertaken by the Atlantic Telegraph Company, the cable briefly enabled direct communication across the Atlantic for the first time in history. On August 16, Queen Victoria transmitted a formal message to James Buchanan inaugurating the line. Though the cable failed after only a few weeks, its temporary success demonstrated the feasibility of transatlantic telegraphy and paved the way for the permanent Atlantic cable, completed in 1866. Together with: The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia, August 8, 1865. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. With a vignette map related to the cable. Some marginal toning; small dampstaining in upper margin. The international telegraph cable expedition of 1865 was the second attempt to secure direct telegraphic communication between Europe and North America. Organized by the Atlantic Telegraph Company, and again, under the leadership of Cyrus West Field, the attempt followed the brief success and subsequent failure of the 1858 cable. Departing aboard the massive steamship SS Great Eastern, the expedition laid thousands of miles of cable across the Atlantic before the line parted and was lost in deep water. Though unsuccessful, the project would pave the way for the successful completion of the transatlantic cable in 1866, an achievement that fundamentally altered international communication. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 271 - [Technology] Partially-Printed Patent for a Precursor of the Television
[Technology] Partially-Printed Patent for a Precursor of the Television Washington, D.C.: The United States Patent Office, March 30, 1880. Single sheet, 11 7/8 x 7 3/4 in. (302 x 197 mm). Partially-printed document, being a one-year patent caveat issued to George R. Carey, relating to an improvement in "Electrical Fac-simile Transfer Instruments"; signed in print by Commissioner of Patents H.E. Paine; red paper seal in lower left. Creasing from old folds; offsetting from seal from when folded. Lot includes two engraved diagrams depicting Carey's selenium camera. In the May 17, 1878 issue of Scientific American, it was reported that, "some very ingenious and curious applications of selenium, in which its peculiar property of changing its electrical conductivity when exposed to light varying in intensity is utilized. The several devices are the invention of Mr. George R. Carey..." Carey (1851–1906), a city surveyor for Boston, based his work on the 1873 research of electrical engineer Willoughby Smith. Smith had discovered selenium's photoconductive properties and, by 1875, had developed a rudimentary method for transmitting images. In early June 1880 (two months following the issue of this preliminary patent) Scientific American further reported on Carey's "wonderful instruments", publishing illustrations of his devices (see the two included diagrams) and explaining their components and function, describing them as "instruments for transmitting and recording at long distances, permanently or otherwise, by means of electricity, the picture of any object that may be projected by the lens of a camera...The operation of this device depends upon the changes in electrical conductivity produced by the action of light in the metalloid selenium..." (June 5, 1880, Vol. XLII, No. 23, p. 355) As one of the first proposed systems for pictorial transmission, Carey's device was an early stepping stone towards the development of television, and was influential to the work of scientists such as Constantin Selencq, who invented the first prototype television around the same time. (see Shelton, The Invention of Television, p. 50) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 272 - [Technology] United States Patent Issued to a Pioneer in Sound Film, 1927
[Technology] United States Patent Issued to a Pioneer in Sound Film, 1927 (Washington, D.C.: United States Printing Office), 1927. Comprising eight sheets, three with printed text recto and verso, five with printed diagrams; stapled in top left corner. Printed patent issued by the United States Patent Office for Charles A. Hoxie, assignor to the General Electric Company, for a "Method and Apparatus for the Transmission of Pictures and Views". Scattered ink stamps. A patent issued to Charles A. Hoxie (1867-1941), a pioneering electrical engineer in talking motion pictures and radio communication, for an apparatus to transmit pictures and views. Raised in Constable, New York, and educated in Boston, Hoxie joined General Electric in 1912, where he first worked on measurements for establishing standards of capacity, inductance, resistance, and electromotive force. With an interest in telephony, in 1920 he developed a visual and photographic receiver for transatlantic wireless communication, which received messages thirty-times faster than the most skillful operator. It was in relation to this work that led Hoxie to the creation in 1922 of his pallophotophone, a machine that could record sound on film. An early basis for the RCA Photophone, one of four major devices that helped revolutionize the film industry with the introduction of sound. Hoxie applied for a patent for the above device on September 23, 1924, and it is likely related to his experiments with sound film. The first major sound film, The Jazz Singer, was released a month prior to this patent, on October 6, 1927. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 273 - [Technology] Group of 9 Printed Items on Early Computing, ca. 1966-82
[Technology] Group of 9 Printed Items on Early Computing, ca. 1966-82 Locations vary, ca. 1966-82. Group of nine items including: printed pamphlet, Computers and the Humanities (Vol. No. 1, September 1966); printed newspaper, Computer Notes ("Special Software Issue", Vol. 2, Issue 6, November 1976); three typed reports relating to the UNIVAC Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation (ca. 1961-67); printed magazine, Byte (Issue #1, September 1975); printed magazine, Personal Computing (December 1982, Vol. 6, No. 12); printed newspaper, Twin Cities Computer User (Vol. 1, No. 1, August 1982); one poster, Personal Computing National Computer Conference June 13-16, 1977. Size and condition varies. The hardware that served as the foundation for modern computers was first developed in the early 1960s, marked primarily by a transition from vacuum tubes to transistors and integrated circuits. These leaps in technological innovation resulted in the 1966 development of the Apollo Guidance Computer, the 1971 invention of the 8-inch floppy disk, and the 1977 introduction of the Apple II personal computer system. The developments outlined in the materials comprised here served as the foundation of our modern technological age. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 274 - [Technology] Designer of the First American Commercial Computer, J. Presper Eckert's Corrected Copy of a Speech on Computing
[Technology] Designer of the First American Commercial Computer, J. Presper Eckert's Corrected Copy of a Speech on Computing "...new thoughts have been coming in much more slowly in the last 10 years than they did in the first 10 years of computers, we are not yet at a plateau..." Denver, Colorado, March 23, 1967. 17 leaves. Typescript speech, on rectos only. Each sheet, 11 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (292 x 216 mm). Titled, "The Computer - A Bridge From Nanoseconds to Seconds", given by J. Presper Eckert, Vice President of UNIVAC, a Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation, at a meeting of the Mile High Chapter Data Processing Management Association. Annotated throughout in pencil and in ink, with notes and emendations. Lightly creased; scattered light ink stains; Old paperclip at top left, with associated stains; small closed tear to right margin of last page. Computer pioneer J. Presper Eckert's corrected copy of a 1967 speech given before a chapter of the Data Processing Management Association. Eckert (1919-1995), along with physicist John Mauchly (1907-1980), developed the first general purpose computer in 1945 (ENIAC). The two worked together on subsequent integrations of the invention including the BINAC and UNIVAC I. Together they founded the Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation which was fundamental in developing key computer concepts such as nesting, subroutines, and stored programming. Their work would contribute to the worldwide explosion of technological advancements in computing in the late 1940s and early 1950s. However, they soon fell on hard economic times, and the company was sold to Remington Rand, who later merged with the Sperry Corporation, forming Sperry Rand. A fascinating piece of technological history from one of the fathers of computer engineering. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 275 - [Technology] Group of 3 Items Related to Apple Computers, Including the First 36 Issues of Apple Assembly Line, 1980-88
[Technology] Group of 3 Items Related to Apple Computers, Including the First 36 Issues of Apple Assembly Line, 1980-88 Press Photo of the Macintosh Computer. Stamped on verso "Jan. 24 1984" and "Feb 1 1988". Light wear and creasing along edges. 11 x 6 1/4 in. (279 x 159 mm). Together with: Apple Assembly Line Richardson, Texas: S-C Software, October 1980-September 1983. Comprising 36 consecutive issues (Vol. 1, Issues 1-12, Vol. 2, Issues 1-12, Vol. 3, Issues 1-12). Original limp printed wrappers. In black spiral-bound binder. A scarce and early monthly newsletter devoted to Apple computer products. Edited and published by Bob Sander-Cederlof from October 1980 through May 1988, it focused on assembly language programming for the Apple II personal computer. Lot includes the premiere issue of Macworld The Macintosh Magazine, with a cover image of Steve Jobs (1984, Vol. 1, No. 1). 4to. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 276 - [Technology] Signed Sketch of the "Basic Internet", by one of its "Fathers," Vint Cerf
[Technology] Signed Sketch of the "Basic Internet", by one of its "Fathers," Vint Cerf No place, after 2017. Original sketch by Vint Cerf in black ink on the reverse of a one-dollar bill, titled "Basic Internet", and signed by him. 2 3/4 x 6 in. (70 x 152 mm). The sketch shows a basic diagram of the connections between gateways, hosts, and networks that comprise the Internet. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 277 - [Technology] 1-of-1 Trading Card with an Autograph Note, Signed by One of the "Fathers" of the Internet, Vint Cerf
[Technology] 1-of-1 Trading Card with an Autograph Note, Signed by One of the "Fathers" of the Internet, Vint Cerf No place, no date. Autograph note, signed by the "Father of the Internet", Vint Cerf: "Some Success Rules 1. If you want to do something Big, get help; preferably from people smarter than you are! 2. Learn to sell your ideas, or you won't get the help you need. Vint Cerf". Approximately 5 x 5 1/2 in. (127 x 140 mm). In pictorial presentation mat with a portrait of Cerf. All proceeds from this lot will benefit a mutually supported not-for-profit. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 278 - [Temperance] Rare Prohibition Broadside for the "Maine Law", the First Statewide Prohibition law in the United States
[Temperance] Rare Prohibition Broadside for the "Maine Law", the First Statewide Prohibition law in the United States Worcester County, Massachusetts, ca. 1851. Printed broadside in two columns, signed in type by Edward W. Lincoln and Truman G. Bancroft; 21 3/8 x 9 in. (543 x 229 mm). A rare prohibition broadside addressing the electors of Worcester County in regards to the passing of the "Maine Law": the first statewide prohibition law in the United States. Passed in 1851 in the state of Maine under the leadership of Neal Dow (considered the "Napoleon of Temperance"), the law prohibited the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages except for medicinal, mechanical, or sacramental purposes. In this address, the president of the Liberal Union writes a scathing letter: "We claim to be 'protected in the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property, according to standing laws,' instead of being continually harassed, by the government for whose support we are taxed, with violent and tyrannical measures to strip us of each and all..." He goes on, "This Maine Law! is not the crowning glory of a republic!...Observation has shown that its noisiest advocates are the least sincere friends of Temperance, when the great cause requires of them individual abstinence..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 279 - [Texiana] Group of 4 Items Related to Early Texas, Including a Report of the Reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence, ca. 1836-64
[Texiana] Group of 4 Items Related to Early Texas, Including a Report of the Reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence, ca. 1836-64 1. Dover Enquirer. Dover, New Hampshire, Tuesday Morning, April 12, 1836. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds, small separations along same; scattered soiling; old ownership signature at top of front page. On the second page is reported the reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence of March 2, 1836, followed by a complete printing of Lt. Col. Commandant William Bryant Travis's famed and passionate letter from the last stand at the Alamo, to Sam Houston, requesting aid in the face of advancing Mexican forces, and ending with his send off, "Victory or Death!" 2. The New York Herald. New York, Sunday Morning, September 1, 1845. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Toning along edges, scattered wear along same. With a front-page printing of an engraved map of Texas showing the disputed land areas with Mexico, and followed by articles reporting on General Zachary Taylor's forces there. 3. Printed Senate Report. May 17, 1852. Single sheet, 8 3/4 x 5 5/8 in. (222 x 143 mm). Disbound. United States Senate report No. 221, denying compensation for Texas Ranger Col. John Coffee Hays (1817-83), for his service in the Mexican-American War. 4. Printed Resolution of the State of Texas. Texas, House of Representatives, May 4, 1864. Single sheet, 9 1/2 x 6 1/4 in. (241 x 159 mm). Signed in type by Secretary of State R.J. Townes. Scattered spotting; toning along edges; circular ink stamp at top. A joint resolution issued by the Texas legislature during the Civil War, reaffirming their secessionist stance and their faith in the Confederate government: "That now that our presumptuous enemy treads our soil, in heavy numbers and menacing attitude, we bid him a proud and scornful defiance...we pledge to our sister States that in this struggle our authorities and our people will evince a patriotism and endurance as great as the occasion and as prolonged as the conflict...we here record our full confidence in the patriotism and ability of President Davis...we would not exchange him for any citizen of the Confederacy, as the pilot to carry us through the present stormy struggle for liberty, as a people, and for independence as a nation." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 280 - [Texiana] Partially-Printed Republic of Texas Payment Order Issued to one of the "Immortal 32" Gonzales Rangers Killed in Action While Defending the Alamo in 1836
[Texiana] Partially-Printed Republic of Texas Payment Order Issued to one of the "Immortal 32" Gonzales Rangers Killed in Action While Defending the Alamo in 1836 Houston, Texas, January 22, 1839. Partially-printed payment order, No. 10396, for $2.66, for "payment of the Military. Services in the army". Issued by the Treasurer of the Republic of Texas Francis Lubbock to J.D. Clements, executor of the estate of Thomas R. Miller. Creasing from old folds; scattered stains and foxing. Thomas Redd Miller (1804-1836) was a Virginia store owner who moved to the Republic of Texas in 1830. He was one of the "Immortal 32" rangers from the nearby town of Gonzales who responded to William Barrett Travis's request for aid as Antonio López de Santa Anna's army approached the Alamo in February 1836. Miller had served as a member of the Texas Consultation tasked with deciding a response to the aggressive actions of Santa Anna. Led by George C. Kimble, the Gonzales Rangers arrived at the Alamo ten days later, and at 3:00 a.m. on March 1 slipped past Santa Anna's forces and into the fortress. Four days later Santa Anna began his final assault on the Alamo, which resulted in 189 Texan defender casualties, including every member of the Gonzales Rangers. Miller's estate took nearly a decade to settle due to inconsistent record-keeping and his own considerable debts. Often referred to as the "Lexington of Texas," Gonzales was the site of the first major skirmish of the Texas Revolution. It was the only city to send aid to the Alamo and immediately following the battle, General Sam Houston ordered it burned to the ground, fearing that it would be Santa Anna's next target. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 281 - [Titanic] The Official British Government Report on the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912
[Titanic] The Official British Government Report on the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912 Shipping Casualties (Loss of the Steamship "Titanic"). Report of a Formal Investigation into the circumstances attending the foundering on 15th April, 1912... London: Published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, Printed by Jas. Truscott and Son, 1912. Tall 4to. (ii), 73, (1) pp. Illustrated with an in-text engraved diagram of the Titanic. Full tan buckram, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt (chipped), library label at foot of spine, boards soiled; all edges trimmed; original blue wrappers bound in, front wrapper loose and chipped along edges, same with "Association of the Bar Library City of New York" ink stamp at top; library ink stamps at top of title-page; leaves with vertical center crease from when sometime folded. Following the sinking of the RMS Titanic on 15 April 1912 a formal inquiry into the disaster was convened by Lord Mersey. Hearings were held over two months at the London Scottish Drill Hall which saw over 100 witnesses questioned. Unlike the American inquiry, no blame was placed on the White Star Line or Captain Edward J. Smith for the disaster. The final report, issued in July 1912, provides a highly detailed account of the entire event, including notes on the Titanic's composition, its crew, the ship's journey, as well as reports on its speed, the weather, iceberg warnings, and a description of its collision ("The injuries to the ship...were of such a kind that she foundered in two hours and forty minutes"). The report further describes damages to the ship, its sinking, an account of the rescue operations, the number of those saved, and the number of casualties. The final section lists recommendations from the Commission, regarding water-tight compartments, lifeboats and rafts, etc. Bound with: Report of the Merchant Shipping Advisory Committee Respecting the Statutory Regulations as to Boats and Life-Saving Appliances and Other Means of Ensuring Safety of Life at Sea... London: Published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, Printed by Darling and Son, Ltd., 1912. (ii), 175 pp. Illustrated with two maps (one folding). Original blue wrappers bound in; same library ink stamp on front wrapper and title-page; scattered short closed tears. Landmark report issued by the Merchant Shipping Advisory Committee on behalf of the Board of Trade following the sinking of the Titanic, being their detailed investigation into English ship safety regulations and sea casualties, and their recommendations for changes. Five further safety reports include those issued by a sub-committee on the construction of lifeboats, on wireless telegraphy, Atlantic steamship routes, life saving appliances on passenger ships, and a statistical report on life saving devices on ships prior to 1910. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 282 - [Tobacco Cards] Rare Salesman's Dummy of an Uncut Sheet of William S. Kimball Tobacco Cards of Women, ca. 1880s
[Tobacco Cards] Rare Salesman's Dummy of an Uncut Sheet of William S. Kimball Tobacco Cards of Women, ca. 1880s Rochester, New York: W.M. Kimball & Co., no date (ca. 1880s). Salesman's copy of uncut sheet of 24 tobacco cards, mounted to gilt captioned card. Light edge-wear. 15 5/8 x 10 in. (346 x 254 mm). An uncommon uncut salesman's dummy sheet of 24 tobacco cards of women celebrities, sold by William S. Kimball & Co. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 283 - [Transportation] Circa 1860 Broadside Advertising the USS Daylight, a Freight Ship Operating Between New York and Boston, Later Acquired by the Union Navy for Service in the Civil War
[Transportation] Circa 1860 Broadside Advertising the USS Daylight, a Freight Ship Operating Between New York and Boston, Later Acquired by the Union Navy for Service in the Civil War New York, ca. 1860. Printed broadside, 16 x 11 1/4 in. (406 x 286 mm). Two engraved vignettes of ships. Top left corner chipped; scattered soiling. A broadside advertising the use of a freight ship between New York and Boston. The USS Daylight was a 682-ton screw steamship built in Brooklyn by Samuel Sneden, later acquired by the Union Navy in May 1862 for Civil War service. It functioned as an armed gunboat patrolling the Atlantic Coast and Virginia waterways. Later in 1862, the Daylight joined the bombardment and capture of Fort Macon, North Carolina, receiving a damaging shot in her hull. It was sold in 1865. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 284 - [Vietnam War] Collection of 6 Press Photos and 2 Newspapers, Related to the Vietnam War, 1960s-70s
[Vietnam War] Collection of 6 Press Photos and 2 Newspapers, Related to the Vietnam War, 1960s-70s Locations and dates vary, ca. 1960s-70s. Comprising eight total items, including six press photos, of protesters, military commanders, etc., as well as two newspapers, including the Los Angeles Evening and Sunday Herald Examiner, dated September 18, 1971 ("U.S. to End Vietnam Combat Role June 30"), and Havana's Granma, dated May 24, 1970 ("Victory!"). Condition varies, generally very good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 285 - [Vietnam War] Old Soldiers Never Die Young Ones Do, Anti-Vietnam War Poster
[Vietnam War] Old Soldiers Never Die Young Ones Do, Anti-Vietnam War Poster Kent, Ohio: Pro-Arts, ca. 1968. Color screen-print. 19 5/8 x 32 1/4 in. (498 x 819 mm). 1 1/4 in. closed tear in lower left edge. "Old soldiers never die, young ones do" was often paraphrased by the 1960s antiwar movement from General Douglas A. MacArthur's 1951 farewell address to the United States Congress: "Old soldiers never die; they just fade away". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 286 - [Vietnam War] Mederos, Rene. Rare Cuban Pro-Vietnam War Poster: Como en Vietnam Mes de la Mujer Vietnamita
[Vietnam War] Mederos, Rene. Rare Cuban Pro-Vietnam War Poster: Como en Vietnam Mes de la Mujer Vietnamita Cuba, ca. 1970. Color screen-print poster on thick paper, by Rene Mederos; 29 1/4 x 19 1/4 in. (743 x 489 mm). Creasing and scattered closed tears along top edge, 1 3/4 closed tear along same; loss in top right and bottom left corners. In 1969, Cuban artist Rene Mederos traveled to Vietnam on assignment from the Cuban government's Department of Revolutionary Orientation to create scenes of the ongoing war, which were later turned into posters, such as this example. Expressing solidarity with the North Vietnamese in their struggle against American forces, the present poster celebrates the month of the Vietnamese Woman. Rare, according to RBH we can locate only one other example of this poster at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 287 - [Villa, Pancho] Rare Enlistment Poster During the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 Against Mexican Revolutionaries
[Villa, Pancho] Rare Enlistment Poster During the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 Against Mexican Revolutionaries Wanted! More Men for Army With Delaware Troops to Serve in Mexico... (Dover, ca. 1916). Printed broadside, 8 3/4 x 6 in. (222 x 152 mm). Lightly toned, small chip of paper loss at top margin. Rare printed poster for enlistment in the Delaware National Guard during the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 against Mexican Revolutionaries led by Pancho Villa (1878-1923). During this period Villa had fallen out of favor with the United States government as a potential leader of Mexico in favor of Venustiano Carranza, as President Woodrow Wilson believed Carranza potentially offered a more stable government. In retaliation, Villa ordered a cross-border attack on Columbus, New Mexico in March 1916. This proved to be the last straw for President Wilson, who then ordered troops into Mexico to capture Villa. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 288 - [War of 1812] The Beginnings of a Naval Hero: Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s 1807 Lieutenant's Commission, His First Official Promotion in the Navy, Signed by Thomas Jefferson
[War of 1812] The Beginnings of a Naval Hero: Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s 1807 Lieutenant's Commission, His First Official Promotion in the Navy, Signed by Thomas Jefferson Washington, D.C., January 15, 1807. Single vellum sheet, 17 1/2 x 14 1/2 in. (444 x 368 mm). Partially-printed military commission, signed by President Thomas Jefferson, appointing Oliver H(azard). Perry a
Lot: 289 - [War of 1812] "We Have Met the Enemy and They are Ours": The Critical Promotion of a Naval Hero, Oliver Hazard Perry is Appointed Master Commandant in the United States Navy, Commission signed by James Madison, 1812
[War of 1812] "We Have Met the Enemy and They are Ours": The Critical Promotion of a Naval Hero, Oliver Hazard Perry is Appointed Master Commandant in the United States Navy, Commission signed by James Madison, 1812 Washington, D.C., August 28, 1812. Partially-printed military commission on vellum, signed by President James Madison, appointing Oliver Hazard Perry Master Commandant in the United
Lot: 290 - [War of 1812] Tooled Leather Wallet, Purportedly Once Belonging to Commodore James Biddle
[War of 1812] Tooled Leather Wallet, Purportedly Once Belonging to Commodore James Biddle Leather wallet, tooled with border design and naval imagery, including an eagle and anchor motif, ca. 1840s. 3 1/2 x 6 3/4 x 1/2 in. (89 x 172 x 12 mm). Pencil notation under primary flap, "Commodore James Biddle U.S.N." Early 20th century sticker mounted below above, with manuscript, "wallet used by James Biddle in Japan." Wear commensurate with age and use; early crude stitched repair to leather fastener. Commodore James Biddle (1783-1848), of the Philadelphia Biddle family, joined the U.S. Navy in 1800. In 1845, Biddle was named head of a naval squadron headed to the far east, with the objective of delivering a letter from Secretary of State John C. Calhoun to the American ambassador in China, Caleb Cushing. The letter authorized him to attempt negotiations with the government of Japan with the hopes of establishing a trade agreement. However, when the fleet arrived in Macau, they found Cushing had already left for America, and his successor Alexander Everett was too ill to make the journey. Biddle decided to attempt the negotiations himself, and on July 20, 1846 he anchored his ships off Uraga. His reception with the Japanese delegation was disastrous, and at one point, while aboard the ship of the Shogunate, Biddle was knocked to the ground by a samurai guard after misunderstanding instructions. Apologies were exchanged, but the Americans were told that Japan forbade all commerce with foreign nations other than the Dutch, and the squadron departed shortly thereafter. Japan remained closed to American trade until Commodore Matthew Perry's expedition seven years later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 291 - [War of 1812] Manuscript Copy of the Proclamation of Armistice, Issued by Future President William Henry Harrison During the War of 1812
[War of 1812] Manuscript Copy of the Proclamation of Armistice, Issued by Future President William Henry Harrison During the War of 1812 Detroit, ca. October 16, 1813. One sheet, 10 1/4 x 8 in. (260 x 203 mm). True copy of a proclamation by order of General William Henry Harrison, in the hand of his aide Charles Stewart Todd, signed by him at conclusion. In part: "An armistice having been concluded between the United States and the Tribes of Indians called Miamies, Potawatomis, Weas, Eel River Miamis, Ottoways, Chippeways, and Wyandot to continue until the pleasure of the former shall be known. I do hereby make known the same to all whom it may concern. This Armistice is preparatory to a general council...the different tribes...have been permitted to retire to their hunting grounds...if they behave themselves peaceably...I exhort our citizens living upon the frontiers to respect the terms of the said armistice..." Creasing from old folds; moderately toned; scattered tape stains. Manuscript copy of the proclamation of armistice issued by future President William Henry Harrison, following his victory over British forces and a confederation of their Indian allies at the Battle of the Thames, on October 5, 1813. Harrison's victory at the Battle of the Thames resulted in American forces taking back Detroit from British control. Perhaps the most consequential result of the battle was the death of Shawnee Chief Tecumseh, leader of the British allied Indian confederation, which afterwards was dissolved. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 292 - [War of 1812] Likely the Earliest Broadside of this Catastrophic Event, Containing a Description of the Burning of Washington D.C. on August 24, 1814
[War of 1812] Likely the Earliest Broadside of this Catastrophic Event, Containing a Description of the Burning of Washington D.C. on August 24, 1814 "The enemy took possession of the city, burned the Capitol, the President's House, Treasury, and War Offices...but to give the Devil his due, his conduct here was as orderly as could have been expected..." Baltimore Patriot and Evening Advertiser Baltimore, Monday Noon, August 29, (1814). Printed broadside in three columns, 15 1/2 x 10 1/2 in. (mm). Containing an extract of a letter describing the Burning of Washington, D.C. In part: "I am almost fatigued to death since Sunday last. I slept little, eat little, and marched till my feet are all blistered, and after the whole we are completely disgraced. The enemy took possession of the city, burned the Capitol, the President's House, Treasury, and War Offices, and some private houses--but to give the Devil his due, his conduct here was as orderly as could have been expected...About 400 of the British came in that evening and commenced the work of destruction..." Disbound; untrimmed; scattered spotting. Rare broadside printed by the Baltimore Patriot and Evening Advertiser containing a description, presumably from a letter of an American soldier, of the Burning of Washington, D.C. on August 24, 1814. In the wake of the British victory at the Battle of Bladensburg, James Madison and the rest of the American government fled the Capitol, taking refuge in the nearby town of Brookville. When British soldiers under the command of General George Ross entered the city of Washington, which was flying white flags of truce, the remaining Americans reportedly opened fire, killing two men and wounding Ross. This act, according to biographer John McCavitt, is what led Ross to first order the burning of the U.S. Capitol and the White House. British forces in the coming days would set fire to the Treasury building, the War Offices, the Washington Naval Yard, and even destroy the offices of the National Intelligencer, tearing it down brick by brick. According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 293 - [War of 1812] The National Intelligencer's Third Issue, Published After Its Press and Building Were Destroyed in the Burning of Washington, D.C., September 1, 1814
[War of 1812] The National Intelligencer's Third Issue, Published After Its Press and Building Were Destroyed in the Burning of Washington, D.C., September 1, 1814 "We have issued one paper a day or two in its present shape, which it must retain until we are enabled to replace the type so meanly and malignantly destroyed by the enemy..." Washington, September 1, (1814). Two sheets, each 13 1/2 x 10 1/4 in. (342 x 260 mm). Printed newspaper in four columns, on rectos only. Featuring the paper's address to its constituents, reading in full: "Having purchased from one of our brother printers one small fount of type, we have issued one paper a day or two in its present shape, which it must retain until we are enabled to replace the type so meanly and malignantly destroyed by the enemy. For any deficiency of matter, or irregularity of transmission, an apology must be found in the absence of many of our hands in the different military corps, and the disadvantages under which others are employed. We shall do the best we can. We should suppose we need only state that our recent loss will require the use of every cent of money we can command, to induce those who know themselves to be indebted to the establishment forthwith to pay their respective dues, and in addition to elicit payment in advance from all who can afford it. The Editors are happy to say that their account books and subscription lists were saved from the general destruction of their books and papers." Disbound, sheets now joined; untrimmed; lightly creased; scattered foxing especially to left margin. Rare issue of the National Intelligencer, Washington, D.C.'s first newspaper, addressing its readers after its offices and press were destroyed by British Admiral George Cockburn during the Burning of Washington on August 24, 1814. The editors of the Intelligencer, William Seaton and Joseph Gales, had been highly critical of Cockburn, branding him a "ruffian" in many of their reports on the war. When British forces entered Washington after their victory against the Americans at the Battle of Bladensburg, Cockburn resolved to burn the newspaper's building down but yielded to the pleas of civilians who feared its conflagration would spread to their homes. Instead he decided to tear the building down "brick by brick", and destroy all of their "C" type, so they could not print his name again. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 294 - [War of 1812] Report of the Committee Appointed...to Inquire into the Expediency of Rebuilding, or Repairing the Public Buildings, in the City of Washington...
[War of 1812] Report of the Committee Appointed...to Inquire into the Expediency of Rebuilding, or Repairing the Public Buildings, in the City of Washington... Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman, 1814. First edition. 8vo. 4 pp. Quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt, spine and joints rubbed; sheets moderately toned. Sabin 69797 Lot includes a fragment of, Report of the Committee...to Inquire into the Causes and Particulars of the Invasion of the City of Washington, by the British Forces in the Month of August, 1814. November 29, 1814. Washington: A. and G. Way, 1814. First edition. 8vo. pp. 1-52 only (of 370) With one (of two) letterpress folding table. Disbound; library stamp at front; foxing. Sabin 69796 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 295 - [War of 1812] The Weekly Register, Commodore Isaac Hull's Copy, with Extensive Coverage of the War of 1812, and more
[War of 1812] The Weekly Register, Commodore Isaac Hull's Copy, with Extensive Coverage of the War of 1812, and more The Weekly Register... Baltimore: H. Niles, September 1813-March 1814. Vol. V, Nos. 1-26, plus two supplements and two addenda. Red library buckram, stamped in gilt, library label on spine, stain on front board; all edges trimmed; Library of Congress book-plate on front paste-down, surplus ink stamp on same; ink stamp "Com. I. Hull / U.S. Navy" on title-page and front blank; ownership signature on title-page ("Jer. Sullivan"); manuscript on front and rear blanks; foxing and toning throughout. Commodore Isaac Hull's copy, with his ownership stamps, on a run of periodicals printing extensive coverage of the War of 1812. The front and rear endpapers feature incomplete ship's log notes from an unknown voyage in the Pacific, dating from March and October, 1823. Isaac Hull (1773-1843) was a naval officer who served in the Quasi-War with France, the Barbary Wars, and the War of 1812. In the latter conflict, he commanded the famous USS Constitution during its engagement and capture of the HMS Guerriere, the event that earned the ship its moniker, "Old Ironsides." Lot also includes: 1. Federal Republican, and Commercial Gazette. Georgetown, September 22, 1813. Vol. VII, No. 1013. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from when folded; scattered spotting. Printing on the second page, Oliver Hazard Perry's message of his victory at Lake Erie to Secretary of the Navy William Jones. 2. The Weekly Register. Baltimore: H. Niles, Saturday, March 27, 1813. Vol. IV, No. 4, Whole No. 82. 8vo. pp. (57)-72. Disbound; sheets toned; scattered spotting. Printing a laudatory message to America's naval commanders on the first page. 3. Daily Federal Republican. Georgetown (Washington D.C.), August 23, 1814. Vol. IX, No. 1259. Bifolium, 19 1/4 x 12 1/2 in. (mm). Printed newspaper. Disbound. Creasing from old folds, moderately toned; scattered stains; contemporary ownership signature "D.P. Clark" on front page. Lot includes a separate printed Congressional report for a proposed memorial for Commodore Isaac Hull, as well as one leaf of printed sheet music, titled "Yankee Thunders." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 296 - [Washington, George] Early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that Ignited the French and Indian War
[Washington, George] Early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that Ignited the French and Indian War The Maryland Gazette Annapolis: Printed by Jonas Green, Tuesday, June 27, 1754. Numb. 477. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; dampstaining along spine and in lower half of each leaf; singe mark in upper fore-edge of first leaf, short closed tear in lower fore-edge of same; scattered spotting. An early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish between Washington's men and French soldiers at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that ignited the French and Indian War. Printed on the second page, third column, reports, "We have certain Information, that Nine of the French Soldiers, from the Fort which was delivered up by Ensign Ward...have Deserted, and come over to Major Washington. Upwards of 300 Soldiers are now at Alexandria, and more expected every Day, who are to march in a few Days, to join and reinforce Major Washington, so that it is hoped his Army will soon be able to withstand and repel any Attacks that may be offered him by the French." On May 28, 1754, Washington and Mingo Chief Tanacharison, known as “Half-King", led a party of 40 men in an ambush against 29 French soldiers at current-day Jumonville Glen in Western Pennsylvania. Following an earlier three-month expedition into the Ohio Valley, Washington had reported to Virginia Governor Robert Dinwiddie about French intentions to establish a military presence in the region. Dinwiddie ordered Washington to proceed to the frontier and establish a fort at the fork of the Ohio River to prevent the French from taking root. By April, Washington had learned that French forces had overtaken a small British contingent already in that area, and he ordered his men to build a defensive position nearby. On May 27, Washington spotted a small contingent of French forces close to his position, and ordered the resulting ambush the next day against French leader Joseph Coulons de Villiers de Jumonville, which led to the death of ten French, and the capture of numerous others. A month later, in retaliation, 600 French soldiers overtook Washington's position at Fort Necessity, forcing his surrender. It was the beginning of the French and Indian War, which would eventually force the French from North America. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 297 - [Washington, George] One of the Earliest Engraved Portraits of George Washington, and the First to be Published in London and in Europe, 1775
[Washington, George] One of the Earliest Engraved Portraits of George Washington, and the First to be Published in London and in Europe, 1775 George Washington, Esqr. General and Commander in Chief of the Continental Army in America (London): C. Shepherd, September 9, 1775. Mezzotint, "Done from an Original, Drawn from the Life by Alexr. Campbell". Trimmed to plate mark. Approximately 14 x 10 in. (356 x 254 mm) (sight). Toned; scattered wear and repairs. Unexamined out of old frame. Baker 46; Hart 721; Fowble 75; Wick, pp. 18-22 One of the earliest engraved portraits of George Washington, and the first to be published in London and in Europe. Upon Washington's commission as commander of the Continental Army on June 15, 1775, demand abroad for images of his likeness skyrocketed. As English and European publishers had no authentic portraits to base their work on, the resulting images were typically inauthentic, and as seen here, based on fictitious sources (there is no record of an Alexander Campbell ever existing, and Washington denied that he had ever sat for a portrait by him). Nonetheless, in response to this image, Washington wrote, "Mr. Campbell...has made a very formidable figure of the Commander-in-Chief, giving him a sufficient portion of terror and countenance." This image of Washington proved incredibly influential in helping establish the English and European public's perception of Washington and the American Revolution more generally, and it was copied throughout the continent for prints, textiles, and medals. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 298 - [Washington, George] General Washington Arrives in Cambridge to Take Command of the American Army
[Washington, George] General Washington Arrives in Cambridge to Take Command of the American Army The New-England Chronicle: or, the Essex Gazette Cambridge: Printed by Samuel and Ebenezer Hall, From Thursday, June 29, to Thursday, July 6, 1775. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Ownership signature of Capt. Josiah Gilman at top of first page; largely separated along center fold; wear along edges, with loss in upper fore-edge of first leaf, affecting some text; loss in top corner of last leaf, affecting some text; residue in top corners and bottom edge of third-page from when mounted; foxing and toning. Newly appointed as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, George Washington arrives in Boston to take command of the American forces. On the second page is an address from the New York Provincial Congress congratulating Washington on his recent appointment, rejoicing "in the appointment of a Gentleman, from whose abilities and virtue, we are taught to expect both security and peace," and having "the most flattering hopes of success, in the glorious struggle for American Liberty...''; followed by Washington's response of the "highest gratitude". On the third page is a lengthy letter from the Massachusetts Congress, congratulating Washington on his safe arrival, and applauding his appointment, and his disinterested virtue and patriotism. The letter then goes on to offer a picture of the Army then gathered around Boston, assuring Washington that they "will, at all Times, be ready to attend to such Requisitions as you may have Occasion to make to us; and to contribute all the Aid in our Power, to the Cause of America..." Washington's response follows, thanking them, and stating that "I only emulate the Virtue and publick Spirit of the whole Province of Massachusetts-Bay, which with a Firmness, and Patriotism without Example in modern History, has sacrificed all the Comforts of social and political Life, in Support of the Rights of Mankind..." At the end of the third-page is a report on the British casualties suffered at the Battle of Bunker Hill. The first page also prints part V of The Crisis, a pro-American journal printed in London, while the final page prints the controversial letters of Massachusetts governor Thomas Hutchinson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 299 - [Washington, George] Report of George Washington Arriving in Philadelphia on his way to his First Inauguration
[Washington, George] Report of George Washington Arriving in Philadelphia on his way to his First Inauguration The London Chronicle London: Sold by T. Wilkie, From Thursday, June 4, to Saturday, June 6, 1789. Vol. LXV, No. 5097. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (537)-544. Disbound; separations along spine; wear in top edge; scattered spotting. George Washington arrives in Philadelphia on his way to his first inauguration: "Every countenance seemed to say, Long, long live George Washington, the Father of the People!" On p. 542 is a report of April 22, on President-elect George Washington's arrival in Philadelphia, on his journey to take the oath of office in New York: "His Excellency rode in front of the procession on horseback. The number of spectators who filled the doors, windows, and streets, which he passed, was greater than on any other occasion we ever remember. The bells were rung through the day and night, and a feu de joy was fired as he moved down Market and Second-streets to the City Tavern. The joy of the whole city upon this august spectacle cannot easily be described...His excellency, having travelled with great expedition from Mount Verno[n], proceeded yesterday morning for New York, where he will receive that power which is infinitely preferable to an hereditary crown, inasmuch as it is conferred upon merit by the unanimous and free suffrages of the representatives of near three millions of affectionate and grateful people." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 300 - [Washington, George] Announcing the Inauguration of George Washington as the First President of the United States
[Washington, George] Announcing the Inauguration of George Washington as the First President of the United States "The illustrious Washington was yesterday installed in the dignity of First Magistrate of the United States of America, to which he had been called by the unanimous suffrages of the nation..." The London Chronicle London: (Sold by T. Wilkie), Tuesday, June 23 to Thursday, June 25, 1789. Vol. LXV, No. 5105. Printed newspaper. 4to. 8 pp. (pp. 601-608). Text in three columns. Disbound, first and last leaves loose. Scattered foxing; royal tax stamp at bottom left of second page. The London Chronicle announces the inauguration of George Washington as the first president of the United States, on April 30, 1789. "Yesterday arrived a mail from Halifax, brought to Falmouth by the Tankerville packet in 22 days. Extract of a Letter from New York, May 1. The illustrious Washington was yesterday installed in the dignity of First Magistrate of the United States of America, to which he had been called by the unanimous suffrages of the nation..." The same letter admiringly observes that "Mr. Washington on this, as on former occasions, refused to receive any lucrative recompence for the services he had done his country." Lot also includes the following issue of the same newspaper (No. 5106, June 25-27, 1789). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 301 - [Washington, D.C.] The First Newspaper Printing of the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Capital City, in the Gazette of the United States
[Washington, D.C.] The First Newspaper Printing of the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Capital City, in the Gazette of the United States New-York: John Fenno, Saturday, July 17, 1790. No. 28, Vol. II, Whole No. 132. Printed newspaper. Folio. pp. (525)-528. Disbound; creasing from old folds; wear along edges; spotting. The first newspaper printing of the 1790 Residence Bill that established the permanent seat of government in Washington, D.C., printed in the semi-official organ of Washington's administration. The bill, printed on the third page and signed in type by President Washington, is preceded by a printing of the debates on the matter. The site of the capital in on the Potomac River in the Southern United States came after a compromise between Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, whereby Hamilton received their support for his plan for the federal government to assume state debts in exchange for the permanent federal capital be located in the south. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 302 - [Washington, D.C.] Rare Congressional Act, Amending the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Permanent Seat of Government
[Washington, D.C.] Rare Congressional Act, Amending the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Permanent Seat of Government Philadelphia: (Francis Childs and John Swaine), March 3, 1791. Printed broadside, 11 3/8 x 8 in. (289 x 203 mm). Signed in type by President George Washington, Vice-President John Adams, and Speaker of the House of Representatives Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg. Disbound; light wear along edges. Evans 23869; ESTC W14409 Rare Congressional act, amending the Residence Act of 1790, that established Washington, D.C. as the permanent seat of government and Philadelphia as the temporary seat. This act, approved on March 3, 1791, repeals a portion of the Act that required the new district to be placed above the mouth of the Eastern Branch, stating that "it shall be lawful for the President to make any part of the territory below the said limit, and above the mouth of Hunting Creek...so as to include a convenient part of the Eastern Branch, and of the lands lying on the lower side thereof, and also the town of Alexandria..." Finally, the Act affirms that "nothing herein contained, shall authorize the erection of the public buildings otherwise than on the Maryland side of the river Potowmac, as required by the aforesaid act." According to RBH, this is only the second example offered at auction since 1917. Furthermore, ESTC locates only three copies This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 303 - [Washington, George] President Washington's Second Inaugural Address, in the Gazette of the United States
[Washington, George] President Washington's Second Inaugural Address, in the Gazette of the United States Gazette of the United States Philadelphia: John Fenno, Saturday, March 9, 1793. No. 81, Vol. IV, Whole No. 405. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. (pp. 321-324). Disbound; creasing from old folds; light spotting. At the bottom of third page, under the header "Address of the President of the United States previous to his taking the Oath required by the Constitution, on Monday last", is printed Washington's second inaugural address. The shortest inaugural address ever given, Washington's speech consisted of only 135 words, and compared to his wide-ranging first address, focused on his presidential duties and the consequences should he break them. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 304 - [Washington, George] A Lengthy Lifetime Attack on President Washington for Being a Slaveholder, 1797
[Washington, George] A Lengthy Lifetime Attack on President Washington for Being a Slaveholder, 1797 The American Universal Magazine Philadelphia: Printed by Richard Lee, 1797. In four issues (Monday, April 3, Vol. II, No. IX; Monday, May 15, Vol. II, No. XII; Monday, May 29, Vol. II, No. XIII; Monday, June 13, Vol. II, No. XIV). 8vo. 52 (i.e. 48); (3), 198-402, (4) pp. Quarter brown leather
Lot: 305 - [Wolcott, Oliver] Rare Printed Circular Signed by Treasury Secretary Oliver Wolcott, Transmitting New Laws on Maritime Commerce
[Wolcott, Oliver] Rare Printed Circular Signed by Treasury Secretary Oliver Wolcott, Transmitting New Laws on Maritime Commerce Printed Treasury Department Circular, signed (Philadelphia): December 28, 1793. Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 8 in. (248 x 203 mm). First page (of 33) of an official printed Treasury Department circular addressed to Nathaniel Phillips, transmitting documents on recent maritime legislation, signed by Wolcott at conclusion. Creasing from old folds; pin holes at left margin; paper loss at top left; scattered foxing; large dampstaining at right margin affecting signature. 33 pp. wanting. Bristol B8530; Shipton & Mooney 46897 This document explains that "these papers have been for some time prepared; and would have been more reasonably transmitted, but for the interruption which the public business has suffered from the late calamity at the seat of government..." The calamity being the Yellow Fever outbreak that ravaged Philadelphia from August through November, 1793. The disease caused over 5,000 deaths, and prompted nearly half the city's population to flee, including many in the Federal Government, ceasing its operation for a time. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 306 - [Women's Rights] New-York Weekly Tribune, Advertising First Women's Rights Convention Held in Pennsylvania, May 8, 1852
[Women's Rights] New-York Weekly Tribune, Advertising First Women's Rights Convention Held in Pennsylvania, May 8, 1852 New-York, Saturday, May 8, 1852. Vol. XI, No. 556. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; leaves unopened; creased from when folded; light spotting. "The friends of Justice and Equal Rights are earnestly invited to assemble in Convention, to consider and discuss the present Position of Woman in Society, her Natural Rights and Relative Duties." Advertised on the front page is a notice of the first women's rights convention held in Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Woman's Convention at West Chester was held in West Chester, Pennsylvania, on June 2 and 3, 1852. Held four years after the famous Seneca Falls, New York convention, the West Chester Convention was called for by leading activists, including Lucretia Mott, Sallie P. Lewis, Hannah M. Darlington, and others. Looking to discuss and examine the "legal, educational, and vocational disabilities" that women suffer, over the two days the Convention was held, its well-attended audience passed numerous resolutions regarding women's suffrage, equal pay, education, and legal issues. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 307 - [Women's Rights] Autograph Letter, signed by Susan B. Anthony, 1869, Written on the Stationery of The Revolution: The First Women's Suffrage Periodical
[Women's Rights] Autograph Letter, signed by Susan B. Anthony, 1869, Written on the Stationery of The Revolution: The First Women's Suffrage Periodical New York, October 4, 1869. Bifolium. One-page autograph letter on The Revolution stationery, signed by Susan B. Anthony in purple ink to A.H. Comstock of Cambridge, New York, regarding a speaking engagement: "Dear Sir Your letter rec'd contents noticed. Will come to Cambridge if you agree for $50.00. Let me hear from you again that we may appoint a day--Resp S.B. Anthony". Creasing from old folds. Includes original mailing envelope addressed by Anthony. Susan B. Anthony writes a brief note to A.H. Comstock of Cambridge, New York, regarding a possible speaking engagement. Comstock ran a small lecture series in the small city, whose 1869-70 season also attracted the likes of Mark Twain. Written on the stationery of The Revolution, the newspaper founded by Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in New York City in 1868. The stationery's headline reads, in part: "Devoted to the discussion of Suffrage, The only means by which Equal Rights can be secured to Woman in the State, the Church, the Home and the World of Work. An American Monetary System--Greenbacks for money, as well for Bondholders and Capitalists, as for the Working Classes..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 308 - [Women's Rights] Group of 2 Issues of Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, one of the First American Newspapers Published by Women
[Women's Rights] Group of 2 Issues of Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, one of the First American Newspapers Published by Women New York, 1874. In two issues, comprising: February 21 and March 7 (Vol. VII, Nos. 12 and 14, Whole Nos. 168 and 170). Folio. Each 8 pp. Creased from old folds; each unopened; wear and repairs along edges. A group of two issues of women's rights activists Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin's radical and notorious newspaper, one of the first American newspapers published by women. Published from May 1870 to June 1876, the newspaper featured articles on topics ranging from spiritualism, vegetarianism, free love, and socialism, but was largely a vehicle for promoting women's suffrage. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 309 - [Women's Rights] Group of 3 Items Related to Women's Suffrage, ca. 1869-1915
[Women's Rights] Group of 3 Items Related to Women's Suffrage, ca. 1869-1915 1. The Revolution New York, Thursday, February 25, 1869. Printed newspaper. Vol. III, No. 8, Whole No. 60. pp. (113)-128. Creasing from old folds; light toning and spotting; minor edgewear. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton's influential weekly women's rights newspaper. Includes extensive coverage of the February 11-12 women's suffrage convention in Chicago, the first women's suffrage convention in Illinois. 2. Press Photo of a Women's Suffrage March New York, no date (ca. 1910-15). Silver gelatin print, 6 5/8 x 8 1/2 in. (168 x 216 mm). Printed press slip attached to verso, "General view of the parade of 5,000 suffragettes passing down Fifth Avenue in New York last Saturday..." Creasing and light wear. 3. Rowland, Bertha K., after Clarence F. Underwood Her First Vote No place, ca. 1915. Watercolor and crayon on thick paper, 13 1/4 x 10 1/2 in. (336 x 267 mm). Spotting and uneven toning. Lot also includes a sammelband of over 30 pamphlets and documents related to anti-women's suffrage. 8vo. Black library-style buckram. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 310 - [World War I] Do Your Duty Join the U.S. Marines Poster
[World War I] Do Your Duty Join the U.S. Marines Poster No place, ca. 1917. Color lithographic recruitment poster, signed "PW"; 26 1/4 x 17 1/2 in. (667 x 444 mm). Ink and perforated stamps along bottom edge; wear along edges; ink stamps at bottom verso. "The Great War / New York State Library / Cuyler Reynolds" rubber-stamped on verso. Reynolds (1866-1934) was a newspaperman, librarian, and historian, in Upstate New York. His papers are held at the New York State Library in Albany. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 311 - [World War I] Group of 3 Items: Trench Map, Poster, Newspaper
[World War I] Group of 3 Items: Trench Map, Poster, Newspaper Location and dates vary, ca. 1914-17. Comprising three items, including: a copy of the Dawson Daily News, dated August 7, 1914 ("War Extra German Navy Swept From the High Seas"); large folding trench map ("Trench Map. France. Sheet 57D S.E. Edition 2. D..."); a lithographed poster ("Over the Top", showing heroic American soldiers). Condition varies, scattered soiling, toning, and tears. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 312 - [World War II] European Theater Allied Military Government of Occupied Territory Proclamation No. 1
[World War II] European Theater Allied Military Government of Occupied Territory Proclamation No. 1 No place, 1943. Printed broadside, in English and in Italian; signed in type by General H.R. Alexander, commander of British and American forces in the 165th Army Group in Italy. Creasing from old folds; light wear. 27 1/2 x 19 1/4 in. (698 x 489 mm). Allied Force broadside announcing military control of Italy, the dissolution of the Fascist party, and the removal of the power of the King. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 313 - [World War II] An Incredibly Vivid Manuscript Diary Reporting the Attack on Pearl Harbor, ca. 1941-42
[World War II] An Incredibly Vivid Manuscript Diary Reporting the Attack on Pearl Harbor, ca. 1941-42 "Pearl Harbor is being bombed...this is no drill" Hawaii, ca. 1941-1942. Manuscript journal in ink, comprising 24 pages (entries dated December 7, 1941-January 5, 1942), written within blank journal (The National Daily Journal for 1942, No. 5197, New York, etc.: National Blank Book Company).
