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Download 1 Civil War Lithograph Of The First Refreshment Saloon
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1 C i vil W a r Civil War Lithograph Of The First Refreshment Saloon 1. (CIVIL WAR BROADSIDE) QUEEN, James and SINCLAIR, Thomas. Union Volunteer Refreshment Saloon of Philadelphia. Being the First Institution of the Kind in the United States. Organized, May 27th, 1861. Philadelphia, circa 1861. Large original color lithograph, sheet measures 30 by 28 inches. $950. Original panoramic chromolithograph by James Queen, printed by Thomas Sinclair, depicting ranks of Union soldiers marching through the Refreshment Saloon and then onto a south-bound train. Lithographic prints were the means for visually documenting news-worthy current events in the 19th century. Their popularity reflected a growing taste for the sensational and the sentimental. Soldiers going off to war fit the popular subject matter of the times. This magnificent panoramic color lithograph was produced by Thomas Sinclair, a direct competitor to Currier & Ives. Sinclair’s work “has a certain crisp touch that raises it above many” (Peters, 369). With the embossed seal of the Union Volunteer Refreshment Committee. Peters, 329 and 368. Two fold lines, one splitting with tape repairs to verso, some chipping to edges (affecting border text, but not affecting the image). A very large and detailed Civil War scene. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 2 “Heroic Portrait In A Bold New Form”: Exceptionally Rare Civil War Carte De Visite Album, Circa 1865, With 61 Albumen Prints Of Lincoln, Robert E. Lee And Others (CIVIL WAR) (BRADY, Mathew, et al.). Civil War Photograph Album. Philadelphia, (circa 1865). Oblong quarto, original blindstamped full brown morocco, ornamental brass catches and clasps. $27,500. 2. Original Civil War Photograph Album, circa 1865, featuring 61 mounted albumen cartes de visite portraits, many by Mathew Brady, of President Lincoln, Mary Lincoln, General Robert E. Lee, Confederate President Jefferson Davis and Union generals Ulysses S. Grant, Sheridan, McClellan and Burnside, along with many others. From the major photography collection of musician Graham Nash with his signed bookplate. “Photography was more intricately involved in the American Civil War than in any other historical event in the 19th century… The documentary of the Civil War by photographs in carte de visite formats represents one of the few remaining, untapped sources of contemporary Civil War information” (Darrah, 74, 87). This handsomely bound carte de visite album represents the finest of the period in its collection of 61 mounted albumen prints (57 displayed in gilt paper frames). Represented herein are numerous Civil War portraits by Mathew Brady, who by 1863 was hailed as “the ‘Father of American photography’” (Panzer, 115). Additionally featured are prints by colleague Alexander Gardner and leading rivals such as Charles Fredericks, Augustus Turner, R.W. Addis and Frederick Gutekunst, Jr. Especially notable is Brady’s striking portrait of President Lincoln taken circa 1862, printed from one frame of the lost original stereographic negative (Mellon, 96). Also within are fine albumen prints of Mrs. Lincoln, the Confederacy’s Jefferson Davis, President Andrew Johnson and General Ulysses S. Grant, together with over 50 other carte de visite portraits of key Union officers, including those of Sherman, McClellan, Burnside and Scott. This scarce album thus fully represents the beliefs of Brady and others who saw their work as a major “part of the material from which the historians and the partners could construct their record”—producing a timeless series of “heroic portrait in a bold new form” (Panzer, 85, 77). Each mounted albumen print measuring 2-1/2 by 4 inches: 57 prints displayed within numbered frames on heavy gilt-edged stock and four prints laid in, many with photographer/ studio printed on the verso. “Index to Portraits” completed in manuscript. With the signed bookplate of photographer and musician Graham Nash tipped in. Images generally quite fresh with only light scattered foxing occasionally affecting images, tiny closed tear to gutter of “Index to Portraits.” www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman R enowned H istories 3 4. (HISTORY) JOHNSON, Robert Underwood, and BUEL, Clarence Clough. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. New York, 1887-88. Four volumes. Quarto, contemporary threequarter burgundy polished calf gilt. $2800. First edition of this essential Civil War reference, composed of narratives of leading military “survivors” (many generals), with hundreds of in-text illustrations (including those of Winslow Homer), maps, plans, and facsimiles. “Written In Letters Of Fire” 3. (HISTORY) DUYCKINCK, Evert A. National History of the War for the Union, Civil, Military and Naval. New York, 1862-65. Three volumes. Quarto, original publisher’s deluxe full embossed dark brown morocco gilt. $1500. First edition of this contemporary Civil War history, with engraved frontispieces, title pages and over 75 illustrations engraved from paintings by Alonzo Chappel and Thomas Nast. A handsome copy in publisher’s deluxe morocco. These three volumes provide valuable, in-depth, contemporary accounts, drawn from official documents and first-hand narratives, of the war years. At his work’s conclusion, Duyckinck reflects, “It is hardly needed to point to [this record’s] moral. That is written in letters of fire in the disasters of the period, and in the utter ruin of the gigantic revolt… Enough, surely, is here recorded to warn faction, in future, of its crime and danger, and to strengthen with an invincible resolve for the preservation of the Nation, the hearts of all true patriots and lovers of their country…” The text is illustrated by finely engraved portraits of most Civil War generals as well as vivid battle scenes “Chappel’s talents were ideally suited to historical illustration and his pictures reveal the results of painstaking research” (ANB). Dornbusch III:188. Sabin 21497. Nicholson, 253. Ink presentation inscription in Volume III, dated 1887. Occasional foxing, chiefly marginal. A few light rubs to extremities. A near-fine copy of this richly illustrated history in publisher’s handsome deluxe morocco. www. baumanrarebooks . com Robert Underwood Johnson, associate editor of Century magazine, “shepherded leading military survivors of the Civil War through the celebrated series of Century articles, 188487, which he then amplified into Battles and Leaders of the Civil War… [Johnson] coaxed recalcitrant generals to take up the pen… The enterprise was a landmark on the long road to reconciliation” (DAB). “The 388 articles by 226 authors are accompanied by 197 well-drawn maps, nearly 1500 engraved illustrations, statistical summaries, orders of battle, and editorial notes… The engravings are among the best relating to Civil War history and were done by a team of artists and illustrators [including Winslow Homer]… Numerous accounts by general officers make this work a necessary, primary source for all Civil War libraries… It should be read carefully and often” (Eicher 743). So vivid are the accounts in Battles and Leaders that Stephen Crane, who had never seen a battle, based his classic Red Badge of Courage largely on his reading of this landmark work. Nicholson, 428. Interiors clean and fine. Light expert restoration, mostly to joints and extremities. A handsome set in contemporary calf. 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r “A Necessary, Primary Source… It Should Be Read Carefully And Often” “The Concentration Of All That Is American”: With Tipped-In Autograph Note Inscribed By Grant C i vil W a r 4 5. (HISTORY) (GRANT, Ulysses S.) BADEAU, Adam. Military History of Ulysses S. Grant, from April 1861 to April 1865. New York, 1881. Three volumes. Thick octavo, contemporary three-quarter dark green morocco. $4500. First edition, mixed issue set of aide-de-camp Badeau’s important “eyewitness estimation of Grant’s performance during the war,” with a stipple-engraved portrait frontispiece of Grant from a photograph by Gurney & Son, and 35 folding maps (6 in rear pockets). Volume II with tipped-in autograph card inscribed by Grant, “Yours Truly U.S. Grant, New York City, Febr. 2nd, 1882.” A contemporary of Ulysses S. Grant once described him as “the concentration of all that is American” (Theodore Lyman). This important early military biography of Grant was written by Adam Badeau, who served on his staff during the Civil War. Though Badeau’s admiration for his general might suggest a lack of objectivity, historians have noted that “Badeau’s style is matter of fact without the embellishment or glorification typical of some early works. The accuracy is impressive… The author does not digress or reflect on matters, so the volumes have a technical precision that is both valuable for its truthfulness… and for delivering an eyewitness estimation of Grant’s performance during the war” (Eicher 486). First published between 1868 and 1881, this work has become particularly valuable for its first-hand accounts of the 1864 campaigns and the surrender at Appomattox. Volume I is second issue, dated 1881; Volumes II and III are first issue. Nicholson 1994. Eicher 486. Dornbusch II:51. Nevins I:22. Text, frontispiece and maps generally fresh with light scattered foxing, minor repairs to fold lines of several maps, very lightest edge-wear to contemporary boards. An especially handsome near-fine copy. “A Stellar Work Of Civil War History—A Classic” (HISTORY) CHAMBERLAIN, Joshua Lawrence. The Passing of the Armies. New York and London, 1915. Octavo, original blue cloth. $2800. 6. Rare first edition of “one of the finest accounts of a campaign penned by a Federal soldier” (Eicher), with two portraits and three maps, two folding. Written by a former teacher who was later commissioned brevet major general of volunteers, this “clear and precise recording of the final campaign of the war [recounts] the last days of fighting at the Petersburg front, along the White Oak Road and elsewhere, through Five Forks, the flight of Lee’s tattered army, the slipping of Southern hope at Amelia Courthouse, the disaster at Sayler’s Creek, and the surrender at Appomattox. The work also includes a narrative of the Grand Review and the closure of Sherman’s march northward to Washington and concludes with the disbanding of the armies. Chamberlain’s intelligence and literary ability enabled him to compose a work of superior quality, from the precision of the facts cited to the prose with which he has woven them together… Additionally, the author casts interesting reflections on the relationships between the two Federal armies and their commanders. This is a stellar work of Civil War history—a classic” (Eicher 146). Dornbusch I:37. Interior fine, spot of discoloration to original cloth, and only mild toning to spine. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman Inscribed By Catton First edition, inscribed: “To Lewis Cott with best wishes, Bruce Catton.” “After Lloyd Lewis’ death, the articulate and expressive writer Bruce Catton finished Lewis’ biography of Grant,” Captain Sam Grant (1950), supplementing Lewis’ notes with his own extensive research, using “a wide array of primary and secondary sources with care, providing a work that is balanced and varied” (Eicher 488). Catton later completed the project with Grant Takes Command in 1968. Illustrated with photographic frontispiece and nine maps. Dornbusch III:2499. Book with faint dampstaining affecting rear board and final leaves of text. Dust jacket with pinpoint foxing, scattered dampstaining, and wear and toning to extremities. A very good inscribed copy. “A Model Of What Military History Can Be”: Signed By Shelby Foote 8. (HISTORY) FOOTE, Shelby. The Civil War. New York, 1958-74. Three volumes. Large octavo, original gray cloth, dust jackets. $4500. Scarce first editions of all three volumes in Foote’s massive, authoritative and engrossing history, with a tipped-in leaf signed by the renowned historian in the first volume, in original dust jackets. “A sweeping overview of the war from a decidedly different perspective… Foote is a master storyteller of the war, www. baumanrarebooks . com “Admired By Historians And Students Alike” (HISTORY) CHURCHILL, Winston. The American Civil War. London, 1961. Octavo, modern three-quarter navy morocco. $1200. 9. First separate English edition of Churchill’s history of the American Civil War, with six maps and numerous blackand-white photographs, handsomely bound. “The first of many spin-offs from Churchill’s History of the English-Speaking Peoples, this fine little work captures his marvelous and detailed description of America’s greatest domestic convulsion, coupling his text with excellent Civil War photographs by Mathew Brady and others. Churchill had explored the battlefields of Virginia with none other than Douglas Southall Freeman, the great American Civil War historian; and he had toured Gettysburg with a local resident of some experience at war, Dwight Eisenhower. His fine if brief account of the War Between the States has been admired by historians and students alike” (Langworth, 327-28). Issued in the same year as the first American edition. Excerpted without change from History of the EnglishSpeaking Peoples, Volume IV, first published in 1958. Cohen A272. Woods A138(b). Fine condition. 1-800-99-bauman 5 C i vil W a r 7. (HISTORY) CATTON, Bruce. Grant Moves South. Boston and Toronto, 1960. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $600. and his accounts are riveting” (Eicher 740). Despite this three-volume, million-word history, two decades in the writing, “Foote remained relatively unknown before his role in Ken Burns’ [documentary film] The Civil War made him a cultural icon. Since that event, Foote has become widely viewed as an authority on the Civil War, and more generally, as a representative of an era and region whose place continues to be central to our country’s understanding of itself” (University of Mississippi). “His mission was to tell what he considered America’s biggest story as a vast, finely detailed, deeply human narrative… A model of what military history can be” (New York Times). First edition sets signed by Foote are much sought-after and increasingly scarce. Dornbusch III 1387. Wright 339. Books fine; only lightest edge-wear to scarce original dust jackets. C i vil W a r 6 douglas southall freeman/ robert e . lee “A Triumph Of Scholarly Tribute”: Scarce Presentation/Association Copy Inscribed By Freeman (HISTORY) (LEE, Robert E.) FREEMAN, Douglas Southall. R.E. Lee: A Biography. New York and London, 1947. Four volumes. Octavo, original red cloth gilt, original box. $1600. 