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ADDAMS, JANE (1860-1935)# 6845
American Social Reformer & Feminist; Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize - 1931
Signature, inscribed, “To Harriet Hull, from Jane Addams, Hull House, Chicago,” on a light 3 ¼” x 5” card.
Slightly irregular toning along the left edge.
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ANDERSON, MARIAN (1897-1993)# 6811
African-American Contralto
One of the most celebrated singers of her time, Anderson was refused permission to perform at Constitution Hall by the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1939, due to racial prejudice. In response, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigned her membership in the organization, and a concert was arranged for Easter Sunday, 1939, at the Lincoln Memorial. On January 7, 1955, Anderson became the first black person to perform at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City.
Document Signed, 6” x 9”, “Marian Anderson,” a four-page printed program for “her twelfth consecutive coast-to-coast tour of her native land,” presented by the Civic Music Association; signed diagonally across the text of the title page.
The program has general soiling and wear, along with several folds and light creases, and there is a break in the paper in the mid-left margin.
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BACHE, ALEXANDER D. (1806-67)# 6629
First President – NationalAcademy of Sciences; Superintendent of the U.S. Coast Survey – 1843-67; A Founder of the Smithsonian Institute; Grandson of Benjamin Franklin
Signature, a free-frank on the 4” x 8 ¼” front portion of an imprinted envelope, “A.D. Bache,” as Superintendent of the U.S. Coast Survey; addressed in another hand, to “Doct[o]r Ch. F. Peters, Albany, New York.”
The panel bears general soiling and wear, along with several light wrinkles and creases, and it has been backed with fabric.
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BARRETT, LAWRENCE P. (1838-91)# 7031
American Actor; Union Captain – 28th Massachusetts Infantry; Friend of George Armstrong Custer
Large Presentation Signature, on a 4” x 6 ¼” album page, for the son or daughter of a friend in the year before the death of George Armstrong Custer, Barrett’s friend of the past decade, at the Little Big Horn.
“Your Father’s Friend, Lawrence Barrett, March 5th 1875.”
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BARTON, CLARA (1821-1912)# 6585
American Civil War Nurse; Founder of the American Red Cross
Barton's work in providing medicine and supplies to the wounded on the Civil War front lines earned her the sobriquet "The Angel of the Battlefield.” She went on to found the American Red Cross.
Autograph Letter Signed, 4” x 6 ¼”, undated, responding to an autograph request.
“My dear Mrs. Perkins, I regret that your very small request has been obliged to wait so long for a response, but it affords me great pleasure to be able to comply even at this late date. I write you from my summer resort at 1000 Islands, - & am, Very Sincerely, Clara Barton.”
A fine example in excellent condition.
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BROOKS, PHILLIPS (1835-93)# 6555
American Clergyman; Author of “O Little Town of Bethlehem”
Autograph Letter Signed, four pages, on a folded 5” x 8” letter-sheet, imprinted “Hotel Kempton, Berkeley Street, Boston,” which Brooks has marked out. In this lengthy communication to Charles R. Codman, formerly the colonel of the 45th Massachusetts Infantry during the Civil War, Brooks eloquently expresses condolences for the death of Codman’s young son in a manner which could easily function as a sermon on the subject.
“175 Marlborough Street, Boston, Oct[ober] 26, 1877. Dear Col. Codman, Your letter has this minute come, telling me of Charlie’s peaceful and painless death. Notwithstanding all that I have know[n] of his condition, the news surprises me for I had feared for him years of sickness & pain. Surely nothing can make the other life seem so attractive & fruitful as just such a death as this. Where physical infirmity has been holding the person in prison & hampering their exercise, death seems to be, what we know it always is, a release, the breaking off of the physical tyranny and setting the soul free for its true life. Nobody can help feeling this thankfulness for Charlie, & rejoicing in the new life that has begun for him. Conscious as he has been of the infirmity that deprived him of the life which other boys were living, now he must be feeling with peculiar keenness the freedom & happiness of spiritual life, & must see also why it was that God led his short earthly life through such strange and painful ways, how he was bringing him to Himself & preparing him for heaven.