Lot: 314 - [World War II] Group of 35 Photographs of Post-Atomic Bomb Nagasaki and the Efforts of Reconstruction, 1945
[World War II] Group of 35 Photographs of Post-Atomic Bomb Nagasaki and the Efforts of Reconstruction, 1945 Nagasaki and environs, Japan, September-December 1945. Group of 35 black and white and/or sepia-toned photographs; each measuring 4 x 5 in. (102 x 127 mm); each with typed or manuscript caption at bottom or within photo (one with additional manuscript on verso). Scattered surface soiling; each with tape remnants, or wear from removed tape, along top edge. Several of these photographs are reproduced in the 1946 United States Navy Reserve cruisebook The Log (Mobile Power 43rd Construction Battalion 1942-1946). Taken with a Speed Graphic camera by an unidentified member of the United States 43rd Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees), these 35 photographs show scenes in and around the vicinity of Nagasaki in the three months following its destruction by an atomic bomb on August 9, 1945. Several photographs document the bomb's destructive power, including scenes showing ruined landscapes, buildings, and infrastructure, as well as the efforts by the Seabees and Japanese soldiers to clean and rebuild roads, bridges, railroad tracks, and other sites. Several photographs depict the occupying American forces, within the city environs and in their barracks, with notations identifying the 43rd and 93rd Naval Construction Battalions. Specific individuals are also identified, including Lieutenant Commander William A. Weeks, Edward A. Gabel, Theodore A. Musset, Melvin George Gerlinger, and George Frank Koester. Some photographs show Japanese citizens, including a mother and child, a group of children, a Japanese police officer, and a large group around the Nagasaki railroad depot. The 43rd Naval Construction Battalion was established in Danville, Rhode Island on November 12, 1942. Following the Japanese surrender on August 15, 1945, the 43rd debarked at Nagasaki on September 23, consisting of about 770 men. During their time in and around the city they undertook and oversaw repair work on buildings, roads, warehouses, railroad tracks, airfields, and docks. By October the number of men had been cut in half, many due to discharges, and by early December its last remaining members departed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 315 - [World War II] One of the Few Surviving Letters From Hemingway to His Third Wife, Martha Gellhorn, Written While a Front-Line War Correspondent in France
[World War II] One of the Few Surviving Letters From Hemingway to His Third Wife, Martha Gellhorn, Written While a Front-Line War Correspondent in France "Your journalism is ok and perfectly done. But for me it is bad. So I will just write the stories as well as I can." (Likely Mont-Saint-Michel, Normandy, France), August 6, 1944. Lengthy six-page autograph letter in pencil on tan graph
Lot: 316 - [World War II] United States Army Field Medic's Photo Album and Assorted Service Ephemera, Including Images of Liberated Buchenwald Concentration Camp, ca. 1940s
[World War II] United States Army Field Medic's Photo Album and Assorted Service Ephemera, Including Images of Liberated Buchenwald Concentration Camp, ca. 1940s France, Germany, etc., ca. 1940s. Album of 102 original photographs; sizes vary (from 2 1/4 x 4 1/4 in. to 5 1/4 x 3 1/2 in. Depicting the service of field medic Charles Fenimore Bowers (73 of the war, the balance depicting Bowers's family members in the United States); several with Bowers's manuscript captions on verso. Oblong 8vo. Original cloth-covered boards, stamped in gilt; several photos loose or starting. United States Army PFC field medic Charles Fenimore Bowers's personal photo album chronicling his service in World War II. Attached to the 7th Field Hospital, Bowers's images capture his units advance across Europe, starting in Normandy, France and ending in Nuremberg, Germany, showing downed and bullet ridden Nazi aircraft, the aftermath of the battle of Saint-Lô, France, various allied aircraft, Bowers's fellow servicemen, scenes in Nuremberg, and notably, images from liberated Buchenwald concentration camp (of which Bowers's unit was an advance party), including images of liberated prisoners, corpses, barracks, and gallows (seven total photos). Other images appear to antedate the war, showing Bowers's various family members. Lot includes an additional six pieces of ephemera related to Bowers's service, including his New York Port of Embarkation certificate, a Commendation Letter, War Department Report of Change of Status and Address document, one typed slip related to a field hospital, Soldier's Individual Pay Record booklet, and one mimeographed newsletter ("Tootin on the Newton"). Original photos showing liberated concentration camps, especially from soldiers who helped do so, are uncommon. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 317 - [World War II] Collection of Erotic Letters From a U.S. Sailor, 1945
[World War II] Collection of Erotic Letters From a U.S. Sailor, 1945 Great Lakes, Illinois, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, ca. May-August, 1945. Group of seven autograph letters, from American Jewish sailor Albert H. Oshiver, addressed to his love interest and later wife, Miss Sylvia Bilker, relaying personal updates as well as explicit content. Accompanied by original mailing envelopes. Creasing from old folds, scattered light foxing. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 318 - [World War II] Passionate Pacific Theater Manuscript Naval Dispatch, August 15, 1945
[World War II] Passionate Pacific Theater Manuscript Naval Dispatch, August 15, 1945 "Sea off Japan", USS San Diego, August 15, 1945. Single sheet, 6 1/2 x 8 in. (165 x 203 mm). Manuscript naval dispatch in pencil received from Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., Commander of the Third Fleet. Reads, in part: "Rec'd morning of Aug. 15. Wed. 45. ab sea off Japan with 3rd. flt. The Nip officers are still fighting X That means we are still facing an enemy that hates our carriers like the devil hates holy water X Until the Nips surrender and are disarmed they are dangerous and need killing X The best present insurance for our forces and a future insurance for peace is to carry it to them with everything we have X Carry on X Halsey..." Creasing from old folds. A passionate Pacific Theater Naval dispatch, sent on the day of Japan's surrender. The USS San Diego, an Atlanta-class light anti-aircraft cruiser, was one of the most decorated United States ships in World War II (awarded 18 battle stars), and on August 27 was the first major Allied warship to enter Tokyo Bay after the surrender of Japan. Japan's surrender was announced by Japanese Emperor Hirohito later the same day that the San Diego received the present dispatch from Third Fleet commander Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., on August 15, 1945. The official surrender of Japan would take place on September 2, aboard the Third Fleet flagship, Iowa-class battleship USS Missouri. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 319 - [World War II] Saturday Evening Post Poster by Mead Schaeffer, November, 1943
[World War II] Saturday Evening Post Poster by Mead Schaeffer, November, 1943 No place, November, 1943. Color lithographic poster advertising the November 6, 1943 issue of The Saturday Evening Post; 28 x 21 3/4 in. (711 x 552 mm). Linen-backed. Mead Schaeffer (1898-1980) was one of the foremost American illustrators of the twentieth century. Trained at the Pratt Institute under Harvey Dunn and associated with the Brandywine tradition of illustration, Schaeffer first gained prominence illustrating classic literary works before becoming a major contributor to The Saturday Evening Post, for which he produced 46 covers. During WWII, he served as a war correspondent and created some of the era's most iconic patriotic imagery. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 320 - [World War II] Sailor's Pacific Theater Daily Journals, 1945-46, including Mention of the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb and Japan's Surrender
[World War II] Sailor's Pacific Theater Daily Journals, 1945-46, including Mention of the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb and Japan's Surrender California, Japan, China, July 20, 1945-May 18, 1946. In two volumes. Tall 24mo. Approximately 198 manuscript pages, in ink and in pencil. Original black cloth, first volume worn, some sheets sprung or starting. Personal diary of United States Navy seaman Walter B. Riggs, detailing his service in the Pacific from July 20, 1945-May 18, 1946. The first volume relates to Griggs's training as a radioman, and includes his various notes and schematics, such as types of messaging, communication procedures, lists of frequencies, symbols, ship nomenclature, the addresses of his shipmates, and his account of money spent while on leave in Japan, China, etc. The second volume is Griggs's daily journal, covering nearly a year of his service in the Pacific. Beginning in Los Angeles and his training in radio school, the journal then proceeds to Griggs's deployment on the USS Tolman, first to Pearl Harbor, and then to Sasebo, Japan, Shanghai, China, Yoko Suka and Tokyo, Japan, and then back to the United States, with his discharge in Shoemaker, California. Griggs keeps meticulous records of his daily actions, noting his various duties, activities while on leave, descriptions of the various locales in Japan and China, including Tokyo, and his interactions with their inhabitants. Notably, Griggs mentions both the dropping of the atomic bomb, as well as Japan's surrender and VJ day. Lot includes 13 pieces of Griggs's personal ephemera, including his Leave Card, pay card, receipts, business cards, etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
[African-Americana] $1,000 Reward Poster for the Capture of the Perpetrators who Lynched an African American Man Proclamation State of Illinois, Executive Department...$1000 Reward Springfield, Illinois, February 28, 1870. Printed reward poster, issued by Governor John M. Palmer, for the apprehension and conviction of those involved in the lynching of an African American man, Anderson Reed. 10 3/4 x 8 3/8 in. (273 x 213 mm). Creasing from old folds, separation along same at center right; soiling and edge-wear; scattered closed tears along edges; old residue on verso from when mounted. In December 1868 (some accounts state 1867), Fritz Lurakee (another account gives the name Frederick Sudikee) was murdered in his home near Venice, Illinois, after an apparent attempted robbery. According to contemporary newspaper reports, following the murder, an African American man named Joe Marshall was arrested for the crime. Shortly after his apprehension, he was seized by a white mob and lynched. His apparent accomplice, an African American man named Anderson Reed, who was reported to go by the alias Bill Wilson, escaped the mob and went on to elude authorities until his capture in St. Louis on February 12, 1870. As reported in the St. Louis Times of February 25, "Henry Lemmert, a constable, came over from Venice and demanded the prisoner [Reed]--without a warrant. Captain Lee refused to deliver him up without the necessary requisition, remarking he was satisfied they meant mischief to him, and if he should surrender Anderson without due process of law and he should be lynched, he would be an accessory to murder." After acquiring the requisite papers, Lemmert took custody of Reed, and took him before a local judge, who convicted him of murder. "Lemmert tied his [Reed’s] hands and feet, placed him in a wagon and proceeded towards Edwardsville. When he had gone about five miles, and as if by preconcerted action, the wagon was surrounded by a mob, who took possession of Reed", who was then summarily murdered. News of the lynching was reported in newspapers throughout the Midwest. In the present poster, Illinois Governor John M. Palmer issues a proclamation stating that the "the murder of the said Reed under the circumstances, is a foul disgrace to the people of the State" and orders "all the officers of the State and particularly the Sheriffs, Coroners, Justices of the Peace and Constables of the Counties of Madison and St. Clair, to exert themselves to bring all persons connected with the outrage of justice, and all good citizens residing in the neighborhood where the killing of said Reed happened, are urged to render every possible assistance to that end." He goes on to offer a $1,000 reward for the "apprehension and conviction of the persons concerned in the killing of said Reed." We cannot locate another copy at auction, nor recorded in OCLC. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 2 - [African Americana] Poem Copied from The Liberator, Mentioning the Murder of Elijah Lovejoy, in a 19th Century American Penmanship Book
[African Americana] Poem Copied from The Liberator, Mentioning the Murder of Elijah Lovejoy, in a 19th Century American Penmanship Book Massachusetts, Bridgewater Normal School, ca. 1844. Oblong 12mo. (36) pp. Manuscript copybook, signed by Charles N. Hall on verso of title-page, and containing 32 pages (recto and verso) of his penmanship studies and other copied passages. Stiff paper wrappers,
Lot: 3 - [African-Americana] [Albany] Small Archive of Manuscript Documents from the Corporation of Albany, Including One Signed by an Abolitionist in the Very Year Slavery was Abolished in New York State
[African-Americana] [Albany] Small Archive of Manuscript Documents from the Corporation of Albany, Including One Signed by an Abolitionist in the Very Year Slavery was Abolished in New York State Group of Five Manuscript Documents, Being Official Receipts Paid by the Corporation of Albany Albany, 1826-32. Comprising five documents, including a receipt for a John G. Smith for carting, signed by architect Phillip Hooker, dated September 13, 1826; a receipt for the printing of 25 copies of amendments to state law, signed by abolitionist John B. Van Steenbergh, dated February 8, 1827 (the year full emancipation occurred in New York State); a receipt for "procuring Subscribers to a memorial to Congress for the Improvement of the navigation of the Hudson River", signed by Conrad Moore, dated May 26, 1830; a donation receipt to the Lancaster School, signed by Charles R. Webster, dated August 10, 1832; a receipt to the "Trustees of African Church", for excavating work, signed by Willian Nordin, dated August 14, 1832. Size and condition varies, but generally fine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 4 - [African-Americana] [American Anti-Slavery Society] Rare Extra Issue of the Emancipator, the Official Newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Published in the Wake of the Group's 1839 Annual Meeting
[African-Americana] [American Anti-Slavery Society] Rare Extra Issue of the Emancipator, the Official Newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Published in the Wake of the Group's 1839 Annual Meeting Emancipator--Extra New-York, June 17, 1839. Printed broadsheet newspaper extra, in four columns, 16 1/4 x 11 in. (413 x 279 mm). Creasing from old folds, a few small closed tears along same; scattered toning. This issue reports on the debate over the "Woman Question" at their recent meeting, and whether or not the names of women should be included as being present in the Society's records. The issue of women's role in the formation of Anti-Slavery societies across the country would lead to a major split in the national movement the following year, with Lewis Tappan and his associates forming the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society in 1840. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 5 - [African-Americana] A Pro-Slavery Reaction to the American Anti-Slavery Society's Postal Campaign of 1835
[African-Americana] A Pro-Slavery Reaction to the American Anti-Slavery Society's Postal Campaign of 1835 "In pursuance of public notice, a very large meeting of the citizens of Shell Point took place on the 19th inst. to express themselves upon the question which has created such universal excitement throughout the slave holding States..." The Shell Point Meeting (Shell Point, Florida
Lot: 6 - [African-Americana] [Anti-Colonization] Reporting on the January 15, 1817 Mass Meeting at Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church in Philadelphia, the First Large-Scale Black Protest in the United States
[African-Americana] [Anti-Colonization] Reporting on the January 15, 1817 Mass Meeting at Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church in Philadelphia, the First Large-Scale Black Protest in the United States The Weekly Recorder Chillicothe, Ohio: John Andrews, September 18, 1817. Volume IV, No. 7, Whole Number 163. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (49)-56. Disbound; library ink stamp at bottom of p. 53; foxing.
Lot: 7 - [African-Americana] An Official Public Appeal Aimed to Defend the American Colonization Society Against Abolitionist Critics and Promote the Mission of Relocating Free Black Americans to Liberia
[African-Americana] An Official Public Appeal Aimed to Defend the American Colonization Society Against Abolitionist Critics and Promote the Mission of Relocating Free Black Americans to Liberia Address of the Managers of the American Colonization Society, to the People of the United States. Adopted at their Meeting, June 19, 1832 Washington: Printed by James C. Dunn, 1832. First edition. 8vo. 16 pp. Drab library-style buckram, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, boards worn and soiled; contemporary ownership signature on title-page, partially trimmed away, numerical notation at same; spotting to sheets. Sabin 81763 In this address, Ralph Randolph Gurley defends the aims of the American Colonization Society, which advocated the relocation of free African Americans to Liberia on the west coast of Africa. Bound with: An Oration Delivered by Hon. Charles Sumner Under the Auspices of the Young Men's Republican Union of New York, November 27, 1861. New York: Printed for the Young Men's Republican Union, 1861. First edition. 8vo. 16 pp. Bound with: The Equal Rights of All...Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, in the United States Senate, February 6 and 7, 1866. Washington: Printed at the Congressional Globe Office, 1866. First edition. 8vo. 32 pp. Together bound with over a dozen assorted pamphlets on various subjects. Several sheets starting or separated; last pamphlet loose. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 8 - [African-Americana] [Black Panthers, etc.] Group of 6 Periodicals, etc.
[African-Americana] [Black Panthers, etc.] Group of 6 Periodicals, etc. 1. Ball & Chain Review San Francisco: Published by Black Journalist, November 1969. Vol. I, No. 2. Printed newspaper. Folio. 6 pp. Creased from when folded, tape repairs at fore-edge of same fold. 2. Free You Palo Alto, California, January 4, 1971. Number 34. Printed newspaper. 4to. 24 pp. Creased from when folded; light wear and toning. 3. The Black Panther Intercommunal News Service San Francisco: The Black Panther Party, 1971. In three issues (Saturday, January 23, Vol. V, No. 30; Saturday, February 20, Vol. VI, No. 4; Saturday, April 17, Vol. VI, No. 12). Printed newspaper. Folio. 12, 20, and 16 pp., respectively. Creased from when folded; toned; light wear. 4. Printed Wanted Poster ("Wanted Terrorists") for Joanna Chesimard (Assata Shakur) and Mutulu Shakur New Jersey: New Jersey State Police Printing Unit, September 9, 1985. Bulletin No. 85-9. Printed broadside; 14 x 8 1/2 in. (356 x 216 mm). The Black Panther Party was founded in Oakland, California by Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton in October 1966, intending to address social inequalities which non-violent resistance appeared to have failed. Following the murder of an unarmed Black man by San Francisco police in 1966 and the Hunter's Point uprising that followed, Newton began to carefully study California gun laws and organize patrols that would follow police through inner-city neighborhoods to monitor their activities. Over time the party began to focus its energies on promoting individual agency to effect larger social changes, beginning with demanding greater education access for inner-city children. The First Free Breakfast for Children program was launched at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in Oakland, as it was believed that hungry children would be less able to keep focused in class. Within a decade similar programs were adopted by school districts nationwide. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 9 - [African-Americana] Broadside of a Confederate Congressional Act Relating to Slaves and Other Property Confiscated by the Union Army
[African-Americana] Broadside of a Confederate Congressional Act Relating to Slaves and Other Property Confiscated by the Union Army An Act to Perpetuate Testimony in cases of Slaves abducted or harbored by the Enemy, and of other property seized, wasted or destroyed by them. No. 270 (Richmond, Virginia), August 30, 1861. Printed broadside. Mounted to lined sheet (excised from a scrapbook); scattered soiling; newspaper clippings on verso. 10 x 8 1/8 in. (254 x 206 mm). Scarce official act passed by the Confederate Congress, establishing a framework for southern slaveholders to keep track of their enslaved "property" lost or confiscated by the Union Army during the war. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 10 - [African-Americana] Buttre, J.C. Engraving of Albany Abolitionist Rev. Francis Burns
[African-Americana] Buttre, J.C. Engraving of Albany Abolitionist Rev. Francis Burns (Cincinnati): Middleton Strobridge & Co., (1859). Engraved portrait, by Buttre, after an ambrotype by Mathew Brady; "Engraved Expressly for the Ladies Repository". Approximately 8 1/2 x 5 5/8 in. (216 x 143 mm) (sight). Unexamined out of frame. A fine example of this bust-length portrait of the Rev. Francis Burns (1809-63), African American deacon in New York and missionary bishop to Liberia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 11 - [African-Americana] Collection of 7 Books, Pamphlets, Newspapers, and Broadsides Related to African Americans, ca. 1807-81
[African-Americana] Collection of 7 Books, Pamphlets, Newspapers, and Broadsides Related to African Americans, ca. 1807-81 Locations vary, ca. 1807-81. Comprising seven items, including: Acts Passed at the Second Session of the Ninth Congress of the United States (1807; 8vo; original wrappers); Christian Advocate and Journal and Zion's Herald (New-York, March 18, 1831, Vol. V, No. 29; Folio); National Intelligencer (Washington, September 28, 1839, Vol. XL, No. 577; Folio); New-York Daily Times (New-York, May 15, 1857, Vol. VI, No. 1764; Folio); The Reports of the Committees of the House of Representatives...Second Session Thirty-Ninth Congress, 1866-67 (Washington, 1867; 8vo; tan calf); Election in Alabama. Affidavits of Discharge From Employment in Alabama for Voting (Washington, ca. 1868; 8vo; disbound); The Free Press (Gunnison, Colorado, December 16, 1881, Vol. I, No. 30; Folio). Content covers a range of topics, including anti-slavery and abolitionism; a report on the ongoing case of the Amistad (National Intelligencer); recounting a meeting and minutes of the American Abolition Society (New-York Daily Times); an account of a lynching in Gunnison County, Colorado (The Free Press); as well as Congressional reports, including a lengthy House report (dated March 26, 1868) with dozens of affidavits from African-American men who were fired for voting in an election in Alabama; Acts passed in the second session of the ninth Congress, including suspension of commerce with Haiti, and an Act to prohibit the importation of slaves in 1808, as per the Constitution, etc. Condition varies, generally very good; wear and soiling; expected wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 12 - [African-Americana] Collection of 13 Autograph Letters, Newspapers, Pamphlets, and Ephemera Related to Abolitionism, ca. 1786-1863
[African-Americana] Collection of 13 Autograph Letters, Newspapers, Pamphlets, and Ephemera Related to Abolitionism, ca. 1786-1863 Location varies, ca. 1786-1863. Comprising 13 items, including: two issues of The London Chronicle (London, August 31-September 5, 1786, Vol. LX, Nos. 4647 and 4648); Epistle From the Yearly Meeting, Held in London...from the 21st to the 31st of the Fifth Month, 1806; The Anti-Slavery Record (February, 1835, Vol. I, No. 2); Herald of Freedom (Concord, New Hampshire, November 4, 1837, Vol. 3, No. 36); Emancipator and Free American (Boston, January 26, 1843, Vol. VII, No. 40); Democratic Standard and Whig of '76 (Cincinnati, July 7, 1846, Vol. I, No. 12); Alton Telegraph-Extra (December 14, 1846), Enoch Long's copy; New-York Weekly Tribune (New York, September 18, 1852, Vol. XII, No. 575); cabinet card of Wendell Phillips (Boston, Warren & Heald, no date); One-page autograph letter, signed by abolitionist George W. Bungay, to Charles H. Morse (October 7, 1854); Two-page autograph letter, signed by George P. Fisher, to Messrs. Walker, Wise & Co. (January 1, 1863); autograph calling card, signed by abolitionist Gerrit Smith. A large and diverse collection of items relating to abolitionism in America, from the post-Revolutionary years to the Civil War. Topics vary, and include an essay on slavery (in The London Chronicle); a Quaker epistle denouncing the slave trade; a compilation of anti-slavery writings (in The Anti-Slavery Record); two abolitionist newspapers, including numerous articles on anti-slavery, some by Elijah P. Lovejoy (Herald of Freedom and Emancipator and Free American); essays on the 3/5ths Compromise, colonization, etc. (in the Democratic Standard); abolitionist Enoch Long's copy of the Alton Telegraph (printing President Polk's second State of the Union Address on the Mexican-American War); a printed letter from Harriet Beecher Stowe to Horace Greeley (in the New-York Weekly Tribune); cabinet card of prominent abolitionist Wendell Phillips; an autograph calling card of abolitionist and financier of Frederick Douglass's newspaper Gerrit Smith; an autograph letter dated the day of the issuance of the final Emancipation Proclamation, regarding a French work on slavery; an autograph letter signed by abolitionist George W. Bungay on a variety of subjects including an upcoming publication. Size and condition vary, generally very good, expected wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 13 - [African-Americana] Du Bois, W.E.B. A Voice of Civil Rights: Typed Letter, Signed by the Co-Founder of the NAACP
[African-Americana] Du Bois, W.E.B. A Voice of Civil Rights: Typed Letter, Signed by the Co-Founder of the NAACP Typed Letter, signed New York, October 15, 1913. Bifolium, 8 3/8 x 5 1/2 in. (213 x 140 mm). Typed letter on The Crisis stationery, signed by W.E.B. Du Bois to Jewish author Jessie E. Sampler of Harlem: "My dear Madam: I thank you very much for your letter which I am handing to some organizations. I am sure they will respond. Very sincerely yours, W.E.B. Du Bois". Creased from old fold; two short closed tears in upper and lower fore-edge of each sheet. The Crisis was the official magazine of the NAACP and was founded in 1910 with Du Bois serving as its first editor. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 14 - [African-Americana] [Enslavement] Group of 3 Slave-Related Documents
[African-Americana] [Enslavement] Group of 3 Slave-Related Documents 1. Manuscript Receipt No place (Possibly Newport, Rhode Island), ca. March 1760. Single oblong sheet, 3 1/4 x 4 1/2 in. (82 x 114 mm). Manuscript receipt from a Mr. William Vernon to Thomas Rogers, noting "To Cash Paid Neagroes for Labour £2..." Docketed on verso. Wear along edges. William Vernon is possibly the same Newport merchant, slave trader, and smuggler (1719-1806), who during the American Revolution outfitted ships for the Continental Navy. 2. Manuscript Appraisal Document Frederick County (Maryland), April 20-May 6, 1789. Single oblong sheet, 5 3/4 x 7 1/2 in. (146 x 190 mm). Manuscript document, being a valuation and appraisal of the "Goods & Chattles of Ludwick Yost Taken by Virtue of fieri facias...One Negro Girl...£15..." Creasing from old folds, separation along same at right side; mat burn. In mat. 3. Partially-Printed Tax Receipt Petersburg, Virginia, December 14, 1861. Single oblong sheet, 6 x 7 1/2 in. (152 x 190 mm). Partially-printed tax receipt for the city of Petersburg, Virginia, for a Mr. William H. Ross, listing taxes for "White Males over 16 years of age... / Slaves that have attained the age of 12 years... / Male Free Negroes... / Horses, Mules... / Pleasure Carriages... / Pianos, Harps..." Creasing from old folds; light edge-wear and soiling. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 15 - [African-Americana] [Enslavement] "Town Property & a Slave!" for Sale. A Human Life Reduced to a Single Line Item: A Rare Slave Broadside
[African-Americana] [Enslavement] "Town Property & a Slave!" for Sale. A Human Life Reduced to a Single Line Item: A Rare Slave Broadside Chancery Sale of Town Property & A Slave! Springfield, Tennessee: Cheap Job Office Print, June 24, (18)58. Printed broadside, 19 x 12 in. (482 x 305 mm). Old manuscript and paper remnants on verso; creasing from old folds; scattered closed tears or loss to margins; moderately foxed. Issued in 1858, this broadside notice of a chancery auction in Springfield, Tennessee, for a house and a young enslaved man, owned by Miles S. Draughon ("Clerk and Master"), offers a stark window into the legal and commercial realities of slavery in antebellum America in the lead up to the Civil War. The broadside devotes far greater attention to the property than to the human being offered alongside it. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 16 - [African-Americana] (Fourteenth Amendment) The State of Minnesota Officially Certifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States
[African-Americana] (Fourteenth Amendment) The State of Minnesota Officially Certifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States..." Partially-Printed Document, signed St. Paul, Minnesota, March 1, 1867. Bifolium, 11 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (286 x
Lot: 17 - [African-Americana] Frederick Douglass' Paper, Devoted to the Rights of all Mankind, Without Distinction of Color, Class, or Clime
[African-Americana] Frederick Douglass' Paper, Devoted to the Rights of all Mankind, Without Distinction of Color, Class, or Clime Rochester, New York, May 4, 1860. Vol. XIII, No. 21, Whole No. 644. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds, toning along same; scattered spotting; two small holes at center of first sheet, repaired tear above same; old ownership signature in pencil at top of first page ("Stephen Reeves"). A scarce issue of this important newspaper, founded and edited by abolitionist and orator Frederick Douglass. In June 1851, at the encouragement of abolitionist Gerrit Smith, Douglass merged his newspaper The North Star with The Liberty Party Paper (of Syracuse), to form the present publication. Issued weekly, it centered on anti-slavery and other social reform causes. The present representative example reports on a variety of issues, including the rescue of fugitive slaves, a visit to the home of John Brown, accounts of lynching in the south, an account of the life of Elijah P. Lovejoy, various reports of anti-slavery measures, letters from African American authors, and a notification that the newspaper will become a monthly. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 18 - [African-Americana] Group of 4 Items Related to Liberia, ca. 1817-1975
[African-Americana] Group of 4 Items Related to Liberia, ca. 1817-1975 1. Group of 2 Congressional Documents. Comprising: Congressional "Joint Resolution For abolishing the traffick in Slaves, and the Colinization (sic) of the Free People of Colour of the United States" (2 pp.); "Report On colonizing the free people of colour of the United States" (5 pp.). Each, (Washington, D.C.), February 11, 1817. 12mo. Disbound; light foxing. 2. The Examiner--Extra. Washington, Pennsylvania, July 25, 1835. Printed broadside, 21 3/4 x 15 1/2 in. (552 x 394 mm). Contemporary ownership signature, recto and verso. Creasing from old folds, uneven toning from same; light edge-wear; scattered spotting. Printing the July 4, 1835 address of David McConaughy, President of Washington College, at the meeting of the Washington County Colonization Society. 3. Liberia As It Is. R.M. Johnson, to the Colored Citizens of the American Republic. Philadelphia, 1853. 8vo. 16 pp. Disbound; dampstaining. Sabin 36276 4. Statute Laws of Liberia From 1957 to 1974-75. Sammelband of nine various acts, etc. related to Liberia. Black pebbled leather, typed cover label ("The Property of E.J.S. Worrell, Counsellor at Law, Monrovia"); wear, soiling, and dampstaining; several sheets starting or sprung; library stamps. Established in 1821 by the American Colonization Society (ACS) to resettle emancipated slaves, Liberia stands as Africa's oldest republic and the only nation on the continent never subjected to colonial rule. In 1822, the first group of 86 Black volunteers, accompanied by white ACS agents, arrived at Cape Montserrado. By 1824, the settlement was renamed "Monrovia" in honor of President James Monroe, an ACS member, and the nation adopted the name Liberia. Over the next four decades, roughly 19,000 African Americans undertook the journey to Liberia. These settlers, known as Americo-Liberians, were joined by approximately 5,000 Africans liberated from intercepted slave ships, along with a smaller number of immigrants from the West Indies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 19 - [African-Americana] Group of 7 Civil War-Era General Orders Related to Black Union Soldiers
[African-Americana] Group of 7 Civil War-Era General Orders Related to Black Union Soldiers Alabama, the Carolinas, Louisiana, January 1864-April 1866. Comprising seven printed General Orders. 12mo. Disbound. Comprising: 1. General Orders No. 7, Department of the South, Folly Island, South Carolina, January 15, 1864. Appointing Col. M.S. Littlefield of the 21st Regiment U.S. Colored Troops,
Lot: 20 - [African-Americana] Hand-colored CDV of Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children
[African-Americana] Hand-colored CDV of Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children (New York: Kimball, 1863). Hand-colored carte de visite; printed caption at bottom "Isaac and Rosa, Emancipated Slave Children, From the Free Schools of Louisiana". Clipped at corners; trimmed along bottom edge excising imprint; wear in bottom right corner; staining in upper half. 3 3/4 x 2 5/16 in. (95 x 59 mm). A scarce carte de visite depicting Isaac White and Rosina Downs, born into slavery in the South and freed by the Union Army in 1863. One of a series of photographs sold by the Freedman's Bureau to raise money for their schools and hospitals in Louisiana. A January 30, 1864 article in Harper's Weekly provides a biography of the two emancipated children: "The group of emancipated slaves whose portraits I send you were brought by Colonel Hanks and Mr. Phillip Bacon from New Orleans, where they were set free by General Butler. Mr. Bacon went to New Orleans with our army, and was for eighteen months employed as Assistant-Superintendent of Freedmen, under the care of Colonel Hanks. He established the first school in Louisiana for emancipated slaves, and these children were among his pupils. He will soon return to Louisiana to resume his labor...Rosina Downs is not quite seven years old. She is a fair child, with blonde complexion and silky hair. Her father is in the rebel army. She has one sister as white as herself, and three brothers who are darker. Her mother, a bright mulatto, lives in New Orleans in a poor hut, and has hard work to support her family...Isaac White is a black boy of eight years; but none the less intelligent than his whiter companions. He has been in school about seven months, and I venture to say that not one boy in fifty would have made as much improvement in that space of time..." RBH locates only one other example of this photograph at auction, that one without hand-coloring. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 21 - [African-Americana] [King, Martin Luther, Jr.] Printed Handbill for a Mass Civil Rights Rally
[African-Americana] [King, Martin Luther, Jr.] Printed Handbill for a Mass Civil Rights Rally Philadelphia, October 9, 1966. Printed handbill on pink paper: "Come to the Mass Civil Rights Rally Hear Dr. Martin Luther King...Mr. James Meredith...On Sunday, October 9, 1966-7:00 P.M. at The Arena 46th and Market Street..." Wear along edges; small holes in bottom right. 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (216 x 140 mm). Sponsored by the Interfaith Interracial Council, the Sunday, October 9, 1966 civil rights rally was held at The Arena in West Philadelphia, and attracted 1,500 attendees to hear Dr. King speak. Accompanying King at this rally was James Meredith, who in 1962 became the first African-American to integrate the University of Mississippi. His admission resulted in the Ole Miss Riot which had to be quelled by President Kennedy sending in 30,000 troops, the largest mobilization for a single instance in the history of the United States. On June 6, 1966 Meredith began a 220-mile "March Against Fear" from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi to highlight continuing racial discrimination in the South; he was joined by numerous civil rights leaders including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Stokely Carmichael. Meredith was shot on the second day, though he had recovered enough to rejoin the march before it reached Jackson on June 26. Meredith's presence at this rally was one of the great draws, having come so close to death only four months before. Lot includes a group of five items related to the Civil Rights Movement, including: a Saturday Evening Post poster signed by James Meredith, "My Ordeal In Oxford, ca. 1962; and four black and white press phographs, deciptiing mourners at the tomb of Malcom X, a group of the Little Rock Nine holding their diplomas, a sketch of the damage cause in Martin Luther King Jr,'s assasinsation, and scenes from the Apollo Theater. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 22 - [African-Americana] Life Insurance Policy for a West Palm Beach Resident, Issued by One of the Largest Black-Owned Businesses in the State
[African-Americana] Life Insurance Policy for a West Palm Beach Resident, Issued by One of the Largest Black-Owned Businesses in the State The Afro-American Life Insurance Company of Jacksonville, Florida Jacksonville, Florida, June 19, 1939. Single sheet, 15 x 10 3/4 in. (381 x 273 mm). Printed life insurance policy. Ink stamps on recto and verso. Creasing from old folds, small losses and separations along same. Abraham Lincoln Lewis (1865-1947), a pioneering African-American businessman, philanthropist, and Florida's first Black millionaire, co-founded along with six associates the Afro-American Industrial and Benefit Association in Jacksonville in 1901, which later became the Afro-American Life Insurance Company, the first life insurance company in Florida. Lewis was elected president of the company in 1919, and under his direction in 1935, he purchased American Beach, a popular beach destination for Black tourists in Nassau County. This life insurance policy (“Two Hundred and Fifty Dollar Special Complete Protection Whole Life Policy”) including sick, accident and death benefits, was issued on June 19, 1939, to 28-year-old George Scott. The first beneficiary is his wife Helen (Cassel) Scott, however, the two apparently divorced, as she is supplanted by Cassie Scott, in 1955, who in turn is replaced by a cousin, Josephine Fearley, one year later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 23 - [African-Americana] [Nat Turner Rebellion] New-Hampshire Gazette, with a Highly Detailed Front-Page Report on Nat Turner's Rebellion
[African-Americana] [Nat Turner Rebellion] New-Hampshire Gazette, with a Highly Detailed Front-Page Report on Nat Turner's Rebellion New-Hampshire Gazette Portsmouth: Published by Gideon Beck, Tuesday, September 20, 1831. Vol. LXXVI, No. 45. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creased from old fold; scattered foxing; light wear along edges. With a highly detailed report on Nat Turner's Rebellion and its aftermath, reprinted from the Richmond Whig. The rebellion began in the early pre-dawn hours of August 21, 1831, in Southampton County, Virginia, led by Nat Turner (1800–1831), an enslaved man and preacher. First killing his enslaver, Turner and his growing band of men traveled through the Virginia countryside over the next two days, killing upwards of 65 whites. The local militia and volunteers quelled the uprising, and a brutal retaliatory crackdown ensued, during which over 200 Blacks were murdered. Turner managed to escape, and evaded capture for two months, before being discovered on October 30, 1831. He was hanged on November 11. The deadliest slave revolt in the history of the United States, the uprising intensified the national debate over slavery, and resulted in the passage of harsher slave codes throughout the south. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 24 - [African-Americana] Pennsylvania Abolition Society's "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks", Printed in the "Gazette of the United States"
[African-Americana] Pennsylvania Abolition Society's "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks", Printed in the "Gazette of the United States" New York: John Fenno, Saturday, November 28, 1789 (No. LXVI). Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; separations along central vertical fold; foxing. Printed on the front page is the Pennsylvania Abolition Society's (PAS) "Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks". Developed by PAS president Benjamin Franklin and put into motion in conjunction with the Free African Society, the Act established the PAS as the "de facto Ministry of Black Affairs" (Library Company of Philadelphia). Created to assist Philadelphia's Free Black community, the Act established committees that focused on education, safety, employment, as well as on moral and social relations. Other articles of note include a May 12, 1784 letter from Franklin to Samuel Mather recounting trips he made to Boston over the course of his life, as well as describing the influence Mather's father, Cotton, made on Franklin through his life; dispatches from France on the Revolution, printing that "The King's government may now be supposed to be at an end. In fact, he is the prisoner, not of the nation, but of the people of France..."; a report on the opening of the first session of the judiciary. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 25 - [African-Americana]
Scarce Issue of The Boston Gazette from the Early Months of the American Revolution, Deriding British Royal Governor Lord Dunmore's Treatment of Freed Slaves within his Army
[African-Americana] Scarce Issue of The Boston Gazette from the Early Months of the American Revolution, Deriding British Royal Governor Lord Dunmore's Treatment of Freed Slaves within his Army The Boston-Gazette and Country Journal Watertown: Benjamin Edes, December 25, 1775. No. 1075. Printed newspaper, with Paul Revere engraved masthead. Folio. 4 pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top left "Joseph Coolidge / Lancaster." Creasing from old folds, small closed tears along same; unevenly toned; small chips or loss to extremities. As the issue describes, "Several persons lately from Norfolk inform that Lord Dunmore was preparing barracks for his army...and that several Scotch tories in that borough commanded black companies, who speak with much confidence of beating us...When his lordship first went down to Norfolk, he gave great encouragement to unwary Negroes, but, such was his baseness, some of them, it is confidently said, he sent to the West Indies, where these unfortunate creatures were disposed of to defray his lordship's expences...Lord Dunmore issued a proclamation inviting the slaves of rebels, as he pleased to say, to repair to his standard. A considerable number at first went to him, but upon their masters taking the oath of allegiance, they were immediately told they must return...such is the barbarous policy of this cruel man..." Virginia royal governor Lord Dunmore (1730-1809) issued a proclamation on November 15, 1775, following a victory at the Battle of Kemp's Landing, promising emancipation to those enslaved in the colony that joined the British Army. While the act was not as successful as he might have hoped, Dunmore was able to form the Royal Ethiopian Regiment from those who joined him. It was the first British regiment during the war to feature Blacks as soldiers, and while it was disbanded not long after its formation, many recruits would go on to serve in other "Black Loyalist" regiments. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 26 - [African-Americana] [Townsend, Elias Stillwell] "The Patriots Who Secured Our Independence": Manuscript of an Anti-Slavery Oration
[African-Americana] [Townsend, Elias Stillwell] "The Patriots Who Secured Our Independence": Manuscript of an Anti-Slavery Oration New Haven, Connecticut, July 4, 1820. 18-page manuscript of an anti-slavery oration. 12mo. Contemporary stiff blue wrappers; old vertical crease. A fine manuscript of an engaging July 4, 1820 anti-slavery oration, delivered only a few months following the passage of the Missouri Compromise. The orator, Elias Stillwell Townsend (1796-1820), opens by praising "the patriots who secured our independence", but then asks, "What were the expectations of the founders of our republic, and how far those expectations have been or will be realised"? He answers by bringing attention to the slavery question that had thus roiled the nation, "The incidents of the past year shew but little to flatter us. A horrid vision has disturbed our halcyon dreams of happiness. Slavery rising from the South like the cloud of Elijah gradually expands itself and portentously threatens us." He goes on to ask, "Let it be supposed that they who proclaimed all men created equal and endowed with certain unalienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness--is it to be supposed they fancied that our country should become a vast prison, a receptacle for slaves? Or that the independence they established at a vast expenditure of blood and treasure should ever be jeopardised from such a source?" Townsend notes that the rising number of enslaved will one day outnumber their oppressors, and will rightly seek revenge, and "attempt their forcible emancipation." Calling to mind the example of the successful slave uprising and revolution in Haiti, the author praises its leaders "Touissant [Louverture], [Alexandre] Petion, and [Henri] Christophe" for their accomplishments in bringing an end to bondage. He then refers to Missouri, a new slave state following the passage of the Missouri Compromise that previous March, "opening a new market for slaves, in vain are all exertions to prevent that abominable traffic, that slave trade." The remainder of his long speech touches on numerous topics, including the economic conditions of the enslaver, the larger economic prosperity of the nation, and Connecticut's larger role within the republic that allows slavery to continue. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 27 - [African-Americana] [Underground Railroad] Autograph Letter, signed, by a Dartmouth Student Who Recounts the Arrival of a Runaway Slave
[African-Americana] [Underground Railroad] Autograph Letter, signed, by a Dartmouth Student Who Recounts the Arrival of a Runaway Slave Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, November 2, 1839. Bifolium. Three-page autograph letter, signed by Timothy Hill to his brother John in Bangor, Maine, thanking him for money he had sent, recounting his studies, and notably, informing him about the arrival of an enslaved man seeking freedom. Addressed on integral leaf. Creasing from old folds; wear from removed seal when opened. A Dartmouth student recounts the arrival of a runaway slave who made a long, arduous, and dangerous over-1,000 mile journey from the Deep South: "A few days ago a runaway slave made his appearance here, said he came from Alabama. The students had him go into the chapel and relate the story of his escape from his master and the reasons why. He said he had been the slave of a man in Virginia was kindly treated by him and lived well as long as he was with him, but he finally sold him and his family one in one direction and another in another, and he soon was away from his second master. He was helped on his way to Canada where he may be safe from the prospect being sold..." Approximately 30,000 to 50,000 enslaved men and women fled bondage to reach Canada before the Civil War. While the Underground Railroad facilitated many escapes, journeys originating from the Deep South were rare due to the immense logistical hurdles and the extreme risks involved. Overland freedom seekers from these regions faced a grueling trek of 800 to 1,300 miles, requiring them to traverse multiple slave states while navigating a sparse and fragmented network of safe houses below the Mason-Dixon line. New Hampshire played a critical role as one of the final northern legs of this route. Hanover, located just 100 miles from the Canadian border, was one of many gateways for those arriving overland. While many enslaved opted for maritime routes, departing from coastal hubs like New Bedford, Massachusetts, to sail directly to Canadian ports, others, including the unnamed individual referenced here, seemingly undertook the arduous journey entirely by land, relying on the clandestine support of abolitionist networks to cross the final stretch into freedom. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 28 - [African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] The First Printed Appearance of Phillis Wheatley's Poem "Recollection"
[African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] The First Printed Appearance of Phillis Wheatley's Poem "Recollection" The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, for the Year 1772 London: Printed for J. Dodsley, 1773. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 105, (1), 65-256, 246, (9) pp. Full contemporary tan calf, stamped in gilt, front board detached, spine dry and worn, rear board starting, boards and extremities rubbed and worn; all edges trimmed, library ink stamps on same; book-plate on front paste-down; contemporary ownership signature on front free endpaper (sheet now detached); library ink stamp on title-page; scattered ink and pencil marginalia; library ink stamp at bottom of D3r. Printed on p. 214 in the second part of the volume is Phillis Wheatley's fourth published poem, "On Recollection", published shortly afterwards in her first book, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (published September 1, 1773). Her poem is prefaced with a short description of the poet, noting, "Verses by a young African Negro Woman, at Boston in New-England; who did not quit her own country till she was ten years old, and has not been above eight in Boston." With contemporary manuscript at same identifying Wheatley by name and amending her age to "eleven". Contemporary pencil at same, "different considerably from published in her Poems since 58 lines longer." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 29 - [African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] Urban, Sylvanus. Phillis Wheatley's Fourth Published Poem "On Recollection"
[African-Americana] [Wheatley, Phillis] Urban, Sylvanus. Phillis Wheatley's Fourth Published Poem "On Recollection" The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle. Volume XLIII. For the Year M.DCCLXXIII London: Printed for D. Henry, and sold by F. Newbery, 1773. First edition. Thick 8vo. (iv), 655, (17) pp. Illustrated with 20 engraved plates. Three-quarter contemporary speckled sheep over drab paper-covered boards, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, rear board detached but holding, front board starting, wear at spine ends, loss at lower front corner, soiling; all edges trimmed; some leaves partially unopened; book-plate of Josiah Harrison on front paste-down; loss in bottom corner of pp. 49/50; scattered closed tears; lower portion of final map separated but present; scattered spotting and soiling. In the September issue (p. 456) is printed Phillis Wheatley's fourth published poem "On Recollection", from her simultaneously published Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (published September 1, 1773). Her poem is followed by a footnote with a short biography and commentary on her: "This piece is taken from a small collection of Poems on Various Subjects, just published, written by Phillis Wheatley, a negro of Boston, who was brought from Africa in 1761, and is now only in the twenty-first year of her age. A testimony in favour of the poems, as the genuine productions of this young person, is signed by the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, seven clergymen, and others eminent for station and literature, and also by her master: and in this it is said, disgraceful as it may be to all that have signed it, that 'this poor girl was brought an uncultivated barbarian from Africa, and has ever since been, and now is--A SLAVE!' Youth, innocence, and piety, united with genius, have not yet been able to restore her to the condition and character with which she was invested by the Great Author of her being. So powerful is custom in rendering thee heart insensible to the rights of nature, and the claims of excellence." Wheatley is again mentioned in the May issue (p. 226), in a letter to the editor from John Wheatley. Reads in part: "...Phillis was brought from Africa to America in the year 1761, between seven and eight years of age, without any assistance from school education; and by only what she was taught in the family, she, in sixteen months time from her arrival, attained the English language, to which she was an utter stranger before, to such a degree as to read any the most difficult parts of the sacred writings, to the great astonishment of all who heard her. As to her writing, her own curiosity led her to it; and this she learned in so short a time, that, in the year 1765, she wrote a letter to the Rev. Mr. Occom, the Indian minister, while in England. She has a great inclination to learn the Latin tongue, and has made some progress in it. This relation is given by her master, who bought her, and with whom she now lives." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 30 - [Alaska] Presentation Copy of Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, on the Cession of Russian America to the United States
[Alaska] Presentation Copy of Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, on the Cession of Russian America to the United States Washington: Printed at the Congressional Globe Office, 1867. First edition. Presentation copy, with a one-page tipped-in autograph letter at front, signed by Charles Sumner to an L.J. Campbell, dated October 30, 1868: "Dear Sir, In reply to yours of 14th Oct. I enclose the only copy of the speech on Russia America which I have in Boston. Faithfully yours, Charles Sumner". 8vo. 48 pp. Illustrated with a large folding frontispiece map of Alaska (second edition "May 1867", as usual; map not found in all copies per Howes). Original limp printed brown wrappers, spine repaired, wear and closed tears along edges; vertical crease at center from when sometimes folded; all edges trimmed; scattered light wear along edges; scattered spotting and soiling to text and map; repair in gutter of map. Best of the West 171; Howes S-1134; Lada-Mocarski 159; Wagner-Camp 163 First edition presentation copy of Charles Sumner's April 9, 1867 speech on the purchase of Alaska. "The discourse by Sumner on the history and state of Russian America, which had just become the American territory of Alaska, was a justification for the purchase of the Territory from Russia, famously known as 'Seward's Folly,' after the Secretary of State who negotiated the purchase." (Best of the West) The large folding map is of particular importance as it is the first published map of the cession area, a land-mass one-third the size of the lower 48 states, and the first map to use the name "Alaska", labeled such across the mainland. Presentation copies are rare to auction, according to RBH, we can find only find two others since 1980. Russian interest in Alaska began in the early 1700s when Czar Peter the Great sent Vitus Bering to explore the territory. Over the following century, Russian traders and explorers established a modest trading network in the resource-rich, but sparsely populated region. However, Russia's financial constraints, coupled with their defeat in the Crimean War in 1856, diminished their commitment to maintaining a presence there. As the United States expanded westward during the 1800s, Russia sought to counter British territorial ambitions in the area. Consequently, in 1859 Russia offered to sell Alaska to the United States, but the sale was delayed until the conclusion of the Civil War. Secretary of State William H. Seward eventually negotiated the purchase for $7.2 million, and President Andrew Johnson signed the treaty transferring ownership on May 28, 1867. The formal transfer of Alaska took place on October 18 of that year. Lot includes two photographs related to Alaska, as well as a printed Congressional session leaf, related to Alaska (40th Congress, 2d Session, No. 130, "Treaty with Russia"). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 31 - [American Centennial] Rare Silk Broadside Celebrating the Centennial Anniversary of the United States in Shanghai, China
[American Centennial] Rare Silk Broadside Celebrating the Centennial Anniversary of the United States in Shanghai, China Celebration of the Centennial Anniversary of the Independence of the United States of America, at Shanghai, China. July 4th, Centennial... Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1876. Printed broadside on silk. Toned; scattered wear along edges; horizontal fraying, affecting some words. A rare broadside on silk announcing the U.S. centennial celebrations in Shanghai, China. The day-long celebration included a "Salute of One Hundred Guns at Sunrise," "Illumination and Fire Works at the Consulate General," "Exercises on Board the Excursion Steamer 'Plymouth Rock'," "Reading of the Declaration of Independence," the singing of the Star-Spangled Banner, followed by "Speeches, Toasts and Songs". Rare, OCLC locates only one other copy, at the Peabody Essex Museum, while RBH locates only two examples at auction. Lot includes four other Centennial-related items, including: an engraved invitation to the International Exhibition of 1876 at Fairmount Park in Philadelphia, a printed program and ticket for the same exhibition; a copy of The Kansas Daily Tribune, "Centennial Issue" (Lawrence, Kansas, July 4, 1876). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 32 - [American Frontier] An Early Northwest Territory Land Indenture Issued to General Washington Johnston
[American Frontier] An Early Northwest Territory Land Indenture Issued to General Washington Johnston Manuscript Land Indenture Vincennes, Knox County, Northwest Territory, March 14-15, 1799. Scallop-edge bifolium, approximately 12 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (324 x 197 mm). Manuscript land indenture between Louis Edeline and his wife Marie, granting General Washington Johnston two arpents of land southwest of Vincennes, at the cost of $400; signed by Edeline, his wife (her mark), as well as witnesses Pierre Gamelin and Charles ____; paper seals intact on third-page. Creasing from old folds, several separations traversing same. An early Northwest Territory land indenture, for land in Vincennes, Knox County (in current day Indiana), issued to General Washington Johnston (1776-1833). Born in Culpepper County, Virginia, Johnston came to the Northwest Territory in 1793 at the age of 17, being one of the first Americans to permanently settle in the region. He later served as a private in General William Henry Harrison's Army at the Battle of Tippecanoe (Johnston's legal first name was "General"), and then as an aide to General John Gibson. Johnston studied law in Louisville, and became the first man to be admitted to the bar in the Northwest Territory. He became a member of the first Indiana territorial legislature on April 20, 1810, and was elected Speaker on behalf of the first legislature to ever propose Indiana statehood. Once a state, he served as a member of the state legislature for several terms and was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. He then served as auditor for the Indiana territory and became Treasurer once statehood was achieved. Previously, in 1808, as chairman of a committee debating the question of whether slavery would be allowed in the territory, he supported the anti-slavery platform, which was then unanimously adopted. Louis Edeline (1730-99) was an early French settler of Vincennes. Born in Longueuil, New France (Canada), he moved to Detroit as a young man, and later married Philadelphia-born Marie-Joseph Thomas there, in 1759. Following the fall of Detroit to the British during the Seven Years' War, Edeline and his family moved to the remote outpost of Vincennes, where he became a leading town member. During the American Revolution, he signed an oath of allegiance with the Americans, and served under George Rogers Clarke in the siege of Fort Vincennes. He was then appointed one of Vincennes' four magistrates (alongside Pierre Gamelin, who has signed this indenture), a position he retained for the remainder of his life. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 33 - [American Law] A Comprehensive Library of Bound Legal Pamphlets, ca. 17th-20th Centuries
[American Law] A Comprehensive Library of Bound Legal Pamphlets, ca. 17th-20th Centuries Location and dates vary, largely ca. 1770-1860. In 133 volumes, some containing as few as five pamphlets and some containing as many as 20. Mostly 8vo. Large group of legal tracts on a variety of subjects (largely English-related, the remainder mostly American-related). Each in a library-style buckram binding, many with red and black morocco spine labels; some tracts loose and laid in; each volume with typed contents leaf at front; each pamphlet with ink or blind stamps of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York; some pamphlets with contemporary ownership signatures, or gift inscriptions. Condition varies; wear and soiling throughout, many pamphlets starting or sprung; some possibly imperfect. A very large and extensive legal library formerly belonging to the Bar Association of New York. Legal topics covered include property law, inheritance and wills, marriage, sporting law, copyright, forgery, selection of juries, canon law, and much more. Notable pamphlets include: 1.The Rights of Tithes Asserted by Our Old Saxon Laws... (London: 1653); 2. The Wickedness of a Disregard to Oaths... (London: 1723); 3. Some Considerations on the Game Laws... (London: A. Dodd, 1753); 4. Sharpe, Granville. A Tract on Dueling... (London: B. White 1790); 5. Paulding, James Kirke. The United States and England: Being a Reply to the Criticism, or Ichiquin's Letters (New York: A.H. Inskeep, 1815); 6. Webster, Daniel. Report Upon the Constitutional Rights and Privileges of Harvard College... (Russell and Gardiner, 1821); 7. Pamphlets regarding the Greek Frigates Incident of 1826, such as Report of the Evidence and Reasons of Award..., Refutation of the Reasons Assigned by the Arbitrators..., A Vindication of the Conduct and Character of Henry D. Sedgwick...; 8. An Act to Abolish Imprisonment for Debt... (Albany: Croswell, Van Bethuyson, 1831); 9. Adams, John Quincy. The Jubilee of the Constitution... (New York: Samuel Colman, 1839); 10. (Greely, Horace). Mr. Greely's Letters from Texas and the Lower Mississippi... (New York: Tribune Office, 1871); and many, many others. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 34 - [American Law] First Edition of the Senate Journal for the Second Second Session of the First Congress: Includes the First State of the Union Address
[American Law] First Edition of the Senate Journal for the Second Second Session of the First Congress: Includes the First State of the Union Address Journal of the Second Session of the Senate of the United States of America, Begun and Held at the City of New-York, January 4th, 1790 New-York: Printed by John Fenno, 1790. First edition. Tall 4to. 124 pp. Three-quarter contemporary sheep over marbled paper-covered boards, signature of Augustus Floyd on front board ("Augustus Floyd Esq / New York"), dampstaining to boards, joints and extremities rubbed; all edges trimmed; scattered foxing to text. Evans 22928 First edition of the Senate journal for the second session of the first Congress. Many important issues were settled in the discussions recorded within, and many significant moments in the nation's history are treated in depth. These include the first State of the Union Message, discussions of state surrender of western lands, notices of ratification of the Bill of Rights, and discussions concerning the seat of government, as well as Alexander Hamilton's fiscal proposals. The Augustus Floyd who signed this book is presumed to be the grandson (1795-1878) of Founding Father William Floyd, Signer of the Declaration of Independence from New York. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 35 - [American Law] Group of 3 Senate Journals, 1795-98, Owned by Two Early New York Politicians
[American Law] Group of 3 Senate Journals, 1795-98, Owned by Two Early New York Politicians Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the First Session, of the Fourth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 7th, 1795... Philadelphia: Printed by John Fenno, 1795. First edition. 8vo. 346, vi, xxi pp. Drab library-style buckram, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, boards unevenly toned, scattered soiling; all edges trimmed; ownership signature of Hezekiah L. Hosmer (1765-1814), Congressman from New York, on title-page; additional ownership signature below same; Association of the Bar Library, City of New York, ink stamp on title-page; closed tear traversing P3. ESTC W20581 (locating 14 copies); Evans 31355; Sabin 15552 Bound With: Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the Second Session, of the Fourth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 5th, 1796... Philadelphia: Printed by John Fenno, 1796. First edition. 8vo. 175, (1), iv, 18 pp. Open tear, O1; scattered spotting. ESTC W20585 (locating 14 copies); Evans 32971 Together with: Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, Being the Third Session of the Fifth Congress, Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia, December 3d, 1798... Philadelphia: Printed by John Ward Fenno, 1799. First edition. From the library of New York lawyer and politician Theodorus Bailey, and with his signature on title-page ("Theodorus Bailey's"). 8vo. 222, vi, xiv pp. Bound as above, similar toning and soiling; same stamp on title-page (twice). ESTC W20588 (locating 15 copies); Evans 36521 Theodorus Bailey (1758-1828) served in the New York militia during the American Revolution, and the New York state militia from 1786-1805, attaining the rank of brigadier general. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1793, serving in the 3rd, 4th, 6th, and 7th Congresses. In 1803 he was elected to the Senate, serving until 1804, when he resigned to become Postmaster of New York City, a position he held until his death. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 36 - [American Law] Group of 2 Volumes of New York Session Laws
[American Law] Group of 2 Volumes of New York Session Laws Laws of the State of New-York...the Eighth Session...(Tenth Session) New-York: Printed by Samuel Loudon, 1785-87. Three volumes in one (with the Ninth and Tenth sessions). Folio. 104; 137 (but 141), (1); 212 pp. Modern quarter blue niger over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; ownership inscription of Christopher P. Yates, Clerk of Montgomery County on verso of final leaf of second work; dampstaining and soiling to first title-page; scattered soiling and spotting throughout. ESTC W14083, W14082, W18046; Evans 19133, 19854, 20578 A run of New York state session laws, including a printing of the state's first statutory bill of rights. Among the earliest state-level declarations of rights of its kind. In 1786, the New York legislature appointed Samuel Jones and Richard Varick to organize and publish all the legal statutes still in force within the state. Acting on this mandate, Jones introduced a Bill of Rights to the Assembly on January 13, 1787. The document consisted of thirteen paragraphs enumerating specific liberties, such as the principle that all power derives from the people and the guarantee of due process, among others. Jones drew upon diverse sources for its creation, including the existing New York Constitution (in which several were already embedded), English common law, the Magna Carta, and the Petition of Right. The bill passed both the Assembly and the Senate without opposition and was signed into law by Governor George Clinton on January 26, 1787. Together with: (Jones, Samuel, and Richard Varick) Laws of the State of New-York, Comprising the Constitution, and the Acts of the Legislature since the Revolution, from the First to the Twelfth Session New-York: Printed by Hugh Gaine, 1789. Volume II only. Folio. (ii), 471, (1), (17) pp. Blue library-style buckram; scattered library ink stamps; gift stamp on title-page, library stamp on same; scattered soiling; wear along edges. ESTC W6820; Evans 22012; Sabin 53735 The second volume only, of the important Varick and Jones edition of New York’s post-Revolutionary laws, from 1778 onward. According to ESTC, the title-page vignette was engraved by Peter Maverick. Lot includes a bound volume of session laws of Nova Scotia, 1767-68. Bound as above. ESTC W41647, W41646, W41645 Condition varies, generally good; scattered soiling, wear, and library stamps. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 37 - [American Law] Group of 4 Volumes of Southern State Session Laws, including an Ordinance Freeing the Family of an Enslaved Black Patriot Spy
[American Law] Group of 4 Volumes of Southern State Session Laws, including an Ordinance Freeing the Family of an Enslaved Black Patriot Spy 1. Acts and Ordinances of the General Assembly of the State of Carolina, Passed in the Year 1783. (Charleston, S.C. : Printed by John Miller, 1783). 4to. Lacking pp. 5-8, 17/18, and errata. Drab library-style binding; scattered library stamps; soiling and toning; scattered dampstaining. ESTC W30624; Evans 18190 Printing an ordinance dated March 12, 1783, freeing and enfranchising the family of a "Negro man named Antigua", who "was employed for the purposes of procuring information of the enemy's movements and designs by John Rutledge, Esq; late Governor of this State; and whereas the said Negro man Antigua, always executed the commissions with which he was entrusted with diligence and fidelity, and obtained very considerable and important information from within the enemy's lines, frequently at the risque of his life..." 2. Acts, Ordinances, and Resolves of the general Assembly of the State of South-Carolina; Passed in March, 1785. Charleston: A(nn). Timothy, 1785. 4to. Bound as above; similar stamps; scattered contemporary marginalia. ESTC W30620; Evans 19250; Sabin 87369. Bound with: A Message From the Governor... (likely Ann Timothy, 1785; Sabin 87536) Ann Timothy (1727-92) was one of only a small number of women printers in North America before and shortly following the American Revolution. She worked alongside her husband, Peter, and following his death, took over control of their printing operations, and later became the official printer of South Carolina. 3. Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia...at an Extra Session in May and June, 1825. Milledgeville: Camak & Ragland, 1825. 8vo. 54, (2) pp. Bound as above; same stamps. Printing the special session regarding the organization and distribution of Creek Indian land. The legislation passed was the Land Lottery Act of 1825, enacting a land lottery to distribute the land. 4. The Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Florida, Passed at its Seventh Session...November 27, 1854. Tallahassee: Dyke & Williams, 1855. 8vo. 101, (1), 10 pp. Bound as above; same library stamps; scattered wear and soiling. Containing dozens of acts that were passed during the Seventh session, including many pertaining to slavery and African Americans. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 38 - [American Law] John Jay's Copy of These English Legal Statutes, in 8 Volumes, all Signed by Him
[American Law] John Jay's Copy of These English Legal Statutes, in 8 Volumes, all Signed by Him An Exact Abridgement of all the Statutes in Force and Use, From Magna Charta, 9 H. 3. to the Beginning of the Reign of King George London: Printed by his Majesty's Printers. And by the Assigns of Edward Sayer, Sold by R. Gosling, 1725-32. In eight volumes. From the library of John Jay, with his
Lot: 39 - [American Law]
Samuel Jones, the Statesman Behind the Newly Discovered "Jones Declaration": His Annotated Set Used in His Working Law Library, Some Almost Certainly Used While Compiling New York State Law
[American Law] Samuel Jones, the Statesman Behind the Newly Discovered "Jones Declaration": His Annotated Set Used in His Working Law Library, Some Almost Certainly Used While Compiling New York State Law Group of 7 Volumes of New York Session Laws, From the Library of Samuel Jones New York: Publishers vary, 1762-1797. Approximately 18 volumes in seven. Comprising: 1. Livingston, William,
Lot: 40 - [American Newspapers] Group of 4 Issues of the Gazette of the United States: The Semi-Official Organ for President Washington's Administration, 1789-93
[American Newspapers] Group of 4 Issues of the Gazette of the United States: The Semi-Official Organ for President Washington's Administration, 1789-93 Philadelphia: John Fenno, 1789-93. In four issues, including: Saturday, July 10, 1790 (Vol. II, No. 26); Saturday, March 30, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 87); Saturday, April 20, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 93); Saturday, May 11, 1793 (Vol. IV, No. 99). Some disbound; creasing from old folds; scattered spotting, soiling, and wear. Printing a wide variety of news from the early republic, including an act to hold the first national census in Rhode Island, who had just ratified the Constitution (July 10 issue); debates related to the conduct of Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton (March 30); the first patent act (April 20), etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 41 - [American Newspapers] (Cobbett, William) Porcupine's Gazette And United States Daily Advertiser, Group of Over 100 issues, 1797-99
[American Newspapers] (Cobbett, William) Porcupine's Gazette And United States Daily Advertiser, Group of Over 100 issues, 1797-99 Philadelphia: William Cobbett, March 29, 1797-March 20, 1799. Vol. I, Nos. 22-34, 36, 37-42, 44-64, 240, 241, 247-252, 257, 335, 453-455; Vol. III, Nos. 467-469, 473-478, 481-483, 485, 486, 489-495, 497-503, 505, 507, 510-513, 516-519, 543, 545, 563-566, 569-571, 574, 575, 588-591, 602-604, 526, 528, 529, 537, 548, 552, 554, 558, 560, 578, 576, 585, 587, 607, 605, 608, 610, 612-621; Vol. IV, Nos. 622, 623, 625, 626, 628, 631, 634, and 635. Folio. Volume also bound with one issue of Claypoole's American Daily Advertiser (No. 6053, August 28, 1798); one issue of the Philadelphia Gazette & Universal Daily Advertiser (No. 3138, December 29, 1798), and two other unknown issues. Contemporary three-quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, rebacked, worn; contents foxed with scattered stains; several issues with contemporary ownership signatures; several issues torn or with sections missing. An extensive run of Porcupine's Gazette, a Philadelphia daily newspaper published by English polemicist William Cobbett (1763-1835) during his time in America. Cobbett, a lifelong political writer and instigator, immigrated to Philadelphia at the perfect time in 1793 during the height of power for the political newspaper medium. Papers such as John Fenno's Gazette of the United States, and Benjamin Franklin Bache's Philadelphia Aurora had become battlegrounds for ideas of the Federalist and Democratic Republican parties. Cobbett established Porcupine's Gazette in March of 1797, often defending Federalist positions and British interests, which put him at odds with Bache's Aurora and its Jeffersonian philosophies that supported the French Revolution. Cobbett published the paper early 1800, when he returned to England. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 42 - [American Newspapers] Group of 2 Newspapers Reporting the Deaths the First Three Presidents of the United States
[American Newspapers] Group of 2 Newspapers Reporting the Deaths the First Three Presidents of the United States Village Messenger Amherst, New Hampshire: Samuel Preston, Saturday, January 11, 1800. No. 3, Vol. V. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front page. Creasing from old folds, wear and small separations along same; scattered soiling. On the third page are reports concerning the death of President George Washington, including messages of condolence from the New Hampshire legislature, details of a mourning procession in Exeter, followed by a report of resolutions passed by Congress, directing the erection of a monument to Washington in the capital, for a procession in Washington's honor, and finally, a proclamation issued by President John Adams calling for a 30-day mourning period. Together with: Farmers' Cabinet Amherst, New Hampshire: Published by Richard Boylston, Saturday, July 13, 1826. No. 44, Vol. 24, Whole No. 1230. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; scattered spotting. On the second and third pages report the deaths of Presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, both of whom died July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Followed by reports from across the nation of "Fiftieth Jubilee" celebrations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 43 - [American Newspapers] [Burr-Hamilton Duel] A Scarce Issue of this Connecticut Newspaper Largely Dedicated to the Aftermath of the Fatal Duel Between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr
[American Newspapers] [Burr-Hamilton Duel] A Scarce Issue of this Connecticut Newspaper Largely Dedicated to the Aftermath of the Fatal Duel Between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr The Connecticut Courant Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Goodwin, Wednesday, July 25, 1804. Vol. XL, Numb. 2061. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Printed black mourning border on each page. Disbound; dampstaining at bottom of each sheet; scattered spotting. Printed 13 days after the duel, this black mourning-bordered issue prints the correspondence between the two men and others regarding the duel. Further printed is Hamilton's will, various tributes to him, and his funeral obsequies with a woodcut print of his coffin. At dawn on July 11, 1804, Vice-President Aaron Burr and former Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton met at Weehawken, New Jersey, a popular dueling ground. The meeting was the result of a long-simmering feud between the two men, brought to a climax by what Burr considered to be numerous instances of dishonor against his character, as well Hamilton's interference against Burr in both the 1800 presidential election and in the 1804 election for governor of New York. Eyewitness accounts vary, but what is known is that two shots rang out and Alexander Hamilton lay crumpled on the ground, mortally wounded. The duel is widely regarded as one of the most consequential in American history, as Hamilton's death contributed to end of the influence of the Federalists in American politics. Immediately following the duel Burr was charged with murder in New York and in New Jersey, but never stood trial. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 44 - [American Newspapers] [American Frontier] The First Newspaper Published West of the Allegheny Mountains: Reports on Meriwether Lewis, Native Americans, and Aaron Burr's Alleged Plot
[American Newspapers] [American Frontier] The First Newspaper Published West of the Allegheny Mountains: Reports on Meriwether Lewis, Native Americans, and Aaron Burr's Alleged Plot The Pittsburgh Gazette Pittsburgh: Printed by John Scull, 1806-1809. Group of three newspapers, comprising: Tuesday Evening, August 26, 1806 (Vol. XXI, No. 1040); Tuesday, March 3, 1807 (Vol. XXI, No. 1067); Wednesday, May 10, 1809 (Vol. XXIII, No. 1180). Folio. Each 4 pp. Disbound; one issue creased from when folded; each largely separated along spine; scattered spotting. A group of three of these early Pittsburgh newspapers, including a variety of content, local, domestic, and international, including ads for numerous local tradesmen, reports on conflicts in Europe, domestic news on relations with Native American tribes, reaction to Aaron Burr's alleged plot to form a renegade empire in Louisiana Territory, as well as articles related to Meriwether Lewis, etc. By the first decade of the 19th century, Pittsburgh had evolved from a frontier fort town and flashpoint of the French and Indian War into an emerging industrial powerhouse. Situated at the strategic confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, which merge to form the Ohio River and provide a vital route to the Mississippi, the city served as the gateway to the Western frontier. During the latter half of the decade, the town's population grew to just under 2,000. This growth was further accelerated by the War of 1812, which solidified Pittsburgh's status as a manufacturing hub for steel, brass, glass, and other materials. The present representative group thus provides a fascinating glimpse into this frontier region and its emergent economy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 45 - [American Newspapers] [Fire Insurance] Group of 2 Issues of the Aurora, with a Large Ad for Early Fire Insurance, and Reports on British Impressment of American Sailors
[American Newspapers] [Fire Insurance] Group of 2 Issues of the Aurora, with a Large Ad for Early Fire Insurance, and Reports on British Impressment of American Sailors Philadelphia: Published by Duane & Co., Thursday, March 29-Friday, March 30, 1810. Two printed newspapers. Folio. Two uncut broadsheets. Disbound; scattered soiling and light wear. With reports on British impressment of American sailors and a Congressional bill authorizing the President to arm public ships to protect its merchant fleet. On the recto of the March 29 issue is a half-page ad for the American Fire Insurance Company, one of the first joint-stock fire insurance companies in the United States, first organized only a month prior, on February 28. The Aurora emerged as the single most influential newspaper of its day during the time that Philadelphia served as the nation's capital. Its founder, Benjamin Franklin Bache, the favorite grandson of Benjamin Franklin, was the driving force behind its success with fresh and accurate reporting. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 46 - [American Newspapers] (Adams, John Quincy) Broadside First Printing of President John Quincy Adams' First State of the Union Address
[American Newspapers] (Adams, John Quincy) Broadside First Printing of President John Quincy Adams' First State of the Union Address "Among the First Perhaps the Very First, Instrument for the Improvement of the Condition of Men is Knowledge" President's Message. National Intelligencer....Extra Washington (D.C.), Tuesday December 6, 1825. Printed broadside in six columns; 23 x 19 in. (584 x 483 mm). Newspaper extra of The National Intelligencer, featuring President John Quincy Adams' first State of the Union address. Manuscript docketing on verso, "President's Message 1825." Creasing from old folds; closed tear at center fold; scattered foxing; large dampstaining at center; a few small closed tears to extremities. In his speech of December 6, Adams outlined an ambitious national vision centered on internal improvements, scientific advancement, and cultural development. He advocated for federally supported roads, canals, and a national university, arguing that the United States should promote both intellectual and economic progress alongside territorial expansion. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 47 - [American Newspapers] Bilingual Issue of the "Baton Rouge Gazette"
[American Newspapers] Bilingual Issue of the "Baton Rouge Gazette" Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Saturday, June 2, 1827. Printed in English and in French. Vol. IX, No. 14. Folio. Separated along central vertical fold; foxing and offsetting; scattered wear along edges. A bilingual issue of this Baton Rouge newspaper, printed in English and in French, and reporting on a variety of domestic and international affairs, including notices of court cases, ads for runaway slaves, acts passed by Congress, etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 48 - [American Newspapers] One of the Final Large Electoral Victories by the Declining Whig Party, Printing a Large and Impressive Victory Display
[American Newspapers] One of the Final Large Electoral Victories by the Declining Whig Party, Printing a Large and Impressive Victory Display Albany Journal Albany: Ten Eyck & Co., November 11, 1853. Vol. 24, No. 2473. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page; scattered spotting; wear along edges, including five-inch closed tear in bottom corner of first sheet. The imposing full-page display on the third page announces, "Whig State Ticket / Triumphantly Elected! / Whig Canal Board! / Whig Senate! Whig Assembly!!" all surrounding an American Eagle with a banner in its beak proclaiming "The Whig Banner Again Floats Over The Empire State!!". Despite the triumphant Whig sweep in the 1853 state election as evidenced here, on a national level the party was in its final precipitous decline. Already fracturing due to the question of slavery’s expansion into the western territories, with the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act the following year the Whig party would collapse. From its ashes would emerge the third-party system and, in the Spring of 1854, the ascendant Republican Party. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 49 - [American Newspapers] [Great Depression] The Stock Market Crash of 1929
[American Newspapers] [Great Depression] The Stock Market Crash of 1929 Chicago Daily Tribune Chicago: October 30, 1929. Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 260. Folio. 40 pp. With the headline, "STOCK SLUMP ENDS IN RALLY." Disbound; separations along vertical central fold; creasing from old folds; scattered stains; pinholes at left margin from when bound. The day after Black Tuesday: scarce Chicago Daily Tribune issue reporting on the one-day "recovery" of the stock market in the midst of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. On October 29, known as Black Tuesday, 16.4 million shares were traded, with a loss of $14 billion in market value. Despite the slight recovery reported here, on October 30, the market continued to plummet into November, and would usher the United States and the world into the Great Depression. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 50 - [American Newspapers] Extensive and Consecutive Run of Issues of the National Intelligencer, the Major Newspaper of the Nation's Capital, Printed During the Second Year of the Presidency of James Monroe
[American Newspapers] Extensive and Consecutive Run of Issues of the National Intelligencer, the Major Newspaper of the Nation's Capital, Printed During the Second Year of the Presidency of James Monroe The National Intelligencer Washington, (D.C.): Printed by Gales & Seaton, January 1-November 17, 1818. Vol. XVIII, No. 2696-Vol. XIX, No. 2831. Bound volume of 135 consecutive issues, a tri-weekly paper, including one supplement (March 24, 1818). Folio. Quarter brown cloth over paper-covered boards; issues unevenly trimmed; printed book-plate of Stanford University Library on front paste-down; unsigned contemporary letter laid in; scattered foxing and stains throughout; tear traversing lower half of front-page of No. 2738; lower half of front page of one issue torn away. Notable events include, the first printing of the Flag Act of 1818, officially establishing the layout of the American Flag; notice of the death of adventurer George Rogers Clark; an advertisement for Benjamin Tyler Owen's printing of the Declaration of Independence; events surrounding the First Seminole War and invasion of Spanish Florida; the 1818 Treaty with Great Britain; Illinois statehood; and much more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 51 - [American Radicalism] Group of 14 Issues of the "Proletarian News", and Other Periodicals Related to Communism, Anti-Fascism, etc.
