Americana from throughout the Revolution includes a manuscript document to enforce New York’s “Agreement of Non-Importation” during the heyday of the Sons of Liberty in New York, 1769 ($10,000-15,000). Also of note is a 1836 previously unknown printing of the disastrous Treaty of New Echota of December 29, 1835, in which an unauthorized minority faction of the Cherokee Nation agreed upon removal west Indian Territory and cleared the path for the Trail of Tears ($4,000-6,000); a first edition of The Trial of William Wemms. . . for the Murder of Crispus Attucks, Boston, 1770, by reporter John Hodgson ($4,000-6,000); a manuscript account of a French ship’s naval battle with the British off Pensacola covering the events of April 16 to 19 of 1718 ($3,000-4,000); and a list of expenses incurred by Colonel Philip Van Cortlandt at Valley Forge from 1779 ($2,500-3,500).
The Civil War era is represented with an album of cartes-de-visite, including one of spymaster Lafayette Baker with images from 1863 to 1865 ($600-900); a yearlong diary of a naval officer in pursuit of Merrimac from March of 1862 to March of 1863 ($4,000-6,000); and a mammoth salt print of Alexander Shaler and the seventh New York Militia Regiment ($3,000-4,000); and a 1861 salt print Clarence Mackenzie, drummer boy of the 13th Regiment of Brooklyn ($3,000-4,000).
Items throughout reference major religions, with a significant section of Judaica that features the second book published for a Jewish audience in America, and the first Jewish calendar from 1806 ($3,000-4,000); and a small run of material relating to Mormonism in America, including a first edition of The Book of Mormon, Palmyra, 1830 ($30,000-40,000).
Another chapter of the sale covers ephemera, letters, books and photographs from the fabled Western frontier with a first edition of The Adventures of Big-Foot Wallace, the Texas Rangers and Hunter, Philadelphia, 1871 ($2,500-3,500); extensive papers from 1872–81 of William McKay, who went west from Iowa to Colorado as a mining agent ($2,000-3,000); silver prints from 1885 and 1890 by F. Hay Haynes of Montana cowboys ($2,000-3,000); and more.
A rich selection that features the earliest publication concerned solely with chocolate from 1631 ($10,000-15,000), early Mexican imprints and manuscript cookbooks, as well as items covering Peru, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere. An offering of material relative to Native peoples and First Nations in America, including photographs, letters rounds out the sale.
Limited previewing (by appointment only) will be available through April 14, to be scheduled directly with a specialist in advance and conforming to strict safety guidelines. Swann Galleries staff will prepare condition reports and provide additional photographs of material on request. Advance order bids can be placed with a specialist for the sale or on Swann’s website, and phone bidding will be available. Live online bidding platforms will be the Swann Galleries App, Invaluable, and Live Auctioneers. The complete catalogue and bidding information is available at www.swanngalleries.com and on the Swann Galleries App.
Additional highlights can be found here.