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Exceptionally Scarce Broadside for the Unveiling of the Cust

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Militaria Start Price:600.00 USD Estimated At:800.00 - 1,000.00 USD
Exceptionally Scarce Broadside for the Unveiling of the Cust

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Auction Date:2009 Jun 24 @ 10:00 (UTC-04:00 : AST/EDT)
Location:6270 Este Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio, 45232, United States
5.5" x 9.25", on pink paper, 30 Aug. 1879.

Even before its dedication, Libbie Custer hated it. Ever protective of her husband's image, she noted that the uniform was wrong - the long coat and boots were part of the undress uniform; he was depicted with a sword in one hand, pistol in the other "like a desperado" (She went on to say that "...some of the General's best charges were made with no fire-arms about him."); and the face was that of a 60-year-old man (Elizabeth Custer's letter to Representative Daggett as quoted in the New York Times, 23 Apr. 1880). She apparently also expressed her opinion when the resolution was passed to have the statue made that Wilson MacDonald, the sculptor, did not have a significant enough reputation to execute Custer's likeness (probably none other than Michelangelo would do, but since he was dead...). She also complained that she was not consulted on the design (aye, there's the rub!).

In 1884 she finally persuaded Robert Lincoln, then Secretary of War, to order the statue removed. It was stored in a Quartermaster's shed at West Point for years. Eventually the pedestal was removed and put over Custer's grave and the statue sent to John Williams' Foundry in New York City for modification. It has never been seen since. (Some reports say that USMA gave Williams permission to reuse the bronze.) Libbie had an obelisk added to the pedestal in 1905. 

The Thomas Minckler Collection of Western Americana

Condition: Recently conserved.