General Hugh Mercer's WillNoting the Plantation he Purchased from George Washington (Ferry Farm, Washington's Boyhood Home), and Instructions to Executors to "hire negroes" to Work the Plantation for the Benefit of his Wife and Children - Rare Book Insider
General Hugh Mercer's WillNoting the Plantation he Purchased from George Washington (Ferry Farm

REVOLUTIONARY WAR. SLAVERY. GEORGE WASHINGTON. HUGH MERCER

General Hugh Mercer’s WillNoting the Plantation he Purchased from George Washington (Ferry Farm, Washington’s Boyhood Home), and Instructions to Executors to “hire negroes” to Work the Plantation for the Benefit of his Wife and Children

Fredericksburg, Virginia: 1776
  • $12,500
Manuscript Document, Contemporary Copy of Last Will and Testament, March 20, 1776, Fredericksburg, Virginia. 4 pp., 7 1/2 x 11 5/8 in. "I direct that after my decease my dear Wife Isabella (if she survive me) and my children do reside on my plantation in King George County adjoining to Mr James Hunter's Land which Plantation I purchased from General George Washington and that my Executors hereafter named out of my personal Estate purchase or hire negroes as they shall think best to work the said Plantation.""I further direct my Books Drugs surgical Instruments shop utensils and Furniture to be sold and also such Household Furniture Negroes or stocks of Cattle and Horses as may appear to my Executors hereafter named to be for the benefit of my Personal Estate."Written shortly after Hugh Mercer became the colonel of the 3rd Virginia Regiment of the Virginia Line, his last will and testament disposed of his real and personal property, including slaves among his wife Isabella Gordon Mercer and children, including one yet to be born.After playing a key role in the Battles of Trenton, in January 1777 at the Battle of Princeton, Mercer's horse was shot from under him, and he was mortally wounded. Vastly outnumbered and mistaken by the British for George Washington, he was ordered to surrender. Instead, he drew his sword, and was bayonetted seven times. He died nine days later. Historical BackgroundGeorge Washington's family moved to Ferry Farm, outside of Fredericksburg, in King George County, Virginia, in 1738, when he was six years old. His father died in 1743, while they lived there, and George Washington eventually inherited the farm and lived there with his mother and siblings until his early 20s. His mother lived there until 1772, when she moved to a house in Fredericksburg. After leasing the tillable and pasture lands of Ferry Farm for two years, George Washington sold it in April 1774 to Scottish physician and fellow French and Indian War veteran Hugh Mercer for £2,000 Virginia currency, due in five annual payments plus interest.Mercer was appointed colonel of what became the 3rd Virginia Regiment of the Virginia Line in January 1776. Both future President James Monroe and future Chief Justice John Marshall served as officers under his command. By June 1776, the Continental Congress had appointed him as a brigadier general in the Continental Army, and he left for New York to oversee the construction of Fort Lee on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River.Mercer played major roles in the First and Second Battles of Trenton on December 26, 1776, and January 2, 1777. While he was leading a vanguard of soldiers to Princeton on January 3, Mercer's horse was shot from under him. British soldiers mistook Mercer for Washington and ordered him to surrender. Instead, Mercer drew his saber and attacked though heavily outnumbered. The British troops bayonetted him seven times and left him for dead. General Washington rallied Mercer's men, pushed back the British regiment, and continued the attack on Princeton. Despite medical attention from Dr. Benjamin Rush and local Quakers, Mercer died nine days later from his wounds.In 1791, Painter John Trumbull used Mercer's son Hugh Tennent Weedon Mercer, who was five months old when his father died, as a model for the large painting, The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777, on which Trumbull worked for many years.Hugh Mercer (1726-1777) was born in Scotland as the son of a minister in the Church of Scotland. He studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen's Marischal College and graduated as a physician in 1744. He served as an assistant surgeon under Bonnie Prince Charlie and was present at the army's defeat at the Battle of Culloden in April 1746. He went into hiding and fled to America in 1747, settling in Pennsylvania, where he practiced medicine. During the French and Indian War, he joined a Pennsylvania regiment as. (See website for full description)
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Ben-Gurion Attempts to Convince the Israeli Government to Attack Jordan, After Jordan Violated the Cease-fire Ending the Six Day War

Autograph Letter Signed, to ?, April 10, 1970, Sde Boker, Israel. In Hebrew. 2 pp., 4.75 x 7.5 in. "I brought to the Government a proposal, since Jordan violated the conditions of the cease-fire I proposed starting a war with Jordan. . The Government rejected this proposal, even though we were sure that in a week or ten days we would conquer the entire Jerusalem and Hebron District." Translated Excerpt"In the Six Day War we conquered all the western part of our land, the Sinai, Golan - and Old Jerusalem. Till the Six Day War I considered it an irreparable disaster. The second cease-fire was arranged on condition Jordan would not damage the Jerusalem pipeline which was in its territory (the pipeline from Ras al to Jerusalem). They did not honor the decision and destroyed the pipe. After this was reported to the Command I brought to the Government a proposal, since Jordan violated the conditions of the cease-fire I proposed starting a war with Jordan for the purpose of conquering all the territory south of Ramallah to Aquaba, that is to say the entire Jerusalem District and Hebron District. The Government rejected this proposal, even though we were sure that in a week or ten days we would conquer the entire Jerusalem and Hebron District. As far as I know, in the annals of Israel there was not a continuum in matters of tradition, but there were changes from time to time. But I don't have the will or need to prove this, because I respect the opposite opinion."Historical BackgroundIn May 1967, Egypt closed the Straits of Tiran between the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli shipping, which Israel considered a cause for war. On June 5, Israel launched a series of pre-emptive airstrikes against Egyptian airfields, destroying nearly the entire Egyptian air force. Israelis simultaneously launched a ground offensive into the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula. Jordan joined the conflict on the side of Egypt as part of a defensive pact signed a week before the war began. On June 11, Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria signed a ceasefire. In addition to the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, Israel also seized the West Bank from Jordan and the Golan Heights from Syria.David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973) was born in the Kingdom of Poland, then part of the Russian Empire, as David Grün, and he studied at the University of Warsaw. In 1906, he immigrated to Palestine, which was part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1912, he moved to Constantinople to study law and adopted the Hebrew name Ben-Gurion. He supported the Ottoman Empire in World War I, but was deported to Egypt and traveled to the United States, where he remained for three years. After the Balfour Declaration of 1917, he joined the Jewish Legion of the British Army. He returned to Palestine after the war and became a leader of the Zionist movement. As head of the Jewish Agency from 1935, Ben-Gurion was effectively the leader of the Jewish population before there was a nation. He accepted the 1947 partition plan as a compromise that would establish a Jewish state, and declared the independence of the state of Israel in May 1948. After leading Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Ben-Gurion won election as Prime Minister of Israel in 1948 as head of the Mapai political party in the Knesset. He resigned in December 1953, effective January 26, 1954, then resumed office in November 1955 and served as Israeli Prime Minster until 1963. He then moved to Sde Boker, a kibbutz in the Negev desert, where he lived until his death.
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FDR Signed Engraving of White House Bound in The Democratic Book 1936

The Democratic Book 1936, with limitation page signed by Franklin D. Roosevelt under a beautiful color illustration of the White House. Original presentation Morocco gilt, with original illustrated title and limitation pages, 19 full-page portraits, dozens of in-text half-tones and illustrations, and a facsimile of the Constitution, and illustrated wrappers bound in; copy no. 256 [of 2500] cover gilt stamped inscription to FDR's first cousin, "Lyman Delano," 384 pp., 11 1/4 x 14 1/2 x 1 5/8 in. Featuring Franklin Roosevelt's acceptance speech at the 1936 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, the 1936 Democratic National Platform, and the results of the election of 1936, this lavish book includes statements by the first lady and cabinet members, sketches of other party leaders, histories of the Democratic Party, Congress, and the White House, and biographies of Roosevelt and Vice President John Nance Garner. With fantastic illustrations and advertisements.President Roosevelt signed colorful printed illustrations of the White House, which were bound into this souvenir book created by the DNC to pay down the post-election campaign deficit. Complete Transcript of Foreword by Franklin D. RooseveltDemocracy is not a static thing. It is an everlasting march. When our children grow up, they will still have problems to overcome. It is for us, however, manfully to set ourselves to the task of preparation for them so that to some degree the difficulties they must overcome may weigh upon them less heavily.I am confident that the people of the nation, having put their shoulders to the wheel, will build a better future for the children of the days to come.FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELTHistorical BackgroundAfter FDR's reelection in 1936, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) faced a campaign deficit of about $850,000. To pay off the debt, Jackson Day dinners were held throughout the country. Addressed by the President via radio, the dinners raised $315,000. Also, DNC treasurer William Forbes Morgan convinced the President to sign 2,500 sheets, bound into The Democratic Book 1936, for donors of $250, raising more than $400,000.After the New York Times reported on July 26, 1937 that hundreds of copies had been sold to corporations, Republican House leader Bertrand Hollis Snell and Rep. Robert Low Bacon insisted that this violated the Federal Corrupt Practices Act which forbid corporations from making federal campaign contributions. Snell showed a DNC letter that read, in part, "The sale of the book enables us to legally accept corporation checks, and this is the way all the companies who are assisting us are handling these expenditures." The Democratic-controlled House failed to act, so Snell asked Attorney General Homer S. Cummings to investigate. In December, Cummings predictably announced that criminal prosecutions against the DNC for selling the souvenir convention books to corporations "would not be warranted."Condition: internally clean, leather cover somewhat rubbed with accompanying edgewear. Fine.
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Early Printing of the U.S. Constitution, in American MuseumOne of the First Two Magazine Printings of the Constitution