[American Radicalism] Group of 14 Issues of the "Proletarian News", and Other Periodicals Related to Communism, Anti-Fascism, etc. Proletarian News Chicago, 1939-1950. In 14 issues, comprising: November 1, 1939 (Vol. VIII, No. 7, Whole No. 83); September 1943 (Vol. XII, No, 9, Whole No. 126); September 1944 (Vol. XIII, No. 9, Whole No. 138); July 1945 (Vol. XIV, No. 7, Whole No. 148); November 1946 (Vol. XV, No. 11, Whole No. 164); December 1946 (Vol. XV, No. 12, Whole No. 165); November 1948 (Vol. XVII, No. 11, Whole No. 188); January 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 1, Whole No. 190); March 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 3, Whole No. 192); August 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 8, Whole No. 197); December 1949 (Vol. XVIII, No. 12, Whole No. 201); November 1950, mimeograph (Vol. XIX, No. 11, Whole No. 212); December 1950 (Vol. XIX, No. 12, Whole No. 213); May 1953 (Vol. XXII, No. 5, Whole No. 242). Folio. Each 8 pp.; mimeograph issue 12 pp. Variously toned and soiled. A run of issues of the Proletarian News newspaper, the official organ of the Proletarian Party of America. Originally founded in 1919 as The Proletarian to serve the left wing of the Socialist Party of Michigan, in 1932 it changed its name to the above, and was discontinued in 1960. Lot includes a group of eight other items, including: Puck (New York, October 26, 1887); Special Magazine Supplement The Daily Worker (Chicago, July 26, 1924); The Daily Worker (Chicago, August 30, 1924, Vol. II, No. 140); Demokratia (New York, March 1970, Vol. 3, No. 3); Printed broadside ad for "The Militant" (New York, ca. 1976); People's World (San Francisco, September 3, 1966, Vol. 29, No. 36); an excised front-page from an issue of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper (May 15, 1886), illustrating the aftermath of the bombing at Haymarket Square in Chicago. Sizes and condition varies, generally good; usual wear to newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 52 - [American Revolution] Early Report of the Boston Tea Party, Printed by The Pennsylvania Gazette, One of Most Vocal Voices of Colonial Opposition
[American Revolution] Early Report of the Boston Tea Party, Printed by The Pennsylvania Gazette, One of Most Vocal Voices of Colonial Opposition The Pennsylvania Gazette (Philadelphia: Hall and Sellers), January 5, 1774. No. 2350. Bifolium, (4 pp.) 16 x 10 in. (406 x 254 mm). Printed newspaper. Split at centerfold repaired with archival tape; toned, scattered stains; small closed tears or chips to extremities. Rare issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette, the paper formerly printed by Benjamin Franklin, containing an early contemporary report on the Boston Tea Party. The issue relays a report from a writer of the Boston Gazette, "that the People, tho unanimously determined that the East-India Company's Tea should not be sold nor landed, nor remain in Harbour long enough, to be liable (according to an Act of the British Parliament) to the Payment of the Duty imposed by that Parliament, for the Purpose of raising a Revenue in America...the People, deprived of any other Way to get rid of it, were obliged to destroy it in their own Defence; so that all the Damage the owners owe, &c. sustain by its Destruction, is wholly chargeable upon the Governor, Collector, Owner, &c." On December 13, 1774, a large group of the Boston Sons of Liberty, dressed as Mohawk Indians, boarded three merchant vessels anchored in the harbor. Over the course of three hours, the group dumped over 340 chests of tea owned by the British East India Company overboard, destroying the monetary equivalent of almost two million dollars in today's currency. The action was in response to the passage of the British Tea Act of 1773, one of a string of legislative duties passed by Parliament that increased financial burdens on American colonists. The Tea Act, along with the Townsend and subsequent Intolerable Acts, were seen by American colonists as violations of their rights as Englishmen, since they represented "taxation without representation." The Boston Tea Party proved a key incident of escalation of hostilities between Great Britain and the American colonies, which culminated two years later with the Battles of Lexington and Concord, officially starting the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 53 - [American Revolution]
Early Reports on the Boston Tea Party
[American Revolution] Early Reports on the Boston Tea Party The London Chronicle London: Sold by J. Wilkie, From Thursday, January 20, to Saturday, January 22, 1774. Vol. XXXV, No. 2678. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (73)-80. Disbound; scattered spotting. Reporting of the Boston Tea Party, reprinted from the December 20, 1773 report in the Boston Gazette: "A number of resolute men (dressed like Mohawks or Indians) determined to do all in their power to save their country from the ruin which their enemies had plotted, in less than four hours emptied every chest of Tea on board the three ships commanded by the Captains Hall, Bruce, and Coffin, amounting to 342 chests, into the sea! without the least damage done to the ships, or any other property." A subsequent article reports on, "An inflammatory hand bill" that "was a few days ago distributed in Philadelphia, addressed to the Delaware Pilots, informing them, that a ship loaded with Tea is on her way to that port, being sent out for the purpose of enslaving and poisoning all the Americans...exhorting them to prevent her arrival..." It goes on to report that, "We hear from Philadelphia, that Captain Ayres, in a ship chartered by the East-India Company, to bring their Teas to that place, had arrived at the Cape of Delaware...but that the Pilots had refused to bring her up the river...that if they presumed to come thither, it would be at their peril, and the inevitable destruction of both vessel and cargo..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 54 - [American Revolution]
A Boston Newspaper Reports the Escalating Tensions between America and Great Britain, including the Boston Tea Party
[American Revolution] A Boston Newspaper Reports the Escalating Tensions between America and Great Britain, including the Boston Tea Party "The situation of affairs in America is becoming more truly alarming than ever..." The Boston Evening-Post Boston: Printed by Thomas and John Fleet, Monday, April 25, 1774. Numb. 2013. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page, contemporary marginalia on same and final page. Disbound; residue along spine on final page; creased from old fold; separating along spine; toned. A Boston newspaper reports the escalating tensions between America and Great Britain, including articles on the Boston Tea Party and its aftermath, as well as on Benjamin Franklin's infamous appearance before the Privy Council at the Cockpit in Whitehall, a watershed event that turned him into a fervent Patriot. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 55 - [American Revolution]
George Washington and the Virginia Delegation are Appointed to the First Continental Congress
[American Revolution] George Washington and the Virginia Delegation are Appointed to the First Continental Congress "It being our Opinion that the united Wisdom of North America should be collected in a General Congress of all the Colonies, we have appointed the Honourable Peyton Randolph, Esq; Richard Henry Lee, George Washington, Patrick Henry, Richard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, and Edmund Pendleton, Esquires, Deputies to represent this Colony in the said Congress, to be held at Philadelphia on the first Monday in September next." The Virginia Gazette (Williamsburg); Printed Alex. Purdie and John Dickson, August 11, 1774. Number 1192. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; scattered soiling; toned. A fine and significant copy of The Virginia Gazette, printing numerous reports on events in the lead-up to the American Revolution, most notably, Virginia's nonimportation agreement passed by Virginia's First Revolutionary Convention, and the selection and instructions for the delegates appointed to represent the colony in the First Continental Congress: George Washington, Patrick Henry, Peyton Randolph, Richard Henry Lee, Richard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, and Edmund Pendleton. Other articles report the Quebec Act of 1774, news of English troops headed to Boston, a declaration of loyalty passed by the Pennsylvania Assembly, and other reports from around the colonies relating to nonimportation and the military rule in Boston. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 56 - [American Revolution] An Article on the Publication of Stephen Hopkins's Influential Pamphlet Against the Stamp Act
[American Revolution] An Article on the Publication of Stephen Hopkins's Influential Pamphlet Against the Stamp Act The Aberdeen Journal Aberdeen, (Scotland): Printed and sold by James Chalmers, Monday, December 30, 1765. Numb. 938. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Faint British tax stamp in bottom corner of first page. Creased from old fold; Repaired along spine; wear along edges, scattered small open tears along same. Printed on p. 3 is an article on the publication of Rhode Island Governor Stephen Hopkins's (1707-85) influential pamphlet against the Stamp Act, The Grievances of the American Colonies Candidly Examined (published in America under the title, The Rights of Colonies Examined). Hopkins first delivered this text as a speech before a special session of the Rhode Island Assembly in November 1764, where he emphasized the economic burden on the colonists of Parliament's Revenue Act of 1764, and the passage of the Stamp Act in March of 1765. The Assembly then drafted a petition to the King, detailing their grievances and denying Parliament's right to levy a stamp act on the colony. The legislature than authorized a pamphlet printing of Hopkins's speech, which was published by William Goddard, printer of the Providence Gazette, shortly after, where it was met with wide acclaim and went through to a second edition before the year ended. A London edition was printed in 1766. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 57 - [American Revolution]
A Fascinating Revolutionary War Newspaper, Published Only Eight Days Following the Battle of Bunker Hill
[American Revolution] A Fascinating Revolutionary War Newspaper, Published Only Eight Days Following the Battle of Bunker Hill Dunlap's Pennsylvania Packet or, The General Advertiser Philadelphia: Printed by John Dunlap, Monday, June 26, 1775. Vol. IV, Numb. 192. Folio. 4 pp. Printed newspaper in four columns. Creasing from old folds; edges untrimmed; scattered foxing; paper loss and chips in right margin; bottom margin heavily creased. Featuring British General Thomas Gage's infamous June 12 Proclamation offering amnesty to "all persons who shall forthwith lay down their arms, and return to the duties of peaceable subjects, excepting only from the benefit of such pardon, Samuel Adams and John Hancock, whose offences are of too flagitious a nature to admit of any other consideration than that of condign punishment." Gage's message was ghostwritten by British Lieutenant General John Burgoyne, but it backfired, as Loyalists did not flock to the British side, and the message's patronizing tone rallied Patriot militiamen, who subsequently surrounded Boston to drive out the British, culminating in the Battle of Bunker Hill. Further printed is Captain Elijah Hide's stirring firsthand account of Bunker Hill. He begins, "On Friday night, the 16th inst. fifteen hundred of the Provincials went to Bunker's Hill, in order to intrench there...when two thousand Regulars marched out of Boston, landed in Charlestown, and plundering it of all its valuable effects, set fire to it...then dividing their army, part of it marched up in the front of the provincial intrenchment and began to attack." He goes on to report that as the Regulars inched closer, "Capt. Nolton gave orders to the men not to fire until the enemy were got within fifteen rods, and then not till the word was given." After two hours of fighting Hide reports the suspected casualties, including that, "Dr. Warren is undoubtedly among the slain." On the third page is reported that on the morning of the 26th, Generals George Washington and Charles Lee had left Philadelphia to take command of the newly-established Continental Army, in Massachusetts. Washington was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Army only six days prior to this publication. Printed on the last page is a report from June 21st, of Washington making his first inspection of the 2,000 soldiers in Philadelphia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 58 - [American Revolution] Very Rare First Report of the Battle of Bunker Hill Printed in England
[American Revolution] Very Rare First Report of the Battle of Bunker Hill Printed in England The London Gazette London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, July 22-25, 1775. Numb. 11581. Bifolium, 12 x 7 1/2 in. (305 x 191 mm). Printed newspaper in two columns. Disbound. With the text of an account of the Battle of Bunker Hill by Thomas Gage. In part: "I am to acquaint your Lordship of an Action that happened on the 17th instant between His Majesty's Troops and a large Body of the Rebel Forces. An Alarm was given...that the Rebels had broke Ground, and were raising a Battery, on the Heights of the Peninsula of Charles-Town...Preparations were instantly made for landing a Body of Men...under the Command of Major-General Howe...The Troops formed as soon as landed...the Attack began by a sharp Cannonade from our Field Pieces...Orders were executed with Perseverance, under a heavy Fire from the vast Numbers of the Rebels...the Loss the Rebels sustained must have been considerable...I inclose your Lordship a Return of the killed and wounded of His Majesty's Troops..." Partial ink stamp at bottom of second page. Creased; small sections of loss to left margin; scattered stains. A very rare issue of The London-Gazette, the official mouthpiece of the English Crown, containing the first English appearance of Colonial Governor Thomas Gage's account of the Battle of Bunker Hill, which took place on June 17, 1775. The issue prints the full text of a letter written by Gage eight days after the battle, to the Earl of Dartmouth, Secretary of State for the Colonies, which took a month to arrive in England. Gage offers an inflated account of the conflict, emphasizing rebel losses while downplaying those of the British. Despite his attempts to control the narrative of the conflict, Gage was dismissed from his office three days after his report was received. The text from this issue was used in the following days to print a broadside version of Gage's account. (Evans 13842) Very rare. We can locate no other copies of this issue featuring Gage's initial report in the available auction record. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 59 - [American Revolution]
Broadsheet Newspaper Printing of the First American Articles of War, Signed in Type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson
[American Revolution] Broadsheet Newspaper Printing of the First American Articles of War, Signed in Type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson Supplement to the New-York Journal, or General Advertiser (New York: Printed and Published by John Holt), Thursday, August 10, 1775. Numb. 1701. Printed broadsheet newspaper, 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 in. (394 x 248 mm). Contemporary inscription in top right recto edge ("For John William Hoffman"), and in lower left verso edge; contemporary notation on recto. Toned; wear along edges; repair in upper left edge. Printing Articles 34-68 of the first American Articles of War, passed by Congress on June 30, 1775, and signed in type by John Hancock and Charles Thomson. The Articles followed those passed by the Massachusetts Provincial Court in May of 1775, and were similar in nature to those of the British, which enumerated various military offenses and described the composition of courts-martial. Its deficiencies would lead to an amended and expanded Articles to be passed in the fall of 1776, largely at the behest of General Washington. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 60 - [American Revolution]
English Printing of General Gage's Amnesty Proclamation of 1775, Plus Numerous Articles Pertaining to the Increasing Hostilities in America
[American Revolution] English Printing of General Gage's Amnesty Proclamation of 1775, Plus Numerous Articles Pertaining to the Increasing Hostilities in America The Shrewsbury Chronicle Or, Wood's British Advertising Gazette Shrewsbury: Printed by T. Wood, Saturday, July 22, 1775. Vol. IV, Numb. 133. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. English tax stamp in bottom corner of first page. Disbound; separations along spine. Printed on the second page are numerous reports concerning the Continental Army's siege of Boston, followed by reports from Virginia of Lord Dunmore's escape from Williamsburg. On the third page is reported the intense hunt by the British for John Hancock and Samuel Adams, while on page four is printed General Gage's proclamation offering pardons to all rebels who lay down their arms, "excepting only from the benefit of such pardon Samuel Adams and John Hancock, whose offences are of too flagitious a nature to admit of any other consideration than that of condign punishment." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 61 - [American Revolution] The July 1775 Issue of Thomas Paine's Important Revolutionary-Era Publication, Featuring an Early Printing of the Declaration of the Causes and Necessities of Taking up Arms
[American Revolution] The July 1775 Issue of Thomas Paine's Important Revolutionary-Era Publication, Featuring an Early Printing of the Declaration of the Causes and Necessities of Taking up Arms The Pennsylvania Magazine: Or, American Monthly Museum. For July 1775 Philadelphia: Printed by R(obert). Aitken, 1775. 12mo. (v), 296-338 pp. Edited by Thomas Paine. Disbound; sheets toned; scattered
Lot: 62 - [American Revolution]
The British Reaction to the Battles of Lexington and Concord
[American Revolution] The British Reaction to the Battles of Lexington and Concord The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Benjamin Towne, Saturday, July 29, 1775. Printed newspaper. Bifolium. pp. 327-330. Disbound, untrimmed along other edges; separated along spine; creasing from old folds, small scattered holes along same; toned; offsetting; faint ink stamp at top of first page.
Lot: 63 - [American Revolution] The Boston-Gazette, and Country Journal, Reporting on the Posting of the Declaration of Independence in Boston
[American Revolution] The Boston-Gazette, and Country Journal, Reporting on the Posting of the Declaration of Independence in Boston "Last Lords Day the Declaration of Independence was published in the several Churches in this Town agreeable to an Order of the Honorable Council of this State." Watertown: Printed by Benjamin Edes, Monday, August 19, 1776. No. 1109. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front-page. Disbound; creasing from old fold; scattered light foxing. A fine 1776-dated Boston newspaper, reporting the posting of the Declaration of Independence in several churches throughout the city of Boston. The first public reading of the Declaration in Boston occurred on July 18. The day prior, the Massachusetts Council ordered that the "Declaration of Independence be printed; and a Copy sent to the Ministers of each Parish, of every Denomination, within this State; and that they severally be required to read the same to their respective Congregations, as soon as divine Service is ended...And after such Publication thereof, to deliver the said Declaration to the Clerks of their several Towns, or Districts; who are hereby required to record the same in their respective Town, or District books, there to remain as a perpetual Memorial thereof." It is likely that the Declarations mentioned in the present article were those printed by Ezekiel Russel of Salem, who was commissioned by the Council to print broadsides for their distribution throughout the state. Russell's broadside is notable for its liberal use of capitalization and italics, so as to aid ministers when reading to their congregations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 64 - [American Revolution]
Born in the USA: First Day of Printing in the United States, July 4, 1776!
[American Revolution] Born in the USA: First Day of Printing in the United States, July 4, 1776! The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Benjamin Towne, Thursday, July 4, 1776. Vol. II, Num. 227. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. The Pennsylvania Evening Post was founded by Philadelphia printer Benjamin Towne, its first issue published on January 24, 1775, with paper borrowed from James Humphreys. Initially supportive of American independence, the paper was published on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday evenings, with its headquarters mere blocks away from the Pennsylvania State House, which served as the central meeting place for the Second Continental Congress. The paper was the first daily newspaper published in the United States and is best known for publishing the first newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence, with it taking up the front page on July 6, 1776. In 2013, a copy of the July 6 newspaper sold at auction for $632,500, the highest price ever at the time for a historic newspaper. The present example is significant for being one of only two newspapers printed in the United States on July 4, 1776 (the other being The Maryland Gazette, likely printed in the very early hours of the 4th), with this example certainly being the first to be printed after the United States formally declared its independence from Great Britain, marking a truly watershed moment in world history. Exceedingly rare: This is the only copy of this July 4th newspaper we could locate appearing at auction (we could not locate a copy of The Maryland Gazette). According to online records, we identified only one other surviving copy, held by the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 65 - [American Revolution] The Continental Journal and Weekly Advertiser, with a Front Page Printing of "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army"
[American Revolution] The Continental Journal and Weekly Advertiser, with a Front Page Printing of "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army" Boston: Printed by John Gill, Thursday, December 5, 1776. Numb. XXVIII. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Docketed in contemporary ink at bottom of front-page. Creasing from old folds; separated along spine; top edge of each sheet repaired; two small holes at center folds of first leaf; small repaired hole at top of first leaf; scattered spotting. A fine 1776-dated Boston newspaper. On the front-page is a printing of the Massachusetts law, "An Act for providing a Reinforcement to the American Army," followed on the second-page by an act to prevent the counterfeiting of bills of public credit. This is followed by various reports from around the country on matters relating to the Revolutionary War, including news from France; a treaty of alliance between American officials and members of the Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee tribes; and the return of Massachusetts statesman James Lovell from British incarceration. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 66 - [American Revolution] A Fine Patriot Newspaper with a Paul Revere Masthead, Printing the Final Sections of the 1776 American Articles of War, Passed by Congress on September 20, 1776
[American Revolution] A Fine Patriot Newspaper with a Paul Revere Masthead, Printing the Final Sections of the 1776 American Articles of War, Passed by Congress on September 20, 1776 The Essex Journal: Or the New-Hampshire Packet, and the Weekly Advertiser Newbury-Port: Printed by John Mycall, Thursday, December 5, 1776. Vol. III, No. 153. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. With woodcut masthead by Paul Revere. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front-page. Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling; wear along edges. First passed the previous year, this revised Articles was largely the result of General George Washington's dogged effort to institute a stricter code among the fledgling Continental Army's ranks to help institute a more professional and permanent army. Thirty-three new articles were added to the preexisting code, such as increasing the severity of punishment for various military infractions, greater protection for civilians from plunder and property destruction, and more regulation of the court martial process. The articles are followed by a resolution of Congress, declaring that "all persons not members of, nor owning allegiance to any of the United States of America...who shall be found lurking as spies in or about the fortifications or encampment of the armies of the United States...shall suffer death according to the law and usage of nations..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 67 - [American Revolution] (Hale, Nathan). A Short-Lived and Rarely Seen Biweekly Periodical Featuring a Report of the Execution of American Spy, Nathan Hale
[American Revolution] (Hale, Nathan). A Short-Lived and Rarely Seen Biweekly Periodical Featuring a Report of the Execution of American Spy, Nathan Hale The Selector London: Printed and Sold at Laidler's-Office, 1776. Number II. First edition. 8vo. (ii), 86 pp. Disbound; scattered minor soiling and spotting. ESTC P3129 (locating three copies in two libraries). Rare and short-lived biweekly periodical with reports on the American Revolution, including an early report on the death of American spy Nathan Hale (p. 78) in a September 25 letter from New York: "On the 22d we hanged a man who was sent as a spy by Gen. Washington." Nathan Hale (1755-1776) was an American soldier and spy for the Continental Army. On September 8, 1776 he volunteered to go behind enemy lines on behalf of the Continental Army to gather intelligence on British troop movements in New York City. According to Connecticut shopkeeper and loyalist Consider Tiffany, Hale was recognized by Major Robert Rogers of the Queen's Rangers at a tavern, who tricked him into betraying his allegiance to the American cause. Hale was promptly arrested and sentenced to death by hanging. According to British Captain John Montresor, as recorded in the memoirs of American Brigadier General William Hull, "Captain Hale...was calm, and bore himself with gentle dignity, in the consciousness of rectitude and high intentions. He asked for writing materials, which I furnished him: he wrote two letters, one to his mother and one to a brother officer. He was shortly after summoned to the gallows. But a few persons were around him, yet his characteristic dying words were remembered. He said, 'I only regret, that I have but one life to lose for my country.'" Though the veracity of the quote itself has been disputed in years since, it has became an iconic rallying cry for American freedom and is today regarded as one of the most consequential in American history. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 68 - [American Revolution] Printed Broadside: A Call to Arms for the Continental Army
[American Revolution] Printed Broadside: A Call to Arms for the Continental Army (Boston: Printed by Benjamin Edes, 1777). Printed broadside, 13 7/8 x 8 3/4 in. (352 x 222 mm). Ownership signature of Col. William Howard at top. Docketed on verso, additionally signed same ("Winslow"). Creasing from old folds, losses along same at bottom affecting some letters; wear and soiling along left edge. Evans 15425; Ford 2074; Wright, A Guide to Pre-Federal Records in the National Archives, 1989, p. 191 "The Perseverance of Britain in her Attempts to subjugate the Free States of America to an unconditional Submission to their arbitrary Impositions, demands a vigorous Perseverance in the Inhabitants of these States, to frustrate the barbarous Design. For this End the Supreme Council of the Continent, convinced of the fatal Impolicy of short Inlistments, have called for Eighty-Eight Battalions, to serve during the War or for the Term of Three Years, and for Fifteen of them from the Massachusetts-Bay. The Necessity and Wisdom of the Measure, must meet the Approbation of every Friend to his Country...And whereas it is the Judgment of this Court, that a Number amounting to One Seventh Part of all the Male Inhabitants, from Sixteen Years old and upwards, at home and abroad, belonging to this State, will compleat our Quota of the Continental Army...save the People called Quakers." The Continental Army that emerged beginning in 1777 was the result of critical legislation passed by the Continental Congress to maintain a more regular army to meet the increasing number of British troops sent to America to crush the nascent rebellion. On September 16, 1776, Congress passed the "Eighty-Eight Battalion Resolve", that authorized the creation of eighty-eight battalions of the Continental Army for the duration of the war, apportioned among the states based on population, who were to recruit their soldiers and appoint officers (as seen above). The act also extended enlistments for three-year terms (thus to avoid year-end terms that threatened to hobble the army), and subsequently gave General Washington the authority to raise an additional 16 regiments. The legislation also provided land bounties and bonuses for military service, and provided soldiers with a yearly uniform allowance. Col. William Howard is presumably the same born in Augusta, Maine, in 1740, who served as a lieutenant colonel in the Maine militia, and later as a colonel in the Massachusetts state militia. He died in Augusta in 1810. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 69 - [American Revolution] Group of 3 Revolutionary War-Era Newspapers and Periodicals, 1779-83
[American Revolution] Group of 3 Revolutionary War-Era Newspapers and Periodicals, 1779-83 1. The Remembrancer; or, Impartial Repository of Public Events. For the Year 1778, and Beginning of 1779 London: J. Almon, 1779. First edition. 8vo. (ii), 400, (6) pp. Modern quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards; all edges gilt; scattered spotting. Sabin 955; Church 1115; Howes A-182 2. The Independent Ledger and the American Advertiser (Boston): Draper and Folsom, April 8, 1782. Vol. IV, Num. 205. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; partially separated along central vertical fold; wear along edges, including closed tears; scattered spotting. Printing various war news, including Henry Laurens's letter from the Tower of London. 3. The Royal Gazette New-York: James Rivington, February 8, 1783. No. 663. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Dampstaining and spotting; light edge-wear. Loyalist newspaper, printing various war news, including the description of a monument erected in memorial of John Andre, executed for his assistance to Benedict Arnold. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 70 - [American Revolution] Acts and Laws Made and passed by the General Court or Assembly of the States of Connecticut...on the 18th Day of December...1776 and second Thursday of May...1777
[American Revolution] Acts and Laws Made and passed by the General Court or Assembly of the States of Connecticut...on the 18th Day of December...1776 and second Thursday of May...1777 New London: Printed by Timothy Green, 1777. Folio. pp. 441-471. Each disbound; toned and spotted. ESTC W10875 (first state), W7278 (first state); Evans 15258, 15259 Revolutionary War-era Connecticut session laws, printing acts related to regulating the militia, prescribing an oath of allegiance to the state, and the articles of war for the state militia. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 71 - [American Revolution] A Rare and Early Continental Army Recruitment Poster
[American Revolution] A Call to Arms in the Months Following the Declaration of Independence: An Early Continental Army Recruitment Poster An Abstract from Resolves containing the Encouragement offered by the Continental Congress, and by the State of Massachusetts-Bay, to such as shall inlist into the Continental Army (Boston: Benjamin Edes), ca. January 28, 1777. Printed broadside, untrimmed, 13 3/4 x 8 1/4 in. (349 x 209 mm). Signed in type by Speaker Pro Tempore Samuel Freeman, and Deputy Secretary John Avery. Docketed on verso, additional manuscript on same ("Winslow"). Creasing from old folds, expertly repaired along upper horizontal fold; short separation at left side of central horizontal fold; dampstaining at right edge; in quarter green morocco slip case and chemise. Evans 15418; Heartman P15:4; Ford 2076; ESTC W34149; Cushing 981 A rare and early Continental Army recruitment poster, issued only months after the Declaration of Independence, seeking to entice men from Massachusetts to join the fight for independence. Printing the resolutions of the Continental Congress and the Massachusetts Legislature, this broadside lists the inducements offered to potential recruits, including a $20 bounty, 100 hundred acres of land, a new suit of clothing, consisting of two linen hunting shirts, two pairs of overalls, a leather or woolen waistcoat, one pair of breeches, a hat or leather cap, two shirts, and two pairs of shoes. It goes on to offer soldiers "disabled in the Service of the United States of America" a disability pension, as well as a further $20 if they enlist with a "good effective Fire-Arm, and also a Bayonet, or in Lieu thereof, a Sword, Hatchet or Tomahawk, a Cartridge Box and Knapsack". Finally, every recruit shall receive "a good Blanket", or a reimbursement of 18 shillings if they provide their own. This poster reflects crucial reforms enacted by the Continental Congress in late 1776 to transform the fledgling Continental Army into a more professional force capable of a sustained fight against the British. Orchestrated by John Adams at George Washington's behest, the revisions reorganized the American Articles of War along the lines of British military law. Key changes included extending enlistment terms, professionalizing the officer corps, enhancing monetary and land incentives for service, and instituting stricter penalties for disciplinary infractions. These measures were instrumental in evolving the American army into a more permanent and stable institution, reducing its dependence on often transient state militias. Rare. ESTC locates only eight institutional copies, while RBH locates only two other copies at auction in over a century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 72 - [American Revolution] A Detailed Report of Benedict Arnold's Treason in "The Annual Register"
[American Revolution] A Detailed Report of Benedict Arnold's Treason in "The Annual Register" The Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature, For the Year 1781 London: Printed for J. Dodsley, 1782. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 202, (2), 161-339, (1), 207, (12) pp. Full contemporary tan calf, red and black morocco spine labels, stamped in gilt, front board detached but holding, rear board starting, wear and soiling to boards and extremities; red speckled edges; marbled endpapers; scattered spotting. Featuring accounts of the ongoing Revolutionary War, with a detailed report on the treason of Benedict Arnold and the execution of John Andre. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 73 - [American Revolution] Group of 3 Issues of "The American Journal and General Advertiser", November 1779
[American Revolution] Group of 3 Issues of "The American Journal and General Advertiser", November 1779 1. Providence: Southwick and Wheeler, Thursday, November 4, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXIV. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; scattered spotting. 2. (Providence: Southwick and Wheeler), Thursday, November 18, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXVI. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; foxing. 3. (Providence: Southwick and Wheeler), Thursday, November 25, 1779. Vol. I, Numb. XXXVII. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Scattered spotting. Printing numerous reports on the Revolutionary War, as well as a front-page printing of Congress's October 20, 1779 proclamation appointing December 9, 1779, a day of public Thanksgiving and prayer. Bennett Wheeler (1753-1806) was originally from Halifax, Nova Scotia, and arrived in Providence, Rhode Island in September 1776. After several months, he began working for the Providence Gazette, where he remained until December 1778. In March 1779, Wheeler partnered with Solomon Southwick to publish The American Journal; and General Advertiser in Providence. Southwick departed the partnership in December 1779, and Wheeler continued publishing the newspaper until August 1781, after which he worked as a journeyman printer. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 74 - [American Revolution]
A Scarce and Completely Untrimmed Revolutionary War Broadsheet Related to the Rhode Island Militia
[American Revolution] A Scarce and Completely Untrimmed Revolutionary War Broadsheet Related to the Rhode Island Militia (Providence, Rhode Island): John Carter, (1779). Printed broadsheet. Folio, 15 x 10 1/8 in. (381 x 257 mm). Text printed in three columns, signed in type by Deputy Secretary William Mumford. Untrimmed; scattered light spotting. Alden 800; Bristol B4956; Shipton & Mooney 43698 Issued by the Rhode Island General Assembly during their October session of 1779, being "An Act for the better forming, regulating and conducting the military Force of this State". Originally introduced in the Assembly's June session, this act greatly reorganized the Rhode Island state militia, creating a new hierarchy of command and the restructuring of battalions, brigades, and regiments across Rhode Island's various counties. RBH locates only four other copies sold since 1935. OCLC locates only copies at the Rhode Island Historical Society and the American Antiquarian Society. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 75 - [American Revolution] Rhode Island Five-Dollar Note, Signed by a New England Physician and Statesman
[American Revolution] Rhode Island Five-Dollar Note, Signed by a New England Physician and Statesman State of Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations: Hall and Sellers, July 2, 1780. Five dollar currency, No. 1054; signed by A(dam). Comstock and physician Jonathan Arnold. 3 5/8 x 2 3/4 in. (92 x 70 mm). Jonathan Arnold (1741-93) was a New England physician and statesman. During the American Revolution he served as a surgeon in the Continental Army and was head of the military hospital in Providence, and served in the Continental Congress, from 1782-83.
Lot: 76 - [American Revolution] A Special Issue of the London Gazette, Printing News of British General Cornwallis's Victory Over General Horatio Gates at Camden, South Carolina
[American Revolution] A Special Issue of the London Gazette, Printing News of British General Cornwallis's Victory Over General Horatio Gates at Camden, South Carolina The London Gazette Extraordinary London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, Monday, October 9, 1780. Printed newspaper. Folio. (3) pp. Contemporary manuscript on first and second pages. Disbound; creasing from old folds, small separation along same at fore-edge; scattered light soiling. "It is with great Pleasure that I communicate to your Lordship an Account of a complete Victory obtained on the 16th Instant, by His Majesty's Troops under my Command, over the Rebel Southern Army commanded by General Gates." The official mouthpiece of the English Crown reports Cornwallis's victory over General Horatio Gates at the Battle of Camden. The Battle of Camden (August 16, 1780) was a devastating defeat for the American army in the early stages of the British offensive in the south, resulting in 900 American casualties and the capture of 1,000 American soldiers. Gates's defeat cleared South Carolina of any organized American resistance, and paved the way for the British invasion of North Carolina. Following the battle, Congress recalled Gates, who was replaced by General Nathanael Greene. The present newspaper prints Cornwallis's letter to Lord Germain announcing his victory, followed by a summation of his troops, casualties, and field pieces used in the battle. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 77 - [American Revolution]
The English Crown Reports Lord Cornwallis’s Surrender at Yorktown
[American Revolution] The English Crown Reports Lord Cornwallis’s Surrender at Yorktown ”I have the Mortification to inform your Excellency...” The London Gazette London: Printed by Thomas Harrison, From Saturday December 15, to Tuesday December 18, 1781. Printed newspaper. (8) pp. Tax stamp at top of first page and at bottom of fifth page. Contemporary manuscript at top of first page, in left margin of second page ("Lord Cornwallis and Army takin (sic) at York Town and Gloucester: by Washington & Rochambeau."), left margin of p. 6 ("the Ship Savage was taken by an American Ship of Warr (sic)."), and on the following page. Partially separated along central vertical fold; scattered spotting ; chip in lower fore-edge of final two leaves. The British reception of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown and the beginning of the end of the American Revolution, printed in the official mouthpiece of the English Crown. Likely the first British newspaper to publish Cornwallis "Mortification" letter and the full articles of capitulation. Printed on the second page is Cornwallis's letter to British General and Commander-in-Chief in North America Sir Henry Clinton, announcing his surrender to General Washington, "I have the Mortification to inform your Excellency, that I have been forced to give up the Posts of York and Gloucester, and to surrender the Troops under my Command, by Capitulation, on the 19th Instant, as Prisoners of War to the Combined Forces of America and France." This is followed by printings of letters between Cornwallis and General Washington negotiating surrender, and then the full articles of capitulation, signed in type by Cornwallis, Washington, et al. News of Cornwallis's surrender on October 19, 1781, after a three-week siege by American and French forces, reached British shores by late November 1781. The news sent reverberations through the English public and political circles, amplifying opposition voices within Parliament and entrenching a sense of disgust over the whole American affair. The British press placed most of the loss on the shoulders of Clinton, for his inability to stop Washington's march south, and then his refusal to reinforce a cornered Cornwallis. Finger pointing continued in the British press in the months that followed, and over time a sense that America was lost became more clear. A preliminary treaty to end the eight-year-long war was signed in November of 1782. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 78 - [American Revolution] A Comprehensive Revolutionary War Manuscript Ledger, Recording Monies Paid to Suppliers and Other Volunteers for the Continental Army, by Paymaster John Squire, in Fairfield, Connecticut, 1780-82
[American Revolution] A Comprehensive Revolutionary War Manuscript Ledger, Recording Monies Paid to Suppliers and Other Volunteers for the Continental Army, by Paymaster John Squire, in Fairfield, Connecticut, 1780-82 Manuscript Account Ledger Connecticut, May 15, 1780-December 10, 1782. Tall 4to. Six leaves. Eight-page manuscript account ledger, being "The State of Connecticut in Acct. with John Squire ACP. of Fairfield". Stab-sewn gatherings; scattered soiling. "A requisition from Congress upon the States for supplies for the army was also granted during the sitting of the April Assembly. The proportion called for from Connecticut was 78,400 weight of beef, 1,011 bushels of salt, 68,558 gallons of rum, 500 tons of hay. John Squire was appointed to purchase the proportion of supplies to be furnished within the limits of Fairfield and Stratford." (Schenck, The History of Fairfield County, Vol. II, pp. 410-411) A revealing record of those who supported the cause of independence. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 79 - [American Revolution] Possibly the First Printed Announcement of the Definitive Treaty of Peace Ending the American Revolution, September 5, 1783
[American Revolution] Possibly the First Printed Announcement of the Definitive Treaty of Peace Ending the American Revolution, September 5, 1783 Supplement a la Gazette Paris: Imprimerie Royale, Friday, September 5, 1783. Printed broadside; 9 1/2 x 7 1/8 in. (241 x 181 mm). No. 71, p. 317. Bound into full marbled paper-covered boards, green paper spine label, stamped in gilt. A rare and
Lot: 80 - [American Revolution] Thomas Jefferson at the Birth of a New Nation: An Important Letter Carried by a Jewish Patriot Communicating the Definitive Treaty of Paris, Projecting American Stability, and Preparations for the Publ
[American Revolution] Thomas Jefferson at the Birth of a New Nation: An Important Letter Carried by a Jewish Patriot Communicating the Definitive Treaty of Paris, Projecting American Stability, and Preparations for the Publication of His “Notes on the State of Virginia”, January 16, 1784 Autograph Letter, signed Annapolis, Maryland, January 16, 1784. Bifolium. Fine two-page
Lot: 81 - [American Revolution] Group of 2 Documents Related to Revolutionary War Pensions: For a Soldier who Helped Establish West Point Military Academy and a Soldier who Defended West Point as a Fortress
[American Revolution] Group of 2 Documents Related to Revolutionary War Pensions: For a Soldier who Helped Establish West Point Military Academy and a Soldier who Defended West Point as a Fortress Printed Broadside Philadelphia: (Francis Childs and John Swaine), April 30, 1794. Printed broadside, 13 1/4 x 8 in. (336 x 203 mm). Small chipping and light scattered wear along edges. Evans 27848
Lot: 82 - [Atomic Energy Commission] Collection of Press Releases and Reports, 1948-52
[Atomic Energy Commission] Collection of Press Releases and Reports, 1948-52 Washington, D.C.: United States Atomic Energy Commission, April 2, 1948-April 7, 1952. Comprising approximately 37 mimeographed press releases and reports issued by the Atomic Energy Commission. In blue cloth ring binder; some reports stapled at top corner; scattered wear; "Mr. Fiedler" in pencil in top corner of a report at rear. The Atomic Energy Commission was created in 1946 following the end of World War II to manage the development, use, and control of atomic, or nuclear, energy for military and civilian purposes. Signed into law by President Harry Truman, it transferred control of nuclear energy from military to civilian hands. Following increasing criticism regarding its regulations, it was abolished in 1974, and its operations were subsumed with the creation of the Department of Energy by President Jimmy Carter in 1976. The present collection contains reports from the critical years immediately following the agency's creation, including those by Lewis L. Strauss, W.W. Waymack, David E. Lilienthal, Robert F. Bacher, Lawrence R. Hafstad, among others. Topics covered include those on the nature of atomic energy, on uranium supplies, the Colorado plateau program, the creation of nuclear reactors, plutonium production, foreign distribution of radioisotopes, reports from Congressional committees, minutes of press conferences, a statement on the arrest of German-born British scientist Klaus Fuchs for passing top-secret information about the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union, the application of atomic energy, the discovery of element 98 Californium, the revisal of security clearance procedures, the creation of production plants, weapons tests in Nevada, the creation of nuclear submarines, etc. One report mentions J. Robert Oppenheimer by name. Lot includes an issue of Prevent World War III (New York: Society for the Prevention of World War III, Inc., Summer 1965, No. 66). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 83 - [Aviation] Earhart, Amelia. Rare Signed Cover From Her Ill-Fated Round-the-World Flight
[Aviation] Earhart, Amelia. Rare Signed Cover From Her Ill-Fated Round-the-World Flight No place, 1937. Unused red and blue cacheted cover, signed by Amelia Earhart in top left. 3 5/8 x 6 5/8 in. (92 x 168 mm). Lot includes a photograph of Earhart. A rare cover signed by Amelia Earhart, created for her ill-fated 1937 round-the-world flight. To raise money for her flight, Earhart's husband, George Putnam, arranged with Gimbel Brothers department store in New York to create these special blue and red cacheted covers featuring a portrait of the aviatrix. Around 10,000 were apparently created, several of which were prepaid and addressed, and were to be carried in the nose compartment of her Lockheed Electra. These were signed by Earhart, who then intended to add postage stamps as the flight progressed, and were then to be delivered to collectors following the completion of her journey. Earhart's first attempt at an around the world flight began in Hawaii in March 1937, but "during the takeoff attempt in Honolulu, the plane went into a loop (type of fishtail), its landing gear gave way and it crashed. When the plane was sent back to Burbank for repairs, the mail was placed in the custody of the Honolulu postmaster." (Bowman, Amelia Earhart Philately, p. 4) The present cover, which was flown to Hawaii in preparation for the first attempt, and was signed but never used or addressed, is one of only a few that are known to survive. For her second attempt, newer covers were created, which took off from Miami on June 1. On that flight she carried approximately 7,500 covers, which then disappeared along with Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Rare. According to RBH, this is only the fourth example of this signed cover to come to auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 84 - [Baseball] Group of 2 Items Related to Early Philadelphia Baseball
[Baseball] Group of 2 Items Related to Early Philadelphia Baseball Ballantine Beer Advertising Sign for the Philadelphia Phillies and Athletics Newark, New Jersey: Ballantine & Sons, ca. 1940s-50s. Printed easel-back cardboard display sign. 18 x 14 in. (457 x 356 mm). Wear along edges with some loss. Together with: 1905 Philadelphia Athletics Score Card Philadelphia: Chas. C. Douglass Printing House, 1905. 8vo. Original limp pictorial stapled self-wrappers; contemporary manuscript notations recording box score. scattered light wear. 1905 American League official score card for the first game of a double-header between the Philadelphia Athletics and the Washington Nationals. The A's shut out the Nationals 5-0, with their future Hall of Famer Chief Bender recording the shutout while only giving up two hits over nine innings. He walked only one batter and struck out seven. The A's would go on to sweep the Nationals that day. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 85 - [Baseball] [Bender, Chief] Cabinet Card of Native American Pitcher Albert "Chief" Bender
[Baseball] [Bender, Chief] Cabinet Card of Native American Pitcher Albert "Chief" Bender Biddle Field, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, August 28, 1930. Cabinet card photograph of Charles Albert "Chief" Bender, signed in pencil on mount "N. Guth / .30" at right below image. 7 3/4 x 5 3/4 in. (197 x 146 mm) print on 14 x 10 in. (356 x 254 mm) card. Scattered minor wear to mount. Charles Albert "Chief" Bender (1884-1954) was a Native American professional baseball pitcher, who is credited with the invention of the slider. Bender spent most of his career pitching for the then powerhouse Philadelphia Athletics (1903-14), where he won nearly 200 games and six World Series, and led the American league in winning percentage. As iconic Athletics manager Connie Mack stated about Bender, "If I had all the men I’ve ever handled, and they were in their prime, and there was one game I wanted to win above all others, Albert would be my man." In 1915, Bender left Philadelphia to play for the Baltimore Terrapins in the short-lived Federal League, but returned to play for the National League Philadelphia Phillies in 1916 and 1917. During his career he pitched 3,017 innings with an earned run average of 2.46, and a record of 212-127. In the years that followed he worked for a variety of teams as a coach, scout, and manager. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1953. The present photograph shows Bender with Frederick Fegan at Biddle Field, at Dickinson College, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Bender first started playing baseball at Carlisle Indian School, which he attended from 1896-1902. Following his graduation he briefly attended Dickinson College's prep school, while also playing for the semipro Harrisburg Athletic Club, before he got his start in the majors for the Philadelphia Athletics. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 86 - [Baseball] (Brooklyn Dodgers) Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up!