10. Later edition of Freeman’s profusely illustrated Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, an exceptional presentation/ association copy inscribed by him in Volume I to a fellow Civil War historian, then serving as an officer in the U.S. Army: “Autographed for Capt. William G. Gavin, U.S. Engineers, with the best wishes of Douglas Southall Freeman,” also with his laid-in typed letter to Gavin, typewritten on Richmond News Leader letterhead, dated February 20, 1947 and signed by Freeman. In original box with printed label. This scarce presentation/association copy is inscribed by the author to a fellow Civil War historian, William Gavin, then a lieutenant in the U.S. Army. In addition to his warm inscription to Gavin, this copy also notably contains Freeman’s signed letter to Gavin, dated February 20, 1947 and typewritten on the letterhead of The Richmond News Leader, where Freeman served as editor from 1915-49. In his letter Freeman addresses a question from Gavin about “the point of attack in some of the assaults at old Cold Harbor.” He urges Gavin to examine a “detailed study by Major Carow made of Cold Harbor… Sometime when you have leave, go to the Battlefield Park headquarters at Fort Harrison near Varina and find Mr. Taylor… He doubtless has Major Carow’s book. That may answer your question.” Freeman, the son of a former Confederate soldier who served in the Army of Northern Virginia, “was invited in 1915 to write a biography of Lee for Scribner’s… He identified with him strongly, seeing Lee’s life through Lee’s own eyes. His biographical method produced an ample, empathetic, and ruminative treatment, abundantly researched and documented, a triumph of scholarly tribute” (ANB). First published in 1934. See Dornbusch II, 2930. Haynes 6441. Recipient William Gavin, who graduated from West Point to become an officer in the U.S. Army, “was an avid historian of the American Civil War” and the author of several books, including Campaigning with the Roundheads (1989). Occasional penciled marginalia. Interiors generally fresh with only lightest scattered foxing, bright gilt cloth; expert repairs to original box. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 7 C i vil W a r douglas southall freeman “One Of The Epic Works On The Confederate Armies”: Signed By Freeman (HISTORY) FREEMAN, Douglas Southall. Lee’s Lieutenants: A Study in Command. New York, 1942-44. Three volumes. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jackets. $2500. 11. First editions of all three volumes of Freeman’s important study of Lee’s officers, profusely illustrated with numerous full-page photographs, as well as many maps and battle plans, including a doublepage map and a large folding map of the Army’s battlegrounds, signed by the author in Volume I. “One of the epic works on the Confederate armies, these exhaustively researched and brilliantly written volumes deserve to be read by all Civil War students. Freeman employs an amazing quantity of information, much of it gleaned from Confederate sources in Richmond, and he is an interesting and intelligent writer, offering insights into a multiplicity of actions and personalities. The three hefty volumes cover the period following Sumter to the end of the Peninsular campaign (Volume I), Second Bull Run to Chancellorsville (Volume II), and the Gettysburg campaign to war’s end (Volume III)” (Eicher 971). Lee’s Lieutenants supplements Freeman’s classic biography of Lee and “stands in its own right as one of the great works of military history” (In Tall Cotton, 61). His “success with Lee’s Lieutenants was brilliant. His advantage, of course, was that he was already profoundly versed in Confederate military lore, but, for a Virginia patriot, he brought a Homeric resonance to such episodes as the death of ‘Stonewall’ Jackson. Being so completely at home with his material… Freeman was able to pass judgment with calm authority” (DAB). Interiors fine; light rubbing to extremities. Some shallow chipping and wear to extremities of bright dust jackets; Volume II dust jacket with light soiling and a one-inch closed tear to spine head. An extremely good signed copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 8 Large Contemporary Civil War Lithograph Of Lee’s Surrender 12. (HISTORY) VALOIS, Edward, artist. The Surrender of General Lee and His Entire Army to Lieut. General U.S. Grant, April 9th 1865. New York, 1865. Original lithographic print (17 by 27 inches), handsomely framed (entire piece measures 25 by 35 inches). $1200. First impression of this large lithographic view of the “memorable event [that] terminated the great Rebellion,” drawn on stone by Edward Valois and printed at the New York press of William C. Robertson. Once the papers of surrender were signed, Lee left for his headquarters in the Appomattox court house. As he passed his men, with tears streaming down his face, he said, “Men, we have fought through the war together. I have done the best that I could for you.” “Lee surrendered 28,231 men, who received paroles. Many hundreds of others just went home in the final days of the campaign. The number of deserters from the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia was so great the Yankees did not even attempt to stop them from just going home. There were too many to care for or imprison” (Lanny Howe). While the formal surrender of Lee to Grant actually took place in the McLean House at Appomattox, popular legend held that the two generals had met outdoors under an apple tree (as pictured here). Grant did meet Lee the following day, outside, on horseback, with staff officers nearby. Peters, 337. Four closed tears (three repaired with tape). A splendid Civil War image in extremely good condition. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 13. (HISTORY) KARBERG, Peter. Retaliation. A Souvenir. Lansing, Iowa, 1878. Slim octavo, contemporary dark green cloth; pp. 29; custom clamshell box. $4800. First edition of this riveting battlefield history of poorly armed African American soldiers fighting rebel bands deep in the “heart of a country not merely occupied by Guerillas, but by detachments of regular confederate troops.” This rare presentation copy inscribed by the author “Compl. of Peter Karberg.” With the Civil War raging and Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation newly in effect, W.E.B. Du Bois noted that “fugitive slaves appeared within [Union] lines. ‘They constitute a military resource’ wrote the Secretary of War.” Soon Congress “called earnestly for Negro soldiers… Thus the barriers were leveled” (Freedmen’s Bureau). Here Union Adjutant General Peter Karberg, who led the Third U.S. Colored Cavalry and the 51st Regiment of U.S. Colored Infantry in spring of 1864, writes of orders to “guard a section of the Mississippi River” and protect freed slaves in Louisiana who worked the abandoned plantations of “their rebellious owners… to replenish the cotton market.” Karberg’s Retaliation documents violent attacks by rebel bands targeting freedmen, slaves and any black soldier who “fell into their clutches… [leaving] the bodies of their victims, in a ghastly mutilated condition, on the road.” Though the men of the “Colored Cavalry” were often only “mounted on mules,” this tale records their dangerous pursuit of well-armed rebel bands into “the heart of a country not merely occupied by Guerillas, but by detachments of regular confederate troops.” Retaliation then follows the troops into shadowy forests, past farmhouses and through “towns set ablaze” for sheltering the “Guerilla bands,” ultimately paying tribute to the “brave and gallant officer” who disguised himself to infiltrate a rebel band and revenge the brutal killing of a fellow soldier. See Dornbusch III:1709-1710. OCLC lists three copies. Owner inscription. Text quite fresh with occasional faint traces of penciled lines, mild spotting and edge-wear to bright cloth. Near-fine. Scarce and desirable. Hampton And His Cavalry In ’64 14. (HISTORY) WELLS, Edward L. Hampton and His Cavalry in ’64. Richmond, Virginia, 1899. Octavo, original full brown morocco gilt. $2400. First edition of this military biography of Confederate General Wade Hampton, with frontispiece, 20 illustrated plates, and two maps, in full publisher’s morocco-gilt. An officer who served at Bull Run, in the Peninsular campaign, and at Seven Pines, Hampton was assigned command of a cavalry brigade in 1862 and was quickly made J. E. B. Stuart’s second-in-command. He commanded his brigade at Antietam, Chambersburg, and Gettysburg, where he was promoted to Major General in 1863. “After the battle of the Wilderness he succeeded Stuart in command of the cavalry corps. He led this force as Haw’s Shop, blocked Sherman’s Trevilian Raid, and fought at Sappony Church, Reams’ Station, and Burgess Mill (Petersburg campaign). As remounts became scarce, he trained his cavalry to fight on foot, but in Jan. ’65 he left Virginia to look for horses in his home state. He was appointed Lt. Gen. on 15 Feb. ’65. Ordered to cover Johnston’s retreat through South Carolina, he was considered technically exempt from surrendering with him” (Boatner, 371). Although he considered resisting with Davis, he ultimately turned to private affairs and only returned to public life in 1876, just in time to be twice-elected governor and later to be elected a United States senator. “For Hampton’s military career, Edward L. Wells, Hampton and His Cavalry in ’64, is still useful” (ANB). Howes W245. Dornbusch III:1196. Nicholson, 917. Turnbull IV:406. Contemporary owner inscription. Hinges repaired, front free endpaper split, a few chips to preliminaries, only light wear to original morocco. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 9 C i vil W a r “Draw Sabers! Right Into The Line—Charge!”: Vivid Eyewitness Account Of African American Troops In The Civil War C i vil W a r 10 Folio Illustrations Of The Union Army By Renowned Civil War Illustrator Edwin Forbes (HISTORY—PICTORIAL) FORBES, Edwin. Thirty Years After: An Artist’s Story of the Great War. New York, 1890. Two volumes. Folio (12 by 16 inches), original navy cloth recently rebacked and recornered in calf. $5000. 15. First edition, with 20 half-tone equestrian portraits of Union officers after oil paintings by Forbes and nearly 300 full-page and in-text wood engravings made from his sketches in the field illustrating the day-to-day life of the Union armies during the years 1862-65. The copy of Assistant Adjutant General Thomas Ward, with his signature on the title page of Volume I. Forbes accompanied the Army of the Potomac as staff artist for Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, where his sketches of camp life and battlefields appeared throughout the Civil War. “The habit of quick and trenchant drawing from life which he developed during his years at the front influenced all his later production, and the sketches themselves were his main stock in trade for the rest of his life… In 1876 copper-plate etchings from his war sketches were published as Life Studies of the Great Army, and received an award at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. The original prints were bought by General Sherman, and were placed in his office in the War Department in Washington” (DAB). Dornbusch III: 537. Interiors generally clean. Only minor discoloration to original cloth; handsome calf bindings fine. An excellent copy with military provenance. “The Classic Early Pictorial History Of The War… Touching And Memorable” 16. (HISTORY—PICTORIAL) (HARPER’S WEEKLY) GUERNSEY, Alfred H., and ALDEN, Henry M. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Great Rebellion in the United States. Chicago, 1866-68. Two volumes. Folio (12 by 16-1/2 inches), original brown pebbled cloth. $2200. Early Chicago edition of this richly illustrated history of the Civil War, issued the same year (and using the same sheets) as the New York first, with almost 1000 wood engravings, many full-page. “Drawn from the pages of Harper’s Weekly, the most popular journal of its day, the work offers not only a chronology of the war but a briefer treatment of the history of the United States with emphasis on the causes of the war. Nearly 125 pages bring readers up to Sumter; thereafter the story comes alive in copy taken from the periodical with minimal re-editing and written shortly after the war. Thus the work seems fresh and exciting to read… As with Frank Leslie’s illustrated history, much of the pleasure here comes from the engravings. There are 998 engravings, mostly scenes of battles, camps, marches, soldier life, and portraits of officers, with a few maps and plans included… This work delivers the news of the war much as the civilians during the conflict experienced it, and it is therefore both touching and memorable” (Eicher). Issued contemporaneously with the New York first edition, and using the same sheets. Eicher 768. Expert restoration to original cloth. A handsome and desirable copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 11 C i vil W a r louis kinney harlow With 12 Stunning Large Folio Chromolithographs, Each Signed By The Artist 17. (HISTORY—PICTORIAL) HARLOW, Louis Kinney. Army Memories. New York, 1887. Large folio (16 by 19 inches), 12 chromolithographic plates mounted to heavy cardstock with printed tissue guards, original blue velvet portfolio. $16,000. Limited “Edition de Luxe,” number 19 of an unknown (but clearly small) number of copies, with 12 stunning large folio chromolithographs, each signed by the artist. Both an etcher and a painter, Harlow usually chose landscapes as his subjects, often working with color lithographer Louis Prang. In addition to general views of army life, plates include depictions of Grant with Generals Sherman, Logan and McPherson at Vicksburg, General Sheridan in the Shenandoah valley and another of General Sherman. Very scarce: OCLC lists only 6 copies. With a descriptive index card. Without original ties. Plates fine, light wear to original velvet portfolio. An exceptional copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 12 francis trevelyan miller “The Grandfather Of Civil War Histories” (HISTORY—PICTORIAL) MILLER, Francis Trevelyan, editor. The Photographic History of the Civil War. New York, 1911. Ten volumes. Quarto, publisher’s blue cloth. $3000. 