The American Museum, or Repository of Ancient and Modern Fugitive Pieces, &c. Volume II, July - December 1787. Philadelphia: Mathew Carey, 1787. 5 1/8 x 8 1/4 in., approx. 624 pp. These six issues of The American Museum magazine capture the events of the dramatic and remarkable latter half of 1787. They include the first magazine printing of the proposed Constitution of the United States, arguments for and against the ratification of the Constitution (including the first six numbers of The Federalist), and notices of the ratification of the Constitution by Delaware and Pennsylvania. Other great material includes the Northwest Ordinance of 1787; the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom (one of the three accomplishments of which Jefferson was proudest); Daniel Boone's account of his exploits in Kentucky; state actions against slavery; and discussions of a wide range of subjects from paper money and public punishment for crimes to Shays' Rebellion and the promotion of American manufactures. Highlights"The constitution framed for the united states of America, by a convention of deputies from the states of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, at a session begun May 14, and ended September 17, 1787""We, the people of the united states, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the united states of America." (p276-284);George Washington to the President of Confederation Congress, Sept. 17, 1787 (p285-6);Resolution of Congress recommending the appointment of state conventions to consider the Constitution, Sept. 28, 1787 (p286);Six numbers of The Federalist, each signed "Publius"No. 1 (General Introduction) [Alexander Hamilton] (p441-443)No. 2 ("Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence") [John Jay] (p443-6)No. 3 ("The Same Subject Continued: Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence") [John Jay] (p523-5)No. 4 ("The Same Subject Continued: Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence") [John Jay] (p525-8)No. 5 ("The Same Subject Continued: Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence") [John Jay] (p528-530)No. 6 ("Concerning Dangers from Dissensions Between the States") [Alexander Hamilton] (p530-4);Benjamin Franklin, "Remarks and facts relative to the American paper money," written in London in 1764 (p17-23);Benjamin Rush, "Account of the life and death of Edward Drinker" (p73-75);Benjamin Franklin, "The way to make money plenty in every man's pocket" (p87);Hugh Williamson / "Sylvius," Seven Letters on "the consequences of emitting paper-money; the necessity and advantages of encouraging American manufactures; the beneficial effects of an alteration in the present mode of taxation, &c." (p107-134);Joel Barlow, Oration delivered to Connecticut Society of the Cincinnati, July 4, 1787 (p135-142);Benjamin Rush, "An enquiry into the effects of public punishments upon criminals, and upon society" (p142-153);Constitution of the Humane Society for the Recovery of Drowned Persons . and for recovering persons supposed to be dead from drowning (including early instructions for pulmonary resuscitation and avoidance of hypothermia) (p160-164);Resolutions by various patriotic societies to encourage economy and the patronage of domestic manufactures (p165-9);The Northwest Ordinance of 1787, creating and governing the Northwest Territory - including prohibition against slavery (p188-192);Benjamin Franklin, President of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, "Information for those who wish to remove to America" [Encouraging immigration] (p211-216);Tench Coxe, "Address to the assembly of the friends of American manufactures" (p248-255);Tench Coxe, "Let. (See website for full description)
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General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America, Printed by Benjamin Franklin

Geographical, Historical, Political, Philosophical and Mechanical Essays. The First, Containing an Analysis of a General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America; And of the Country of the Confederate Indians: A Description of the Face of the Country; Philadelphia: Benjamin Franklin and David Hall, and sold by Robert and James Dodsley in London, August 1755. First edition. First state (before "The Lakes Cataraqui" caption was added just north of Lake Ontario), original hand-coloring, unfolded to 27 x 20 1/8 in. Removed for conservation and display. The accompanying book is included, 7 1/2 x 10 1/4 in. 36 pp. This hand-colored General Map of the Middle British Colonies in America, and the accompanying Analysis, is a first edition, first state printing of one of the most important maps of Colonial America. Particularly due to the details of the Ohio Country, it played a key role in the French and Indian War, with General Edward Braddock using a copy in his ill-fated expedition against the French in modern-day western Pennsylvania. Historic BackgroundEvans built on his Map of Pennsylvania, New-Jersey, New-York, and the three Delaware Counties revised in 1752, as well as the best information from other sources to create this 1755 map. Using the Map of the most inhabited part of Virginia by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson, he adjusted the longitudinal position of the Potomac River and added the area claimed by the Ohio Company to Pennsylvania. He also consulted the Map of the Northern Neck of Virginia by William Mayo and the Mapp of the Bay of Chesepeack, with the Rivers, Potomack, Potapasco, North East, and part of Chester by Walter Hoxton, as well as maps of Connecticut by William Douglass and Thomas Pownall. Evans dedicated the new work to Thomas Pownall, as a "Tribute of Gratitude, for the great Assistance You have given me in this Map; and to assure the Public, that it has past the Examination of a Gentleman, whom I esteem the best Judge of it in America." Pownall, the recently appointed lieutenant governor of New Jersey and a future governor of Massachusetts Bay, received most of the public acclaim at the time of its publication. (Schutz, Thomas Pownall., 53.) Benjamin Franklin, who took immense pride in his trade as a printer throughout his long and storied life, had both a personal and professional connection with cartographer Lewis Evans. Franklin employed Evans as a clerk, and sometimes draftsman, in the 1740s, and Deborah, Franklin's wife, served as godmother to Evans' daughter Amelia. After Lewis Evans' untimely death in 1756, Franklin helped Amelia secure royalties on later editions of her father's map. He remained in close correspondence with her up until his death.
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Bill of Rights: September 23, 1789 with Penultimate 2nd Amendment Text

Gazette of the United States. New York: John Fenno, September 23, 1789. 4 pp., 10 3/8 x 16 3/4 in. "Congress shall make no law establishing articles of faith, or a mode of worship, or prohibiting the free exercise of religion,or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition to the government for a redress of grievances."After the House of Representatives proposed seventeen amendments ("Articles"), the Senate took up the debate and reduced the number to twelve. Even after the reduction, the House and Senate continued wrangling over language, especially in the third article (which would become the First Amendment) and the eighth article regarding trials (the Sixth Amendment).The Proceedings of Congress report in this issue is dated September 23, but the Journals of the House and Senate don't show action that day. This could provide new information on the timing of the debates, but at the least this reflects the House's agreement on September 21 to ten points proposed earlier by the Senate. They then established a conference to resolve sixteen other points of disagreement.On September 24, the House dropped its objections to the sixteen points, insisting only on changes in the third and eighth articles which currently stood as printed in this rare newspaper issue. Agreement on these two areas established the final Congressional text of the Bill of Rights. The Senate concurred on September 25, and the House re-affirmed its approval on September 28th when at least one engrossed copy was signed, marking the Bill of Rights' last legislative hurdle before being sent to the states for ratification. Partial Transcript - Bill of Rights text entirely on page 1Note: Differences between this and the final text are bracketed. As described above, these differences were decided after September 21 and before September 24 in committee.]In the Senate of the United States/ September 23, 1789/ AMENDMENTS to the CONSTITUTION.The Conventions of a number of the states having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added. And as extending the ground of public confidence in the government, will best insure the beneficent ends of its institution:-Resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, two-thirds of both Houses concurring, That the following articles be proposed to the Legislatures of the several States, as AMENDMENTS to the CONSTITUTION of the United States, all or any of which articles, when ratified by three-fourths of the said legislatures, to be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of the said Constitution, viz.ArticlesIn addition to, and amendment of, the Constitution of the United States of America, proposed by Congress, and ratified by the legislatures of the several States, pursuant to the fifth Article of the original Constitution.Article First. After the first enumeration required by the first article of the Constitution, there shall be one representative for every thirty thousand, until the number shall amount to one hundred; to which number one Representative shall be added for every subsequent increase of forty thousand, until the Representatives shall amount to two hundred, to which number one Representative shall be added for every subsequent increase of sixty thousand persons. [Minor differences between this and final text. Never ratified.]Art. Second. No law varying the compensation for the services of the senators and representatives shall take effect, until an election of representatives shall have intervened. [Not ratified until May 7, 1992, when it became the 27th Amendment]Art. Third. Congress shall make no law establishing articles of faith, or a mode of worship [changed in final text to: respecting an establ. (See website for full description)
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A Week After Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK Asks Treasury Secretary Dillon About the Possibility of a Run on Gold if the Crisis Had Lasted Longer or Involved a Total Blockade