[Baseball] (Brooklyn Dodgers) Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up! (New York, ca. 1913 or later). Large sepia photograph, depicting the Brooklyn Dodgers walking on the field behind a marching band; small inset of the newly completed Ebbets Field at top right. Printed caption mounted to verso reads in part, "Now Even the Price of Baseball Is Going Up! They are going to charge more this season for baseball seats than ever. The day of the 25 cent bleacher seat is fast departing. Why? Costly stadiums and costly players. The New Ebbets field, Brooklyn, is an example..." Lightly creased; some soiling to image; scattered stains on verso. 14 x 17 in. (355 x 432 mm). Very rare, large format sepia photograph of the Brooklyn Dodgers strolling behind a marching band on the recently completed Ebbets Field. The printed caption mounted to the back laments the rising price of seat tickets, due to the heightened popularity of baseball. Dodgers' owner Charles Ebbets began acquiring property for the construction of a new stadium in 1908, and ended up spending a total of $750,000 over five years on the project. The stadium officially opened on April 5, 1913 with an exhibition game against their rivals, the New York Yankees. The Dodgers won 3-2, and outfielder Casey Stengel recorded the first ever home run at the stadium, scoring on an inside-the-park hit. The New York Tribune reported on the opening of Ebbets Field in their April 6 issue, stating, "the park includes everything that could be thought out by the fertile mind of a master in baseball...The admissions rates will be as follows: general admission, 75 cents...box seats, $1.50...Pavilion general admission 50 cents, North end pavilion 25 cents...Brooklyn owes the fact that she can boast of the finest ball park in the country to Charles H. Ebbets, after whom the park is named..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 87 - [Baseball] Clarke Bros. Whiskey "All Star" Lineup Advertisement Poster, ca. 1917
[Baseball] Clarke Bros. Whiskey "All Star" Lineup Advertisement Poster, ca. 1917 "Take a Chance and Win a Bottle 2 of the World's Greatest Ball Teams 2 of the World's Greatest Whiskies" Peoria, Illinois, ca. 1917-18. Printed broadside advertisement for Clarke Bros. & Co.; 11 x 9 in. (279 x 227 mm). With images of whiskey bottles, a distillery, and a fantasy lineup card for the National and American league "all-star" teams. Lacking two original printed small paper tabs. Toned; scattered stains; soiling and small chips to extremities. Very rare promotional broadside for Clarke Bros. & Co. Whiskey, featuring a list of baseball players from the American and National leagues, including many Hall of Famers. Lacking two mounted printed tags that would have covered both columns of numbers and the name "Schalk" at center. This poster would have encouraged customers to "Pay amount under tab" by placing their name opposite their favorite player from either column, and the number revealed would be the price for the whiskey that they had to pay (between 1-18 cents). The National league squad included: Grover Cleveland Alexander, Philadelphia Phillies (pitcher); Bill Raridan, New York Giants (catcher); Jack Daubert, Brooklyn Dodgers (first base); Johnny Evers, Boston Braves (second base); Heine Zimmerman, New York Giants (third base) Honus Wagner, Pittsburgh Pirates (shortstop); Sherry Magee, Boston Braves (left field); Dave Robertson, New York Giants (right field); Cy Williams, Chicago Cubs, (centerfield). For the American league: Walter Johnson, Washington Senators (pitcher); Ray Schalk, Chicago White Sox (catcher); Dick Hoblitzel, Boston Red Sox (first base); Eddie Collins, Chicago White Sox (second base); Frank "Home Run" Baker, New York Yankees (third base); Donnie Bush, Detroit Tigers (shortstop); Shoeless Joe Jackson, Chicago White Sox (right field); Tris Speaker, Cleveland Indians (left field); Ty Cobb, Detroit Tigers (right field) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 88 - [Baseball] Poster of Douglass Crockwell's Iconic Up at Bat Image for the August 10, 1940 cover of The Saturday Evening Post
[Baseball] Poster of Douglass Crockwell's Iconic Up at Bat Image for the August 10, 1940 cover of The Saturday Evening Post No place, 1940. Off-set color lithographic poster. 27 5/8 x 21 3/8 in.. (702 x 543 mm). Linen backed. Bright example of this charming poster of a young girl up at bat. Douglass Crockwell (1904-1968) was an American illustrator and commercial artist, best known for his cover illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post, and was often compared to Norman Rockwell for his nostalgic depictions of American life. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 89 - [Baseball] "The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks": A Striking Type 1 Press Photograph of Lou Gehrig's Hands
[Baseball] "The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks": A Striking Type 1 Press Photograph of Lou Gehrig's Hands No place, 1927. Press photograph of Lou Gehrig; typed newsreel slip mounted on verso ("The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks"), dated July 3, 1927. 7 x 5 in. (178 x 127 mm). A fine and powerful Type 1 press photograph of baseball legend Lou Gehrig, focusing closely on the powerful hands that helped make him one of the most celebrated baseball players of all time. The image recalls the strong tonal contrasts and intimate compositions associated with the work of noted baseball photographer Charles Conlon (1868-1945), whose best-known image of Gehrig was a close-up photograph of his eyes. Over sixteen years with the New York Yankees, Gehrig amassed a lifetime batting average of .340, with 2,721 hits, and 493 home runs. The 1927 season in particular was noteworthy both for Babe Ruth achieving a record 60 home runs and for Gehrig's strong showing of a .373 batting average, 218 hits, and 175 RBIs (breaking Ruth's 1921 record of 168), one of the greatest showings of any batter in baseball history. That year the Yankees swept the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0 to win the World Series, with Gehrig named MVP. Gehrig's record of playing in 2,130 games stood until 1995, when passed by Cal Ripken, Jr. On July 4, 1939 the Yankees retired Gehrig's number 4 in an elaborate ceremony. Almost two years later, he succumbed to the disease that now bears his name. During his illness, while at the Mayo Clinic, Gehrig had his hands x-rayed. It was found that he had seventeen healed fractures, including each of his fingers having been broken at least once, a testament to the incredible power and strength he'd displayed throughout his legendary career. We can trace no other examples of this powerful photograph ever being offered on the market, nor can we locate an image of it in online resources or contemporary newspapers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 90 - [Baseball] Group of 18 Press Photographs of Baseball Legends, including Mickey Mantle, Ty Cobb, Roberto Clemente, and more
[Baseball] Group of 18 Press Photographs of Baseball Legends, including Mickey Mantle, Ty Cobb, Roberto Clemente, and more Locations and dates vary. Group of 18 black and white press photographs depicting baseball legends including Mickey Mantle, Roberto Clemente, Daffy Dean, Carl Erskine, Casey Stengel, Ernie Banks, Rogers Hornsby, Ty Cobb and Connie Mack, Roy Campanella, Billy Martin, Whitey Ford, Casey Stengel, Carl Hubbell, Red Rolfe, Bill Terry, et al. Many with copyright stamps and printed labels on verso. Condition varies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 91 - [Baseball] Group of 4 Periodicals Related to Baseball, Including an Early 19th Century Illustration of the Game and a Front-Page Image of Willie Mays in an African American Newspaper
[Baseball] Group of 4 Periodicals Related to Baseball, Including an Early 19th Century Illustration of the Game and a Front-Page Image of Willie Mays in an African American Newspaper 1. The Gift of Friendship; Seasoned with Instruction, Both for the Mind and the Eye New Haven: S. Babcock, n.d. [1835]. Woodcut vignettes throughout. Original pictorial yellow wrappers. The front wrapper depicts an early rendition of children playing baseball. Although variants of the game had existed for decades, modern baseball was not formally codified until 1845, when Alexander Cartwright helped establish the rules for the New York Knickerbockers. 2. National Chronicle Journal of American Sports and Amusements Boston, May 28, 1870. Vol. II, No. 21. Printed newspaper. Folio. pp. (161)-174. Disbound. Numerous reports and scores of early baseball matches. 3. The Chicago Evening Post Chicago, Monday, July 25, 1921. Printed newspaper. Folio. (ii), 12 pp. Toned and very brittle; wear along edges; worn with losses. Reporting on the 1919 Black Sox game-fixing scandal in a local Chicago newspaper. 4. Chicago Daily Defender Chicago, May 1, 1961. Vol. VI, No. 49. Printed newspaper. Folio. 24 pp. Slightly toned. African American newspaper with a front and rear page image and a report on Willie Mays. With an article titled "What Happened to Negro Baseball?" This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 92 - [Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Pitcher Walter Johnson
[Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Pitcher Walter Johnson "The Big Train Socks 'Em Out" (New York: International Newsreel, ca. March 19, 1929). Black and white photograph, 8 x 5 3/4 in. (203 x 146 mm). Type 1 photograph depicting Washington Senators' pitching legend Walter Johnson at bat. Original typed caption mounted to verso, copyright stamp on same. Lightly creased. With accompanying PSA Letter of Authenticity. Walter Johnson (1887-1946) was a Hall of Fame right-handed pitcher, who played for the Washington Senators from 1907-27, and later became their manager in 1929. Generally regarded as one of the greatest to ever throw a baseball, to this day Johnson remains the all-time leader in shutouts (110), second in wins (412), and fourth in complete games (531).
Lot: 93 - [Baseball] Keeler, William Henry. 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red
[Baseball] Keeler, William Henry. 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red “Keep your eyes clear and hit them where they ain’t” 1910-11 T3 Turkey Red Cabinets, of Wee Willie Keeler, #101; checklist back (offer); SGC VG-EX 4. Corners lightly worn; small abrasion in upper edge. A handsome example of New York Giants Hall of Famer Wee Willie Keeler, from the T3 Turkey Red set. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 94 - [Baseball] [Mantle, Mickey] Mickey Mantle's First Cover: The Earliest Front-Page Newspaper Image of Mickey Mantle, "Something Good from Joplin"
[Baseball] [Mantle, Mickey] Mickey Mantle's First Cover: The Earliest Front-Page Newspaper Image of Mickey Mantle, "Something Good from Joplin" The Southwestern Joplin, Missouri, Friday, March 30, 1951. Vol. 17, No. 6. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creased from original fold. Toned. On the cusp of entering the majors to play for the New York Yankees, a young Mickey Mantle is profiled here in Joplin, Missouri's hometown newspaper. Featuring a front-page, above-the-fold, image of young Mick, the earliest front-page newspaper image of the baseball legend and Hall of Famer, followed by four columns dedicated to the rising star. Named after the Yankee legend Mickey Cochrane, Mickey Mantle's upbringing is described within as being "steeped in Yankee lore." The paper notes that his formal baseball education started as soon as he could lift a bat and throw a ball, creating a year-round atmosphere of baseball heavily infused with "Yankeeism." Mantle began his professional career in 1948 in Kansas with the Baxter Springs Whiz Kids. His talent was quickly spotted by Yankees scout Tom Greenwade, leading to a rapid promotion to the minor leagues. In 1949, he was assigned to the Yankees' Class-D Independence team in the Kansas–Oklahoma–Missouri League, where he played shortstop and posted a .313 batting average. The following year, he was promoted to the Class-C Joplin Miners of the Western Association. As depicted in the accompanying image from the 1950 spring training in Branson, Mantle excelled in Joplin, winning the Western Association batting title with a .383 average. Recognized as "baseball's most publicized rookie," Mantle was invited to the Yankees' instructional camp prior to the 1951 season. He subsequently joined the major league roster that year, playing right field. As the lengthy profile concludes, "We predict that the young, hopeful ballplayers of America are going to have a fine hero to pattern after." Exceedingly rare: According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy of this paper at auction, and it is perhaps the only obtainable copy in private hands. Together with: The Sporting News The Base Ball Paper of the World St. Louis, April 25, 1951. Volume 131, Number 12. Folio. 37, (3) pp. Toned; wear along edges; closed tear traversing center of pp. 3/4. Featuring an early cover illustration of Mantle as a young Yankees rookie, dated only four weeks after the above paper. Together with: The Sporting News The Base Ball Paper of the World St. Louis, January 31. 1951. Volume 130, Number 26. Folio. 26, (2) pp. Toned; foxing and wear along edges. On p. 5 is an early report on Mantle: "Yanks to Take Early Look at Mantle, Rated Top Prospect in Minors at 19". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 95 - [Baseball] [Negro League] Partially-Printed Tax Document for the New York Black Yankees
[Baseball] [Negro League] Partially-Printed Tax Document for the New York Black Yankees New York, September 10, 1946. Single oblong sheet, 5 x 8 in. (127 x 203 mm). Partially-printed Internal Revenue Service tax document ("Notification to Collector by Lessor Where Lessee is Responsible for Collection of Federal Tax on Admissions"), for ticket sales for games played by the New York Black Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Type on verso, listing dates of related games. Perforated stamps along top; scattered light soiling. An IRS tax document for the New York Black Yankees baseball club, issued for taxes collected on ticket sales for games played by them at Yankee Stadium, from July-October 1946. Originally known as the Harlem Stars, the New York Black Yankees were a professional Negro League baseball team established in 1932, and based in New York City, Paterson, New Jersey, and Rochester, New York. Their early years saw them play the often grueling baseball circuit, and in 1936 they joined the Negro National League. Notable players include legends like Satchel Paige, George “Mule” Suttles, Willie Wells, Clarence “Fats” Jenkins, and Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe. They played their last game in 1948 when the Negro National League dissolved. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 96 - [Baseball] [Reese, Pee Wee] Telegram to Brooklyn Dodger Hall of Famer Pee Wee Reese Congratulating Him on Winning the World Series
[Baseball] [Reese, Pee Wee] Telegram to Brooklyn Dodger Hall of Famer Pee Wee Reese Congratulating Him on Winning the World Series No place, October 4, 1955. Single oblong sheet 6 1/4 x 8 in. (159 x 203 mm). Telegram from Van Lingle Mungo to Pee Wee Reese. Creasing from old folds, scattered light stains. Western Union Telegram sent to Hall of Fame shortstop Pee Wee Reese, from his former Brooklyn Dodger teammate pitcher Van Lingle Mungo and his wife Elouise, congratulating Reese on winning the first World Series in Dodgers franchise history. The telegram was received at 4:17 P.M, only 30 minutes after the conclusion of Game 7, where the Dodgers beat their rival Yankees 2-0. Brooklyn scored the game's only runs off of a fourth-inning RBI single and a sacrifice fly in the sixth, both by Gil Hodges, with Reese and catcher Roy Campanella scoring. Dodgers pitcher Johnny Podres recorded the shutout and was subsequently named the series MVP for his performance here as well as in Game 3. The 1955 contest had been the fifth time in nine years that the Yankees and Dodgers met in the World Series, with the Yankees having won in 1947, 1949, 1952, and 1953. The two teams met again at the end of the 1956 season, but Brooklyn ended up losing the rematch. Brooklyn's beloved "bums" moved to Los Angeles after the 1957 season. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 97 - [Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] An Uncut Panel of 1926 W512 Strip Cards
[Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] An Uncut Panel of 1926 W512 Strip Cards No place, 1926. Single sheet, 11 1/4 x 7 in. (286 x 178 mm). Chip in top and bottom left corners, partially affecting outer border of Babe Ruth image. This rare uncut sheet captures the energy and star power of the Roaring '20s, showcasing some of the era’s most iconic figures—led by none other than Babe Ruth. Unlike the more commonly found single hand-cut cards or five-card strips, this full uncut sheet is a seldom-seen gem. It also features baseball legends Rogers Hornsby and Frankie Frisch, silver screen icons Douglas Fairbanks and Lon Chaney, tennis great Bill Tilden, swimming champion Johnny Weismuller, and golf champion Walter Hagen—bringing together the biggest names in sports and entertainment from a golden age. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 98 - [Baseball] [Ruth, Babe]
A Very Early Report Mentioning Ruth, then in the Minor Leagues Playing for the Baltimore Orioles
[Baseball] [Ruth, Babe] A Very Early Report Mentioning Ruth, then in the Minor Leagues Playing for the Baltimore Orioles The Baltimore News Baltimore, Sunday Evening, June 14, 1914. Vol. LXXXV, No. 41. Printed newspaper. Folio. Toned; paper brittle and chipping; separated along central vertical fold. With a very early report of Babe Ruth while in the Minor Leagues playing for the Baltimore Orioles: "The opening setto yesterday was a corker, and Babe Ruth was forced to give the best he had, for the Orioles offered him little to work on." Together with: 1. The National Police Gazette. New York, Saturday, May 12, 1923. Vol. CXXII, No. 2387. Folio. Scattered soiling and wear. Full-page coverage of the opening of the new Yankee Stadium, including a photo of Ruth crossing home plate after hitting his first homer there. 2. The New York Times. New York, Monday, August 12, 1929. Vol. LXXVIII, No. 26,133. Printed newspaper, on rag paper. Folio. Disbound. Reporting Ruth's 500th home run. 3. The New York Times. New York, Monday, October 1, 1934. Vol. LXXXIV, No. 28,009. Printed newspaper, on rag paper. Folio. Reinforced along central vertical fold. Special rag printing reporting on Ruth's last at bat as a regular player. A fine lot covering the entire career of the "Great Bambino". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 99 - [Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Shortstop Joe Tinker
[Baseball] Type 1 Photograph of Hall of Fame Shortstop Joe Tinker No place, ca. 1900s. Black and white photograph, 7 1/2 x 5 in. (191 x 127 mm). Type 1 photograph depicting Hall of Fame Chicago Cubs shortstop Joe Tinker, dressed in civilian garb. Sticker at top right of image, "Playing Exclusively for John W. Considine" Lightly creased; contemporary stamp on verso, adhesive residue from mounting on same. Accompanied by PSA Letter of Authenticity. Joe Tinker (1880-1948) was a Hall of Fame shortstop who played the majority of his Major League career with the Chicago Cubs, from 1902-16, winning four pennants and two World Series championships. He now is best remembered for his inclusion in Franklin P. Adams' 1910 poem "Baseball's Sad Lexicon", and its refrain, "Tinker to Evers to Chance".
Lot: 100 - [Basketball] An Early Women's Basketball Team Photograph
[Basketball] An Early Women's Basketball Team Photograph Washoe County, Nevada, ca. 1890s-early 1900s. Silver gelatin print on original cardstock. Corners slightly worn; some scattered stains to mount; dampstaining to verso. Photo: 7 3/16 x 9 3/8 (182 x 238 mm); mount: 10 1/4 x 12 1/2 in. (260 x 317 mm). An early photograph of a women's basketball team from Washoe County, Nevada. In the United States, basketball was the first women’s team sport. First played by women at Smith College in 1892, a year after the sport’s creation, it quickly spread throughout the country over the ensuing decade. The early history of the sport was dominated by Senda Berenson, known as the “founding mother of women’s basketball”, who taught the sport at Smith. In line with Victorian norms, she modified the rules of the game to meet social expectations relating to women, such as increasing the number of players and prescriptions on types of playing and maneuvers, in order to reduce physicality and keep physical exposure to a minimum. This is reflected in the present photo by their concealing uniforms, typically comprised of long skirts or bloomers. The first inter-collegiate game was played in 1896, and the first high school game the following year. In 1899, Berenson published the first rules guide for women’s basketball, which was largely adhered to until the 1960s. Over the following decades the rules restraining the types of play were loosened, and in 1978, the first professional league was formed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 101 - [Basketball] [Jordan, Michael] Sissac, Carl V. Type 1 Photo of Michael Jordan
[Basketball] [Jordan, Michael] Sissac, Carl V. Type 1 Photo of Michael Jordan Circa 1995-1996. Original PSA Type 1 color photograph; 6 x 4 in. (152 x 102 mm). Encapsulated. Copyright stamp on verso. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 102 - [Bill of Rights] Madison Proposes the Bill of Rights in a Local New York Newspaper
[Bill of Rights] Madison Proposes the Bill of Rights in a Local New York Newspaper The New-York Journal and Weekly Register New-York: Printed and Published by Thomas Greenleaf, Thursday, June 11, 1789. Vol. XLIII, No. 29, Total Numb. 2404. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound. One of the earliest newspapers--possibly only the second--to report on James Madison's proposed Bill of Rights. On the second page, second column is a report on Madison's landmark June 8 speech to Congress, where he asked his colleagues "to take into consideration the subject of amendments." It is followed by a report of debates between members of Congress on the matter, and Madison's submission of nine proposed amendments. Madison's nine proposed amendments, drawn from numerous sources, grew to seventeen, but was then narrowed to twelve. Ten were ultimately ratified by 1791, becoming what would later be referred to as the Bill of Rights. This newspaper reporting is evidently preceded only by the June 10 report in the Gazette of the United States, the semi-official Federalist Party newspaper also based in New York. According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy of this issue at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 103 - [Bill of Rights] An Early Printing of the Bill of Rights in Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America
[Bill of Rights] An Early Printing of the Bill of Rights in Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America Acts Passed at the Second Congress of the United States of America: Begun and Held at the City of Philadelphia...the Twenty-Fourth of October, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Ninety-One... Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Childs and John Swaine, (1793). First edition. 8vo. 175, iii, (1), 178-291, ii, (25) pp. Full contemporary brown calf, stamped in gilt, blind stamp of the Library of the New York Law Institute on front and rear board, rebacked, boards and extremities rubbed and worn; all edges trimmed; scattered spotting and soiling. Evans 26295; ESTC W14416; Sabin 15499 Printing the Acts passed at the Second United States Congress, held from March 4, 1791-March 4, 1793. Opening with an early printing of the Bill of Rights, and their ratification by the states, on pp. 3-19. Other important Acts passed include the Postal Services Act, the Coinage Act of 1792, the Fugitive Slave Act, etc. Rare. ESTC locates only seven institutional copies. RBH locates four copies at auction since 2013. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 104 - [Boone, Daniel] Group of 3 Items Related to Daniel Boone
[Boone, Daniel] Group of 3 Items Related to Daniel Boone 1. The Weekly Register (Baltimore): H. Niles, (March 13, 1813). Supplementary to No. 2, Vol. IV. 8vo. (i), 34-40 pp. Disbound; first and last leaf separated; foxing. Featuring an excerpt from a memoir on Daniel Boone on the first four pages. 2. Acts Passed at the Second Session of the Thirteenth Congress of the United States (Washington, D.C., 1814). First edition. 8vo. (iii), 244-429, (1), 6 pp. Original stiff blue wrappers, worn, contemporary and later manuscript on spine; text unopened; scattered spotting; library ink number on title-page. Includes an "Act for the relief of Daniel Boone", granting him rights to land in Missouri received by the Spanish government (p. 266). 3. The Yankee Boston: Published by Rowe & Hooper, Friday, June 21, 1816. Vol. V, No. 26. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; creasing from when folded; scattered spotting. Printed on the front page is a letter from an officer at Fort Osage, recounting their meeting Boone. Daniel Boone (1734-1820) was an American frontiersman who is considered one of the first folk heroes of the United States. Born in Pennsylvania, he steadily made his way west, eventually becoming one of the first white settlers to explore what is now the Kentucky region. Within two decades over 200,000 settlers had made their way into the area through routes established by Boone. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 105 - [Boxing] Group of 11 Items Related to Boxing, Including Press Photos, etc.
[Boxing] Group of 11 Items Related to Boxing, Including Press Photos, etc. Locations and dates vary. Group of 11 items related to boxing, including, eight press photographs of boxing greats such as Muhammad Ali (4), Joe Louis (1), Jack Dempsey (1), and Floyd Patterson (1), and Max Baer (1); an issue of the French magazine La vie au grand air (1910), featuring a story on a fight between Jack Johnson and James Jefferies; a small printed ad listing ticket prices for the Tunney-Dempsey match of 1926 in Chicago; a printed color poster, ca. 1894, depicting a fight between James J. Corbett and Peter Jackson. Sizes vary. Conditions vary but generally fine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 106 - [Canal Building] The Predecessor of the Erie Canal
[Canal Building] The Predecessor of the Erie Canal Report of a Committee, Appointed to Explore the Western Waters in the State of New-York: For the Purpose of Prosecuting the Inland Lock Navigation Albany: Printed by Barber and Southwick, 1792. First edition. 16mo. 24 pp. Disbound; corners of title-page clipped, affecting some letters, two library ink stamps on same ("Library of the New York Law Institute"), same ink stamps on pp. 2 and 24; text trimmed close affecting some page numbers at top; creasing and small chip in bottom corner of pp. 3/4; scattered spotting and soiling. In black cloth fall-down-back box. Evans 24604; ESTC W8575; Sabin 22754; Streeter Sale 883 Rare first edition detailing the Western Inland Lock Navigation Company, which constructed New York's first major canal system along the Mohawk River to Lake Oneida. Incorporated by the New York state legislature in 1792 with General Philip Schuyler (Alexander Hamilton's father-in-law) as its president, the company was established to enhance navigation and commerce on waterways west of Albany. Construction commenced in 1793, and within a decade the company had successfully built a network of canals designed to bypass difficult portages at locations such as Little Falls and Rome. Although these improvements revolutionized water transportation in New York, the company's infrastructure was rendered obsolete by 1825 following the completion of the much larger Erie Canal. According to RBH, this is the first copy to come to auction since the Streeter Sale. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 107 - [Civil War] A Rare, Large, and Unusually Bright Patriotic Civil War Poster
[Civil War] A Rare, Large, and Unusually Bright Patriotic Civil War Poster Military Portraits Map of the Seat of War, Uniforms, Arms, &c. New York: Published by H.H. Lloyd & Co., 1861. Hand-colored engraved poster. Printed by Waters & Son, New York. Small portion of inpainting to copyright line in bottom left. Linen backed; wear along edges. 39 x 29 in. (991 x 737 mm). Showing military uniforms and dress, 16 large portraits of prominent Union Army leaders (Winfield Scott, George McClellan, John C. Fremont, Benjamin F. Butler, et al.) and a map illustrating the regions of Maryland, Virginia, and the Chesapeake Bay. Henry Huggins Lloyd (1828-68) was a New York City-based publisher and mapmaker, operating before, during, and after the Civil War. Their extensive output included posters such as these, as well as military campaign charts, patriotic portraits of military leaders, regional and state maps, etc. Rare to auction, we cannot find a similar example in online records. OCLC locates only two similar examples, at Harvard University and in the David Rumsey Map Collection at Stanford University (the latter depicting fewer military leaders). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 108 - [Civil War] The National Lines Before Washington: Broadside Supplement to The New York Times
[Civil War] The National Lines Before Washington: Broadside Supplement to The New York Times New-York, December 7, 1861. Printed broadside; 22 x 15 in. (550 x 385 mm). Illustrated with two engraved battlefield maps. Creasing from when folded, separations along folds; unevenly toned; closed tear in bottom edge; wear along right edge. An early Civil War map exhibiting the defenses of the national capital, and positions of the several divisions of the Grand Army, part of a series sent free to New-York Times subscribers. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 109 - [Civil War] Group of 7 Newspapers with Important Content Related to the Battle of Antietam, a "Negro Confederacy", the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, and more, 1861-65
[Civil War] Group of 7 Newspapers with Important Content Related to the Battle of Antietam, a "Negro Confederacy", the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, and more, 1861-65 1. Daily Appeal. Marysville, California, Thursday Morning, May 23, 1861. Vol. 3, No. 122. Folio. 4 pp. With an anti-Union article on the "Negro Confederacy". 2. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Monday, September 22, 1862. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting to separate. Front-page report on the Battle of Antietam. 3. Daily Richmond Examiner. Richmond, Virginia, Tuesday Morning, October 7, 1862. Vol. XVI, no. 183. Folio. 4 pp. Text faded. Confederate newspaper, with Confederate-related news. 4. The Tri-Weekly Telegraph. Houston, Texas, Monday, March 2, 1863. Vol. XXVIII, No. 150, Whole No. 8647. Broadsheet. Small holes along central vertical fold. Confederate newspaper, with Confederate-related content. 5. The Commonwealth. Boston, Friday, May 15, 1863. Vol. I, No. 37. Folio. 4 pp. Scattered soiling. With a report on the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, one of the first African American regiments in the Civil War. 6. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Thursday, May 25, 1865. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting or separated. "The Armies of the Republic. Their Triumphant Return to the National Capital..." 7. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Monday, June 12, 1865. Folio. 8 pp. Leaves starting or separated, last leaves torn. "Philadelphia's Welcome to Her Returning Volunteers..." Condition varies, generally good, with expected creasing, wear, and tears. An illuminating set of eight Civil War-era newspapers, offering a trans-continental perspective on the conflict. Lot also includes six cartes de visite of Civil War figures, including of President Lincoln and his son Tad. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 110 - [Civil War] General Benjamin F. Butler's Farewell Address to the Army of the Gulf in New Orleans
[Civil War] General Benjamin F. Butler's Farewell Address to the Army of the Gulf in New Orleans Printed Document, General Orders No. 106 New Orleans: Headquarters Department of the Gulf, December 15, 1862. Printed document, being Benjamin F. Butler's General Orders No. 106, his farewell address to his troops. 12mo. Disbound; reinforced with sello tape along spine. Butler praises his army for their service and for illustrating the "best traits of the American soldier". He expresses his admiration for their having "fed the starving poor, the wives and children of your enemies, so converting enemies into friends...you have won the confidence of the 'oppressed race' and the slave. Hailing you as deliverers, they are ready to aid you as willing servants, faithful laborers, or, using the tactics taught them by your enemies, to fight with you in the field..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 111 - [Civil War] Dedication Copy of "The Draft Riots in New York", Presented to Police Commissioner Thomas C. Acton, Who Led New York's Police Force to Stamp Out the New York Draft Riots
[Civil War] Dedication Copy of "The Draft Riots in New York", Presented to Police Commissioner Thomas C. Acton, Who Led New York's Police Force to Stamp Out the New York Draft Riots "To Commissioner Acton are our Citizens indebted in a large degree for the prompt and successful assaults upon the rioters, and to his judicious and energetic action for their subsequent entire defeat and
Lot: 112 - [Civil War] Scarce Confederate Newspaper, Reporting Sherman's March on Augusta, as well as the "Last Great Battle of the War"
[Civil War] Scarce Confederate Newspaper, Reporting Sherman's March on Augusta, as well as the "Last Great Battle of the War" The Camp Illuminator Bridgeport, (Alabama), Tuesday, March 7, 1865. Vol. I, No. 9. 8vo. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; a few short splits along horizontal folds; scattered toning and soiling. A scarce Confederate newspaper, printing reports in the waning days of the Civil War, including Sherman's march on Augusta. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 112A - [Civil War] Bound Volume of Over 70 Issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, October-December, 1864
[Civil War] Bound Volume of Over 70 Issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, October-December, 1864 Philadelphia, Saturday, October 1-December 31, 1864. Printed newspapers in five columns. Bound, non-consecutive run of The Philadelphia Inquirer, a daily paper, comprised of approximately over 70 issues. Covers perished, leather spine remnants, endpapers torn; issues generally worn, margins torn or chipped; many issues with sections torn or excised. An extensive bound volume of war-dated issues of The Philadelphia Inquirer, providing contemporary commentary on major events of the Civil War and the Presidential Election of 1864. Notable issues feature headlines regarding President Lincoln's campaign and reelection, the Siege of Petersburg, Sherman's March to the Sea, the Battle of Nashville, the raids of Confederate Colonel John S. Mosby, the Siege of Fort Fisher, and much more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 113 - [Civil War] Field Press Printing of General Robert E. Lee's Farewell Address, April 10, 1865
[Civil War] Field Press Printing of General Robert E. Lee's Farewell Address, April 10, 1865 Head-Quarters, Army of Northern Virginia, April 10, 1865. Letterpress circular of General Orders No. 9, signed in type by Robert E. Lee. Creasing from old folds. 8 1/4 x 5 1/2 in. (209 x 140 mm). Following the surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865, Lee and his lieutenants retired to his tent, where they sat before a fire and discussed the day's events and Lee's own feelings towards his soldiers. It was decided that Lee would draft an address to be distributed to his troops thanking them for their service but acknowledging the Confederate cause was lost, the South defeated. According to Lee's aide-de-camp, Colonel Charles Marshall, Lee gave him the use of his ambulance in which to draft the letter, going so far as to place an armed guard before it in order to prevent any distraction on Marshall's part from the task at hand. Lee then read over the draft, made a few changes, and ordered that it be printed and distributed. While numerous copies were printed as broadsides and sold throughout the South following the war, original field copies are considered quite scarce. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 114 - [Colonial America] Rishworth, Edward. Group of 3 Autograph Legal Documents, signed
[Colonial America] Rishworth, Edward. Group of 3 Autograph Legal Documents, signed 1. Boston, May 12, 1670. Single sheet, 12 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (311 x 216 mm). One-page autograph document, signed by Edward Rishworth, being a petition to the General Court seeking a pardon for accepting a commission contrary to the law. Docketed on verso. Reinforced along edges on verso; creasing from old folds. Mounted along left edge with two below documents. 2. (Province of Maine), May 6, 1681. Single sheet, 5 1/2 x 7 in. (140 x 178 mm). Autograph document, signed twice by Rishworth as Recorder of Maine Province, being a sworn deposition by a Richard Hunnewell (1645-1703), regarding a land claim in relation to Ambrose Boaden's plantation. Creased from old folds; laid down on larger sheet. 3. Province of Maine, December 11, 1680. Two sheets, each 11 5/8 x 7 1/2 (295 x 190 mm). Three-page autograph document, signed by Rishworth as Recorder of the Province of Maine, being a copy of a libel suit brought by Collector and Surveyor of New England Edward Randolph (1632-1703) against Ely Nicoll, Master of a Barque. Creasing from old folds; repairs along edges; scattered spotting. Based primarily in Maine, then part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Edward Rishworth served in a variety of civic roles, including as a member of the Governor's Council and as a justice of the courts. He is perhaps best remembered for his involvement in documenting King William's War and the frontier conflicts between English settlers and French-allied Indigenous groups in northern New England. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 115 - [Colonial America] Rare First Edition of the Treaty of Whitehall, King James II's First Treaty and Among the Earliest Between England and France in Relation to America
[Colonial America] Rare First Edition of the Treaty of Whitehall, King James II's First Treaty and Among the Earliest Between England and France in Relation to America Treaty of Peace, Good Correspondence & Neutrality in America, Between the most Serene and Mighty Prince James II...And the most Serene and Mighty Prince Lewis XIV...Concluded the 6/16th Day of Novemb. 1686 (London), In the Savoy: Printed by Thomas Newcomb, 1686. First edition. 12mo. 19, (1) pp. Full tan calf, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, loss in lower spine with wear to front and rear joints; gilt edges; gilt dentelles; small repair at bottom of title-page; bottom corners of B2 and C2 repaired; scattered spotting. ESTC R477000; Sabin 96532 In this treaty, England and France pledged neutrality in North America, as well as renouncing illegal trade and fishing within the boundaries of each other's colonies, as well as the aiding of pirates and Native Americans. Despite this, the Treaty was short lived, as King Williams's War broke out in 1688 (the first of several North American conflicts between the two nations that would culminate in the French and Indian War), and King James II was shortly after deposed. According to RBH, this is only the second copy to come to auction since 1991. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 116 - [Colonial America] A London Newspaper with Front-Page Addresses from Plymouth Colony
[Colonial America] A London Newspaper with Front-Page Addresses from Plymouth Colony The London Gazette London: Thomas Newcomb, From Thursday June 14, to Monday June 18, 1688. Numb. 2356. Printed broadsheet newspaper. Light marginal chipping and soiling. "Nothing can be more valued by a People who on the mere account of Religion left their Native Land, and Transplanted themselves into a Desart..." With a front-page address from Plymouth Colony and several congregations in New England praising King James II, and reaffirming their loyalty and gratitude to him. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 117 - [Colonial America] Plymouth Colony Seeks a Royal Charter: A Rare and Important Plymouth Colony Document
[Colonial America] Plymouth Colony Seeks a Royal Charter: A Rare and Important Plymouth Colony Document Manuscript Document Plymouth, Massachusetts, March 3, 1690/91. Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (248 x 197 mm). Draft manuscript document, signed by Samuel Sprague, Secretary of Plymouth Colony, regarding negotiations on behalf of the Colony to obtain a separate, independent charter following the dissolution of the Dominion of New England in 1689. Creasing from old folds; small separations and holes along same. In 1689, after the collapse of the Dominion of New England and the arrest of Governor Edmund Andros, northeastern colonies struggled to re-establish ties with the English Crown. Plymouth Colony, who lacked a royal charter, sent Ichabod Wiswall to England, alongside Massachusetts's Increase Mather, to negotiate a new and distinct charter that would preserve its political separation from Massachusetts Bay. This manuscript, possibly an early draft, instructs Wiswall, Mather, and Sir Henry Ashurst to secure "Ancient Civill and Religious Liberties" for Plymouth. A deleted clause, that does not appear in the final document, demands orthodox religious preaching, and suggests an attempt to moderate the colony's Puritanical image. Ultimately, Plymouth did not receive a separate charter. Instead, the 1691 Charter of the Province of Massachusetts Bay merged the two colonies, preventing Plymouth's absorption into New York, but ending its political independence. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 118 - [Colonial America] Group of 7 Items Related to Colonial America, Queen Anne's War, The Crown Point Expedition, the French and Indian War, and more, ca. 1703-59
[Colonial America] Group of 7 Items Related to Colonial America, Queen Anne's War, The Crown Point Expedition, the French and Indian War, and more, ca. 1703-59 1. The Present State of Europe, or the Historical and Political Monthly Mercury... London: Printed for Henry Rhodes, and Elizabeth Harris, 1703. Vol. XIV. 12mo. (ii), 419-456. Disbound. Reporting news on the ongoing Queen Anne's War, including mention of Massachusetts-Bay and relations with the Native Americans of the region. 2. Acts and Laws, Passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of Her Majesties Province of Massachusetts-Bay...Held at Boston upon Wednesday the Thirty-first of May, 1704 (Boston: B. Green), 1704. Folio. pp. 263-266. Disbound; lightly worn and soiled. ESTC W8052; Evans 1167 With two acts related to Queen Anne's War, including an "Act in further Addition to the Act for Levying Souldiers" and "An Act directing, That the Militia of the Frontiers be provided with Snow Shoes". 3. The Post Boy, With the Freshest Advices, Foreign and Domestick London: Printed for B. Beardwell, May 27-29, 1707. Numb. 1878. Printed broadsheet newspaper. Scattered soiling. Reporting news on the ongoing Queen Anne's War. 4. The Kentish Post: or Canterbury News-Letter Canterbury: Printed and Sold by J. Abree, June 10-14, 1727. Numb. 945. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Tax stamp in bottom right corner of front-page. Disbound; separating along central vertical fold. With a report on the last page on the death of Samuel Mills (abt. 1632-1727) of Jamaica, Long Island, aged 95 years. 5. Unaccomplished Printed Massachusetts-Bay Indenture Massachusetts-Bay, no date (after 1720). Printed unaccomplished indenture, "for the Purchasing Houses, and Lands for the Perpetuating the Charity of the Honourable Edwad (sic) Hopkins..." Folio. Two sheets. Disbound, light spotting. 6. Manuscript Receipt Province New Hampshire, no date (ca. 1756 or after). Single oblong sheet, 3 x 3 5/8 in. (76 x 92 mm). Manuscript receipt, for £111, "Rec'd of the province for my service in the Expedition against Crown pointe." Creased from old folds. In frame. The Crown Point Expedition was a failed 1756 English siege of the French stronghold of Fort Saint-Frédéric on Lake Champlain during the French and Indian War. 7. A View of Niagara Fort, taken by Sir William Johnson, on the 25th of July 1759. Drawn on the Spot in 1758. (London), September 1759. Engraving. Excised from the Royal Magazine. View of the highly strategic fort at the juncture of Lake Ontario and the Niagara River, taken by the British during the French and Indian War on July 25, 1759 under the leadership of William Johnson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 119 - [Colonial America] Church, Benjamin. A Rare Autograph Document, Signed by Benjamin Church, America's First Ranger
[Colonial America] Church, Benjamin. A Rare Autograph Document, Signed by Benjamin Church, America's First Ranger (Likely Little Compton, Rhode Island), October 17, 1709. Single sheet, 5 7/8 x 3 5/8 in. (149 x 92 mm). Autograph document in 18 lines, signed by Benjamin Church, reads in part: "Hanna Woodary on herself apprd this 17 day of October 1709...that Jonathan...hisself a Jun. was the father of afsd child that she is now...with and that it was begot sum time in the beginning of February last past and that he had to...with her at that time and no other...on oth. as aforesaid before me Benjamin Church Just."; ten-line autograph fragment in Church's hand on verso and crossed out. Creasing from old folds, separations along same; wear along edges; soiling to recto and verso. Benjamin Church (1639–1718), recognized as America's first ranger, was born in Plymouth Colony. He became an early settler of present-day Little Compton, Rhode Island, where he established friendly ties with the local Sakonnet tribe. During King Philip's War (1675-78), Church commanded a force of English colonists and Native American allies against Sachem Metacom (known to the English as King Philip) and his warriors, who were devastating frontier settlements in New England. Breaking from traditional European tactics, Church adopted indigenous strategies to create a small, highly mobile unit composed of both English and Native soldiers. This mixed force specialized in targeting enemy leadership. In a decisive surprise attack, Church's men cornered Metacom, leading to the Sachem's death and effectively ending the war. Church's military service continued after the conflict, as he fought for the English in both King William's War and Queen Anne's War. He dedicated himself to training soldiers in the "ranger" style of warfare he had learned from Native tribes, cementing his legacy as one of the most influential military leaders of the colonial era. His innovative tactics were later refined by Ranger Robert Rogers during the French and Indian War and remained a component of American military strategy during the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 120 - [Colonial America] [Hunter, Robert] A Scarce Summary of Legal Fees Present in the Colonies of New York and New Jersey, from the Press of the First Printer of New York
[Colonial America] [Hunter, Robert] A Scarce Summary of Legal Fees Present in the Colonies of New York and New Jersey, from the Press of the First Printer of New York An Ordinance For Regulating & Establishing Fees (New York: William Bradford), 1710. First edition. 4to. 20 pp. Disbound. Signed in type by colonial governor R(obert). Hunter. Scattered toning; some wear to extremities; final leaf loose. ESTC W42635; Evans 1482 William Bradford (1663-1752) began his printing career in London before emigrating to the colonies in 1685, where he established the first printing press in Pennsylvania that year and the first in New York eight years later. A prolific printer of almanacs, newspapers, books, pamphlets, broadsides, and legal notices, in 1689 Bradford was hired to print William Penn's first charter of Pennsylvania, an incident which resulted in official reprimand from Governor John Blackwell. A year later Bradford partnered with German paper maker William Rittenhouse to establish the first paper mill in North America. For nearly two decades, Bradford's was the only operating paper mill in the country. In 1709, he printed the very first example of paper currency for the province of New York. Bradford's grandson, also named William, was a well-known printer and soldier during the Revolutionary period. In December 1742 he established The Pennsylvania Journal, later famous for featuring numerous essays and letters by Thomas Paine. In 1774 he was named the official printer for the first Continental Congress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 121 - [Colonial America] One of the Earliest Works Printed in Connecticut: "Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England"
[Colonial America] One of the Earliest Works Printed in Connecticut: "Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England" Acts and Laws, Of His Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England New-London: Re-printed and Sold by Timothy Green, 1715-ca. 1743. Mixed edition. 4to. (xii, "The Table"), (ii), 376 pp. Full modern brown calf, red and black leather spine labels, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; scattered spotting, toning, and soiling. A large and consecutive run of early colonial Connecticut laws. The 1715 imprint is very rare, and is among the earliest printed works in Connecticut. According to RBH, this is only the third copy of early colonial laws, with the 1715 imprint, to come to auction in the past 30-plus years. Comprising: Table: ESTC W28023 (variant); 1715, first edition: ESTC W35238, Evans 1738 (without table of contents or Charter); 1716, first edition: ESTC W7110, Evans 1808; 1716, first edition: ESTC W7112, Evans 1809; 1717, first edition: ESTC W7113, Evans 1876; 1717: ESTC W7122, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1718: ESTC W7124, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1718, first edition: ESTC W7141, Evans 1951; 1719: ESTC W7125, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1719, first edition: ESTC W7118, Evans 2021; 1720, first edition: ESTC W7142, Evans 2107; 1720: ESTC W7128, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1727-33); 1721: ESTC W7130, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1721: ESTC W7131, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1722: ESTC W7132, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1733-43); 1722: ESTC W7133, Not in Evans (presumed reprint, ca. 1726-33); 1723, first edition: W7146, Evans 2423; 1723, first edition: ESTC W7147, Evans 2424; 1724: ESTC W7137, Not in Evans (reprint, ca. 1728-33); 1724, first edition: ESTC W7121, Evans 2516; 1725, first edition: ESTC W7150, Evans 2621; 1725, first edition: Evans 2622, Not in ESTC; 1726, first edition: Evans 2738, Not in ESTC; 1726, first edition: Evans 2739, Not in ESTC; 1727, first edition: Evans 2856, Not in ESTC; 1727, first edition: ESTC W7154, Evans 2857; 1728, first edition: Evans 3012, Not in ESTC; 1728, first edition: ESTC W7156, Evans 3013; 1729, first edition: ESTC W7157, Evans 3150; ESTC W7271, Evans 3151; 1730, first edition: Evans 3264, Not in ESTC. Trumbull 503 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 122 - [Colonial America] An Important Work of Connecticut History, Printed by the Pioneering Colonial Printer Timothy Green
[Colonial America] An Important Work of Connecticut History, Printed by the Pioneering Colonial Printer Timothy Green The Charter Granted by his Majes(ty) King Charles (II.) To the Governour & Company of the English Colony of Connecticut in New-England... New-London: Printed and Sold by Timothy Green, 1718. First edition. 4to. (ii), 6 pp. Full modern brown calf, red and black leather spine labels, stamped in gilt; portions in upper right of title-page excised, touching some letters, edges of same with scattered wear; light wear along text leave edges. Evans 1952; ESTC W3774; Sabin 15726; Streeter Sale 669; Trumbull 453 An important work of Connecticut history, printed by the pioneering colonial printer Timothy Green. Green was the son of Samuel Green, one of the earliest printers in British North America, who operated the former press of his father at Harvard's Indian College--the first printing press established in what would become the United States devoted in part to indigenous-language printing. In 1713, Timothy Green was appointed official printer to the Colony of Connecticut and relocated the family press to New London, where he became responsible for printing many of the colony's laws, proclamations, sermons, and foundational historical texts. Very rare, according to RBH only two other copies of this first edition have come to auction since 1915 (one bound in session laws, in 2015, and the Streeter-Reese copy, in 2022 and 1967). ESTC records only 11 copies (some bound with session laws). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 123 - [Colonial America] Colonial Massachusetts Document Related to a Case of Fornication, Levied Against an Unmarried Woman Named Elizabeth Wilcox
[Colonial America] Colonial Massachusetts Document Related to a Case of Fornication, Levied Against an Unmarried Woman Named Elizabeth Wilcox Partially-Printed Document, signed Dartmouth, August 5, 1729. One sheet, 12 1/2 x 8 in. (317 x 203 mm). Partially-printed document, signed by Bristol County Justice of the Peace Silvester Richmond, being a writ of recognizance, certifying the release of Elizabeth Wilcox, who "Confessed that she is Guilty of fornication & she was begott with Child by Ebenezer Briggs of Dartmouth..." Creasing from old folds; scattered toning and stains. Fornication, or the act of nonmarital sex, was enacted as a crime in Massachusetts in 1692, at the beginning of the Salem Witch Trials. Throughout much of the 18th century, the law was prosecuted almost exclusively against women, indictments for men hardly ever being charged. Punishments could include fines, flogging, and even public shame by being sentenced to the pillory. The criminal charge of fornication was officially repealed by the Governor of Massachusetts in 2018, although a conviction of it had not occurred since the mid-twentieth century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 124 - [Colonial America]
The King of England Declares War Against Spain, Igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear
[Colonial America] The King of England Declares War Against Spain, Igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear His Majesty's Declaration of War against the King of Spain London: Printed by John Baskett, 1739. Printed broadside, 20 1/2 x 16 1/2 in. (521 x 419 mm). Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, 4 1/4 in. closed tear along lower central vertical fold; small worming in each corner from when folded; scattered minor edge-wear. ESTC T36245 The King of England declares war against Spain, igniting the War of Jenkins' Ear. Rooted in trade disputes and colonial ambitions in the Caribbean and North America, George II cites the "unjust Seizures...and Depredations carried on for several Years in the West Indies" by Spanish vessels, and provides an extensive and detailed list of the grievances that led to his commencement of hostilities. The War of Jenkins' Ear began in October 1739 and eventually merged with the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48, known as King George's War in North America). It received its name after an incident involving English smuggler Robert Jenkins, who alleged in 1738 before the House of Commons that marauding Spaniards had cut off his ear in 1731 off the coast of Florida (according to some accounts he brought the preserved ear along with him for display). The altercation was used as propaganda by those opposed to Prime Minister Robert Walpole's government, and helped fan the flames of public anger over Spanish actions and pushed the nation into conflict. Although the English saw initial success, including Admiral Edward Vernon's capture of Puerto Bello, subsequent campaigns, including the 1741 attempt to take Cartagena were met with disaster. Minor skirmishes were met throughout the region, including in North America, such as James Edward Oglethorpe's failed siege at St. Augustine in 1740, and the Spanish's failed attack on Georgia in 1742. With the merger into the larger War of Austrian Succession, the conflict shifted attention toward Europe, and ended with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748. Rare. RBH locates only one other copy at auction, in 2011. ESTC locates nine copies, including only three in the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 125 - [Colonial America] An Andrew Bradford-Printed Power of Attorney, for a Suit Against William Bladwell, Commander of the Swift, a Man of War Stationed in North Carolina
[Colonial America] An Andrew Bradford-Printed Power of Attorney, for a Suit Against William Bladwell, Commander of the Swift, a Man of War Stationed in North Carolina Partially-Printed Document Philadelphia: Andrew Bradford, June 5, 1742. Single sheet, 12 1/2 x 7 3/4 in. (317 x 197 mm). Partially-printed document, accomplished in manuscript, and signed by mariner Robert Georges of Philadelphia, being a power of attorney granting John Shewbart authority to collect money, etc. from a William Bladwell, commander of the man of war Swift, in North Carolina. Chipped with losses near the upper corner margin, not affecting text, tiny chip to the lower margin, just below the imprint, and a horizontal crease at the center. Andrew Bradford was the son of William Bradford, the first printer in Pennsylvania. After his father resettled in New York in 1692, Andrew returned to Philadelphia in 1712 and opened his own print shop, likely making him the only printer in the Pennsylvania colony until competition emerged in 1728. Andrew issued the first newspaper in Pennsylvania and the Middle Colonies, the American Weekly Mercury, which began on December 22, 1719. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 126 - [Colonial America]
Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania Province, James Hamilton, Grants Clemency to a Butter Thief, 1761
[Colonial America] Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania Province, James Hamilton, Grants Clemency to a Butter Thief, 1761 Manuscript Document, signed Easton, Pennsylvania, March 19, 1761. Bifolium, 12 3/8 x 7 5/8 in. (314 x 194 mm). Manuscript document, being a petition for clemency for a Peter Wannamacker of Northampton County, signed by Wannamacker with his mark ("X"), as well as four justices of the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace of Northampton (Lewis Klotz, Jacob Arndt, Aaron Dupui, and Conrad Hess); inscribed, signed, and dated (April 3, 1761) at bottom by Lieutenant Governor of the Province of Pennsylvania, James Hamilton, granting Wannamacker clemency. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, two small open tears at center folds; scattered light soiling. Peter Wannamaker was found guilty on March 17, 1761 of stealing 40 pounds of butter belonging to Jacob Haak, and was sentenced to receive 12 lashes and to restore the stolen butter or compensate the owner for the value thereof. A petition was drawn up by Wannamaker's family (not present), attesting to his character, which was submitted to the Northampton Justices of the Peace, and then sent to Lieutenant Governor of the Province, James Hamilton, which he approved. James Hamilton (1710-83) served two terms as deputy governor of Pennsylvania, from 1748-54, and from 1759-63. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly from 1735-40, and as mayor of Philadelphia from 1745-47. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 127 - [Colonial America] Manuscript Pay Order for Transporting a Transient Woman to New London, Connecticut
[Colonial America] Manuscript Pay Order for Transporting a Transient Woman to New London, Connecticut Killingworth, Connecticut, March 3, 1765. Single oblong sheet, 2 3/4 x 8 1/4 in. (70 x 209 mm). Manuscript pay order, signed by Justice of the Peace Elnathan Stevens, requesting Connecticut Treasurer Joseph Talcott pay Killingworth Constable Nathan Griswold 11 shilling and two pence for "Transporting a Trancient (sic) woman calld. Marcy Siskil last February Sent here by a Ebz. Hill of Gilford (sic) in order to be sent to New London & by order of yr. subscribers to yr next Constable at Saybrook..." Docketed on verso, signed on same by John Pierson. Creasing from old folds. A "transient woman" is an archaic term which was particularly common during the 18th and 19th centuries; it generally refers to women suspected or convicted of prostitution. In colonial America prostitution was relatively rare, as its practice was usually confined to port cities. Philadelphia in particular was notorious for prostitution in its "Hell Town" district, today considered to be America's first red-light district. During this period it was common for authorities in smaller communities to simply transport women suspected of prostitution to other towns, being of the mind that prosecuting them in a smaller town would be a waste of local resources. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 128 - [Colonial Americana] Partially-Printed Invitation From the First Governor of the Leeward Islands, West Indies, to a Philadelphia Quaker
[Colonial Americana] Partially-Printed Invitation From the First Governor of the Leeward Islands, West Indies, to a Philadelphia Quaker Partially-Printed Invitation Philadelphia, ca. 1760s-70s. Oblong card, given to Mr. Pattison Hartshorne of Philadelphia, likely during an official visit from Woodley. Manuscript notations on verso. 2 1/2 x 3 11/16 in. (63 x 94 mm). Toned. William Woodley (1728-1793) was appointed Governor of the Leeward Islands in the West Indies, and first served in that role from 1766 to 1771, then again from 1791 until his death. His office covered a wide range of governance issues. His formal instructions of 1767 addressed matters including the council, legislation, trade, finance, currency, customs, religion, fortification, piracy, and the administration of justice across St. Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, Antigua, Barbuda, and Anguilla. Pattinson Hartshorne (1745-1828) was a Philadelphia Quaker merchant, son of Hugh and Hannah Hartshorne, and husband of Susannah Waln. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 129 - [Colonial America] Allen, Andrew. Autograph Legal Document Related to a Money Counterfeiter
[Colonial America] Allen, Andrew. Autograph Legal Document Related to a Money Counterfeiter Northampton County, Pennsylvania, July 11, 1770. Single sheet, approximately 9 1/4 x 8 1/4 in. (235 x 209 mm) (sight). Manuscript legal document, in the hand of Provincial Attorney General Andrew Allen, being an indictment against Salisbury Township yeoman Jacob Johe, for "contriving and fraudulently
Lot: 130 - [Comics] A Payment Receipt for American Comic Book Writer Jerry Siegel for the Creation of Three Issues of Superman
[Comics] A Payment Receipt for American Comic Book Writer Jerry Siegel for the Creation of Three Issues of Superman Partially-Printed Payment Receipt No place, May 1941. Single oblong sheet, 4 7/8 x 7 1/4 in. (124 x 184 mm). Partially-printed receipt ("Payments to Artists") for Jerry Siegel for three issues of the Superman comic book, accomplished in pencil and pen: "Superman (Defense) / Superman (Archer) / Superman (Light)", each listed in manuscript as 13 pp.; price column left blank. Residue from now removed paperclip at top. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman in the early 1930s while still high school students in Cleveland, Ohio. Influenced by pulp science fiction, newspaper adventure strips, and the hardships of the Great Depression, the pair conceived Superman as a heroic champion of the oppressed endowed with extraordinary strength and moral clarity. After years of rejection, the character made his first appearance in Action Comics No. 1 in June 1938, marking the beginning of the modern superhero genre and the rise of the American comic book industry. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 131 - [Constitution] Printing of the Proposed Constitution in the Journals of Congress, Uncut and in Original Boards, 1787
[Constitution] Printing of the Proposed Constitution in the Journals of Congress, Uncut and in Original Boards, 1787 (Journal of the United States in Congress Assembled: Containing the Proceedings From the Sixth Day of November, 1786, to the Fifth Day of November, 1787...Published by Order of Congress) (New-York, 1787). Vol. XII. First edition. 8vo. (3)-255, (1), (9) pp.; lacking title-page. Original paper-covered boards, rebacked, contemporary manuscript on lower front board; all edges untrimmed; text unopened; light spotting to text. Evans 20772 Containing the printing of the proposed Constitution, on pp. 149-163, followed by the Constitutional Convention's resolutions and George Washington's letter to Congress, as well as Congress's resolutions submitting the proposed charter to the states (pp. 163-166). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 132 - [Constitution] Full-Printing of the United States Constitution in Isaiah Thomas' Almanack, 1787
[Constitution] Full-Printing of the United States Constitution in Isaiah Thomas' Almanack, 1787 Thomas's Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode-Island, New-Hampshire & Vermont Almanack, With an Ephemeris, for the Year of Our Lord 1788... Worcester, (Massachusetts): Isaiah Thomas, (1787). 12mo. Unpaginated (24 leaves). Stab-sewn gatherings; thread likely sometime renewed. Dampstaining; scattered chipping and short closed tears along edges. Drake 3400 Includes a full, five-page, printing of the Constitution, headed, ''Proceedings of the Federal Convention", as well as George Washington's transmittal letter to Congress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 133 - [Constitution]
Rare First Edition of this Pamphlet Published in Support of the Constitution's Ratification, Containing One of the Earliest Printings of the Proposed Federal Charter
[Constitution] Rare First Edition of this Pamphlet Published in Support of the Constitution's Ratification, Containing One of the Earliest Printings of the Proposed Federal Charter Debates of the Convention, of the State of Pennsylvania, on the Constitution, Proposed for the Government of the United States...Taken accurately in Short-Hand, by Thomas Lloyd Philadelphia: Printed by Joseph
Lot: 134 - [Constitution] [Hamilton, Alexander] Very Rare First Edition of the Debates of the New York Ratifying Convention, Featuring the First Appearance of Alexander Hamilton's Speeches in Favor of the Adoption of the United States Constitution
[Constitution] [Hamilton, Alexander] Very Rare First Edition of the Debates of the New York Ratifying Convention, Featuring the First Appearance of Alexander Hamilton's Speeches in Favor of the Adoption of the United States Constitution The Debates and Proceedings of the Convention of the State of New-York, Assembled at Poughkeepsie, on the 17th June, 1788. To deliberate and decide on the Form of Federal Government recommended by the General Convention at Philadelphia, on the 17th September, 1787... New-York: Printed and Sold by Francis Childs, 1788. First edition. 12mo. (ii), 144 pp. Full modern buckram, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt; speckled edges; two ink stamps of the Library of the New York Law Institute on title-page, same ink stamp on pp. (i) and recto of rear blank; ownership inscription of Gardiner Baker on title-page ("Gardiner Baker Museum March 27th 1795"); contemporary manuscript corrections and notations, on pp. 115, 143, and 144; sheets toned; scattered foxing and dampstaining. Evans 21310; ESTC W4576; Ford 129; Sabin 53634; Streeter Sale 1054 Based on short-hand notes taken by the printer and publisher, Francis Childs. Despite being outnumbered 47-20, the Federalist faction of the New York convention, led by Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, managed through impressive oratorical skill to overcome the arguments of their Anti-Federalist colleagues, and win favor of the charter in the closest margin of any state, 30-27. Very rare to auction, this is only the fourth copy offered since the Streeter Sale in 1967. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 135 - [Constitution] A Scarce and Early English Printing of the United States Constitution in The New Annual Register, 1788