I know that all your thankfulness for what has come to Charlie does not make you feel the less his absence from your sight – nor make it easier to miss the privilege of caring for him. There was always something very [?] about his patience & the uncomplaining way in which he met his strange life. I was struck this summer with the quiet kindness & gentleness of his way. He did not seem unhappy, but rather often like one bewildered by inability to understand his life, to whom life may be still be very sweet. The thought that his affliction never brought him one pain which the most watchful care could avert must be a very happy thought for you now, & the thankfulness that you have had the privilege of caring for him so long must be completed by thankfulness that God has taken him to His own care, before he had begun to dread what might be before him in this world.
I have thought very much of you since I got home. I wish there were some hope that you could come back here, but these autumn days are so bad that I am glad you are not here. Thank God, we do not have the choosing of our places or our lives. Do give my love to Mrs. Codman & Manny & all the children. May God bless you always. Your friend, Phillips Brooks.”
The letter is lightly and evenly toned, with two horizontal folds, and is accompanied by the transmittal envelope, addressed by Brooks to Colonel Codman in London.
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BROOKS, PHILLIPS (1835-93)# 6554
American Clergyman; Author of “O Little Town of Bethlehem”
Autograph Letter Signed, three pages, on a monogrammed 4 ½” x 5 ¾” letter-sheet. Writing to the wife of Charles R. Codman, formerly the colonel of the 45th Massachusetts Infantry during the Civil War, Brooks sends a gift of a book and invites the Codman family to visit.
“Boston, Sep[tember] 18, 1879. Dear Mrs. Codman, I venture to send you a little work of mine which is just out, not for the value that there is in the book, which I fear is not much, but only as a little sign of the true friendship which I have for you & all of yours. I have wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed the few days at your house. I know you will be glad to know that I look back to them as the pleasantest bits of my summer. I hope you are all well, & I think it is quite time that you came here. Be sure that when you do you will be welcome. Pray give my best remembrance to Mr. Codman & to all the children & count me & let me count myself Ever Your Friend. Phillips Brooks”
The letter is in excellent condition, with a center horizontal fold, and is accompanied by the transmittal envelope, addressed by Brooks to Mrs. Codman in Cotuit, Massachusetts.
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BYRD, RICHARD E. (1888-1957)# 6644
American Aviator & Polar Explorer; Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient; U.S. Navy Rear Admiral
Typed Letter Signed, 8 ½” x 11”, on the imprinted stationery of The National Economy League. As national chairman, Byrd thanks the recipient for his work on behalf of the organization during the Great Depression. Organized late in the presidential term of Herbert Hoover, The National Economy League was devoted to keeping government expenditures in check. As a political lobby, one of the organization’s most notable early battles was to reduce by almost half the one million dollar per year appropriation for veterans. Ironically, both Rear Admiral Byrd and General John J. Pershing, listed at this letter’s upper left as a member of the Advisory Council, had received $4500 and $19,880 respectively in pensions from the government.
“April First 1933. My dear Mr. Nichols:- I wish to express my deepest and sincerest appreciation of your work with the National Economy League. I know it has meant a sacrifice on your part and I want you to feel that you have patriotically done vastly more than your share towards arousing an informed public opinion. I assure you that every thinking man and woman joins with me in wishing you success. Very sincerely, R.E. Byrd. Richard E. Byrd, National Chairman.”
Condition is excellent, with the usual folds. The letter is accompanied by the transmittal envelope, with the typewritten address, “Mr. Benjamin E. Nichols, 148 Main Street, Reading, Massachusetts.”
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CLEMENS, SAMUEL L. (1835-1910)# 6195
American Author
Signed Card, 2” x 3 ¼”, with sentiment and desirable double signature, “Y[ou]rs Truly, Saml. L. Clemens, Mark Twain.” Affixed, beneath a 2 ¼” x 3 ¾” photograph of Clemens as a young man, to a 5” x 7 ½” album page.
The corners of both the card and the image have been clipped diagonally, and there are several glue stained areas around and on the surface of the photograph.