Typed Draft Letter with autograph corrections, to Douglas Dillon, November 5, 1962, Washington, D.C. 1 p., 6 3/4 x 8 3/4 in. With Evelyn Lincoln (Personal Secretary to JFK) letter of authenticity, July 16, 1990, and small note card with Kennedy doodle. "If the crisis had become more pronounced, if there had been a total blockade .would we have had a serious run on gold? . It should be possible for us to get better coordination with the western governments."In this typed draft, with Kennedy's handwritten corrections, the President asks Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon about the monetary implications of a prolonged Cuban missile crisis. Complete TranscriptThe White House / Washington / November 5, 1962Dear Doug: Is it your understanding that our present arrangements ^in [central?]or monetary policy^ stood up during the last two weeks? If the crisis had become more pronounced, ^if^ there had been a total blockade, and it had gone on for a longer period of time, would we have had a serious run on gold? What can we do to prevent a disparity in interest rates ^such as we have recently seen between ourselves & G. B^. It should be possible for us to get better coordination with the western governments to limit any causes for concern. Sincerely, [unsigned]The Honorable / Douglas DillonSecretary of the Treasury / Washington, D.C.Note that this precedes the Presidential Records Act, which made papers such as this created after the 1978 Act the property of the National Archives and Records Administration. Condition: Several small puncture marks to the top left corner from removed staples.With: JOHN F KENNEDY, autograph doodles on a card, [Nov. 5, 1962] 1 p., 5x3 inchesPresident John F. Kennedy wrote "Doug" three times with lines around each during a phone conversation with Douglas Dillon about monetary implications of a prolonged Cuban missile crisis.[In Evelyn Lincoln's Hand] Sec Dillon / #21With: EVELYN LINCOLN. Personal Secretary to JFK, letter of authenticity, July 16, 1990. "On November 7, 1962 Secretary Douglas Dillon called President John F. Kennedy at 10:15 a.m. to discuss the letter that President Kennedy had written to him on November 5, 1962. The handwritten notes on the card, which you now have in your possession, 'Doug', 'Doug', 'Doug' were written by President Kennedy during that conversation."With: additional collateral. Historical BackgroundIn 1961, the U.S. deployed nuclear missiles in Italy and Turkey, and supported the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba to topple Fidel Castro. In July 1962, Nikita Khrushchev secretly agreed with Castro to deploy Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. After a U-2 spy planes discovered the building of missile installations, President Kennedy convened a meeting of top advisers, desperate to act before the missiles became operational. On October 22, 1962, Kennedy ordered a naval "quarantine" (not a blockade, which by definition would have been an act of war) to prevent additional missiles from reaching Cuba, and demanded the withdrawal of all Soviet missiles from Cuba. The crisis is widely thought to be the closest the world has ever gotten to a nuclear conflagration. After days of extremely tense negotiation, on October 28, Khruschev announced the Soviets were removing their missiles in exchange for an American promise not to invade Cuba, with a secret additional promise that America's Jupiter missiles would be removed from Turkey. The U.S. ended the naval quarantine on November 20, and removed the Jupiter missiles the next April.Gold and the Cold WarIn the 1950s, as western European economies recovered from World War II, their payment deficits became surpluses, and they traded many of their excess dollars for gold, causing the depletion of American gold reserves. In 1962, a $2.2 billion deficit in the balance of international payments resulted in an outflow of $900 million worth of gold. To alleviate the problem, President Eisenhower hop. (See website for full description)
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President Woodrow Wilson Asks Congress for a Declaration of War

Printed Document Signed, "A Message Calling for War With the Imperial German Government in Defense of American Rights," [April 2, 1917]. New York: Literary Digest, 1917. In three columns with elaborate initials in red and gold. 1 p., 16 1/4 x 22 1/2 in. "there are serious, very serious, choices of policy to be made, and made immediately, which it was neither right nor constitutionally permissible that I should assume the responsibility of making."In this address to Congress, President Woodrow Wilson reluctantly requests a declaration of war on Imperial Germany because of its announcement that "it was its purpose to put aside all restraints of law or of humanity and use its submarines to sink every vessel that sought to approach either the ports of Great Britain and Ireland or the western coasts of Europe or any of the ports controlled by the enemies of Germany within the Mediterranean." Germany had cast aside its earlier restraint and begun to pursue unrestricted submarine warfare on vessels from every nation with a "reckless lack of compassion or of principle." Excerpts"With a profound sense of the solemn and even tragical character of the step I am taking and of the grave responsibilities which it involves, but in unhesitating obedience to what I deem my constitutional duty, I advise that the Congress declare the recent course of the Imperial German Government to be in fact nothing less than war against the government and people of the United States; that it formally accept the status of belligerent which has thus been thrust upon it, and that it take immediate steps not only to put the country in a more thorough state of defense but also to exert all its power and employ all its resources to bring the Government of the German Empire to terms and end the war.""A steadfast concert for peace can never be maintained except by a partnership of democratic nations. No autocratic government could be trusted to keep faith within it or observe its covenants. It must be a league of honor, a partnership of opinion. Intrigue would eat its vitals away; the plottings of inner circles who could plan what they would and render account to no one would be a corruption seated at its very heart. Only free peoples can hold their purpose and their honor steady to a common end and prefer the interests of mankind to any narrow interest of their own.""It is a distressing and oppressive duty, Gentlemen of the Congress, which I have performed in thus addressing you. There are, it may be, many months of fiery trial and sacrifice ahead of us. It is a fearful thing to lead this great peaceful people into war, into the most terrible and disastrous of all wars, civilization itself seeming to be in the balance. But the right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the things which we have always carried near our hearts, - for democracy, for the right of those who submit to authority to have a voice in their own governments, for the rights and liberties of small nations, for a universal dominion of right by such a concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety to all nations and make the world itself at last free. To such a task we can dedicate our lives and our fortunes, everything that we are and everything that we have, with the pride of those who know that the day has come when America is privileged to spend her blood and her might for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace which she has treasured. God helping her, she can do no other."Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) was born in Staunton, Virginia, and graduated from the College of New Jersey (Princeton University) in 1879, attended the University of Virginia Law School, and received a doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in 1886. He taught at Bryn Mawr College (1885-1888), Wesleyan University (1888-1890), and Princeton University (1890-1902) before serving as president of Princeton University (1902-1910) and governor. (See website for full description)
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President Harry S. Truman Signs Potsdam Declaration Demanding Japanese Surrender for Himself, Winston Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek

Typed Document Signed, Potsdam Declaration, July 26, 1945. Truman also adds in his own hand the signatures of Winston Churchill ("Churchill") and Chiang Kai-shek ("Chiang Kai-shek"). 3 pp. on 2 leaves, 8 1/4 x 11 in. "Following are our terms. We will not deviate from them. There are no alternatives. We shall brook no delay."This remarkable document, signed by President Harry S. Truman and by him for British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Chairman Chiang Kai-shek of the Republic of China, sets forth their terms for Japan's surrender. Within days, Churchill had been replaced as prime minister, and within two weeks, the United States Air Force had dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. On August 15, Japanese Emperor Hirohito accepted the terms of the Declaration. Excerpts"We, the President of the United States, the President of the National Government of the Republic of China and the Prime Minister of Great Britain, representing the hundreds of millions of our countrymen, have conferred and agree that Japan shall be given an opportunity to end this war.""The result of the futile and senseless German resistance to the might of the aroused free peoples of the world stands forth in awful clarity as an example to the people of Japan. The might that now converges on Japan is immeasurably greater than that which, when applied to the resisting Nazis, necessarily laid waste to the lands, the industry and the method of life of the whole German people.""There must be eliminated for all time the authority and influence of those who have deceived and misled the people of Japan into embarking on world conquest, for we insist that a new order of peace, security and justice will be impossible until irresponsible militarism is driven from the world.""We do not intend that the Japanese shall be enslaved as a race or destroyed as [a] nation, but stern justice shall be meted out to all war criminals, including those who have visited cruelties upon our prisoners. The Japanese government shall remove all obstacles to the revival and strengthening of democratic tendencies among / the Japanese people. Freedom of speech, of religion, and of thought, as well as respect for the fundamental human rights shall be established." (p2-3)"Japan shall be permitted to maintain such industries as will sustain her economy and permit the exaction of just reparations in kind, but not those which would enable her to re-arm for war. To this end, access to, as distinguished from control of, raw materials shall be permitted. Eventual Japanese participation in world trade relations shall be permitted. The occupying forces of the Allies shall be withdrawn from Japan as soon as these objectives have been accomplished and there has been established in accordance with the freely expressed will of the Japanese people a peacefully inclined and responsible government." (p3)"We call upon the Government of Japan to proclaim now the unconditional surrender of all Japanese armed forces, and to provide proper and adequate assurances of their good faith in such action. The alternative for Japan is prompt and utter destruction."Historical BackgroundNine weeks after the surrender of Nazi Germany, the leaders of the United States, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union met in Potsdam, in the Soviet-occupied zone of Germany, from July 17 to August 2, 1945 to plan the postwar peace. The allies were initially represented by General Secretary Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and President Harry S. Truman. As a result of a British general election, Prime Minister Clement Atlee replaced Churchill by July 28. The Potsdam Conference divided Germany into four occupation zones, recognized a Soviet-backed group as the legitimate government of Poland, and partitioned Vietnam at the 16th parallel.On July 26, President Truman, Prime Minister Churchill, and Chairman Chiang Kai-shek issued the Potsdam Declaration, in which the United. (See website for full description)
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An Important Boston Tea Party Broadside is Reprinted