[Constitution] A Scarce and Early English Printing of the United States Constitution in The New Annual Register, 1788 London: Printed for G.G. J. and J. Robinson, 1788. Three parts in one volume. First edition. 8vo. (ii), ii, (iv), xxviii, 184, 159, (1), 299 pp. Full contemporary tree calf, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt, joints worn, extremities rubbed, loss at head of spine; scattered minor spotting. ESTC N20035 A scarce and early English printing of the United States Constitution, on pp. 99-109. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 136 - [Crime & Punishment] Group of 3 CDVs of a Murderer, His Victim, and the Detective who Brought Him to Justice
[Crime & Punishment] Group of 3 CDVs of a Murderer, His Victim, and the Detective who Brought Him to Justice Lisbon, New Hampshire: W.B. Gleason, ca. 1867. Group of three cartes de visite, of George Maxwell, Samuel Mills, and Moses Sargent; each with printed captions (Maxwell on recto, Mills and Sargent on verso). Scattered soiling. A group of three cartes de visite showing murder victim George Maxwell, his murderer Samuel Mills, and the detective that brought him to justice, Moses Sargent. Samuel Mills murdered George Maxwell in Maxwell's Franconia, New Hampshire home the night of December 8, 1866, purportedly after attempting to seek shelter. Mills then stole Maxwell's horse, and fled first to Montreal and then elsewhere in Canada. New Hampshire authorities hired Boston private detective Moses Sargent to track down the assailant, who traced him to Canada and then proceeded to trail him through the provinces. Eventually, on January 20, 1867, Sargent arrested Mills in Galena, Illinois and returned him to New Hampshire where he stood trial. In April of 1867 he was found guilty of murder in Haverhill, and sentenced to death. On May 6, 1868, in the last public hanging in New Hampshire, Mills was executed before a crowd of thousands. His last words were "Samuel Mills is guilty of this crime, and I have made my peace with God..." Following mounting criticism of the public practice of execution, within a year the New Hampshire legislature passed a law mandating that they be carried out only within prison walls, resulting in Mills being the last convicted felon in the state to be publicly executed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 137 - [Crime & Punishment] Group of 17 Items Related to Crime and Punishment
[Crime & Punishment] Group of 17 Items Related to Crime and Punishment Locations and dates vary. Comprising 11 press photographs and six publications, etc., relating to famous crimes and murderers, etc. Images include an 1895 lynching of four men in Yreka, California; a 1936 hanging in Kentucky; murderers and criminals, such as Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Charles Manson, Susan "Sexy" Sadie, and more. Publications including two issues of The Illustrated American, with descriptions of the Lizzie Borden murder trial; The Sham-Robbery Committed by Elijah Putnam Goodridge (Concord, New Hampshire, 1819; 12mo); an issue of The Days Doings, with a description of the trial of Edward S. Stokes; an issue of The Post Enquirer (Oakland, November 27, 1933), reporting on the lynching of two men; one printed pass to witness an execution (New Mexico, June 6, 1916). Condition varies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 138 - [Crockett, Davy] The First American Comic Book: Group of 2 Items Related to Davy Crockett, Including Likely the First Mention of Him in an American Magazine
[Crockett, Davy] The First American Comic Book: Group of 2 Items Related to Davy Crockett, Including Likely the First Mention of Him in an American Magazine Galaxy of Comicalities Philadelphia: Printed by Lesher & Shelly, Wednesday, November 27, 1833. Vol. 1, No. 9. 8vo. pp. (65)-72. Disbound; spine repaired; scattered soiling. Likely the first mention of Davy Crockett in an American magazine, featuring a review of, and an excerpt from, Sketches and eccentricities of Col. David Crockett, of the West Tennessee--an unauthorized biography of Crockett, whose authorship has not been definitively determined, and from which some of the frontiersman's lasting legends originated. The Galaxy of Comicalities was published in Philadelphia from 1833-34. Each issue profusely illustrated with woodcuts, it is considered to be the first American comic book. The present issue Together with: The Albany Journal New York: Hoffman & White, Friday, May 2, 1834. Volume IV, Number 428. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Edited by Thurlow Weed. Creasing from old folds, some separations and open tears along same; scattered foxing.. Old ownership signature in right margin of front-page. Printed on the second page is an excerpt from a speech given by Crockett at the Philadelphia Exchange, on May 1, 1834, criticizing President Andrew Jackson and his administration: "seven months ago this was the most flourishing country in the world. Look at it now; and what do you see? You behold your commerce suspended; your laborers wandering about for employment; your mechanics starving; and above all, you see the best currency in the world deranged!...what is all this for? To gratify the will of a superannuated old man!! A man whose popularity, like the lightning of heaven, blasts and withers all that comes within its influence. His leading object, in all the mischief he has done, has been to destroy the best monied institution on earth..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 139 - [Curiosa] Group of 6 Items Related to Magic, Circuses, Minstrels, and Sideshows
[Curiosa] Group of 6 Items Related to Magic, Circuses, Minstrels, and Sideshows 1. Printed Broadside for Christy's Minstrel Show Philadelphia: U.S. Job Print, 1860. Tall printed broadside, for the "First Night of the Brief Season of Geo. Christy's Minstrels. Under the Immediate Personal Supervision of George Christy! ... Mammoth Company! ..." Creasing from old folds, largely separated along central horizontal fold, smaller separations along other folds; toned; faint dampstaining along edges; open tear in lower bottom left. 23 5/8 x 9 1/2 in. (600 x 241 mm). 2. Harper's Weekly. A Journal of Civilization New York, Saturday, February 21, 1863. Vol. VII, No. 321. Folio. pp. (113)-128. Disbound; Scattered toning and spotting. With an engraved portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) and his wife on the front page, after the photograph by Mathew Brady, and with an article about them on the second page. General Tom Thumb (1838-83) was an American showman with dwarfism and the first major attraction promoted by P.T. Barnum. 3. Carte de visite of Millie-Crissie, the Two-Headed Girl St. Louis, Missouri: J.H. Fitzgibbon, (ca. 1870). Carte de visite on captioned mount, 4 x 2 1/2 in. (102 x 63 mm). Spotting and soiling along mount edges. Millie and Christine were born in Whiteville, North Carolina on July 11, 1851, to Jacob and Monemia McKoy, who were enslaved to Jabez McKay. Various enslavers and managers exhibited the twins nationally and internationally, and in 1870, the sisters traveled and performed throughout the Midwest. 4. Tall Printed Broadside for the 5th Annual Tour of B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show No place, ca. 1877. Tall printed broadside for B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show, 28 x 7 in. (711 x 178 mm). With a wood engraved portrait of Bamber at top and of Hermes at center. Old fold at center; 2 3/4 in. closed tear in upper left edge. Tall printed broadside for the 5th Annual Tour of B.A. Bamber's Great Dime Show, featuring exhibitions on "Grand Stereoptical Dissolving Views", including "scenes in Many Lands From Greenland's Icy Mount, to India's Coral Strand", as well "The Planetarium," "Natural Scenery," "The Ill-Fated Ship," "The Highland Lover's Courtship for Marriage", etc. 5. Printed Broadside for a Magic Show Minneapolis, Minnesota: Sutherland Opera House, July 1911. Printed broadside, 13 x 5 3/4 in. (330 x 146 mm). Mounted to card, and in mat. Advertising the magic show for "The Peerless Magician" Warrington Jones, and F. Littlefield Cobb. 6. Printed Handbill for a Harry Kellar Magic Show Madison, Wisconsin: Fuller Opera House, January 24, (1902). Printed handbill program, 8 5/8 x 4 1/4 in. (219 x 108 mm). Toned. Printed program for famed globe-trotting American magician Harry Kellar's (1849-1922) January 24, 1902 magic show at the Fuller Opera House in Madison, Wisconsin. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 140 - [Curiosa] Indian Medicine Show Co. "Come, Laugh With Us" Poster
[Curiosa] Indian Medicine Show Co. "Come, Laugh With Us" Poster Cincinnati, Ohio: Russell-Morgan Print, The U.S. Printing Co., (ca. late 1890s-early 1900s). Color lithographed poster; comprised of two conjoined sheets. Unevenly toned; wear and losses along edges; top edges worn; repaired horizontal separation traversing upper edge, other repairs at same; creasing from old folds. A rare example of this poster advertising a traveling Indian Medicine Show. We cannot locate another example of this fragile survival. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 141 - [Cycling] A Photo-Finish: Possibly the Earliest Extant American Photo Finish Race Image and Among the Earliest Action Sport Photos
[Cycling] A Photo-Finish: Possibly the Earliest Extant American Photo Finish Race Image and Among the Earliest Action Sport Photos Rowe on Columbia Racer Defeating Temple Hartford, Connecticut: F.O. Tucker, 1888. Albumen print, mounted to captioned card, "Finish of One Mile Professional America's Championship Race, Hartford, Sep. 13, 1888. Instantaneous Photograph / Rowe on Columbia Racer
Lot: 142 - [Declaration of Independence] The Important and Increasingly Rare Robert Aitken Issue of the Journals of Congress for the Pivotal Year of 1776, Containing an Early and Complete Printing of the Declaration of Independence, 1777
[Declaration of Independence] The Important and Increasingly Rare Robert Aitken Issue of the Journals of Congress for the Pivotal Year of 1776, Containing an Early and Complete Printing of the Declaration of Independence, 1777 Journals of Congress. Containing the Proceedings In the Year, 1776 Philadelphia: Printed and Sold by R. Aitken, 1777. Volume II. First edition, first issue. 8vo. (ii),
Lot: 143 - [Declaration of Independence] Pratt, Luther. Connecticut Republican Magazine. Number 1, Volume 1, 1802
[Declaration of Independence] Pratt, Luther. Connecticut Republican Magazine. Number 1, Volume 1, 1802 Suffield,(Connecticut), 1802. 8vo. Original printed wrappers, soiled and worn; uncut; foxing and soiling. Includes a printing of the Declaration of Independence. Rare: We trace only two copies that have appeared at auction in the past century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 144 - [Declaration of Independence] The First Scottish Printing of the Declaration of Independence
[Declaration of Independence] The First Scottish Printing of the Declaration of Independence The Edinburgh Advertiser Edinburgh: Printed by and for James Donaldson, From Friday August 16, to Tuesday August 20, 1776. Vol. XXVI, No. 1319. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (113)-120. Disbound. Not in Matyas "General Howe having in his last dispatches mentioned that the Continental Congress had declared the united colonies free and independent states, the following is a copy of the declaration by the representatives of the united states of America, in General Congress assembled, July 4. When in the course of human events..." The first printing of the Declaration of Independence in Scotland, fully printed on pp. 116-117, six weeks after its adoption by the American Congress. On August 10, news of the Declaration of Independence reached London, and was first printed in newspapers there by August 16. From there, news traveled north, with the present printing believed to be the first in Scotland, which was then closely followed by printings in The Caledonian Mercury and in The Scots Magazine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 145 - [Declaration of Independence] Rare Issue of the Pennsylvania Evening Post Reporting the Second Reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York City
[Declaration of Independence] Rare Issue of the Pennsylvania Evening Post Reporting the Second Reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York City The Pennsylvania Evening Post Philadelphia: Printed by Benjamin Towne, July 23, 1776. Vol. II, Num. 235, Folio. 4 pp. Printed newspaper in two columns. Disbound. Featuring a report on the second reading of the Declaration of Independence in New York: In full: "Thursday last the Declaration of the Independancy of the United States of America was published at the Courthouse; where a number of people, true friends to the rights and liberties of this country, attended, and signified their approbation to it by loud acclamations. After which the coat of arms of his Majesty George the III. was torn to pieces and burnt in the presence of spectators..." Scattered foxing and pencil marginalia. Lot also includes an 8 1/2 x 5 in. (216 x 127 mm) engraved portrait of John Hancock. By order of General George Washington, the Declaration was first read publicly in New York on July 9, 1776. The ensuing fervor of soldiers and civilians lead to the destruction of an equestrian statue of George III on Bowling Green. On July 18, following a resolution passed by the New York City Committee, the Declaration was read again on the steps of City Hall. After being met with thunderous applause, spectators from the crowd removed the King's coat of arms from the legislative chamber, and burnt it in celebration. An ensuing mob scoured the city destroying similar insignias of Royal authority. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 146 - [Declaration of Independence] One of the Earliest Printed Announcements of American Independence, in the Exceedingly Rare Original Wrappers, 1776
[Declaration of Independence] One of the Earliest Printed Announcements of American Independence, in the Exceedingly Rare Original Wrappers, 1776 The Pennsylvania Magazine: Or, American Monthly Museum for June 1776 Philadelphia: Printed by R. Aitken, 1776. Number VI, Volume II. First edition. 8vo. (iv), 253-296 pp. Manuscript on front wrapper ("Mr Ebenezer Hazard / N.C. Co."). Edited by Thomas Paine. Illustrated with one folding map. Original limp printed wrappers, original thread intact, rear wrapper detached, front wrapper nearly detached, scattered foxing, wear along edges; all edges untrimmed; sheets moderately toned; wear along edges. Sabin 60346 Among the earliest of any type of publication to announce American independence. Although dated June 1776, the monthly issues were traditionally published the first Wednesday of the following month, which would have been on July 3. Due to a temporary paper shortage ("Our customers will excuse us, though the day of publication be sometimes delayed: The great difficulty we have procuring printing paper, renders it impossible for us to publish always on the first Wednesday of the month.", as printed in the apologia within), the printing was delayed until no later than July 4 or 5, allowing enough time to add at the end of the "Monthly Intelligence" section the important Congressional announcement, that on, "July 2. This day the Hon. Continental Congress declared the UNITED COLONIES FREE AND INDEPENDENT STATES." In the column immediately preceding the above news, the text of Pennsylvania’s own declaration of independence reads, in part: “Whereas George the Third... in violation of the principles of the British constitution, and of the laws of justice and humanity... We the DEPUTIES of the people of Pennsylvania, assembled in FULL Provisional Conference for forming a plan for the executing the resolve of Congress of the 15th of May last, for suppressing all authority in this province derived from the crown of Great-Britain, and for establishing a government upon the authority of the people only, DO in this public manner... UNANIMOUSLY declare our willingness to concur in a vote of the Congress declaring the United Colonies free and independent STATES....” This periodical is preceded by four other printed announcements: Pennsylvania Evening Post, July 2; Die Germantowner Zeitung, July 3; Pennsylvania Journal, July 3; Pennsylvania Gazette, July 3. Rare to auction, especially in the original wrappers. According to RBH, only three other copies have come to auction since the Laird Park sale in 2000. Lot includes an engraved portrait of John Hancock, and engraved print of the Declaration after John Trumbull. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 147 - [Early American Museum] A Very Early Philadelphia Museum Trade Card for Bowen's Exhibition of Wax-Work and Paintings
[Early American Museum] A Very Early Philadelphia Museum Trade Card for Bowen's Exhibition of Wax-Work and Paintings Philadelphia, ca. 1792-93. Printed card, 2 1/2 x 3 3/4 in. (63 x 95 mm). Ornamental letterpress border (Reilly 585, 652, and 784). Two-inch vertical closed tear in top right side; scattered wear along edges; toned and spotted. A very early museum promotional card, advertising pioneering American museum proprietor and showman Daniel Bowen's (1760-1856) Philadelphia exhibition of wax-works and paintings. Born in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Bowen served in the Revolutionary War under Captain Silas Talbot, and was captured by the British while serving aboard the privateer General Washington. After his release and the conclusion of the war, Bowen was inspired by the pioneering waxworks of Patience Wright, and began a career as a museum proprietor, showman, and artist. He acquired the Wright family's collection of figures and began touring the Atlantic coast in the late 1780s, exhibiting wax figures of prominent Americans and allegorical scenes. In the fall of 1792, Bowen opened a museum at No. 9 Eighth Street in Philadelphia, located in the former home of English painter Robert Edge Pine. A friend of fellow Philadelphia museum owner Charles Willson Peale, Bowen's establishment advertised over 100 paintings (many by Pine) and 30 wax figures depicting "principal characters in America," including George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and John Hancock. He also sold his own sculpted wax likenesses of President Washington. Contemporary newspapers indicate that this Philadelphia exhibition closed in late 1793, likely so Bowen could concentrate on his new venture, the Columbian Museum in Boston, his most well-known endeavor. This institution cemented his reputation as one of America's earliest leading museum proprietors. Expanding the format of his Philadelphia show, the Columbian Museum eventually featured a vast array of curiosities and natural specimens, as well as hosting lectures, musical and dramatic performances, and circus-like acts. After enduring a series of fires and relocations, Bowen sold his interest in the museum in 1815 and retired. Rare. While Evans lists two broadsides advertising Bowen's Columbian Museum, and ESTC locates one broadside for this Philadelphia exhibition, at Yale, neither (nor OCLC) locate promotional cards like the present example. Furthermore, according to RBH, we cannot locate other copies ever having been sold or offered at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 148 - [Early American Trades] A Full Front-Page Ad by an 18th-century American Bookseller for a "Large and Elegant Collection of Books"
[Early American Trades] A Full Front-Page Ad by an 18th-century American Bookseller for a "Large and Elegant Collection of Books" The Connecticut Gazette; and the Universal Intelligencer New-London: Printed by Timothy Green, Friday, July 1, 1785. Vol. XXII, Numb. 1129. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds, sello tape repairs to same; scattered soiling; unevenly toned; wear along edges. With a large front-page ad for Geary, Champion, and Co., of Norwich Landing, for a "large and elegant Collection of Books", including titles on divinity, surgery, medicine, philosophy, literature, etc. Followed by a list of various medicines and drugs also sold by them, including opium, as well as other dry goods, such as hats, shoes, and hard wares. The second page reports a resolution passed by the Confederation Congress for the paying of invalid officers and soldiers from the Revolutionary War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 149 - [Early American Trades] Early Printed Boston Furrier Trade Card
[Early American Trades] Early Printed Boston Furrier Trade Card Boston, Massachusetts, ca. 1800-10. Single oblong sheet, 3 3/4 x 5 in. (95 x 127 mm). Wood-engraved and letterpress trade card for furrier Samuel Crease. Inscribed and notated by Crease on verso (possibly a receipt). Creasing from old folds; lightly worn. An early trade card for a Boston furrier and leather dresser. Samuel Crease (1765-1816) operated a store at No. 74 Newbury Street, offering furs, muffs, tippets, trimmings, caps, gloves, and more, while also accepting furs for cash. Crease first appears in the Boston city directory in 1798 at No. 63 Newbury St., and then at the above address from 1800-1810. By 1813 he relocated to Jarvis Row, and does not appear listed in subsequent directories. According to The Ancestors, Kin and Descendants of John Warden and Narcissa (Davis) Warden, His Wife (1901), Crease was successful in business, but lost most of his property due to the Embargo Act of 1807. Crease's second son, also named Samuel, likewise became a furrier and leather dresser, before his death in 1822 at the age of 31. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 150 - [Early American Trades] Rare Early Baltimore Druggist's Broadside
[Early American Trades] Rare Early Baltimore Druggist's Broadside Baltimore: Printed by G. Dobbin & Murphy, May 1, 1807. Printed broadside, 10 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (267 x 216 mm). Toned and soiled; old glue and paper residue from when removed from album; old manuscript on verso. An early nineteenth century broadside for a Baltimore druggist, advertising the "Drug and Chemical Business" of William P. Mathews. Mathews informs his customers that, "He will be constantly supplied with a large and general assortment of fresh and genuine Drugs and Medicine, Shop Furniture and Vials, Surgeon's Instruments, Patent Medicine, Dye Stuffs, and Fine Painter's Colours...all of which he will sell at the most reduced prices, on his usual credit, or a discount for cash." OCLC locates only one other copy, at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 151 - [Early American Trades] Early Printed Broadside for a Vermont Dentist
[Early American Trades] Early Printed Broadside for a Vermont Dentist Chelsea, Vermont, May 1, 1835. Printed broadside, mounted to old wood, 15 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. (394 x 292 mm). Printed by Kimball's Dartmouth Press, Hanover, New Hampshire. Toned; soiling and dampstaining along edges. "Sebre Gustin, Jr., Surgeon Dentist, of Chelsea, Vt., Would respectfully inform the citizens of Rutland that he has taken Rooms at 11 Main Street where he is prepared to perform any operation on the Teeth...Cleansing, Filling, and Insertion of Artificial Teeth..." An early 19th-century broadside advertising the services of an itinerant Vermont dentist, containing a testimonial from several prominent citizens and patients attesting to his skills. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 152 - [Emancipation Proclamation] One of the Earliest Printings of the Final Emancipation Proclamation, in the "Official Paper" of the U.S. Congress
[Emancipation Proclamation] One of the Earliest Printings of the Final Emancipation Proclamation, in the "Official Paper" of the U.S. Congress The Daily Globe Washington, (D.C.): John C. Rives, ca. December 2, 1862-April 18, 1863. New Series, Vol. XVI, No. 1-96 (duplicate issues of 94, 95, 96). Folio. Bound volume of 99 issues. Quarter brown cloth over paper-covered boards; printed book-plate of Stanford University Library on front paste-down; scattered foxing and stains. Eberstadt, p. 17 An extensive volume of the "Official Paper" of the United States Congress, The Daily Globe, printed by John Rives. Importantly, this volume includes a January 2, 1863 issue featuring one of the earliest printings of the final Emancipation Proclamation, issued by President Abraham Lincoln the day before, on January 1st. According to Charles Eberstadt, "We have seen that the (Washington) Star obtained by irregular means and printed the text of the final proclamation during the early afternoon of January 1st...A number of newspapers did not issue on January 2nd because of the previous day's holiday, but most of those that did carried the final proclamation. Many of the others printed it on January 3rd...(p. 17) Other news details Congressional minutes and debates, as well as updates on the Civil War as well as other world events, such as, news of the Battles of Fredericksburg, Stones River, Arkansas Post, and a variety of skirmishes; events leading up to the Siege of Vicksburg; the passing of legislation such as the Conscription Act, and much more. A well-preserved and extensive record of Congressional activity during the height of the Civil War. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 153 - [Emancipation Proclamation] "Slaves of Rebels Proclaimed Free": Front-Page Printing of Lincoln's Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation
[Emancipation Proclamation] "Slaves of Rebels Proclaimed Free": Front-Page Printing of Lincoln's Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia, Tuesday, September 23, 1862. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; old crease from when folded; scattered spotting; three-inch closed tear in top left edge. In the summer of 1862, New-York Tribune editor Horace Greeley published a scathing editorial entitled “The Prayer of Twenty Millions,” which harshly criticized President Abraham Lincoln for what Greeley viewed as his not being aggressive enough in defeating the Confederacy and freeing the slaves within its borders. At one point, the fiercely abolitionist editor wrote, “We complain that you…elected as a Republican, knowing full well what an abomination Slavery is…seem never to interfere with its atrocities, and never give a direction to your military subordinates…” Lincoln, who had spent the last few months secretly drafting a preliminary proclamation formally emancipating all slaves in Confederate-held territories, was nonetheless incensed by Greeley’s editorial. Wanting to keep his cards close to his vest, Lincoln’s response as published in the Tribune on August 22, 1862 forcefully asserted, “If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.” The preliminary draft was first read to the cabinet on July 13, and many expressed horror at the idea, believing that emancipating at such a fragile moment in the conflict would either signal weakness or attract additional foreign support for the Confederacy. It was agreed that such a proclamation could be issued only following a major Union victory, which finally came on September 17 with the Confederate defeat at Antietam. Five days later, Lincoln convened his cabinet and announced that he would be issuing the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, saying that "I made a solemn vow before God, that if General Lee was driven back from Pennsylvania, I would crown the result by the declaration of freedom to the slaves." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 154 - [Emancipation Proclamation] The Emancipation Proclamation, Printed in Full in the New-York Tribune
[Emancipation Proclamation] The Emancipation Proclamation, Printed in Full in the New-York Tribune New-York, Thursday, January 1-Saturday, January 10, 1863. In eight issues (Vol. XXII, Nos. 6,785-6,792). Printed newspaper. Edited by Horace Greeley. Folio. Each 8 pp. Disbound; creased; scattered soiling. The issue of January 1, announces on p. 5, "Those who will lay down The Tribune to-morrow with disappointment, not finding the New-Year's Proclamation of Freedom in it, may be assured of reading the paper before sunset. The subject was considered at a Cabinet meeting holden at the usual hour of 11, and adjourned before noon to-day. After its adjournment, the President denied himself to all visitors, and devoted the residue of the day to the composition of the Proclamation to be issued to-morrow..." On page four of the following issue, dated January 2, is printed the entire Emancipation Proclamation in large font, and is signed in type by President Lincoln. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 155 - [Emancipation Proclamation] The Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamation, in "The Evening Journal Almanac. 1863"
[Emancipation Proclamation] The Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamation, in "The Evening Journal Almanac. 1863" Albany, New York: Weed, Parsons & Company, 1863. First edition. 8vo. 143, (1) pp. Original limp blue wrappers, scattered spotting, unevenly toned, wear and creasing in lower front corner, small tear in fore-edge of front wrapper; all edges trimmed; scattered light foxing; small loss in bottom corner pp. 83/84, but not affecting text. Printed on facing pp. 128 and 129 are President Abraham Lincoln's Preliminary and Final Emancipation Proclamations. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 156 - [Film] Dingillian, Bob. Press Release for Star Wars
[Film] Dingillian, Bob. Press Release for Star Wars Los Angeles, California, 1977. Three sheets, each measuring 11 x 8 1/2 in. (279 x 216 mm); stapled in top left corner. In the months leading up to its May 1977 release, Star Wars experienced numerous production delays including incomplete special effects, an edit that director George Lucas was initially unhappy with, and the film having gone over budget. To ensure that these delays did not cause the public to forget about the film, 20th Century Fox drafted a press release describing the film from the perspectives of its filmmaker and its stars. Lucas managed to complete the film only one week before its May 25, 1977 release date. According to Lucas, he had completely forgotten that the film was being released on that day and remembered only when he and his wife Marcia went out for dinner that night and saw crowds stretching around the block outside of Mann's Chinese Theatre to see it. It was the first indication of how it would become one of the most successful franchises in film and popular culture history. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 157 - [Film] Manuscript Register from a Silent Film Movie Theater, 1925
[Film] Manuscript Register from a Silent Film Movie Theater, 1925 Possibly New Jersey, ca. July-December 1925. Partially printed manuscript register, titled "Daily Statement of Business..." (accomplished in "N.C.R. Statement Book No. 39"; printed Dayton, Ohio: The National Cash Register Company, no date). 4to. Unpaginated. Register of accounts for an unnamed movie theater, detailing film titles, studios, employee names and wages, and other expenses, from July-December 1925. Quarter brown cloth over black cloth-covered boards, title stamped in white, heavily worn and soiled; dampstain affecting lower margin of most pages. Fascinating account register of a 1920s movie theater, in the glory years of the silent film era. Notes in the rear of the book suggest the theater could be The Darress Theater in Boonton, New Jersey, which first opened in 1919 and closed by the 1970s. Notable films shown include: Kiss in the Dark; Her Market Value, Lilies of the Street, The Ten Commandments, and many more. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 158 - [Football] Large Format Silver Print of ca. 1910 Harvard v. Dartmouth Football Game
[Football] Large Format Silver Print of ca. 1910 Harvard v. Dartmouth Football Game No place, ca. 1910. Large format silver print, 11 x 14 1/4 in. (279 x 362 mm), mounted to board, 16 x 20 in. (406 x 508 mm). Manuscript on lower mount: "Harvard-Dartmouth / Frothingham stops Dartmouth's Forward / Pass and gains 35 Yards". Very small pinholes in corners of print, small wear at same; wear along mount edges. Likely showing the 1910 or 1911 match between Ivy League rivals Harvard and Dartmouth. T. Frothingham matriculated into Harvard in 1908, and played for the Harvard Crimson as a halfback from 1910-11. Harvard would go on to win both the 1910 and 1911 games. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 159 - [Football] "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29": Mock Wanted Poster for The Famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale Football Game
[Football] "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29": Mock Wanted Poster for The Famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale Football Game Wanted the Harvard Killers for Massacring Yale's Offensive Football Team... (Cambridge, Massachusetts), ca. November 1968. Printed mock wanted poster, 18 x 12 in. (457 x 305 mm). Toned; scattered soiling; pinholes in each corner; tape remnants at top; scattered closed tears along edges. In mat. A very rare--possibly one of the only extant--mock wanted posters for the famous 1968 Harvard v. Yale football game. Dubbed "The Miracle" and "The Tie", Harvard scored 16 points in the final 42 seconds to tie the game 29-29, inspiring the famous Harvard Crimson headline, "Harvard Beats Yale 29-29". This poster was, according to George Howe Colt, one of many at the time that were tacked up around Harvard's campus in anticipation of the November 23 game. The poster shows mug shots of each Harvard player (formal coat and tie photos culled from the game program) accompanied by gangster-style nicknames like "Two Gun," "Mad Dog," "Scar Face," "Potato Nose," "Baby Face," "Pretty Boy," "Machine Gun," and more. The large text reads, "Wanted the Harvard Killers For Massacring Yale's Offensive Football Team on Sat., Nov. 23, 1968 Warning These Men are Considered the Most Dangerous Deffensive Team in the N.C.A.A. Reward Free Trip to Sing Sing". Played against the backdrop of deep social unrest and college protests over the Vietnam War, this was the 85th edition of the two teams' longstanding annual rivalry. Each entered the game 8-0, with Harvard's formidable defense pitched against Yale's league-leading offense. By the final three minutes of the game Yale had advanced a seemingly insurmountable 29-16 lead. With only minutes remaining, Harvard's prospects dramatically changed, precipitated by a fumble by Yale fullback Bob Levin, which then saw Harvard score two consecutive touchdowns and two two-point conversions, tying the game and sending the crowd into a frenzy. The two teams would go on to share the Ivy League title, the last tied game in their series history. In 2024, the Harvard Crimson ranked this match as the greatest game in the 149-year history of the Harvard-Yale football rivalry. Lot includes a typed postcard, postmarked Nov. 8, 1909, informing a Theodore Chadwick of Cambridge, Massachusetts of the status of his application for tickets to the Harvard/Yale football game. 3 1/4 x 5 1/2 in. (82 x 140 mm). Lot also includes five press photos related to professional football. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 160 - [Fraktur] A Pennsylvania German Fraktur Book-Plate
[Fraktur] A Pennsylvania German Fraktur Book-Plate Bethel, Pennsylvania, January 20, 1827. Manuscript fraktur book-plate, in Die Bibel, oder die ganze heilige schrift des alten und neuen testaments...D. Martin Luthers (Bremen: Carl Schunemann, 1822). Thick 8vo. Original brown sheep, clasps perished, scuffed and moderately worn; all edges trimmed; spotting and soiling. A Pennsylvania German fraktur book-plate: "This Book Belongs to me Maria Lesch" Lot includes a copy of almanac, Der Hoch-Deutsche Americanische Calender...1827 (Germantown: M. Billmeyer, 1827). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 161 - [Franklin, Benjamin] A Great American Patriot Isaiah Thomas Reports on the Death of Another: Group of 2 Periodicals Reporting the Death of Benjamin Franklin, April-May, 1790
[Franklin, Benjamin] A Great American Patriot Isaiah Thomas Reports on the Death of Another: Group of 2 Periodicals Reporting the Death of Benjamin Franklin, April-May, 1790 Thomas's Massachusetts Spy: Or, The Worcester Gazette Worcester: Isaiah Thomas, Thursday, May 6, 1790. Vol. XIX, No. 892. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Light scattered spotting; light wear along edges. Printed on p. 3 is a report on the death of Franklin and details of his funeral service. Together with: The Universal Asylum, and Columbian Magazine, for April, 1790 Philadelphia: Printed, for the Proprietors, by William Young, 1790. 8vo. (ii), (203)-262, (2) pp. Disbound; red speckled edges; short tear in top edge of final rear leaves. Containing three articles related to Franklin: his February 22, 1756 letter on the death of his brother (p. 208); his article, "Precautions to be used by those who are about to undertake a Sea-Voyage" (pp. 245-248); and a report on Franklin's death and funeral (pp. 261-262). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 162 - [Franklin, Benjamin] Scarce Issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette for November 28, 1745, With the Burning of Saratoga, Printed by Benjamin Franklin
[Franklin, Benjamin] Scarce Issue of The Pennsylvania Gazette for November 28, 1745, With the Burning of Saratoga, Printed by Benjamin Franklin The Pennsylvania Gazette Philadelphia: Printed by B. Franklin, November 28, 1745. Numb. 885. Bifolium, 12 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (305 x 216 mm). Printed newspaper in three columns. Disbound; worming to top and left margins; edges unevenly trimmed; scattered foxing. Miller 378 A scarce issue of this Benjamin Franklin newspaper. This issue contains a report of the raid and subsequent burning of Saratoga, New York, by French and Indian forces, as part of the ongoing King George's War. Also included are advertisements for Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack, 1746, various plantations for sale around both Philadelphia and Baltimore, as well as a number of runaway servants or enslaved persons. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 163 - [Franklin, Benjamin] Urban, Sylvanus. The Gentleman's Magazine For October 1752, in the Rare Original Wrappers with Articles on Benjamin Franklin's Electrical Experiments
[Franklin, Benjamin] Urban, Sylvanus. The Gentleman's Magazine For October 1752, in the Rare Original Wrappers with Articles on Benjamin Franklin's Electrical Experiments London: Printed by E. Cave, 1752. 8vo. (ii), (439)-481, (1) pp. Illustrated with woodcut vignette on title-page, two engraved plates (one folding), one page of engraved sheet music, and one in-text engraving after Catesby. Rare original limp blue wrappers, losses along spine, wear along extremities; scattered spotting. Printed four months after Franklin's famous kite and key experiment, this magazine features a discussion on Benjamin Franklin's famous electrical experiments and their applications, on pp. 450-452. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 164 - [French and Indian War] Vaugondy, Robert de. Carte de la Virginie et du Maryland...
[French and Indian War] Vaugondy, Robert de. Carte de la Virginie et du Maryland... Paris, 1755. Engraved map with hand-colored outlining. First state (of five). Old ink stamps at top left and right verso, "Virginie & Maryland." Creasing from old folds, separations at top and bottom of same vertical central fold; scattered light edge-wear; shallow tidemark in top edge; faint dampstaining in bottom corners. A handsome first state of this important French map depicting Virginia and Maryland, derived from Peter Jefferson and Joshua Fry's landmark 1751 map "A Map of the Most Inhabited part of Virginia", considered the most important map of the region in the 18th century. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 165 - [Gangsters] (Buchalter, Lepke) Original NYPD $25,000 Reward Poster for a Jewish Gangster
[Gangsters] (Buchalter, Lepke) Original NYPD $25,000 Reward Poster for a Jewish Gangster New York: Police Department City of New York, Detective Division, August 8, 1939. Circular No. 11. Printed broadside; 14 1/2 x 7 3/4 in. (368 x 197 mm). Wanted poster for Jewish gangster Lepke Buchalter, headed "$25,000 Reward Dead or Alive", with printed facsimile of his fingerprints, a description of appearance, and his mugshot. Creasing from old folds, scattered light stains along same. In mat. Rare NYPD wanted poster for Lepke Buchalter, head of the infamous Mafia hit squad, Murder, Inc. For most of the 1930s, Buchalter (1897-1944) operated an independent hit squad for various crime families across the country, referred to in later years as "Murder, Inc." In 1936, he ordered the murder of a Brooklyn candy store owner named Joseph Rosen, whom he suspected of working with New York District Attorney Thomas Dewey. While no convictions were made at the time, Buchalter was soon charged with violating federal anti-trust laws in one of his businesses, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. Buchalter became a fugitive for almost two years and by mid-July 1939, Dewey requested a $25,000 reward for his capture, due to a recent string of gang-related murders. On August 25, 1939, Buchalter surrendered to FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover, the result of a surrender deal supposedly facilitated by the help of radio broadcaster Walter Winchell. Buchalter was indicted on charges of narcotics trafficking and extortion, but while imprisoned, he was arraigned and indicted by New York authorities for the murders of Joseph Rosen and three others. He and two accomplices were sentenced to death, and Buchalter was executed by electric chair on March 4, 1944, at Sing Sing Prison. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 166 - [Gangsters] Group of 9 Press Photos of American Gangsters and Criminals
[Gangsters] Group of 9 Press Photos of American Gangsters and Criminals Locations vary, ca. 1926-60s. Group of nine press photos of American gangsters and criminals, depicting Vito Genovese (leader of the Genovese crime family); Gerald Chapman ("The Count of Gramercy Park"); Frank Nitti (Al Capone's bodyguard); George R. "Machine Gun" Kelly; Johnny Torrio (leader of the Chicago Outfit); Frankie Yale (Brooklyn crime boss); Jack "Legs" Diamond (Irish-American Philadelphia gangster); scene of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre; and of John Dillinger as a child. Sizes and condition varies, generally very good. Copyright ink stamps and typed slips on versos. Lot also includes a copy of the Bulletin of the Chicago Crime Commission, dated July 23, 1924 ("Murder Check Needed Public Safety Demands Immediate Action by all Responsible Authorities..."). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 167 - [Garfield, James] Group of 3 Items Related to Presidential Assassin Charles J. Guiteau, Previously Owned by Dr. Edward Charles Spitzka
[Garfield, James] Group of 3 Items Related to Presidential Assassin Charles J. Guiteau, Previously Owned by Dr. Edward Charles Spitzka 1. Copy of a Drawing of the Skull of Charles J. Guiteau No place, no date (likely ca. 1880s-90s). Printed copy of a drawing; manuscript at bottom, "Skull of Guiteau / by Dr Lamb of Army Med Museum". Unevenly toned; soiling and creasing; foxing; scattered closed tears along edges. 12 3/4 x 10 1/4 in. (324 x 260 mm). 2. Four-Portrait Mugshot of Guiteau Label on verso "Copyright, 1882 by C.M. Bell. Forbes Albertype, Boston". Printed caption at bottom recto, "Charles J. Guiteau. / From Photographs Taken by C.M. Bell, Washington, D.C., July 4, 1881." Mounted to board. Soiling and wear. Image: 8 3/4 x 6 1/4 in. (222 x 159 mm). 3. Cabinet Card of Guiteau's Brain No place, no date. Cabinet card, manuscript in pencil on verso, "Guiteau". Light foxing and soiling. 4 1/2 x 6 1/2 in. (114 x 165 mm). On July 2, 1881, Charles Guiteau stepped out of a crowd at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station in Washington, D.C., and fired two shots from behind into the body of President James A. Garfield. For months Guiteau had been stalking President Garfield, believing that he had played an outsized role in the president's victory in the 1880 election and was therefore owed a position in the administration. Over two months Garfield's condition, exacerbated by poor medical treatment, gradually deteriorated, until he finally expired on September 19. In the lead-up to Guiteau's trial, his defense hired Dr. Charles Edward Spitzka as an expert witness to bolster their claim that Guiteau was not guilty by reason of insanity. Dr. Spitzka testified that Guiteau was not only insane, but a "moral monstrosity." Despite this analysis, Guiteau was found guilty and executed by hanging on June 30, 1882. Guiteau's remains were then dissected in the hopes of finding some trace of abnormality in his brain or in the shape of his skull. An alienist, neurologist, and anatomist, Spitzka likely kept these materials after the trial as mementos and reference materials. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 168 - [Georgia] [Moore, Francis] Manuscript Document by the Secretary of James Oglethorpe, Founder of the Colony of Georgia
[Georgia] [Moore, Francis] Manuscript Document by the Secretary of James Oglethorpe, Founder of the Colony of Georgia Frederica, Georgia, ca. July 1736. 2 pp. on bifolium. Docketed on verso, "Copy Deposition of John Latter, John Barber, Rice Pyke, David Holmes, Darby Kellihorne, taken 13. Apl. 1736. In D(uke). of Newcastle July 2d. 1736." 12 x 7 5/8 in. (305 x 194 mm), old folds. A secretarial copy (presumably in the hand of Francis Moore, secretary of James Oglethorpe) of a deposition of John Latter, John Barber, Richard Pike, David Holmes, and Darby Kallihorne[?], all of Georgia, taken at Frederica on April 13, 1736. Attesting that they traveled with Tomochichi to the Altamaha and St. Johns Rivers and encountered no Spanish settlements in the area, and that the territory north of the St. Johns was in possession of “the Indians.” In 1736, James Oglethorpe and the Yamacraw leader Tomochichi stood at the center of the increasingly fraught dispute between British Georgia and Spanish Florida over the southern limits of the English settlement. Oglethorpe maintained that Georgia’s boundaries extended to the St. Johns River, citing English charters and agreements negotiated with Native leaders allied to the colony. Tomochichi, whose earlier visit to London with Oglethorpe had lent legitimacy to the Georgia enterprise before the Trustees and the Crown, remained a crucial diplomatic figure in relations between the British and the region's Indigenous peoples. In a letter dated April 17, 1736, Oglethorpe warned the Duke of Newcastle that the Spanish governor intended to demand that Britain abandon not only Georgia but also territory extending even into Carolina. As the correspondence of the period makes clear, British officials regarded Native alliances as indispensable to securing their claims against mounting Spanish opposition from St. Augustine. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 169 - [Gettysburg Address]
First Day Printing of the Gettysburg Address in The New York Herald
[Gettysburg Address] First Day Printing of the Gettysburg Address in The New York Herald New York, Friday, November 20, 1863. Whole No. 9926. Printed newspaper. Folio. 10 pp. Creased from old fold, loss at fore-edge of same on first leaf, affecting some text, closed tear at same on subsequent leaves; central fold repaired, with loss at lower half, affecting some letters at bottom; scattered spotting and toning. Scarce first-day printing of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, printed at the bottom of final page ("Dedicatory Speech of the President"). This newspaper also features Edward Everett’s entire speech, as well as reports on the dedicatory ceremonies. The transcript that gave the world Lincoln's speech was taken by Associated Press freelancer Joseph L. Gilbert, who was seated on the speaker's platform. As Gilbert recalled in 1917, during Lincoln's brief two-minute 272-word speech, he became "fascinated by his intense earnestness and depth of feeling," and "unconsciously stopped taking notes and looked up at him." Luckily for Gilbert, Lincoln allowed him to copy his text, from which the press report featured here was made. Lincoln's speaking copy has since been lost, and the definitive text has been pieced together, from Gilbert's account, and additional sources. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 170 - [Gold Rush] Autograph Letter, Featuring a Mention of Frontiersman Kit Carson and the Arizona Gold Rush
[Gold Rush] Autograph Letter, Featuring a Mention of Frontiersman Kit Carson and the Arizona Gold Rush "The news we have from Arizona is almost fabulous, and if the accounts are half true, the mines are richer than those of California in 1848...the Navajos are now being drove out by Kit Carson..." Fort Union New Mexico, November 8, 1863. Bifolium; 9 x 6 1/2 in. (228 x 165 mm). Four-page autograph letter, signed by an unknown Union soldier stationed at Fort Union, New Mexico during the Civil War. In part: "I have no conveniences for writing now, and you must wait till I get to Santa Fe for a good long letter...We had a very severe snow storm while encamped at Ft. Lyon and I took cold, and the result was, I had an attack of pleurisy...the weather was very cold with four inches of snow on the ground and we had to shovel off a place to sleep at night. We lost one or two mules and five or six horses, but continued on our march without a halt, as we were very anxious to get through the mountains. The Raton Mountains are very high, and are apt to be impassable at this season of the year... Gov. Arny, of New Mexico, gave me a place in his ambulance while I was sick, and arranged his blankets and robes so that I could lie down...The weather is now mild and pleasant and I feel almost as good as new, and am now doing my usual camp duty, and devouring an enormous amount of provisions....The news we have from Arizona is almost fabulous, and if the accounts are half true, the mines are richer than those of California in 1848. The rush there will be very great in the Spring...It is said that gold can be found four inches from the surface, and can be dug with a butcher knife. Gov. Arny took with him to Washington some specimens of gold and also gold bullets which he procured from the Navajo Indians; the Indian was sharp, and would not tell him where the gold was to be found, but a military expedition into their country revealed the location of the mines, and the Navajos are now being drove out by Kit Carson..." Creasing from old folds, A few small closed tears along same; scattered toning. An illuminating letter by a Union soldier stationed at Fort Union describing the ongoing gold rush in the Territory of Arizona, and mentioning frontier legend Kit Carson driving Navajo Indians from the land. Arizona had been a major stopping off point for settlers making their way to California during the Gold Rush of 1848, but during the late 1850s, major deposits were discovered around the Gila River, leading to a major surge in population for the territory. Fort Union was an important military outpost for Northern forces, and was the base of operations for General Kit Carson, who took command there in 1862, and defended the western frontier from Confederate incursions until 1865. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 171 - [Gold Rush] Scarce Issue of The Illustrated California News
[Gold Rush] Scarce Issue of The Illustrated California News The Illustrated California News San Francisco: Cook & Le Count, November 1, 1850. Vol. 1, No 4. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. 25-32. Disbound; scattered minor spotting. The first illustrated newspaper printed on the West Coast, and one of the earliest illustrated newspapers ever printed in America. An important and scarce California Gold Rush-era illustrated newspaper, The Illustrated California News was a semi-monthly periodical which began publication in September 1850 under the editorship of J.M. Carleton. Over the course of three months, six issues were published before Carleton folded operations, with the focus kept exclusively on recording current events and presenting images and descriptions of the new state's unique geography. The present issue features a long editorial by Carleton discussing the benefits of bringing more women to California, arguing, "It is upon the solid and substantial weight of those whose family ties bind them to social order which we must depend...The youth who is loose upon the world is an anarchist by nature." Of particular interest is a rare pre-settlement view (likely the first ever printed) of Vallejo, then slated to become the first capital of the state of California, of which Carleton writes, "This is a view...[of] Vallejo, the proposed permanent seat of Government for the State of California, and on that account will probably be considered as one of the most interesting subjects that could have been offered our readers." Though the legislature met here in 1851, the decision was made to move the State Government to Sacramento in 1854; despite the move, Vallejo continued to grow and is today the second-largest city in the Bay Area. The present issue also features views of Portsmouth Square Park, the first public park in San Francisco, and of Dead-Man's Bar, one of the most gold-rich (and hazardous) areas in the region. Wagner 80. Together with: Manuscript Document No place, no date. Single sheet, 10 1/4 x 8 1/2 in. (260 x 216 mm). Two-page manuscript document in an unidentified hand, titled "The actual & prospective effects of the California gold mines on the United States." Creasing from old folds; light soiling. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 172 - [Guns & Artillery] A Late 19th Century Photograph Album of Ordnance and Artillery from "Freedom's Fortress" Fort Monroe
[Guns & Artillery] A Late 19th Century Photograph Album of Ordnance and Artillery from "Freedom's Fortress" Fort Monroe No place, no date ca. 1880s. Comprising 23 albumen prints mounted to card; some with manuscript captions. Oblong 4to. Black pebbled cloth-covered boards, spine perished, boards and extremities moderately worn and soiled; Fort Monroe library book-plate ("Coast Artillery School") on front paste-down; cards loose; foxing and soiling to cards; several with Fort Monroe Artillery School ink stamps. Fort Monroe was constructed between 1819 and 1834 at Old Point Comfort in Hampton, Virginia to guard the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay. The largest stone fort ever built in the United States, it played a vital role in American coastal defense for nearly two centuries. During the Civil War, Fort Monroe remained under Union control and became known as "Freedom's Fortress" after serving as a refuge for thousands of formerly enslaved people escaping Confederate territory. Following the war, Confederate president Jefferson Davis was briefly imprisoned there. Lot includes two excised printed Congressional acts, 1860s, related to fire-arms, as well as sheets from issues of Harper's, etc., related to guns. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 173 - [Hancock, John] 1-of-1 Trading Card with Cut Signature of John Hancock and an 1876 $20 Gold Coin, From the "1776: The Freedom Fighters" Card Set, Created by Eric C. Caren
[Hancock, John] 1-of-1 Trading Card with Cut Signature of John Hancock and an 1876 $20 Gold Coin, From the "1776: The Freedom Fighters" Card Set, Created by Eric C. Caren Special one-of-one trading card (2026), with a fine cut signature of John Hancock (excised from a December 20, 1787 military commission), approximately 1 3/4 x 4 in. (44 x 102 mm); with a mounted 1876 Liberty Head $20 gold coin. Together in pictorial presentation card, with fragment of document ("Reasons assigned by the Continental Congress, for the North American Colonies and provinces withdrawing their Allegiance to the King of Great Britain. In Congress, July 4, 1776. A Declaration...") Housed in wooden pictorial presentation box, with presentation stand. A fine one-of-one trading card, with a bold cut signature of John Hancock and a Centennial Liberty Head $20 gold coin. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 174 - [Harrison, William Henry] The Death of American President William Henry Harrison is Announced in his own Newspaper, "The Log Cabin"
[Harrison, William Henry] The Death of American President William Henry Harrison is Announced in his own Newspaper, "The Log Cabin" The Log Cabin New-York: (Horace Greeley), Saturday, April 10, 1841. Vol. I, New Series, No. 19. Printed newspaper; black mourning border on each page. Folio. (4) pp. Contemporary ownership signature at top of front page. Disbound; old crease from when folded; separations along central vertical fold; scattered edge-wear; light foxing. "Death of President Harrison! We are constrained to confirm the painful tidings which have already been borne on the wings of the wind to every portion our land. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON IS NO MORE!" The Log Cabin was published from May 1840 to November 1841 to support the candidacy of William Henry Harrison, who unexpectedly died six-days prior to this issue, on April 4, after a brief illness. He was the first President to die in office. This paper's wild popularity caused Greeley to establish his most well-known paper, the New-York Tribune. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 175 - [Harrison, William Henry] Handbill for the Funeral Service for the First President to Die in Office, April 16, 1841
[Harrison, William Henry] Handbill for the Funeral Service for the First President to Die in Office, April 16, 1841 Arrangements for the Observation of Funeral Solemnities, on the Death of the late President of the United States... Middletown, (Connecticut), April 16, 1841. Tall printed handbill, 14 7/8 x 3 1/8 in. (378 x 79 mm). Docketed on verso. Creased from old fold; scattered soiling; light foxing. Handbill for a memorial service for President William Henry Harrison, the first president to die in office. Held in Middletown, Connecticut, on April 17, 1841, two weeks after his sudden death on April 4, the present handbill lists the various ceremonies arranged by the town, including a procession to the city courthouse and a service held by the town's clergy. Harrison's unexpected death after only a month in office shocked the nation, and commenced a 30-day period of mourning across the nation, with similar ceremonies being held in most cities and towns. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 176 - [Hawaii] An Early Hawaiian Newspaper, Sent From Hawaii to California in 1841
[Hawaii] An Early Hawaiian Newspaper, Sent From Hawaii to California in 1841 The Polynesian Honolulu, Saturday, March 20, 1841. Vol. I, No. 41. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Ownership inscription of American diplomat and businessman Thomas O. Larkin ("Thomas O. Larkin / Monterey, California") at top of front-page. Disbound; creased from old fold. Thomas O. Larkin (1802–1858) was a Massachusetts-born American diplomat, merchant, and financier, who relocated to California in the early 1830s. Based in Monterey, then part of Alta California, Mexico, he established extensive commercial ties with Mexico and the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii). During the 1840s, Larkin played a significant diplomatic role in the transition of California from Mexican to American control, serving from 1843 to 1848 as the American Consul to Alta California (the only person to hold this title). During the Mexican-American War he acted as a confidential agent for President James K. Polk and used his influence to support the transfer of California to the United States. In 1849, Larkin also served as a delegate representing San Francisco at California’s Constitutional Convention. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 177 - [Hawaii] Group of 4 Early Newspapers and Documents Relating to Hawaii, 1826-80s
[Hawaii] Group of 4 Early Newspapers and Documents Relating to Hawaii, 1826-80s 1. The Missionary Herald. For the Year 1826. Vol. XXII. Boston: Crocker and Brewster, 1826. 8vo. Illustrated with an engraved folding map of Hawaii. Brown library-style buckram, stamped in gilt; all edges trimmed; scattered foxing; gutter split at pp. 296-297. 2. The Friend. Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii, June 15, 1846. Vol. IV, No. XII. Printed newspaper. 4to. 8 pp. Disbound; bottom left corner torn. 3. Ka Nupepa Kuokoa. Honolulu, November 22, 1862. Vol. I, No. 52. Printed newspaper in Hawaiian. Folio. 4 pp. Toned and worn; scattered worming and tears. 4. Engraved Hawaiian Bell Telephone Company Stock Certificate. Honolulu, ca. 1880s. Unaccomplished. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 178 - [Hollywood] (Dean, James). Unsigned Carbon Copy of a Legal Agreement
[Hollywood] (Dean, James). Unsigned Carbon Copy of a Legal Agreement (New York), ca. March 1955. Three stapled sheets, 13 x 8 1/2 in. (330 x 216 mm). Unsigned carbon copy of a legal brief, regarding the settlement of a suit between James Dean and Rogers Brackett, in which Dean agrees to pay an outstanding debt. Creasing from old folds; scattered foxing. Lot also includes four black and white press photographs of Dean in various roles. Legal brief outlining the settlement of a debt between American actor James Dean (1931-55), and radio director Rogers Brackett. The two first met in the early 1950s, with Brackett credited as introducing Dean to a number of executives in the entertainment industry, while also acting as an advisor through much of Dean's short career. The present document, which resolves small loans and hotel room bills, is dated March 1955, the month that East of Eden premiered, and just six months before Dean's untimely death. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 179 - [Horse Racing] An Early and Possibly the Only Extant Example of this 19th Century Broadside Advertising the Stud Services of the Celebrated American Thoroughbred Racehorse Wild Medley
[Horse Racing] An Early and Possibly the Only Extant Example of this 19th Century Broadside Advertising the Stud Services of the Celebrated American Thoroughbred Racehorse Wild Medley The Thorough Bred Horse Wild Medley... Greenup County, Kentucky, ca. October 1, 1809. Printed broadside, 15 3/8 x 11 1/2 in. (390 x 292 mm). Creasing from old folds, losses along central vertical fold, affecting some text; foxed and dampstained; wear along edges; closed tear and small loss in top right corner; manuscript on verso. This broadside, published for a John Hockaday of Kentucky, advertises that Wild Medley "will stand the ensuing season at my stable on the Ohio, one mile above the mouth of Little Sandy, Greenup country, commencing on the first day of May, and ending on the last day of July--will cover Mares at Five Dollars the season, Eight Dollars to insure, and Three Dollars the single leap..." Printed below is a testimony from a John Wood attesting to Wild Medley's pedigree, bred by him in Gloucester County, Virginia, "got by the old imported horse Medley, and came out of a full bred Wild Air mare." A summation of Wild Medley's performance is printed at the bottom, and certified by eight acquaintances of Mr. Wood. Rare, we cannot locate another example on RBH or OCLC. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 180 - [Illustration Art] Davies, Wynne W. Color Separation Proof for Cover of "Scarlet Adventuress"
[Illustration Art] Davies, Wynne W. Color Separation Proof for Cover of "Scarlet Adventuress" No place, (ca. February, 1936). Offset-lithograph, 13 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. Lightly creased; evenly toned; scattered light stains. Color separation proof cover illustration for the pulp novel series Scarlett Adventuress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 181 - [Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] Custer's Own Copy of Territorial General Orders, Two Years Before the Battle of Little Bighorn
[Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] Custer's Own Copy of Territorial General Orders, Two Years Before the Battle of Little Bighorn Headquarters Department of Dakota, August 17, 1874. One sheet, 7 1/2 x 5 in. (191 x 127 mm). Printed U.S. Army General Orders No. 59, issued by command of Brigadier General Alfred Terry, signed at conclusion by Capt. R.P. Hughes and addressed by him to recipient, "Lieut. Col. G.A. Custer. 7th Cavalry." Order reads in part: "The 'Middle District' of this Military Department will, until further order, comprise the following named posts, viz: Forts Stevenson, Abraham Lincoln and Rice, Camp Hancock and Grand River Agency. The headquarters will be established at Fort Abraham Lincoln, and Lieutenant-Colonel G. A. Custer, 7th Cavalry, is assigned to the Command..." Creasing from old folds; ink stain not affecting text; light foxing. George A. Custer's copy of army General Orders No. 59, establishing Fort Abraham Lincoln as headquarters of the Middle District of the Department of the Dakota. The Black Hills Expedition led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer departed Fort Abraham Lincoln on July 2, 1874 with orders to find a suitable location for a fort and to investigate the possibility of mining for gold. This expedition was in direct violation of the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 which guaranteed that white settlement would be off-limits in the Black Hills, as the region was considered sacred ground to the various Indigenous tribes of the area. While Custer and his soldiers searched for a location for their fort, the citizens who accompanied them began to prospect for gold. Custer received orders to return to Fort Abraham Lincoln on August 15, and two days later received the present message informing him that the fort was now the central headquarters of the Middle District of the Department of the Dakota, with Custer officially appointed commander. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 182 - [Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] A Secretary of State's Copy of This St. Louis Newspaper, Reporting on the Recent Battle of Little Big Horn: "The Horrible Story...Confirmed"
[Indian Wars] [Custer, George A.] A Secretary of State's Copy of This St. Louis Newspaper, Reporting on the Recent Battle of Little Big Horn: "The Horrible Story...Confirmed" St. Louis Globe-Democrat, July 7, 1876 St. Louis, July 7, 1876. Vol 2. No. 49. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds; very small printed tag mounted at top right ("Sec. of State"). With another issue of the same paper, dated July 5, 1876, bearing the same mounted stamp. The front-page column reads in part: "Gen. Custer Attacks Sitting Bull in His Camp...Who Massacre Him and His Entire Force...How Awful the News was Received in this City." In late 1875 the Grant administration sent an official notification to all tribes in the Dakota Territory that they were to report to designated reservations no later than January 31, 1876 or be deemed "hostile." Few acceded to this order. In the spring and early summer, Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull called a large gathering of Plains tribes together to create a united encampment of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho on land already belonging to the Crow, who sided with the United States Army to expel them from their lands. On June 25, the 7th Cavalry, led by General Custer, came upon their encampment. Upon realizing his position had been discovered, he ordered his men to attack. What followed was nothing short of a massacre which ended with over fifty-two percent of the 7th Cavalry dead, including Custer himself. This engagement became known as the Battle of Little Bighorn, or "Custer's Last Stand." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 183 - [Immigrants] Group of Items Related to the Asian American Immigrant Experience