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CLEMENS, SAMUEL L. (1835-1910)# 6782
American Author
Double Signature, a desirable pairing of his given name and pseudonym, “S.L. Clemens (‘Mark Twain’.),” on a 1 ¼” x 2 ¼” slip of paper; affixed to a larger portion of an album page.
There is a bit of light soiling, along with a few scattered stains.
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CLEVELAND, ROSE ELIZABETH (1846-1918)# 6429
Sister of Grover Cleveland
Autograph Letter Signed, on the imprinted 5” x 8” stationery of the Executive Mansion at Albany, New York. During the final months of her unmarried brother's tenure as New York Governor, Rose Cleveland expresses their gratitude and good wishes upon the receipt of a gift from this letter’s recipient.
“5 January 1885. Dear Mr. Wood, Thanks for the kindness which prompted the sending of your package. I hope I may sometime have time to more appreciatively acknowledge all such remembrance. With kind regards from the Governor and myself to you and your mother. Yours, Rose Elizabeth Cleveland.”
Light, even toning, a small stain at lower center, and reinforcement of the folds on reverse detract very little.
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CUSTER, ELIZABETH B. (1842-1933)# 6784
Wife of 7th Cavalry Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer; Author of Numerous Books on Her Husband and the American West
Mrs. Custer Asks for an Application to Join the Daughters of the American Revolution
Autograph Letter Signed, 1 ½ pages, on two separate 5” x 6 ½” sheets. Well into her eighties, Mrs. Custer writes to obtain an application to join the Daughters of the American Revolution.
“71 Park Avenue, N.Y., August 28 [1927]. Miss Blanche Edwards, My dear Miss Edwards, My cousin Mrs. Bingham has long wanted me to be a Daughter of the American Revolution and has been so good as to make it possible by searching records. I shall be glad to have the blanks for application when it is convenient for you to send them. Thanking you in advance I am very sincerely yours, Elizabeth B. Custer.”
Both sheets have a horizontal fold at the center and heavier toning along the edges. The accompanying transmittal envelope, 3 ½” x 5 ¼”, addressed by Mrs. Custer, to “Miss Blanche Edwards, Abiline, Kansas,” has general soiling and wear, along with a tear at the upper edge, near the August 29, 1927, Grand Central Station, New York postmark.
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DICKINSON, ANNA E. (1842-1932)# 6993
American Abolitionist, Author & Orator
Autograph Quotation Signed, on a 2 ¼” x 3 ½” card.
“The world belongs to those who take it. Truly Yours, Anna E. Dickinson, Sep[tember] 24, 1872.”
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EADS, JAMES B. (1820-87)# 5225
American River Engineer & Inventor
Eads made enormous contribution to the Union cause by developing and manufacturing the iron-clad gunboats which helped in the opening of the Mississippi and other western rivers.
Autograph Note Signed, 5” x 5”, inscribed to, and crediting, prominent Republican U.S. Senator Angus Cameron of Wisconsin for political assistance rendered in Eads’ effort to open the mouth of the Mississippi River below New Orleans to permanent navigation by installing jetties to scour sedimentation from the riverbed. Begun in 1875, entirely at his own risk - Eads would receive no payment from the government until a twenty-foot channel depth was achieved – the $5 million project was completed five years later, during which time New Orleans shipping tonnage rose by sixty-five times, making it the second largest port in the United States.
“Presented to the Honorable Angus Cameron, one of the Statesmen to whom the Mississippi Valley is indebted for an open mouth to its great river. From his friend Jas. B. Eads.”
Slightly heavier toning along right edge.
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EDISON, THOMAS A. (1847-1931)# 5515
American Inventor
Document Signed, 5 ¾” x 10 ¼”, New Jersey, October 23, 1888, “Thos. A. Edison,” as company president, also signed on reverse, a partly printed certificate for shares of Edison’s own stock in the Edison Phonograph Works.
A few light folds; light staining and toning at left and upper edges.
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FIELD, KATE (1838-96)# 6842
American Journalist, Lecturer & Actress
Autograph Quotation Signed, on a 1 ¾” x 3 ¾” card.
“The price of success is industry. Kate Field.”
The card is lightly and evenly toned, with a light stain at the signature, and there is old glue staining on the reverse.