The Connecticut Journal, and the New-Haven Post-Boy, January 28, 1774. New Haven: Thomas Green and Samuel Green. 4 pp., 8 1/2 x 13 1/4 in. This issue of The Connecticut Journal contains a report from Boston that includes the text of a handbill distributed and posted there over the pseudonym "Joyce Junior." In their choice of persona, the Boston Sons of Liberty paid tribute to Cornet George Joyce, an officer of the parliamentary New Model Army of the seventeenth century. Joyce was credited with having captured King Charles I in June 1647. The regicide "Joyce Junior" had made earlier appearances in Boston, including at the annual "Pope Night" in November when rival gangs of boys seek to capture one another's carts displaying figures of the pope and the devil. Another version appeared during the controversies that preceded the Boston Massacre in 1770.In 1774, "Joyce Junior" was John Winthrop Jr. (1747-1800), the son of Harvard professor John Wainwright Winthrop (1714-1779) and the great-great-great-grandson of Massachusetts Bay founder John Winthrop (1588-1649). More handbills appeared from "Joyce Junior" over the coming months, including one disavowing the tarring and feathering of John Malcom in Boston. In general, the "Joyce Junior" handbills tried to portray the Boston Tea Party and its aftermath as the result of principled resistance and not mob action. Excerpts"Boston, January 20."Saturday morning the following was posted up in the most public parts of this town, viz."'Brethren, and fellow citizens;"'You may depend, that those odious miscreants and detestable tools to ministry and governor, the Tea Consignees (those traitors to their country, butchers who have done, and are doing every thing to murder and destroy all that shall stand in the way of their private interest) are determined to come and reside again in the town of Boston."'I therefore give you this early notice, that you may hold yourselves in readiness, on the shortest notice, to give them such a reception, as such ingrates deserve. "JOYCE, jun."(Chairman of the committee for taring and feathering.)"?*? If any person should be so hardy as to tear this down, they may expect my severest resentment. J. jun.'"The several committees of this town we hear never had so much business upon their hands as at present. Three of them in their several departments it is said, sat late last Friday evening; And the committee of correspondence the evening before."The country road committees we are informed keep a very good look out, to prevent teas coming into town by land. While the night-look-out committees, are equally industrious in seeing none are landed in this and the neighbouring sea ports."One of the tea commissioners it is said narrowly escaped a tarring and feathering one day last week-presumptious men to think of gaining a footing in this town again-so says every man high and low, rich and poor." (p1/c3-p2/c1)"We are informed, that one John Cook, of Salem, skipper of a schooner belonging to Mr. George Bickford, of the same place, accepted of the infamous employment of transporting from Cape Cod to Castle William, the East India Company's detestable tea, saved out of the wreck of Capt. Loring's brig."Mr. Bickford is now a patient at Essex hospital, and we are assured, that a company of natives, dressed in the Indian manner, armed with hatchets, axes, &c. have already paid him a visit; but he being under inoculation, they deferred proceeding to extremities. What punishment is to be inflicted on the Skipper is yet uncertain; but it is judged by the expressions of indignation at his conduct, that he will not escape with impunity." (p2/c1)Historical BackgroundParliament passed the Tea Act to aid the East India Company with its excessive stock of tea for which it had no market. King George III gave his assent to the act on May 10, 1773. The act permitted the East India Company to export tea to the American colonies directly. (See website for full description)
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Autograph Book Kept by a Jewish Former U.S. and Future Confederate Naval Officer Imprisoned at Fort Warren, Signed by Dozens of Fellow Political and Military Prisoners

Autograph Album. Fort Warren (Boston), MA, December 1861 to January 1862. 41 inscriptions on rectos of 21 pp., 5 x 7 3/4 in. With two 1899 clippings on Myers' death of Myers at the rear. Disbound; worn, some leaves may have been lost. Julian Myers enlisted in the United States Navy at the age of 13, against his parent's wishes. He served with distinction, rising to lieutenant before the Civil War. After a 30-month tour in the China Seas, he was arrested on board the steam sloop of war USS Hartford under Admiral Farragut, in Philadelphia, on December 4, 1861 due to his Confederate sympathies. He used this album to gather signatures from his fellow prisoners at Fort Warren at the mouth of Boston Harbor. While some of the inscriptions are simple autographs, many of the prisoners have added a note explaining their positions and how they came to be imprisoned. Confederate sympathizers from border state Maryland are especially well represented. Several signers were among the 31 members of the state House of Delegates who were arrested to prevent that state's secession, including Speaker of the House E.G. Kilbourn. Charles Howard, formerly president of the Baltimore Police Board of Commissioners, wrote on Christmas Eve with the date of his arrest and the names of the three locations where he had been incarcerated. A fellow Baltimore commissioner, William H. Gatchell, noted that he had been "arrested on the 1 July 1861 at 3 o'clock in the morning by 400 armed men."George Armistead Appleton wrote: "Arrested Sept. 7th 1861 on my way to Virginia. Confined in the Station house at Bulls for 4 days taken from thence to Fort McHenry thence to Fort Columbus thence to Fort Waren. [Signed at] Ft. Warren Dec 28th/61." His stay as a prisoner in Fort McHenry is ironic; his grandfather George Armistead was the American officer who successfully defended Fort McHenry during the British bombardment that inspired Francis Scott Key to write The Star-Spangled Banner.Naval officer Austin E. Smith wrote "Arrested Aug. 2d 1861, suspected of being suspicious." Another naval officer complained that he was arrested "for refusing to serve against the Confederate States of America." Infamous con artist Parker Hardin French, "he Kentucky Barracuda," arrested as a Confederate spy, added his signature. Frank K Howard, Editor of Baltimore's The Daily Exchange, notes that he was arrested by order of William Seward.Myers was paroled in January, 1862, and then exchanged in April for Captain and future Union general Zenas Bliss. Myers then joined the Confederate Navy, taking command the monitor CSS Huntsville. He fought in the Battle of Mobile Bay on August 5, 1864, scuttling his vessel to avoid its capture. According to a clipped 1899 obituary, "Subsequent to the war, Admiral Farragut once said in a remark to Gen. Sherman, when Mr. Budd Myers, the Captain's son was introduced to the great Union naval hero, "This man's father did what no other man could have done with the same forces, he kept me out of Mobile for two weeks."His remains were interred in the Jewish section of the Laurel grove cemetery in Savannah, Georgia. The burial was officiated by Rabbi I. P. Mendes of the Mikva Israel Congregation.Myers had not been previously identified as a Jewish soldier who served in the Civil War. Julian Myers (1825-1899) was the son of Mordecai Myers (1794-1865) and Henrietta Cohen Myers (1799-1886). His mother was the daughter of Solomon Cohen and Belle Moses. Solomon's Father, Rabbi Moses Cohen (1798-1762) and Belle's father Myer Moses (1735-1787) were prominent English-born Jews that emigrated to Charleston from London. His grandfather Levy Myers (d.1827), a native of Georgetown, South Carolina, was the first Jewish medical graduate at the University of Glasgow in 1787. Provenance: collection of Arthur G. "Gil" Barrett. Swann Galleries, Sept. 23, 2023, lot 145 (not recognizing this as Judaica).
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Vibrant Print of Fifteenth Amendment Celebrations