[Immigrants] Group of Items Related to the Asian American Immigrant Experience Locations and dates vary. Group of 20 items related to the Asian Immigrant experience in America, including government reports, newspapers, photographs, and postcards. Highlights include a printed proclamation by the County of Los Angeles apologizing for Japanese Internment; a stereoview by J.J. Riley of a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco; a postmarked mailing cover from the Topaz Japanese Internment Camp; and The Heathen Chinee by Brett Harte (Boston: James Osgood, 1871). Size and condition vary. The first major wave of Asian immigration to the United States began around 1850, largely in response to the discovery of gold in California. Many Chinese immigrants arrived hoping to escape economic inequality and the fallout from the First Opium War. Following the end of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery in the United States, plantation owners in the South began to recruit Asian laborers as a cheap source of labor to replace their former slaves. This exploitation led to tensions between Asian immigrants and nativist groups. Over subsequent years numerous skirmishes broke out, the most infamous being the Rock Springs Massacre which in turn led to Congress passing the Page Act of 1875, the first restrictive immigration bill in United States history. Despite the repeal of restrictive immigration laws targeting Asian countries over subsequent years, following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which established a series of internment camps specifically targeting citizens of Japanese descent. Following the 1944 presidential election Roosevelt suspended the order, effectively ending the forced internment program. President Gerald Ford terminated the order in 1976, and in 1989 reparations began to be issued to survivors of the camps. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 184 - [Immigrants] Large Group of Items Related to the European-American Immigrant Experience
[Immigrants] Large Group of Items Related to the European-American Immigrant Experience Locations and dates vary. Group of approximately 100 items related to the European immigrants' experience in America. Nationalities represented include Irish, Italian, Hungarian, Polish, Lithuanian, Armenian, Swedish, and more. Items include newspapers, pamphlets, photographs, postcards, posters, a photo album, etc. Highlights include an autograph letter signed by American businessman George Francis Train, a movie poster featuring Alice Brady, for the lost silent film Little Italy, and dime novel, Pluck and Luck. Condition varies, although generally fine. Between 1492 and 1930 it is estimated that over 60 million Europeans emigrated to the Americas. This wave reached its crest during the late 19th-and early 20th centuries, as a series of economic, agricultural, and social upheavals led to more Europeans seeking better lives on the other side of the Atlantic. The effects of this migration are many and include the near-total annihilation of the Indigenous populations and led to the beginning of a globalization trend which has had profound effects on commerce, culture, and geopolitics. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 185 - [Jackson, Andrew] Group of 2 Newspapers, Reporting on Jackson's Victory Over the British at New Orleans and His Fourth State of the Union Address
[Jackson, Andrew] Group of 2 Newspapers, Reporting on Jackson's Victory Over the British at New Orleans and His Fourth State of the Union Address Political and Commercial Register Philadelphia: Published by W. Jackson, Monday Evening, February 6, 1815. Vol. XXII, No. 30. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; scattered minor spotting. Printed on page two is the "Glorious News" of General Andrew Jackson's victory over the British at New Orleans, the final battle of the War of 1812, with detailed reports on the engagement. Together with: National Intelligencer Washington: Gales & Seaton, Thursday, December 6, 1832. Vol. XXXIII, No. 4840. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; dampstaining at top and along right edge; scattered edge-wear. Printed on the front page is President Andrew Jackson's fourth State of the Union Address, where he critically addresses the ongoing Nullification Crisis. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 186 - [Jacksonian Era] A Fascinating Contemporary Letter by an American Farmer Written Amid the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat Affair
[Jacksonian Era] A Fascinating Contemporary Letter by an American Farmer Written Amid the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat Affair Autograph Letter, signed Wilcox County, Alabama, July 4, 1832. Bifolium, 12 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (324 x 197 mm). Three-page autograph letter, signed by Charles and Jane Connor to his brother William Connor of Fairfield Corner, Maine, regarding family matters, and mentioning the political climate of the United States that has "run mad with nulification", and mentioning the Petticoat Affair and Peggy Eaton, wife of President Jackson's Secretary of War. Integral leaf addressed in Connor's hand. Creasing from old folds; wear and small loss (affecting some text) at fore-edge from seal when opened. A National Crisis from the Viewpoint of an Everyday Farmer and his Family Penned by a Charles Connor, and his wife Jane, of Wilcox County, Alabama, to his brother William, in Fairfield Corner, Maine. Connor touches on a variety of family affairs, including the state of his family and farming. In particular, he goes on to mention the Nullification Crisis that then threatened the federal government's sovereignty as South Carolina sought to void federal law by rejecting the hated Tariff of 1828. The first major test against federal sovereignty, the confrontation nearly led to armed conflict, but was avoided with the passage of the Force Bill and the Compromise Tariff of 1833. Connor states that the "politicks of this country they are run mad with nulification and dont now where it will end but i am in hopes that it will end in the ellection of Henry Clay to Presidentcy". Connor goes on to make reference to Peggy Eaton, wife of President Jackson's Secretary of War, and what would be called the Petticoat Affair--a scandal involving Jackson's cabinet and their wives, who ostracized Mrs. Eaton for what they deemed her loose morals. The scandal resulted in the resignation of Vice President John C. Calhoun and the replacement of Jackson's cabinet. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 187 - [Jefferson, Thomas, and Sally Hemings]
John Quincy Adams' Racist Satirical Poem Mocking Thomas Jefferson After his Scandalous Affair with his Slave
[Jefferson, Thomas, and Sally Hemings] John Quincy Adams' Racist Satirical Poem Mocking Thomas Jefferson After his Scandalous Affair with his Slave Boston Gazette. Commercial and Political Boston: Published by John Russell and James Cutler, Monday, December 27, 1802. Vol. XIII, No. 34. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds; wear along edges, affecting some text; separations along central vertical fold; spotting and mild dampstaining. On the second page is printed John Quincy Adams' satirical poem mocking Thomas Jefferson, following reports of Jefferson's scandalous affair with his slave, Sally Hemings: "Dear Thomas, deem it no disgrace With slaves to mend thy breed, Nor let the wench's smutty face Deter thee from the deed..." In an early September 1802 issue of The Richmond Recorder, journalist James Callendar made the shocking accusation that President Thomas Jefferson had for nearly a decade been engaged in a sexual relationship with one of his slaves, Sally Hemings. Though Callendar claimed to have come to this conclusion after observing several light-skinned enslaved children at Monticello, similar rumors had been whispered about for years, notably during the bitter 1800 presidential contest between Jefferson and then-President John Adams. What few knew was that the original source for these rumors may have been Adams himself, who had possibly hinted about the relationship in letters to his son, John Quincy Adams, following Jefferson's resignation from George Washington's cabinet as Secretary of State in 1794. Federalist newspapers across the country eagerly reprinted the story. Though aligned with Jefferson politically, the BostonGazette nonetheless reprinted a racist poem penned by the son of Jefferson's predecessor and one-time friend, openly mocking the scandal. Originally published in October, the poem was reprinted multiple times. Jefferson denied paternity of Hemings's children, as did his children and grandchildren, however DNA evidence has since proven that Jefferson fathered six children with Hemings, four of whom survived to adulthood. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 188 - [Jefferson, Thomas] The Formation of the Library of Congress: Scarce Official Senate Report Pertaining to the Sale of Former President Thomas Jefferson's Library to the United States Congress
[Jefferson, Thomas] The Formation of the Library of Congress: Scarce Official Senate Report Pertaining to the Sale of Former President Thomas Jefferson's Library to the United States Congress Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman, 1814. First edition. 8vo. (4) pp. Likely disbound; separated along center fold; wear and light creasing along edges; light foxing. Scarce official Senate report pertaining to the sale of former President Thomas Jefferson's library to the United States Congress. During the War of 1812, the British entered Washington, D.C. and set fire to the Capitol building, destroying nearly all of the 3,000-plus-volume-library within. Jefferson was particularly distressed at the news and offered to sell his library to Congress to help them rebuild. At the time, Jefferson had the largest personal collection of books in the country, held at his plantation, Monticello, in Virginia. He had planned to offer this library to Congress upon his death, but considering the circumstances, and Congress's likely inability to rebuild on their own, he offered his at any valuation and payment terms Congress saw fit. His only stipulation was that they accept the library in full. This report, dated November 28, 1814, presents the bill to the Senate for Jefferson's 6,487-volume library, for a price of $23,950. The books were shipped beginning in April 1815, with the last wagonload arriving in Washington that May. Scarce, according to online records, only two other copies of this report have come to auction since the Streeter Sale, the last copy in these very rooms in 2023. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 189 - [Judaica] One of the Earliest Printed References to Jewish Individuals Living in the New World, 1698
[Judaica] One of the Earliest Printed References to Jewish Individuals Living in the New World, 1698 The Continuation of the Laws of Jamaica, Passed by the Assembly, And Confirmed by his Majesty in Council, December 26th 1695. Being the Second Volume of the said Laws. London: Printed for Charles Harper, and Samuel Crouch, 1698. First edition. Folio. (iv), 101, (3) pp. Full contemporary brown calf, stamped in blind, boards worn, scuffed, dry, and soiled, spine and joints dry and worn; all edges trimmed; ink stamps of the Library of the New York Law Institute on title-page and Index. ESTC R42084 One of the earliest printed references in English to members of a Jewish community living in the new world, listing them by name in the collected volume of laws of Jamaica. On pp. 8-10 is printed, "be it further Enacted and Ordained by the Authority aforesaid, that the Nation and People of the Jews Residing within this Island, Pay or cause to be Paid, toward the Raising of the said Sum of Mony (sic)...the full Sum of Seven Hundred and Fifty Pounds Currant Mony of this Island, to be rated, Assessed, Taxed, Collected and Paid in by Solomon Ararii, Jacob de Leon, Moses Toiro, Jacob Mendez Guteres, Jacob Henriques, Jacob Rodrigues de Leon, Moses Jesuram Cardoso, Samuel Gabay, Jacob Lopes Torres, Isaac Coutinho, Isaac Nunes Gonsales and Abraham Nunes..." While Jews, or those of Jewish descent, had been living in Jamaica since at least the 16th century, mainly of Portuguese and Spanish descent, it was not until the English capture of the island in 1655 that a more organized and intentional community began to take root. Other Jewish communities in the New World had sprung up earlier in the 17th century, among the first considered to be in Recife, Brazil in the latter 1630s, with others in Barbados, Suriname, and Martinique, but it was Jamaica that increasingly became a safe haven for them to openly practice their faith and customs, attracting settlers from Europe and elsewhere. Bolstering this emigration was the island’s religious tolerance, and the English Crown’s granting of citizenship. As the above law demonstrates though, while the Jewish community maintained civic rights, they were nonetheless discriminated against and taxed at a higher rate than their Christian neighbors. The above act relates to the repulsion of a French attack on the island in 1693, with four thousand pounds being subsequently levied, a fifth of which was requisitioned by the Jewish community on the island, and to be paid by their wealthiest and most prominent members (the 12 listed). Failure to pay by the designated date would result in a fine, the confiscation of slaves or other property, or arrest. Other similar taxes followed in the years hence. Despite this oftentimes onerous taxation, the Jewish community continued to thrive, reaching nearly 3,000 in the early 18th century. Rare. ESTC locates only two other copies, at Harvard University and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 190 - [Judaica] Thorpe's Original House of David Baseball Club of Benton Harbor, Michigan World's Champion Traveling Baseball Team
[Judaica] Thorpe's Original House of David Baseball Club of Benton Harbor, Michigan World's Champion Traveling Baseball Team Pensacola, Florida: Mayes Printing Co., ca. 1929. Printed broadside; 22 x 11 1/4 in. (559 x 286 mm). Laid down on card; creasing from old folds. Formed in 1913 by members of the Adventist commune the Israelite House of David, the House of David Baseball Club was a sensational barnstorming baseball team, known for their long unkempt hair and trick plays a la the Harlem Globetrotters. Headquartered in Benton Harbor, a small town in southwest Michigan, the Israelite House of David was founded in 1903 by the preacher couple Benjamin and Mary Purnell. Members of this communal society renounced personal property and adhered to strict prohibitions against sex, meat, alcohol, drugs, tobacco, and shaving. The group's baseball team emerged from Benjamin's passion for the sport and his belief that physical activity was essential to spiritual discipline. By the 1920s, the team had become a staple of the American barnstorming circuit, competing against both amateur and semi-professional clubs. During the team's lifetime they achieved remarkable success, drawing massive crowds, due not only to their wild looks, but to their adept playing skills and trick maneuvers. Toward the end of the decade, the team began recruiting professional talent, signing legends such as Grover Cleveland Alexander, Chief Bender, and Satchel Paige. They even occasionally featured Babe Ruth, who would humorously don fake facial hair to blend in with the bearded members of the team. This rare broadside dates to the year following the death of founder Benjamin Purnell, a period marked by the fallout from his scandalous trial and a subsequent schism within the commune. The split resulted in two factions: one loyal to Mary Purnell and the other remaining faithful to the original leadership. This poster features a full team photograph, an image of manager Francis Thorpe at center left, star player J.L. Tally--dubbed "The Babe Ruth of the Colony Team"--at center right, and John Tucker, known as the "Elongated First Baseman," at the bottom. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 191 - [Judaica] Early Front-Page report Warning Against Adolf Hitler, 1929
[Judaica] Early Front-Page report Warning Against Adolf Hitler, 1929 Jewish Daily Bulletin New York: Wednesday, January 2, 1929. Printed newspaper. Vol. V, No. 1256. 4to. 4 pp. Disbound; small chipping and wear along edges. With an early front-page report warning against Adolf Hitler: "Warns of Danger in Hitler Agitation Among German Peasants...A warning that if not checked, the anti-Semitic Hitler agitation among German peasants will lead to acts of violence..." Between 1928 and 1930 the Nazi Party in Germany began a sharp rise in popularity, propelled by their eagerness to blame minority groups for the country's economic instability. Hitler's scapegoat of choice was the Jewish people, which would eventually result in the Holocaust which saw over 6 million Jews murdered by Hitler's fascist regime. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 192 - [Know Nothing Party] Hurd, Charles, et al. Archive of Over 200 Manuscripts and Documents
[Know Nothing Party] Hurd, Charles, et al. Archive of Over 200 Manuscripts and Documents Locations vary, ca. 1830s-1930s. Archive of 218 documents related to Charles Hurd of Londonderry, New Hampshire, as well as his relatives or descendants. Including 165 manuscript pages of speeches and essays by Hurd; approximately 53 manuscript letters, bills, or receipts, by Hurd or his relatives; a small albumen postcard glossed "Hurd Family Farm"; a printed newspaper The Native American (Vol. I, No. I, February 22, 1844). Many documents housed in paper folders, and in green cloth binder titled, "Miscellaneous Writings of Charles Hurd Circ. 1850..." Size and condition varies; some documents heavily soiled. An extensive archive of original manuscripts, essays, and speeches, by Charles Hurd (1791-1873), an active participant in the Native American political party (also known as The Know Nothings) in the 1840s-60s. His writings cover both his personal and party views on topics such as temperance, nativism, biblical truths or philosophies, anti-Catholic rhetoric, democracy, the Whig Party, tariffs, the Fillmore administration, and much more. During the 1840s and 50s, as the Whig Party declined in political power, and the Republican Party was still in its beginning stages, the Native American Party or "Know Nothings" rose as an alternative faction to the Democrats. The Know Nothings preached a nativist stance against the growing trend of European immigration, specifically from Roman Catholic nations, while promoting traditional religious and political values, advocating temperance, and taking a neutral position on slavery. In 1856 the Know Nothings nominated former President Millard Fillmore to run on their ticket for the Presidency, but his loss that year to James Buchanan led to the party's rapid decline and eventual disappearance during the American Civil War. An extensive archive offering an in-depth look at the ideology of a 19th century American political party. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 193 - [Judaica] Large Archive of Items Related to Jewish Americans, etc., ca. 1820s-1960s
[Judaica] Large Archive of Items Related to Jewish Americans, etc., ca. 1820s-1960s Locations vary, ca. 1820s-1960s. Comprising over 40 items, including books, pamphlets, newspapers, government reports, printed invoices, etc., as well as three press photos. Publications relate to Zionism or Jewish American immigrants, their businesses, celebrations, and more. Notable content includes: The Anglo-Saxon, March 1899, issue "Devoted to the Identity of the Anglo-Saxon Race with the House of Israel..."; The Jewish Daily Bulletin, April 18, 1929, featuring an article on Albert Einstein; various Jewish publications such as The Jewish Mail, Yugnt, The Workmen's Circle, Young Maccabee, Digest and Review...of the American Jewish Congress, Zionist Organization of America, and others (1930s-50s); an 1893 Congressional Report recognizing the service of Haym Solomon during the American Revolution; Jewish Buyers' Guide, Spring 1954, etc.; Size and condition vary, generally very good. The first immigrant to the Americas of Jewish descent, Luis de Carabajal y Cueva, arrived at what is now Texas in 1570. During the lead-up to American independence around 2,000 Jews lived in the colonies, many of them supportive of the Patriotic cause. In a 1790 letter to a Jewish congregation, President George Washington wrote, "May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in the land continue to merit and enjoy the goodwill of the other inhabitants. While everyone shall sit safely under his own vine and fig-tree and there shall be none to make him afraid." Jewish immigration increased during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, largely to escape European persecution, and following the Second World War many more European Jews emigrated to the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 194 - [Labor] Group of 9 Items Related to American Labor and Manufacturers
[Labor] Group of 9 Items Related to American Labor and Manufacturers Locations vary, ca. 1820-1992. Comprising nine items, including, Printed Senate Report ("Plan for the Defence of our Commerce"). Washington, D.C., April 3, 1820. 8vo.; Patron of Industry. New York, Saturday, July 29, 1820. Printed newspaper. Folio; Printed Congressional Report ("Kentucky--Protect American Manufactures"). Washington, D.C., April 26, 1832. 8vo; Profits on Manufactures at Lowell. A Letter From the Treasurer of a Corporation to John S. Pendelton, Esq., Virginia. Boston: Little & Brown, 1845. 8vo; The Coal Calamity Supplement to Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. September 25, 1869. Folio; Printed Senate Report ("Memorial of the Laboring Men of the United States"). Washington, D.C., December 15, 1869. 8vo; Group of two stereoviews depicting Pennsylvania miners, ca. 1880s; Paxton, A.B. Cabinet card depicting Oregon laborers. Condition varies, generally very good; documents all disbound; photographs worn. The roots of the American labor movement stretch all the way back to 1619, when Polish craftsmen organized a strike to protest their being barred from voting in the first elections held in the Virginia colony. Subsequent strikes did little to achieve the goals of the strikers, largely due to a lack of organization and a lack of legal recourse. It was not until the Industrial Revolution came into full swing, as craftsmen found themselves losing their jobs to machines, that workers began to organize and demand protections for their livelihoods. The legality of labor unions was decided by the United States Supreme Court in the 1842 landmark case of Commonwealth v. Hunt. Over subsequent years the debate over worker rights has been played out again and again, often with bloody results, as in the case of the Haymarket Affair and the Pullman Strike. After a decline in union membership during the latter half of the twentieth century, the labor movement has seen a dramatic resurgence over the last two decades, largely in response to concerns over economic inequality and high costs of living. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 195 - [Labor] Partially-Printed Indentured Servitude Agreement, Baltimore, 1790
[Labor] Partially-Printed Indentured Servitude Agreement, Baltimore, 1790 Baltimore: Printed by John Hayes, November 3, 1790. Single sheet, 13 x 8 in. (330 x 203 mm). Partially-printed document, being an agreement of indentured servitude between John William Barkle, and James Dunwoody, the former agreeing to serve the latter for two and a half years; signed by both at conclusion ("Johan Willem Bartels" and "Jas. Dunwadey"), and witnessed by future Mayor of Baltimore James Calhoun. Autograph endorsement signed by Calhoun on verso. Wax seals present. Creasing from old folds, closed tears along same; scattered foxing and stains. James Calhoun (1743-1816) served as Deputy Commissary General of Maryland during the American Revolution, and later served as the first Mayor of Baltimore from 1794-1804. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 196 - [Labor] Report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, the Deadliest Industrial Disaster in United States History: "140 Girls Perish in Big Factory Holocaust"
[Labor] Report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, the Deadliest Industrial Disaster in United States History: "140 Girls Perish in Big Factory Holocaust" The Call San Francisco, March 26, 1911. Vol. CIX, No. 116. Folio. pp. 17-52. Printed newspaper. With a front-page report of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. Disbound; leaves brittle; creasing from old folds; scattered loss to extremities; moderately toned. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire occurred on March 25, 1911 in New York City, resulting in 146 deaths, the majority of which were Jewish and Italian girls. The sweatshop occupied three floors of a building located in Greenwich Village, and was not outfitted with any sort of sprinkler system. Additionally, the doors to many stairwells had been locked by managers to prevent workers from stealing or taking breaks. The disaster led to a major push by reform groups, especially the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) advocating for improved safety protection and better working conditions for laborers across the country. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 197 - [Lafayette, Marquis de] Sheet Music for The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Boston Brigade Band During the Marquis de Lafayette's Visit During his Triumphal Return and Tour of America in 1824-25
[Lafayette, Marquis de] Sheet Music for The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Boston Brigade Band During the Marquis de Lafayette's Visit During his Triumphal Return and Tour of America in 1824-25 The Boston Brigade March, as Performed by the Brigade Band at the Reception of Genl. Lafayette... Boston and New York: Published by James L. Hewitt, (ca. 1824). Second state (of two). Printed sheet music. 4to. Two conjoined sheets. Disbound; ink stamp on first leaf ("Hewitt's Store"); foxing along edges; dampstaining in top edge. Wagner, James Hewitt Selected Compositions, 22a; Wolfe 3684A Sheet music for a performance by the Boston Brigade Band during the Marquis de Lafayette's visit to Boston during his triumphal return and tour of America in 1824-25. Lafayette first visited Boston from August 25-September 2, 1824, where he was greeted by over 100,000 people. During his stay he visited Harvard University, the sites of the Battles of Bunker Hill, Lexington, and Concord, and met with former president John Quincy Adams in Quincy, Massachusetts. He returned nearly a year later, in June 1825, after touring the rest of the United States, and laid the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument during the 50th anniversary of the battle, which was attended by 200,000 people. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 198 - [LGBTQ+] Group of 6 LGBTQ+ Related Periodicals, 1784-1978
[LGBTQ+] Group of 6 LGBTQ+ Related Periodicals, 1784-1978 1. The Boston Magazine for June, 1784. Boston: Norman, White, and Freeman, 1784. 8vo. pp. 317-358, lacking pp. 313-316. Illustrated with two engraved plates, including a portrait of Chevalier D'Eon, a French soldier, spy, and diplomat, and "arguably the most famous male crossdresser in history..." (Bolich, Crossdressing in Context, p. 105). Disbound. 2. The Furies Lesbian/Feminist Monthly Washington, D.C., January 1972. Vol. I. Printed newspaper. Folio. 16 pp. Creased from when folded; wear along edges and at fold. 3. Bitch The Only Newspaper For Women New York: Milky Way Productions, March 1974. Vol. I, No. 2. Printed newspaper. Folio. 24 pp. Creased from when folded; lightly worn. 4. GayLife The Midwest Gay Newsletter (Chicago): YourStyle Publishers Inc., Friday, December 8, 1978. Volume 4, Number 25. Printed newspaper. Folio. 28 pp. Folded; toned. With a front page report on the aftermath of the November 27 murder of San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, and notification of a memorial service for him in Chicago. Lot includes an issue of Homophile Studies (Fall 1959), and Expose (November 1, 1951). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 199 - [LIFE Magazine] Dummy of the First Issue of LIFE Magazine, 1936
[LIFE Magazine] Dummy of the First Issue of LIFE Magazine, 1936 New York: Time Inc., ca July 30, 1936. Light creasing to covers. This first dummy issue was prepared for prospective advertisers and produced and distributed by Time Inc. four months prior to the November 23, 1936 publication of the magazine's premiere issue. One of the most important publications in the history of photojournalism, and arguably the most iconic American magazine of the twentieth century, LIFE was among the most widely read periodicals in the United States from its debut in 1936 through the 1960s. First issued as a weekly magazine on November 23, 1936, LIFE revolutionized modern journalism through its emphasis on large-format photographic essays, bringing world events, war, politics, celebrity, and everyday life into American homes with unprecedented immediacy. The magazine continued its weekly run until December 29, 1972, when it ceased regular publication and thereafter appeared only in occasional special editions. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 200 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Early Mention of Abraham Lincoln as a State Legislator
[Lincoln, Abraham] Early Mention of Abraham Lincoln as a State Legislator Illinois Sentinel Vandalia, Illinois, December 5, 1840. Vol. 1. No. 52. Bifolium sheet, 21 1/2 x 16 in. (546 x 406 mm). Printed newspaper, featuring an early mention of Abraham Lincoln when an Illinois State Congressman. Creasing from old folds, separated at vertical central fold; closed tears repaired with cello tape; small chips to extremities; scattered soiling; ownership signature at top right, "Dept. of State." A scarce issue of the Illinois Sentinel, listing the names of those appointed to standing committees within the state House of Representatives, among them a 31-year-old Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln is listed as a member of the Committee on Canals and Canal lands. Later in his political career, he would have a long-standing commitment to what he called "internal improvements", for infrastructure projects such as canals, railroads, and other pieces of infrastructure. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 201 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Lincoln's Famed "Spot Resolutions" in His Local Newspaper: Printing of a Rebuke to the First Major Speech Given by Him as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives
[Lincoln, Abraham] Lincoln's Famed "Spot Resolutions" in His Local Newspaper: Printing of a Rebuke to the First Major Speech Given by Him as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives Illinois State Register Springfield, January 14, 1848. Bifolium, 26 x 19 in. (660 x 483 mm). Printed newspaper. Creasing from old folds, scattered wear to extremities, a few small closed tears; light dampstaining affecting half of text; contemporary inscription at top left of front page. Printing a rebuke to the first major speech given by Abraham Lincoln as an Illinois Congressman in the House of Representatives. Delivered two days prior on January 12, Lincoln's "Spot Resolutions" speech argued against the wantonness of the Polk administration whom he claimed incited an unnecessary war with Mexico. The author of this article, charges "Thank Heaven, Illinois has eight representatives who will stand by the honor of the nation. Would that we could find Mr. Lincoln in their ranks doing battle on the side of his country as valiantly as did the Illinois volunteers upon the battle fields of Buena Vista and Cerro Gordo. He will have a fearful account to settle with them..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 202 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Front-Page Ad for Lincoln & Herndon's Law Practice, July 14, 1858
[Lincoln, Abraham] Front-Page Ad for Lincoln & Herndon's Law Practice, July 14, 1858 Daily Illinois State Journal Springfield, (Illinois): Bailhache & Baker, July 14, 1858. Volume XI, Number 26. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds; separated along central vertical fold; wear and creasing along edges. Featuring an ad for Abraham Lincoln's law practice on the front page: "Lincoln & Herndon Attorneys and Counsellors at Law..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 203 - [Lincoln, Abraham, and Stephen Douglas] Very Rare Pamphlet Containing the Text of the Last Debate Between Lincoln and Douglas, the Only Separate Printing of any of Their Historic Debates
[Lincoln, Abraham, and Stephen Douglas] Very Rare Pamphlet Containing the Text of the Last Debate Between Lincoln and Douglas, the Only Separate Printing of any of Their Historic Debates Washington (D.C.): Lemuel Towers, 1858. First edition. 8vo. 32 pp. Printed from text in the Chicago Daily Times, October 17, 1858. Limp printed wrappers, foxed; edges unevenly trimmed, small closed tears to extremities; scattered manuscript numbering, foxing throughout. Monaghan 10 Very rare pamphlet containing the text of the final debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, the only separate printing of any of their historic debates. After winning the 1858 Republican nomination for the Senate from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln delivered his famous "House Divided" speech and prepared for a hard-fought campaign against Douglas, who continued to oppose any meddling whatsoever with the institution of slavery. Lincoln and his campaign team began following Douglas across the state, delivering campaign speeches immediately after him, until he finally agreed to a series of seven debates with Lincoln between August 21-October 15, 1858, and now remembered as the Lincoln-Douglas Debates. The present example is only the fourth copy to appear in the available auction record in the last 50 years. Lot also includes a small tintype portrait of Douglas, and an issue of the Campaign Plain Dealer and Popular Sovereignty Advocate (July 14, 1860); This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 204 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Unrecorded Anti-Lincoln Handbill: Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row
[Lincoln, Abraham] Unrecorded Anti-Lincoln Handbill: Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row No place, no date (ca. 1860-64]. printed handbill. Wood-engraved vignette depicting enslaved men; 3 15/16 x 5 1/2 in. (100 x 140 mm). "Ho! For Salt River! The "Black Repubs" Making for the State House Row. The 'Black Republicans' driven into Retirement! Bought nominations with Brokers and Office Holders money gone to Salt River." An apparently unrecorded anti-Lincoln handbill. "Black Republicans" was an epithet coined by pro-slavery Democrats and Southern critics to tar the party with the brush of racial radicalism, implying that Republicans sought not merely to contain slavery's expansion but to overturn the entire racial order of American society. "Gone to Salt River," meanwhile, was a well-worn idiom in antebellum political culture, invoking total electoral humiliation. To be sent up Salt River was to be finished, repudiated, swept from the field by the voters. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 205 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Group of 4 Items Related to President Abraham Lincoln, 1860-65
[Lincoln, Abraham] Group of 4 Items Related to President Abraham Lincoln, 1860-65 Locations vary, ca. 1860-65. Comprising four items, including, jugate letterhead of Lincoln and Hamlin, ca. 1860 (Milgram AL-107); Message of the President of the United States, July 17, 1862, announcing that Cornelius Vanderbilt has presented the ocean steamer Vanderbilt for service to the government (single sheet, disbound); The Presidential Election. Appeal of the National Union Committee to the People of the United States, September 9, 1864, urging the reelection of President Lincoln (single sheet, 11 1/4 x 8 1/8 in.); American Phrenological Journal and Life Illustrated, New York, May, 1865, Vol. 41, No. 5, Whole No. 317 (4to, original printed wrappers), with an article on the death of President Lincoln. Condition varies, generally good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 206 - [Lincoln, Abraham]. The First Conspiracy to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln, Breaking News in The New York Herald, 1861
[Lincoln, Abraham]. The First Conspiracy to Assassinate Abraham Lincoln, Breaking News in The New York Herald, 1861 The New York Herald New York, Sunday Morning, February 24, 1861. Whole No. 8934. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Creasing from old folds; separations along center vertical fold, some repairs to same. Breaking front-page news of a conspiracy to prevent President-elect Abraham
Lot: 207 - [Lincoln, Abraham] "With Malice Toward None, with Charity for All": Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address
[Lincoln, Abraham] "With Malice Toward None, with Charity for All": Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address The New-York Times New-York, Monday, March 6, 1865. Vol. XIV, No. 4195. Printed newspaper on rag paper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; creasing from old folds, unevenly toned from same; short separation at fore-edge of central horizontal fold. Printed in full on the front page is Lincoln's second inaugural address, followed by reports on the inauguration ceremonies. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 208 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Contemporary Manuscript Copy of Special Field Order No. 56, Announcing the Assassination of President Lincoln, April 17, 1865
[Lincoln, Abraham] Contemporary Manuscript Copy of Special Field Order No. 56, Announcing the Assassination of President Lincoln, April 17, 1865 "The General Commanding announces with pain and Sorrow that on the evening of the 11th inst. at the Theater in Washington City His Excellency the President of the United States Mr. Lincoln was assassinated by one who uttered the State motto of Virginia..." Head Quarters Mil(itary). Div(ision). of the Miss(issippi). in the Field Raleigh, N(orth).C(arolina)., April 17, 1865. Lined bifolium, 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. (248 x 197 mm). Manuscript document, signed by Captain and Assistant Adjutant General Hubert S. Brown, of the Second Division of the Fifteenth Army Corps, being a contemporary copy of General William T. Sherman's Special Field Order No. 56. , announcing to the Union Army the assassination of President Lincoln. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds, small separations along same; largely separated along central vertical fold; scattered light soiling. On the morning of April 17, 1865, General William T. Sherman, commander of the Military Division of the Mississippi, was traveling from Raleigh, North Carolina to Durham to negotiate the surrender of Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston. When he was about to depart he received an urgent telegraph from Secretary of War Edwin Stanton: "The following order of the Secretary of War announces to the Armies of the United States the untimely and lamentable death of the illustrious Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States...at 7.22 o’clock on the morning of Saturday, the 15th day of April, 1865, Abraham Lincoln...died of a mortal wound, inflicted upon him by an assassin. The Armies of the United States will share with their fellow-citizens the feelings of grief and horror inspired by this most atrocious murder..." Following the meeting and his return to Raleigh, Sherman showed the message to his staff, and cautioned them to keep close observance of the soldiers when the news was broke, as they might retaliate against the civilian population of the city in a fit of emotion. As a precaution, he strengthened the garrison and guard at the roads leading into the various camps, ordered all soldiers on leave to immediately return to their commands, and placed the city on lockdown. Following these preparations, Sherman released his Special Order that evening. "The startling proclamation that Lincoln was dead brought varied reactions from the Federal troops. Fortunately, accompanying Special Field Order No. 56 was the announcement of the first day's truce talk between Sherman and Johnston. This helped turn the thoughts of soldiers from vengeance to peace." (Barrett, p. 236) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 209 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Abraham Lincoln Funeral Program with Order of Procession for Washington, D.C., April 17, 1865
[Lincoln, Abraham] Abraham Lincoln Funeral Program with Order of Procession for Washington, D.C., April 17, 1865 Washington, D.C.: War Department, Adjutant General's Office, April 17, 1865. 12mo. (1), 2-3 pp. Printed mourning border, with diagram of hearse and pallbearers. Signed in type by Assistant Adjutant General W.A. Nichols. Disbound; remnants of original thread. A scarce and fine example of the official arrangements for Abraham Lincoln's Washington, D.C. funeral procession. The program lists in detail the several military units, civic and religious figures, family and relatives, as well as cultural and institutional officers that took part in the solemnities, with a printed diagram showing the hearse and pallbearers. It is followed by a description of the procession's movements, which was to begin at precisely 2 o'clock P.M. on Wednesday, April 19th, following the conclusion of the religious services at the Executive Mansion. The start of the procession was met with the firing of several guns from St. John's Church, City Hall, and the Capitol, and the ringing of church bells throughout Washington, Georgetown, and Alexandria. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 210 - [Lincoln, Abraham] Rare New York Times New Year's Broadside Commemorating the end of the Civil War and the Assassination of President Lincoln
[Lincoln, Abraham] Rare New York Times New Year's Broadside Commemorating the end of the Civil War and the Assassination of President Lincoln Carrier's Address. 1866. Happy New Year. The New York Times. To our Patrons New York: Printed by E.S. Dodge & Co., 1866. Printed broadside, 23 x 16 3/4 in. (584 x 425 mm). Printed in brown ink; text in four columns; printed decorative border; vignette at top and bottom. Creasing from old folds; scattered light spotting; repairs on verso edges; scattered edge-wear. A rare New Year's carrier's address broadside printed for the patrons of The New York Times, commemorating in verse the end of the Civil War and the assassination of President Lincoln: "Another tale will old men oft relate, / Of how our Lincoln fell 'neath traitor hate; / How he we loved so much, with so much pride, / Struck by th' assassin's fatal bullet, died." Rare. OCLC records only two other copies, at the New York Historical Society (imperfect), and at the New Jersey Historical Society. According to RBH, no other copy of this broadside has sold at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 211 - [Louisiana Purchase] President Thomas Jefferson Announces the Louisiana Purchase
[Louisiana Purchase] President Thomas Jefferson Announces the Louisiana Purchase Connecticut Herald New-Haven: Printed and Published by J. Woodward and M. Potter, November 1, 1803. Vol. I, No. I. Printed newspaper. (4) pp. Creasing from old folds, small holes along central horizontal fold of each sheet; creasing and wear along edges; scattered soiling and minor dampstaining. One of the most significant and far-reaching Presidential addresses to Congress, Jefferson's October 17, 1803 message announcing the Louisiana Purchase: "The enlightened government of France saw, with just discernment, the importance to both nations of such liberal arrangements as might best and permanently promote the peace, friendship and interests of both; and the property and sovereignty of all Louisiana, which had been restored to them, has on certain conditions, been transferred to the United States by instruments bearing date the 30th of April last." He goes on to stress, "With the wisdom of Congress it will rest to take those ulterior measures which may be necessary for the immediate occupation and temporary government of the country; for its incorporation into our union; for rendering the change of government a blessing to our newly adopted brethren; for securing to them the rights of conscience and of property; for confirming to the Indian inhabitants their occupancy and self-government, establishing friendly and commercial relations with them, and for ascertaining the geography of the country acquired." The latter a reference to the Lewis and Clark expedition that was then ongoing, tracing the source of the Missouri River. Other news reported is the passage of the 12th Amendment, to be sent to the individual states for ratification, and which altered the procedure for electing the president and vice president (that led to the contentious election of Jefferson as vice-president during John Adams' term). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 212 - [Louisiana Purchase] Report Regarding the Louisiana Purchase in the National Intelligencer, and Washington Advertiser
[Louisiana Purchase] Report Regarding the Louisiana Purchase in the National Intelligencer, and Washington Advertiser Washington City: Printed by Samuel Harrison Smith, Wednesday, October 26th, 1803. Vol. III, No. CCCCLXX. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front page. Disbound, old stub along spine; creasing from old folds, separations along same; chipping and wear along fore-edge. On the front-page is a report regarding the Louisiana Purchase, prefaced with, "The House of Representatives have taken off the injunction of secrecy respecting the following proceedings of the last session, and ordered them to be printed." Following is a resolution passed by Congress on January 12, 1803, appropriating $2 million for the purchase of New Orleans and East and West Florida from the Spanish and French. On the fourth page is a report from Congress requesting the President provide a copy of the Spanish and French treaty, ceding Louisiana Territory to France. Congress ratified the Louisiana Purchase a week prior to this newspaper, on October 20. A lengthy article on the second and third pages prints the debates around the passage and ratification of the 12th Amendment to the Constitution. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 213 - [Louisiana Purchase] The Return of Lewis and Clark
[Louisiana Purchase] The Return of Lewis and Clark The Connecticut Courant Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Goodwin, Wednesday, November 5, 1806. Vol. XLII, Numb. 2180. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Old ownership signature at top of front-page. Creasing from old folds. Printed at the top of the second-page is an October 27 report from Washington, D.C., announcing the return of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark following their over two-year-long expedition into the Louisiana Territory. The article recounts the final leg of their journey, over the Rocky Mountains and along the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean, and Lewis's expected journey to Washington, D.C. to be received by President Thomas Jefferson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 214 - [McKinley, William] Pair of General Orders on the Death of President William McKinley
[McKinley, William] Pair of General Orders on the Death of President William McKinley Washington, D.C., September 14-November 14, 1901. Group of two printed documents, each 7 7/16 x 4 7/16 in. (189 x 113 mm). One printed with mourning border. Chip in bottom edge of September document. The first document (General Orders #123) was issued by Secretary of War Elihu Root on September 14, 1901, announcing to the United States Army, the death of President McKinley. The second (General Orders #150) was issued by Theodore Roosevelt two months later, on November 14, 1901. "This Thanksgiving finds the people still bowed with sorrow for the death of a great and good President. We mourn President McKinley because we so loved and honored him; and the manner of his death should awaken in the breasts of our people a keen anxiety for the country, and at the same time a resolute purpose not to be driven by any calamity from the path of strong, orderly, popular liberty which as a nation we have thus far safely trod..." William McKinley was assassinated in Buffalo, New York on September 6, 1901, while attending the Pan-American Exposition. He was shot twice at close range by anarchist Leon Czolgosz, while inside the Temple of Music building during a public receiving line where the President was greeting visitors. McKinley died eight days later on September 14. Following his death, Vice President Theodore Roosevelt assumed the office. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 215 - [Monroe, Marilyn] Group of 5 Documents Relating to the Divorce of Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio
[Monroe, Marilyn] Group of 5 Documents Relating to the Divorce of Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio Locations vary, ca. 1955. A small group of papers related to Monroe's divorce from Joe DiMaggio, comprising two telegrams from Monroe's attorney Jerry Giesler to attorney Frank Delaney (including one with receipt), a carbon of one typed letter (from Delaney to Monroe, dated February 3, 1955, transmitting a copy of her divorce judgement, the latter not present), and one typed memo, presumably from Delaney, being a list of the locations of her divorce judgement. Lot also includes a press photograph of Monroe and DiMaggio, ca. January 16, 1954. Condition varies, generally fine. The marriage between film star Marilyn Monroe and baseball legend Joe DiMaggio lasted only 274 days, with the filming of Monroe's infamous subway grate scene from The Seven Year Itch widely believed to have been the main cause for the couple's separation; in the divorce proceedings Monroe was represented by Jerry Giesler, who worked closely with Monroe's legal counsel Frank Delaney to finalize the settlement. Delaney would later prove crucial in establishing Monroe's independent production company in 1955. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 216 - [Mexican-American War] A U.S. Soldier Writes to His Love Interest Following the March on Matamoros
[Mexican-American War] A U.S. Soldier Writes to His Love Interest Following the March on Matamoros Matamoros, Mexico, September 8, 1846. Bifolium. Two-page autograph love letter in blue ink, signed by a United States Army soldier to his love interest, recounting his unit's march on Matamoros. Addressed on integral leaf, with additional manuscript in another hand, "Miss Eliza Whiting Eagleville". Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling. Early in the Mexican-American War, a United States Army soldier, stationed in Matamoros, Mexico, writes to his love interest, recounting his march on the city: "I'm thinkin that would done your very soul good to see us when we lumbered thiseer town. If we didn't make a noise equal to almost any thunder clap you ever hearn, and made it as lite a day in the night, then i'll be hanged. We worked plenty hard, for so much gunpowder burnt down in thiseer hot-clymit don't make it none the cooler, When yeller Mexicans tried to blow us up but they couldn't cum it, for all them ateen pownders of ours went made for nothin, and they sent a lot of balls in amongst em and they made turin work for we put in the catriges full into em and when we tuched em of they bellerd like a made Ruffler. B____ they giv up and then we marched in and took possession on em. Tween you and me Kate I didn't feel none the wurs for the fite fur Jineral marched us into the town with all dignity, and sooty Mexican gals lookin as iff they was skeered haf to deth looked at us wen we cum in but I didn't see none I liked so much as you Kate. I kep my head up and looked as smart as I could..." General Zachary Taylor marched on Matamoros, Mexico in mid May 1846, following his victories at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma that ended the Mexican Army's siege of Fort Texas on the Rio Grande River. The city would remain occupied by U.S. forces for the remainder of the war, and serve as a critical staging ground and supply depot for Taylor's troops as they advanced into the interior of Mexico. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 217 - [Mexican-American War] Contemporary Manuscript Naval Document of Instructions for the First Large-Scale Amphibious Invasion in American Military History
[Mexican-American War] Contemporary Manuscript Naval Document of Instructions for the First Large-Scale Amphibious Invasion in American Military History No place, (presumably off Lobos Island, Gulf of Mexico), no date (presumed ca. February 1847). Bifolium, 12 1/2 x 8 in. (317 x 203 mm). Three-page manuscript document, being a contemporary copy of General Orders No. 28, detailing naval directions and signals "prescribed by the Genl. in Chief [Winfield Scott]...strictly observed on board of all vessels belonging to his expedition..." Docketed on verso, with further manuscript below, "A copy of G.O. No 28 & sailing directions to be furnished to each master of a vessel--New vols. are already furnished"; creasing from old folds; small stain in lower central fold. A fascinating contemporary copy of General Orders No. 28, issued by Major General Winfield Scott in preparation for the siege of Veracruz, Mexico during the Mexican-American War--the largest amphibious invasion in American history before the D-Day landings during World War II. Issued from Army Headquarters aboard the USS Massachusetts, an auxiliary steam-powered packet ship, the present Order details numerous flag signals and directions for vessels to use during the invasion. Aided by Commodore David E. Conner's Home Squadron, Scott's 15,000-strong force prepared for their operation off the Island of Lobos in early March 1847. The operation took place on March 9, and in less than 24 hours, facing little resistance, Scott landed 12,000 soldiers onto Mexican shores. Veracruz, the largest port in Mexico, served as a critical and strategic gateway to the capital of Mexico City, whose capture Scott hoped would force Mexico's surrender. Protected by the San Juan de Ulúa fortress, Scott chose to surround Veracruz for bombardment instead of the potential risk of taking the fort outright. Bombardment began on March 22, and by the 29th Mexican forces surrendered. The invasion opened the interior of Mexico, and began Scott's successful campaign toward Mexico City, arriving on the outskirts by August. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 218 - [Monroe Doctrine]
One of The Earliest Printings of the Monroe Doctrine
[Monroe Doctrine] One of The Earliest Printings of the Monroe Doctrine "The American continents, by the free and independent condition they have assumed and maintained, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers" National Journal [Extra] Washington, D.C.: Published by Peter Force, December 3, 1823. Vol. I, No. I. 4to; 12 5/8 x 9 3/8 in. (321 x 238 mm). Six leaves, printed in two columns. Disbound from the National Government Journal, and Register of Official Papers...From December, 1823, to December, 1824; leaves separated; toned; wear and chipping along edges. Library of Congress ink stamp on recto and verso of first leaf ("Surplus Duplicate"). Sabin 25057 A very rare printing of President Monroe's December 2, 1823 message to Congress, now known as the Monroe Doctrine, one of the most important American state papers and the guiding foreign policy for America's relations in the Western Hemisphere. Printed in Peter Force's National Government Journal, and Register of Official Papers, an early predecessor of the Congressional Record. Force produced this special "Extra" edition of his daily newspaper (National Journal, 1823-30) to chronicle the sessions of the federal Congress. It contains the debates in the House and Senate, bills introduced, discussions and votes, and other government business. Although Force's venture failed after one year (only December 1823-December 1824 was printed), it was the first major separate publication dedicated solely to the printing of Congressional activity, and preceded by a year Joseph Gales, Jr. and William W. Seaton's Register of Debates (1824), printers of Force's rival newspaper, the National Intelligencer. The National Intelligencer, and Force's National Journal, were the de facto and semi-official newspapers of the federal government. This printing is preceded only by the very rare broadside newspaper "extra" printed by the National Intelligencer, published the day prior, on December 2. Gales and Seaton also published President Monroe's message to Congress in their Daily National Intelligencer on the same day as this extra by Force. Very rare to market, according to RBH, we can locate no other copy of this printing having been sold or offered at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 219 - [Mormonism] Group of 13 Printed Items Related to Mormonism, ca. 1842-1879
[Mormonism] Group of 13 Printed Items Related to Mormonism, ca. 1842-1879 Locations vary, ca. 1842-1879. Group of 13 printed items related to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, including, five issues of the printed periodical Times and Seasons (Nauvoo, Illinois: 1842-46); printed periodical American Penny Magazine and Family Newspaper (Vol. 1, No. 47, December 27, 1845); printed newspaper Life Illustrated (August 15, 1857, Vol. IV, No. 16); printed pamphlet Circular of the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1877); printed newspaper Salt Lake Daily Review (August 9, 1871, Vol. 1, No. 1); three issues of the printed newspaper Woman's Exponent (Salt Lake City, 1877-79); printed newspaper The Sun, (August 30, 1877, Vol. XLIV, No. 364). Size and condition varies. Following the 1838 Mormon War and their expulsion from the state of Missouri, Joseph Smith led his church to Illinois, where they bought a small town which they renamed Nauvoo and settled into what proved to be a short-lived period of relative tranquility. Within a few years, however, tensions arose between the Mormons and their neighbors once again. Joseph Smith was murdered by a mob in 1844 and the largest sect of his followers, now led by Brigham Young, fled to the Utah Territory. For the next forty years the Mormon Church remained locked in a statehood dispute with the United States government, mainly over the church's practice of polygamy. This dispute is generally acknowledged to be the main reason why Utah was not admitted as a state until a formal ban was written into the state's constitution, a practice which all other western states were forced to add into their own constitutions as well. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 220 - [Mormonism] A Unique Contemporary Manuscript Account of Joseph Smith's Final Words to His Followers, the Day Before his Violent Death, on the Interior of a Postal Cover
[Mormonism] A Unique Contemporary Manuscript Account of Joseph Smith's Final Words to His Followers, the Day Before his Violent Death, on the Interior of a Postal Cover "The prophet told his people the day before he was killed, to read the 6th Ch. Revelation; as a part was already fulfilled, and the remainder will shortly be..." (Nauvoo, Illinois, July, 27, 1844). Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 7 1/2
Lot: 221 - [Mormonism] Substantial and Nearly Consecutive Run of an Anti-Mormon Newspaper
[Mormonism] Substantial and Nearly Consecutive Run of an Anti-Mormon Newspaper Corinne Daily Reporter Corinne, Utah: Dennis J. Toohy, Monday, July 1, 1872-December 30, 1872. Vol. V, Nos. 181-343 (Nos. at rear misnumbered beginning after No. 289). Comprising 145 near-consecutive issues, lacking Nos. 183, 200, 206, 216, 218, 219, 228, 273, 278, and 308. Folio. Each issue 4 pp. Bound together in worn stiff paper wrappers, typed paper spine labels; contemporary ownership signature at top of each front-page ("L.P. Fisher"); scattered tape repairs and pencil or crayon scrawls; scattered creasing and wear along edges; some issues faded. A substantial and nearly consecutive run of this anti-Mormon newspaper, founded in 1869 by Dennis J. Toohy, an Irish attorney and prominent leader of Utah's anti-Mormon Liberal Party. The publication was launched in March of that year in Corinne, a town situated along the Pacific Union railroad. Established by non-Mormon settlers, Corinne earned the nickname "Gentile City" as its founders sought to create a rival economic and political hub to challenge Salt Lake City. This newspaper offered a diverse mix of content, including local, domestic, and international news, advertisements for local businesses, and a significant number of humorous pieces, many targeting and mocking the Mormon Church. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 222 - [Mormonism] Signed Autograph Quote from Ann Eliza Young, Nineteenth Wife of Mormon Leader Brigham Young, Signed During her Divorce Proceedings Against him, 1874
[Mormonism] Signed Autograph Quote from Ann Eliza Young, Nineteenth Wife of Mormon Leader Brigham Young, Signed During her Divorce Proceedings Against him, 1874 No place, January 13, 1874. Single sheet, 7 1/4 x 4 7/8 in. (184 x 124 mm). Autograph quote, signed by Ann Eliza Young: "God grant your sufferings may never / equal mine. / Ann Eliza Young. / January 13th 1874". Inscription in purple ink in another later hand at top. Scattered light spotting; faint erased pencil inscription at top; likely excised from an album. An autograph quote from Ann Eliza Young (1844–1917), the nineteenth wife of Mormon leader Brigham Young, signed during her divorce proceedings against him. Born into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Nauvoo, Illinois, she married Young on April 7, 1869; at the time, he was 67 and she was a 24-year-old divorcee. In 1873, Ann Eliza filed for divorce, citing neglect, cruel treatment, and desertion. The divorce was granted in 1875. In the years that followed, she became a vocal critic of the Mormon Church, particularly its practice of polygamy. Her activism included testifying before Congress in April 1874 and lecturing in Washington, D.C. about her experiences. Her efforts contributed to the passage of the Poland Act in 1874, which reorganized the Utah Territory and transferred civil and criminal cases from Mormon probate courts to federal jurisdiction. In 1876, she published Wife No. 19, an autobiography detailing her life with Young and her broader critique of Mormonism. Her lectures on her marriage and religion captivated the American public for years and helped shape public opinion and legislation. Her pressure is considered to have influenced the church's 1890 Manifesto, which advised members to cease marriages forbidden by U.S. law. Polygamy itself was federally outlawed through the Edmunds Act of 1882 and the Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 223 - [Motor Racing] Early Race Car Crash at the Daytona Beach Race Course
[Motor Racing] Early Race Car Crash at the Daytona Beach Race Course New York: Burr McIntosh Studio, 1905. Photograph mounted to original card, studio blindstamp in lower right corner of photograph; studio imprint in gilt in lower left corner of card; contemporary typed card stapled to verso, "Both Driver and Mechanic Were Killed in this Wreck at Daytona Beach, Fla. 1905. Mechanic was Killed Instantly; Croker Died Shortly Afterward. Car was Built for Richard Croker Jr. of New York City." Chipping and small losses to edges of mount, closed tear in bottom of same. An early and scarce Daytona Beach auto race photograph, showing the fatal wreckage of Frank H. Croker's (1878-1905) Simplex race car. At the time of his fatal crash on the afternoon of Saturday, January 21, 1905, Croker was preparing for the Sir Thomas Dewar Trophy race, the top event at the third annual Daytona-Ormond Beach Speed Carnival competitions, held from January 23-28. While practicing the course at Ormand Beach in his 75-horsepower Simplex racecar he attempted to avoid a crash with motorcycle racer Newton Stanley, who was also using the course. Croker's car turned over several times after hitting a sand dune, ejecting Croker, and instantly killing his mechanic, Alexander Raoul, before coming to rest partially in the sea. Croker suffered critical head and body injuries and was taken to the Hotel Ormond, where he was cared for by numerous doctors, but died the following morning. Croker was the son of Richard Croker, Jr., a one-time coroner in New York City, and leader of Tammany Hall and New York's Democratic Party. At the time of his death, Frank was preparing to compete in 15 races over the week-long Speed Carnival, and had raced the pictured Simplex for the first time the previous October at the Vanderbilt Cup race on Long Island. Over 8,000 people attended his funeral in New York City, including the Mayor, and several people from the Democratic Club and Tammany Hall. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 224 - [Music] [The Beatles] Scarce Poster Advertising the First Polish Release of The Beatles Film A Hard Day's Night
[Music] [The Beatles] Scarce Poster Advertising the First Polish Release of The Beatles Film A Hard Day's Night Poland: United Artists, 1964. Off-set color lithographed poster. Text in Polish. Designed by Waldemar Swierzy. 33 3/4 x 24 in. (857 x 610 mm). Scattered surface wear and creasing; wear along edges; small loss in top right corner; dampstaining and soiling in top edge; pinholes in corners; large repaired vertical closed tear in top edge, other smaller repaired closed tears along edges. A scarce poster advertising the first Polish release of the classic 1964 Beatles' film, A Hard Day's Night, directed by Richard Lester. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 225 - [Music] [Country Joe and the Fish] Group of 2 Psychedelic Concert Posters, 1966-1975
[Music] [Country Joe and the Fish] Group of 2 Psychedelic Concert Posters, 1966-1975 Country Joe and the Fish Likely Berkeley, California, November 1966. Color lithograph designed by "Weller"; photograph by Paul Kagan. Loss in lower right corner. 22 9/16 x 17 5/8 in. (573 x 448 mm). Promotional poster for Country Joe and the Fish's performance schedule for November 1966. Together with: Be-In A Day to Be-In the Park Presented by Radio Free Madison and the Mad City Be-In Committee...featuring Hemisphere Recording Artists...Derringer... Madison, (Wisconsin), September 7, 1975. Screen-print. Hole in upper left side; closed tear upper right side. 17 x 11 (432 x 279 mm). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 226 - [Music] [Hendrix, Jimi] Early Concert Contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience
[Music] [Hendrix, Jimi] Early Concert Contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience London: Harold Davison Agency Ltd, December 5, 1966. Unsigned carbon of a contract between manager Philip Haywood and Chas Chandler for "The Jimmy Hendrix Experience", for a show at the Ricky Tick Club in Windsor, Berkshire, England, on December 23, 1966. Creasing from old folds; stain in bottom left corner; small holes in top left corner from removed staple. 13 x 8 in. (330 x 203 mm). A very early and scarce carbon of a concert contract for The Jimi Hendrix Experience, for a two-set show at the Ricky Tick night club in Hounslow, England, on December 23, 1966. By May of 1966, Hendrix had been playing circuit gigs in America for months, earning scant attention and struggling to earn a living. That summer his luck began to change. When playing with Curtis Knight and the Squires at New York’s Cheetah Club, his playing caught the attention of Linda Keith, then girlfriend of the Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards. They became quick friends, and Linda soon referred Hendrix to Chas Chandler, bassist for The Animals who was looking to transition to managing artists. During his final tour with The Animals, Chandler saw Hendrix play at Cafe Wha? Nightclub in Greenwich Village, and mesmerized by his performance of “Hey Joe”, invited Hendrix to London and signed him to a management contract. By the early fall they began to search for members to fill out a band, and quickly recruited guitarist Noel Redding on bass, and Mitch Mitchell on drums. By mid-October Chandler arranged for the band, now called The Jimi Hendrix Experience, to support French star Johnny Hallyday for a brief tour of France. They played their first-ever live show on October 13 at the Novelty, in Evreux. Shows in Germany and England followed through the fall and winter. Their first single, “Hey Joe” backed by “Stone Free”, was released on December 16, less than two weeks after this contract. Television performances followed, and their single entered the UK charts on December 29 and peaked at #6. It was the beginning of an arc that would catapult the group to the forefront of Rock and Roll, and immortalize Hendrix as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 227 - [Music] [Hendrix, Jimi, and Janis Joplin] Winner?/Winner?
