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LINCOLN, ABRAHAM
Autograph letter signed as President to Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas [with] American flag bunting from Lincoln’s box at Ford’s Theatre. Washington, Executive Mansion, May 27, 1861
Abraham Lincoln, writing at the outset of the Civil War, recommends that the Army admit three volunteers from the highly divided city of Baltimore. He advises Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas, “I hate to reject any offered from what is called a Southern State.” [offered with] Bunting from the presidential box at Ford’s Theatre.
two items: $275,000
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WEED, CHARLES LEANDER
Sentinel Rock, 3270 Feet High. San Francisco, 1864
This spectacular view shows Sentinel Rock towering above a rider on horseback in a well-lit clearing.
$25,000
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WATKINS, CARLETON
Section of the Grizzly Giant with Galen Clark, Mariposa Grove, Yosemite. San Francisco, 1865-66
An iconic Yosemite photograph. This famous photograph shows Galen Clark standing at the foot of the colossal Grizzly Giant sequoia. Clark was the first European American to discover the Marisposa Grove of giant sequoias at Yosemite.
$28,000
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CURTIS, EDWARD S.
Original glass plate interpositive prepared by Curtis for the printing of The North American Indian. Curtis, 1924
This is a splendid original glass plate made for Edward Curtis’s The North American Indian, the greatest photographic work on Native Americans. Curtis, one of the greatest American artists of his era, was the most celebrated photographer of North American Indians.
$35,000
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(DOUBLEDAY, ABNER)
Maj. Gen. Abner Doubleday. No place, 1860s
This is a rare large format portrait of the famed general Abner Doubleday. Doubleday played a prominent role in the Union Army from the war’s outset. He was was second in command at Fort Sumter when the war started. He later commanded a division at Antietam, Gettysburg and other major battles.
$9,500
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(GRANT, U. S.) Gutekunst, Frederick
Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. Philadelphia: Gutekunst, April or May 1865
This impressive full-length portrait of Grant in uniform was made at war’s end to capture the triumphal hero at the height of his powers. This portrait shows Grant emulating the pose of Napoleon in David’s famous Napoleon in his Study (1812), a pose favored in military portraits of the time.
$9,500
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EINSTEIN, ALBERT and SIGMUND FREUD.
Why War?. Paris: International Institute of Intellectual Cooperation, League of Nations, 1933
First edition in English, one of 2000 numbered copies. Translated from the German by Stuart Gilbert.
$1,600
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EINSTEIN, ALBERT
The Fight Against War. New York: John Day, (c.1933)
FIRST EDITION.
This scarce collection of Einstein’s writings on war and peace was published in 1933, the year the Nazis took power in Germany and the year Einstein left Germany for the United States. In his prefatory note, Einstein writes, “Mr. Lief [the editor, Alfred Lief] has taken great trouble in collecting utterances of mine having pacifistic content and he presents them with my authorization. … I consider it my duty to confess my pacific conviction publicly. May the seriousness of my purpose be transferred to you, my readers! A. Einstein.”
$1,500
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EINSTEIN, ALBERT
The World as I See It. New York: Philosophical Library, (c.1949)
Signed and dated 1950 by Albert Einstein on the front free endpaper.
$13,500
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(STOWE, HARRIET BEECHER.) John A. Whipple
Harriet Beecher Stowe. Boston, 1853
This is a fine salt print portrait of Harriet Beecher Stowe by John A. Whipple, a leading early American portrait photographer.
$25,000