The Fifteenth Amendment, Celebrated May 19th 1870, hand-colored lithographic print. New York: Thomas Kelly, 1870. From original design by James C. Beard. 1 p., 30 x 24 in. The colorful central image of this lithograph depicts a Black Zouave regiment on parade in Baltimore, Maryland, on May 19, 1870, to celebrate passage of the Fifteenth Amendment. Framing the central scene are vignettes and portraits of individuals important to the cause of African American men's voting rights. Individuals pictured include Ulysses S. Grant, Frederick Douglass, Martin R. Delany (first U.S. Army African American field officer), Hiram R. Revels (first African American U.S. Senator), Schuyler Colfax, Abraham Lincoln, and John Brown. The portraits are interspersed with vignettes showing scenes of African Americans reading the Emancipation Proclamation, marrying, leading troops in battle, worshiping, voting, sitting in Congress, among other activities, with captions: "We till Our Own Fields; Education Will Prove the Equality of the Races; The ballot box is Open to Us; [Masonic scene]We Unite in the Bonds of Fellowship with the Whole Human Race; Liberty Protects the Marriage Alter; The Holy Ordinance of Religion are Free; Freedom Unites the Family Circle; We Will Protect our Country as it Defends our Rights; Our Charter of Rights is the Holy Scripture." Historic BackgroundThe 15th Amendment, passed by Congress in 1869, and ratified by the requisite number of states on February 3, 1870, stated that "the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude," and gave Congress an enforcement mechanism. It was the last of the Reconstruction amendments passed by the Republican Congress after the Civil War to give citizenship to newly freed African Americans.The BaltimoreSun newspaper described the parade on May 19 as an "Imposing Procession of Civil, Military, Trade and Beneficial Associations." Both black and white spectators lined the streets to view the grand procession. A chariot drawn by four horses led the procession and carried a large bell that was "kept continually sounding" and a banner proclaiming, "Ring out the old, ring in the new, ring out the false, ring in the true." Following the chariot were the Knights Templar of Baltimore and Washington, the Philadelphia Cornet Band, and detachments of infantry and cavalry. Carriages carrying a procession of distinguished guests and speakers included famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass. The parade also included various social organizations, fire departments, bands, clubs, schools, work associations, political societies, and more from Baltimore, Washington, and Philadelphia, many dressed in bright colors and carrying banners and flags. A twenty-foot full-rigged ship sits in the background of the center scene of the print, which the BaltimoreSun's article mentioned accompanied the Caulkers' and Live Oak Association and was drawn by four horses. A wagon carried an operating printing press that was printing a handbill during the parade, which contained the text of the Fifteenth Amendment and an advertisement for the Freedmen's Savings Bank. The procession began at 11 a.m., and the end of it did not reach Monument Square until 4 p.m.At Monument Square, the speaker's stand collapsed, but there were no serious injuries, and they changed to the balcony of the Gilmor House on the other side of the square. Organizers read letters from Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts and William Lloyd Garrison of New York. Speakers included African American attorney from Ohio John M. Langston, U.S. Postmaster General John Creswell from Maryland, Frederick Douglass, and U.S. Senator Frederick A. Sawyer of South Carolina.James Carter Beard (1837-1913) was born in Cincinnati, and spent his childhood in Covington, Kentucky. Admitted to the bar in 1861, Beard pract. (See website for full description)
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Ben-Gurion Attempts to Convince the Israeli Government to Attack Jordan, After Jordan Violated the Cease-fire Ending the Six Day War

Autograph Letter Signed, to ?, April 10, 1970, Sde Boker, Israel. In Hebrew. 2 pp., 4.75 x 7.5 in. "I brought to the Government a proposal, since Jordan violated the conditions of the cease-fire I proposed starting a war with Jordan. . The Government rejected this proposal, even though we were sure that in a week or ten days we would conquer the entire Jerusalem and Hebron District." Translated Excerpt"In the Six Day War we conquered all the western part of our land, the Sinai, Golan - and Old Jerusalem. Till the Six Day War I considered it an irreparable disaster. The second cease-fire was arranged on condition Jordan would not damage the Jerusalem pipeline which was in its territory (the pipeline from Ras al to Jerusalem). They did not honor the decision and destroyed the pipe. After this was reported to the Command I brought to the Government a proposal, since Jordan violated the conditions of the cease-fire I proposed starting a war with Jordan for the purpose of conquering all the territory south of Ramallah to Aquaba, that is to say the entire Jerusalem District and Hebron District. The Government rejected this proposal, even though we were sure that in a week or ten days we would conquer the entire Jerusalem and Hebron District. As far as I know, in the annals of Israel there was not a continuum in matters of tradition, but there were changes from time to time. But I don't have the will or need to prove this, because I respect the opposite opinion."Historical BackgroundIn May 1967, Egypt closed the Straits of Tiran between the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli shipping, which Israel considered a cause for war. On June 5, Israel launched a series of pre-emptive airstrikes against Egyptian airfields, destroying nearly the entire Egyptian air force. Israelis simultaneously launched a ground offensive into the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula. Jordan joined the conflict on the side of Egypt as part of a defensive pact signed a week before the war began. On June 11, Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria signed a ceasefire. In addition to the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, Israel also seized the West Bank from Jordan and the Golan Heights from Syria.David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973) was born in the Kingdom of Poland, then part of the Russian Empire, as David Grün, and he studied at the University of Warsaw. In 1906, he immigrated to Palestine, which was part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1912, he moved to Constantinople to study law and adopted the Hebrew name Ben-Gurion. He supported the Ottoman Empire in World War I, but was deported to Egypt and traveled to the United States, where he remained for three years. After the Balfour Declaration of 1917, he joined the Jewish Legion of the British Army. He returned to Palestine after the war and became a leader of the Zionist movement. As head of the Jewish Agency from 1935, Ben-Gurion was effectively the leader of the Jewish population before there was a nation. He accepted the 1947 partition plan as a compromise that would establish a Jewish state, and declared the independence of the state of Israel in May 1948. After leading Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Ben-Gurion won election as Prime Minister of Israel in 1948 as head of the Mapai political party in the Knesset. He resigned in December 1953, effective January 26, 1954, then resumed office in November 1955 and served as Israeli Prime Minster until 1963. He then moved to Sde Boker, a kibbutz in the Negev desert, where he lived until his death.
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Georgia Constitution of 1798 Prohibits Both the Importation of Slaves and Emancipation by Legislation

GEORGIA The Constitution of the State of Georgia. As Revised, Amended and Compiled, by the Convention of the State, at Louisville, on the Thirtieth Day of May, MDCCXCVIII. Augusta: John Erdman Smith, 1799. 36 pp., 4 3/4 x 8 in. Browned throughout; half calf over marbled boards. "There shall be no future importation of Slaves into this State, from Africa or any foreign place, after the first day of October next. The legislature shall have no power to pass laws for the emancipation of slaves without the consent of each of their respective owners, previous to such emancipation."This 1798 Georgia Constitution, the state's third, better defined legislative power, established popular elections for the governor and authorized a state supreme court. Unlike its predecessors that made no mention of slavery, this Constitution prohibited the further foreign importation of slaves into Georgia. However, it also forbade the legislature from emancipating slaves without the consent of their owners or restricting the immigration of slaves from other states with their owners. Practically, it also did not prevent the extensive internal slave trade from other slave-holding states. Historical BackgroundGeorgia adopted its first Constitution in 1777 to replace its colonial government. It became the fourth state, and the first in the South, to ratify the proposed U.S. Constitution on January 2, 1788. Weeks later, the Georgia Assembly appointed delegates to be convened after nine states had ratified the federal Constitution "to take under their consideration the alterations and amendments that are necessary to be made in the Constitution of this State." When New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution in June 1788, the new federal compact became effective, and the Georgia State Constitutional Convention convened in Augusta in November 1788. Rather than amending the 1777 Constitution, the convention proposed an entirely new Constitution to conform to the newly adopted U. S. Constitution, which was referred to a second convention that assembled in Augusta in January 1789, and adopted on behalf of the people by a third convention in May 1789. The new Georgia Constitution mirrored the U.S. Constitution by establishing three branches of government and providing for a bicameral legislature and a single chief executive. It also provided for a convention in five years to consider alterations.In 1794-1795, Georgia Governor George Mathews and the Georgia legislature approved the sale of more than forty million acres of Georgia's western lands (modern Alabama and Mississippi) for $490,000 to four companies at approximately 1½ cents per acre. In exchange for their cooperation, the companies offered Georgia officials shares in these companies or bribes. After initially vetoing a similar bill, Governor Mathews signed the bill authorizing the sale into law, known as the Yazoo Act, on January 7, 1795. When the details of this wholesale legislative corruption became known, there was widespread public outrage and protests to the federal government. Reformer Jared Irwin was elected Governor of Georgia and in February 1796 signed a bill nullifying the Yazoo Act. Another reformer, U.S. Senator James Jackson succeeded Irwin as governor from 1798 to 1801. The state refunded money to many people who purchased land, but others refused the refund, preferring to keep the land. When the state did not recognize their claims, the matter ended up in the courts, eventually reaching the U.S. Supreme Court in 1810. In the landmark decision of Fletcher v. Peck, the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a state law by deciding that the land sales were binding contracts and could not be retroactively invalidated by legislation. In 1802, because of the controversy, Georgia ceded all of its claims to lands west of its modern border to the federal government.When the convention called for in the 1789 Constitution convened in May 1795, ou. (See website for full description)
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British Literary Magazine Early Printing of the Declaration of Independence

DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE The Westminster Magazine; or, The Pantheon of Taste, August 1776. London: Thomas Wright, [1776]. Folding engraved map; lacking an engraved view and a piece of music, 52 pp. (395-448), 5 1/8 x 8 in. "We hold these Truths to be self-evident; that all Men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness."The Westminster Magazinewas one of several London periodicals to include the Declaration in their August issue; the full text appears on pages 431-32, without comment. The issue opens with "A Concise Account of the British Colonies in America," accompanied by an engraved, fold-out "Map of the present Seat of War in North America," which provides a brief geographic description of each colony, including Newfoundland, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and East and West Florida.Excerpts from more than three pages of "American Intelligence" (p442-45).General William Howe letter to Lord George Germain, July 1776, Staten Island:"the Rebels.are numerous, and very advantageously posted with strong intrenchments, both upon Long Island and that of New York, with more than 100 pieces of cannon for the defence of the town towards the sea, and to obstruct the passage of the fleet up the North river, besides a considerable field train of artillery." (p442/c2)"I propose waiting here for the English fleet or for the arrival of Lieut. General [Henry] Clinton, in readiness to proceed, unless by some unexpected change of circumstances, in the mean time, it should be found expedient to act with the present force." (p443/c1)"Governor Franklyn [William Franklin], who for a long time maintained his ground in Jersey, has been lately taken into custody at Amboy, and is at this time detained a prisoner in Connecticut: And the Mayor of New-York [David Mathews] was confined a few days ago upon a frivolous complaint of sending intelligence to Governor [William] Tryon, brought to trial, and condemned to suffer death; but, by the last intelligence, the sentence was not carried into execution."Notwithstanding these violent proceedings, I have the satisfaction to inform your lordship, that there is great reason to expect a numerous body of the inhabitants to join the [British] army from the provinces of York, the Jerseys, and Connecticut; who, in this time of universal oppression, only wait for opportunities to give proofs of their loyalty and zeal for Government. . Several men have within these two days come over to this island, and to the ships, and I am informed that the Continental Congress have declared the United Colonies free and independent States." (p443/c1)Additional ContentShort articles include "The Pleasures of Poverty: or, Adventures in a Coffee-House" (p405-6); "The Anxieties of Irresolution" (p406-7); "An Essay on the Variety of Opinions, Whence It Proceeds, and the Uncertainty of Human Knowledge" (p413-15); "On the Varieties, Uses, &c. of Potatoes" (p419-20); and "Biographical Memoirs of William King" (p422-26); original poetry (p433-41).The Westminster Magazine; or, The Pantheon of Taste(1773-1785) was a monthly literary magazine published in London. Among its publishers over its twelve-year run were William Goldsmith (d. 1796), William Richardson (1701-1788) & Leonard Urquhart, Thomas Wright (d. 1797), John Cooke (1731-1810), John Fielding & John Walker, and John Walker.Condition: Some soiling at top margin; disbound.
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Boston Newspaper Publishes Former Governor Hutchinson’s Letters

REVOLUTIONARY WAR The Boston Gazette, and Country Journal, December 11, 1775. Watertown, Massachusetts: Benjamin Edes. 4 pp., 10 x 15 1/4 in. This newspaper features a masthead by noted silversmith and engraver Paul Revere, first used on January 1, 1770. The masthead features an illustration of a seated woman on the right with a laurel wreath on her brow and a lance with a liberty cap in her hand and the shield of Britain at her feet. She is opening the door to a birdcage and releasing a dove. A tree adorns the left side, and a town is visible in the distance. Beneath the image is the epigram, "Containing the freshest Advices, Foreign and Domestic."This issue publishes a series of letters from Thomas Hutchinson in the late 1760s, demonstrating that Hutchinson had sought the post of governor. The publication of these and other letters by Hutchinson convinced many that he had conspired with Parliament to deprive the American colonists of their rights. Hutchinson left Boston for England in early 1774, and his request for leave was granted. General Thomas Gage replaced him as governor of Massachusetts Bay in May 1774, but Hutchinson's letters continued, even in December 1775, to be evidence to American patriots that the British sought to strip them of their rights. Historical BackgroundAlthough Paul Revere is most remembered for his "midnight ride" of April 18-19, 1775, he was an engraver and silversmith by trade. Although the plates for eighteenth-century newspapers and publications are frequently referred to as woodcuts, they were usually engraved on type-metal, an alloy of lead, antimony, and tin.Excerpts"In this and some following papers the public will be favour'd with a number of letters, from which they will perceive with what art Mr. Hutchinson conducted, that so he might gain the chair." (p1/c1)[Letter of Thomas Hutchinson, July 18, 1767:]"Mr. B--, soon after my misfortune applied for leave to go home, and I was in hopes to have been left in command, at least during his absence, which would have been of pecuniary advantage to me, and if I had gained any reputation might have established me in the government, if he had been otherwise provided for: but it was not thought adviseable for him then to leave the province, and I doubt that he himself is fond of a voyage to England now at his own expence, so that I see no prospect of rising." (p1/c2)[Letter of Thomas Hutchinson to the Duke of Grafton, February 3, 1768:]"I have the unexpected honour of receiving a letter from your Grace, signifying your favourable opinion of my past services and your intention to name me to his majesty for a seat at the board of customs whenever a vacancy shall happen, if you shall know that it will be agreeable to me. The place your Grace proposes has more than three times the emoluments of the post I now hold of chief justice; and as I have several children to introduce into the world, this pecuniary advantage would not be unwelcome, but I may not dispense without acquainting your Grace, that these two posts are thought to be incompatible, and that I very much doubt whether it should remain the [?] and interest which I have in the people, and be as able to contribute to the preserving or ratherrestoring order and a due subordination to the supreme authority of the whole empire, was I to hold a place in the customs, as I might in my present post, or any other place not immediately related to the revenue." (p1/c2-3)[Letter of Thomas Hutchinson, November 14, 1768:]"I Believe he (the governor) has no thoughts of leaving the province this winter. The hint you have given me of my succeeding him has by other hands been given to others, and raised a general expectation. I know too well the weight of the trust to be very eager in seeking for it, but my friends tell me if the appointment should be thought a proper measure, I ought not to decline it [no, or ever really designed to decline it, for it was what he was assiduously and conver. (See website for full description)
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Booker T. Washington Writes Brief Notes for Speeches

BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Autograph Manuscript Documents, Notes for Speeches or Reports, ca. 1890-1915. Several pages are written on blank or verso of "Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute" letterhead and one is on the verso of "Grand Union Hotel" stationery from New York City. 17 pp., 5 3/4 x 8 1/2 in. to 8 1/2 x 11 in. "Proud of Race / Serious Problem, / all can help / In & out of slavery"These pages of notes, written by African American leader and educator Booker T. Washington, are not fully developed texts but are likely either speaking points for speeches or points to stress in reports. A few can be tied to specific speeches Washington gave in the mid-1890s, but many refer to anecdotes or themes that he used in multiple speeches over a lifetime of addressing black and white audiences.Washington's approach to the path for African Americans to rise out of the miseries of slavery was more gradual than that of other African American leaders and aimed for accommodation to white hostility, fearing that the more confrontational methods espoused by others would lead to disaster for his race. The educational institutions and business organizations he nurtured created a more confident and capable generation of leaders who led African Americans to demand equal political and civil rights in the mid-twentieth century. Excerpts"Mind and matter in Industrial Education""Tendency toward matter. / Kindergarten &c. / Ind. Ed-mind applied to matter-Conquering forces of nature / more mind more matter""Educational Power of Ind. Ed. / Not for less but for its use. / What to do with that thing, Not what is Known""Liberia-No common schools, No roads, Pointless boy / Liberian student, / Studying oratory"Washington delivered a speech entitled "Mind and Matter" before the Alabama State Teachers' Association in Selma on June 5, 1895."It is said that the strongest chain is no stronger than its weakest link.""In the Southern part of our Country are 20,000,000 of your brethern who are bound to you and to whom you are bound with a indisoluble cord from you can not separate yourselves if you would. / (Aim should be to reach lowest) / Negro can be anything.""two ways of exerting ones strength / Friendship of south""quote from recent report, / Justice, / Teach children to be helpful & kind.""stick to Tuskegee plan. / Influence of Negro leaders"During a speech to the National Education Association in St. Louis on June 30, 1904, Washington, said, "There are two ways of exerting one's strength; one in pushing down, the other in pulling up. It is a sign of the highest civilization when individuals reach that point where their strength is used in pulling every human soul up to the very highest point of its usefulness and service."[1] The first sentence became an oft-repeated inspirational quotation."Trustee meeting / Land sale""Lease land. / New trustees""All under law. / 1 weak religious restraint / 2 Exciting passions, / 3 ministering to wicked appetites""Reputation-its value, / Publishing bad actions, / Be charitable in judging, / Ridicule / when to speak out, / to protect Soc. / to protect the innocent, / To protect the offender / Shun company of wicked.""It is a great satisfaction to belong to a race just now when white Americans are likely to find themselves intermingled with the Mongolian and the malay from the far East and the Latin races from the South, & say that under such circumstances it is a supreme satisfaction to belong to a race that has such a potent drawing power as is true of my race."This quotation comes from an address Washington delivered to the Christian Endeavor Society on July 7, 1898, in Nashville, Tennessee. His speech was entitled, "The Mutual Dependence of the Races." The Christian Endeavor Society was founded in 1881 as an interdenominational Christian youth society and spread throughout the United States."How not to work""Dignifying labor / girl / white worker"In his 1903 speech, "Industrial Education for the Negro. (See website for full description)
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Early Printing of a Bill to Establish the Treasury Department