[Music] [Hendrix, Jimi, and Janis Joplin] Winner?/Winner? No place: L & S Productions, 1970. Offset color lithographic poster. 36 1/4 x 14 1/4 in. (921 x 362 mm). Scattered light edge-wear. A handsome and uncommon example of this powerful anti-drug poster, depicting musicians Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, both of whom died from drug overdoses in 1970 at the age of 27. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 228 - [Native-Americana] Bell, Charles M. White Eagle, Ponca Chief, ca. 1877
[Native-Americana] Bell, Charles M. White Eagle, Ponca Chief, ca. 1877 Washington, D.C., ca. 1877. Mammoth plate albumen photograph on original card; 20 x 18 in. (508 x 457 mm). Scattered foxing and stains. A striking and large studio portrait of Ponca Chief White Eagle, taken by Charles M. Bell. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 229 - [Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] The Athenian Mercury, with a Postscript Honoring John Eliot
[Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] The Athenian Mercury, with a Postscript Honoring John Eliot London: Printed for John Dunton, Saturday, November 28, 1691. Vol. 4, Numb. 18. Printed newspaper. Broadsheet. Disbound; wear along left edge, dampstaining along same. With a postscript honoring Puritan missionary to the Native Americans in Massachusetts Bay colony, John Eliot (1604-90), who was "so very earnest for the bringing poor Children under the Bond of the Covenant, that he very openly and earnestly maintain'd the Cause of Infant Baptism..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 230 - [Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] Leaf From the Eliot Indian Bible, the First Bible Printed in America
[Native-Americana] [Eliot, John] Leaf From the Eliot Indian Bible, the First Bible Printed in America (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Samuel Green and Marmaduke Johnson, 1663). Single disbound leaf, 7 3/8 x 5 3/4 in. (187 x 146 mm). Printed in two columns. Lightly soiled; small repair in top and bottom edge. Leaf 5L3 from the first Bible printed in America, and translated into a Native American language, by John Eliot. Featuring portions of Chaps. 9-10 of Zechariah, as well as some surrounding text. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 231 - [Native-Americana] Group of Nine Photographic and Printed Items Related to Native Americans, ca. 1807-1900
[Native-Americana] Group of Nine Photographic and Printed Items Related to Native Americans, ca. 1807-1900 Locations vary, ca. 1807-1900. Group of nine items related to Native Americans, including: a William Henry Jackson albumen print, "Dance in the Pueblo San Juan"; a cabinet card by D.B. Chase, Santa Fe, "Indian Ghost Dance"; a printed circular of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, April 17, 1807, discussing Indian advancements in agriculture; two printed Senate of the United States reports, July 24, 1846 and June 23, 1852, regarding the proposed purchase of George Catlin's collection of paintings; printed pamphlet, Missionary Paper. Number Sixteen. By the Bishop Seabury Mission. July, 1861. Faribault, Minnesota.; printed pamphlet, Report of a Visit to the Sioux and Ponka Indians on the Missouri River, Made by William Welsh... (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1872); printed pamphlet, A True History of the Massacre of Ninety-six Christian Indians... (Gnadenhuetten, Ohio: R.C. House, 1882); color photochrome after William Henry Jackson, 1900, depicting "Ute Chief Sevara and Family". Condition varies, generally very good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 232 - [Native-Americana] Gurney, Jeremiah. Tak-Kee-O-Mah "Little Robe" Chief of the Cheyennes
[Native-Americana] Gurney, Jeremiah. Tak-Kee-O-Mah "Little Robe" Chief of the Cheyennes New York: J. Gurney & Son, 1871. Albumen print, mounted to captioned card, 12 x 10 in. (305 x 254 mm). Scattered soiling to mount, uneven toning to same. A fine portrait of prominent Cheyenne warrior turned peace advocate, Little Robe (Takkeomah). Born in 1828, Little Robe gained distinction as a warrior during the 1850s in battles against the Pawnee and Ute. He rose to a leadership position within his tribe, and survived the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre, where United States troops slaughtered around 200 Cheyenne and Arapaho. Following this, he waged war against white settlers, but soon came to the conclusion that such actions were hopeless and subsequently became an advocate for peace. He signed treaties at both the Little Arkansas in 1865, and Medicine Lodge in 1867, and became a leader of the peace faction of the Southern Cheyenne. He was a delegate to Washington, D.C., in 1871 and 1873, where he met with President Ulysses S. Grant and Congressional leaders, and then retired to his home on the North Canadian River. He died there in 1886. From Jeremiah Gurney's portfolio of Native Americans, created for the Trustees of the Blackmore Museum, in Salisbury, England. The Blackmore portfolio contained 12 albumen portraits of Cheyenne, Arapaho and Wichita leaders. Gurney boasted of being the oldest and most extensive photographic establishment in the world, a claim that may well have been true. Born in 1812, he was trained as a jeweler, an occupation he engaged in until 1840 when he took up photography, soon after its invention. He was one of the first to take up the new craft, and as such, had to have French journals translated for instruction, and had to make much of his own equipment. His affable nature combined with great skill made his New York City business a great success. By 1869 he had several studios, including one at 707 Broadway, trading as Gurney & Son, which was described as the most expensive photographic establishment in the world. It was to this studio that this delegation of Native Americans was brought to in June of 1871. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 233 - [Native-Americana] Kelly, R.L. Cabinet Card Portrait of Spotted Eagle
[Native-Americana] Kelly, R.L. Cabinet Card Portrait of Spotted Eagle Pierre, Dakota: Kelly & Odell, ca. 1880s. Cabinet card portrait of Sioux Chief Spotted Eagle, on gilt-bordered cardstock mount, Kelly & Odell imprint below image. Contemporary manuscript on verso: "Spotted Eagle / Sioux Chief / Engaged in the Custer Massacre / in 1876". Light wear along edges; spotting. 6 1/2 x 4 1/4 in. (165 x 108 mm). Spotted Eagle, a leader of the Sans Arcs Lakota Sioux, fought at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876, and played a key role in the defeat of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry. After the battle, he fled to Canada with Sitting Bull before surrendering to U.S. authorities at Fort Keogh, Montana, in October 1880. By the summer of 1881, he had been moved to Standing Rock in the Dakota Territory and later to Cheyenne River. R.L. Kelly was a Canadian photographer who operated a studio in Hamilton, Ontario, before moving to Pierre in the Dakota Territory. In 1881, he co-founded a studio there with M.B. Odell. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 234 - [Native-Americana] Scarce Bound Volume of 5 Issues of Early English Periodical The Political State of Great Britain, Including a Report of Native American Violence in the Colony of South Carolina, etc.
[Native-Americana] Scarce Bound Volume of 5 Issues of Early English Periodical The Political State of Great Britain, Including a Report of Native American Violence in the Colony of South Carolina, etc. London: Sold by T. Warner, January-June, 1724-25. Five issues bound in one (April issue wanting). 8vo. Full contemporary speckled brown calf, gilt armorial crest of the Scottish Duke of Buccleuch on front and rear board, black morocco spine label, both boards worn and soiled, joints split but holding; scattered foxing and offsetting. A scarce volume of five issues of an early English periodical. Highlights include a report of Native American violence in the colony of South Carolina, a notice of the death of Czar Peter the Great, an early account of smallpox inoculation performed by Dr. James Jurin, and the Treaty of Vienna between the Spanish and Holy Roman Empires. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 235 - [Native-Americana] Rinehart, Frank A. White Buffalo, 1898
[Native-Americana] Rinehart, Frank A. White Buffalo, 1898 Omaha, Nebraska: F.A. Rinehart, 1898. Silver gelatin print, 9 1/8 x 7 1/4 in. (232 x 184 mm). No. 785. Official photograph of White Buffalo of the Cheyenne, taken during the Trans-Mississippi Exposition and Indian Congress. Mounted to board above printed label, lightly foxed; In mat and in frame, 19 x 16 1/4 in. (483 x 413 mm). White Buffalo (1862-1929) was a Cheyenne chief and an early attendee of the infamous Carlisle Indian School. The Indian Congress, held concurrently with the 1898 Trans-Mississippi Exposition in Omaha, Nebraska, was the largest gathering of Native Americans at that point in history. The portraits taken by official photographer Frank A. Rinehart (1861-1928) are regarded as some of the best representations of traditional Native dress. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 236 - [Native-Americana] Penhallow, Samuel. The History of the Wars of New-England with the Eastern Indians..., 1726 (but 1859), with 2 Extremely Rare Colonial American Military Signatures Tipped-in
[Native-Americana] Penhallow, Samuel. The History of the Wars of New-England with the Eastern Indians..., 1726 (but 1859), with 2 Extremely Rare Colonial American Military Signatures Tipped-in Cincinnati: Re-printed from the Boston Edition of 1726...for Wm. Dodge, by J. Harpel, 1859. One of 150 copies privately printed. 4to. 7, (4), 10-138, 36 pp., including Appendix (not always found). With two cut signatures mounted to front paste-down ("Samuel Penhallow" and "John Lovewell"). Original quarter linen over blue paper-covered boards, extremities and boards rubbed and worn, spine label perished; text partially unopened; foxing to text. "The best early summary of New England's Indian troubles." (Howes) Samuel Penhallow (1665-1726) was a Maine colonist and historian during Queen Anne's and Dummer's War, who served as commander of Fort Menaskoux during the latter, where he was wounded during the Northeast Coast Campaign (1724). John Lovewell (1691-1725) was an American militia captain who fought in Father Rale's War (1722-25), and led three expeditions against the Abenaki in Maine, and killed in the last during the Battle of Pequawket (also known as Lovewell's Fight). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 237 - [Native-Americana] [Sitting Bull] Autograph Letter, Signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Offering an Account of the Encounter that Ended with the Death of the Famed Lakota Warrior, Sitting Bull, 1890
[Native-Americana] [Sitting Bull] Autograph Letter, Signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Offering an Account of the Encounter that Ended with the Death of the Famed Lakota Warrior, Sitting Bull, 1890 Fort Yates, North Dakota. December 30, 1890. One sheet, 10 x 7 3/4 in. (254 x 197 mm). Autograph letter, signed by Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th US Cavalry, to Isaac N. Roland. In part: "I am sorry that I cannot comply with your request, as I have nothing of my own to send you. I was too busy when I drove off Sitting Bulls followers from when they had the Indian police penned up, to secure any trophies myself. After the fight was over, some of the police brought me as a present a beautiful buffalo robe, embroidered with porcupine quills which they gave me as a present as it had been the finest Sitting Bull had. I start out with the Cavalry at day light to try and capture the balance of Bull's band, when I come in again I will see if I cannot get hold of something for you..." Creasing from old folds, closed tears along same; scattered stains. Captain Edmond G. Fechet of the 8th U.S. Cavalry offers an account of the encounter that ended with the death of famed Lakota warrior, Sitting Bull (1831-1890). In 1890 Sitting Bull and his Sioux followers had been living on the Standing Rock Reservation, overseen by United States Indian Agent James McLaughlin based at Fort Yates. A year before, the Ghost Dance ceremony began being adopted by many Plains Indian tribes, advocating an end of American westward expansion. United States officials were wary it would lead to a coordinated Indian rebellion, so McLaughlin, fearing that Sitting Bull might join, ordered his arrest that December. On December 15, over 40 armed police officers entered Sitting Bull's village, informed him that he was under arrest, and attempted to usher him to Fort Yates. The other Sioux nearby began to surround the officers, and when Sitting Bull refused to comply the tensions erupted. A member of the Sioux fired on the officers, who in turn shot Sitting Bull. Within minutes 14 men were killed or wounded. Sitting Bull's body was buried at Fort Yates until 1953, when it was exhumed for reinternment near his birthplace in Mobridge, South Dakota. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 238 - [Native-Americana] [Wounded Knee Massacre] Photograph of the Body of Chief Big Foot, ca. 1891
[Native-Americana] [Wounded Knee Massacre] Photograph of the Body of Chief Big Foot, ca. 1891 Chadron, Nebraska: Northwestern Photographic Company, ca. 1891. Sepia photograph; 5 1/2 x 7 3/8 in. (140 x 187 mm). Depicting the frozen body of Big Foot on the snow-covered ground at the site of the Wounded Knee Massacre, on January 1, 1891. Titled in the negative, "Big Foot." Scattered toning and stains. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 239 - [Old West] Group of 5 Frontier Newspapers Related to the American West, 1860-86
[Old West] Group of 5 Frontier Newspapers Related to the American West, 1860-86 1. Sacramento Daily Union. Sacramento, California. Two issues: June 26 and August 2, 1860 (Vol. XIX, Whole Nos. 2886 and 2917. Folio. Each 4 pp. Each disbound; scattered wear and soiling. 2. Arizona Citizen. Tucson, Arizona. March 15, 1873. Vol. III, No. 23. Folio. 4 pp. Disbound. Old ownership inscription in pencil at top of first page. 3. The Montanian. Virginia City, Montana Territory, February 10, 1876. Vol. 6, No. 29, Whole No. 290. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; toned; wear and loss along edges; some leaving started or separated. 4. The Daily Tombstone. Tombstone, Arizona, April 29, 1886. Volume V, No. 177. 4 pp. Disbound; toned; wear and losses along edges. With an ad for the O.K. Corral Livery and Feed Stable. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 240 - [Old West] A Rare Variant Buffalo Bill Program Insert and a Very Early CDV
[Old West] A Rare Variant Buffalo Bill Program Insert and a Very Early CDV Printed Program Insert for Buffalo Bill's Wild West (Hartford, Connecticut: The Calhoun Printing Company, 1884). Single sheet, being a printed program insert, with lithographed portrait of Cody on verso. Old horizontal crease along center; unevenly toned; abrasions in top edge and top left corner. 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (216 x 140 mm). Originally included as an insert in a larger chromolithographed program (not included) for Buffalo Bill's Wild West show for 1884. Also known as a "tip in", the front features the full program of the show, with events including the grand parade, grand equestrian entree, a Pony Express exhibition, shooting demonstrations by Captain Bogardus and his four sons, a stage coach attacked by Native Americans, a buffalo chase by Cody and Pawnee Indians, and a Native American attack on a settler's cabin with a rescue by Cody and his men. The program represents the second season of Buffalo Bill's Wild West with Nate Salsbury as a partner. Together with: Early CDV of a Young Buffalo Bill Circa 1870s. Carte de visite of a young and hatless William "Buffalo Bill" Cody; on captioned mount. 4 x 2 3/8 in. (102 x 60 mm). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 241 - [Old West] Group of 5 Items Related to Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and other Western Outlaws, ca. 1875-1907
[Old West] Group of 5 Items Related to Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and other Western Outlaws, ca. 1875-1907 1. Partially-Printed Western Union Telegram. Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 7, 1875. Partially-printed telegram on The Western Union Telegraph Company stationery, accomplished by United States Marshal John Pratt, appointing Henry M. Porter, and Alexander G. Irvine, U.S. Marshals for New Mexico, in order to "preserve pease (sic) and order". 2. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. St. Louis, Friday Morning, September 15, 1876. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Small Secretary of State label on front page; heavily worn along central vertical fold. Reporting on p. 5 the famous Northfield Bank robbery by the notorious James-Younger Gang. Jesse and Frank James and company (Cole Younger, Jim Younger, Bob Younger, Clell Miller, Bill Chadwell, and Charlie Pitts) attempted the brazen daylight bank robbery in Winona, Minnesota, on September 14. Local citizens, who realized what was happening, sprang into action and a gun fight ensued, with the robbers fleeing. What resulted, as recounted within, was one of the largest manhunts in the history of the United States and the eventual capture of the Younger brothers. 3. Daily Evening Post. San Francisco, Saturday, April 15, 1882. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Separated along folds; toned and brittle, chipping and closed tears along edges. Featuring a front-page two-column report on the exploits of Jesse James and co.: "The James Boys. An Extraordinary Career of Crime. Robbing for Profit and Murder for Pastime. Some of the More Notable Exploits of the Desperadoes." 4. Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. New York, For the Week Ending April 22, 1882. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 leaves (pp. 129-144). Creasing from old folds; scattered soiling; scattered wear along edges. With a full front-page engraved portrait of Jesse James; a report on his funeral on p. 135; and a full-page engraving depicting the conveyance of his remains, with portraits of the Ford brothers, Robert and Charley. 5. LaCroix, Arda. Billy the Kid. A Romantic Story Founded Upon the Play of the Same Name. New York: J.S. Ogilvie Publishing Company, (1907). 12mo. 128 pp. Original stiff illustrated wrappers. A fine copy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 242 - [Old West] [O.K. Corral] "A Lively Fight at Tombstone": California Newspaper Reports the Legendary Gun Fight at the O.K. Corral, 1881
[Old West] [O.K. Corral] "A Lively Fight at Tombstone": California Newspaper Reports the Legendary Gun Fight at the O.K. Corral, 1881 Stockton Daily Independent Stockton, California, Friday Morning, October 28, 1881. Vol. XLI, No. 72. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; light edge-wear and toning. Tucked away on the third page is a report on the legendary October 26, 1881 shootout between the Earp brothers and the Clanton-McLaury gang at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona: "A Tombstone dispatch of the 26th says: A sanguinary shooting affray occurred on Fremont street this afternoon. Four cow-boys had been in town for a few days past, drinking heavily and making themselves obnoxious by their boisterous conduct. This morning, the City Marshal, V.W. Earp, arrested one for disorderly conduct, and he was fined $25 and disarmed in the Justice's Court. He left, swearing vengeance on the Sheriff and Marshal Earp ... About three o'clock P. M., the Earp brothers and J. H. Halliday [Doc Holliday] met the four, who drew upon them at once, when a lively fire commenced from the cow-boys against the three citizens. About thirty shots were fired, rapidly. When the smoke of battle cleared away... Jim and Frank McLoury were gasping in the agonies of death. Bill Clarton was mortally wounded and died shortly after. Morgan Earp was wounded in the shoulder...V.W. Earp had a flesh wound...Halliday escaped unhurt...There was great excitement, but no further trouble is anticipated...The Sheriff's posse is now under arms..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 243 - [Old West] Tombstone, Arizona $50 Reward Poster for the Arrest of A.B. Taylor, Alias A.B. Clegg, for Forgery and Horse Theft, Issued by Tombstone Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler, with Reference to Early American Cinema
[Old West] Tombstone, Arizona $50 Reward Poster for the Arrest of A.B. Taylor, Alias A.B. Clegg, for Forgery and Horse Theft, Issued by Tombstone Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler, with Reference to Early American Cinema Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona, April 12, 1912. Printed handbill poster, 8 3/4 x 5 3/4 in. (222 x 146 mm). Toned. A $50 reward handbill for the arrest of A.B. Taylor, alias A.B. Clegg, for forgery and horse theft, issued by Tombstone sheriff Harry C. Wheeler. The handbill provides a detailed description of Taylor, noting him as "Age 23 to 25 years old. About 5 feet 5 inches tall. Dark eyes. Dark hair. Swarthy complexion. Some Indian blood." The handbill further notes that Taylor had "worked for Lubin Moving Picture Show...Forged two checks...stole horse and saddle..." and then made his way to New Orleans, where he continued to present himself as a representative of the Lubin Moving Picture Show. Wheeler states, "I hold warrant. Arrest, hold and wire me, I will come at once with extradition papers, and will pay a reward of $50.00 when he is given into my custody." A rare survival. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 244 - [Old West] Autograph Notes on "Wild Bill" Hickok and the McCanles Gang, by Historian William E. Connelley, 1925
[Old West] Autograph Notes on "Wild Bill" Hickok and the McCanles Gang, by Historian William E. Connelley, 1925 Topeka, Kansas, December 14, 1925. Autograph notes on rectos only of six lined sheets, signed by Connelley on final sheet. Residue from removed paperclip in top left corner of first sheet. William E. Connelley (1855-1930), an American writer, historian, and school teacher, spent 42 years collecting and researching material on James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok (1837-76), for his posthumously published book, Wild Bill and His Era. As President, and then Secretary, of the Kansas State Historical Society, Connelley had access to a wide trove of documents related to the old American West and gunslinger and folk hero Wild Bill Hickok. Upon Connelley's death in July 1930, he left behind an extensive manuscript on the frontiersman, which was then completed and published by his daughter. As she indicated in the editor's note for the book, "Much that is valuable has been removed, and much that was left has been condensed." The notes above, penned by Connelley, appear to possibly be one of many vignettes he gathered while researching Wild Bill Hickok (which involved extensive interviews with individuals who knew Hickok directly or indirectly). In this account, Connelley retells the recollections of a Curtis Phillips of Sapulpa, Oklahoma. As a young man, Phillips lived at Rock Creek Station in Jefferson County, Nebraska, the site of Wild Bill's notorious July 1861 gunfight with the McCanles Gang. Phillips's story offers perhaps an alternative motive for the shooting. According to Curtis, a man named Hughes lived at the station at the time, along with his "trifling brother-in-law," Mason. Mason had established a nearby homestead and borrowed cattle from the McCanles brothers. The subsequent events are somewhat unclear, but it appears a postal worker in the area, who had also wanted the cattle, was refused by the McCanles gang. In response, the gang had Mason arrested for cattle theft. This arrest enraged Mrs. Hughes, Mason's sister. Connelley notes that she and Wild Bill were close friends. Feeling scandalized by her brother's arrest, she urged Bill to seek revenge, and Bill obliged by killing McCanles a few days later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 245 - [Opium] Fine Engraved IRS Special Tax Document for the Sale of Opium, ca. 1918-1919
[Opium] Fine Engraved IRS Special Tax Document for the Sale of Opium, ca. 1918-1919 Bennington, Vermont, 1918-1919. Engraved Internal Revenue Service $1 special tax document on "Manufacturer, Distributor, Etc. of Opium, Etc.", received from a dentist Dr. Peleg A. Matteson of Bennington, Vermont, stamp dated June 29, 1918; additional oblong IRS printed slip adhered to recto, "Notice and Receipt--Additional Special Taxes--Revenue Act of 1918", stamped dated April 19, 1919, and totaling $3. Creasing from old folds, scattered edge-wear. A fine IRS special tax certificate for the sale of opium. The Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914 required individuals producing, importing, manufacturing, or dispensing (such as physicians or doctors) opium or cocoa leaves to register with the IRS and pay a special tax. The Revenue Act of 1918 raised the tax rate for the same, and removed exemptions for doctors. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 246 - [Penn, William] Engraved Armorial Book-Plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania, ca. 1703
[Penn, William] Engraved Armorial Book-Plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania, ca. 1703 (Philadelphia), ca. 1703. Engraved armorial book-plate of William Penn, Proprietor of Pennsylvania. 3 1/2 x 3 in. Scattered light stains; mounted to a larger card. William Penn (1644-1718) was an English writer and theologian who in 1681 was granted a land charter by King Charles II to repay a debt owed by the king to Penn's father, creating what the King would name Pennsylvania. The following year Penn founded Philadelphia, which in later years would become the birthplace of the United States of America. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 247 - [Philadelphia Independence Hall] Pay Order for the Doorkeeper of Independence Hall in the Heat of the American Revolution, Signed by Joseph Reed
[Philadelphia Independence Hall] Pay Order for the Doorkeeper of Independence Hall in the Heat of the American Revolution, Signed by Joseph Reed Philadelphia, May 2, 1780. Single sheet, 11 1/2 x 7 1/4 in. (292 x 184 mm). Manuscript document, signed by President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania Joseph Reed ("Jos. Reed Presidt"), ordering Treasurer David Rittenhouse to pay Frederick Sneider for his wages ("three hundred and fifty five pounds twelve shillings and six pence") for his services as doorkeeper to the Council Room at the Pennsylvania State House; listing at top his various sundry expenses. Docketed on verso. Creasing from old folds; chipping along bottom edge affecting some letters, including of "Presidt" in Reed's signature; sheet toned. Joseph Reed (1741-85) was an American politician who in 1778 was one of the first signatories of the Articles of Confederation. Later that year he was elected President of the Supreme Executive Council, or governor, of Pennsylvania, where he oversaw the gradual abolition of slavery. During this time Reed also became involved in a vicious and highly public dispute with Benedict Arnold, who Reed accused of using his position as military commander of Philadelphia to profit from war-related shipments and supply movements. Eventually, Reed publicly charged Arnold with corruption, leading to Arnold requesting a court-martial from Washington to clear his name. Though Arnold was able to do so, the trial damaged his reputation and led to Arnold committing treason against the United States. During this time Reed also waged a fierce campaign against Loyalist citizens of Pennsylvania, advocating that their property be seized and treason charges be levied against them. He was elected to the Continental Congress a second time in 1784 but declined due to ill health. He died the following year at the age of 43. Construction began on the Pennsylvania State House in 1732 after a design by Edmund Woolley and Andrew Hamilton. It was completed nearly twenty-one years later, largely due to payments being made in installments over such a long period of time. On June 14, 1775, delegates of the Continental Congress established the Continental Army, and a little over a year later the Declaration of Independence was unanimously approved within its walls, with the Declaration read for the first time just outside in what is now Independence Square. The Continental Congress continued to meet there until December 12, when the approaching British Army forced their evacuation. They returned briefly in 1777 and permanently, from 1778 to 1781. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 248 - [Perry, Commodore Matthew C.] Manuscript Plan of the Berth Deck of the USS Macedonian, 1852
[Perry, Commodore Matthew C.] Manuscript Plan of the Berth Deck of the USS Macedonian, 1852 (Possibly Brooklyn, New York), 1852. Single oblong sheet of translucent paper, 10 1/4 x 36 in. (260 x 914 mm). Manuscript plan of the "Berth Deck" of the USS Macedonian, in black, red, and brown ink, as well as pencil; manuscript notations in ink and pencil; initialed at top; scattered soiling. In 1852, the USS Macedonian was docked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard to be converted to a sloop-of-war for an expedition to Japan to open foreign trade. The ship was assigned to Commodore Matthew C. Perry's East India Squadron and put under the command of Captain Joel Abbott. She was one of the American ships to arrive off Uraga, Japan on February 13, 1854, during Perry's second expedition to Japan. The Treaty of Kanagawa, negotiated by Perry and the Tokugawa Shogunate, was signed on March 31, 1854, and ended Japan's 220-year-old policy of isolation. Following this, the Macedonian patrolled the north Pacific, from 1854-61, and served with the Home Squadron in the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 249 - [Piracy] Autograph Letter, Signed by a Representative of Cape May County to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, Regarding Enemy Privateers Along the Coast of North America and Cape May, 1747
[Piracy] Autograph Letter, Signed by a Representative of Cape May County to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, Regarding Enemy Privateers Along the Coast of North America and Cape May, 1747 Burlington, New Jersey, August 20, 1747. Single sheet, 12 1/2 x 7 1/2 in. (317 x 190 mm). Autograph letter, signed by Jacob Spicer, representative of Cape May County in the New Jersey House of Assembly, to New Jersey Governor Jonathan Belcher, regarding enemy privateers along the coast of North America and Cape May, and requesting the Governor to take action to help ameliorate the situation. Creasing from old folds, largely separated along central vertical fold; scattered soiling and edge-wear. Jacob Spier (1717-65) was a prominent Cape May County merchant and farmer who represented Cape May County in the New Jersey House of Assembly from 1744 until his death in 1765. This letter, regarding enemy privateers, relates to the then ongoing King George's War (1744-48), the third great colonial North American conflict between Great Britain and France. Here, Spicer, on behalf of his constituents, urges New Jersey Governor Belcher to take action against the privateers. Lot includes two volumes with articles related to piracy and privateers: The Political State for the Month of August, 1729 (see pp. 127-128), 12mo, disbound; Hall, John E. The American Law Journal and Miscellaneous Repertory (Philadelphia: Farrand and Nicholas, 1810), 8vo, library buckram. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 250 - [Piracy] Scarce Contemporary Account of the Death of Infamous Pirate Blackbeard, 1719
[Piracy] Scarce Contemporary Account of the Death of Infamous Pirate Blackbeard, 1719 The Political State of Great-Britain London: Printed for the Author, and Sold by Tho. Warner, and A. Rocayrol, 1719. Volume XVII; six monthly issues, January-June. First edition. 8vo. (x), 658 pp. (erratic pagination). Full contemporary partially speckled brown calf, red morocco onlay on front board, the
Lot: 251 - [Piracy] Rare Royal Proclamation Broadside, Issued by King Charles II During the Golden Age of Piracy, Establishing Strict Regulations for Maritime Trade and Navigation to curb the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insol
[Piracy] Rare Royal Proclamation Broadside, Issued by King Charles II During the Golden Age of Piracy, Establishing Strict Regulations for Maritime Trade and Navigation to curb the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insolences of Private Men of War, March 12, 1683/84 London: Printed by the Assigns of John Bill, and by Henry Hills, and Thomas Newcomb, March 12, 1683/84. Printed broadside, comprised of two sheets; 22 x 15 in. (559 x 381 mm). Large woodcut initial and woodcut royal arms. Creasing from old folds; upper and lower left edge trimmed to text, repair at center of same. Steele, I 3757; ESTC R213166 This rare royal proclamation, issued by King Charles II during the golden age of piracy, establishes strict regulations for maritime trade and navigation in order to curb "the Piratical Practices, Depredations, and Insolencies (sic) of Private Men of War, and others pretending Commission." Although applicable throughout the English realm, the decree was prompted by a surge of unsanctioned piracy in the Caribbean and along the North Atlantic, which was disrupting English commerce and threatening to violate the 1670 treaty between England and Spain that had resolved territorial disputes in the Americas. This document outlines seven specific mandates, such as requiring neutrality within ports and areas under British protection, forbidding men of war from cruising near English coasts, dictating how warships must behave toward merchant vessels while in port, and ordering Vice Admirals and other officers to inspect and confiscate ships suspected of privateering. The proclamation also clarifies the rights of foreign privateers and their cargo, while forbidding English subjects from trading with unauthorized vessels, and banning English citizens from serving on ships belonging to foreign princes or states, commanding any currently doing so to return to English service immediately, "upon pain of being Reputed and Punished as Pirats (sic)." We cannot locate another copy on RBH as having come to auction. ESTC locates only four other copies in the United States, and 14 copies in the United Kingdom and Ireland. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 252 - [Queen Anne's War] Extraordinarily Large Manuscript Petition Signed by a Who's Who of Colonial New York Accomplished on Vellum to Queen Anne from the Colony of New York Seeking Reimbursement for a Failed Conquest of New France
[Queen Anne's War] Extraordinarily Large Manuscript Petition Signed by a Who's Who of Colonial New York Accomplished on Vellum to Queen Anne from the Colony of New York Seeking Reimbursement for a Failed Conquest of New France, November 12, 1709, With Reference to William Penn's Proprietary Colony of Pennsylvania "We your Majesties most Dutifull and Loyall Subjects...fore securing the frontier
Lot: 253 - [Red Scare] Group of 6 Items Related to Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, 1946-54
[Red Scare] Group of 6 Items Related to Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, 1946-54 Locations vary, ca. 1946-54. Group of six items related to Senator Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare, including, a 1954 Christmas card signed in print by McCarthy and his wife, with a mounted black and white image of them; The Red-Baiters Menace America, by Eugene Dennis, a twelve page political pamphlet, ca. 1946; a 59-page typescript titled "Statement of Senator William Benton Before the Subcommittee on Privileges and Election of the Senate Rules Committee, September 28, 1951, Relation to Senate Resolution 187."; three black and white press photographs of Joseph McCarthy. Condition varies, generally fine. Beginning in 1950, Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy (1908-1957) became the most visible opponent of communism in America through his accusations of and hearings on widespread communist subversion in the U.S. Government. This period of "McCarthyism" was defined by the senator's often-unfounded accusations against his social and political opponents, resulting in one of the most notorious periods of American paranoia in the country's history, ruining thousands of lives and careers and in the estimation of many, including Reagan Administration Secretary of Education William Bennett, "cause[d] untold grief to the country he claimed to love... McCarthy besmirched the honorable cause of anti-communism. He discredited legitimate efforts to counter Soviet subversion of American institutions." Senate Resolution 187 was introduced by Senator William Benton of Connecticut, called for McCarthy's ouster from the Senate, specifically to "make such further investigation with respect to the participation of Senator Joseph McCarthy in the 1950 Senatorial campaign of Senator John Marshall Butler and such investigation with respect to his other acts since his election to the Senate as may be appropriate to enable such committee to determine whether or not it should initiate action with a view toward the expulsion from the United States Senate of said Senator McCarthy." Ultimately the Senate Rules Committee investigated, but did not remove McCarthy. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 254 - [Religion] Group of 6 American Pamphlets on Religious Subjects, 1743-1844
[Religion] Group of 6 American Pamphlets on Religious Subjects, 1743-1844 Locations vary, 1743-1844. In six volumes, comprising: The Christian History... (Saturday, August 6, 1743); Lord, Benjamin. A Sermon Preached at the Ordination of the Reverend Mr. John Huntington... (Boston: Edes and Gill, 1763; half-title loose, lacking final blank; ESTC W26200); Pemberton, Ebenezer. A Sermon Preached at the Ordination of the Reverend Mr. Isaac Story... (Salem: Samuel Hall, 1771; ESTC W3200); The character and best exercises of unregenerate sinners set in a scriptural light, in a Discourse Delivered by David Tappan... (Newbury-Port: John Mycall, 1782; ESTC W14016); A Roland for an Oliver. Letters on Religious Persecution... (Philadelphia: Bernard Dornin, 1826); The Truth Unveiled; or, a Calm and Impartial Exposition of the Origin and Immediate Cause of the Terrible Riots and Rebellion in Philadelphia... (Baltimore: Metropolitan Tract Society, 1844). Each 8vo. Disbound; scattered wear. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 255 - [Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Official Program For Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inauguration, Boldly Signed by FDR
[Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Official Program For Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inauguration, Boldly Signed by FDR Washington, D.C.: Published by Ransdell Incorporated, 1933. First edition. Boldly signed by Roosevelt on front wrapper. 4to. 64 pp. Original stiff staple-bound pictorial wrappers, lightly worn and soiled; pp. 31-34 sprung. A handsome copy. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was inaugurated as the 32nd President of the United States on March 4, 1933, amidst one of the most turbulent periods in American history since the Civil War. That year, the American unemployment rate peaked at 24.9%, the highest in U.S. history. His inaugural speech was broadcast into millions of homes, with his words, "let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is...fear itself" instantly becoming one of the most memorable phrases of any presidency. Lot also includes a press photograph of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 256 - [Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Mimeographed Typescript Press Copy of the First Fireside Chat
[Roosevelt, Franklin D.] Mimeographed Typescript Press Copy of the First Fireside Chat Washington, D.C., March 12, 1933. Three mimeographed sheets, titled in type "Address of President Roosevelt by radio, delivered from the President's study in the White House at 10 P.M. today." Each sheet measuring 14 x 8 1/2 in. (356 x 216 mm); stapled at top. Noted in type "For the Press" at top of first sheet, and below of same, "Caution: Not to be Released by the Press in editions appearing on the streets before 10 P.M. today.", with manuscript at top of same, "Roosevelt-Address / Radio Desk No. 1-Banking". Scattered soiling; scattered wear along edges. Scarce original press release typescript of the first fireside chat delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. One of the most celebrated and innovative achievements of his presidency, Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his first "fireside chat" just eight days into his first term, amidst a severe month-long banking crisis that had triggered bank runs and closures nationwide. The broadcast aimed to inform and reassure the distressed public, with Roosevelt explaining what his administration had done in the preceding days, the reasoning behind those actions, and the steps planned for the future. Using direct and accessible language, Roosevelt addressed the events that had eroded public trust in the banking system and outlined his strategy to restore economic stability. His plan included declaring a national bank holiday to temporarily shut down the banking system and stock market, passing the Emergency Banking Act, which established federal deposit insurance, and gradually reopening only those banks deemed financially sound by federal inspectors. As Roosevelt assured listeners, "It is safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than under the mattress." The fifteen-minute address reached over 60 million Americans and helped restore public confidence, such that in the two weeks that followed, Americans deposited more than half of the currency they had previously withdrawn during the panic. Over the next ten years Roosevelt would go on to deliver approximately 30 more fireside chats that covered topics ranging from New Deal initiatives, economic recovery, to foreign policy and the unfolding events of World War II, and have since been recognized as one of the defining moments of his presidency. Rare to auction, according to RBH, we can not locate another example at auction. OCLC locates only one other example, at the Hagley Museum and Library. Lot also includes a press photograph of FDR. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 257 - [Sacco and Vanzetti] Press Photo of a San Francisco Protest in Support of Italian Anarchists, Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927
[Sacco and Vanzetti] Press Photo of a San Francisco Protest in Support of Italian Anarchists, Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927 San Francisco, August 23, 1927. Press photo, 6 3/8 x 11 1/4 in. (162 x 286 mm). Crease in lower left edge; scattered abrasions; ink addition in top left; manuscript on verso, "Sacco Vanzetti Demonstration S.F.", date stamped below same, "Aug 23 1927". By 1927, the prosecution and possible innocence of Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti had become a worldwide cause celebre. Protests were held in every major city in the United States, as well as across Europe, South America, and as far away as Australia. The present photo, showing a demonstration in San Francisco is date-stamped August 23, 1927, the day both men were executed by electric chair. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 258 - [Salem Witch Trials] Printed Ad for Increase Mather's "Tryals of the New-England Witches", in The Athenian Mercury
[Salem Witch Trials] Printed Ad for Increase Mather's "Tryals of the New-England Witches", in The Athenian Mercury London: Printed for John Dunton, Tuesday, June 20, 1693. Vol. 10, Numb. 12. Printed broadsheet newspaper, 12 1/4 x 7 1/2 in. (311 x 190 mm). Light toning and wear long edges. On the second page is an ad for Increase Mather's A Further Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches, the earliest printed book on the Salem Witch Trials. Increase Mather (1639-1723) was a Puritan minister who was a highly influential religious and political figure during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692-93. Mather had published a book on witchcraft in 1684 and his son Cotton had written one shortly afterwards in which he defended the courts which had condemned twenty people to death. Mather's A Further Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches was often bound with copies of his son's account, entitled Wonders of the Invisible World. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 259 - [Sauer, Christoph] The First Book Printed in German in America: Zionitischer Weyrauchs Hugel oder: Myrrhen Berg, 1739
[Sauer, Christoph] The First Book Printed in German in America: Zionitischer Weyrauchs Hugel oder: Myrrhen Berg, 1739 Germantown: Christoph Sauer, 1739. First edition, second issue (with the correct imposition of signature B). 8vo. (xii), 792, (14) pp. Likely contemporary boards, spine perished, original leather removed, boards detached but holding; all edges trimmed; marbled paste-downs (free endpapers perished), partially exposed contemporary waste-paper under same; spotting and toning; one leaf of manuscript at rear. Evans 4466; Hildeburn 617; Sabin 106364 The first book from the press of Christoph Sauer, and the first book printed in German in America. Christoph Sauer (1695-1758) was the first German printer and publisher in America. Emigrating from Schwarzenau, Germany (now Berleburg) to Germantown, Pennsylvania in 1724, he established a press there in 1738 to serve the needs of the growing German-speaking population in the colonies. The present volume, comprised of hymns created by Johann Conrad Beissel (founder of the Ephrata Community in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania) and others, was compiled for the use by the Ephrata Community, and is considered the Community's "largest and most important collection of the hymns". "As the edition was small and the book was in common use for devotional purposes, it has become extremely scarce, nearly all of the few known copies being imperfect." (Hildeburn) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 260 - [Science & Technology] Thomas Edison's Laboratory Copy of a Patent for an Electric Light, 1881
[Science & Technology] Thomas Edison's Laboratory Copy of a Patent for an Electric Light, 1881 (Washington, D.C.: United States Patent Office), February 15, 1881. Printed patent for Thomas A. Edison's Electric Light, patent No. 237,732. Two conjoined sheets. 4to. Illustrated with lithographed diagram of an electric light. Disbound; toned along edges. From the collection of Charles L. Clarke and extracted from his bound collection of U.S. Patents granted to Edison. Clarke (1853-1941) was Chief Engineer and first President of the Edison Electric Light Company and was responsible for the Pearl Street Station in New York, the world's first commercial power plant. In February 1881, Edison established the headquarters of the Edison Electric Light Company in New York City, seeking to power lower Manhattan, which was achieved through the work of his engineers like Clarke. The Edison Electric Light Company began operations on October 15, 1878. It was one of many business entities founded by Edison, and was a patent-holding corporate entity, backed by J.P. Morgan and the Vanderbilt family, for the purpose of funding Edison's experiments with the incandescent bulb and electric lighting. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 261 - [Space] Neil Armstrong's 1962 Astronaut Training Certification in the Flight Controllers Course, from the Armstrong Family Collection
[Space] Neil Armstrong's 1962 Astronaut Training Certification in the Flight Controllers Course, from the Armstrong Family Collection No place, October 22, 1962. Printed oblong sheet, 8.5 x 11 in. (216 x 279 mm). Official NASA-printed document, accomplished in type, certifying that "Neil Armstrong Has Completed The Course of Study In The Flight Controllers Course Number 104..." With facsimile signatures of Christopher Kraft, John Hodge, and one other. Lightly creased; scattered foxing; two bands of offsetting. Encapsulated and certified by Collectibles Authentication Guaranty. First man on the Moon, Neil Armstrong's personal certification for the completion of the Flight Controllers Course, issued just one month after his joining the NASA Astronaut Corps. After his graduation from Purdue, Armstrong became an experimental test pilot for the National Advisory Committee of Aeronautics (NACA). He officially became an employee of NASA when it was established in 1958. When Project Mercury began to take applications for the program, Armstrong was not eligible due to his status as a civilian test pilot. This requirement was waived in 1962 for Project Gemini, and he was selected alongside Elliot See as the first civilians recruited for a NASA program. He would serve on, or in the backup crews of, Gemini 5, 8, and 11, as well as Apollo 9, before his appointment to the command of Apollo 11, in December of 1968. A remarkable piece of space memorabilia, from the Armstrong Family Collection. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 262 - [Space] Group of 6 Items Related to the Apollo 11 Moon Landing
[Space] Group of 6 Items Related to the Apollo 11 Moon Landing 1. Mimeographed NASA Press Release. Washington, D.C., July 6, 1969. Release No: 69-83K Apollo 11. 35 stapled sheets. "The United States will launch a three-man spacecraft toward the Moon...with the goal of landing two astronaut-explorers on the lunar surface..." 2. NASA Apollo Blueprint. New York: Farrand Optical Co., Inc., ca. 1967. Blueprint, apparently related to the Apollo Command Module, titled at bottom "LEM Correlation Chart Electrical Drawings (L&A Electronics & Probe)", drawing No. 120999. Kennedy Space Center Simcom Library Master Copy, stamped at bottom right (possibly in image). Creasing from when folded, small hole at center; unevenly toned. 3. Lunar Module Ascent Monitoring Chart for the Apollo 11 Mission. Washington, D.C.: Prepared Under the Direction of the Department of Defense by the Aeronautical Chart and Information Center, July 21, 1969. Sheet 3B, showing landing site No. 5. 12 1/2 x 36 in. (317 x 914 mm). 4. Printed Braun Electric Canada Report. Two stapled sheets; original photograph of the moon landing mounted to first sheet (copyright stamp on verso "Hasselblad"). "'Stars and Stripes' Billows on a Windless Moon". 5. Aldrin, Buzz. Signed "First Man on the Moon Apollo 11" Cover. With postal stamps. Lot also includes a small photograph of an astronaut disembarking a lunar module. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 263 - [Star Trek] William Shatner-Signed Script of the Pilot Episode of Star Trek
[Star Trek] William Shatner-Signed Script of the Pilot Episode of Star Trek No place, November 30, 1964 (but later reprint). Star Trek "Final Draft" of pilot episode "The Cage", signed by William Shatner on front wrapper. (iv), 81 pp. Original stiff blue printed wrappers. A William Shatner-signed final draft script for the pilot episode of Star Trek. Written by Gene Roddenberry and completed in January of 1965, the pilot was rejected by NBC for being too cerebral. Another pilot was ordered, and the footage for the present episode was worked into the season one two-part episode "The Menagerie". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 264 - [Star-Spangled Banner] Eyewitness Account of the Shelling of Fort McHenry in the War of 1812, in a Manuscript Logbook from the HMS Trave, Present at the Battles of Baltimore and New Orleans, 1814-16
[Star-Spangled Banner] Eyewitness Account of the Shelling of Fort McHenry in the War of 1812, in a Manuscript Logbook from the HMS Trave, Present at the Battles of Baltimore and New Orleans, 1814-16 “Bombs and Frigates weigh and stand in...commenced a tremendous heavy fire on the batteries near Baltimore...Midnight squally with rain Bombs &c keeping up a heavy bombardment on Fort
Lot: 265 - [Star-Spangled Banner] The First Magazine Appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", 1814
[Star-Spangled Banner] The First Magazine Appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", 1814 The Analectic Magazine Philadelphia: Published and Sold by Moses Thomas, 1814. Vol. IV only. First edition. 8vo. iv, 524 pp. Illustrated with an engraved frontispiece portrait, engraved vignette title-page, and four engraved portraits. Contemporary three-quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt, boards and extremities rubbed; yellow-stained edges; foxing to endpapers and leaves at front and rear; scattered offsetting. BAL 11081G; Filby B18; Streeter Sale II:1070 The first magazine appearance of Francis Scott Key's "Star-Spangled Banner", printed on pp. 433-434 in the November issue. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 266 - [Star-Spangled Banner] One of the Earliest Obtainable Newspaper Printings of the Star-Spangled Banner, September 27, 1814
[Star-Spangled Banner] One of the Earliest Obtainable Newspaper Printings of the Star-Spangled Banner, September 27, 1814 The National Advocate New-York: N. Phillips, Tuesday Morning, September 27, 1814. Vol. II, No. 120. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Separated along central vertical fold; scattered spotting; closed tears in bottom edge of each leaf; light edge wear; scattered small repairs; printing defect in top of central vertical fold. Filby N-13 A very early newspaper printing of the Star-Spangled Banner. Reprinted from the Baltimore Patriot, the editor prophetically introduces Francis Scott Key's poem--printed anonymously with its original title the "Defence of Fort M'Henry"--as "destined long to outlast the occasion, and outlive the impulse, which produced it." They go on to provide some detail to the poem's creation, stating, "A gentleman had left Baltimore, in a flag of truce for the purpose of getting released from the British fleet a friend of his, who had been captured at Marlborough. He went as far as the mouth of the Patuxent, and was not permitted to return lest the intended attack on Baltimore should be disclosed. He was therefore brought up the bay to the mouth of the Patapsco, where the flag vessel was kept under the guns of a frigate, and he was compelled to witness the bombardment of Fort M'Henry, which the Admiral had boasted that he would carry in a few hours, and that the city must fall. He watched the flag at the Fort through the whole day with an anxiety that can be better felt than described, until the night prevented him from seeing it. In the night he watched the Bomb Shells, and at early dawn his eye was again greeted by the proudly waving flag of his country." Key's identity was first published in the September 24 issue of the Frederick-Town Herald, but that news had evidently not yet reached the editors of this newspaper. Key's poem was widely printed at the time, and was first published in a newspaper a week prior to this printing, on September 20, in the Baltimore Patriot & Evening Advertiser. Five other newspapers and some broadsides precede this newspaper, all quite rare, while this printing precedes the first magazine appearance (November 1-3, 1814), the first sheet music appearance (ca. October 19, 1814), and the first book appearance (later 1814). According to online records, we cannot locate another copy of this issue at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 267 - [Star-Spangled Banner] Early Example of Printed Sheet Music for the Star-Spangled Banner
[Star-Spangled Banner] Early Example of Printed Sheet Music for the Star-Spangled Banner Baltimore: John Cole, (ca. 1825). Printed sheet music. Two joined sheets, printed on rectos only. 4to. Disbound; foxing and soiling. Filby S-18 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 268 - [Statue of Liberty] Group of 6 Items Related to the Statue of Liberty, ca. 1883-87
[Statue of Liberty] Group of 6 Items Related to the Statue of Liberty, ca. 1883-87 Locations vary, ca. 1883-87. Group of items related to the Statue of Liberty, including, a Merrick Thread Co. trading card, "Liberty Enlightening the World" (encapsulated by SGC, 3.5 VG+); Bartholdi Statue of Liberty. Liberty Enlightening the World (1884, 24mo), a series of small black and white illustrations; an 1887 German edition of Puck magazine discussing the Statue; three manuscript letters, New York, August-September 1883, discussing moulds for the Statue of Liberty. Size and condition varies, but generally fine. The idea of presenting the American people with a monumental statue representing liberty was first proposed in 1870 by French president of the Anti-Slavery Society Édouard René de Laboulaye, who wanted to honor the Union's victory in the Civil War. Laboulaye also hoped to inspire the French people with the great strides in human rights achieved by their compatriots in the United States to demand a democracy of their own. Architect Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi was inspired by depictions of Columbia and of Libertas, Roman goddess of freedom. Original designs included Liberty holding a broken chain to symbolize the end of slavery, however it was decided that this was too divisive a message so soon after the end of the Civil War. Construction began in Paris in 1877, with the statue's head completed just in time to be displayed at the Paris World's Fair the following year. While this was going on, a pedestal was constructed on Bedloe's Island, in Manhattan harbor. On July 17, 1885 the French ship Isère arrived in New York carrying the parts of the statue. Upon completion of the pedestal, the statue was assembled and a dedication ceremony presided over by President Grover Cleveland, was held on October 28, 1886. Poet Emma Lazarus was commissioned to compose a short verse to be included on the statue which reads in part, "Give me your tired, your poor / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." Lazarus had been heavily involved in relief efforts for immigrant communities in New York and elsewhere, and she would later write that she wished to "dedicate" the statue as a welcoming beacon to those seeking safety from persecution in the United States. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 269 - [Strauss, Levi]. The Birth of Iconic American Blue Jeans: The First Ad for Levi Strauss & Co.