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GARRISON, WILLIAM LLOYD (1805-79)# 6996
American Journalist & Abolitionist; Founder of the Abolitionist Newspaper, “The Liberator”
Civil War-Date Autograph Quotation Signed, voicing the abolitionist sentiment for which Garrison was widely known, on a 2 ½” x 5” portion of an album page.
“Yours, for universal freedom, Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Boston, May 20, 1862.”
Garrison’s long-held, oft-stated dream of “immediate and complete emancipation of all slaves” was very soon advanced two-fold, as the bill abolishing slavery in the territories was signed into law on June 19 and, more significantly, President Lincoln read the first draft of his Emancipation Proclamation to the Cabinet on July 22, 1862.
Barely discernible damp-staining to the left one-third, along with a few small stains, detract very little.
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GARRISON, WILLIAM LLOYD (1805-79)# 7032
American Journalist & Abolitionist; Founder of the Abolitionist Newspaper, “The Liberator”
Autograph Sentiment Signed, reflecting the spirit of reform on which Garrison had risen to national prominence, on a 2 ¼” x 4 ¾” slip of paper.
“Yours, to vindicate all human rights, Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Boston, Nov. 23, 1875.”
The paper is evenly toned, with light soiling and wear, and there is old glue staining on the reverse.
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GREELEY, HORACE (1811-72)# 6764
American Editor & Abolitionist
Three Weeks after the Assassination of President Lincoln – “…I hope for better times politically, but the sky is clouded…”
As founder of the New York Tribune, Greeley exerted great political power with the expression of his antislavery views. He was defeated in the 1872 presidential election, and died later in the same year.
Autograph Letter Signed, on imprinted 5” x 8” Office of The Tribune stationery, to “James Graham, Esq.,” regarding his appointment to an unspecified position.
In the month after the Confederate surrender at Appomattox and the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, Greeley conveys that he has recommended Graham to New York Governor Reuben Fenton, and sorrowfully notes the effect of the recent, abrupt death of the sixteenth president on the nation’s politics.
“New York, May 8, 1865. Friend Graham: Yours received. I have your letter, and have forwarded your application to Gov. Fenton, with a strong letter of my own, urging him to appoint you. I have no doubt he will. I trust you experienced no permanent injury from Vanderbilt’s drafts. I paid them both so soon as they reached me. I hope for better times politically, but the sky is clouded. I cannot see to the end, but have faith. Yours, Horace Greeley.”
The letter is lightly and evenly toned, with two horizontal folds.
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GREELEY, HORACE (1811-72)# 7041
American Editor & Abolitionist
As founder of the New York Tribune, Greeley exerted great political power with the expression of his antislavery views. He was defeated in the 1872 presidential election, and died later in the same year.
A Recommendation for a Disabled Soldier in the Irish Brigade
Civil War-Date Autograph Letter Signed, on imprinted 5” x 8” Office of The Tribune stationery, to “Gen[eral] M.C. M[e]igs, Quartermaster U.S.A.” In this earnest and eloquent letter to U.S. Army Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs, who established the military cemetery at Arlington later in the war, Greeley recommends a battle-disabled soldier in the 69th New York, part of the Irish Brigade under General Thomas F. Meagher, for a position.
“New York, Feb[ruary] 23, 1863. Capt[ain] Jasper M. Whitty, who has fought in nearly every battle of our War from first Bull Run to Antietam inclusive, has lost his right eye, been disabled by severe wounds and compelled to seek and accept an honorable discharge from the service, is poor and deserving, and solicits some clerkship or other place wherein he may still earn bread for his family. I respectfully submit that he ought to have it. Yours, Horace Greeley.”
Having enlisted as a lieutenant on April 20, 1861, Lieutenant Whitty was wounded and taken prisoner at First Bull Run. Subsequently exchanged, he was again wounded at Antietam, where the hard-fought Irish Brigade suffered losses among the highest of any Federal unit during the war.
The letter is accompanied by a period carte-de-visite image of Greeley, with a C.D. Fredericks & Co. backmark. Both pieces bear general soiling and wear, the letter having the usual horizontal folds and a few small stains.
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