ALEXANDER HAMILTON The Pennsylvania Packet, and Daily Advertiser. Newspaper, June 11, 1789 (No. 3233), Philadelphia: John Dunlap and David C. Claypoole, including the Bill to establish the Treasury Department, 4 pp., 11 x 18.25 in. Excerpt"it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury, to digest and report plans for the improvement and management of the revenue, and for the support of public credit-To prepare and report estimates of the public revenue, and the public expenditures-To superintend the collection of the revenue-To decide on the forms of keeping and stating accounts, and making returns, and to grant, under the limitations herein established, or to be hereafter provided, all warrants for monies to be issued from the Treasury, in pursuance of appropriations by law-To conduct the sale of the lands belonging to the United States, in such manner as shall be by law directed-To make report, and give information to either branch of the Legislature, in person or writing, (as he may be required) respecting all matters referred to him by the Senate or House of Representatives, or which shall appertain to his office, and generally to do or perform all such services, relative to the finances, as he shall be empowered or directed to do and perform." (p3/c2) Historical BackgroundThe First Congress of the United States under the U.S. Constitution convened in New York City on March 4, 1789. In May, the House of Representatives resolved that the new federal government should have a Department of Foreign Affairs, a Treasury Department, and a Department of War, and appointed a committee to prepare bills establishing these departments. In June, Abraham Baldwin of Georgia presented a bill from the committee to establish the Treasury Department, and it is that bill that appears in this issue of the Pennsylvania Packet. After debating the bill for several months, Congress passed "An Act to Establish the Treasury Department," and President George Washington signed it into law on September 2, 1789.On September 11, Washington nominated Alexander Hamilton as the first Secretary of the Treasury. The Senate approved the nomination, and Hamilton took the oath of office that very day. Hamilton held the office until January 31, 1795.Additional ContentThis issue also includes a letter reprinted from the Virginia Journal recommending Jedediah Morse's The American Geography to "my countrymen" and providing an excerpt related to the Potomac River (p2/c1-2); an ordinance for regulating the High Street market in Philadelphia (p2/c2-p3/c2); excerpts from an act "to prevent poor and Impotent persons being imported into the Province of Pennsylvania" (p4/c4); and many notices and advertisements, including one offering a $20 reward for the return of a twenty-four-year-old African American slave from the West Indies (p4/c3).The Pennsylvania Packet, or the General Advertiser (1771-1800) was founded by John Dunlap (1747-1812) in late 1771 as a weekly newspaper in Philadelphia, though it relocated to Lancaster during the British occupation of Philadelphia in 1777-1778. In 1776, Dunlap became the official printer for the Continental Congress, and he printed the first copies of the Declaration of Independence. On May 30, 1783, Benjamin Towne turned the Pennsylvania Evening Post into the first daily newspaper in the United States. However, with Towne branded a traitor and forced to hawk his own papers on the street, the newspaper collapsed the following year. John Dunlap and David Claypoole (1757-1849) then made their Pennsylvania Packet the first successful daily newspaper beginning on September 21, 1784. It was the first newspaper to print the U.S. Constitution in 1787 and the first to publish George Washington's Farewell Address in 1796. It underwent numerous name changes in the 1790s until sold in 1800 and renamed Poulson's American Daily Advertiser.
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California Constitution First Printing in Book FormOne of Earliest Printings in San Francisco

California Constitution First Printing in Book FormOne of Earliest Printings in San Francisco

CALIFORNIA Constitution of the State of California. San Francisco: Office of the Alta California, 1849. 16 pp., 5 3/4 x 9 5/8 in. "We, the People of California, grateful to Almighty God for our freedom, in order to secure its blessings, do establish this Constitution." (p3)Art. I, "Sec. 18. Neither slavery, nor involuntary servitude, unless for the punishment of crimes, shall ever be tolerated in this State." (p4) Historical BackgroundIn January 1848, a carpenter first found gold at a sawmill owned by John Sutter on the South Fork American River northeast of Sacramento, launching the California Gold Rush. As news of the discovery spread, prospectors flocked to the new U.S. territory of California, 81,000 arriving in 1849 and another 91,000 in 1850. Over the next seven years, approximately 300,000 people came to California seeking gold or supplying prospectors. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican War in February 1848 made California, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado and parts of New Mexico and Arizona American territory.On June 3, 1849, Brigadier General Bennett C. Riley (1787-1853), the ex officio governor of California under U.S. military rule, issued a proclamation calling for a constitutional convention and the election of delegates to it on August 1. Voters elected 48 delegates, who convened in Monterey for six weeks in September and October 1849. William E. Shannon (1822-1850) of Sacramento proposed a section declaring that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude "shall ever be tolerated in this State," which was unanimously adopted and made part of the bill of rights in the first article. The constitution also guaranteed the right to vote to "every white male citizen of the United States, and every white male citizen of Mexico, who shall have elected to become a citizen of the United States" who was also at least twenty-one years old. The office of the Alta California newspaper in San Francisco printed this pamphlet for California's citizens to review before casting their ballots. Voters ratified the new state constitution on November 13. On December 1, 1849, the issue of the Alta California for the Steamer Unicorn reported early results on the ratification of the constitution and election of state officers: "From every precinct yet heard from, the meagerness of the vote is accounted for by the fact that the rain fell in torrents. Some complaint is also made that the printed copies of the Constitution were not properly circulated, and that is said to be one reason of the large vote against it in the Sacramento District." According to the precincts reporting from the Sacramento District, 5,002 voted in favor of the constitution and 603 against it. The final vote of the state was 12,061 for the constitution, and 811 against it.The rapid expansion of California's population inspired discussions of its status within the Union. In his annual message to Congress in December 1849, President Zachary Taylor noted the constitutional convention recently held and his expectation that California would soon apply for statehood, which he encouraged. Two months later, President Taylor submitted this California Constitution and a proposal to admit California as a new state to Congress. Taylor's death on July 9, 1850, elevated Millard Fillmore to the presidency. Fillmore supported the Compromise of 1850, engineered by Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky. One of the five acts that composed the Compromise of 1850 was "An Act for the Admission of the State of California into the Union." On September 9, 1850, Fillmore signed the act into law, and California became the 31st state in the Union.The Alta California began publication on January 4, 1849, as a weekly newspaper. Edward C. Kemble, Edward Gilbert, and George C. Hubbard were the first publishers. The newspaper became a daily in January 1850 and continued publishing until 1891.Condition: Small accession number stamped in margin of upper cover; scatt. (See website for full description)
  • $17,500
  • $17,500
J.E.B. Stuart Writes to Legendary Confederate Spy Laura Ratcliffe