18. First edition of Miller’s famous and important 10-volume photographic history of the Civil War, containing “thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities.” “This mammoth work… a necessary part of any civil war library,” contains contributions from over 39 eminent individuals, including academicians, President William H. Taft, and veteran officers of both Confederate and Union forces, many of whom wrote from personal experience. A number of the photographs, previously unpublished, are from the collections of private individuals, including the extensive Eldridge Collection of Mathew Brady Civil War photographs, “easily five times larger than that of any contemporary” (Everitt). “Zealous in their work, often regardless of danger, and at all times handicapped by the vexing difficulties of the photographic process of that day,” Brady and his assistants “carried their cameras to every scene that promised an interesting picture,” capturing “scenes of actual conflict, others of places devastated by gunfire, of troops on the march or in bivouac, and of individual officers and men” (DAB). Volume X is the first issue (with unrevised index, marked “1-Ed.” in bottom margin of page 323). Eicher 771. Nicholson, 516. Interiors fine, only most minor wear to original cloth, gilt exceptionally bright and crisp. A fine copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 13 C i vil W a r the u . s . army and navy With 44 Vivid Folio Color Lithographs Of American Soldiers, Sailors And Ships In Battle (HISTORY—PICTORIAL) (WERNER COMPANY, publisher) WAGNER, Arthur L.; KELLEY, J.D. Jerrold. The United States Army and Navy. Akron, 1899. Large oblong folio (18 by 14 inches), publisher’s leatherette gilt with pictorial vignettes on front cover. $2200. 19. First edition, with 43 vivid color lithographs of battle scenes, soldiers and sailors in uniform, and navy vessels in action. “The Werner Company of Akron seems to have been at the forefront of new developments in printing technology at the end of the [19th] century” (Reese, 114), as the vivid colors of these chromolithographs readily attest. These companion histories trace the development of the U.S. Army and Navy from the era of the Revolution through the Civil War to the close of the SpanishAmerican War, with accounts of their organization, administration and duties. With appendices listing the principal ships of the Navy, their batteries and armor, official reports of the battle of Manila and the battle of Santiago de Cuba. Owner pencil inscription. Front free endpaper renewed. Plates fine and vivid. Light restoration to front joint and extremities of publisher’s binding. A near-fine copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman each of the states from the 1850 census. Shortly after April 13, 1861 (the date of the Battle of Fort Sumter), John M. Batchelder, a telegraph engineer and inventor from Cambridge, Massachusetts, used the bar-graphs here to make a similar comparison, also based on the 1850 census. This striking broadside contrasts the statistical differences between the free and slave states, now at war, on a scale of 100, including illiterate white adults (free, 50; slave, 100), enrolled militia (free, 100; slave, 58), miles of railroads (free, 100; slave, 38) and miles of canals (free, 100; slave, 29). A wood-engraved vignette in the heading depicts Sergeant Peter Hart’s heroic act during the bombardment of Fort Sumter, when the fort’s flagstaff was “shot off near the peak, and, with the flag, fell among the gleaming cinders. Lieutenant Hall rescued the precious bunting before it took fire. Peter Hart carried it, with the piece of the staff, and fastened it, where the soiled banner was kept flying defiantly” (Harper & Brother, United States History). Three faint horizontal fold lines, expert repairs to two chips in left margin, not affecting text. Near-fine, bright and fresh. A splendid Civil War broadside. Scarce. C i vil W a r 14 “The Most Notorious Prison After Andersonville” 21. (CIVIL WAR BROADSIDE) FISHER, Captain Robert J. Officers of the United States: Army and Navy: Prisoners of War. Libby Prison, Richmond, Va. Cincinnati, 1864. Broadside, approximately 24 inches by 31 inches, handsomely framed. $4500. “Compare The Length Of The Red And Blue Lines In Each Column” 20. (CIVIL WAR BROADSIDE) BATCHELDER, John M. Comparison of Products, Population, and Resources of the Free and Slave States. Cambridge, 1861. Large broadside (14 by 22 inches), printed in black, red and blue; handsomely framed, entire piece measures 22 by 31 inches. $2700. Original large broadside red and blue bar-graph comparing the resources of North and South at the outset of the Civil War, with a small wood-engraved vignette of Peter Hart restoring the flag at Fort Sumter. Graphic representation of the growing sectionalism that was dividing the nation during the late antebellum years began with William Reynolds’ Political Map of the United States (1856). Designed to portray and compare the areas of free and slave states, it included tables of statistics for www. baumanrarebooks . com Handsome engraved broadside listing officers imprisoned at Libby Prison in Richmond, “the most notorious prison after Andersonville” (Boatner, 482). Contains at top center a Union war eagle nestled in the Stars and Stripes; four separate cartouches of scenes from Libby Prison; engravings of four soldiers; the names of the northern states in an oval pattern interspersed with floral designs and the names of numerous battles; and, in the center, a list of Union officers at Libby, headed by Brigadier Generals Neal Dow and E. P. Scammon. The Cincinnati firm of Ehrgott and Forbriger is noted for a series of over 70 broadsides it issued during the civil war that featured Union military and government figures. The top and bottom edges have been slightly shaved, losing a bit of image from the top and bottom, including the imprint, which read “designed and executed with a pen in Libby Prison” by Captain Robert J. Fisher from the 17th Missouri Volunteers. Slight darkening in two bands across middle. A rare piece in excellent condition, very handsomely framed. 1-800-99-bauman Sparked The Infamous New York City Draft Riots 15 WAR—CONSCRIPTION LAW) The United States Conscription Law or National Militia Act. Approved March 2d, 1863. New York, 1863. 32mo, original blue paper wrappers; pp. 32. $2600. C i vil W a r 22. (CIVIL First edition of the pamphlet containing the United States Conscription Law of 1863, the act that outlined the procedures for the Union Army’s draft during the Civil War and that sparked the infamous New York City draft riots. A “most imperfect” congressional act, the Conscription Law instituted a broad draft, requiring registration of all males between the ages of twenty and forty-five. However, “instead of exempting specific classes such as ministers and heads of families, money payment was made the basis of exemption… The system was inequitable to the poor, and in the working-class quarters of New York the first drawing of names in 1863 was the signal for terrible riots” (Morison, 666). Incensed by the provost marshal’s first drawing of names on July 11th, 1863, “a mob, which soon numbered 50,000, burned a Negro church and orphanage, attacked the office of the N.Y. Tribune, wrecked the home of the provost marshal, terrorized large parts of the city, started fires, did $1,500,000 worth of property damages, and killed more than a dozen people” (Boatner, 245). When Federal troops from the Army of the Potomac came to disperse the rioters, it turned into the bloodiest riot in history, with nearly 1,200 people killed by gunfire or in the resulting stampede. With 10 pages of advertisements for military-related items interleaved. A few pinpoint spots of foxing to text. An extremely scarce historic document in about-fine condition. The U.S. Sanitary Commission’s Illustrated Report On Prisoners Of War In Rebel Hands 23. (CIVIL WAR—PRISONERS) UNITED STATES SANITARY COMMISSION. Narrative of Privations and Sufferings of United States Officers and Soldiers while Prisoners of War on the Hands of the Rebel Authorities. Boston, 1864. Slim octavo, modern half green cloth. $950. First edition, with four woodcut plates depicting prisoners suffering from malnourishment. The Sanitary Commission, a civilian organization concerned with the health of Civil War troops, was highly influential in the reform of American medicine. This fascinating report contains the testimony of soldiers and descriptions by the investigative committee on cruel treatment and deplorable hospital conditions, specifically in the Confederate hospital at Belle Isle Prison in Virginia. Sabin 51791. Light foxing to first and last leaves. Small closed tear to page 72-73. Plates clean. Near-fine condition. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman P resident L incoln C i vil W a r 16 “Words Had To Complete The Work Of Guns”: Exceedingly Rare Programme For The Inauguration Ceremony Of The National Cemetery At Gettysburg (LINCOLN, Abraham). Programme of Arrangements and Order of Exercises for the Inauguration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, on the 19th of November, 1863. Washington, 1863. Octavo (5-3/8 by 8-1/2 inches), printed bifolium, on blue paper. $40,000. 24. Exceedingly rare original Programme of the inaugural ceremonies at Gettysburg, dated the day of Lincoln’s magnificent Gettysburg Address, listing his legendary words only as “Dedicatory Remarks,” a virtually unobtainable document.” www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 17 This exceedingly rare and virtually unobtainable document, printed by David Wills’ committee, offers exceptional insight into that momentous day, for Lincoln’s speech is listed far below Everett’s “Oration” on the Programme. “Though we call Lincoln’s text the Gettysburg Address… Lincoln’s contribution, labeled ‘remarks,’ was intended to make the dedication formal (somewhat like ribbon-cutting at modern ‘openings’). Lincoln was not expected to speak at length… [Yet] what should not be forgotten is that Lincoln was himself an actor… Lincoln’s text was polished, his delivery emphatic. He was interrupted by applause five times… Lincoln did for the whole Civil War what he accomplished for the single battlefield… The Civil War is, to most Americans, what Lincoln wanted it to mean. Words had to complete the work of guns… Without Lincoln’s knowing it himself, all his prior literary, intellectual and political labors had prepared him for the intellectual revolution contained in those fateful 272 words” (italics in original, Wills, 24-40). “Lincoln’s address… is immortal, one of the supreme utterances of the principles of democratic freedom” (PMM). This most rare item of ephemera from the day of Lincoln’s address consists of a printed octavo bifolium, on blue paper, with the embossed oval stamp of “Rhoades & Sons, London, Commercial.” No copies listed in OCLC. A few tiny marginal creases. Fine condition. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r Within weeks of the bloody Battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania governor Curtin and local civic leader David Wills, together with architect William Saunders, sought to honor those fallen in battle. Wills called upon Edward Everett, a figure famed for his eloquence, and invited him in late September to appear on October 23. But Everett, who devoted much research to his speeches, said he could not be ready until mid-November. Significantly, “the careful negotiations with Everett form a contrast, more surprising to us than to contemporaries, with the casual invitation to President Lincoln” that came nearly a month after Everett’s. On the evening before the dedication ceremony was to begin—a date named in this Programme of Arrangements as “the 19th of November, 1863”—Lincoln arrived by train in Gettysburg to see coffins were still stacked at the station, for only a third of the fallen soldiers had been buried. “Wills and Everett met the President and escorted him to the Wills home.” Early the next morning, as military formations described in this rare Programme began to assemble, Lincoln, still wearing a mourning band for his dead son, was joined by his secretary of state William Seward as they rode to the battle sites. “A Crime… Which Has Sent A Shudder Through The Civilized World” C i vil W a r 18 (LINCOLN, Abraham) BINGHAM, John A. Trial of the Conspirators for the Assassination of President Lincoln. Washington, 1865. Octavo, period-style half calf. $1600. 25. First edition of Judge Bingham’s powerful Argument in the trial of seven men and one woman accused of conspiring to assassinate Lincoln, delivered June 1865, only two months after Lincoln’s death and arguing that the “intense hate and rage” of Jefferson Davis made him as “clearly proven guilty of conspiracy as is John Wilkes Booth.” Within hours of the assassination of Lincoln, the government pulled “into custody anyone who might have the slightest connection to Booth…. By April 26 Booth was dead and eight of his cohorts were in custody…. placed on trial before a military tribunal established by an executive order of President Johnson” (Steers, The Trial, xii). John Bingham, who served in the Judge Advocate’s Office and would become the main author of the 14th Amendment, was named the trial’s Assistant Judge Advocate General. Together with Judges Burnett and Holt, Bingham had to quickly review the evidence: “Lincoln was shot on April 14, 1865… and the trial of the surviving conspirators opened before a military commission on May 9” (Epps, Democracy Reborn, 169). Arguing the assassination was a confederate intelligence operation, Bingham herein states “that Jefferson Davis is as clearly proven guilty of this conspiracy as is John Wilkes Booth” (70). Later “Bingham would from time to time issue dark hints that he knew more about the Lincoln plot than he could tell because the true dimensions of the conspiracy would wreak havoc on the nation. His doctor reported years later that, on his deathbed, Bingham had said, ‘The truth must be sealed’” (Epps, 169). Sabin 5451. Harvard Law Catalogue I:172. McDade 625. NYU, 994. Text fresh with only faint occasional marginal dampstaining. Near-fine. “May You And Yours Enjoy These Pages About A Glorious Fellow-Struggler Of Ours” 26. (LINCOLN) SANDBURG, Carl. Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years. Two volumes. WITH: The War Years. Four volumes. New York, 1926, 1939. Together, six volumes. Octavo, original navy cloth. $3200. First trade edition of the second of Sandburg’s landmark Lincoln biographies, the profusely illustrated four-volume The War Years, inscribed on the half title of Volume One by Sandburg, “Jimmy Cone, with good wishes, Carl Sandburg, 1940,” coupled with a third printing (issued the same year as the first) of the two-volume The Prairie Years, also inscribed on the half title, “Alfred G. Walthal, may you and yours enjoy these pages about a glorious fellow-struggler of ours, Carl Sandburg, The Shop, Chicago, 1926.” Sandburg grew up in the Knox County neighborhoods with which Lincoln was familiar; the poet met people who knew Lincoln not only as a politician but also as a man. “The most popular Lincoln biography yet written… Lincoln publications increased after the appearance of this work” (Monaghan 2877, 3711). The War Years preceded by a deluxe signed limited edition of 525 copies, published in the same year. Without scarce original box. Howes S82. Inscribed half titles in each work rehinged. Only slightest rubbing to cloth extremities. A near-fine set, most desirable doubly inscribed. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 19 C i vil W a r Wonderfully Decorative Wood-Engraved Broadside Of The Emancipation Proclamation, 1864 27. (BROADSIDE PROCLAMATION) LINCOLN, Abraham. Proclamation of Emancipation. New York, 1864. Large wood-engraved broadside on beige tinted ground, image measures 15 by 20 inches; framed, entire piece measures 20-1/2 by 25-1/2 inches. $7500. Original large wood-engraved pictorial border around the typeset text of the Emancipation Proclamation, with a portrait of Lincoln and six border vignettes depicting African-American life before and after emancipation. On January 1, 1863, Lincoln reportedly paused before signing the final Emancipation Proclamation, saying, “I never, in my life, felt more certain that I was doing right than I do in signing this paper.” It declared that “all persons held as slaves… are and henceforward shall be free.” The Emancipation Proclamation is “one of the strangest and most important state papers ever issued by an American President… Technically, the proclamation was almost absurd. It proclaimed freedom for all slaves in precisely those areas where the United States could not make its authority effective, and allowed slavery to continue in slave states which remained under Federal control. It was a statement of intent rather than a valid statute, and it was of doubtful legality… But in the end it changed the whole character of the war and, more than any other single thing, doomed the Confederacy to defeat” (Ketchum & Catton, 252). Eberstadt 21. Fine condition, with only the faintest foldlines. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 20 Disrespect, Disloyalty, And Conduct Unbecoming An Officer: Exceptional Autograph Letter Signed By Abraham Lincoln While President Concerning The Trial Of A Kentucky Officer, One Day Before Lincoln’s Suspension Of Habeas Corpus In Kentucky 28. LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed. Washington, DC, July 4, 1864. One octavo sheet (8 by 10 inches), folded, writing on recto only. Handsomely floated and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 20 by 18 inches. $42,000. Autograph letter signed by Abraham Lincoln on the matter of a controversial Union colonel dismissed and arrested for his denunciation of Lincoln. The letter reads: “July 4, 1864. Senator Powell, Sir, The Sec. of War informs me that Col. Woolford will be put on trial this week & just as early in the week as the case can be prepared. Very Respectfully, A. Lincoln.” The letter was written only one day before Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus in Kentucky as part of an effort to prevent Kentucky from joining the Confederacy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 21 Powell had been particularly vocal in his opposition to Lincoln’s desire to suspend the writ of Habeas Corpus in 1861. Indeed, the day after Lincoln wrote this letter, he proclaimed the suspension of the writ of Habeas Corpus indefinitely in Kentucky, and the establishment of martial law, in an effort to prevent Kentucky from joining the Confederacy. On July 7, 1864, Wolford gave his word as a gentleman and an officer to return to Louisville and avoid all public speaking until the trial discussed in this letter. Lincoln subsequently sent him a letter on July 17, requesting he sign the following statement and thereby have his charges dismissed: “I hereby pledge my honor that I will neither do or say anything which will directly or indirectly tend to hinder, delay, or embarrass the employment and use of colored persons, as soldiers, seamen, or otherwise, in the suppression of the rebellion, so long as the U.S. government chooses to so employ and use them.” Wolford refused, on the grounds that he had done nothing wrong and his rights were being violated. He went back to speaking against Lincoln and in support of McClellan, but his trial never took place, as fear of Kentucky seceding faded; he enjoyed a successful career as a Kentucky politician and lawyer from 1865 until 1887. The controversial Powell found himself shut out of Kentucky politics after the Union’s victory in 1865, and he died in 1867. Expert tape repair to verso only of folds. Light toning to paper. An exceptional letter, written entirely by Abraham Lincoln on the final Independence Day of his life. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r Lincoln wrote this letter to Senator Lazarus W. Powell of Kentucky, regarding Colonel Frank Woolford (usually spelled “Wolford”). A Union soldier in the First Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry, on March 10, 1864, Wolford denounced Lincoln as a tyrant and a traitor at a ceremony honoring himself for his heroic actions on the battlefield. Wolford was particularly angered at Lincoln’s acceptance of African-Americans in the Union ranks. Tensions were particularly high in the border state of Kentucky, a slave state which maintained an officially neutral status during the Civil War, and such activities were frequently met with suppression and arrest, as happened to Wolford several days later. He was “dishonorably dismissed from the service of the United States for violation of the Fifth of the Rules and Articles of War, in using disrespectful words against the President of the United States, for disloyalty, and for conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.” The Chicago Tribune condemned Wolford in an editorial: “Let Mr. Wolford, and all his kith and kin in politics, remember that the God-fearing black, who, with musket in hand steps forward at the call of the country, is tenfold more the brother and fellow citizen of the true patriot, than the wretches who to spite the negro would ruin the country.” However, General Grant reinstated Wolford to his rank and position in April. Wolford then continued his anti-Lincoln activities, traveling throughout Kentucky condemning Lincoln and supporting McClellan in the 1864 presidential election. Consequently, Wolford was re-arrested on June 27, 1864, and taken to Washington, where he was put up in a hotel rather than being imprisoned. Lincoln requested a meeting with Wolford, and the two men, along with Senator Powell, met shortly thereafter. Senator Powell was himself an outspoken Lincoln critic who had been censured for it by the U.S. Senate and the Kentucky General Assembly, and the implication of this letter is that he was taking a great interest in Wolford’s situation and treatment. C i vil W a r 22 “Restoration Of All Rights Of Property, Except As To Slaves” 29. (BROADSIDE PROCLAMATION) LINCOLN, Abraham. Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction. Washington, circa December 8, 1863. Broadside, measuring 12 by 19 inches, printed in two columns on wove stock. $26,000. First public notice of the December 8, 1863 Presidential proclamation offering amnesty to citizens of the Confederacy, providing they take an oath that they “will abide by and faithfully support all proclamations of the President made during the existing rebellion having reference to slaves” (i.e. the Emancipation Proclamation). Toward the close of 1863, with the Confederate Army in full retreat, discussions in Congress centered on how to restore the Southern states to the Union. “The crisis which threatened to divide the friends of the Union is past,” announced Lincoln. Now it was the duty of Congress to ensure that all citizens in the South, regardless of race, were guaranteed the equal protection of the law. A number of competing proposals emerged from deliberations, but in the end, during his message to Congress on December 8, 1863, Lincoln declared reconstruction of the South a wholly executive responsibility and “offered ‘full pardon… with restoration of all rights of property, except as to slaves,’ to all rebels who would take an oath of future loyalty to the Constitution and pledge to obey acts of Congress and presidential proclamations relating to slavery” (Donald, 470-71). Those excluded from taking the oath were the highest ranking members of the Confederacy—government officials, judges, military and naval officers above the rank of army colonel or navy lieutenant, former congressmen, and “all who have engaged in treating colored persons or white persons otherwise than lawfully as prisoners of war.” Lincoln further encouraged the Southern states to make provisions “in relation to the freed people of such State, which shall recognize and declare their permanent freedom, provide for their education, and which may yet be consistent, as a temporary arrangement, with their present condition as a laboring, landless, and homeless class.” This particular copy of this rare public broadside of Lincoln’s proclamation was received on February 15, 1864 at Union Army headquarters in St. Augustine, Florida, where “Major Hay” (probably James H. Hay of the 2nd Florida Cavalry) was authorized to administer the oath “to such persons of that vicinity.” See Monaghan 191. Several faint patches of foxing, four light fold lines, two tiny closed tears at intersections of folds. A splendid, wide-margined copy in near-fine condition. Very scarce. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 23 C i vil W a r M emoirs & M emorabilia “A Classic Civil War Autobiography” 30. (MEMOIR—UNION) GRANT, Ulysses S. Personal Memoirs. New York, 1885-86. Two volumes. Thick octavo, original green cloth. $850. First edition of the memoirs of one of the most recognized figures in American military history, illustrated with numerous steel engravings, facsimiles, and 43 maps. After an ineffectual term as president, ruined by bankruptcy and dying of throat cancer, Grant agreed to publish his memoirs to provide a measure of economic security for his family. Mark Twain agreed to serve as the publisher. Struggling to dictate his notes to a stenographer, Grant finished his memoirs shortly before his death in the summer of 1885. “It seemed to Twain, sitting quietly near him in his bedroom at Sixtieth Street, that Grant had fully regained the stature of a hero” (Kaplan, 273). “No Union list of personal narratives could possibly begin without the story of the victorious general. A truly remarkable work” (New York Times). “Grant’s memoirs comprise one of the most valuable writings by a military commander in history” (Eicher 492). Dornbusch II:1986. Mullins & Reed 35. Contemporary owner inscriptions of Illinois physician A.J. Ogram dated “1-29-92.” Interiors generally fresh with a few marginal paper repairs, expert reinforcement to some inner hinges, cloth fresh and bright. An about-fine copy. “Grant Used The Weapon That McClellan Forged To Defeat Lee” 31. (MEMOIR—UNION) MCCLELLAN, George B. McClellan’s Own Story. New York, 1887. Octavo, original green cloth. $550. First edition of the Civil War memoirs of Lincoln’s controversial commander of the Army of the Potomac, with steel-engraved frontispiece portrait, nine illustrations, three full-page maps, and a two-page facsimile letter. “A military enigma, a brilliant administrator and a man possessing much good strategic sense” (Boatner, 524), McClellan was commander-in-chief of the Union forces from November 1861 to March 1862. “This controversial Union general’s memoirs are really an explanation of his wartime activities and decisions. McClellan’s administrative and organizational skills are often overshadowed by his alleged shortcomings in the field and his involvement in party politics. It is seldom remembered that Grant used the weapon that McClellan forged to defeat Lee and win the war” (Union Bookshelf 56). “Lee, who should have known, set him down as the best commander who ever faced him” (DAB). Eicher 539. Nevin I:124. Text and plates fresh and clean, with front inner hinge expertly reinforced. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman “The Military Analysis Is Enhanced By Anecdotal Material” C i vil W a r 24 32. (MEMOIR—UNION) GORDON, George H. History of the Campaign of the Army of Virginia… from Cedar Mountain to Alexandria, 1862. Boston, 1880. Octavo, original green cloth. $900. First edition of Brigadier-General Gordon’s detailed history of the Second Massachusetts Infantry from the close of Cedar Mountain through Second Bull Run, with four richly detailed folding maps, and a fifth large folding map printed in color and laid into a pocket at rear, as issued. This history, told by one of its chief participants, follows Gordon and the Second Massachusetts Infantry from the close of Cedar Mountain (August 9, 1862) through the Second Battle of Bull Run (August 28-30, 1862). “The work is well documented and draws on many official documents… The chief attribute of this history is the enormous amount of detail presented on the regiment, Gordon, related officers, and the campaign… There is a good— though harsh—analysis of Pope’s inadequacy as a field commander, a defense of Fitz John Porter, and much of interest relating to Massachusetts troops. The military analysis is enhanced by anecdotal material. Appendices cover strengths of the forces engaged, casualties, a report on Second Bull Run from Robert E. Lee, and the Fitz John Porter case. There are elaborate foldout maps” (Eicher). Gordon went on to fight at Antietam, and President Andrew Johnson nominated him for the award of the honorary grade of brevet major general, United States Volunteers. He was one of the founders of the Military Historical Society of Massachusetts. Eicher 484. Nevins, I:30. Dornbusch I, Massachusetts 92. Fragile folding map in pocket with archival repairs to folds, now laid into rear of book. The four folding maps bound into the text are in excellent condition. A few minor rubs to cloth; skillful repair to spine head. An extremely good copy. “A Basic Source For Federal Cavalry Operations In The East” 33. (MEMOIR—UNION) KIDD, J.H. Personal Recollections of a Cavalryman. Ionia, Michigan, 1908. Thick octavo, original giltstamped navy cloth. $850. First edition of James H. Kidd’s important Civil War history, paying tribute to the 6th Michigan Cavalry of General Custer’s Brigade who bravely answered Lincoln’s call to arms, with 33 full-page photogravures and three full-page maps, including “Route of the Michigan Cavalry Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign,” scarce in original bright gilt-stamped cloth. In Personal Recollections, Union officer James H. Kidd dramatically records “the exploits of the 6th Michigan Volunteer Cavalry of Custer’s Brigade, in whose ranks Kidd served with credit and honor, at age 25 winning promotion to the rank of brevet brigadier general” (Wittenberg, At Custer’s Side, xi). This key Civil War history, which “remains a basic source for Federal cavalry operations in the East,” also pays tribute to the Michigan ‘Wolverines’ who answered Lincoln’s call to arms (Nevins I:117). Kidd’s stirring account resounds “with vibrant descriptions of hard-riding, rough campaigning, the beauties of nature, the stern service, and above all the dash and glory of combat of heroic proportions. The studentturned-soldier had a way with words” (Wittenberg, xii). With frontispiece of Kidd, 32 full-page photogravures, and three full page maps, including “Route of the Michigan Cavalry Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign.” Dornbusch I:MI29. Broadfoot, 257.Seagrave, 428. Union Bookshelf 230. See Boatner, 458. Text fine, front inner paper hinge starting but very sound, bright gilt cloth. A scarce about-fine copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman One Of The “Nation’s Greatest Fighting Soldiers” 25 (MEMOIR—UNION) MILES, Nelson A. Personal Recollections and Observations. Chicago, 1896. Large octavo, original pictorial brown cloth. $750. C i vil W a r 34. First edition, scarce first issue of this impressive volume of memoirs by General Miles, profusely illustrated over 200 black-and-white photogravures and engraved illustrations, including frontispiece, fullpage map and 15 full-page gravures after paintings by Frederick Remington, in original pictorial gilt-stamped cloth. General Nelson Miles fought with distinction “in almost every important battle of the Army of the Potomac… He went to the frontier as an infantry officer and was a primary field commander in the Red River War… Miles’ winter campaign on the Northern Plains in 187677 brought several victories over the Sioux… and in 1877 he made a forced march to intercept the fleeing Nez Percé and forced their surrender.” Charged with capturing Geronimo in 1886, Miles was subsequently appointed “commander of the vast Military Division of the Missouri.” Awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor in 1892, “Miles was an extremely able officer who combined aggressiveness and boldness with imagination” (Lamar, 699). “One of the nation’s greatest fighting soldiers” (ANB). Howes M595. Decker II:1111. Contemporary owner inscription dated “Jany 15, 1897.” Text and plates fresh and clean, slight edge-wear to bright gilt boards, gilt and silver bright. A highly desirable near-fine copy. Complete Run Of 100 First-Hand Civil War Narratives, Extra-Illustrated 35. (MEMOIR—UNION) RHODE ISLAND SOLDIERS AND SAILORS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Personal Narratives of the Battles of the Rebellion, Being Papers Read before the Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society. Providence, 1878-1915. Ten volumes. Thick octavo, contemporary three-quarter red morocco gilt, original wrappers bound in. $4500. First editions of this fascinating series of 100 eyewitness accounts of engagements fought by Rhode Island soldiers and sailors in the Civil War, extra-illustrated with portraits and landscapes of the people and places mentioned in the texts. “The society holds meetings each month at the houses of members… It is the intention at each meeting to have a paper read by some member, giving his personal recollections of the part borne by Rhode Island soldiers in the great conflict, and these papers, as they accumulate, are carefully verified in every particular, and then published and preserved by the society” (The Providence Press, 1881). This complete set of these 100 detailed narratives contains such highpoints as “Kit Carson’s Fight with the Comanche and Kiowa Indians,” “The Loss of the Iron-Clad Monitor,” “Reminiscences of Two Years with the Colored Troops,” “In a Rebel Prison: Experiences in Danville,” “The Siege and Capture of Harper’s Ferry,” “The Gettysburg Gun,” and “The March to the Sea.” Signature of P.S. Chase in pencil on most wrappers. A fine set, with only some toning and wear to spines on the fifth and sixth series. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 26 “When The Battle Waged Hottest, Sheridan Was At His Best” (MEMOIR—UNION) SHERIDAN, P.H. Personal Memoirs. New York, 1888. Two volumes. Octavo, original gilt-stamped green cloth. $650. 36. First edition of Sheridan’s military autobiography, with 27 maps (many folding) and 17 plates. “Often ranked with Grant and Sherman as the foremost Union commanders” (Mullins & Reed 82), Sheridan completed this work just days before his death in 1888. He recounts three decades of military service including his many decisive Civil War campaigns and his later Indian campaigns, his military governorship of Texas and Louisiana and his tenure as commander-in-chief of the army after Sherman’s retirement. “When the battle waged hottest, Sheridan was at his best—cool, exact, self-possessed, the dashing and brilliant leader of men willing to follow him anywhere” (DAB). Dornbusch II:2400. Occasional foxing mainly to preliminaries, original cloth quite nice with only slightest rubbing and a few tiny spots, gilt very bright. A handsome copy, near-fine. “The First Modern General” 37. (MEMOIR—UNION) SHERMAN, William Tecumseh. Memoirs. New York, 1891. Two volumes. Octavo, original green cloth gilt. $2400. Enlarged fourth edition of Sherman’s invaluable autobiography, signed by him on a tipped-in card in Volume I, “W.T. Sherman, General,” this expanded edition containing corrections and revisions by Sherman, and including a concluding chapter on his final illness and death and a personal tribute by Congressman James G. Blaine. With 15 folding maps and handsome steel-engraved portraits. “Penned with intelligence and passion, [Sherman’s Memoirs] cover the periods of birth to the Meridian Expedition early in 1864 (Volume I) and the remainder of the war to the commander’s first decade following the war (Volume II)… The memoirs frankly describe the rights and wrongs of the Civil War campaigns Sherman experienced, without regard to stepping on the feelings of others. The work is not unduly harsh, but is unwaveringly honest (as the author viewed these events)… The writing in this work is enjoyable, more so than the average soldier’s memoirs, and the enlightened opinions of the second-ranking Federal officer on a multitude of operations make the work invaluable” (Eicher 576). First published in 1875. Owner inscription below signed card (2 by 3-1/2 inches) tipped to front pastedown of Volume I reads: “This signature of Gen. Sherman was written for my father, John H. Rees on one of his cards by Gen. Sherman him-self [sic] at the National Grand Army Encampment held at Minneapolis about 1883 or 4. [signed] B.R.G.” Owner signatures. Text, plates and maps fresh and clean, front inner papers hinges starting, light edge-wear to bright gilt cloth. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman Presentation Copy Of A Memoir Of Hector Tyndale First edition, presentation copy, of this biography of a famous Union general who fought at Bull Run and Antietam, with frontispiece portrait and folding plan of the Battle of Wauhatchie, in original cloth. With presentation slip reading: “Compliments of Mrs. Hector Tyndale.” The son of a prominent Philadelphia businessman who made his own fortune in the pottery and porcelain business, Hector Tyndale became involved in Republican politics before the War, failing to embrace abolition but nevertheless escorting the widow of John Brown to visit her husband and recover his body postexecution. When the Civil War began, Tyndale volunteered for the Union and soon became engaged in combat, fighting at the Second Battle of Bull Run and Antietam. He was wounded badly while in service and promoted to Brigadier General for his conspicuous service at Antietam. General Tyndale returned to command his brigade after Gettysburg. With the Union struggling at Chattanooga, Tyndale participated in battle one last time, before finally resigning on August 26, 1864 due to poor health. He was brevetted to Major General on March 13, 1865. A near-fine presentation copy. Manuscript Civil War Account Of Losses At The Battle Of Bull Run (MEMORABILIA—UNION) GRANGER, Brownell. List of the Killed, Wounded and Missing in the 11th Reg[imen]t, Mass[achusetts] Vol[unteers] at the Battle of Bulls (sic) Run, Virginia, July 21st 1861. Manassas, Virginia, 1861. Original sheet of blue-ruled wove stock (8 by 29 inches), backed by linen and mounted in contemporary gray cloth wallet; custom clamshell box. $8500. 39. Original manuscript listing of casualties suffered by the 11th Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers at the Battle of Bull Run, the first major land battle of the Civil War, in the hand of Adjutant Brownell Granger. “Union forces and civilians alike feared that the Confederates would advance on Washington, D.C., with very little standing in their way. The Union’s preemptive strike was the first major land battle of the American Civil War, fought on July 21, 1861, near Manassas, Virginia. Unseasoned Union Army troops advanced across Bull Run against the equally unseasoned Confederate Army, and despite the Union’s early successes, they were routed and forced to retreat back to Washington, D.C.” (Hal Jespersen). This original manuscript in the hand of www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 27 C i vil W a r 38. (MEMOIR—UNION) (TYNDALE, Hector) MCLAUGHLIN, John M. A Memoir of Hector Tyndale. Philadelphia, 1882. Octavo, original brown cloth. $600. Adjutant Brownell Granger lists casualties suffered by the 11th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers at the Battle of Bull Run: 15 killed, 55 wounded and missing (46 of whom were taken prisoner). Bull Run was the regiment’s first military engagement. Organized at Readville and mustered in June 13, 1861, the 11th Regiment left Massachusetts for Washington, D.C. on June 24th. There it was attached to Franklin’s Brigade, Heintzelman’s Division, McDowell’s Army of Northeast Virginia, and remained so through August, 1861. Altogether the Regiment lost during service a total 261 men: 11 officers and 153 enlisted men killed or mortally wounded; two officers and 95 enlisted men dead from disease. Pencil annotations in a later hand. A number of minor smudges and spots to manuscript, dampstain to bottom segment of wallet. A very desirable item of Civil War memorabilia. C i vil W a r 28 robert j . holley Documents From The Estate Of Civil War Veteran Robert Y. Holley, Including A Consular Appointment Signed By Grant (MEMORABILIA—UNION) HOLLEY, Robert J. Naval document archive. No place, March 1852-June1886. Seven documents of varying sizes, two albumen photographs, two manuscript leaves. $3800. 40. Archive of documents relating to the naval career of Civil War veteran Robert Y. Holley, including his consular appointment to the Barbados signed by Ulysses S. Grant. Robert Y. Holley (sometimes spelled ‘Holly’) was the grandson of Robert Holley, Esquire, of Vermont, a Revolutionary War veteran. This archive of documents spans his career in the U.S. Navy, from his appointment as a midshipman to his position as a U.S. Consul. Included in the archive are seven documents: (1) Printed document finished in manuscript, dated March 16, 1852, granting Holley midshipman status and ordering him to the Naval Academy at Annapolis. (2) Printed document finished in manuscript, dated September 3, 1861, Navy Department appointment designating Holley as Acting Master and ordering him to report to the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C. (3) Holley’s photogravure carte-de-visite, dated November 1862 on the reverse and listing him as master on the U.S.S. Augusta. (4) Printed document finished in manuscript (21 by 17 inches), dated April 16, 1869, appointing Holley U.S. Consul at Barbados, signed by President Ulysses S. Grant and with his white paper seal. (6) Printed petition to President Grover Cleveland signed by 70 ship’s masters requesting that Holley be retained as the U.S. Consul at Barbados. (7) Typed letter signed, dated June 10, 1886, from the Navy Department, detailing Holley’s naval service. Also included are two albumen photographs on thin photographic paper, one mounted on card stock, of unidentified groups of sailors in Union uniforms (mounted photograph approximately 7 by 4 inches on a 9 by 6-inch mount, unmounted photograph 9 by 6-3/4 inches); two undated manuscript leaves listing “Vessels belonging to the United States Navy, with their designating numbers in numerical order—Extracted from the General Signal Book,” with 497 ships listed and several color photocopies of related newspaper clippings from the Holley family files. Holley served on the U.S.S. Norwich, a civilian steamship converted into a gunboat that was used to blockade the coasts of Georgia and eastern Florida, from January to March 1862; on the U.S.S. Augusta, a civilian side-wheel steam cruiser converted into a warship that was used to blockade Charleston during Holley’s March through August 1862 tour of service; on the U.S.S. New Bern, a Navy blockading vessel and supply ship off the North Carolina coast, from October 1863 to March 1865, at which point Holly was given command of the U.S.S. New Bern; he commanded the U.S.S. New Bern and the U.S.S. Massachusetts, originally an iron-screw steamship, until September 1867. Holley was appointed as U.S. Consul at Barbados in 1869. Documents about fine. Carte-de-visite fine. Mounted photograph fine; creasing and closed tears to very good unmounted photograph. A unique collection. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 29 C i vil W a r william mckinley “Be It Known That Cadet Samuel Beck…”: Collection Of Career Military Documents In Original Custom Metal-Gilt Tube 41. (MEMORABILIA—UNION) (MCKINLEY, William) BRECK, Samuel. Collection of military documents. West Point, various printers, 1855-97. Seven items of various sizes, rolled into a contemporary 17-inch metal tube. $7500. Seven original documents relating to the career and family of Brigadier General Samuel Breck, Adjutant General of the Army, including his diploma from West Point and his final commission signed by President McKinley. Housed in a handsome contemporary black metal tube, hand-lettered in gilt. Career officer Samuel Breck “graduated the United States Military Academy in 1855 and served in the Florida War of 1855-56. He was Assistant Professor of geography, history, and ethics at the Academy in 1860-61. During the Civil War he served as Assistant Adjutant-General of McDowell’s division early in 1862… and [later in the year] of the Department of the Rappahannock, being engaged in the occupation of Fredericksburg and the Shenandoah Valley expedition” (Appleton’s). Breck received three brevets for war service (Boatner, 82). From 1870 onward he served in Washington as Assistant Adjutant-General in charge of rolls, returns, and the preparation of the Volunteer Army Register, under General George D. Ruggles, whom in 1897 he succeeded as Adjutant General of the Army with the rank of Brigadier General (New York Times). This collection of seven military and family documents begins with Breck’s ornately engraved diploma from the United States Military Academy (1855) and ends with his final commission as Adjutant General (1897), signed by President William McKinley and Secretary of War Russell Alger. Documents in generally fine condition, rolled to fit into contemporary metal tube. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 30 Vintage Civil War Parlor Game, With 12 Hand-Colored Playing Cards 42. (MEMORABILIA—UNION) McLOUGHLIN BROTHERS, publishers. Game of Visit to Camp. New York, circa 1871. Twelve original hand-colored pictorial charactercards, 71 (of 72) article-cards, original instruction booklet; original wooden box with mounted chromolithographic lid label. $2000. Vintage card game in the context of the Civil War, with 12 hand-colored character-cards drawn by Justin Howard, each with six accoutrements to be displayed on demand during a spoken reading of the game’s storyline. In original wooden storage box with sliding lid. Creators of the mechanical paper toy “Jolly Jump-Ups” and early publishers of “Tiddledy Winks,” the New York publishing house McLoughlin Brothers “pioneered the systematic use of color printing technologies in children’s books, particularly between 1858 and 1920… During the early years, the product line expanded to include non-book toys including games, blocks, and paper dolls… The firm’s publications served to popularize illustrators including Thomas Nast, William Momberger, Justin Howard, Palmer Cox, and Ida Waugh” (Laura Wasowicz). In February of 1871 McLoughlin Brothers moved its operations to 71 Duane Street (as listed here on the lid label). The firm was sold to Milton Bradley in 1920. Nearly intact (missing only one small piece of 84). Beautiful condition, despite minor chipping to booklet and box label. “A Genuinely Tragic Book, Brave And Bitter” 43. (MEMOIR—CONFEDERATE) HOOD, John Bell. Advance and Retreat. New Orleans, 1880. Octavo, period-style three-quarter tan calf. $1200. First edition of this dramatic Confederate memoir, with two full-page engraved portraits and four maps, one folding. Hood’s memoir focuses on his Confederate service, from his early involvement at Second Manassas and Sharpsburg to his surrender at Natchez, Mississippi. Though much admired as a divisional and corps commander, Hood’s aggressive tendencies helped to seal the fate of the Confederacy at the Battle of Atlanta. Hood took over army command after Johnston’s removal and decided to move his troops from their well-entrenched positions in and around Atlanta to attack Sherman’s numerically superior forces. The resulting rout broke the last Southern stronghold and freed the way for Sherman’s infamous march to the sea. Of Advance and Retreat, Freeman wrote in The South to Posterity, “This is a genuinely tragic book, brave and bitter, wistful and manly, touched with humor in the early chapters, grim in its recountal of the circumstances which defeated his final plan of operations.” Tall Cotton 93. Eicher 240. Wright 1051. Howes H622. Early owner signature, dated 1896. Fine condition. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman “The Southern States Had Rightfully The Power To Withdraw” 31 (MEMOIR—CONFEDERATE) DAVIS, Jefferson. The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government. New York, 1881. Two volumes. Thick octavo, original publisher’s full tan sheep. $2500. C i vil W a r 44. First edition of Jefferson Davis’ important history of the Confederacy, with 18 maps (14 folding) and 19 plates, including stipple-engraved portraits of Davis, members of the presidential staff, General Lee, and others, quite scarce in handsome publisher’s binding. “Every impartial reader must recognize the ability with which Davis’ history is composed, the sincerity with which his opinions are held and the good faith with which they are set forth, and the value which it possesses as the authentic commentary on the most momentous episode in the history of the United States” (Allibone, Supplement I:461). Howes D120. In Tall Cotton 34. Small owner bookplates. Text, plates and maps fresh and clean. Joints corners and spine ends with expert restoration. A handsome copy in contemporary calf. Large Engraved Military Commission, 1856, Signed By Both President Franklin Pierce And Secretary Of War Jefferson Davis 45. DAVIS, Jefferson and PIERCE, Franklin. Document signed (Military Commission). Washington, DC, July 11, 1856. Folio, one sheet of vellum measuring 13-1/2 by 17-1/2 inches, engraved, finished in manuscript. $3800. Fine military commission, fully engraved on vellum and finished in manuscript, signed by President Franklin Piece and countersigned by then-Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, future President of the Confederacy. “To aid the Democratic party in an uphill contest in Mississippi in 1851, Davis resigned his Senate seat and ran for governor. His personal popularity made the contest close, but he lost and considered leaving politics. In little more than a year, however, Davis returned to public life as secretary of war in the administration of Franklin Pierce. He was a hardworking and competent secretary who stressed promotions on merit, better training and expansions of the army’s arsenals, fortifications and size… He strengthened the army technologically by converting flintlock muskets to rifles and supporting experiments with breech-loading rifles and improved cannons. On grounds of national security he advocated a transcontinental railroad and was delighted when surveys suggested that a southern route was most feasible” (ANB). Davis re-entered the Senate in 1857; upon the outbreak of the Civil War, of course, he was elected the first (and only) President of the Confederate States of America. With large ornamental vignettes of the American Eagle at top and military flags and regalia at bottom. Embossed paper seal affixed. For more on the career of recipient Samuel Breck, see item 41. Faint fold lines. A fine document, signed by both Pierce and Davis. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman First edition, presentation copy, of this story of “the bloodiest man in American history” as told by a member of his band of Confederate guerrillas, John McCorkle, to author O.S. Barton, inscribed: “Presented to my friend Thomas Hand by the writer, O.S. Barton. Carthage Mo. Feb 24-/16.” C i vil W a r 32 “A Milestone Of Great Importance In Confederate Literature” 46. (MEMOIR—CONFEDERATE) LONGSTREET, James. From Manassas to Appomattox. Philadelphia, 1896. Thick octavo, original three-quarter brown morocco. $1750. First edition, with frontispiece portrait, 16 maps and 30 illustrations of battle sites and portraits, in scarce publisher’s deluxe three-quarter morocco binding with Longstreet’s portrait stamped in gilt on the front board. “Longstreet’s tome is a milestone of great importance in Confederate literature. It tells the story of the war in the first person from one of the great generals of American history, allows him to make his case… Longstreet here provides ample documentation of his close relationships with Lee” (Eicher). Contrary to myth, Longstreet, not Stonewall Jackson, was Lee’s intimate confidant, close friend, and principal military adviser (ANB). “Longstreet’s reminiscences are basic to any study of the Army of Northern Virginia” (In Tall Cotton 114), and is “a necessary source for any study of Lee’s army” (Nevins I:122). Dornbusch II: 2977; Eicher 277; Wright 664; ITC 114; Nevins I, 122; Howes L451. Gift inscription. Light expert restoration to original morocco. A handsome near-fine copy. “An account of Quantrill and his activities, repeating legends about this famous guerrilla… Also tells of some of the escapades of Cole Younger and Frank James while they were members of the guerrillas” (Adams, Six Guns 76). Although William Clarke Quantrill began his roving career of crime as a bandit in Kansas, where he professed abolitionist sympathies, he got out of a sticky situation in Missouri by representing himself as a proslavery native of Maryland, joining the Confederacy when war broke out. “Having helped regular Confederate forces capture Independence, Missouri, he received a captain’s commission as a partisan ranger. By this time he was the most notorious of the many ‘bushwhackers’ operating in Western Missouri. The climax of his career came on 21 August 1863 when he led more than 300 guerrillas in a raid on Lawrence, Kansas, that resulted in the destruction of the business district and the massacre of 150 men and boys. This was the most atrocious event of its kind during the Civil War, making Quantrill the most famous, and infamous guerrilla chieftain of that conflict” (ANB). Quantrill went on to attack Union troops at Baxter Springs, killing nearly 100 of them. However, after that point, he encountered resistance from the Confederacy itself and then from his own men, with the result that his own lieutenant, Todd, supplanted him as leader of the guerrillas. He was eventually captured and mortally wounded by a group of Union guerrillas who hunted him down in 1865. He came to be known as “the bloodiest man in American history.” This work was taken from the recollections of John McCorkle, who spent three years with Quantrill and later recounted his story to author O.S. Barton. Dornbusch III:278. Wright M432. Graff 2581. Howes M63. Chipping to extremities and some wear to original wrappers. A very good presentation copy. Presentation Copy Of McCorkle And Barton’s Three Years With Quantrell 47. (MEMOIR—CONFEDERATE) (MCCORKLE, John) BARTON, O.S. Three Years with Quantrell. Armstrong, Missouri, 1914. Octavo, original black paper wrappers. $850. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman “What You Did Not Hear During The War” 33 C i vil W a r 48. (MEMOIR—CONFEDERATE) NORTH, Thomas. Five Years in Texas. Cincinnati, 1870. Octavo, original brown cloth. $550. Rare first edition of this “barbed commentary on the Lone Star State during the war years” (Nevins I:138), in original cloth. Written by a Northern businessman who took up the ministry to evade the Confederate draft, this first-person Civil War narrative contains deep insight into life in Texas during the war. Here, the author tempers biting criticisms and harsh assessments of his neighbors and their behavior with a generally amiable tone. Howes N193. Wright 183a. Marginal tears to pages 187-88, light foxing mainly to preliminary and concluding pages, light wear to extremities of cloth. Extremely good. Scarce. Very Scarce 1861 Confederate Printing Of Hardee’s Classic Tactical Manual— The Copy Of A Confederate Artilleryman 49. (CONFEDERATE IMPRINTS) HARDEE, William Joseph. Rifle and Light Infantry Tactics. New Orleans, 1861. Slim octavo, contemporary limp brown cloth, pp. 102; custom clamshell box. $3800. One of a number of Confederate printings made during the first year of the Civil War of this widely accepted tactical guide (first published in 1855), with in-text wood-engravings illustrating various firing positions and 14 tipped-in diagrams of field maneuvers. This copy belonged to Confederate engineer Lieutenant Colonel Edward Ivy, who presented it to his “distinguished friend,” Captain Marshall McDonald, fellow prisoner after the siege of Vicksburg. Commander of the Army of Tennessee and one of the great Confederate generals of the Civil War, William Hardee graduated the U.S. Military Academy and served with Lee in the 2nd Cavalry. First published in 1855 and dubbed “Hardee’s Tactics,” this scarce military manual soon became a standard work on riflery and was adopted as a text-book for the Confederate army. Hardee’s guide underwent numerous printings during the first year of the Civil War throughout the South—though only eight copies of this scarce printing are recorded (Parrish & Willingham). With title page vignette of a rifleman. Parrish & Willingham 4867. The owner of this copy, Confederate Engineer and Chief of Artillery Edward Ivy, was captured with Smith’s Brigade in the fall of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863. On July 26th, while awaiting his parole, Ivy presented this copy to “his highly esteemed and distinguished friend, Capt. M[arshall] McDonald,” Chief of Ordnance and fellow prisoner. Several pencil annotations. Crease to front cover, faint dampstain to bottom margin, inner hinge expertly repaired. An extremely good copy with intriguing provenance. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 34 “The Slave Found A Purse In The Ditch”: 1865 Confederate School Speller 50. (CONFEDERATE IMPRINTS) CHAUDRON, Adelaide De V. Chaudron’s Spelling Book, Carefully Prepared for Family and School Use. Mobile, 1865. Small octavo, original self-wrappers; pp 48 $650. Fifth edition of this popular Confederate speller, illustrated with numerous woodcuts, in original wrappers. Includes examples of alphabets in capital and lower case letters; roman, italic, and Old English typefaces; and punctuation marks. One illustrated alphabet woodcut depicts “Victory” for the letter V; another woodcut depicts an alligator chasing a running slave. One review sentence reads, “The slave found a purse in the ditch.” “These Confederate school-books inculcate strong Southern sentiments” (Sabin 12287). Chaudron also authored a popular series of school readers. Original paper wrappers reinforced. Parrish & Willingham 7686. Sabin 12287. Interior fine with light offsetting. Light soiling to paper wrappers and splitting along the spine, sewing strong. A near-fine copy of a fragile rarity. Presented By Confederate Senator Robert Ward Johnson To His Son In The Army (CONFEDERATE IMPRINTS) ROBINSON, R.H.P. General Orders from the Adjunct and Inspector-General’s Office, Confederate States Army, for the Year 1863. Richmond, 1864. Small octavo, original pale yellow printed wrappers, contemporary blue wallet-style paper protective wrapper; custom clamshell box. $2500. 51. First edition of this collection of Confederate General Orders for 1863, “compiled and corrected under the authority of Gen’l S. Cooper,” inscribed on the wrapper (and partially repeated on the title page), “To Capt. B.S. Johnson by his father R.W. Johnson, Mch 1864. I will send those of 1864 as soon as I can.” Prepared and annotated by R.H.P. Robinson of the Adjutant and Inspector General’s Office, this volume contains Confederate congressional acts and army regulations regarding such matters as absences without leave, court martial, “slaves, taken by, or employed in, army,” “citizens held in confinement,” and “stragglers and deserters,” with an “Analytical Index.” Parrish & Willingham 2425. As of May 1864, the recipient of this copy, Major B.S. Johnson, had become Assistant Adjutant General of Churchill’s Division of the 27th Arkansas Infantry (identified in manuscript of the protective cover). His father, Little Rock attorney Robert Ward Johnson, was one of the richest men in the Confederate Congress. He had joined with Congressman Hindman in carrying Arkansas out of the Union and into the Confederacy and was one of five Arkansans elected to the Provisional Confederate Congress in May 1861. “He strongly supported the administration of President Jefferson Davis, and by 1864 served on the powerful Military Affairs Committee, and chaired the Committee on Indian Affairs. The South’s defeat bankrupted him and destroyed his political career” (James M. Woods). Faint foxing throughout, original stitching broken but text holding firm, moderate soiling to original wrappers. A very desirable copy with distinguished association. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman P relude War to 35 C i vil W a r “Our Contest Will End In Blood And Disunion”: First Edition Of The Key Remedy Speech By Leading South Carolina Nullifier Harper (NULLIFICATION) [HARPER, William J.]. The Remedy by State Interposition, or Nullification… Charleston, 1832. WITH: [HAMILTON, James, MCDUFFIE, George et al.]. The State Rights and Free Trade Almanac for the Year of our Lord 1832. Charleston, 1832. WITH: The State Rights and Free Trade Almanac for the Year of our Lord 1833. Charleston, 1833. Three volumes. Octavo, original tan printed self-wrappers, stitched as issued, largely uncut. $1600. 53. First editions of three seminal works in South Carolina’s controversial call for nullification, with the first publication of a foundational speech—The Remedy—by Harper, a leader in the Southern crisis that set a course for Civil War, this scarce presentation copy with a laid-in autograph note signed by Harper, who authored the 1832 Ordinance for Nullification, presenting this copy to U.S. Congressman Drayton. Along with the nullifiers’ 1832 and 1833 Almanacs, an exceptional collection in original wrappers on the constitutional crisis that sparked Jackson’s 1832 Proclamation. This scarce collection of three major works in South Carolina’s call for nullification, a searing constitutional challenge that set the stage for Civil War, contains the first publication of a foundational speech—The Remedy by State Interposition—by William Joseph Harper, a leading voice for nullification. ‘In an 1830 speech, given in Columbia and published two years later as The Remedy by State Interposition [herein], Harper declared… the states… not the U.S. Supreme Court, stood as ‘authority of the last resort’ on the meaning of the Constitution” (ANB). 1832 Almanac with excepts from the Declaration of Independence; 1833 Almanac with a printing of Harper’s Ordinance of Nullification. To President Andrew Jackson “the action of the ‘Nullies’ was folly and madness” and he forcefully countered the nullification crisis with his December 1832 Proclamation (Houston, Critical Study, 116). Turnbull II:271; II:289. Sabin 30446; 87784. Light scattered foxing, faint soiling to wrappers, Remedy with slight dampstaining, minor loss to right corners not affecting text, faint foldlines to laid-in note. An extremely good collection. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 36 “Can There Be Nothing Pure In Government, Except The Exercise Of Mere Control?”: Webster’s 1830 Senate Speech, A Major Step In The Battle Of Words That Led To Civil War 52. WEBSTER, Daniel. Speech… on the Subject of the Public Lands, &c. Washington, 1830. Slim octavo, disbound; pp. 28. $450. First edition of the seminal 1830 speech by Senator Daniel Webster, his eloquent defense of the Union in an increasingly bitter debate over state rights that would escalate into Civil War. “When Andrew Jackson’s first Congress met in December 1829, land sales as well as Indian policy demanded the attention of the members.” As many southern states contested federal authority over the sale of public lands, there emerged a powerful “political alliance of South and West under Jacksonian auspices, directed against New England. Then Daniel Webster spoke up. ‘Sir, I rise to defend the East’ [18]” (Howe, 367-9). With that line, boldly proclaimed in this January 20, 1830 speech, the celebrated Massachusetts senator established his formidable pre-eminence in a battle of words that defined pre-Civil War tensions—a battle couched in an increasingly vitriolic state-rights debate. “In an America where spoken rhetorical grandeur still carried weight in legislative debates,” Webster was widely held as the Senate’s finest orator (Wilentz, 490). Text generally fresh with light scattered foxing, tiny marginal pinholes from original stitching. A near-fine copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 37 “Many Are Looking For Civil War, And Scenes Of Bloodshed” (NULLIFICATION) [HAYNES, Robert Y., HARPER, William, TURNBULL, Robert J. and MCDUFFIE, George]. The Report, Ordinance, and Addresses of the Convention of the People of South Carolina. Columbia, South Carolina, 1832. Octavo, original printed tan self wrappers, uncut; pp. 28; 15; 16. $1600. First edition of this scarce collection of pivotal 1832 documents proclaiming South Carolina’s fiery resistance to federal authority, containing the incendiary Ordinance of Nullification, Turnbull’s Address to the People of South Carolina, McDuffie’s Address to the People of the United States, and the Report of the Committee of Twenty One, authored by the state’s next governor, key documents in the nullification battle that Andrew Jackson countered with his December 1832 proclamation that urged South Carolina to refuse the legacy of “authors on the first attack on the Constitution,” in fragile original self wrappers, entirely uncut. By the 1830s, many of South Carolina’s white citizens rose against federal authority, “motivated by a fundamental fear: slave violence… and protective national tariffs.” In particular, passage of the 1828 Tariff “led the state to consider shattering a union that seemed at best indifferent and at worst hostile” (Meacham, 53-4). In early 1832 a state convention assembled, seeking to explain “nullification as the legitimate, peaceful and rightful remedy’” (Houston, Critical Study, 105). This led to a subsequent convention of delegates, many of them nullifiers, that met in Charleston from November 19-24. There, on the 22nd, Judge Colcock “introduced the Ordinance of Nullification. On Friday [Turnbull’s] Address to the People of South Carolina was reported, and later an Address to the People of the United States was read by McDuffie.” This exceedingly scarce first edition collection of those three crucial documents, rarely found with the title page of Report, Ordinance, and Addresses, is completed by the convention’s Report of the Committee of the Twenty One, authored by Senator Robert Haynes, the state’s next governor. On November 24th, the Ordinance of Nullification was adopted and its signing “was accompanied with unusual solemnity; the seven old members of the convention who had borne arms in the Revolutionary War were called upon to affix their signatures first” (Houston, 110-11). Ultimately the Ordinance, drafted by former senator William Harper, “expressed the determination of the people of South Carolina not to submit… The die had now been cast” (Houston, 111-12). Shortly after its passage, a visitor observed: “Many are looking for civil war, and scenes of bloodshed” (cited in Meacham, 223). That December 4, in his Annual Message to Congress, Andrew Jackson would adopt a conciliatory tone to the nullifiers. Within days, however, he issued his landmark Proclamation of December 10, soundly attacking nullification as “incompatible with the existence of the Union.” In addressing the people of South Carolina, Jackson urged them not to be remembered “as the authors of the first attack on the Constitution of your country. Its destroyers you cannot be.” Tiny marginal pinholes from original stitching. Sabin 87428; 87423; 87427. Turnbull II:265-266; II:273. With small occasional inked pagination. Text generally fresh with light scattered foxing, faint occasional dampstaining, slight edge-wear to fragile uncut leaves and wrappers. An extremely good copy of this seminal work in America’s pre-Civil War history. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 54. C i vil W a r 38 “Decide For Yourselves, Before The Power Of Deciding Is Taken”: Scarce Collection Of Five First Edition Pamphlets, 1831-2, Key Unionist Works In South Carolina’s War Of Words Over Nullification (NULLIFCIATION) HUGER, Alfred. A Letter to the People of Spartanburgh District. Columbia, December 5, 1832. WITH: [MIDDLETON, Henry]. Prospects of Disunion. Part I. South Carolina, 1832. WITH: [MIDDLETON, Henry, LEGARÉ, Hugh et al]. Manifesto and Resolutions of the Constitutional State Rights & Union Party… Charleston, 1831. WITH: [TAYLOR, Thomas et al.]. The Report of the Committee of the Convention of the Union and State Rights Party… Columbia, 1832. WITH: [WASHINGTON SOCIETY]. Address of the Washington Society to the People of South-Carolina. Charleston, 1832. Five volumes. Octavo, original tan printed self-wrappers, loose signatures or stitched as issued, uncut and partially unopened. $950. 55. First editions of five major pamphlets in South Carolina’s war over nullification—a stark challenge of federal constitutional authority and a major step toward Civil War—with key anti-nullification (Unionist) works urging restraint in a battle ultimately settled by Andrew Jackson’s assertion of federal rule in his forceful 1832 Proclamation. An important collection in original wrappers. With passage of unpopular federal tariffs, many in South Carolina urged nullification, arguing “the Union could survive only if the states, as the original parties to the Constitution, had the means to nullify a law if and until the Constitution were to be specifically amended” (Meacham, 184). John Calhoun led the nullifiers, while restraint was urged by Unionists such as Alfred Huger, Hugh S. Legaré and Henry Middleton—whose positions are pre-eminent in this scarce collection. By late 1832 “roving bands of armed Unionists and nullifiers confronted each other nightly. Nullifier rhetoric bristled with attacks on majority rule” and Unionists insisted “that South Carolina’s interests were far more secure inside the Union than outside” (Wilentz, 378). Generally fresh with light scattered foxing, occasional faint dampstaining, Address of the Washington Society with closed tears affecting text. An extremely good collection of scarce pre-Civil War works. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman 39 C i vil W a r “Rivals Dred Scott V. Sanford In Historical Importance” 56. (SLAVERY) (PRIGG, Edward) PETERS, Richard. Report of the Case of Edward Prigg… In which it was Decided that All the Laws of the Several States Relative to Fugitive Slaves are Unconstitutional and Void. Philadelphia, 1842. Octavo, period-style full speckled calf gilt. $4200. First edition of United States Supreme Court decision in Prigg v. Pennsylvania, the momentous first Court ruling directly addressing the Constitution’s Fugitive Slave Clause, a pivotal step toward increased sectional conflict and Civil War, beautifully bound. “In 1837 Edward Prigg, a professional slave catcher from Maryland, seized Margaret Morgan, a fugitive slave residing in Pennsylvania… He then acted unilaterally and, in contravention of Pennsylvania law, took Morgan back to Maryland without any state process.” With that Prigg violated an 1826 Pennsylvania law that conflicted with Congress’s 1793 Fugitive Slave Act and its provisions, and crucially heightened the battle over federal supremacy sparked by a national divide over slavery. “Prigg was subsequently indicted for kidnapping… [and] extradited to Pennsylvania. There he was tried and convicted. In a pro forma hearing, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed this conviction, and the case was then taken to the United States Supreme Court… With one justice, John McLean, dissenting, the Court held the Pennsylvania Act of 1826 unconstitutional as an interference with congressional power. The conviction of Prigg was reversed.” In writing for the Court, Justice Story noted, “Few questions which have ever come before this Court involve more delicate and important consideration.” Legal scholars argue that “the decision in Prigg ultimately became an antislavery weapon” in prompting passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 (Finkelman, 60-2). Others, however, note that Prigg ominously advances, to a “remarkable extent… the involvement of the federal government in the protection of slavery,” generating an impact that “rivals Dred Scott v. Sanford in historical importance” (Fehrenbacher, Dred Scott Case, 43). Occurring almost immediately after announcement of the ruling, this first edition printing of Prigg also distinguishes it as “an unusually rare instance of ‘instant’ mass communication in the 19th century” (Finkelman, 62-3). Sabin 61207. Harvard Law Catalogue II:1169. Library stamp and notation. Light scattered foxing, near-fine. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman “The Formation Of A Southern Confederacy” 40 C i vil W a r 57. DE SAUSSURE, W.F. Report on the Address of a Portion of the Members of the General Assembly of Georgia. Charleston, 1860. Slim octavo, original tan printed wrappers; pp.6. $1500. First edition of one of the very first Confederate imprints, De Saussure’s December 22, 1860 Report alerting Georgia to passage—only two days earlier—of the Ordinance of Secession by South Carolina, the first state to secede from the Union, triggering the secession of six more states over the next six weeks, including Georgia on January 19, 1861. An exceedingly scarce work, rarely found in original wrappers. This December 22, 1860 Report, one of the very earliest Confederate imprints, is signed in print by William F. De Saussure, delegate to the South Carolina Secession Convention and signer of the state’s Ordinance of Secession, which was passed two days before. Here De Saussure urges Georgia, South Carolina’s southern neighbor, to follow its lead, and emphasizes that his state had not desired “to take the lead in secession.” He points out that an Address of the General Assembly of Georgia, which had urged postponing any state’s secession until a meeting of a Convention of the Southern States, was not received “until just before the Ordinance of Secession was put upon its passage” (3). With South Carolina’s electrifying action, “‘a snowballing process’ began that over the next six weeks, six additional states followed suit—Mississippi, Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Texas” (Goodwin, Team of Rivals, 293.). ‘The rapidity and vehemence of the secession movement” was a fearful sign of a nation tearing itself apart (Goodwin, 294). Turnbull III:320. Wright II:R304. Parrish & Willingham 3185. Sabin 27093. Text fresh, small bit of faint dampstaining, slight edgewear to fragile wrappers. An extremely good copy of this important Civil War document. “A Government Of The People… Not A Government Of The States” 58. STREIGHT, Abel. The Crisis of Eighteen Hundred and Sixty… Its Cause, And How It Should Be Met. Indianapolis, 1861. Octavo, original printed tan wrappers sympathetically rebacked. $850. First edition of this forceful defense of the Union by Streight, who served as the Indiana Governor’s “personal emissary to Abraham Lincoln” before commanding the 51st Indiana Volunteer Regiment, then serving under Grant in a campaign that ended with Streight’s capture and daring escape from a Confederate prison. Abel Streight had just opened a publishing firm in Indiana when Civil War loomed. “Streight deeply believed that the North should go to war, if necessary, to preserve the Union of the United States. He used his writing and publishing skills to produce a brief book, The Crisis of 1861.” On publication, Governor Morton sent Streight “to Springfield, Illinois as his personal emissary to Abraham Lincoln. Hence Streight was appointed a Colonel” in the Union Army, commanding the 51st Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment (Baughman, Boys from Lake County, 248-50). This scarce first edition of Streight’s self-published Crisis cites the Constitution and passages from the Federalist, prints Jackson’s 1832 Proclamation (41-64), and includes excerpts from a key Senate speech by Daniel Webster and the Missouri Compromise in order to emphatically argue “that this is a government of the people collectly [sic], and not a government of the States.” See Boatner, 811; Nevins I:200. Text generally fresh with light scattered foxing, minor edge-wear with bit of loss to corner of rear wrapper not affecting text. An extremely good copy of this elusive work. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman in L iterature C i vil W a r The War 41 “War Changes Many Things; But It Doesn’t Change Everything, Thank God!” CRANE, Stephen. The Little Regiment And Other Episodes of the American Civil War. New York, 1896. Octavo, original tan cloth, uncut. $700. 59. First edition, first issue, of the first publication in book form of six Crane short stories, including “The Veteran,” which tells “the end of Henry Fleming, whose beginning was so astonishingly set forth in The Red Badge of Courage” (New York Times), in original cloth. The six powerful war stories in The Little Regiment earned Stephen Crane further renown as a writer of “unusual intuitive power” (New York Times). Prompted by his publisher’s commission to tour Civil War battlefields, the volume features “A Mystery of Heroism,” which was “Crane’s first story after having actually witnessed combat” (Sorrentino, Student Companion to Stephen Crane, 77), and closes with “The Veteran,” which memorably “tells of the end of Henry Fleming, whose beginning was so astonishingly set forth in The Red Badge of Courage [1895]” (New York Times). First issue, with “Gilbert Parker’s Best Books” on page 197, and top edge orange, as called for. Without original dust jacket, rarely found. BAL 4076. Bruccoli & Clark, 80. Faint library inkstamp not affecting text (184). Text generally fresh, front free endpaper excised, trace of plate removal to front pastedown, light edge-wear, soiling to cloth with library shelf label to spine end. A very good copy. “What Flower Is This That Greets The Morn, Its Hues From Heaven So Freshly Born?”: Illustrated With 50 Patriotic Chromolithographs 60. FURBISH, Julia A.M., editor and illustrator. The Flower of Liberty. Cincinnati, Ohio, 1869. Octavo, publisher’s pictorial salmon cloth gilt. $1850. Early edition of this patriotic poetry anthology celebrating the conclusion of the Civil War, illustrated with 50 chromolithographs after Furbish’s watercolor paintings of the American flag and other national emblems, in publisher’s pictorial cloth-gilt. After the Civil War, Furbish collected and illustrated, with 50 chromolithographs after her own watercolor paintings, this poetry anthology to honor “gentlemen of the Army and Navy and… all lovers of our glorious flag and the institutions which it symbolizes and protects.” Includes verse by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Whitier, William Cullen Bryant, Henry Longfellow, Emerson, Julia Ward Howe and many more. First published in Boston, 1866. All early editions are quite scarce. Scattered light foxing. Light dampstaining to front free endpaper, title page and first several leaves. Faint offsetting to pages 30-[31]. Cloth lightly worn. A very good copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 42 “He Loved His Country As No Other Man Has Loved Her” HALE, Edward Everett. The Man Without a Country. Boston, 1865. 12mo, original printed pink self-wrappers, pp. 23; custom chemise and half morocco slipcase. $1500. 61. First edition, first issue, of Hale’s classic tale of American patriotism, in original wrappers. Contrary to popular belief, Hale’s story was not based on fact, but was instead “inspired by the remark of Congressman Vallandigham that he did not wish to live in a country that supported Lincoln’s administration, and was written to arouse patriotism during the Civil War” (Hendrickson, 95). “One of the best short stories written by an American, and representing Hale at his best as a writer of fiction with a purpose” (DAB). The story was first published in The Atlantic Monthly in December 1863. This copy is without publisher’s announcement slip, as are all first issues. Wright II, 1056. Sabin 29627. Owner signatures on title page. Back wrapper gone, some creasing to edges of front wrapper. Internally clean. A wonderful copy of a fragile landmark. “My Dear, I Don’t Give A Damn” MITCHELL, Margaret. Gone with the Wind. New York, 1936. Thick octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $7500. 62. First edition, in first-issue dust jacket, of Mitchell’s sweeping story of romance and resolve against the backdrop of the Civil War. “This is beyond doubt one of the most remarkable first novels produced by an American writer. It is also one of the best… It has been a long while since the American public has been offered such a bounteous feast of excellent story-telling” (New York Times Book Review, 1936). Said to be the fastest selling novel in the history of American publishing (50,000 copies in a single day), Gone with the Wind won Mitchell the Pulitzer Prize. First printing, with “Published May 1936” on the copyright page and no mention of other printings. First issue dust jacket with Gone with the Wind listed in second column of booklist on back panel. Books of the Century, 111. Eicher 730. In Tall Cotton 125. Paper clip impressions to first few leaves. Interior clean. Cloth with light rubbing to spine ends. Price-clipped dust jacket with expert restoration, extremely good. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman “A Different Story From The One You Learned In School” 43 First edition of this Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, one of the most popular and acclaimed works of Civil War fiction. “Stephen Crane once said that he wrote The Red Badge of Courage because reading the cold history was not enough; he wanted to know what it was like to be there, what the weather was like, what men’s faces looked like. In order to live it he had to write it. This book was written for much the same reason” (Shaara). “A book that changed my life… I had never visited Gettysburg, knew almost nothing about that battle before I read the book, but here it all came alive” (Ken Burns). “One of the greatest American historical novels and among the finest fictional treatments of the Civil War” (Chronology of American Literature). Contemporary owner’s initials. Book fine, dust jacket very nearly so. A lovely copy. “The Grandfather Of Civil War Novels” 64. TUCKER, Nathaniel Beverly. The Partisan Leader. New York, 1861. Octavo, original blind-stamped green cloth gilt. $400. Second edition of this forerunner of the modern political novel, published in 1861 as the nation divided against itself in years of bloody conflict, preceded only by a suppressed 1836 publication, a fascinating work that offered “a prophetic foretelling of the Civil War” (Howes T394). This early American political novel, with its “a prophetic foretelling of the Civil War,” was issued in 1861 after an 1836 edition was immediately suppressed on publication (Howes T394). The Partisan Leader “is an important book… This is the grandfather of Civil War novels. It was written as an anti-Jackson and Van Buren document in the guise of fiction and published surreptitiously in Washington in 1836, with a fictitious imprint date of 1856. The Partisan Leader describes a war centering in the southwestern mountains of Virginia in which the South is victorious. It was republished in New York in 1861 as antiConfederate propaganda and then in Richmond in 1862 as pro-Confederate propaganda. The Southern Literary Messenger declared in 1862 (XXXIV, 400): “The Partisan Leader supplies a great desideratum… Interesting as a novel, surprising as a work of prophecy, and invaluable as an incentive to the prosecution of the existing struggle, and an assurance of our ultimate success, it cannot fail to meet with universal favor” (In Tall Cotton 182). Two volumes issued in one: also issued in a two-volume edition, no priority established. With two internal title pages containing the fictitious imprint of 1856 and Tucker’s pseudonym of Edward William Sidney. Sabin 97374. BAL 20586. See Parrish & Willingham 6586. Bookplate. Owner signature. Bookseller ticket. Text fresh and clean, lightest edge-wear to gilt-lettered cloth. A near-fine copy. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman C i vil W a r 63. SHAARA, Michael. The Killer Angels. New York, 1974. Octavo, original blue-gray cloth, dust jacket. $3800. “The Social Impact… Was Greater Than That Of Any Book Before Or Since” C i vil W a r 44 65. STOWE, Harriet Beecher. Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Negro Life in the Slave States of America. London, 1852. Octavo, original giltillustrated blue cloth. $2000. Early Clarke edition of this influential novel, with 40 illustrations, issued the same year as the first English edition (un-illustrated), also published by Clarke. Uncle Tom’s Cabin was immediately successful upon its publication in book form, and publishers in England, where there was a large and vocal anti-slavery contingent, were quick to issue their own editions of the controversial novel. This is an early Clarke printing, issued the same year as the true first English edition, also published by Clarke; this edition contains 380 pages and 40 illustrations, rather than 329 pages in the first un-illustrated Clarke printing. “In the emotion-charged atmosphere of mid-19th century America Uncle Tom’s Cabin exploded like a bombshell. To those engaged in fighting slavery it appeared as an indictment of all the evils inherent in the system they opposed; to the pro-slavery forces it was a slanderous attack on ‘the Southern way of life’… the social impact of [the novel] on the United States was greater than that of any book before or since” (PMM 332). Publisher’s ticket on rear endpaper. BAL 19518. See Grolier English 100, 91 and Grolier American 100, 61. A beautiful unrestored copy, with only light rubbing to extremities. “Dred, I Will—I’ll Do As You Tell Me—I Will Not Be A Slave!” STOWE, Harriet Beecher. Dred; A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp. Boston, 1856. Two volumes. Octavo, original blind-stamped brown cloth. $700. 66. First edition of Stowe’s second novel, sequel to Uncle Tom’s Cabin. First printing of both volumes, in binding “A” with pale yellow endpapers, in original cloth. Dred “complements Uncle Tom’s Cabin by showing the demoralizing influence of slavery on the whites. [The titular character] Dred is modeled on Nat Turner” (Hart, 211). Dred is an escaped slave who lives in the Great Dismal Swamp, preaching violent retribution for the evils of slavery while rescuing escapees from the dogs of the slavecatchers. BAL 19389. Early bookseller’s ticket tipped into front of each volume. Light scattered foxing; a few signatures mildly embrowned. Original cloth generally clean and fresh, with tiny pinprick hole to rear board of Volume II. An extremely good copy in original cloth. www. baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-99-bauman