[Strauss, Levi]. The Birth of Iconic American Blue Jeans: The First Ad for Levi Strauss & Co. "Important To The Working Man, Mechanic, Drayman and Miner. Buy Levi Strauss and Co.'s celebrated Patented Riveted Duck and Denim Overalls..." The Daily Independent Helena, Montana. May 7, 1874. Vol. I, No. 37. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds; scattered foxing; contemporary ownership signature at top right of first page; four-inch closed tear at same, affecting signature. A fine example of this Montana newspaper, featuring the first ad for German-American businessman Levi Strauss's iconic blue jeans, printed during the company's inaugural ad campaign. Levi Strauss (1829–1902) emigrated from Germany to the United States in 1847. By 1853, he had established a dry goods store in San Francisco to supply miners during the California Gold Rush with durable workwear and provisions. Recognizing the demand for sturdier trousers, Strauss partnered with tailor Jacob Davis in 1871. Davis had developed a method of reinforcing denim pants with metal rivets. Two years later, the pair secured a patent for the garment, effectively creating the first modern blue jeans. As evidenced by this advertisement, the product was initially marketed to working-class laborers, however, its durability and comfort quickly propelled propelled it as a popular choice across all social classes and professions. Today, Levi's is a global fashion staple, yet retains its status as a symbol of rugged American heritage. According to online records, the above ad began circulation in newspapers in California, Nevada, Montana, and Idaho in early April of 1874 (the oldest evidently being an April 10 ad in the San Francisco Chronicle, headquarters of Levi Strauss & Co.). According to the same records, we cannot locate earlier ads with different content. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 270 - [Technology] Group of 2 Items Related to the Atlantic Cable
[Technology] Group of 2 Items Related to the Atlantic Cable Printed Handbill No place, ca. September 2, 1858. Printed handbill; 7 7/16 x 5 in. (189 x 127 mm). Likely disbound; scattered stains and toning. The Atlantic telegraph cable of 1858 marked the first successful submarine telegraphic connection between Europe and North America, an achievement widely heralded as a triumph of modern science and engineering. Promoted by Cyrus West Field and undertaken by the Atlantic Telegraph Company, the cable briefly enabled direct communication across the Atlantic for the first time in history. On August 16, Queen Victoria transmitted a formal message to James Buchanan inaugurating the line. Though the cable failed after only a few weeks, its temporary success demonstrated the feasibility of transatlantic telegraphy and paved the way for the permanent Atlantic cable, completed in 1866. Together with: The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia, August 8, 1865. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. With a vignette map related to the cable. Some marginal toning; small dampstaining in upper margin. The international telegraph cable expedition of 1865 was the second attempt to secure direct telegraphic communication between Europe and North America. Organized by the Atlantic Telegraph Company, and again, under the leadership of Cyrus West Field, the attempt followed the brief success and subsequent failure of the 1858 cable. Departing aboard the massive steamship SS Great Eastern, the expedition laid thousands of miles of cable across the Atlantic before the line parted and was lost in deep water. Though unsuccessful, the project would pave the way for the successful completion of the transatlantic cable in 1866, an achievement that fundamentally altered international communication. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 271 - [Technology] Partially-Printed Patent for a Precursor of the Television
[Technology] Partially-Printed Patent for a Precursor of the Television Washington, D.C.: The United States Patent Office, March 30, 1880. Single sheet, 11 7/8 x 7 3/4 in. (302 x 197 mm). Partially-printed document, being a one-year patent caveat issued to George R. Carey, relating to an improvement in "Electrical Fac-simile Transfer Instruments"; signed in print by Commissioner of Patents H.E. Paine; red paper seal in lower left. Creasing from old folds; offsetting from seal from when folded. Lot includes two engraved diagrams depicting Carey's selenium camera. In the May 17, 1878 issue of Scientific American, it was reported that, "some very ingenious and curious applications of selenium, in which its peculiar property of changing its electrical conductivity when exposed to light varying in intensity is utilized. The several devices are the invention of Mr. George R. Carey..." Carey (1851–1906), a city surveyor for Boston, based his work on the 1873 research of electrical engineer Willoughby Smith. Smith had discovered selenium's photoconductive properties and, by 1875, had developed a rudimentary method for transmitting images. In early June 1880 (two months following the issue of this preliminary patent) Scientific American further reported on Carey's "wonderful instruments", publishing illustrations of his devices (see the two included diagrams) and explaining their components and function, describing them as "instruments for transmitting and recording at long distances, permanently or otherwise, by means of electricity, the picture of any object that may be projected by the lens of a camera...The operation of this device depends upon the changes in electrical conductivity produced by the action of light in the metalloid selenium..." (June 5, 1880, Vol. XLII, No. 23, p. 355) As one of the first proposed systems for pictorial transmission, Carey's device was an early stepping stone towards the development of television, and was influential to the work of scientists such as Constantin Selencq, who invented the first prototype television around the same time. (see Shelton, The Invention of Television, p. 50) This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 272 - [Technology] United States Patent Issued to a Pioneer in Sound Film, 1927
[Technology] United States Patent Issued to a Pioneer in Sound Film, 1927 (Washington, D.C.: United States Printing Office), 1927. Comprising eight sheets, three with printed text recto and verso, five with printed diagrams; stapled in top left corner. Printed patent issued by the United States Patent Office for Charles A. Hoxie, assignor to the General Electric Company, for a "Method and Apparatus for the Transmission of Pictures and Views". Scattered ink stamps. A patent issued to Charles A. Hoxie (1867-1941), a pioneering electrical engineer in talking motion pictures and radio communication, for an apparatus to transmit pictures and views. Raised in Constable, New York, and educated in Boston, Hoxie joined General Electric in 1912, where he first worked on measurements for establishing standards of capacity, inductance, resistance, and electromotive force. With an interest in telephony, in 1920 he developed a visual and photographic receiver for transatlantic wireless communication, which received messages thirty-times faster than the most skillful operator. It was in relation to this work that led Hoxie to the creation in 1922 of his pallophotophone, a machine that could record sound on film. An early basis for the RCA Photophone, one of four major devices that helped revolutionize the film industry with the introduction of sound. Hoxie applied for a patent for the above device on September 23, 1924, and it is likely related to his experiments with sound film. The first major sound film, The Jazz Singer, was released a month prior to this patent, on October 6, 1927. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 273 - [Technology] Group of 9 Printed Items on Early Computing, ca. 1966-82
[Technology] Group of 9 Printed Items on Early Computing, ca. 1966-82 Locations vary, ca. 1966-82. Group of nine items including: printed pamphlet, Computers and the Humanities (Vol. No. 1, September 1966); printed newspaper, Computer Notes ("Special Software Issue", Vol. 2, Issue 6, November 1976); three typed reports relating to the UNIVAC Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation (ca. 1961-67); printed magazine, Byte (Issue #1, September 1975); printed magazine, Personal Computing (December 1982, Vol. 6, No. 12); printed newspaper, Twin Cities Computer User (Vol. 1, No. 1, August 1982); one poster, Personal Computing National Computer Conference June 13-16, 1977. Size and condition varies. The hardware that served as the foundation for modern computers was first developed in the early 1960s, marked primarily by a transition from vacuum tubes to transistors and integrated circuits. These leaps in technological innovation resulted in the 1966 development of the Apollo Guidance Computer, the 1971 invention of the 8-inch floppy disk, and the 1977 introduction of the Apple II personal computer system. The developments outlined in the materials comprised here served as the foundation of our modern technological age. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 274 - [Technology] Designer of the First American Commercial Computer, J. Presper Eckert's Corrected Copy of a Speech on Computing
[Technology] Designer of the First American Commercial Computer, J. Presper Eckert's Corrected Copy of a Speech on Computing "...new thoughts have been coming in much more slowly in the last 10 years than they did in the first 10 years of computers, we are not yet at a plateau..." Denver, Colorado, March 23, 1967. 17 leaves. Typescript speech, on rectos only. Each sheet, 11 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (292 x 216 mm). Titled, "The Computer - A Bridge From Nanoseconds to Seconds", given by J. Presper Eckert, Vice President of UNIVAC, a Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation, at a meeting of the Mile High Chapter Data Processing Management Association. Annotated throughout in pencil and in ink, with notes and emendations. Lightly creased; scattered light ink stains; Old paperclip at top left, with associated stains; small closed tear to right margin of last page. Computer pioneer J. Presper Eckert's corrected copy of a 1967 speech given before a chapter of the Data Processing Management Association. Eckert (1919-1995), along with physicist John Mauchly (1907-1980), developed the first general purpose computer in 1945 (ENIAC). The two worked together on subsequent integrations of the invention including the BINAC and UNIVAC I. Together they founded the Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation which was fundamental in developing key computer concepts such as nesting, subroutines, and stored programming. Their work would contribute to the worldwide explosion of technological advancements in computing in the late 1940s and early 1950s. However, they soon fell on hard economic times, and the company was sold to Remington Rand, who later merged with the Sperry Corporation, forming Sperry Rand. A fascinating piece of technological history from one of the fathers of computer engineering. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 275 - [Technology] Group of 3 Items Related to Apple Computers, Including the First 36 Issues of Apple Assembly Line, 1980-88
[Technology] Group of 3 Items Related to Apple Computers, Including the First 36 Issues of Apple Assembly Line, 1980-88 Press Photo of the Macintosh Computer. Stamped on verso "Jan. 24 1984" and "Feb 1 1988". Light wear and creasing along edges. 11 x 6 1/4 in. (279 x 159 mm). Together with: Apple Assembly Line Richardson, Texas: S-C Software, October 1980-September 1983. Comprising 36 consecutive issues (Vol. 1, Issues 1-12, Vol. 2, Issues 1-12, Vol. 3, Issues 1-12). Original limp printed wrappers. In black spiral-bound binder. A scarce and early monthly newsletter devoted to Apple computer products. Edited and published by Bob Sander-Cederlof from October 1980 through May 1988, it focused on assembly language programming for the Apple II personal computer. Lot includes the premiere issue of Macworld The Macintosh Magazine, with a cover image of Steve Jobs (1984, Vol. 1, No. 1). 4to. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 276 - [Technology] Signed Sketch of the "Basic Internet", by one of its "Fathers," Vint Cerf
[Technology] Signed Sketch of the "Basic Internet", by one of its "Fathers," Vint Cerf No place, after 2017. Original sketch by Vint Cerf in black ink on the reverse of a one-dollar bill, titled "Basic Internet", and signed by him. 2 3/4 x 6 in. (70 x 152 mm). The sketch shows a basic diagram of the connections between gateways, hosts, and networks that comprise the Internet. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 277 - [Technology] 1-of-1 Trading Card with an Autograph Note, Signed by One of the "Fathers" of the Internet, Vint Cerf
[Technology] 1-of-1 Trading Card with an Autograph Note, Signed by One of the "Fathers" of the Internet, Vint Cerf No place, no date. Autograph note, signed by the "Father of the Internet", Vint Cerf: "Some Success Rules 1. If you want to do something Big, get help; preferably from people smarter than you are! 2. Learn to sell your ideas, or you won't get the help you need. Vint Cerf". Approximately 5 x 5 1/2 in. (127 x 140 mm). In pictorial presentation mat with a portrait of Cerf. All proceeds from this lot will benefit a mutually supported not-for-profit. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 278 - [Temperance] Rare Prohibition Broadside for the "Maine Law", the First Statewide Prohibition law in the United States
[Temperance] Rare Prohibition Broadside for the "Maine Law", the First Statewide Prohibition law in the United States Worcester County, Massachusetts, ca. 1851. Printed broadside in two columns, signed in type by Edward W. Lincoln and Truman G. Bancroft; 21 3/8 x 9 in. (543 x 229 mm). A rare prohibition broadside addressing the electors of Worcester County in regards to the passing of the "Maine Law": the first statewide prohibition law in the United States. Passed in 1851 in the state of Maine under the leadership of Neal Dow (considered the "Napoleon of Temperance"), the law prohibited the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages except for medicinal, mechanical, or sacramental purposes. In this address, the president of the Liberal Union writes a scathing letter: "We claim to be 'protected in the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property, according to standing laws,' instead of being continually harassed, by the government for whose support we are taxed, with violent and tyrannical measures to strip us of each and all..." He goes on, "This Maine Law! is not the crowning glory of a republic!...Observation has shown that its noisiest advocates are the least sincere friends of Temperance, when the great cause requires of them individual abstinence..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 279 - [Texiana] Group of 4 Items Related to Early Texas, Including a Report of the Reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence, ca. 1836-64
[Texiana] Group of 4 Items Related to Early Texas, Including a Report of the Reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence, ca. 1836-64 1. Dover Enquirer. Dover, New Hampshire, Tuesday Morning, April 12, 1836. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Creasing from old folds, small separations along same; scattered soiling; old ownership signature at top of front page. On the second page is reported the reception of Texas's Declaration of Independence of March 2, 1836, followed by a complete printing of Lt. Col. Commandant William Bryant Travis's famed and passionate letter from the last stand at the Alamo, to Sam Houston, requesting aid in the face of advancing Mexican forces, and ending with his send off, "Victory or Death!" 2. The New York Herald. New York, Sunday Morning, September 1, 1845. Printed newspaper. Folio. 4 pp. Toning along edges, scattered wear along same. With a front-page printing of an engraved map of Texas showing the disputed land areas with Mexico, and followed by articles reporting on General Zachary Taylor's forces there. 3. Printed Senate Report. May 17, 1852. Single sheet, 8 3/4 x 5 5/8 in. (222 x 143 mm). Disbound. United States Senate report No. 221, denying compensation for Texas Ranger Col. John Coffee Hays (1817-83), for his service in the Mexican-American War. 4. Printed Resolution of the State of Texas. Texas, House of Representatives, May 4, 1864. Single sheet, 9 1/2 x 6 1/4 in. (241 x 159 mm). Signed in type by Secretary of State R.J. Townes. Scattered spotting; toning along edges; circular ink stamp at top. A joint resolution issued by the Texas legislature during the Civil War, reaffirming their secessionist stance and their faith in the Confederate government: "That now that our presumptuous enemy treads our soil, in heavy numbers and menacing attitude, we bid him a proud and scornful defiance...we pledge to our sister States that in this struggle our authorities and our people will evince a patriotism and endurance as great as the occasion and as prolonged as the conflict...we here record our full confidence in the patriotism and ability of President Davis...we would not exchange him for any citizen of the Confederacy, as the pilot to carry us through the present stormy struggle for liberty, as a people, and for independence as a nation." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 280 - [Texiana] Partially-Printed Republic of Texas Payment Order Issued to one of the "Immortal 32" Gonzales Rangers Killed in Action While Defending the Alamo in 1836
[Texiana] Partially-Printed Republic of Texas Payment Order Issued to one of the "Immortal 32" Gonzales Rangers Killed in Action While Defending the Alamo in 1836 Houston, Texas, January 22, 1839. Partially-printed payment order, No. 10396, for $2.66, for "payment of the Military. Services in the army". Issued by the Treasurer of the Republic of Texas Francis Lubbock to J.D. Clements, executor of the estate of Thomas R. Miller. Creasing from old folds; scattered stains and foxing. Thomas Redd Miller (1804-1836) was a Virginia store owner who moved to the Republic of Texas in 1830. He was one of the "Immortal 32" rangers from the nearby town of Gonzales who responded to William Barrett Travis's request for aid as Antonio López de Santa Anna's army approached the Alamo in February 1836. Miller had served as a member of the Texas Consultation tasked with deciding a response to the aggressive actions of Santa Anna. Led by George C. Kimble, the Gonzales Rangers arrived at the Alamo ten days later, and at 3:00 a.m. on March 1 slipped past Santa Anna's forces and into the fortress. Four days later Santa Anna began his final assault on the Alamo, which resulted in 189 Texan defender casualties, including every member of the Gonzales Rangers. Miller's estate took nearly a decade to settle due to inconsistent record-keeping and his own considerable debts. Often referred to as the "Lexington of Texas," Gonzales was the site of the first major skirmish of the Texas Revolution. It was the only city to send aid to the Alamo and immediately following the battle, General Sam Houston ordered it burned to the ground, fearing that it would be Santa Anna's next target. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 281 - [Titanic] The Official British Government Report on the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912
[Titanic] The Official British Government Report on the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912 Shipping Casualties (Loss of the Steamship "Titanic"). Report of a Formal Investigation into the circumstances attending the foundering on 15th April, 1912... London: Published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, Printed by Jas. Truscott and Son, 1912. Tall 4to. (ii), 73, (1) pp. Illustrated with an in-text engraved diagram of the Titanic. Full tan buckram, red morocco spine label, stamped in gilt (chipped), library label at foot of spine, boards soiled; all edges trimmed; original blue wrappers bound in, front wrapper loose and chipped along edges, same with "Association of the Bar Library City of New York" ink stamp at top; library ink stamps at top of title-page; leaves with vertical center crease from when sometime folded. Following the sinking of the RMS Titanic on 15 April 1912 a formal inquiry into the disaster was convened by Lord Mersey. Hearings were held over two months at the London Scottish Drill Hall which saw over 100 witnesses questioned. Unlike the American inquiry, no blame was placed on the White Star Line or Captain Edward J. Smith for the disaster. The final report, issued in July 1912, provides a highly detailed account of the entire event, including notes on the Titanic's composition, its crew, the ship's journey, as well as reports on its speed, the weather, iceberg warnings, and a description of its collision ("The injuries to the ship...were of such a kind that she foundered in two hours and forty minutes"). The report further describes damages to the ship, its sinking, an account of the rescue operations, the number of those saved, and the number of casualties. The final section lists recommendations from the Commission, regarding water-tight compartments, lifeboats and rafts, etc. Bound with: Report of the Merchant Shipping Advisory Committee Respecting the Statutory Regulations as to Boats and Life-Saving Appliances and Other Means of Ensuring Safety of Life at Sea... London: Published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, Printed by Darling and Son, Ltd., 1912. (ii), 175 pp. Illustrated with two maps (one folding). Original blue wrappers bound in; same library ink stamp on front wrapper and title-page; scattered short closed tears. Landmark report issued by the Merchant Shipping Advisory Committee on behalf of the Board of Trade following the sinking of the Titanic, being their detailed investigation into English ship safety regulations and sea casualties, and their recommendations for changes. Five further safety reports include those issued by a sub-committee on the construction of lifeboats, on wireless telegraphy, Atlantic steamship routes, life saving appliances on passenger ships, and a statistical report on life saving devices on ships prior to 1910. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 282 - [Tobacco Cards] Rare Salesman's Dummy of an Uncut Sheet of William S. Kimball Tobacco Cards of Women, ca. 1880s
[Tobacco Cards] Rare Salesman's Dummy of an Uncut Sheet of William S. Kimball Tobacco Cards of Women, ca. 1880s Rochester, New York: W.M. Kimball & Co., no date (ca. 1880s). Salesman's copy of uncut sheet of 24 tobacco cards, mounted to gilt captioned card. Light edge-wear. 15 5/8 x 10 in. (346 x 254 mm). An uncommon uncut salesman's dummy sheet of 24 tobacco cards of women celebrities, sold by William S. Kimball & Co. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 283 - [Transportation] Circa 1860 Broadside Advertising the USS Daylight, a Freight Ship Operating Between New York and Boston, Later Acquired by the Union Navy for Service in the Civil War
[Transportation] Circa 1860 Broadside Advertising the USS Daylight, a Freight Ship Operating Between New York and Boston, Later Acquired by the Union Navy for Service in the Civil War New York, ca. 1860. Printed broadside, 16 x 11 1/4 in. (406 x 286 mm). Two engraved vignettes of ships. Top left corner chipped; scattered soiling. A broadside advertising the use of a freight ship between New York and Boston. The USS Daylight was a 682-ton screw steamship built in Brooklyn by Samuel Sneden, later acquired by the Union Navy in May 1862 for Civil War service. It functioned as an armed gunboat patrolling the Atlantic Coast and Virginia waterways. Later in 1862, the Daylight joined the bombardment and capture of Fort Macon, North Carolina, receiving a damaging shot in her hull. It was sold in 1865. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 284 - [Vietnam War] Collection of 6 Press Photos and 2 Newspapers, Related to the Vietnam War, 1960s-70s
[Vietnam War] Collection of 6 Press Photos and 2 Newspapers, Related to the Vietnam War, 1960s-70s Locations and dates vary, ca. 1960s-70s. Comprising eight total items, including six press photos, of protesters, military commanders, etc., as well as two newspapers, including the Los Angeles Evening and Sunday Herald Examiner, dated September 18, 1971 ("U.S. to End Vietnam Combat Role June 30"), and Havana's Granma, dated May 24, 1970 ("Victory!"). Condition varies, generally very good. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 285 - [Vietnam War] Old Soldiers Never Die Young Ones Do, Anti-Vietnam War Poster
[Vietnam War] Old Soldiers Never Die Young Ones Do, Anti-Vietnam War Poster Kent, Ohio: Pro-Arts, ca. 1968. Color screen-print. 19 5/8 x 32 1/4 in. (498 x 819 mm). 1 1/4 in. closed tear in lower left edge. "Old soldiers never die, young ones do" was often paraphrased by the 1960s antiwar movement from General Douglas A. MacArthur's 1951 farewell address to the United States Congress: "Old soldiers never die; they just fade away". This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 286 - [Vietnam War] Mederos, Rene. Rare Cuban Pro-Vietnam War Poster: Como en Vietnam Mes de la Mujer Vietnamita
[Vietnam War] Mederos, Rene. Rare Cuban Pro-Vietnam War Poster: Como en Vietnam Mes de la Mujer Vietnamita Cuba, ca. 1970. Color screen-print poster on thick paper, by Rene Mederos; 29 1/4 x 19 1/4 in. (743 x 489 mm). Creasing and scattered closed tears along top edge, 1 3/4 closed tear along same; loss in top right and bottom left corners. In 1969, Cuban artist Rene Mederos traveled to Vietnam on assignment from the Cuban government's Department of Revolutionary Orientation to create scenes of the ongoing war, which were later turned into posters, such as this example. Expressing solidarity with the North Vietnamese in their struggle against American forces, the present poster celebrates the month of the Vietnamese Woman. Rare, according to RBH we can locate only one other example of this poster at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 287 - [Villa, Pancho] Rare Enlistment Poster During the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 Against Mexican Revolutionaries
[Villa, Pancho] Rare Enlistment Poster During the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 Against Mexican Revolutionaries Wanted! More Men for Army With Delaware Troops to Serve in Mexico... (Dover, ca. 1916). Printed broadside, 8 3/4 x 6 in. (222 x 152 mm). Lightly toned, small chip of paper loss at top margin. Rare printed poster for enlistment in the Delaware National Guard during the American "Punitive Expedition" of 1916 against Mexican Revolutionaries led by Pancho Villa (1878-1923). During this period Villa had fallen out of favor with the United States government as a potential leader of Mexico in favor of Venustiano Carranza, as President Woodrow Wilson believed Carranza potentially offered a more stable government. In retaliation, Villa ordered a cross-border attack on Columbus, New Mexico in March 1916. This proved to be the last straw for President Wilson, who then ordered troops into Mexico to capture Villa. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 288 - [War of 1812] The Beginnings of a Naval Hero: Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s 1807 Lieutenant's Commission, His First Official Promotion in the Navy, Signed by Thomas Jefferson
[War of 1812] The Beginnings of a Naval Hero: Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s 1807 Lieutenant's Commission, His First Official Promotion in the Navy, Signed by Thomas Jefferson Washington, D.C., January 15, 1807. Single vellum sheet, 17 1/2 x 14 1/2 in. (444 x 368 mm). Partially-printed military commission, signed by President Thomas Jefferson, appointing Oliver H(azard). Perry a
Lot: 289 - [War of 1812] "We Have Met the Enemy and They are Ours": The Critical Promotion of a Naval Hero, Oliver Hazard Perry is Appointed Master Commandant in the United States Navy, Commission signed by James Madison, 1812
[War of 1812] "We Have Met the Enemy and They are Ours": The Critical Promotion of a Naval Hero, Oliver Hazard Perry is Appointed Master Commandant in the United States Navy, Commission signed by James Madison, 1812 Washington, D.C., August 28, 1812. Partially-printed military commission on vellum, signed by President James Madison, appointing Oliver Hazard Perry Master Commandant in the United
Lot: 290 - [War of 1812] Tooled Leather Wallet, Purportedly Once Belonging to Commodore James Biddle
[War of 1812] Tooled Leather Wallet, Purportedly Once Belonging to Commodore James Biddle Leather wallet, tooled with border design and naval imagery, including an eagle and anchor motif, ca. 1840s. 3 1/2 x 6 3/4 x 1/2 in. (89 x 172 x 12 mm). Pencil notation under primary flap, "Commodore James Biddle U.S.N." Early 20th century sticker mounted below above, with manuscript, "wallet used by James Biddle in Japan." Wear commensurate with age and use; early crude stitched repair to leather fastener. Commodore James Biddle (1783-1848), of the Philadelphia Biddle family, joined the U.S. Navy in 1800. In 1845, Biddle was named head of a naval squadron headed to the far east, with the objective of delivering a letter from Secretary of State John C. Calhoun to the American ambassador in China, Caleb Cushing. The letter authorized him to attempt negotiations with the government of Japan with the hopes of establishing a trade agreement. However, when the fleet arrived in Macau, they found Cushing had already left for America, and his successor Alexander Everett was too ill to make the journey. Biddle decided to attempt the negotiations himself, and on July 20, 1846 he anchored his ships off Uraga. His reception with the Japanese delegation was disastrous, and at one point, while aboard the ship of the Shogunate, Biddle was knocked to the ground by a samurai guard after misunderstanding instructions. Apologies were exchanged, but the Americans were told that Japan forbade all commerce with foreign nations other than the Dutch, and the squadron departed shortly thereafter. Japan remained closed to American trade until Commodore Matthew Perry's expedition seven years later. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 291 - [War of 1812] Manuscript Copy of the Proclamation of Armistice, Issued by Future President William Henry Harrison During the War of 1812
[War of 1812] Manuscript Copy of the Proclamation of Armistice, Issued by Future President William Henry Harrison During the War of 1812 Detroit, ca. October 16, 1813. One sheet, 10 1/4 x 8 in. (260 x 203 mm). True copy of a proclamation by order of General William Henry Harrison, in the hand of his aide Charles Stewart Todd, signed by him at conclusion. In part: "An armistice having been concluded between the United States and the Tribes of Indians called Miamies, Potawatomis, Weas, Eel River Miamis, Ottoways, Chippeways, and Wyandot to continue until the pleasure of the former shall be known. I do hereby make known the same to all whom it may concern. This Armistice is preparatory to a general council...the different tribes...have been permitted to retire to their hunting grounds...if they behave themselves peaceably...I exhort our citizens living upon the frontiers to respect the terms of the said armistice..." Creasing from old folds; moderately toned; scattered tape stains. Manuscript copy of the proclamation of armistice issued by future President William Henry Harrison, following his victory over British forces and a confederation of their Indian allies at the Battle of the Thames, on October 5, 1813. Harrison's victory at the Battle of the Thames resulted in American forces taking back Detroit from British control. Perhaps the most consequential result of the battle was the death of Shawnee Chief Tecumseh, leader of the British allied Indian confederation, which afterwards was dissolved. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 292 - [War of 1812] Likely the Earliest Broadside of this Catastrophic Event, Containing a Description of the Burning of Washington D.C. on August 24, 1814
[War of 1812] Likely the Earliest Broadside of this Catastrophic Event, Containing a Description of the Burning of Washington D.C. on August 24, 1814 "The enemy took possession of the city, burned the Capitol, the President's House, Treasury, and War Offices...but to give the Devil his due, his conduct here was as orderly as could have been expected..." Baltimore Patriot and Evening Advertiser Baltimore, Monday Noon, August 29, (1814). Printed broadside in three columns, 15 1/2 x 10 1/2 in. (mm). Containing an extract of a letter describing the Burning of Washington, D.C. In part: "I am almost fatigued to death since Sunday last. I slept little, eat little, and marched till my feet are all blistered, and after the whole we are completely disgraced. The enemy took possession of the city, burned the Capitol, the President's House, Treasury, and War Offices, and some private houses--but to give the Devil his due, his conduct here was as orderly as could have been expected...About 400 of the British came in that evening and commenced the work of destruction..." Disbound; untrimmed; scattered spotting. Rare broadside printed by the Baltimore Patriot and Evening Advertiser containing a description, presumably from a letter of an American soldier, of the Burning of Washington, D.C. on August 24, 1814. In the wake of the British victory at the Battle of Bladensburg, James Madison and the rest of the American government fled the Capitol, taking refuge in the nearby town of Brookville. When British soldiers under the command of General George Ross entered the city of Washington, which was flying white flags of truce, the remaining Americans reportedly opened fire, killing two men and wounding Ross. This act, according to biographer John McCavitt, is what led Ross to first order the burning of the U.S. Capitol and the White House. British forces in the coming days would set fire to the Treasury building, the War Offices, the Washington Naval Yard, and even destroy the offices of the National Intelligencer, tearing it down brick by brick. According to RBH, we cannot locate another copy at auction. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 293 - [War of 1812] The National Intelligencer's Third Issue, Published After Its Press and Building Were Destroyed in the Burning of Washington, D.C., September 1, 1814
[War of 1812] The National Intelligencer's Third Issue, Published After Its Press and Building Were Destroyed in the Burning of Washington, D.C., September 1, 1814 "We have issued one paper a day or two in its present shape, which it must retain until we are enabled to replace the type so meanly and malignantly destroyed by the enemy..." Washington, September 1, (1814). Two sheets, each 13 1/2 x 10 1/4 in. (342 x 260 mm). Printed newspaper in four columns, on rectos only. Featuring the paper's address to its constituents, reading in full: "Having purchased from one of our brother printers one small fount of type, we have issued one paper a day or two in its present shape, which it must retain until we are enabled to replace the type so meanly and malignantly destroyed by the enemy. For any deficiency of matter, or irregularity of transmission, an apology must be found in the absence of many of our hands in the different military corps, and the disadvantages under which others are employed. We shall do the best we can. We should suppose we need only state that our recent loss will require the use of every cent of money we can command, to induce those who know themselves to be indebted to the establishment forthwith to pay their respective dues, and in addition to elicit payment in advance from all who can afford it. The Editors are happy to say that their account books and subscription lists were saved from the general destruction of their books and papers." Disbound, sheets now joined; untrimmed; lightly creased; scattered foxing especially to left margin. Rare issue of the National Intelligencer, Washington, D.C.'s first newspaper, addressing its readers after its offices and press were destroyed by British Admiral George Cockburn during the Burning of Washington on August 24, 1814. The editors of the Intelligencer, William Seaton and Joseph Gales, had been highly critical of Cockburn, branding him a "ruffian" in many of their reports on the war. When British forces entered Washington after their victory against the Americans at the Battle of Bladensburg, Cockburn resolved to burn the newspaper's building down but yielded to the pleas of civilians who feared its conflagration would spread to their homes. Instead he decided to tear the building down "brick by brick", and destroy all of their "C" type, so they could not print his name again. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 294 - [War of 1812] Report of the Committee Appointed...to Inquire into the Expediency of Rebuilding, or Repairing the Public Buildings, in the City of Washington...
[War of 1812] Report of the Committee Appointed...to Inquire into the Expediency of Rebuilding, or Repairing the Public Buildings, in the City of Washington... Washington City: Printed by Roger C. Weightman, 1814. First edition. 8vo. 4 pp. Quarter brown calf over marbled paper-covered boards, stamped in gilt, spine and joints rubbed; sheets moderately toned. Sabin 69797 Lot includes a fragment of, Report of the Committee...to Inquire into the Causes and Particulars of the Invasion of the City of Washington, by the British Forces in the Month of August, 1814. November 29, 1814. Washington: A. and G. Way, 1814. First edition. 8vo. pp. 1-52 only (of 370) With one (of two) letterpress folding table. Disbound; library stamp at front; foxing. Sabin 69796 This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 295 - [War of 1812] The Weekly Register, Commodore Isaac Hull's Copy, with Extensive Coverage of the War of 1812, and more
[War of 1812] The Weekly Register, Commodore Isaac Hull's Copy, with Extensive Coverage of the War of 1812, and more The Weekly Register... Baltimore: H. Niles, September 1813-March 1814. Vol. V, Nos. 1-26, plus two supplements and two addenda. Red library buckram, stamped in gilt, library label on spine, stain on front board; all edges trimmed; Library of Congress book-plate on front paste-down, surplus ink stamp on same; ink stamp "Com. I. Hull / U.S. Navy" on title-page and front blank; ownership signature on title-page ("Jer. Sullivan"); manuscript on front and rear blanks; foxing and toning throughout. Commodore Isaac Hull's copy, with his ownership stamps, on a run of periodicals printing extensive coverage of the War of 1812. The front and rear endpapers feature incomplete ship's log notes from an unknown voyage in the Pacific, dating from March and October, 1823. Isaac Hull (1773-1843) was a naval officer who served in the Quasi-War with France, the Barbary Wars, and the War of 1812. In the latter conflict, he commanded the famous USS Constitution during its engagement and capture of the HMS Guerriere, the event that earned the ship its moniker, "Old Ironsides." Lot also includes: 1. Federal Republican, and Commercial Gazette. Georgetown, September 22, 1813. Vol. VII, No. 1013. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Creasing from when folded; scattered spotting. Printing on the second page, Oliver Hazard Perry's message of his victory at Lake Erie to Secretary of the Navy William Jones. 2. The Weekly Register. Baltimore: H. Niles, Saturday, March 27, 1813. Vol. IV, No. 4, Whole No. 82. 8vo. pp. (57)-72. Disbound; sheets toned; scattered spotting. Printing a laudatory message to America's naval commanders on the first page. 3. Daily Federal Republican. Georgetown (Washington D.C.), August 23, 1814. Vol. IX, No. 1259. Bifolium, 19 1/4 x 12 1/2 in. (mm). Printed newspaper. Disbound. Creasing from old folds, moderately toned; scattered stains; contemporary ownership signature "D.P. Clark" on front page. Lot includes a separate printed Congressional report for a proposed memorial for Commodore Isaac Hull, as well as one leaf of printed sheet music, titled "Yankee Thunders." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 296 - [Washington, George] Early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that Ignited the French and Indian War
[Washington, George] Early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that Ignited the French and Indian War The Maryland Gazette Annapolis: Printed by Jonas Green, Tuesday, June 27, 1754. Numb. 477. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Disbound; dampstaining along spine and in lower half of each leaf; singe mark in upper fore-edge of first leaf, short closed tear in lower fore-edge of same; scattered spotting. An early report of a 22-year-old George Washington, printed following the skirmish between Washington's men and French soldiers at Jumonville Glen, Pennsylvania, that ignited the French and Indian War. Printed on the second page, third column, reports, "We have certain Information, that Nine of the French Soldiers, from the Fort which was delivered up by Ensign Ward...have Deserted, and come over to Major Washington. Upwards of 300 Soldiers are now at Alexandria, and more expected every Day, who are to march in a few Days, to join and reinforce Major Washington, so that it is hoped his Army will soon be able to withstand and repel any Attacks that may be offered him by the French." On May 28, 1754, Washington and Mingo Chief Tanacharison, known as “Half-King", led a party of 40 men in an ambush against 29 French soldiers at current-day Jumonville Glen in Western Pennsylvania. Following an earlier three-month expedition into the Ohio Valley, Washington had reported to Virginia Governor Robert Dinwiddie about French intentions to establish a military presence in the region. Dinwiddie ordered Washington to proceed to the frontier and establish a fort at the fork of the Ohio River to prevent the French from taking root. By April, Washington had learned that French forces had overtaken a small British contingent already in that area, and he ordered his men to build a defensive position nearby. On May 27, Washington spotted a small contingent of French forces close to his position, and ordered the resulting ambush the next day against French leader Joseph Coulons de Villiers de Jumonville, which led to the death of ten French, and the capture of numerous others. A month later, in retaliation, 600 French soldiers overtook Washington's position at Fort Necessity, forcing his surrender. It was the beginning of the French and Indian War, which would eventually force the French from North America. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 297 - [Washington, George] One of the Earliest Engraved Portraits of George Washington, and the First to be Published in London and in Europe, 1775
[Washington, George] One of the Earliest Engraved Portraits of George Washington, and the First to be Published in London and in Europe, 1775 George Washington, Esqr. General and Commander in Chief of the Continental Army in America (London): C. Shepherd, September 9, 1775. Mezzotint, "Done from an Original, Drawn from the Life by Alexr. Campbell". Trimmed to plate mark. Approximately 14 x 10 in. (356 x 254 mm) (sight). Toned; scattered wear and repairs. Unexamined out of old frame. Baker 46; Hart 721; Fowble 75; Wick, pp. 18-22 One of the earliest engraved portraits of George Washington, and the first to be published in London and in Europe. Upon Washington's commission as commander of the Continental Army on June 15, 1775, demand abroad for images of his likeness skyrocketed. As English and European publishers had no authentic portraits to base their work on, the resulting images were typically inauthentic, and as seen here, based on fictitious sources (there is no record of an Alexander Campbell ever existing, and Washington denied that he had ever sat for a portrait by him). Nonetheless, in response to this image, Washington wrote, "Mr. Campbell...has made a very formidable figure of the Commander-in-Chief, giving him a sufficient portion of terror and countenance." This image of Washington proved incredibly influential in helping establish the English and European public's perception of Washington and the American Revolution more generally, and it was copied throughout the continent for prints, textiles, and medals. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 298 - [Washington, George] General Washington Arrives in Cambridge to Take Command of the American Army
[Washington, George] General Washington Arrives in Cambridge to Take Command of the American Army The New-England Chronicle: or, the Essex Gazette Cambridge: Printed by Samuel and Ebenezer Hall, From Thursday, June 29, to Thursday, July 6, 1775. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. Ownership signature of Capt. Josiah Gilman at top of first page; largely separated along center fold; wear along edges, with loss in upper fore-edge of first leaf, affecting some text; loss in top corner of last leaf, affecting some text; residue in top corners and bottom edge of third-page from when mounted; foxing and toning. Newly appointed as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, George Washington arrives in Boston to take command of the American forces. On the second page is an address from the New York Provincial Congress congratulating Washington on his recent appointment, rejoicing "in the appointment of a Gentleman, from whose abilities and virtue, we are taught to expect both security and peace," and having "the most flattering hopes of success, in the glorious struggle for American Liberty...''; followed by Washington's response of the "highest gratitude". On the third page is a lengthy letter from the Massachusetts Congress, congratulating Washington on his safe arrival, and applauding his appointment, and his disinterested virtue and patriotism. The letter then goes on to offer a picture of the Army then gathered around Boston, assuring Washington that they "will, at all Times, be ready to attend to such Requisitions as you may have Occasion to make to us; and to contribute all the Aid in our Power, to the Cause of America..." Washington's response follows, thanking them, and stating that "I only emulate the Virtue and publick Spirit of the whole Province of Massachusetts-Bay, which with a Firmness, and Patriotism without Example in modern History, has sacrificed all the Comforts of social and political Life, in Support of the Rights of Mankind..." At the end of the third-page is a report on the British casualties suffered at the Battle of Bunker Hill. The first page also prints part V of The Crisis, a pro-American journal printed in London, while the final page prints the controversial letters of Massachusetts governor Thomas Hutchinson. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 299 - [Washington, George] Report of George Washington Arriving in Philadelphia on his way to his First Inauguration
[Washington, George] Report of George Washington Arriving in Philadelphia on his way to his First Inauguration The London Chronicle London: Sold by T. Wilkie, From Thursday, June 4, to Saturday, June 6, 1789. Vol. LXV, No. 5097. Printed newspaper. 4to. pp. (537)-544. Disbound; separations along spine; wear in top edge; scattered spotting. George Washington arrives in Philadelphia on his way to his first inauguration: "Every countenance seemed to say, Long, long live George Washington, the Father of the People!" On p. 542 is a report of April 22, on President-elect George Washington's arrival in Philadelphia, on his journey to take the oath of office in New York: "His Excellency rode in front of the procession on horseback. The number of spectators who filled the doors, windows, and streets, which he passed, was greater than on any other occasion we ever remember. The bells were rung through the day and night, and a feu de joy was fired as he moved down Market and Second-streets to the City Tavern. The joy of the whole city upon this august spectacle cannot easily be described...His excellency, having travelled with great expedition from Mount Verno[n], proceeded yesterday morning for New York, where he will receive that power which is infinitely preferable to an hereditary crown, inasmuch as it is conferred upon merit by the unanimous and free suffrages of the representatives of near three millions of affectionate and grateful people." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 300 - [Washington, George] Announcing the Inauguration of George Washington as the First President of the United States
[Washington, George] Announcing the Inauguration of George Washington as the First President of the United States "The illustrious Washington was yesterday installed in the dignity of First Magistrate of the United States of America, to which he had been called by the unanimous suffrages of the nation..." The London Chronicle London: (Sold by T. Wilkie), Tuesday, June 23 to Thursday, June 25, 1789. Vol. LXV, No. 5105. Printed newspaper. 4to. 8 pp. (pp. 601-608). Text in three columns. Disbound, first and last leaves loose. Scattered foxing; royal tax stamp at bottom left of second page. The London Chronicle announces the inauguration of George Washington as the first president of the United States, on April 30, 1789. "Yesterday arrived a mail from Halifax, brought to Falmouth by the Tankerville packet in 22 days. Extract of a Letter from New York, May 1. The illustrious Washington was yesterday installed in the dignity of First Magistrate of the United States of America, to which he had been called by the unanimous suffrages of the nation..." The same letter admiringly observes that "Mr. Washington on this, as on former occasions, refused to receive any lucrative recompence for the services he had done his country." Lot also includes the following issue of the same newspaper (No. 5106, June 25-27, 1789). This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 301 - [Washington, D.C.] The First Newspaper Printing of the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Capital City, in the Gazette of the United States
[Washington, D.C.] The First Newspaper Printing of the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Capital City, in the Gazette of the United States New-York: John Fenno, Saturday, July 17, 1790. No. 28, Vol. II, Whole No. 132. Printed newspaper. Folio. pp. (525)-528. Disbound; creasing from old folds; wear along edges; spotting. The first newspaper printing of the 1790 Residence Bill that established the permanent seat of government in Washington, D.C., printed in the semi-official organ of Washington's administration. The bill, printed on the third page and signed in type by President Washington, is preceded by a printing of the debates on the matter. The site of the capital in on the Potomac River in the Southern United States came after a compromise between Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, whereby Hamilton received their support for his plan for the federal government to assume state debts in exchange for the permanent federal capital be located in the south. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 302 - [Washington, D.C.] Rare Congressional Act, Amending the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Permanent Seat of Government
[Washington, D.C.] Rare Congressional Act, Amending the Residence Act of 1790, Establishing Washington, D.C. as the Permanent Seat of Government Philadelphia: (Francis Childs and John Swaine), March 3, 1791. Printed broadside, 11 3/8 x 8 in. (289 x 203 mm). Signed in type by President George Washington, Vice-President John Adams, and Speaker of the House of Representatives Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg. Disbound; light wear along edges. Evans 23869; ESTC W14409 Rare Congressional act, amending the Residence Act of 1790, that established Washington, D.C. as the permanent seat of government and Philadelphia as the temporary seat. This act, approved on March 3, 1791, repeals a portion of the Act that required the new district to be placed above the mouth of the Eastern Branch, stating that "it shall be lawful for the President to make any part of the territory below the said limit, and above the mouth of Hunting Creek...so as to include a convenient part of the Eastern Branch, and of the lands lying on the lower side thereof, and also the town of Alexandria..." Finally, the Act affirms that "nothing herein contained, shall authorize the erection of the public buildings otherwise than on the Maryland side of the river Potowmac, as required by the aforesaid act." According to RBH, this is only the second example offered at auction since 1917. Furthermore, ESTC locates only three copies This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 303 - [Washington, George] President Washington's Second Inaugural Address, in the Gazette of the United States
[Washington, George] President Washington's Second Inaugural Address, in the Gazette of the United States Gazette of the United States Philadelphia: John Fenno, Saturday, March 9, 1793. No. 81, Vol. IV, Whole No. 405. Printed newspaper. Folio. (4) pp. (pp. 321-324). Disbound; creasing from old folds; light spotting. At the bottom of third page, under the header "Address of the President of the United States previous to his taking the Oath required by the Constitution, on Monday last", is printed Washington's second inaugural address. The shortest inaugural address ever given, Washington's speech consisted of only 135 words, and compared to his wide-ranging first address, focused on his presidential duties and the consequences should he break them. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 304 - [Washington, George] A Lengthy Lifetime Attack on President Washington for Being a Slaveholder, 1797
[Washington, George] A Lengthy Lifetime Attack on President Washington for Being a Slaveholder, 1797 The American Universal Magazine Philadelphia: Printed by Richard Lee, 1797. In four issues (Monday, April 3, Vol. II, No. IX; Monday, May 15, Vol. II, No. XII; Monday, May 29, Vol. II, No. XIII; Monday, June 13, Vol. II, No. XIV). 8vo. 52 (i.e. 48); (3), 198-402, (4) pp. Quarter brown leather
Lot: 305 - [Wolcott, Oliver] Rare Printed Circular Signed by Treasury Secretary Oliver Wolcott, Transmitting New Laws on Maritime Commerce
[Wolcott, Oliver] Rare Printed Circular Signed by Treasury Secretary Oliver Wolcott, Transmitting New Laws on Maritime Commerce Printed Treasury Department Circular, signed (Philadelphia): December 28, 1793. Single sheet, 9 3/4 x 8 in. (248 x 203 mm). First page (of 33) of an official printed Treasury Department circular addressed to Nathaniel Phillips, transmitting documents on recent maritime legislation, signed by Wolcott at conclusion. Creasing from old folds; pin holes at left margin; paper loss at top left; scattered foxing; large dampstaining at right margin affecting signature. 33 pp. wanting. Bristol B8530; Shipton & Mooney 46897 This document explains that "these papers have been for some time prepared; and would have been more reasonably transmitted, but for the interruption which the public business has suffered from the late calamity at the seat of government..." The calamity being the Yellow Fever outbreak that ravaged Philadelphia from August through November, 1793. The disease caused over 5,000 deaths, and prompted nearly half the city's population to flee, including many in the Federal Government, ceasing its operation for a time. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 306 - [Women's Rights] New-York Weekly Tribune, Advertising First Women's Rights Convention Held in Pennsylvania, May 8, 1852
[Women's Rights] New-York Weekly Tribune, Advertising First Women's Rights Convention Held in Pennsylvania, May 8, 1852 New-York, Saturday, May 8, 1852. Vol. XI, No. 556. Printed newspaper. Folio. 8 pp. Disbound; leaves unopened; creased from when folded; light spotting. "The friends of Justice and Equal Rights are earnestly invited to assemble in Convention, to consider and discuss the present Position of Woman in Society, her Natural Rights and Relative Duties." Advertised on the front page is a notice of the first women's rights convention held in Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Woman's Convention at West Chester was held in West Chester, Pennsylvania, on June 2 and 3, 1852. Held four years after the famous Seneca Falls, New York convention, the West Chester Convention was called for by leading activists, including Lucretia Mott, Sallie P. Lewis, Hannah M. Darlington, and others. Looking to discuss and examine the "legal, educational, and vocational disabilities" that women suffer, over the two days the Convention was held, its well-attended audience passed numerous resolutions regarding women's suffrage, equal pay, education, and legal issues. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 307 - [Women's Rights] Autograph Letter, signed by Susan B. Anthony, 1869, Written on the Stationery of The Revolution: The First Women's Suffrage Periodical
[Women's Rights] Autograph Letter, signed by Susan B. Anthony, 1869, Written on the Stationery of The Revolution: The First Women's Suffrage Periodical New York, October 4, 1869. Bifolium. One-page autograph letter on The Revolution stationery, signed by Susan B. Anthony in purple ink to A.H. Comstock of Cambridge, New York, regarding a speaking engagement: "Dear Sir Your letter rec'd contents noticed. Will come to Cambridge if you agree for $50.00. Let me hear from you again that we may appoint a day--Resp S.B. Anthony". Creasing from old folds. Includes original mailing envelope addressed by Anthony. Susan B. Anthony writes a brief note to A.H. Comstock of Cambridge, New York, regarding a possible speaking engagement. Comstock ran a small lecture series in the small city, whose 1869-70 season also attracted the likes of Mark Twain. Written on the stationery of The Revolution, the newspaper founded by Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in New York City in 1868. The stationery's headline reads, in part: "Devoted to the discussion of Suffrage, The only means by which Equal Rights can be secured to Woman in the State, the Church, the Home and the World of Work. An American Monetary System--Greenbacks for money, as well for Bondholders and Capitalists, as for the Working Classes..." This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 308 - [Women's Rights] Group of 2 Issues of Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, one of the First American Newspapers Published by Women
[Women's Rights] Group of 2 Issues of Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, one of the First American Newspapers Published by Women New York, 1874. In two issues, comprising: February 21 and March 7 (Vol. VII, Nos. 12 and 14, Whole Nos. 168 and 170). Folio. Each 8 pp. Creased from old folds; each unopened; wear and repairs along edges. A group of two issues of women's rights activists Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin's radical and notorious newspaper, one of the first American newspapers published by women. Published from May 1870 to June 1876, the newspaper featured articles on topics ranging from spiritualism, vegetarianism, free love, and socialism, but was largely a vehicle for promoting women's suffrage. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 309 - [Women's Rights] Group of 3 Items Related to Women's Suffrage, ca. 1869-1915
[Women's Rights] Group of 3 Items Related to Women's Suffrage, ca. 1869-1915 1. The Revolution New York, Thursday, February 25, 1869. Printed newspaper. Vol. III, No. 8, Whole No. 60. pp. (113)-128. Creasing from old folds; light toning and spotting; minor edgewear. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton's influential weekly women's rights newspaper. Includes extensive coverage of the February 11-12 women's suffrage convention in Chicago, the first women's suffrage convention in Illinois. 2. Press Photo of a Women's Suffrage March New York, no date (ca. 1910-15). Silver gelatin print, 6 5/8 x 8 1/2 in. (168 x 216 mm). Printed press slip attached to verso, "General view of the parade of 5,000 suffragettes passing down Fifth Avenue in New York last Saturday..." Creasing and light wear. 3. Rowland, Bertha K., after Clarence F. Underwood Her First Vote No place, ca. 1915. Watercolor and crayon on thick paper, 13 1/4 x 10 1/2 in. (336 x 267 mm). Spotting and uneven toning. Lot also includes a sammelband of over 30 pamphlets and documents related to anti-women's suffrage. 8vo. Black library-style buckram. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 310 - [World War I] Do Your Duty Join the U.S. Marines Poster
[World War I] Do Your Duty Join the U.S. Marines Poster No place, ca. 1917. Color lithographic recruitment poster, signed "PW"; 26 1/4 x 17 1/2 in. (667 x 444 mm). Ink and perforated stamps along bottom edge; wear along edges; ink stamps at bottom verso. "The Great War / New York State Library / Cuyler Reynolds" rubber-stamped on verso. Reynolds (1866-1934) was a newspaperman, librarian, and historian, in Upstate New York. His papers are held at the New York State Library in Albany. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 311 - [World War I] Group of 3 Items: Trench Map, Poster, Newspaper
[World War I] Group of 3 Items: Trench Map, Poster, Newspaper Location and dates vary, ca. 1914-17. Comprising three items, including: a copy of the Dawson Daily News, dated August 7, 1914 ("War Extra German Navy Swept From the High Seas"); large folding trench map ("Trench Map. France. Sheet 57D S.E. Edition 2. D..."); a lithographed poster ("Over the Top", showing heroic American soldiers). Condition varies, scattered soiling, toning, and tears. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 312 - [World War II] European Theater Allied Military Government of Occupied Territory Proclamation No. 1
[World War II] European Theater Allied Military Government of Occupied Territory Proclamation No. 1 No place, 1943. Printed broadside, in English and in Italian; signed in type by General H.R. Alexander, commander of British and American forces in the 165th Army Group in Italy. Creasing from old folds; light wear. 27 1/2 x 19 1/4 in. (698 x 489 mm). Allied Force broadside announcing military control of Italy, the dissolution of the Fascist party, and the removal of the power of the King. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 313 - [World War II] An Incredibly Vivid Manuscript Diary Reporting the Attack on Pearl Harbor, ca. 1941-42
[World War II] An Incredibly Vivid Manuscript Diary Reporting the Attack on Pearl Harbor, ca. 1941-42 "Pearl Harbor is being bombed...this is no drill" Hawaii, ca. 1941-1942. Manuscript journal in ink, comprising 24 pages (entries dated December 7, 1941-January 5, 1942), written within blank journal (The National Daily Journal for 1942, No. 5197, New York, etc.: National Blank Book Company).
Lot: 314 - [World War II] Group of 35 Photographs of Post-Atomic Bomb Nagasaki and the Efforts of Reconstruction, 1945
[World War II] Group of 35 Photographs of Post-Atomic Bomb Nagasaki and the Efforts of Reconstruction, 1945 Nagasaki and environs, Japan, September-December 1945. Group of 35 black and white and/or sepia-toned photographs; each measuring 4 x 5 in. (102 x 127 mm); each with typed or manuscript caption at bottom or within photo (one with additional manuscript on verso). Scattered surface soiling; each with tape remnants, or wear from removed tape, along top edge. Several of these photographs are reproduced in the 1946 United States Navy Reserve cruisebook The Log (Mobile Power 43rd Construction Battalion 1942-1946). Taken with a Speed Graphic camera by an unidentified member of the United States 43rd Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees), these 35 photographs show scenes in and around the vicinity of Nagasaki in the three months following its destruction by an atomic bomb on August 9, 1945. Several photographs document the bomb's destructive power, including scenes showing ruined landscapes, buildings, and infrastructure, as well as the efforts by the Seabees and Japanese soldiers to clean and rebuild roads, bridges, railroad tracks, and other sites. Several photographs depict the occupying American forces, within the city environs and in their barracks, with notations identifying the 43rd and 93rd Naval Construction Battalions. Specific individuals are also identified, including Lieutenant Commander William A. Weeks, Edward A. Gabel, Theodore A. Musset, Melvin George Gerlinger, and George Frank Koester. Some photographs show Japanese citizens, including a mother and child, a group of children, a Japanese police officer, and a large group around the Nagasaki railroad depot. The 43rd Naval Construction Battalion was established in Danville, Rhode Island on November 12, 1942. Following the Japanese surrender on August 15, 1945, the 43rd debarked at Nagasaki on September 23, consisting of about 770 men. During their time in and around the city they undertook and oversaw repair work on buildings, roads, warehouses, railroad tracks, airfields, and docks. By October the number of men had been cut in half, many due to discharges, and by early December its last remaining members departed. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 315 - [World War II] One of the Few Surviving Letters From Hemingway to His Third Wife, Martha Gellhorn, Written While a Front-Line War Correspondent in France
[World War II] One of the Few Surviving Letters From Hemingway to His Third Wife, Martha Gellhorn, Written While a Front-Line War Correspondent in France "Your journalism is ok and perfectly done. But for me it is bad. So I will just write the stories as well as I can." (Likely Mont-Saint-Michel, Normandy, France), August 6, 1944. Lengthy six-page autograph letter in pencil on tan graph
Lot: 316 - [World War II] United States Army Field Medic's Photo Album and Assorted Service Ephemera, Including Images of Liberated Buchenwald Concentration Camp, ca. 1940s
[World War II] United States Army Field Medic's Photo Album and Assorted Service Ephemera, Including Images of Liberated Buchenwald Concentration Camp, ca. 1940s France, Germany, etc., ca. 1940s. Album of 102 original photographs; sizes vary (from 2 1/4 x 4 1/4 in. to 5 1/4 x 3 1/2 in. Depicting the service of field medic Charles Fenimore Bowers (73 of the war, the balance depicting Bowers's family members in the United States); several with Bowers's manuscript captions on verso. Oblong 8vo. Original cloth-covered boards, stamped in gilt; several photos loose or starting. United States Army PFC field medic Charles Fenimore Bowers's personal photo album chronicling his service in World War II. Attached to the 7th Field Hospital, Bowers's images capture his units advance across Europe, starting in Normandy, France and ending in Nuremberg, Germany, showing downed and bullet ridden Nazi aircraft, the aftermath of the battle of Saint-Lô, France, various allied aircraft, Bowers's fellow servicemen, scenes in Nuremberg, and notably, images from liberated Buchenwald concentration camp (of which Bowers's unit was an advance party), including images of liberated prisoners, corpses, barracks, and gallows (seven total photos). Other images appear to antedate the war, showing Bowers's various family members. Lot includes an additional six pieces of ephemera related to Bowers's service, including his New York Port of Embarkation certificate, a Commendation Letter, War Department Report of Change of Status and Address document, one typed slip related to a field hospital, Soldier's Individual Pay Record booklet, and one mimeographed newsletter ("Tootin on the Newton"). Original photos showing liberated concentration camps, especially from soldiers who helped do so, are uncommon. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 317 - [World War II] Collection of Erotic Letters From a U.S. Sailor, 1945
[World War II] Collection of Erotic Letters From a U.S. Sailor, 1945 Great Lakes, Illinois, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, ca. May-August, 1945. Group of seven autograph letters, from American Jewish sailor Albert H. Oshiver, addressed to his love interest and later wife, Miss Sylvia Bilker, relaying personal updates as well as explicit content. Accompanied by original mailing envelopes. Creasing from old folds, scattered light foxing. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 318 - [World War II] Passionate Pacific Theater Manuscript Naval Dispatch, August 15, 1945
[World War II] Passionate Pacific Theater Manuscript Naval Dispatch, August 15, 1945 "Sea off Japan", USS San Diego, August 15, 1945. Single sheet, 6 1/2 x 8 in. (165 x 203 mm). Manuscript naval dispatch in pencil received from Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., Commander of the Third Fleet. Reads, in part: "Rec'd morning of Aug. 15. Wed. 45. ab sea off Japan with 3rd. flt. The Nip officers are still fighting X That means we are still facing an enemy that hates our carriers like the devil hates holy water X Until the Nips surrender and are disarmed they are dangerous and need killing X The best present insurance for our forces and a future insurance for peace is to carry it to them with everything we have X Carry on X Halsey..." Creasing from old folds. A passionate Pacific Theater Naval dispatch, sent on the day of Japan's surrender. The USS San Diego, an Atlanta-class light anti-aircraft cruiser, was one of the most decorated United States ships in World War II (awarded 18 battle stars), and on August 27 was the first major Allied warship to enter Tokyo Bay after the surrender of Japan. Japan's surrender was announced by Japanese Emperor Hirohito later the same day that the San Diego received the present dispatch from Third Fleet commander Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., on August 15, 1945. The official surrender of Japan would take place on September 2, aboard the Third Fleet flagship, Iowa-class battleship USS Missouri. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 319 - [World War II] Saturday Evening Post Poster by Mead Schaeffer, November, 1943
[World War II] Saturday Evening Post Poster by Mead Schaeffer, November, 1943 No place, November, 1943. Color lithographic poster advertising the November 6, 1943 issue of The Saturday Evening Post; 28 x 21 3/4 in. (711 x 552 mm). Linen-backed. Mead Schaeffer (1898-1980) was one of the foremost American illustrators of the twentieth century. Trained at the Pratt Institute under Harvey Dunn and associated with the Brandywine tradition of illustration, Schaeffer first gained prominence illustrating classic literary works before becoming a major contributor to The Saturday Evening Post, for which he produced 46 covers. During WWII, he served as a war correspondent and created some of the era's most iconic patriotic imagery. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Lot: 320 - [World War II] Sailor's Pacific Theater Daily Journals, 1945-46, including Mention of the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb and Japan's Surrender
[World War II] Sailor's Pacific Theater Daily Journals, 1945-46, including Mention of the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb and Japan's Surrender California, Japan, China, July 20, 1945-May 18, 1946. In two volumes. Tall 24mo. Approximately 198 manuscript pages, in ink and in pencil. Original black cloth, first volume worn, some sheets sprung or starting. Personal diary of United States Navy seaman Walter B. Riggs, detailing his service in the Pacific from July 20, 1945-May 18, 1946. The first volume relates to Griggs's training as a radioman, and includes his various notes and schematics, such as types of messaging, communication procedures, lists of frequencies, symbols, ship nomenclature, the addresses of his shipmates, and his account of money spent while on leave in Japan, China, etc. The second volume is Griggs's daily journal, covering nearly a year of his service in the Pacific. Beginning in Los Angeles and his training in radio school, the journal then proceeds to Griggs's deployment on the USS Tolman, first to Pearl Harbor, and then to Sasebo, Japan, Shanghai, China, Yoko Suka and Tokyo, Japan, and then back to the United States, with his discharge in Shoemaker, California. Griggs keeps meticulous records of his daily actions, noting his various duties, activities while on leave, descriptions of the various locales in Japan and China, including Tokyo, and his interactions with their inhabitants. Notably, Griggs mentions both the dropping of the atomic bomb, as well as Japan's surrender and VJ day. Lot includes 13 pieces of Griggs's personal ephemera, including his Leave Card, pay card, receipts, business cards, etc. This lot is located in Philadelphia.
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