J.E.B. Stuart Writes to Legendary Confederate Spy Laura Ratcliffe

J.E.B. STUART Autograph Letter Signed "S", to Laura Ratcliffe. April 8, 1862. 3 pp., 3 7/8 x 6 in. Full of braggadocio, Confederate cavalryman J.E.B. Stuart gives early mistaken reports of the Battle of Shiloh to an informant, the famous Confederate spy Laura Ratcliffe."We are here quietly waiting for the yankees and if they ever come we will send them howling." Complete Transcript Rappahannock April 8 1862My Dear Laura - We are here quietly waiting for the yankees and if they ever come we will send them howling - through Fairfax again. We have won a glorious victory in New Mexico, capturing the whole Federal command 5000 - under Genl Canby. We have also won a glorious victory near Corinth on the Tenn. Captured 3 genls Smith McClernand & Prentiss, & six thousand prisoners, all [2]their artillery & camp equipage & rumor says we are sure to bag the remainder who are in full retreat, A.S. Johnston was killed. Beauregard & Bragg were there - I have thought of you much, & hope soon to see you all again. Before another week we expect to win another glorious victory. Hurrah! Hurrah!! I wish I could see you read this -- [3] My regard to your folks - The bullet-proof is all right. Yours ever truly S__[envelope:] Miss Laura Ratcliffe / Beauty's Bower Historical Background Laura Ratcliffe lived in Fairfax, Virginia, and her home was sometimes used as headquarters by the ranger John Singleton Mosby. Ratcliffe used to hide messages and money for Mosby, and once hid him from a search party of Federal troops. Among other Confederate officers to whom she offered various types of support was J.E.B. Stuart, who corresponded with her and occasionally even sent her poetry.Stuart rapturously recounts a recent series of Confederate victories and anticipates others. "We are here quietly waiting for the Yankees and if they ever come we will send them howling through Fairfax again." Apparently dependent on early newspaper reports, Stuart is mistaken about the Battle "near Corinth." On April 4 and 5, 1862, after near-victory on the first day, General Albert S. Johnston's Army of Tennessee was defeated by Ulysses Grant at the Battle of Shiloh. Stuart was correct in noting, however, that Johnston was killed at this battle.The envelope for the letter bears the engraved address of "Head Quarters Cavalry Brigade, Army of the Potomac." The Confederate Army of the Potomac was commanded by P.G.T. Beauregard, but in June 1862 it was renamed as the First Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia when Robert E. Lee assumed command. Beauregard had been sent west to be second-in-command to Albert Johnston, and led the Army of Tennessee on the second day of Shiloh. Stuart's cavalry was soon transferred from north central Virginia (this letter is dated "Rappahannock") to the Peninsula, where Union General George McClellan had landed his Army of the Potomac in an attempt to advance on Richmond from the southeast with the help of Union Navy transport vessels.Laura Ratcliffe (1836-1923) was a legendary Confederate spy who operated a safe house in Fairfax County, Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C. She met cavalrymen J.E.B. Stuart and John S. Mosby early in the war, when she and her sister were nursing wounded soldiers, and soon began providing information on Union troop activity as the Confederate Army was forced south. In 1862 and 1863, when Stuart commanded Robert E. Lee's entire cavalry corps, he made several raids on the Fairfax County area, often visiting Laura at her home. In the winter of 1862, Mosby was granted permission to stay with Ratcliffe and nine soldiers. There was a rock at the top of Squirrel Hill on her property where she would leave messages for Mosby or Stuart. She was never charged with a crime.James Ewell Brown ("Jeb") Stuart (1833-1864) was the most famous Confederate cavalryman and one of General Lee's principal lieutenants in the Army of Northern Virginia. A Virginian, he graduated from West Point in 1854 and gained use. (See website for full description)
  • $7,800
  • $7,800
The Justice Department's First Publication: Attorney General Edmund Randolph's Suggestions to Improve the New Federal Judiciary

The Justice Department’s First Publication: Attorney General Edmund Randolph’s Suggestions to Improve the New Federal Judiciary, Including Supreme Court Fixes

EDMUND RANDOLPH Report of the Attorney-General. Read in the House of Representatives, December 31, 1790. Philadelphia: Francis Childs & John Swaine, 1791. 32 pp., Folio 8 x 13 in. The House of Representatives asked Attorney General Edmund Randolph to report on the working of the system established by the Judiciary Act of 1789. Randolph responded with this report, delivered on December 27, 1790, provided criticisms and suggestions that became a blueprint to improve the Federal judiciary. Specifically, Randolph wanted Congress to assert the exclusive jurisdiction of federal courts in certain areas; to relieve Supreme Court justices from the duty of presiding in circuit courts; and to adopt explicitly the common law of the United Kingdom as a basis for judicial decisions unless superseded by specific American legislation. The latter two-thirds of the report presents Randolph's proposal for "A Bill for amending the several Acts concerning the Judicial Courts of the United States," with his explanatory notes. Before Congress acted on Randolph's suggestions, in August 1792, all of the Supreme Court justices complained in a letter to President George Washington that circuit travel was too onerous. In response, Congress passed the Judiciary Act of 1793 (see #26594) that required only one, rather than two, justices to sit in each circuit court. Congress did not relieve the justices of circuit-riding duties until 1911. Excerpts"I am persuaded that time and practice can alone mature the judicial system." (p1)"If the United States, as far as they can be a party defendant, should happen to be so, their own courts can alone judge them. To drag a confederate before the courts of one of its members, would reverse the plain dictates of order; hazard the most critical interests of the union upon the pleasure of a single state; and enable every individual state under the pretext of a forensic sentence, to arrogate the general sovereignty." (p4)"We are then led to conclude, that the judiciary of the United States have exclusive jurisdiction in the following cases."1. In those of strict admiralty and maritime jurisdiction."2. Where the United States are a party defendant."3. Where a particular state is a party defendant."4. Where lands are claimed under grants of different states."5. In treason, as described by the constitution, and other crimes and offences created by the laws of the United States, but not consigned to the state tribunals."6. In rights created by a law of the United States, and having a special remedy given to them in federal courts." (p5)"Judicial uniformity is surely a public good, but its price may be too great if it can be purchased only by cherishing a power, which to say no more, cannot be incontestably proved." (p7)"A third alteration, which the Attorney-General cannot forbear to suggest, is, that the judges of the supreme court shall cease to be judges of the circuit courts." (p7)"If the judge, whose reputation has raised him to office, shall be in the habit of delivering feeble opinions, these reports will first excite surprise, and afterwards a suspicion, which will terminate in a vigilance over his actions." (p9)"in one aspect the existence of the common law, as the law of the United States, is equivocal. some parts of the common law.will be estranged from our system. To cut off then such altercation, is not unworthy the care of Congress. It is true indeed, that there ought to be a repugnance to naturalize the statute book of a foreign nation, even for a moment. But the fact is, that the United States have not yet had sufficient leisure to disengage themselves from it, by enacting a code for themselves. The time will come (perhaps it has already come) when such a work will be indispensable. But until it shall be completed, it will be far less disgraceful to accept, under proper restrictions, some part of our law from an alien volume, with which every state is well acquainted, and to which . (See website for full description)
  • $18,000
  • $18,000
Rare Abraham Lincoln 1860 Campaign Sash for Rally at Boston's Faneuil Hall

Rare Abraham Lincoln 1860 Campaign Sash for Rally at Boston’s Faneuil Hall

ABRAHAM LINCOLN Portrait Sash from Faneuil Hall Rally, May-November, 1860, Boston, Massachusetts. 1 p., 29 x 2 1/4 in. It features a portrait of Lincoln engraved from an 1858 photograph taken in Springfield by Christopher S. German. The first owner wore this sash at one or more of the Lincoln Rallies during the 1860 presidential campaign season. The two most prominent were at the beginning and end of the season. Historical BackgroundOn May 24, 1860, an "immense meeting" opened the Republican campaign in Massachusetts. The Daily Advertiser reported, "Faneuil Hall never rocked under the feet of a larger, a more unanimous, patriotic and enthusiastic audience, than filled its walls to overflowing last evening. The enthusiasm that was kindled, will spread throughout the country, and bear Lincoln and Hamlin in triumph to the goal."[1]On October 16, 1860, Wide Awake and other Republican groups from throughout New England again assembled in Boston for a "grand Republican demonstration and torchlight procession." William Lloyd Garrison's Liberator called it "the most brilliant and imposing political demonstration ever witnessed in Boston on any occasion" and asserted that ten thousand Wide Awakes "all in full dress" paraded through the streets of Boston, including several hundred African Americans.[2]We aren't aware of any other 1860 presidential campaign sashes with Lincoln's portrait and tied to such a prominent historic location.Faneuil HallIn 1740, slave trader Peter Faneuil offered to build a public market house as a gift to the town of Boston. Built over the next two years, it had an open ground floor to serve as a market house, with an assembly room above. Although the interior was destroyed by fire in 1761, the town rebuilt it in 1762. Expanded to double its original size in width and the addition of a third floor in 1806, the enhanced Faneuil Hall was used for town meetings until 1822 and for public meetings of all sorts thereafter. To the east of Faneuil Hall is the Faneuil Hall Market, begun in 1824, which includes the North Market, South Market, and Quincy Market granite buildings.[1] Boston Daily Advertiser (MA), May 25, 1860, 1:7.[2] The Liberator (Boston, MA), October 19, 1860, 2:3.
  • $12,500
  • $12,500